<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="1976" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/1976?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T18:48:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11878">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d7daab6b27d7cc750cff28a9ce3779a8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8e716132145927b5f9152eb3de4fd166</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7367">
                  <text>Prisoners
have no right
to parole

Chance of
storms. High
of 82, low of 70

Southern
golfers
top Rebels

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 131, Volume 69

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 s 50¢

Morgan’s Raid re-enactment

Tues.
Meigs
Fair
features
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

those Confederate soldiers captured in battle,
450 additional Confederate solders were captured
off the battleﬁeld along
the West Virginia shore
of the Ohio River or off
the battleﬁeld in eastern
Meigs County.
Mowery said that
plans are still being
solidiﬁed for the event,
and that the foundation
and all others involved in
the project hope to get
more of the community
involved as well, including volunteers for multiple positions
“The history of the
battle is really important
(to the area),” Mowery
said. “Heritage tourism can bring people to
Meigs County.”
For any more information, email Bufﬁngtonisland@gmail.com.

POMEROY — Tuesday is “Swisher and
Lohse Pharmacy Day” at
the Meigs County Fair.
As with every day,
gates open at 7 a.m.
A Junior Fair Poultry
Show will take place
at the RL Arena at 8
a.m. For 2015, the Ohio
Department of Agriculture has banned all
shows and exhibitions
of poultry across the
state in efforts to prevent the spread of the
avian inﬂuenza virus
that has devastated parts
of the country’s poultry
industry. The Poultry
Showmen have received
and cared for their birds,
participated in project
book interviews, made
posters to showcase
their work with their
birds and will have
completed the Skill-AThon and Showmanship
events during the fair.
The show will be completed with model birds
for the 2015 season.
An electronic giveaway will take place at
12:30 p.m. on the Hill
Stage.
When it comes to animals, there are plenty of
activities Tuesday, with
an Open Class Beef Show
which will be followed by
the Jr. Fair Beef Breeding in the RL Arena. At
1 p.m. the Open Class
Poultry Show will take
place in the Small Arena,
with the Junior Fair
Steer Show in the RL
Arena at 5 p.m., a Jr. Fair
Dairy Feeder Show at the
RL arena at 5:15 p.m., a
Junior Fair Feeder Show
at 5:30 p.m. in the RL
Arena and a Jr. Fair Market Steer Show in the
same location at 6 p.m.
For those not attending animal shows, there
will also be kid’s games
at 2 p.m. in the Small
Arena and a Kiddie
Tractor Pull in the same
location at 4 p.m. The
Singing Shafers will take
Hill Stage at 6 p.m., and
at the same time the
Antique Tractor Pull will
take place at the Pull
Track. Motor Cross will
take place at the Grandstand at 7 p.m., and at
8 p.m. the River Towne
Band will take Hill Stage
at 8 p.m.
Gates close at 11 p.m.

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155. EXT. 2555.

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-4444303.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Pictured in the back row, from left, are Constance White, David Mowery and Dale Colburn. In the front are Commissioner Tim Ihle, Commissioner Randy Smith and
Steve George. The six met to discuss the commissioners’ support of the re-enactment coming up next year, which the commissioners have given. The tentative date
of the re-enactment is Sept. 15-18, 2016.

Event garners support
By Lindsay Kriz

place Sept. 15-18, 2016.
Mowery is also an
author of two books:
MEIGS COUNTY —
“Morgan’s Great Raid:
Late last week, co-chairs The Remarkable Expediof the Bufﬁngton Island
tion from Kentucky to
Battleﬁeld Preservation
Ohio,” and “Morgan’s
Foundation, David Mow- Raid Across Ohio: The
ery and Dale Colburn,
Civil War Guidebook of
along with two other
the John Hunt Morgan
Ohio history enthusiasts, Heritage Trail.”
Constance White, of
This re-enactment
Wilkesville, and Steve
is set to begin in WilGeorge, of Ohio Hiskesville and will end in
tory Connection, met in Portland, with the Battle
Meigs County with local of Bufﬁngton Island endofﬁcials to discuss the
ing the re-enactment.
raid re-enactment that
The battle will feature
will take tentatively take genuine costumes, can-

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Golf: 6
NASCAR: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 7
Comics: 9

non ﬁre and about 1,2001,300 cavalry in the form
of hobbyists from around
the country. For this
event, the main re-enactors will come from Sixth
Ohio Cavalry hobbyists.
There will also be talks
during the re-enactment
for those wanting to see
and learn history at the
same time.
The four, along with
meeting the Meigs
County of Chamber
of Commerce and the
Meigs County Commissioners to garner/cement
support from the community, also met with
local school ofﬁcials to
discuss educating local
students on the subject.
According to information provided by
Mowery, the Battle of

Bufﬁngton Island did
not actually occur on
the island itself. Instead,
the name of the battle
was taken from a wellknown river ford located
at the head of the island.
Mowery said this battle,
fought July 19, 1863,
marked the apex of Morgan’s Great Raid, which
took place in two states
between July 2-26, 1863.
The raid is also known as
the Indiana-Ohio Raid.
During ﬁghting, nearly
1,800 Confederate soldiers and nearly 3,000
Union/Federals fought
for two hours, with all
four arms of the military
involved: infantry, artillery, navy and cavalry. In
the end, on the Confederate side 57 were killed,
63 wounded and 71
captured, with only six
killed on the Union side
and 20 Union soldiers
injured. In addition to

Fatal Saturday crash under investigation
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

By Lindsay Kriz

traveling southbound on State Route
143 near mile post 17 in a 2007 Nissan Murano and began traveling off
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio State
the left side of the road. He overcorHighway Patrol is still investigating
rected to the right side of the road,
a fatal Meigs County crash.
but continued off the right side of
The victim, Maynard D. Fitzgerald, 57, of Pomeroy, died at approxi- the roadway. His vehicle struck an
embankment and overturned.
mately 9:13 p.m Saturday. He was

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

According to the report, Fitzgerald was not wearing a seat belt,
and ofﬁcials say alcohol was
involved.
The road remained completely
closed for two hours following the
crash.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155. EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL/NATION

2 Tuesday, August 18, 2015

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
ADKINS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Douglas Adkins,
60, of Point Pleasant, passed away Saturday, Aug.
15, 2015. Arrangements are incomplete and a full
obituary will appear in the Wednesday edition of
the Point Pleasant Register and the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune. Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant is
serving the family.

SUSAN CLAIRE BURGESS
SYRACUSE — Susan
Claire Burgess, 65, of Syracuse, peacefully passed
away Aug. 16, 2015, with
her family at her side.
She was born Oct. 17,
1949, in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Charles
Lytle Jr. and Thelma
(Karr) Lytle. Susan was
a member of St. Paul
Lutheran Church and a
1967 graduate of Pomeroy High School.
She is survived by her
husband of 45 years,
Philip Burgess; son and
daughter-in-law Kevin
and Angie Burgess, of
Bolivar, Ohio; and grand-

daughters Olivia and
Gabrielle Burgess.
A memorial service will
be 7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug.
18, 2015, with Pastor
Martin Francis ofﬁciating
at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visiting hours will be
4-7 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home.
In lieu of ﬂowers, donations in memory of Susan
may be made to the
American Cancer Society
at www.cancer.org.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

Kasich files for 1st-in-the-South primary

CONTACT US

By Meg Kinnard

date to ofﬁcially ﬁle for
South Carolina’s 2016
Republican primary, the
COLUMBIA, S.C. —
ﬁrst contest in the South
Ohio Gov. John Kasich
on Feb. 20.
on Monday landed the
At the endorsement,
endorsement of fellow
announced Monday at
governor Robert Bentthe Alabama Sports Hall
ley of Alabama, as the
of Fame in Birmingham,
presidential hopeful
Bentley said Kasich has
seeks to build support
the executive level expefor his White House bid
rience and background
and courts voters in the
necessary to lead.
South.
“I have watched him
Later in the day, Kasich over the years and I chose
became the third candihim because of his heart,”
Bentley said, adding
that he believes the two
have similar approaches
toward governing.
Kasich said Bentley
has made Alabama’s

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

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

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

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

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

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Do we have your attention now?
Advertise your business
in this space, or bigger
Call us at:

740.992.2155
TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3
4
6

6

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur
(WSAZ)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6

6:30

PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Super
Sleuths"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

PM

6:30

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!
TUESDAY, AUGUST 18

7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Got Talent "Live Round 2" Twelve of the top acts perform Game Night "The Scott
at Radio City Music Hall for the chance to move on. (N)
Wolf of Wall Street" (N)
Got Talent "Live Round 2" Twelve of the top acts perform Game Night "The Scott
at Radio City Music Hall for the chance to move on. (N)
Wolf of Wall Street" (N)
Fresh Off the Fresh Off the Extreme Weight Loss "Hannah" A woman wants to lose
Boat
Boat
all the weight needed so that she can have children. (N)
Navy SEALs: Their Untold Story Learn how the U.S. Navy Frontline "The Retirement
SEALs morphed into the world's most admired
Gamble"
commandoes.
Fresh Off the Fresh Off the Extreme Weight Loss "Hannah" A woman wants to lose
Boat
Boat
all the weight needed so that she can have children. (N)
Zoo "The Cheese Stands
NCIS: New Orleans "RockNCIS "No Good Deed"
Alone" (N)
a-Bye-Baby"
Smarter-5th Grader "Caleb Brooklyn
Last Man on Eyewitness News at 10
(Part 2)/ Evan (Part 1)" (N) Nine-Nine
Earth
Navy SEALs: Their Untold Story Learn how the U.S. Navy Frontline "The Retirement
SEALs morphed into the world's most admired
Gamble"
commandoes.
Zoo "The Cheese Stands
NCIS: New Orleans "RockNCIS "No Good Deed"
Alone" (N)
a-Bye-Baby"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Cinderella Man ('05, Bio) Renée Zellweger, Paul Giamatti, Russell Crowe. TVPG
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Arizona Diamondbacks at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
24 (ROOT) Insider (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
Hey Rookie E:60
WPT Poker World Series
WPT Poker World Series
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption Softball Little League World Series Semifinal (L)
SportsCenter Softball Little League World Series (L)
Dance Moms "Baby Dance Dance Moms "Nia vs.
Dance "Chaos at Nationals
27 (LIFE)
Mama Drama"
Kalani: Winner Takes All"
(Choreographer's Cut)" (N)
The Hunger Games ('12, Act) Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence. The Capitol
29 (FAM)
selects a boy and a girl from the twelve districts to fight to the death. TV14
Ink Master "Tut for Tat"
Ink Master "Problem Parts" Ink Master "Firing Lines"
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Dance Moms Dance Moms
(N)
Startup U "The Hack-AThon" (N)
Ink Master "Composed and
Exposed"
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Talia
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
SVU "Comic Perversion"
SVU "Post-Mortem Blues" WWE Tough Enough (N)
Chrisley
Chrisley
House (N)
Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Clipped (N) The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "Sucker Punch"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles "Love Taps" Rizzoli "Sister Sister" (N)
Proof (N)
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. Death row guards form a relationship
The Shawshank
with an inmate who possesses extraordinary powers. TV14
Redemption TV14
Deadly Catch "Beastmode" D. Catch "I'm the Captain" Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadly Catch "We Have Not Yet Begun to Fight" (SF) (N)
Storage
Storage
S. Wars "My Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
S. Wars "Just Storage
Storage
Wars
Wars
Wars
Little Brony" Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Deserts" (N) Wars (N)
NWL: Most Wanted
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
Yellowstone: Battle for Life
Boss Nails
It Takes a
Worst. Post. Boss Nails
It Takes a
Bad Girls Club "Once Upon Bad Girls Club "Double
Worst. Post.
Sister
a Turnt Up Time"
Trouble" (N)
Ever (N)
(N)
Sister (N)
Ever
Law &amp; Order "Justice"
Law &amp; Order "Marathon" Law &amp; Order "Patsy"
Law&amp;Order "Blood Money" Law &amp; Order "Sundown"
Total Divas "Tea Mode"
E! News (N)
Total Divas
Divas "No Holds Barre" (N) WAGS "The WAG Life" (N)
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
(:35) The Exes (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Super Bowl"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Live Free or Die: Down &amp; Legend of
Live Free or Die: Down &amp;
Legend of
Mick Dodge Dodge "Road Live Free or Die "Blood,
Dirty "Trial by Fire"
Mick Dodge Mick Dodge (N)
Trip" (N)
Sweat, and Tears" (N)
Dirty "Do or Die" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
Adventure Spartan Race
Adventure Spartan Race
Adventure Spartan Race
Adventure Spartan Race
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
MLB Best (N) Pure Sports UEFA Soccer Champions League Bayer vs Lazio
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
(:05) Outlaw Chronicles
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars (N)
Cars (N)
"The Angels Code" (N)
Wives "London Calling"
The Real Housewives
New York City Social (N)
Wives "Reunion Part 1" (N) Wives "Reunion Part 1"
(5:30)
Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins TVPG
Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain (N)
Husbands (N) Punk'd (N)
Caribbean
Caribbean
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip/ Flop (N) Flip or Flop House (N)
House (N)
(4:30)
The Thing
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Arthur escapes from Earth Face Off "Frightful Fiction" Face Off "Surprise of the
Century"
TV14
seconds before it is destroyed to make way for a space highway. (N)

6

PM

Show Me a Hero

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

Dance Moms "City of
Angels" (N)
Next Step Realty: NYC
"The Blacklist" (N)
Ink Master "Predator/ Prey"

9

PM

9:30

Edge of Tomorrow ('14, Sci-Fi) Emily Blunt, Tom Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)
Cruise. A soldier in a war against an alien race becomes
caught in a time loop after he is killed. TV14
(:55)
The Talented Mr. Ripley ('99, Susp) Gwyneth
(:15)
The Grand Budapest Hotel ('14, Com/Dra)
450 (MAX) Paltrow, Matt Damon. A charming sociopath takes over the Tony Revolori, Ralph Fiennes. A hotel concierge, framed for
life of a playboy he admires in 1950s Italy. TV14
murder, must recover and hide a priceless painting. TV14
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle ('92, Thril) Rebecca Masters of Sex "Two
Ray Donovan "Swing Vote"
500 (SHOW) De Mornay. A nanny charms her way into a family's
Scents"
Ray must ensure Verona's
Election Day victory.
employ while planning a violent revenge on them. TVM
400 (HBO)

MOLDEN
NEWARK, Ohio — Charles E. Molden, 81, of
Buckeye Lake, Ohio, passed away Monday, Aug.
17, 2015, in Newark. Arrangements by Birchﬁeld
Funeral Home, Rutland, Ohio.

CREMEENS
LONDON, Ohio — Chester Lawrence Cremeens,
92, passed away peacefully Aug. 15, 2015, at home.
Visitation will be 5-8 p.m. Tuesday at Rader McDonald Tidd Funeral Home, 1355 W. Main St., West
A. SEXTON
Jefferson, Ohio, where the funeral will be 11 a.m.
KERR, Ohio — Amy Arizona Sexton, 90, of Kerr,
Wednesday. Visitation will be one hour prior to the passed away Saturday, August 15, 2015, at Holzer
service. Burial will follow in Deercreek Township
Senior Care, Bidwell, Ohio. Services will be 11 a.m.
Cemetery, London.
Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, at Trinity United Methodist Church, Porter, Ohio. Burial will follow in Pine
HATTEN
Street Cemetery, Gallipolis, Ohio. Friends may call
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Eileen Virginia
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Gallipolis, between
Hatten, 88, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Saturday, Aug.
5-8 p.m. Tuesday.
15, 2015, at Holzer Senior Care, Bidwell, Ohio. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday, Aug. 17, 2015, at WilT. SEXTON
coxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Terri Lynn Sexton,
will follow. Visitation will be one hour prior to the
53, of Willow Wood, died Saturday, Aug. 15, 2015 at
funeral service Monday at the funeral home.
the University of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington, Ky. Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug.
LEGG
18, 2015, at Fairview Missionary Baptist Church,
FLATROCK, W.Va. — Georgia Meadows Legg,
Wilgus, Ohio. Burial will follow in Wilgus Fairview
78, of Flatrock, passed away Sunday, Aug. 16, 2015. Cemetery, Wilgus.

Civitas Media, LLC

Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19,2015, at
Good Shepherd United Methodist Church, in Point
Pleasant. Burial will follow in Forest Hills Cemetery. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, and noon to 1 p.m.
Wednesday prior to the service at the church.

10

PM

10:30

Hard Knocks '15 "Training
Camp With the Houston
Texans" (N)
47 Ronin ('13, Action)
Hiroyuki Sanada, Tadanobu
Asano, Keanu Reeves. TV14
The Affair Noah learns more
about Alison from his best
friend.

state government more
efﬁcient and isn’t afraid
to lead. Alabama faces
a $200 million general
fund budget shortfall that
lawmakers will again face
during a second special
session.
Bentley is the ﬁrst
Deep South governor to
endorse Kasich, who is
generally viewed as being
among the more moderate Republican contenders. Kasich said he didn’t
spend time during his
term as governor building
broader name recognition and that he thinks an
endorsement from Bentley — a past supporter
of and delegate for Mike
Huckabee — will go a
long way.
“It sends a signal
in the South,” Kasich
said before pledging
to return to Alabama.
“It makes a big differ-

ence. Think of us as the
engine that could.”
The two traded autographed footballs after
speaking.
Kasich entered the race
less than a month ago.
But he’s building momentum off a strong showing
at the ﬁrst GOP presidential debate in Cleveland
and has been upping his
proﬁle in early voting
South Carolina, with
more than half a dozen
stops in recent months.
As he ﬁled his candidacy papers later Monday in
Columbia, Kasich blamed
gridlock in Washington
— where he served nine
terms in the U.S. House
— for partisan stalemates
on a variety of issues,
particularly immigration
reform, which he called
“one of those issues that
we have been unable to
ﬁx because of inﬁghting.”

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TUESDAY, AUG. 18
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. Please bring child(ren)’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian. A $10 donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will be
denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood
vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax
(shingles) vaccines will also be available. Call for
eligibility determination. Please see www.meigshealth.com for more information about commercial
insurances that are accepted.

FRIDAY, AUG. 21
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High School Class of
1959 will be holding their third Friday lunch at Fox
Pizza at noon.

41865 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-0540

www.hopewellhealth.org

��9[[]hlaf_�F]o�HYla]flk�
��Hjgna\af_�&lt;]flYd�;Yj]
Most insurances accepted

Sliding fee available
to qualifying patients
60599242

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 3

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Racine Grange addresses issues

86th birthday card shower

Contributed article

mously opposed Meigs
County Home Rule,
RACINE — At the
seeing it as a ruse to
recent meeting of Racine stop fracking. A resoluGrange, community sertion was passed asking
vice was a major topic.
the Ohio Legislature to
The tree still in the
exempt all Ohio judges
lawn of the former Letart and probate court clerks
Falls Elementary School from issuing license for
was planted in the 1930s gay marriages when it
by the fourth-grade
was against their reliclass of Eileen Buck.
gious principles. The
The tree was obtained
Grange also supports
from the “Ohio Farmer”
Congress taking the
magazine. The tree came issue of gay marriage
from the famous Logan
out of the U.S. Supreme
Elm, where Chief Logan Court as allowed by the
signed a treaty with this U.S. Constitution.
country. The tree was
A resolution opposing
dying at that time and
President Obama’s idea
offspring trees were cre- of allowing individuals
ated. One of those trees
and private organizations
is still in the school yard, from paying ransom for
which every student
U.S. citizens because it
attending that school
will cause more kidnapwell remembers. The
ping. Also, those who go
Grange is looking at the
to foreign countries where
possibility of contactkidnappings are common
ing former students to
have to accept kidnapping
obtain donations to place as a possible situation.
a permanent marker at
Problems with fedthe tree. Further investigation will be needed.
Olivia Yost attended
the recent Ohio State
Grange youth camp at
Friendly Hills Grange
camp near Zanesville.
She reported on her
activities and also asked
member to get T.B. test
to assist at the Meigs
County Grange Youth
food booth at the county
fair.
A ﬂood of legislative
topics were considered.
The members unani-

SYRACUSE — Frank Ryther will celebrate his
86th birthday Tuesday, Aug. 18. Send all cards to:
P.O. Box 97, Syracuse, OH 45779.

Carleton preschool screenings
SYRACUSE —Carleton School will be conducting
preschool screenings for children ages 3 and 4 on Aug.
28. If you have concerns about your child’s development, call 740-992-6681 to schedule an appointment.

Meigs Cleanup Day
POMEROY — Meigs Cleanup Day will be Sept. 12
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Meigs County Fairgrounds,
1850. Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy. This event is open
to Meigs County residents only and proof is required,
such as a drivers license or utility bill. Industrial or commercial customers are not eligible. For more information on what items can be recycled, visit www.gjmvrecycle.com or call 1-800-544-1853.

Meigs High School Reunion
POMEROY — The 1975 graduating class of Meigs
High School will be celebrating their 40th reunion at
2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19 at the Gavin Recreational
Building on St. Rt. 554 in Cheshire, Ohio. The class
is currently seeking classmates addresses they have
been unable to locate which, includes but are not
limited to:Robert Michael Allen, Gail Patsy Bailey,
David Eugene Christian, Lois April Fraser (Frasier),
Linda Anne Gerard, Cheryl Dian Haning, David
Dewayne Jones, Eileen Ann Kennedy, Roy E. Lawson,
Jr. ,Irene Malone, Charles M. Miller, Christopher J.
Miller, Debra Diane Mowery, Virginia Viola McCune,
Patricia Lou Darst Smith, Kimberly Elizabeth Stevers,
Thomas Stevers, Daniel E. Taylor, Susan L. Tillis,
Alisa Walker, George Reino Ward, Tery Ray Warner,
Gerald Wayne White and Linda Diane Williams. Anyone who may know addresses for the aforementioned
classmates or for questions about the reunion contact
Cynthia Manley Hartenbach at 740-992-2775 or email
chartenbach57@gmail.com or Scherry Lane Spears at
740-645-2244.

Pot backers, opponents
ready fall campaigns
By Ann Sanner

so needed in our state,”
Associated Press
she said.
The tour announceCOLUMBUS — Those ment came hours before
on both sides of a mari- opponents of the proposjuana legalization proal planned to formally
posal in Ohio readied
launch their campaign at
their fall campaigns on
an afternoon news conMonday, preparing to
ference at Nationwide
sway voters their ways
Children’s Hospital in
at the polls this Novem- Columbus.
ber.
Passage of the proThe group Responsiposed amendment would
bleOhio, which brought make Ohio a rare state
the measure to the
to go from entirely
ballot, announced its
outlawing marijuana to
plans to promote the
allowing it for all uses in
issue statewide from a
a single vote.
bright green, camperlike
The Marijuana Legalvehicle adorned with
ization Amendment
marijuana leaves and
would allow adults 21
phrases such as “YES on and older to purchase
legalization.”
marijuana for medicinal
The vehicle will travel or recreational use and
to all 88 counties ahead to grow four plants for
of the Nov. 3 election,
personal use. It sets up
stopping at college cam- a network of 10 authopuses, local landmarks
rized growing locations
and town squares, said
around the state, some
Faith Oltman, spokesthat have already attractwoman for Responsied private investors, and
bleOhio. Organizers plan lays out a regulatory and
to tell voters at each
taxation scheme for canstop “the high points of nabis.
A separate fall ballot
why marijuana reform is

issue takes aim at the
growing sites described
in the proposed amendment. Voters will be
asked whether monopolies and cartels should
be banned from being
added to Ohio’s constitution. Ofﬁcials say the
anti-monopoly measure
is written in a way to
trump the marijuana
amendment.
On Tuesday, the
state Ballot Board will
approve the phrasing
that voters will see on
Election Day for all ballot issues.

eral income taxes were
discussed. Many drug
dealers have switched to
obtaining illegal income
tax refunds. The grange
passed resolutions calling for Congress to stop
allowing the use of credit
and debit cards for issuing federal tax refunds,
to require W-4 forms
showing income and
withholding on money
earned as employees and
to require businesses to
ﬁle W-4 forms with the
L.R.S. by January 31
annually. These will stop
the fraud.
A member recently lost
a job and because the company had a policy to terminate employees at will
and without reason, could
not collect unemployment.
The Grange passed a
resolution asking that Ohio
law change to permit all
employees terminated after
their probationary period
be entitled to unemploy-

ment beneﬁts.
A discussion on the
current herd of Republican candidate for
president was discussed.
Due to the large number
of candidates and due
to the fact that Ohio is
a winner-take-all state,
a Republican candidate
can win all of Ohio’s
delegates with less than
20 percent of the total
Republican vote. Therefore, the grange passed
a resolution to change
Ohio law on presidential
primaries that there be
a run-off of the top three
party candidates when
more than three are running for president on
Ohio’s ballot.
Plans were made for
display at the display at
the Meigs County Fair.
It was noted that the
premium for the booth
was raised this year after
many years of having no
increase.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
740-992-2955
636 EAST MAIN STREET POMEROY, OH 45769

www.ThePharmacy4u.com
60602165

Mike &amp; Kevin remind you to support
the Youth of Meigs County

Junior Fair Livestock Sale
Per past buyer input, we will not have set times
to start each individual species this year. There
will be short breaks throughout the day.
Dairy Feeder
Market Goats
Market Lambs
Market Beef Steer

Market Dairy Steer
(none for 2015)
Market Hogs
Market Poultry

Market Rabbits
Commercial Beef
Feeders

60603786

Funeral Homes &amp; Cremation Service
Coolville, OH
Pomeroy, OH
740-667-3110
740-992-2121

60603496

White
Schwarzel
Ewing
Schwarzel

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Report the data,
stop gun sales
Gun rights advocates like to cite shooting
incidents such as the one involving Dylann Roof,
accused of killing nine people at a historically
black church in Charleston, S.C., as evidence that
background checks for ﬁrearms just don’t work.
What good are such checks, they often ask, if
people like Roof can purchase ﬁrearms legally?
Proponents of tighter background checks have
the much stronger argument. Roof, whose previous drug charges should have disqualiﬁed him
under federal gun laws, got a gun because his
records weren’t immediately accessible…
Because federal law does not require states to
make information available, background checks
frequently are based on incomplete ﬁles. Statelevel background checks are more thorough, notes
the California-based Law Center to Prevent Gun
Violence, because they can access FBI information
plus state and local data…
There are efforts by the Ohio attorney general’s
ofﬁce to remind local ofﬁcials to report data to
the state, which then sends ﬁles to the FBI, and,
working with the Ohio Supreme Court, to computerize record keeping. What is lacking are laws that
clearly require reporting all relevant records, closing dangerous gaps in the FBI database.
Full reporting, when added to an expanded
time period for background checks and closing
the loophole for private guns sales, ﬁnally would
create a system far more likely to do what was
intended — add to public safety.
— Akron Beacon Journal

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
August 18, the 230th
day of 2015. There are
135 days left in the
year.
Today’s Highlight
in History:
On August 18, 1587,
Virginia Dare became
the ﬁrst child of English parents to be born
in present-day America,
on what is now Roanoke Island in North
Carolina. (However, the
Roanoke colony ended
up mysteriously disappearing.)
On this date:
In 1838, the ﬁrst
marine expedition
sponsored by the U.S.
government set sail
from Hampton Roads,
Va.; the crews traveled
the southern Paciﬁc
Ocean, gathering scientiﬁc information.
In 1846, U.S. forces
led by General Stephen
W. Kearny captured
Santa Fe, N.M.
In 1914, President
Woodrow Wilson
issued his Proclamation
of Neutrality, aimed
at keeping the United
States out of World
War I.
In 1920, the 19th
Amendment to the
Constitution, guaranteeing all American
women’s right to vote,
was ratiﬁed as Tennessee became the 36th
state to approve it.
In 1938, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
and Canadian Prime
Minister William Lyon
Mackenzie King dedicated the Thousand
Islands Bridge connecting the United States
and Canada.
In 1955, the romantic
drama “Love Is a ManySplendored Thing,”
starring William Hold-

en and Jennifer Jones,
had its world premiere
in New York.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former ﬁrst lady
Rosalynn Carter is 88.
Movie director Roman
Polanski is 82. Olympic
gold medal decathlete
Rafer Johnson is 80.
Actor-director Robert
Redford is 79. Actor
Henry G. Sanders is 73.
Actor-comedian Martin
Mull is 72. Rhythm-andblues singer Sarah Dash
(LaBelle) is 70. Rock
musician Dennis Elliott
is 65. Comedian Elayne
Boosler is 63. Country
singer Steve Wilkinson
(The Wilkinsons) is 60.
Actor Denis Leary is
58. Actress Madeleine
Stowe is 57. Former
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (GYT’nur) is 54. ABC News
reporter Bob Woodruff
is 54. The former
president of Mexico,
Felipe Calderon, is 53.
Bluegrass musician
Jimmy Mattingly is 53.
Actor Adam Storke is
53. Actor Craig Bierko
(BEER’-koh) is 51. Rock
singer-musician Zac
Maloy (The Nixons)
is 47. Rock singer and
hip-hop artist Everlast
is 46. Rapper Masta
Killa (Wu-Tang Clan)
is 46. Actor Christian
Slater is 46. Actor
Edward Norton is 46.
Actor Malcolm-Jamal
Warner is 45. Actress
Kaitlin Olson is 40.
Actor-writer-director
Hadjii is 39. Rock musician Dirk Lance is 39.
Actor-comedian Andy
Samberg (TV: “Saturday Night Live”) is 37.
Actress Mika Boorem is
28. Actress Maia Mitchell is 22. Actress Parker
McKenna Posey is 20.

THEIR VIEW

Prisoners have no right to parole

tutional, legal, or inherent
Bernard R. Keith, an
right to parole and no
inmate at Richland Cordue-process right to the correctional Institution serving
rection of errors in OAPA
an indeterminate sentence,
records.
ﬁled an action in the court
The magistrate also found
of appeals requesting a writ
that even if Keith had the
ordering the Ohio Adult
right to the correction of an
Parole Authority (“OAPA”) Paul E.
error, his request was moot,
and Cynthia Mausser
Pfeifer
as the OAPA records had
— the chair of the Ohio
Court of
been corrected to reﬂect
Appeals
Parole Board — to correct
that Keith has been paroled
erroneous information in
six times. The court of
his records regarding the
appeals adopted the magistrate’s
number of times Keith had been
recommendations.
paroled.
After that, Keith’s case came
In November 2011, Keith
before us — the Ohio Supreme
entered Loraine Correctional
Court. The key element of his
Institution to serve a six-month
appeal was an assertion that the
sentence. A hearing ofﬁcer with
the OAPA determined that Keith’s procedure used during his parole
previous parole should be revoked, hearing was improper in that the
information used was erroneous,
and a parole-release hearing was
and the OAPA should have known
scheduled for February 2012.
it was incorrect.
At that February hearing, the
In previous cases, we have estabparole board denied Keith’s parole
and set the next parole hearing for lished that a prisoner has no constitutional or legal right to parole.
62 months later. In explaining its
Because there is no such right, a
rationale, the board cited several
prisoner who is denied parole is
factors and stated that Keith had
not deprived of liberty as long as
been paroled eight times.
state law makes the parole deciKeith sent a letter to Mausser
sion discretionary, and Ohio law
requesting that the decision be
does just that.
corrected to reﬂect the correct
Our court has held that because
number of times he had been
a potential parolee was not
paroled and that the parole board
deprived of life, liberty, or propgrant him a new hearing.
erty by being denied parole, he
The board responded that
could not invoke due process to
Keith’s request did not meet the
challenge his allegedly inaccurate
standard for a reconsideration of
scoresheet. Therefore, the court of
a decision and that it would make
appeals was not unreasonable in
no modiﬁcation of the decision.
concluding that the parole board
That’s when Keith ﬁled his action
had no clear legal duty to correct
with the court of appeals.
Keith’s records.
The OAPA ﬁled a motion to
To support his argument that
dismiss Keith’s case. Both sides
he has a right to a correct record,
requested summary judgment and
Keith cited a 2002 decision by
added afﬁdavits and exhibits to
our court in a case called Layne
the record, and Keith raised addiv. Ohio Adult Parole Auth. In that
tional claims of further errors in
case, the OAPA used a formula
his records.
for projecting an inmate’s earliest
The OAPA asserted that Keith’s
possible release on parole. The
records had been corrected to
reﬂect the correct number of times formula relied on two numbers,
one of which reﬂected the inmate’s
he had been paroled, and further
“offense category score.”
asserted that after the correction
The inmates in Layne had
was made, Mausser had submitbeen assigned incorrect offense
ted the matter to the parole board
category scores, resulting in
to consider the correction. But
potential release dates that were
the board voted not to modify its
previous decision and not to grant substantially later than the dates
that would have resulted from
Keith a new hearing.
the correct scores. We held that
A magistrate for the court of
by assigning each inmate a score
appeals recommended that the
corresponding to an offense more
court grant OAPA’s motion for
serious than the offense for which
summary judgment and deny
he was actually convicted, the
Keith’s motion. The magistrate
OAPA breached the state’s plea
found that Keith had no consti-

agreement with the inmate.
While none of the errors alleged
in Keith’s case breached a plea
agreement, Layne establishes a
minimal standard for the OAPA —
that the language in the law “ought
to mean something.”
At issue in Layne were the
words in the pertinent state law —
“eligible for parole.” We held that
inherent in the language of the law
is “the expectation that a criminal
offender will receive meaningful
consideration for parole.”
In Keith’s case, the language
at issue involves the procedures
relating to parole of a prisoner.
The regulation setting forth the
procedure for parole requires that
in deciding on an inmate’s release,
the parole board is to consider
numerous factors, such as any
ofﬁcial report of the inmate’s prior
criminal record, including a record
of earlier probation or parole, and
other relevant written information.
The existence of this formal process for considering parole rightly
gives parolees some expectation
that they are to be judged on their
own, correct reports. Requiring
the board to consider speciﬁc
factors to determine the inmate’s
ﬁtness for release would not mean
anything if the board is permitted
to rely on incorrect – and therefore
irrelevant – information.
The OAPA has wide-ranging
discretion in parole matters, and a
prisoner lacks any constitutional
or legal right to parole. But, having established a parole system,
and having put in place legal and
regulatory language requiring the
OAPA to consider relevant information regarding a prisoner it is
considering for parole, the state
has created a minimal due-process
expectation that the information
will accurately pertain to the person whose parole is being considered.
Accordingly, where a credible
allegation of substantive inaccuracies in a prisoner’s record is made,
the OAPA is obligated to correct
those errors before considering the
inmate for parole. Therefore — by
a six-to-one vote — we reversed
the court of appeals’ judgment and
granted a writ ordering the OAPA
to investigate Keith’s allegations
and correct substantive errors in
the record used to consider him
for parole.
Paul E. Pfeifer is a judge in the Ohio Court of
Appeals.

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed and include
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be accepted for publication.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 5

Trump takes a detour off the trail, reports for jury duty
By Jake Pearson
and Verena Dobnik

morning, Trump
returned from a lunch
Associated Press
break with copies of
The New York Times,
NEW YORK — DonUSA Today and The
ald Trump pulled up in a
Wall Street Journal. Not
long black limousine and
bringing reading material
gave a very presidential
earlier “was a mistake,”
wave as he made his way
he said.
into the building. Then
Trump said he hadn’t
the billionaire promptly
asked for a postponefound himself seated
ment, because serving
next to ordinary, wagejury duty is “the right
earning, subway-riding
thing to do.” But asked
New Yorkers, forced to
whether he hoped to get
wait — and wait some
cut loose after only one
more — for the wheels of
day, he said: “I hope so.”
justice to turn.
Over the years, many
The Republican
celebrities, including
presidential candidate
Madonna, Spike Lee and
reported for jury duty in
Woody Allen, have been
Manhattan on Monday
called for jury duty in
and spent much of the
New York. Indeed, “Satday like everyone else,
urday Night Live” cast
ﬁlling out forms and
Seth Wenig | AP member Bobby Moyniwondering whether he
Donald Trump, center, gives a fist bump to a pedestrian as he arrives for jury duty Monday in New York. The front-runner said last week han was in the jury pool
would get picked.
with Trump. Moynihan
before a rally in New Hampshire that he would willingly take a break from the campaign trail to answer the summons.
By late afternoon, he
had no comment.
was released without
While it was once
But they largely kept a
escorted to a front-row
come to court, court ofﬁ- great system. It’s a sysgetting selected for a
de
rigueur for doctors,
trial, his civic obligation respectful distance from seat in a juror waittem that works,” Trump
cers’ union leader Denlawyers,
various other
the real estate mogul,
ing room to ﬁll out a
fulﬁlled.
said at midday. “They do
nis Quirk said. Trump
professionals
and elected
Trump had high praise reality TV star and GOP questionnaire about bio- also brought his own,
a fantastic job, and I met ofﬁcials to get out of jury
graphical basics, hobbies,
for the public servants at front-runner.
some wonderful people.” duty, the state eliminated
unarmed bodyguard.
“He makes it a little
experiences with crime
the courthouse, saying:
After sitting silently
“It’s
a
system,
and
we
their exemptions in
and the courts, and occu“The people in the court more bearable,” said
through
much of the
go
through
it.
And
it’s
a
1996.
system are really profes- Christian Johnson, 21, a pation. Trump said he
sional. It was an honor to University at Albany stu- listed real estate, “only
dent doing jury duty for
because I refuse to say
see how it worked.”
the ﬁrst time. “He’s giv‘politician.’”
The businessman’s
Jury assembly supervilimo arrived in the morn- ing me a lot of material
LOCAL STOCKS
for my Snapchat.”
sor Irene Laracuenta told
ing at the foot of the
Another juror, retiree
the prospective jurors
courthouse steps familiar
AEP (NYSE) — 58.35
BBT (NYSE) —40.19
Renee Shapiro, said:
that celebrities are entito viewers of TV’s “Law
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.90
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.74
“I’m looking at him and
tled to the same privacy
&amp; Order,” and he was
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 116.18
Pepsico (NYSE) — 99.86
I’m saying, ‘Are my eyes — and face the same
met by a throng of camBig Lots (NYSE) — 42.94
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.77
era crews, reporters and deceiving me?’” She said selection process — as
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.39
Rockwell (NYSE) — 117.00
he looked taller than she anyone else.
onlookers. Some booed,
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 46.79
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.82
expected.
“No one — no one —
while others greeted
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 5.83
Royal Dutch Shell — 56.10
The civic duty was
gets special treatment,”
him with ﬁst bumps and
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.350
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 25.33
somewhat overdue
she said.
books for him to sign.
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.65
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 71.91
Still, from a secuInside, a lawyer posed for Trump, who had
Collins (NYSE) —87.81
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.08
been summoned but
rity standpoint, Trump
DuPont (NYSE) — 54.27
for a selﬁe with him, a
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.30
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.65
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.37
didn’t appear ﬁve times
sketch artist presented
wasn’t treated entirely
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.21
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
before. His campaign
him with a drawing to
like everyone else.
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 59.88
ET closing quotes of transactions
explained that Trump
sign, and a bystander
A special team of uniJP
Morgan
(NYSE)
—
68.07
Aug. 17, 2015, provided by Edward
never got those sumexhorted him to “save
formed and plainclothes
Kroger
(NYSE)
—
38.65
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
this country!”
monses because they had ofﬁcers shadowed him to
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 81.51
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
A murmur went
been sent to the wrong
make sure he could get
Norfolk So (NYSE) —82.15
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
through the 75 or so
address.
around the courthouse
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.20
674-0174. Member SIPC.
other prospective jurors
After ﬁling through
easily, as is standard
when Trump walked in.
security, Trump was
when high-proﬁle people

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

69°

78°

77°

A shower or thunderstorm in spots today and
tonight. High 82° / Low 70°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

86°
65°
86°
64°
100° in 1988
50° in 1979

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.92
2.13
34.52
28.64

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:44 a.m.
8:20 p.m.
10:25 a.m.
10:20 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Aug 22 Aug 29

Last

Sep 5

Sep 13

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

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

Major
2:49a
3:36a
4:24a
5:12a
5:59a
6:47a
7:36a

Minor
8:59a
9:47a
10:35a
11:23a
12:11p
12:36a
1:23a

Chillicothe
83/69

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
83/69

Primary: ragweed/grass/other
Mold: 3146
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
83/69

Major
3:10p
3:58p
4:46p
5:35p
6:23p
7:12p
8:02p

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
9:21p
10:09p
10:57p
11:46p
---1:00p
1:49p

WEATHER HISTORY
Hurricane Bob was 45 miles south of
Cape Hatteras, N.C., at 9 a.m. EDT on
Aug. 18, 1991. It had sustained winds
of 115 mph and gusts to 130 mph.
Hurricane warnings were issued from
the Carolinas to New England.

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.06
15.73
21.20
12.62
13.55
25.06
13.13
25.58
34.74
13.12
15.60
34.40
13.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.13
+0.35
+0.48
+0.42
+0.31
-0.04
-0.23
-0.30
+0.02
-0.22
-0.40
-0.30
-1.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

83°
61°

SUNDAY

86°
65°

89°
69°

Belpre
82/70

Athens
82/69

St. Marys
83/68

Parkersburg
81/68

Coolville
82/69

Elizabeth
83/69

Spencer
82/68

Buffalo
82/69
Milton
83/70
Huntington
80/68

St. Albans
83/71

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
87/62
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
76/61
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
83/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
El Paso
Flurries
100/76
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

86°
59°

Mostly cloudy and
warm

Marietta
81/69

Murray City
81/68

Ironton
82/68

Ashland
81/68
Grayson
81/70

MONDAY

Lots of sun with a
t-storm possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
82/68

Wilkesville
80/67
POMEROY
Jackson
82/69
82/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
83/69
82/69
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
82/69
GALLIPOLIS
82/70
83/70
82/69

South Shore Greenup
82/68
82/69

56

SATURDAY

A couple of showers Sunny to partly cloudy Pleasant with times of
and a thunderstorm
and nice
clouds and sun

McArthur
81/69

Waverly
83/68

Pollen: 15

FRIDAY

78°
59°

Adelphi
82/68

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

0 50 100 150 200

New

Clouds and sun,
humid; a p.m. t-storm

5

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

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

Primary: basidiospores

Wed.
6:45 a.m.
8:18 p.m.
11:20 a.m.
10:51 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

84°
69°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Clendenin
82/69
Charleston
82/70

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
71/52

Billings
65/46

Denver
74/48

Montreal
87/69

Minneapolis
65/57

Toronto
83/65
Detroit
84/70

New York
91/75

Chicago
82/68
Washington
92/75

Kansas City
76/56

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
97/63/s
68/52/sh
84/71/t
85/74/s
89/71/t
65/46/pc
89/60/s
88/70/s
82/70/pc
82/71/t
67/43/t
82/68/c
83/68/pc
84/67/t
81/69/pc
97/78/s
74/48/t
74/58/t
84/70/t
89/75/sh
94/78/t
84/69/pc
76/56/t
107/79/s
90/73/t
83/65/pc
86/74/pc
92/80/t
65/57/r
81/71/pc
88/78/t
91/75/s
88/63/t
92/75/t
93/75/t
107/85/s
81/68/pc
85/64/pc
81/70/t
88/71/t
88/70/t
85/59/s
76/61/pc
87/62/s
92/75/t

Hi/Lo/W
91/62/s
68/49/s
84/72/t
82/73/t
86/72/t
77/55/s
91/64/s
86/69/pc
83/70/t
88/71/t
69/45/s
77/57/t
82/64/t
86/65/t
85/65/t
91/67/t
73/54/s
72/57/pc
86/61/t
89/77/pc
90/77/t
80/60/t
71/54/pc
108/78/s
84/63/t
82/66/pc
82/65/t
91/79/t
62/55/r
81/67/t
88/78/t
84/74/pc
71/52/t
93/76/t
87/74/t
106/84/s
84/69/t
82/63/pc
86/72/t
83/71/t
77/60/t
87/65/s
75/61/pc
88/60/pc
86/77/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/71

High
Low

109° in Needles, CA
30° in Boca Reservoir, CA

Global
Chihuahua
91/64

High
Low

Houston
94/78

Monterrey
97/69

GOALS

Miami
92/80

121° in Mitribah, Kuwait
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

TODAY

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 s Page 6

All eyes on
QBs at OSU
COLUMBUS (AP) —
The most-talked-about
quarterback competition in
college football even has the
other Ohio State Buckeyes
paying more attention than
usual to preseason practices.
“It is very interesting,”
chatty safety Tyvis Powell
said Sunday during Buckeyes’ media day. “You know
what it does, when you’re
not in, you sit back and you
watch. You’re like, ‘He’s having a bad day, but he’s having a really good day.’ And
then it ﬂips, ‘You know he’s
having a bad day, but he’s
having a really good day.’
“I can’t wait to see who’s
going to jog out there on
Sept. 7.”
J.T. Barrett or Cardale
Jones?
The 2014 Big Ten player
of the year or the guy who
came out of nowhere to
guide the Buckeyes to the
national championship after
Barrett was injured?
Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer says he will not
reveal the answer until the
defending national champions open their season
Labor Day night against
Virginia Tech, the last team
to beat the Buckeyes.
Ohio State has three days
of two-a-day practices this
week, starting Monday. If
either Jones or Barrett is
going to seize the job, this
would be an excellent time
to do it.
While Meyer would prefer the starter to be a gametime decision publicly, he
probably needs to make
a choice the week before
opening night for the purposes of game-planning.
Meyer said he would
meet with co-offensive
coordinators Tim Beck and
Ed Warinner on Sunday to
go over the data from the
ﬁrst week of practice. So
far, Meyer likes what he
sees from both players.
“I think they’re both
right there and you probably wouldn’t expect me to
say anything different, but
that’s what it is. They’re
both working they’re tails
off and it’s one of the most
refreshing competitions
I’ve ever witnessed,” Meyer
said. “When I say best
friends, they’re unbelievable
how well they get along.”
The reality is Barrett and
Jones have been competing
with each other since the
spring of 2014, when they
were vying to be Braxton
Miller’s backup.
“I don’t think it’s something that will ever change
in our relationship,” said
Barrett, who set a Big Ten
record by accounting for 45

touchdowns before breaking his ankle in the seasonﬁnale against Michigan.
Jones won the spring last
year, but Barrett took the
job in August. Then Miller
re-injured his throwing
shoulder late in camp and
Barrett secured the starting
job.
Barrett learned from last
year to not try to one-up
Jones in practice.
“He made a play then I
got to force it and then I
throw a pick and it’s like
why’d you do that? I didn’t
really have an answer,”
Barrett said. “What am
I going to tell (former
offensive coordinator Tom)
Herman. ‘I tried to make a
play because Cardale made
a play?’ He would have
probably move me to like,
longsnapper.
“It’s just focusing on
myself and then what’s best
for the offense.”
Jones said he also has
a much healthier attitude
than last year, when he was
too concerned about being
able to match Miller, the
two-time Big Ten player of
the year who is now moving to receiver.
“Know what you can and
know what you can’t do,”
said Jones, 9-month-old
daughter Chloe Michelle
on his knee working a paciﬁer while her now famous
father did interviews during
an Ohio State media day for
the ﬁrst time since becoming a member of the team
in 2012.
In three starts last season, Jones became one
of the most recognizable
names in college football.
The 6-foot-5, 250-pound
junior passed for 742 yards
and ﬁve touchdowns in
Ohio State victories against
Wisconsin (Big Ten title
game), Alabama (national
semiﬁnal) and Oregon
(College Football Playoff
championship).
It was a remarkable turnaround for a player who
Meyer has said had a lot of
growing up to do.
Jones acknowledges he
did not handle well coming
out on the short end of last
year’s competition with
Barrett.
“I kind of went to kind of
a dark place,” Jones said.
Jones said that will not
be a problem last year. He
wants to win the job, but it
losing it will not break him
— or Barrett.
“We know we want the
best for each other and
most important we want
the best for the team,”
Jones said. “It’s going to
be bittersweet for whoever
starts.”

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 18

Golf
River Valley/Meigs at Alexander, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Warren, 2 p.m.
Eastern Girls at Meigs Girls, 3:15

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19

Golf
Wahama/Waterford at Miller/Trimble, 4 p.m.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 20

Golf
River Valley/South Gallia at Gallia Academy,
4:30
Southern/Belpre at Eastern, 4 p.m.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 22

Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, 2 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, noon

Southern golfers top Rebels
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — The Southern golf team had some
good road fortunes Friday after picking up a pair of
wins over Federal Hocking and host South Gallia in
a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division match at
Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia County.
The Tornadoes ﬁred a winning team tally of 215,
which was 17 strokes better than the competition.
The Rebels placed second overall with a 232, while
the Lancers did not have enough players to record a
team score. In fact, FHHS had only one player at the
event, and that player did not post a ﬁnal score.
Jensen Anderson paced SHS with a medalist effort of
49, followed by Jonah Hoback with 50 and Ryan Acree
with 54. Eli Hunter rounded out the winning total with
a 60, while Ashley Acree and Trey Wood also added
respective rounds of 67 and 68 for the Purple and Gold.
Cuyler Mills paced SGHS with a 50, followed by
Curtis Haner with a 51 and Tristen Davis with a 62.
Joshua Henry completed the Rebels’ tally with a 69,
while Caleb Henry also shot a 70 for the hosts.
Raiders 3rd at Jackson quad
JACKSON, Ohio — The River Valley golf team
ﬁnished third out of four teams Friday during a nonDonald Lambert | OVP Sports league quad match held at Franklin Valley Golf Club
Southern sophomore Jonah Hoback hits a chip shot during Friday’s in Jackson County.
TVC Hocking golf match against South Gallia and Federal Hocking
at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.

See GOLFERS | 10

Kenseth in control at Michigan
BROOKLYN, Mich.
(AP) — Matt Kenseth
had little to say about how
NASCAR’s rules package
affected his race at Michigan International Speedway.
“I didn’t see much of the
race, which was totally ﬁne
with me,” he said. “We were
up front the whole time.”
Kenseth started in the
lead, stayed there for most
of the race and ﬁnished
with his third Sprint Cup
victory of the season Sunday, beating Kevin Harvick
by 1.7 seconds.
It was the second race
under NASCAR’s high-drag
aerodynamic package,
which was also in place at
Indianapolis last month in
an effort to improve passing. At Michigan, Kenseth
won while leading 146
of 200 laps — so whatever excitement there was
occurred further back in the
pack.
“Cars could really, at the
end of the straightaway,
gain on others, two or three
car lengths,” said Jason Ratcliff, Kenseth’s crew chief.
“But they just couldn’t do
much once they got there,
and they got down in the
corner. They were kind of
helpless. On the restarts,
it got exciting. … I’d say
eighth place back, it was fun
to watch. Like Matt said,
I’m glad he was watching it
in the rear-view mirror.”
Kenseth led for 73 percent of the laps Sunday, the
highest percentage by anyone in a Cup race this year.
He’d led for only 147 laps all
season before dominating
this 400-mile race in his No.
20 Toyota.
It was his 34th career
victory, and Joe Gibbs Racing has won ﬁve of the last
six Cup races — two by
Kenseth and three by Kyle
Busch.
“You really need to enjoy
it, because about 10 races
back, we were struggling,
trying to get there,” Gibbs
said. “You just hope now
that we’ll be able to hold
some momentum here and
head into the Chase, but
it’s very hard to do. In pro
sports, it can come and go
in a week.”
JGR came into the race
with the top three qualiﬁers
in Kenseth, Denny Hamlin
and Carl Edwards. Hamlin
ﬁnished ﬁfth and Edwards
was sixth.
Martin Truex Jr. ﬁnished
behind Harvick in third.

AP Photo/Bob Brodbeck

Matt Kenseth raises the trophy after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup series auto race at Michigan
International Speedway, Sunday, Aug. 16, in Brooklyn, Mich.

Austin Dillon, who was sent
to the back at the beginning
of the race because of an
engine change, managed a
fourth-place showing, and
Kyle Busch took another
step toward wrapping up a
spot in the Chase with an
11th-place run in his backup
car.
Kenseth had a comfortable lead before a caution
with 17 laps remaining
tightened things up, but he
had little trouble holding off
Harvick after the restart.
NASCAR used a special
high-drag aerodynamic
package for this race and
last month’s at Indianapolis
Motor Speedway. It was
supposed to improve passing, but aside from one brief
duel at the front between
Kenseth and Dillon with
about 55 laps left, there was
little drama in terms of lead
changes.
Kenseth led for the ﬁrst
22 laps, and there were 16
lead changes after that.

Clint Bowyer’s Chase
chances look more tenuous
after he went into the wall
Sunday and ﬁnished 41st.
He’s now 15th in the standings.
Busch came into the
race in 30th place, needing
to avoid major mistakes
because although he has
four wins in 2015, a top30 ranking is required for
entry into the Chase. Busch
wrecked his car in practice
Saturday and had to start
the race from the back, but
he had a solid, uneventful day, even leading for a
couple stretches.
He’s now 29th in the
standings, 23 points ahead
of 31st-place Cole Whitt.
“It was a success,” Busch
said. “It wasn’t what we
wanted. We had a really,
really fast car yesterday, but
I screwed up and wrecked
that car. It was a winning
car, maybe not the winning
car. But congratulations to
our teammate Matt Kenseth

and the ‘20’ bunch. It’s really good times for Joe Gibbs
Racing right now.”
Harvick remained atop
the standings and now leads
Joey Logano by 48 points.
Logano ﬁnished seventh.
The rules package caused
some concerns over the
heat, and NASCAR mandated a dual outlet duct be
used on the right-side window to help with ventilation
and keep the cockpit from
being too hot for the drivers. NBC Sports showed a
reading of over 150 degrees
in the cockpit of Casey
Mears’ car — and that was
still during the ﬁrst quarter
of the race.
“You knew it was going
to be a little bit hotter. We
prepared for that,” Kenseth
said. “Started hydrating
a couple days ago and
drinking a lot of Gatorade
and tried to eat right and
get some sleep. … It really
wasn’t bad. Yeah, it was hot,
but I’ve been a lot hotter.”

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 7

Miscellaneous

Automotive

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Help Wanted General

2002 Dodge Ram 3500 Van
9 passenger with wheelchair
lift ac works good new rear
shocks good tires
740-446-3232 or
740-645-0203
asking $4500

Laundry &amp; Housekeeping Supervisor II position for work in a
114 bed Long Term Care Facility. Salary is commensurate
with experience. To apply go to
www,personnel.wv.gov. Lakin
Hospital is an EEO/AA Employer.

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Serving Gallia,
Meigs Co.
and
Mason Wv.
Ron Evans
Jackson,Oh
1-800-537-9528
Money To Lend
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)

Help Wanted General
Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring full time STNAҋs and
offering a 600.00 Sign on
Bonus. Must have Certificate
of Completion or State
Certification in Ohio.
Background check and drug
screen required. Please apply
in person at 170 Pinecrest
Drive in Gallipolis.

Arbors at Pomeroy
is NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time
Cook/Dietary Aid Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

60583312

GUN SHOW
MARIETTA
Washington Co. Fairgrounds
Aug 22 &amp; 23
922 Front Street
Adm$5 6ҋ Tbls $35
740-667-0412
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
Free Recliner. Phone 304-4581657

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

For Sale By Owner

Professional Services

Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring a part time
ACTIVITIES ASSISTANT
for weekend shift. Must submit to background check and
drug screen. Please apply in
person at 170 Pinecrest Drive
in Gallipolis.

Notices

Business &amp; Trade School

Arbors at Pomeroy
NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time STNAs
or CNAs, Part Time &amp; PRN
LPNs. Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

CAREER OPPORTUNITY!
Research/Planning Specialist,
GIS/GPS, Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission,
Waverly, Ohio $30,000 and
up; visit www.ovrdc.org
for details.
Diesel Mechanic needed
at local business.
Salary negotiable depending
on experience.
Mon-Fri, 7:30am- 4:00pm.
Send resumes to:
Blind Box 15
825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Employment Opportunity
Local manufacturing company seeking to hire skilled
welders and painters.
Looking for experienced individuals who are detail and
job oriented. Benefits
Available. Apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue,
Gallipolis, Oh

Help Wanted General

WANTED: Emergency Relief (Substitute) Workers needed to
assist individuals with developmental disabilities in Meigs
County. Evening/weekend/overnight hours. High school
degree/GED, valid driverҋs license and three years good driving
experience required. $9.75/hr after training. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640; or email: beyecserv@yahoo.com . Equal Opportunity
Employer.

House for Sale and Lot on
Honeysuckle Dr. Cheshire,
OH. Call for details
740-709-1496
Mobile Home for sale
Proctorville, Ohio area
2002 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1 bath furnished excellent
condition 17,000
813-767-9922

3BR, 2BA, on Farm,
$750 per month
540-729-1331

Trucks/SUVs/Vans
For Sale a 1996 Ford Econoline work van with some
shelving - needs a little work
as is $2,000 OBO 740-4411236 Leave message

FOR SALE OR LEASE
Medical / Professional
office building
close to Holzer Hospital.
Two suites (one rented)
priced to sale
call 740-709-1221

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

Rentals

Want To Buy

Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport overlooking
Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$650.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953

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

Houses For Rent

House for Rent near Holzer
hospital 3 bedrooms,
kitchen,dining room, utility
closet. 1 and 1/2 bathrooms,
2 car garage, no pets or
smoking, gas heat and air.
$685 month plus utilities and
deposit phone 740-645-3836

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

House for Rent-3 Bedroom, 2
Story, No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Free 6 wk old black kitten
ready to go to a good home.
304-675-2071

Tree Service
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

Sales
Call

Pets

Sales / Business Development

Houses For Sale
3BR 2BA
$33,900
740-446-3570

SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY LAW

4br 2ba, Brick front Bi-Level,
Living, Family, Utility, New
Carpet, New Metal Roof,
Detached 2 Car Garage
All electric. Walking
distance to high school
Pet free&amp;smoke free home
830 30th St Point Pleasant.
304-674-6262
Asking $135,000
(no land contract or rental)

Win...No Award / No Fee

All Cases Considered

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

�Applications/Hearings/Appeals
�Immediate Access to
Experienced Personnel

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

�We Strive For Quick
Claim Approval

�Free Consultation

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

CALL TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE HELP!

(800) 615-1256

Bill Gordon &amp; Associates is a nationwide practice limited to representing clients before the Social Security Administration.
Bill Gordon is a member of the Texas &amp; New Mexico Bar Associations. The attorneys at Bill Gordon &amp; Associates work for quick
approval of every case. Results in your case will depend on the unique facts and circumstances of your claim.

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

Want The Best Deal
On TV &amp; Internet?

Auctions

AUCTION
Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015
@ 5:00 P.M

Get
DISH!

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER, ROUTE 62 N,
MASON, WV. SELLING THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
CLIFFORD AND CLARA DUNN, PLUS ANOTHER
PARTIAL ESTATE.
ANTIQUE &amp; MODERN FURNITURE &amp; APPL: 3 Pc.
Mah. BR Suite; Set of Maple Bunk Beds; 2 Pc. Sectional LR
Suite w/Hyda-Bed; 3 Pc. French Prov. Coffee Table &amp; End
Tables; Aerosonic Piano; Peach Colored Sofa; Beautiful DR
Suite, Table, 6 Chairs &amp; China Cab.; Kenmore Dorm Type
Refrigerator; Kenmore 19 CF Upright Freezer; Wing Back
Chair; 2 Matching Leather Top Chests; Mah. Bow Front
Dresser; Victorian Table; Game Table; Early Slave Bed;
Cherry Poster Bed; Riverside Maple Desk; Ofﬁce Desk; Wash
Stand; Nice Early Dough Box; Early Flatwall Cabinet; Cherry
Drop Leaf Table; Patio Furniture; Barstools; Table &amp; Chairs.
COLLECTIBLES: 3 Gal. AP Donaghho, Parkersburg, WV
Stone Jar; 3 Gal Uhl Stone Churn; Buggy Robe; Early Dough
Box on Turned Legs; Vintage Popcorn Machine, MUST SEE!!
Linens; Quilts; Radio Flyer Wagon; Oil Lamps; Tackle Box &amp;
Lures; Lard Press; Old Tricycle; Croquet Set; Haviland China;
Fenton &amp; Much More
GENERAL HOUSEHOLD: Pots; Pans; Tools; New 14”
Electric Chain Saw; 14” Cut Off Saw.
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID.
FOOD AVAILABLE

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR. #1955

304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures

19.99

$

/mo.

for 12 months.
Not eligible with Hopper.

ADD
HIGH-SPEED
INTERNET

14

.95
/mo.

$

where available

FREE

FREE
SAME DAY
INSTALLATION

PREMIUM CHANNELS
For 3 months.

in up to 6 rooms

CALL TODAY INSTALLED
TODAY!
where available

Offer subject to change based on premium channel availability.

NO ONE CAN
COMPARE TO

DIRECTV

DISH!

240+ Channel
TV package

$39.99/mo
for a whole year!

$92.99/mo

$84.99/mo

HD DVR

$12/mo plus FREE
Hopper Upgrade

$25.00/mo

$16.95/mo

HD Service

HD FREE FOR LIFE

Included in HD DVR fee

$26.95/mo

$117.99/mo

$128.89/mo

Total

$51.99/mo

All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification.
Remote viewing requires Wi-Fi connection or use of Hopper Transfer feature.

Call Now And Save 50%

With qualifying packages
and offers.

1-800-401-1670
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB62015

60603562

Home Improvements

Lease

TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Offers valid through 6/10/15 and require activation of new qualifying DISH service with 24-month commitment and credit qualification. An Early Termination fee of $20 for each month remaining will apply if service is terminated during the first 24 months. All prices, fees,
charges, packages, programming, features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice. PROGRAMMING DISCOUNT: Requires qualifying programming. Receive a discount for each of the first 12 months as follows: $35 per month with America’s Top 250; $30 per month with America’s Top
200; $25 per month with America’s Top 120, America’s Top 120 Plus; $15 per month with Smart Pack; $25 per month with DishLATINO Dos, DishLATINO Max; $20 per month with DishLATINO Plus; $15 per month with DishLATINO Clásico; $5 per month with DishLATINO Basico. After 12-month promotional
period, then-current monthly price applies and is subject to change. You will forfeit discount in the case of a downgrade from qualifying programming or service disconnection during first 12 months. HD FREE FOR LIFE: Requires qualifying programming and continuous enrollment in AutoPay with
Paperless Billing. Additional $10/mo. HD fee is waived for life of current account. Offer is limited to channels associated with selected programming package. Qualifying programming packages are America’s Top 120 and above, DishLATINO Plus and above. You may forfeit free HD in the case of service
disconnection. PREMIUMS FREE FOR 3 MONTHS: Receive Showtime, Starz, Blockbuster @Home and Encore free for the first 3 months. You must maintain all four movie services during the promotional period. Offer value $132. After 3 months, then-current prices will apply unless you elect to downgrade.
6 FREE MONTHS OF PROTECTION PLAN: Receive the Protection Plan free for the first 6 months. Offer value $48. After 6 months, then-current price will apply unless you elect to downgrade. Change of Service fee will apply if you cancel the Protection Plan during the first 6 months. DIGITAL HOME
ADVANTAGE: EQUIPMENT: All equipment remains the property of DISH at all times and must be returned to DISH within thirty days of account deactivation or you will be charged an unreturned equipment fee ranging from $100 to $400 per receiver. Lease Upgrade fees are not deposits and are
non-refundable. Maximum of 6 leased receivers (supporting up to 6 total TVs) per account. You will be charged a monthly equipment rental fee for each receiver beyond the first, based on model of receiver. WHOLE-HOME HD DVR: Monthly fees: Hopper, $12; Joey, $7, Super Joey, $10; second Hopper,
$12. First Hopper HD DVR receiver and up to 3 Joey receivers available for a one-time $199 Upgrade fee. $199 Upgrade fee waived at time of service activation with subscription to America’s Top 120 and above or DishLATINO Plus and above. A second Hopper HD DVR receiver is available for a one-time
Upgrade fee: $49 for a Hopper, $99 for a Hopper with Sling. With a second Hopper HD DVR receiver, one additional Joey receiver is available for a one-time $99 Upgrade fee. Hopper and Joey receivers cannot be combined with any other receiver models or types. PrimeTime Anytime and AutoHop
features must be enabled by customer and are subject to availability. With PrimeTime Anytime record ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC plus two channels. With addition of Super Joey record two additional channels. AutoHop feature is available at varying times, starting the day after airing, for select primetime
shows on ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC recorded with PrimeTime Anytime. Recording capacity varies; 2000 hours based on SD programming. Equipment comparison based on equipment available from major TV providers as of 12/01/14. Watching live and recorded TV anywhere requires an
Internet-connected, Sling-enabled DVR and compatible mobile device. On Demand availability varies based on your programming subscription. Requires Android OS 4.0 or higher to watch on an Android device and iOS 7.0 or higher to watch on iPhone or iPad. Select DVR recordings cannot be
transferred. ALL OTHER RECEIVER MODELS: Lease Upgrade fee(s) will apply for select receivers, based on model and number of receivers. Monthly DVR and receiver fees may apply. Digital Home Advantage offer is available from DISH and participating retailers for new and qualified former DISH
residential customers in the continental United States. You must provide your Social Security Number and a valid major credit card. Participating retailers may require additional terms and conditions. The first month of DISH service must be paid at time of activation. Number of channels may decline.
Local and state sales taxes and state reimbursement charges may apply. Where applicable, monthly equipment rental fees and programming are taxed separately. Standard Professional Installation includes typical installation of one single-dish antenna configuration, typical hook-up of an eligible
receiver configuration and equipment testing. More complex installations may require additional fees; other installation restrictions apply. Prices valid at time of activation only; additional fees will apply to upgrade after installation. Any unreturned equipment fees will automatically be charged to your
DISH account or credit or debit card provided to DISH. DISH shall determine eligibility for this offer in its sole and absolute discretion. Programming and other services provided are subject to the terms and conditions of the Digital Home Advantage Customer Agreement and Residential Customer
Agreement, available at www.dish.com or upon request. Blackout and other restrictions apply to sports programming. All service marks and trademarks belong to their respective owners. ©2015 DISH Network L.L.C. All rights reserved. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the
property of Home Box Office, Inc. HBO On Demand® and Cinemax On Demand® require compatible HD DVR receiver model. HBO GO® and MAX GO® are only accessible in the US and certain US territories where a high-speed connection is available. Minimum connection of 3 Mbps required for HD
viewing on laptop. Minimum 3G connection is required for viewing on mobile devices. Some restrictions may apply. SHOWTIME and related marks are registered trademarks of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment,
LLC. ESPN GamePlan, NHL Center Ice, NBA League Pass, ESPN Full Court and MLS Direct Kick automatically continue at a special renewal rate each year provided DISH carries this service, unless you call to cancel prior to the start of the season. ESPN GamePlan, NHL Center Ice, NBA League Pass, ESPN Full
Court and MLS Direct Kick are nonrefundable, nonproratable and nontransferable once the season begins. NHL, the NHL Shield and Center Ice name and logo are registered trademarks and The Game Lives Where You Do is a trademark of the National Hockey League. NHL and NHL team marks are the
property of the NHL and its teams. © NHL 2015. All Rights Reserved. NBA, the NBA logo and team identifications are the exclusive property of NBA Properties, Inc. © 2015. All rights reserved. © 2015 NFL Enterprises LLC. NFL and the NFL Shield design are registered trademarks of the National Football
League. MLS Direct Kick is a trademark of MLS. Sling is a registered trademark of Sling Media, Inc. All new customers are subject to a one-time processing fee.

�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Miller expects to make big plays

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Meet
the Teams night

By Jim Naveau

blessed me that I can play any position on the ﬁeld. I just pray every
night I have a healthy season,” he
COLUMBUS — Braxton Miller
said.
did not become a receiver after a
Informed that quarterback Carlifetime of playing quarterback to
dale Jones said he had looked like
become a possession receiver, a
it was his ﬁrst time playing receivpart-time player or a decoy.
er when OSU began practice last
He thinks he can be every bit as Monday, Miller said, “First time?
dangerous — maybe even more of Yeah, right. Ask him again. Ask
a threat than he was as a two-time (defensive back) Vonn Bell.”
Big Ten Offensive Player of the
Miller acknowledged playing
Year as Ohio State’s quarterback in receiver is hard work, maybe even
2012 and 2013 — as a receiver this more work than he thought it
season.
would be.
As a pass catcher, he ﬁgures he
Speciﬁcally, receivers do a lot
will be far deeper into opposing
more running in practice than
defenses when he gets the ball than
quarterbacks do.
he was when he started several
“After the second day, I was like,
yards behind the line of scrim‘I
don’t
know how y’all do it.’ I ran
mage, which should work to his
four
miles
a day and I barely ran a
advantage.
mile
at
quarterback.
It’s going good
“You’re already on the second
other
than
my
legs
being
sore. I
or third level (of the defense). All
just
want
to
be
the
best
at
what I
you have to do is make one person
do.
Whatever
I
do
on
the
ﬁeld,
I
miss and it’s off to the races,” he
just
want
to
be
the
best
at
it.”
said, smiling at the opportunity to
Miller’s role could include throwleave defenders ﬂailing in his wake
ing the ball, a hint he dropped on
again.
It’s not just his return to the ﬁeld Sunday.
When he was asked who would
after two surgeries on his throwing
emerge
from the contest between
shoulder that has Miller excited.
J.T.
Barrett
and Jones to be the
It’s the fact Ohio State’s offense
starting
quarterback,
he said,
should be electric this year. Or
“There’s
always
going
to be two
maybe more like electronic.
quarterbacks
on
the
ﬁeld
at the
“It’s like playing a video game
same time.”
where you can put anybody anyCoach Urban Meyer also talked
where,” Miller said at Ohio State’s
about using Miller’s arm in OSU’s
media day on Sunday.
offense, but said he is being careful
The ﬁfth-year senior has never
not to risk another shoulder injury.
lacked conﬁdence and brings
He said he decided not to practhe same belief in his abilities to
tice a double pass involving Miller
receiver that he had as a quarterand one of the other quarterbacks
back.
last week for that reason. “God
“I’ve always had conﬁdence in
myself. I’m fortunate that God
forbid he throws that darned thing

jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy High
School will be holding a Meet the Teams night
at approximately 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, at
Memorial Field in Gallia County. The event is free
and open to the public, and all levels of fall sports
at GAHS and GAMS will be introduced at the
event.

PPHS Meet the Teams night
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Point Pleasant Junior-Senior High School will be holding a
Meet the Teams night at approximately 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 19, 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.

Meet the Marauders Night
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — Meigs High School
will be hosting a Meet the Marauders night at 7
p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 26, at Farmers Bank Stadium Holzer Field. Players from all teams will be
introduced to the public and the Marauder band
will also take part in the festivities. Admission to
the event is free.

Southern Girls
Bball Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern girls basketball
program will be hosting a beneﬁt golf scramble at
the Riverside Golf Club on Saturday, August 29, at
9 a.m. The cost is $60 per player with skill prizes
on every hole and food and beverages served
throughout the round. Prizes will be awarded to
the top three teams. For more information contact Lady Tornadoes head coach Kent Wolfe at
(740)949-4222 ext. 1212 or at (740)444-9334.

NFL Punt, Pass,
and Kick Competition
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Recreation Department will be hosting a local competition of the NFL Punt, Pass, and Kick Competition.
The competition will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday,
Sept. 13, at Memorial Field. Pre-registration will
begin at 1:30 p.m. The event is free and open to
boys and girls ages 6-15 years old. The age will
be determined as of Dec. 31, 2015. Boys and girls
will compete in separate divisions. Players must
have tennis shoes. No cleats (rubber or metal) or
bare feet are allowed. Combined scores of distance
and accuracy for one punt, one pass, and one kick
will determine the overall winner.
Participants must bring a birth certiﬁcate and can
only compete in one local event. Local winners will
compete at a sectional event. The winners of the
sectional events will have their score tallied against
other state winners to determine if they compete
before a Bengals’ NFL Football game.
For more information, contact Brett Bostic at
740-441-6022.

and something happens. I just to
make sure he’s ready,” Meyer said.
Meyer called the second week
of practice at receiver a big week
for Miller after his introduction to
playing that position against live
competition last week.
Miller said, “It’s fun. It feels like
when I was growing up and playing
all different positions and just having fun and enjoying football.”
NOTES:
ANOTHER QB/RECEIVER?:
Highly regarded freshman quarterback Torrance Gibson spent some
time at wide receiver last week but
that does not mean he is changing
positions, Meyer said.
“He came to me. He realizes it’s
going to take at least a year to play
quarterback here, especially with
what’s in front of him,” Meyer said.
Ohio State is still looking for a
deep threat to replace Devin Smith
and Gibson is one of the players
the coaches have looked at to ﬁll
that role.
“Has he moved to receiver? No,”
Meyer said. “Is he going to play?
Remains to be seen.”
INJURY UPDATE: Receiver
Dontre Wilson, who is one of four
players suspended for the opener
at Virginia Tech, missed some practice time because of “some aggravation” in the same foot he broke
against Michigan State last season,
Meyer said.
Cornerback Marshon Lattimore,
who missed all of last season because
of hamstring surgery, is dealing with
a less serious hamstring issue in
his other leg and it is hoped he can
return to practice this week.

Five things we learned at the PGA
SHEBOYGAN, Wis.
(AP) — Jason Day
posted a picture of the
Wanamaker Trophy on
his Twitter account along
with a message that said
everything: “Ding dong
the witch is dead.”
Yes, Day ﬁnally broke
through and won his ﬁrst
major. No more what-ifs
for the kid from Beaudesert, Australia.
In breaking through,
he went where no other
golfer had gone before.
His 20-under score to win
the PGA Championship
set a new major record in
relation to par.
And nobody will ever
say he took the easy
route. He played in the
ﬁnal group with Jordan

Spieth and never gave a
glimmer of hope to the
Masters and U.S. Open
champion.
Day’s wife, Ellie, was
holding court on the 18th
green afterward while
their son, Dash, played in
the sand trap.
She recalled the long
road her husband took
from a club-throwing,
foul-mouthed 20-year-old
to a major champion at
the age of 27.
“In the last couple
years, he’s grown up in
a lot of ways,” she said.
“And in the last couple
months, a switch has
ﬂipped. He said, ‘OK,
now I’m ready.’”
The victory meant
almost as much to Colin

Swatton, his 46-year-old
caddie and coach, who
took the 12-year-old Day
under his wing when
the golfer lost his father
to stomach cancer and
nearly wound up on the
streets.
“He’s taken me from a
kid who was getting in
ﬁghts and getting drunk
at 12 and not heading in
the right direction to a
major winner,” Day said.
“He means the world to
me. I love him to death.”
Five other things we
learned at the PGA
Championship, the season’s ﬁnal major:
CAN’T BEAT FUN
AT THE OL’ GOLF
COURSE: Day’s win was
the highlight, but maybe

not even the most entertaining moment.
— Matt Jones hit it off
the artiﬁcial turf in the
hospitality tent: http://
go.pga.com/1MugeLS .
— John Daly hit three
shots into Lake Michigan, then helicoptered
his 6-iron in after them:
http://bit.ly/1IOE3tZ .
— Phil Mickelson
played slip and slide on
the hilly terrain of Whistling Straits: http://bit.
ly/1IOyxr2 .
A NEW NO. 1: Spieth
was denied in his effort
to emulate Tiger Woods
and win a third major in
a calendar year. But he
called this his easiest loss
ever, mainly because Day
played so well.

Bengals offense looks good in 23-10 win over Giants
CINCINNATI (AP) — Andy
Dalton and the rest of the Bengals’ offense were so good that
they got the night off after less
than 3 minutes.
Dalton completed all of his
three passes, and the Bengals’
starting offense was impressive in its only drive Friday
night during Cincinnati’s preseason 23-10 victory over the
New York Giants.

Dalton was 3 for 3 for 31
yards, including a 3-yard
touchdown pass to Mohamed
Sanu. Coach Marvin Lewis
decided that was enough, resting his starting offense after
only 2 minutes, 55 seconds on
the ﬁeld. Dalton had completions of 12, 16 and 3 yards,
and Jeremy Hill ran twice for
15 yards.
“I think what everybody saw

just shows that we came out
fully prepared,” Dalton said.
“It’s not that much but sure,
it’s a good start to the season.
The ﬁrst-unit guys were glad
we could earn ourselves a
short night.”
It was much different for the
Giants’ starters. Eli Manning
and the rest of the offense
stayed on the ﬁeld until early
in the second quarter, manag-

ing only one ﬁrst down and 38
yards in four series.
“We need to be a little sharper,” said Manning, who was 4
of 8 for 22 yards. “We deﬁnitely have room for improvement.
That’s what preseason’s for,
to ﬁgure out what you have to
improve on and go do it.”
The Giants lost two rookie
safeties from their reconﬁgured secondary. Second-round

pick Landon Collins left in the
ﬁrst injury with a knee injury,
but X-rays were negative and
he said he’ll be back “in a week
or less.”
Fifth-rounder Mykkele
Thompson hurt his right
Achilles tendon while covering a punt and was taken off
the ﬁeld on a cart. Coach Tom
Coughlin said that injury “is a
big concern.”

Call Now: 800-595-3120
Their Price

Are You Still
832.60 Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?

CelebrexTM
$
Typical US Brand Price

for 200mg x 100

Our Price

Celecoxib
$

*

75.56

Generic equivalent of CelebrexTM
Generic price for 200mg x 100

ViagraTM $4,287.27
Typical US Brand Price for 100mg x 40

You can save up to 93% when
you ﬁll your prescriptions with
our Canadian and International
prescription service.
vs

Sildenaﬁl*

$

132.00

Generic Price for 100mg x 40

Get An Extra $15 Off &amp; Free Shipping On
Your 1st Order!
Call the number below and save an additional $15 plus get free shipping on
your ﬁrst prescription order with Canada Drug Center. Expires December
31, 2015. Offer is valid for prescription orders only and can not be used in
conjunction with any other offers. Valid for new customers only. One time
use per household. Use code 15FREE to receive this special offer.

Your auto is taken care of if something
should happen to it.
But what if something happened to you?
Is your family protected?
Call 740.992.3381 or visit
simmonsmusserwarner.com

Call Now! 800-595-3120
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
60554222

60602120

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription
is required for all prescription medication orders.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 18, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

By Hilary Price

7

5

1

7

4

3

6

5

3

2

9

2

9

5

8

1

3

4

8

1

8

9

2

8/18

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

8/18

1
7
5
9
6
4
2
8
3

2
9
1
6
3
8
7
4
5

4
5
6
2
1
7
9
3
8

7
3
8
4
5
9
6
2
1

Everyday price $34.99/mo. All offers require
24-month commitment and credit qualification.

8
4
3
1
7
2
5
6
9

FOR 12
MONTHS

6
2
9
5
8
3
4
1
7

19

$

3
8
4
7
2
5
1
9
6

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

PROMOTIONAL PRICES
START AS LOW AS

9
1
7
8
4
6
3
5
2

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

5
6
2
3
9
1
8
7
4

DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

7

2

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

4

8

9

TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

FREE

PREMIUM
CHANNELS!
for 3 months

Call Now and Save.
Ask about Next-Day Installation!

1-800-697-0129

Se Habla Español

™

Offers expire 10/30/15. Restrictions apply. Call for details.

DR_16461_3x3.5

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Ranking OSU home schedule
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS — Season tickets
were in the mail for many Ohio State
fans last week for the Buckeyes’
seven home games at Ohio Stadium.
Interest in Ohio State football is as
high, maybe higher, than it has ever
been. After winning last season’s
national championship game by
beating Alabama and Oregon in the
College Football Playoff, Ohio State
is everyone’s No. 1 team in the preseason rankings.
But how does its home schedule
rank? Here’s my ranking from best to
worst of the games on Ohio State’s
schedule in Columbus this fall:
1. Michigan State, Nov. 21.
While both teams will insist
Michigan is a bigger rival for them,
this might be the most important
regular-season game in the Big Ten
this year.
The winner could end up being
one of the teams in the four-team
College Football Playoff. And the
loser could ﬁnd itself settling for
consolation prizes despite having 10
or 11 wins.
Also, the Spartans spoiled Ohio
State’s 2013 season and OSU
returned the favor in 2014.
2. Penn State, Oct. 17
The Nittany Lions aren’t back to
what they were in the glory days
with Joe Paterno, but with an easy
early schedule, this could be a matchup of unbeaten teams under the
lights.

Penn State’s ﬁrst six games are
against Temple, Buffalo, Rutgers,
San Diego State, Army and Indiana.
Five of those games are at home
and the other is on a neutral ﬁeld.
3. Minnesota, Nov. 7
The Gophers were a challenge for
OSU last year when the Buckeyes
won 31-24 in Minneapolis. And
they’re obviously well coached since
Jerry Kill somehow beat Urban
Meyer in the Big Ten Coach of the
Year voting.
But Minnesota could have a hard
time matching last year’s 8-5 record
without running back David Cobb
(1,626 yards rushing) and tight end
Maxx Williams, a second-round NFL
draft pick of the Baltimore Ravens.
4. Maryland, Oct. 10
The Terrapins were a better-thanexpected 7-6 in their ﬁrst season in
the Big Ten last year. But with many
of the playmakers from that team
gone this year, they might struggle
to get seven wins.
Ohio State won 52-24 at Maryland
in 2014 and it probably won’t be any
closer this year.
5. Northern Illinois, Sept. 19
The Huskies are the Mid-American Conference’s version of the St.
Louis Cardinals. Every time they’re
counted out, they still ﬁnd a way to
play for a championship.
Last year they won the MAC title
game 51-17 over Bowling Green,
ﬁnished 11-3 and had a win over a
Big Ten team when they beat Northwestern 23-15. They have 20 of their
top 23 offensive players back.

6. Western Michigan, Sept. 26
The Broncos were 8-5 last season
and were picked to ﬁnish second to
Toledo in the West division in the
Mid-American Conference this season at the MAC’s media day.
Quarterback Zach Terrell threw
for 3,443 yards and 26 touchdowns
last season and running back Jarvion
Franklin gained 1,551 yards, though
he faded late in the season under a
heavy workload (307 carries).
7. Hawaii, Sept. 12
Do you remember Ohio State ever
playing a game only ﬁve days after
another game? The home opener
against Hawaii comes ﬁve days after
the season opener at Virginia Tech
on Sept. 7.
That tells you all you need to
know about how competitive this
match-up should be.
Hawaii was 4-9 last season and has
won a total of eight games the last
three years. It has only one player on
its depth chart who was rated higher
than a 3-star recruit (linebacker Jeremy Castro) and he transferred from
UCLA.
If you’re interested in another
ranking of OSU’s home schedule, the
lowest priced tickets for each game
on StubHub range from $82 for the
Western Michigan game to $189 for
the Michigan State game. The lowest prices listed for the other games
are $87 for Northern Illinois, $89 for
Hawaii, $106 for Maryland and Minnesota and $165 for Penn State.
Reach Jim Naveau at 567-242-0414 or on
Twitter at @Lima_Naveau.

McCown showing
Manziel the way
CLEVELAND (AP) — Josh McCown doesn’t view Johnny
Manziel as a threat. That alone makes the Browns’ quarterback
situation much more stable than the mess they had last year.
A respected veteran with a golden reputation, but not many
wins on his 12-year NFL resume, McCown was signed by
Cleveland as a free agent to provide stability to their quarterback position and mentor Manziel, who couldn’t control his
Johnny Football persona and nearly partied himself out of the
league as a rookie.
They share Texas roots, but McCown and Manziel have
grown close in Ohio.
“Josh is a pro, he’s been doing this a long time,” Manziel said
Thursday night following Cleveland’s 20-17 exhibition loss to
Washinton.
“I’m always watching and trying to learn from him. He’s
always giving me a lot of tips. I can hear him on the sideline
even when he’s out (of the game) and I’m out there.
“He has been very, very helpful, and it has been awesome
having him around.”
McCown hasn’t been ofﬁcially selected as Cleveland’s starter
for the Sept. 13 season opener, but the 36-year-old has done
everything coach Mike Pettine has needed and appears comfortable in new coordinator John DeFilippo’s system.
On Friday, Pettine said he hasn’t wavered from putting
McCown No. 1 on the depth chart.
Against the Redskins, McCown ﬁnished 5 of 5 for 33 yards
and threw a touchdown pass in his only series with Cleveland’s
ﬁrst-team offense.
But even on the sideline, McCown kept working.
“He was poised, focused,” Pettine said. “He was into it. Even
after that series, the whole rest of the game, he had the ear
piece in, he knew the call, taking the mental reps on the sideline. He just showed tonight that he’s the ultimate professional.”
Rewind to a year ago when Brian Hoyer and Manziel
were locked in a day-to-day competition to win Cleveland’s
starting job. There was tension as Hoyer, the hometown
kid playing for family and a new contract, tried to hold off
the former Heisman Trophy winner. It wasn’t healthy —
for anyone — and the Browns recognized they couldn’t
have a repeat this summer.

Moats ready to bring pressure to Steelers pass rush
your efforts, it feels
good,” Moats said. “But
ultimately you have to
produce and that’s what
I’m excited about.
“I look at it as a chance
for us to establish ourselves as a new Steel
Curtain.”
An effective pass rush
has always been an integral part of past Steelers
defenses, but it’s an area

that has lacked in recent
years.
Pittsburgh ﬁnished
26th last season with
just 33 sacks, four years
removed from a leaguebest 48 sacks.
“That goes with the history of the organization
and the success they’ve
had defensively,” Moats
said. “Last year wasn’t
near that type of level. We

deﬁnitely have a chip on
our shoulder.”
The Steelers signed
Moats to a three-year,
$7.5 million deal in
March, one year after
bringing him in as an
unrestricted free agent
from Buffalo for the
league minimum. He
joins a group that features
Bud Dupree, this year’s
ﬁrst-round pick, in addi-

ORTHOPAEDIC CARE

From Page 6

JUST GOT BETTER.
MARSHALL ORTHOPAEDICS SURGEON JOHN CROMPTON, MD,
JOINS PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ORTHOPAEDICS

Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to
welcome John Crompton, MD, fellowshiptrained Marshall Orthopaedics Surgeon to
their orthopaedic team. Dr. Crompton is now
seeing patients with all types of orthopaedic
concerns Monday through Friday at PVH.
From simple sprains to orthopaedic
trauma, from reconstructive surgery to
total joint replacement, patients with
orthopaedic concerns now have access to
comprehensive, highly specialized care.
Because health happens here in the
community we love.

Introducing…
JOHN
CROMPTON, MD
“The Marshall School
of Medicine has made
it a priority to stay at
the forefront of the
field of orthopaedics,
which has grown
exponentially in recent years,” said
Dr. Crompton. “Marshall Orthopaedics
has expanded its specialties to include
services like pediatric orthopaedics,
orthopaedic traumatology and orthopaedic
oncology – services that weren’t available
anywhere in the state of West Virginia just
10 years ago. Now, with the partnership
between Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
Marshall School of Medicine, we are able
to provide immediate access to those
services to residents of Point Pleasant and
surrounding areas. It’s an exciting time
in the field of orthopaedics, and it’s an
exciting time at Pleasant Valley Hospital.”

60603604

For more information or to schedule an
appointment, call 304.675.2781.

them that I wanted the
opportunity to compete
for that spot and play,”
Moats said. “That was
my biggest thing and
that’s what I’m getting,
so I have to make the
most of it.”
The Steelers have discussed a potential pass
rush rotation once the
regular season begins
between Moats and
Dupree on the left side
and Jones and Harrison
at right outside linebacker.

Golfers

at Pleasant Valley Hospital

Orthopaedic patients in the Point Pleasant
area have long been able to depend on
Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) for quality
orthopaedic services. And now, PVH’s
partnership with Cabell Huntington Hospital
and Marshall Health is proving that
advanced orthopaedic care can be better,
faster, and right here in our community.

tion to 37-year-old James
Harrison and Jarvis
Jones, the team’s ﬁrst
rounder in 2013, who is
healthy after missing nine
games last season with a
wrist injury.
“I feel good about our
outside group,” Moats
said.
When Moats re-signed,
he did with the intent of
competing for the starting job at left outside
linebacker.
“We deﬁnitely talked
about it and I told

The Raiders posted a team score of 218, which was
37 strokes better than last place Wellston — which
ﬁred a 255. Jackson ‘A’ won the quad with a 192,
while Jackson ‘B’ was the runner-up with a 197.
RVHS senior Logan Sheets earned medalist honors
with a 1-over par round of 38 on the back nine. Grant
Gilmore was next for the Silver and Black with a 55,
while Cliff Chapman and Chance Gillman respectively
rounded out the scoring with efforts of 58 and 67.
Jared Lemaster paced Jackson ‘A’ with a 43, followed by John Bachtel with a 45 and Ricky Fraley
with a 45. Ethan Mercer rounded out the winning
tally with a 58.
Dakota Simpson led Jackson ‘B’ with a 41 to earn
runner-up honors individually, followed by Evan
Coyan with a 46 and Derek Murray with a 52. Alden
Massie wrapped up the scoring with a 58.
Josh Lung paced the Golden Rockets with a 60, followed by Blake Royster with a 64 and Seth Coulter
with a 65. Ken Lemaster closed things out for WHS
with a 66.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Reed &amp; Baur
Insurance Agency

AUTO INSURANCE

CALL 740-992-3600
We are there when you need us!!!
www.reedbaur.com

60599352

SERVING YOU FOR OVER 60 YEARS
www.rutkandbottlegas.com

1-800-837-8217
Get a jump on being ready for the cold weather…
During the winter months; demand is high for service…
Contact us today &amp; you’ll be ready for old man winter!

282 Main Street-Rutland, Ohio
740-742-2511 1-800-837-8217
www.rutlandbottlegas.com

60599338

LATROBE, Pa. (AP)
— The Pittsburgh Steelers gave Arthur Moats a
new contract during the
offseason.
Now, the veteran outside linebacker wants to
return the favor on the
ﬁeld as one of the leaders
of a revamped Steelers
defense.
“To feel like you’ve
been compensated for

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="246">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6689">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="7369">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7368">
              <text>August 18, 2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="490">
      <name>burgess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1784">
      <name>cremeens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="727">
      <name>hatten</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="167">
      <name>legg</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2428">
      <name>lytle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1590">
      <name>molden</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="242">
      <name>sexton</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
