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                  <text>Voices
from
our past
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

48°

60°

60°

Cool today with sun and clouds. Mainly clear
and chilly tonight. High 66° / Low 42°

Today’s
weather
forecast

GA moves
up in
rankings

WEATHER s 3

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 76, Volume 73

Tuesday, May 14, 2019 s 50¢

Archery team, students recognized

FOR THE RECORD
Meigs County Common
Please Court and
Prosecutor’s Office
Stiffler pleads guilty
to breaking and entering
and drug offenses
On May 13, 2019,
Sonja Stifﬂer, 48, of Middleport, Ohio, entered
guilty pleas to two counts
of Breaking and Entering, each a felony of the
ﬁfth degree, and Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of
the ﬁfth degree. At the
change of plea hearing,
Stifﬂer admitted to breaking into two buildings
in Middleport as well
as being in possession
of methamphetamine.
Sentencing will occur in
June.

Courtesy photos

Members of the Meigs Middle School Archery team were recognized by the Meigs Local Board of Education during last week’s meeting.

Meigs Middle School
team took first
place in Ohio NASP
Championship
Staff Report

MIDDLEPORT — The
Meigs Local Board of Education honored the Meigs Middle
School Archery Team, as well
as Students of the Month, during last week’s meeting held at
Meigs Elementary School.
The Meigs Middle School
Archery Team took ﬁrst place in
the Ohio NASP Championship
held in Columbus in March.
Middle School Archery team
members are Kadence Allen,
Brady Barnett, Lindsay Barnhart, Katy Cox, Evan Davis,
Lauren Davis, Natalie Davis,
Billy Goble, Alana Herdman,
Kynzie Johnson, Lorena Kennedy, Zack King, Madelyn
Mayer, Walker Mayer, Rhiannia
McDonald, Dalton Peacock,
Emily Roush, Faith Roush,
Emilee Smarr, Tyson Stewart,
Ethan Vernon, Addison Whitlatch, Woody Will, and Garrett
Workman.
Students of the Month recognized at the meeting were
Caroline Roush, Alyssa Parsons,
Nathan Pooler, Isaiah Brooks,
Byron Harenberg, Emily Pennington, Shawn Davidson,
Alex Daniels, Hannah Watson,
Dolton Brickles, Brady Bryant,
Shawn Summers, Carson Stewart, Jaylen Peavley, Jayda Parrish, Brandon Johnson, Susannah Bickford, Serenity Bailey,

Roush sentenced to
three years in prison
On May 13, 2019,
Colton Roush, 27, of
Pomeroy, Ohio, appeared
before Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas
Judge Linda R. Warner
on the State’s motion
to revoke community
control. Roush had been
sentenced to community
control in 2016 with 36
months as an underlying
prison sentence. Roush
violated the terms of
community control by
failing to appear when
scheduled and by testing
positive for drugs. Upon
Roush admitting the
community control violations, the State requested
the imposition of the
entire 36 month prison
sentence. Due to Roush’s
multiple violations, Judge
Warner agreed with the
State and sentenced
See RECORD | 5

Meigs Local Students of the Month were recognized during the recent board meeting.

Devon McDaniel, Ryan Day,
Pacstun McKinney, Matthew
Brammer, and Jenna Bare.
In personnel matters, the
resignation of Gene Bing, high
school welding technology
teacher was accepted, effective May 3. The resignation of
Patti Bodimer as the family and
consumer science teacher at the
high school was accepted for
retirement purposes, effective
May 24.
Jacob Dunn was hired as
the interactive media teacher
at Meigs High School for the
2019-20 school year.
Howard David Barr was
hired as the ninth grade science
teacher for the 2019-20 school
year.

INSIDE
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
Television: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Supplemental positions for
the 2019-20 school year were
approved as follows: BettyAnn
Wolfe, high school yearbook;
Lisa Froehlich, middle school
yearbook; Abby Harris, senior
class advisor and high school
student council; Nicholas
Michael, assistant band director; Scott Brinker, students
website/webpage designer;
Jennifer Henson, lead mentor;
and Janel Kennedy, junior class
advisor.
Assistant volleyball coaches
were hired as follows: Amber
Blackwell, assistant volleyball
coach; Chrissy Musser, eighth
grade volleyball coach; Tanisha
McKinney, seventh grade volleyball coach.

Assistant football coaches
were hired as follows: Kemp
Kelly, Jeff McElroy and Alex
Saunders, assistant varsity football coaches; Bryan Zirkle and
Cass Cleland, middle school
football coaches.
In other business, the board,
Accepted the Rural Innovative Summer Meals Grant in the
amount of $7,745.
Accepted the Ohio School Climate Grant for Meigs Primary
in the amount of $5,000.
Accepted the Meigs County
Community Fund grant in the
amount of $2,140.61 for Meigs
Primary.
Accepted the School Quality
See MEIGS | 5

Ohio House approves 2-year
$69 billion spending plan
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

ing for foster care, with $60 million
allocated over two years.
The proposal also would add an
additional $21.8 million for higher
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohioans
education next year and $20 million
would see state income taxes elimiin 2021.
nated or cut by a healthy margin
House Speaker Larry Householder
depending on their income under
the latest version of the state budget, says the budget protects vulnerable
approved by the House Thursday and Ohioans while investing in the state’s
sent to the Senate for further consid- future, and singled out the major
investment in foster care.
eration.
“This budget takes an important
The $69 billion spending plan
would also increase the minimum sal- additional step by helping those
ary for Ohio teachers from $20,000 to impacted by the addiction crisis, in
$30,000 annually, add $125 million to particular children,” said Householder,
Gov. Mike DeWine’s education proSee SPENDING | 5
posal, and signiﬁcantly boost spend-

The Associated Press

London Pool
decision still
awaiting
pressure test
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

SYRACUSE — The
Syracuse Village Council
discussed the London
Pool at their meeting on
Thursday evening.
In April, council voted
to have a company in Gallipolis conduct a pressure
test to check for leaks in
the pool lining and water
lines. However, that company is unable to properly cap the pool’s water
lines, due to the size of
the system.
The village will now be
working with a company
located in Columbus to
do the pressure test. No
further decisions have
been made on whether or
not to open the pool for
this summer. The pool
has been closed since
August 2017, having
been closed for the 2018
season due to structural
concerns.
In other business,
Fiscal Ofﬁcer Crystal
Cottrill said the Village Police Department
received the Ohio Law
Enforcement Body
Armor Program award
See POOL | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
CASTO
RIPLEY — Phyllis Jean (Bush) Casto, 70, of
Ripley, died May 11, 2019 in Hubbard Hospice
West, Charleston.
A graveside service will be held at 1 p.m.,
Wednesday, May 15, 2019 in the Baptist Grove
Cemetery, Leroy with Elmer Miller ofﬁciating.
Visitation will be Tuesday, May 14, 2019 from 6-8
p.m. in the Casto Funeral Home, Evans.
PRESTON
VINTON — Judith A. Preston, 68, of Vinton,
passed away Friday, May 10, 2019, at her residence. In accordance with Judy’s wishes there will
be no service. Cremation services are under the
direction of the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
CAMPBELL
VINTON — Rachel J. Campbell, 70, of Vinton,
passed away Friday, May 10, 2019, in the Holzer
Medical Center Gallipolis. Funeral Services well
be conducted 11 a.m., Tuesday, May 14, 2019,
with Pastor Heath Jenkins ofﬁciating. Friends and
family may call Monday 6-8 p.m. in the McCoyMoore Funeral Home Vinton Chapel.
BURGESS
GALLIPOLIS — Victor Burgess, 97, of Gallipolis died on May 11, 2019 at Abbyshire Place in
Bidwell.
The funeral service for Victor will be held at
1 p.m. on Wednesday, May 15, 2019 at Willis
Funeral Home with Pastor Jim Chapman ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Mina Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call prior to the service from noon to
1 p.m. at the funeral home. Military honors will
be given at the graveside by the Gallia County
Funeral Detail.

Courtesy photo

Pictured are officers of Racine Chapter #134 OES, with the newly initiated candidates, and inspecting officer.

Order of The Eastern Star holds inspection
RACINE — On Monday, May 6, Racine
Chapter #134 Order of
The Eastern Star held
its annual inspection and
welcomed four new members: Jim and June Hayman, Emily Bunce, and
Sarah Bunce. The inspection was held inside the
Racine Masonic Temple.
The annual inspection
provides a special opportunity for the members of
Racine Chapter to renew
friendships with Eastern Star members from
around District 25 which
includes Meigs, Athens,
Washington, and Morgan
Counties.
Worthy Matron and
Patron Ruth Ann and
David Fox welcomed
more than 60 guests and
ofﬁcers to the regular
stated meeting. The
Inspecting Ofﬁcer was
Jan Emge, Deputy Grand
Matron of Southeast
Ohio, Team 25. Special
honor was given to
the gathering by the
attendance of Associate
Grand Patron Charles
Merkle. In addition,
Grand Representatives of
Nebraska and Montana
were in attendance, as
well as various ofﬁcers
of District 25, past grand
representatives of various states and Canadian
Provinces, past and present Worthy Matrons and

Worthy Patrons, and past
Deputy Grand Matrons.
A reception with refreshments followed the meeting. The main dining
room and Chapter rooms
were decorated in a musical theme with trumpets
prominently displayed.
The Order of the Eastern Star is the largest fraternal organization in the
world to which both men
and women may belong
with more than 650,000
members worldwide.
In Eastern Star Chapters, Masons and their
female relatives promote
the values of charitable
purposes that are such
an important part of
the Masonic fraternity.
Male petitioners must be
members in good standing of a regular Masonic
lodge. A woman always
serves as the presiding
ofﬁcer of an OES chapter, but Masons are there
to advise and support.
Females must be 18 years
of age or older, and related to Masons in good
standing or a member
either active for three
years or majority of the
International Order of
Job’s Daughters, or of the
International Order of
the Rainbow Girls. While
the Order of the Eastern
Star has evolved over the
centuries, it still remains
rooted in its charitable

endeavors and fraternal
fellowship.
An Eastern Star Chapter has members of all
ages. Some are young
men and women who are
in college or just beginning their careers. Some
are “Baby Boomers” or
“Gen-Xers,” and still others have been members of
the Order of the Eastern
Star for 50 years or more.
It is an amazing mix that
results in shared wisdom
and ideas as members
grow to appreciate and
learn from the knowledge
and talents of their sisters
and brothers, both young
and old. OES chapters
server their communities
in a variety of ways. They
collect food for needy
families, donate school
supplies to disadvantaged
students, offer scholarships, support Little
League teams and hospitals, participate in walkathons to fund research
to cure cancer and other
deadly diseases, and
sponsor Masonic youth
organizations (Order
of Job’s Daughters, the
Order of the Rainbow
for Girls, and Order of
DeMolay). Chapters also
work together to support several statewide
charities, including the
Ohio Eastern Star Home
and a long-standing OES
scholarship program for

future pastors and other
religious leaders.
Racine Chapter #134
OES was instituted in
1900 by Worthy Grand
Parton William Semple.
The charter was received
in October of 1901.
Racine Chapter #134
was the ﬁrst Order of the
Eastern Star chartered in
Meigs County, thus allowing Evangeline Chapter
#172 in Middleport to be
chartered December 3,
1903. Pomeroy Chapter
#186 was chartered on
May 13, 1904, and Harrisonville Chapter #255
was chartered on October
24, 1907. Today, only
Racine #134 and Harrisonville #255 remain.
Evangeline Chapter #172
merged into Harrisonville
Chapter #255 in 2003,
after 100 years in existence. Pomeroy Chapter
#186 left Pomeroy at the
closure of the Masonic
Temple and relocated
their charter to Shade
River Lodge, where it
existed until 2017, merging with Harrisonville
#255.
For more information
or inquires on joining
The Order of The Eastern
Star, please visit www.
ohiooes.org or call (740)
247-4505.

of the Butterﬂy Ridge
Butterﬂy Conservation
Center, Rockbridge,
Ohio, speaking on creating a Butterﬂy Habitat.
The program begins
at 6:30 p.m., is free
and open to the public.
Refreshments will be
MIDDLEPORT —
Riverbend Arts Council, served and there will be
290 N. 2nd Ave., Middle- a rafﬂe. Books authored
port, Ohio, will present by the speaker will be
Chris Kline, the director available for purchase.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will
hold a special budget
meeting at 9 a.m. in the
ofﬁce located at 97 North
Second Avenue, Suite 2,
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC
in Middleport. This will
be the only meeting for
(USPS 436-840)
May.
Telephone: 740-992-2155
SYRACUSE — The
Syracuse Community
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Center Board of Directors
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
will meet at 7 p.m.
Prices are subject to change at any time.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
CONTACT US
Health meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the conSPORTS EDITOR
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
ference room of the Meigs
Lane Moon
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
County Health Depart937-508-2313
ment, which is located at
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
112 E. Memorial Drive in
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992

located near Salem
Center. The grange is
located the Star Grange
Hall located on County
Road 1, 3 miles North of
Salem Center.

Education will be held
at 7:30 a.m. to approve
graduating seniors. It
will be held at the district
ofﬁce.

for lunch reservations.
Guests welcome. Members are asked to bring
in kitchen items and/or
cleaning products for the
new Habitat for Humanity house.

Ohio: More than
30K people register
to buy medical pot
Dispensaries have
sold 750 pounds of
marijuana flowers
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ohio’s Medical Marijuana Control
Program says more
than 30,000 people
with physician recommendations have
registered to legally
buy cannabis with
about half having
made purchases since
some licensed dispensaries opened in January.
The state provided
an update on various
aspects of the program
Friday, to include:
— 17 of 29 cultivators with provi-

sional licenses having
received operating
certiﬁcates to grow
medical marijuana.
— 15 of 56 dispensaries with provisional licenses to sell
cannabis now have
certiﬁcates of operation.
— 484 physicians
have been certiﬁed to
recommend medical
marijuana use
— Only 2 of 39 provisional licensees thus
far have permission
to produce cannabisbased products like
edibles, tinctures and
creams.
— Dispensaries
through May 5 have
sold 750 pounds of
marijuana ﬂowers at
a price of $5.8 million.

Information provided by
Jordan Pickens.

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

bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Tuesday,
May 14

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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

Wednesday,
May 15
SALEM TWP. — The
Salem Township bicentennial marker will be
unveiled at 5:30 p.m.
at Star Grange #778

Saturday,
May 18
POMEROY — The
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter NSDAR will
meet at 1 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. OSDAR Regent
Nancy Wright will be
visiting and providing the
program. Mrs. Wright’s
program, “How Does
Your Garden Grow”,
reﬂects the Ohio State
DAR Theme of “Sowing Seeds of Service,
Outreach and Love”. The
public is invited to attend
this reﬂective program
that applies to our daily
lives and not only to
DAR.

Monday,
May 20
POMEROY — The
Coordinating Council of
the Meigs Cooperative
Parish will hold its quarterly meeting at 7 p.m. in
the Conference Room at
the Mulberry Community
Center.
RACINE — A special
board meeting of the
Southern Local Board of

Thursday,
May 23
POMEROY — A Special meeting of the Meigs
County Transportation
Improvement District will
be held at 8 a.m. at the
Meigs County Highway
Dept., 34110 Fairgrounds
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. The purpose of
this meeting to review
existing projects and
FY20 Application Submittals for approval and
to ﬁll the vacancy of the
Board’s Secretary/Treasurer ofﬁce.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly
meeting at 11:30 a.m. at
the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers will meet for a
noon lunch at the Trinity
Church meeting room.
The speaker will be
Andrea Bussert, Senior
Beneﬁts Representative for the state ORTA.
Please call 740-992-3214

Saturday,
May 25
SYRACUSE — Southern High School Class
of 1964 is planning our
55th reunion to be held at
the Syracuse Community
Center. The Southern
Five band will be there
from 2-5 p.m. playing all
our old favorite songs.
We are inviting all SHS
graduates to the dance.
Admission is free but we
will be accepting donations to help cover costs.
Light snacks and ﬁnger
foods will be available.
For more information
contact Carol Shain Reed,
SHS Class of 1964, at
740-416-9531.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Fire Department will host a chicken
BBQ at the BBQ pit with
serving to begin at 11
a.m.
CHESTER TWP. —
Due to Memorial Day
Holiday there will be no
meeting of the Meigs
County Ikes Club on
May 25. The next regular
meeting with meal Saturday, June 22.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Mommy&amp;Me

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

Police: Water heater
likely cause of deaths
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) — Authorities believe a tankless water heater
probably caused a carbon monoxide
leak that killed a family of four at a
home in Ohio.
Genoa Township authorities found
50-year-old Richard Reitter III, 49-yearold Jennifer Reitter, and their children,
15-year-old Richard Reitter IV and
13-year-old Grace Reitter, dead in their
home May 2. Their three dogs also
were dead.
Township police say the last known
contact with the family was April 29
when they all complained of illness.
Investigators say a forensic engineering company tested the water heater
and found it emitted high levels of
carbon monoxide. Police say determining what caused the leak would require
more testing.
No carbon monoxide detectors were
found in the home.

PD: 4-year-old dies in
accidental shooting
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Police say a
4-year-old boy has been killed in what
they believe was an accidental shooting
at a home in Ohio.
Toledo police Chief George Kral says
it appears the boy somehow shot himself with a parent’s gun. But police say
the investigation is continuing.
Authorities say the child was shot
once in the head. His identity hasn’t
been released.
Police Sgt. Paul Davis says one of the
family members is with the State Highway Patrol.

will help dedicate the property.
The former U.S. senator was born in
Cambridge and moved to New Concord
with his family in 1923. He was the ﬁrst
American to orbit the Earth and served
24 years as a Democrat in the Senate.
The museum has also been designated an Ohio historic site and is on
the National Park Service’s Register of
Historic Places.

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PHOTO CONTEST

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Submit your favorite photo
of Mom &amp; child at:

Sen. Portman adds to
2022 reelection fund

www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com
www.mydailytribune.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A Republican senator from Ohio is amassing
millions of dollars toward his 2022
reelection bid, which falls in the middle
of President Donald Trump’s would-be
second term.
Sen. Rob Portman, of Cincinnati,
added more than $1 million to his
already healthy campaign fund Friday.
A campaign spokesperson said the
money was raised at a hometown event
hosted by members of the wealthy Lindner family. Earlier last week, Portman’s
campaign said he raised $100,000 at a
Cleveland fundraiser.
All that’s on top of nearly $2.4 million
Portman reported having on hand at the
end of the ﬁrst quarter.

Submissions accepted until

May 15th

TENOGLIA &amp; SALISBURY
LAW GROUP, LLC.

Paratroopers will drop
from vintage plane

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Paratroopers will drop from a plane used in the
D-Day invasion as the National Museum
of the U.S. Air Force begins its commemoration of the 1944 attack.
A C-53D Skytrooper named “D-Day
Doll’ will carry the Airborne Heritage
Platoon paratroopers at Monday’s jump
near Dayton, Ohio.
The museum also will show movies
about the amphibious assault that led to
the liberation of France and the end of
the Nazi regime.
Visitors can access tablets that use
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (AP) — The
John and Annie Glenn Museum will be a French-developed technology called
dedicated as a site on the National Reg- HistoPad. Users can contrast current
views of historic sites with detailed reister of Historic Places this month in
creations of them, enhanced in this case
the late astronaut’s hometown of New
with video footage, photos and maps
Concord.
The museum, which was John Glenn’s and animation. It will be the ﬁrst use of
the technology outside of France.
boyhood home, will be dedicated in a
The museum plans more special
May 19 ceremony in the Muskingum
County village roughly 70 miles east of events for the75th anniversary on June
6.
Columbus. The Glenns’ daughter, Lyn,

Dedication of Glenn
Museum to be held

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

48°

60°

60°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

58°
52°
75°
52°
92° in 1957
33° in 1996

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.02
3.92
1.89
18.02
15.27

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:17 a.m.
8:33 p.m.
3:57 p.m.
4:06 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Low

Wed.
6:16 a.m.
8:34 p.m.
5:06 p.m.
4:39 a.m.

New

May 18 May 26 Jun 3

First

Jun 10

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

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

Major
8:49a
9:33a
10:17a
11:03a
11:51a
12:17a
1:13a

Minor
2:36a
3:21a
4:05a
4:50a
5:38a
6:30a
7:26a

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

Very High

Major
9:14p
9:58p
10:42p
11:28p
---12:44p
1:39p

Minor
3:02p
3:46p
4:30p
5:15p
6:04p
6:57p
7:53p

WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature at Climax, Colo.,
sank to 10 degrees below zero on
May 14, 1896. That is the coldest
temperature ever recorded in the
United States in May.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
13.23
20.38
23.28
12.84
12.95
25.64
11.93
28.16
35.12
12.16
25.80
34.50
24.10

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.25
+1.61
+0.82
+0.13
-0.06
+0.29
-0.56
+1.42
+0.58
-0.25
+2.90
+0.30
+1.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

OH-70124582

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

85°
64°

Mostly cloudy, a
t-storm in the p.m.

Partly sunny with a
passing shower

Mostly cloudy with a
shower or t-storm

Warm with times of
clouds and sun

Partly sunny and very
warm

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

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

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
63/41

Chillicothe
64/45

Ashland
66/44
Grayson
66/44

Belpre
61/42

Athens
63/41

McArthur
63/41

Portsmouth
66/44

Marietta
61/41

Murray City
62/41

Adelphi
63/43

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

THURSDAY

87°
61°

Parkersburg
60/43

Coolville
62/42

Elizabeth
62/41

Spencer
62/42

Buffalo
65/42

Ironton
66/43

Milton
65/43

St. Albans
65/43

Huntington
64/44

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
61/50
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
64/56
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
76/59
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Today

St. Marys
60/42

Wilkesville
64/41
POMEROY
Jackson
64/42
65/42
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
64/43
66/43
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
65/46
GALLIPOLIS
66/42
64/42
65/42

South Shore Greenup
66/43
65/43

31

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
86°
62°

Lucasville
66/43

High

Responsible Attorney: Adam R. Salisbury,
licensed in Ohio and West Virginia

81°
58°

Very High

Primary: walnut, others
Mold: 363

www.taslg.com

77°
56°

Waverly
65/44

Pollen: 5

Primary: ascospores, unk.

MOON PHASES
Full

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

200 East Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

73°
51°

1

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

1-833-522-6237 OR 1-740-992-6368

WEDNESDAY

Cool today with sun and clouds. Mainly clear
and chilly tonight. High 66° / Low 42°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

IF YOU OR A LOVED ONE HAS BEEN
DIAGNOSED WITH OR DIED FROM LUNG CANCER
CONTACT US FOR A FREE CONSULTATION!

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Tuesday, May 14, 2019 3

Clendenin
63/40
Charleston
63/43

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
65/38

Billings
81/57

Denver
79/52

Montreal
50/38
Minneapolis
69/51

Toronto
55/42
Detroit
Chicago 66/47
68/52

New York
52/45
Washington
62/49

Kansas City
78/56

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
81/55/s 83/57/pc
54/43/c 58/45/pc
72/53/s 75/61/s
58/46/sh 66/56/pc
60/46/pc 71/54/pc
81/57/pc 80/55/pc
84/55/pc 75/52/c
47/42/r 59/48/c
63/43/c 71/52/s
71/50/s 74/56/pc
74/49/pc 78/51/pc
68/52/s 68/50/pc
67/46/pc
69/52/t
61/47/c
67/49/t
64/45/pc
70/51/t
84/64/pc 86/67/pc
79/52/pc 82/55/pc
71/55/t 78/60/s
66/47/pc 67/48/sh
87/72/sh 86/73/pc
82/65/pc
84/68/t
67/49/s 68/53/sh
78/56/t 80/64/s
92/69/s 92/65/pc
78/61/s 84/64/s
76/59/pc 73/59/pc
71/50/s
73/55/t
89/72/t
84/72/t
69/51/c 75/58/pc
71/51/s
74/58/t
83/65/s 84/66/pc
52/45/sh 65/54/pc
82/61/pc 85/63/s
84/65/t 86/66/pc
58/45/sh 70/55/pc
97/75/s 100/74/pc
55/42/c
67/49/t
45/38/r 55/40/c
70/48/pc 72/55/s
67/47/pc 73/55/pc
71/58/s 77/59/c
83/62/pc 83/61/c
64/56/pc 65/54/sh
61/50/r 66/53/sh
62/49/pc 72/57/pc

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
72/53

El Paso
87/62

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

High
Low

95° in Marathon, FL
26° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
Chihuahua
86/56

High
118° in Matam, Senegal
Low -27° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
82/65
Monterrey
84/68

Miami
89/72

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The sublime
fruit of the
vine — wine
My friend Laura has spent a lifetime doing for
others. Incredibly smart and incredibly generous,
she is always there for her family, for her extended
family, and for the rest of us assorted
hangers-on. In the 15 or so years I
have had the raw good luck to know
her, I don’t recall her asking for anything for herself. So when it came to
pass that Laura turned the big 6-0,
she said she’d like a group of her
friends to take a little vacation. At
Marla
ﬁrst she said “Paris.” We looked at
Boone
the airfare. When we could breathe
Contributing
again and got back up off the ﬂoor,
columnist
we asked her what her second choice
was. “Napa,” she declared. “Napa
California wine country.”
This decision was met with great joy, enormous
anticipation, and immediate concern for our livers.
But you just don’t say no to a plan proposed by
one of the ﬁnest people you’ve ever met especially
if the plan entails spending a week drinking wine.
By another healthy dose of that raw good luck,
Laura’s niece co-owns ﬁve bars/restaurants. These
are establishments, you understand, that sell wine.
Lots of wine. The niece arranged private tastings
and tours and lunches. We were going to descend
upon wine country and we were going to do it in
style. Every day we got an update from the niece
outlining which winery we would visit and when
and what the good people at that winery were willing to do for ﬁve perfect strangers. It turns out
the good people were willing to do a great deal.
On the ﬁrst day, we were going to experience
three wineries which indicated to even the most
debauched of us that a little restraint was in order.
The daily exposure to alcohol tapered off after
that, but not by much. The second and third days
each offered two wineries. And then there was the
free day during which we could either indulge on
our own or opt to dry out.
Because the gods of happiness were smiling
down benevolently, the ﬁve of us lucky people
managed to arrive at the Oakland airport within
20 minutes of each other. There was that nasty
business of our return ﬂight being booked on
a 737 Max 8. There wasn’t enough wine in the
world to make me get on one of those, even if they
hadn’t been ﬁnally grounded. Rebooking took less
than 10 minutes and we were off. The mini-van
sagged on its axles under the weight of luggage
for ﬁve women, one of whom brought three outﬁts
for every day. Plus make-up. Plus accessories. But
man, she looked good. (No, it wasn’t me.)
The ﬁrst-class arrangements did not take much
getting used to. Everywhere we went we were
greeted with smiles and huge trays of wine, the
order of which does not necessarily reﬂect their
importance to us. We also met, and I swear I am
not making this up, wine educators. Wine educators will — guess what? — educate you about
wine until you are forced to drink a large amount
just to make them happy. This is a sacriﬁce we
were willing to make. It seemed downright churlish to not sample all that was put before us. Someone’s feelings might get hurt. No one wants that,
especially ﬁve thirsty people who are drinking on
the house.
I will never look at a glass of wine the same way
again. These people are serious — dead serious
— about their grapes, their barrels, their process,
their blending secrets and for heaven’s sake, their
wine. Most of the wineries are beautiful. Many are
extraordinary. A few are breathtaking.
We made our way through a dozen of them, sniffing, twirling, admiring, and ultimately tasting the
liquid bounty placed before us. Each wine master
had a vision that fueled his or her mission and each
wine had a story. Minutiae such as what percent of
new French oak was used in the barrel took on its
ﬁtting importance as we former swillers of wine
morphed into people who appreciate what goes
into the vast and complex process of coaxing the
simple (or not so simple) grape to transform itself
into a drink that sometimes approaches nectar.
Some of the wines we liked the best are not
available in Ohio. For reasons that passseth understanding, there are all sorts of vague laws about
where wine can be shipped and where it cannot
be shipped. The happy news is, my very favorites
wines could be shipped here. The ecstatic news is,
they arrived Wednesday.
Marla Boone resides in Covington, Ohio and writes for Miami Valley
Today.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The family you come from isn’t as
important as the family you’re going to
have.”
— Ring Lardner,
American humorist (1885-1933)

THEIR VIEW

Voices speak from our past
A few weeks ago, I
found myself comforting
my daughter.
As often happens, we
ended up crying together.
Then, we ended up comforting each other.
The reason for our sadness was the approaching
anniversary of my son
Danny’s death.
Jessi always had a
special relationship with
her big brother. Every
anniversary is difﬁcult,
but this year Jessi came
to the realization that,
after 13 years, she could
no longer remember the
sound of Danny’s voice.
Neither could I.
We have pictures of
Danny when he was a
chubby little infant and
many more pictures
showing him as he
grew into a very handsome young man. I have
pictures of both of my
sons, Josh and Danny,
that were taken while
we were scuba diving in
the Bahamas. There are
lots of vacation pictures
and pictures from his
time in the U.S. Coast
Guard, but, despite the
many pictures, I couldn’t
remember the sound of
his voice.
Then I remembered
that, for several years, I
emceed the local Relay
for Life event.
However, in 2001 I
was going to be in Israel
during the event. I told
the local leaders of the
American Cancer Society
that I would not be able

Mother’s Day. For
to be the emcee
the ﬁrst time in my
that June. A memlife, Mother’s Day
ber of the commitfaded into Monday
tee then asked if
without me hearI thought Danny
ing the voice of my
would be interested
Mom.
in taking over the
As an infant,
microphone.
Randy
I’m
sure her voice
I knew that
Riley
Danny had inherContributing always calmed and
comforted me. As
ited my gift of gab columnist
an adult, she often
and wasn’t afraid of
made me laugh. In
public speaking, so
turn, I could always make
I told them that I would
ask. Danny jumped at the Mom giggle at the drop
of a hat.
chance.
Mom had a wonderIt dawned on me that
ful spirit. For the last
my friend, Tom Ibaugh,
several years of Mom’s
provided the sound
life, she was in a wheelsystem for every Relay
chair. Despite that, she
for Life event. Tom is
roamed the halls of her
a big-hearted guy who
routinely works with local assisted living facility in
Middletown. She would
nonproﬁt organizations.
His company, Elite Sound go from the dining room
to various activities, sharProductions, had provided audio for Relay for ing smiles and laughter
wherever she went.
Life for many years.
The last time I visited
I called Tom and asked
if he might possibly have Mom in her apartment, I
told her about how Deba recording of Danny
bie and I had recently
from 2001.
started a new tradition
Within less than an
with our grandchildren.
hour, I received a text
After every visit – after
message from Tom.
Attached to the message kisses and hugs, as they
are getting in their van
was a short video and
to leave — Debbie and I
audio recording of my
son. Danny was on stage, stand on our front porch
microphone in hand, talk- to tell them that we love
them.
ing to a large, smiling
As they back out of our
crowd of people about
driveway, we tell them,
ﬁghting cancer and the
“Bye. We love you! We
joys we share in life. He
was honoring people who love you. Bye!” As they
continue down our street,
were ﬁghting cancer.
The video was 18 years we yell after them, “Bye.
We love you! We love you.
old, but the voice was
Bye!” Their windows are
fresh and alive.
always rolled down and
This past Sunday was

from their van we hear
their voices shouting and
laughing, “Bye. We love
you, Pappy and Memaw!
We love you. Bye!”
Mom thought that was
hilarious. After our goodbye hug and kiss, I told
Mom, “Bye, Mom. I love
you! I love you. Bye!” I
continued saying that as
I walked out of her apartment door.
I walked around the
corner of the hallway and
stood quietly in front
of the elevator. It was
faint, but in the distance.
I could hear her voice.
From her apartment I
could hear Mom repeating, “Bye. I love you! I
love you. Bye!”
I would give almost
anything in the world to
be able to hear that sweet
voice just one more time.
My recommendation
to everyone would be to
make recordings for your
children and grandchildren. Record their favorite children’s story or
poem. Record a favorite
memory of them or tell
them the story about the
day they were born.
Also, ask them to
make a recording of their
voices for you. That
recording will become
more special to you as
time goes by.
You might want to end
your recording by saying,
“Bye. I love you! I love
you. Bye!”

Randy Riley is former Mayor of
Wilmington, Ohio and former
Clinton County Commissioner.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

In 1804, the Lewis
and Clark expedition to
explore the Louisiana
Territory as well as the
Paciﬁc Northwest left
camp near present-day
Today’s Highlight in History: Hartford, Illinois.
In 1948, according to
On May 14, 1955, repthe current-era calendar,
resentatives from eight
the independent state of
Communist bloc countries, including the Soviet Israel was proclaimed in
Union, signed the Warsaw Tel Aviv by David BenPact in Poland. (The Pact Gurion, who became its
ﬁrst prime minister.
was dissolved in 1991.)
In 1968, John Lennon
and Paul McCartney held
On this date:
a news conference in New
In 1643, Louis XIV
became King of France at York to announce the creation of the Beatles’ latest
age 4 upon the death of
business venture, Apple
his father, Louis XIII.
In 1796, English physi- Corps.
In 1973, the United
cian Edward Jenner inocStates launched Skylab 1,
ulated 8-year-old James
its ﬁrst manned space staPhipps against smallpox
tion. (Skylab 1 remained
by using cowpox matter.
Today is Tuesday, May
14, the 134th day of
2019. There are 231 days
left in the year.

in orbit for six years
before burning up during
re-entry in 1979.) The
National Right to Life
Committee was incorporated.
In 2001, the Supreme
Court ruled 8-0 that
there is no exception in
federal law for people to
use marijuana for medical
purposes.
In 2004, Britain’s Daily
Mirror newspaper published a front-page apology after photographs supposedly showing British
forces abusing Iraqi prisoners turned out to be
fakes. The U.S. Supreme
Court refused to step in
and block gay marriages
in Massachusetts.
In 2008, the Interior
Department declared the

polar bear a threatened
species because of the
loss of Arctic sea ice.
Ten years ago: Chrysler
announced plans to eliminate 789 dealerships as
part of its restructuring.
A pair of spacewalking
astronauts installed a new
piano-sized camera in the
Hubble Space Telescope.
One year ago: Israel
and the U.S. held an inauguration ceremony for the
new American Embassy
in Jerusalem; just a few
miles away, Israeli forces
shot and killed nearly 60
Palestinians and wounded
hundreds of others during
protests along the Gaza
border that were the culmination of demonstrations aimed at breaking a
border blockade.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

The Meigs
Middle
School Boys
and Girls
Track teams
won the TVC
Ohio league
meet. Team
members
and coaches
are pictured
following the
meet.

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

Photos courtesy of Meigs Middle School Track

Track teams win league titles
The Meigs Middle
School Boys and Girls
track teams won their
respective TVC Ohio
titles during the recent
league meeting.
Meigs Middle School
Girls Team scored 134
points, with Athens second at 99 points.
Meigs Middle School
Boys Team 149 points,
with Nelsonville-York second at 99 points.
All Points Winners for
the meet were Taylor Bartrum with 28 points and
Dillon Howard 28 points.
Both the boys and girls
teams swept all of the
relay races at the meet.
Event results were as
follows:
100m Hurdles: Maddie
Floyd 16.90s* 1st place
boys and ranked 29th in
State;
110m Hurdles: Payton
VanInwagin 18.63s* 1st
place boys;
100m Dash: Edena
Reynolds 14.15s* 3rd
place girls; Dillon Howard 12.53s* 2nd place
boys and Brennan Gheen
12.82* 4th place boys;
1600m Run: E.J. Anderson 6:12.07* 4th place
girls; Conlee Burnem
5:37.98* 5th place boys;
4x100m Relay: GirlsEdena Reynolds, Charlotte
Hysell, Keaghan Wolfe,
Delana Wright 56.47* 1st
place; Boys-Logan Eskew,
Brayden Stanley, Braylon
Harrison, Brennan Gheen
52.65 1st place;
400m Run: Taylor Bartrum 1:03.35* 1st place
girls and Maggie Musser
1:04.69* 2nd place girls;
Dillon Howard 57.13* 1st
place boys and Brayden
Stanley 1:01.06* 4th
place boys;

Tuesday, May 14, 2019 5

Dillon Howard and Taylor
Bartrum were the TVC Ohio All
Point Winners at the recent
league meet.

4x200m Relay: GirlsEdena Reynolds, Charlotte Hysell, Keaghan
Wolfe, Delana Wright
2:00.55* 1st place; BoysLogan Eskew, Brody
Butcher, Braylon Harrison, Ethan Stewart
1:50.00* 1st place;
200m Hurdles: Maddie
Floyd 32.41* 1st place
girls and Lily Dugan
35.98* 4th place girls;
Payton VanInwagin
30.62* 1st place boys;
800m Run: Maggie
Musser 2:41.93* 1st
place girls, Audrey Hysel
3:36.35*; Payton VanInwagin 2:32.79* 4th
place boys, Riley Lanham
2:37.90* 6th place boys;
200m Dash: Taylor
Bartrum 28.70* 2nd
place girls, Maddie Floyd
32.03 5th place girls; Dillon Howard 25.52* 1st
place boys, Danna Hanna
40.30*
4x400m Relay: GirlsCharlotte Hysell, Keaghan
Wolfe, E.J. Anderson,
Maggie Musser 4:33.31*
1st place; Boys-Conlee
Burnem, Brayden Stanley,
Brody Butcher, Brennan
Gheen 4:07.41 1st place;
Discus: Girls-Lily
Dugan 66-09 1st place,
Quinn Sargent 51-11 6th
place; Boys-Ethan Stewart 129-00 1st place (9th
place in the State); Cory

Record

Dotson 95-07 2nd place;
High Jump: Boys-Brody
Butcher 5-02.00 1st place,
Braylon Harrison 4-10.00
3rd place;
Long Jump: Delana
Wright 13-01.00 3rd place
girls and Alexa Ingels
11-06.25; Logan Eskew
14-10.25 3rd place boys
and Ashton Jude 10-09.50;
Shot Put: Quinn Sargent 24-03.00 4th place
girls and Avery Patterson
19-10.00*; Ethan Stewart 40-11.75 1st place
boys (34th in State) and
Walker Maker 29-07.00
3rd place boys;
Pole Vault: Taylor Bartrum 7-04.00 1st place
girls (50th in State) and
Lilly Dugan 5-06.00 6th
place girls; Conlee Burnem 6-00.00 and Ashton
Jude 5-06.00.
Other team members
are Elana Barrett, Christina Smith, Shane Nichols,
and Jonny Scott.
The teams are coached
by Jennifer Bartrum with
Debbie Gerard as the
throwers coach.
In addition to winning
the league meet, additional results from the season
included:
1st Place Girls and
Boys Meigs MS Open on
March 25;
2nd Place Girls and
Boys Marietta Night
Relays on April 11;
1st Place Girls Meigs
MS Invitational on April
15;
1st Place Girls and
Boys Skyline Bowline
Middle School Invitational on April 26.
*PR indicated Personal
Record
Information provided by Meigs
Middle School Track Coach
Jennifer Bartrum.

of the ﬁfth degree, one
count of Receiving Stolen
Property, a felony of the
fourth degree, two counts
From page 1
of Theft, each a felony of
the ﬁfth degree, one count
Roush to 36 months in
prison. Roush was imme- of Theft, a felony of the
diately remanded into
fourth degree, one count
the custody of the Meigs of Theft, a misdemeanor
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
of the ﬁrst degree, and
and awaits transportation Complicity to Burglary,
to prison.
a felony of the second
degree. Gilmore is alleged
Gilmore arraigned
to have committed these
On May 13, 2019, Zyon offenses in the Pageville
and Harrisonville areas.
Gilmore, 23, of Nelsonville, Ohio, was arraigned These cases will proceed
for ﬁve counts of Breaking in Meigs County Court
&amp; Entering, each a felony of Common Pleas before

Judge Linda R. Warner.
Gilmore remains in custody at this time.

Spending

of 10 students already
are eligible for free or
reduced price breakfasts.
— Fund DeWine’s
proposed water quality
initiative at requested
levels of $85 million over
two years, with the promise of a separate bill to
address long-term water
quality concerns in Ohio.
— Eliminate tax credits for the motion picture
industry or for making
a political contribution,
and direct ride-sharing
companies such as Lyft
and Uber to collect and
remit sales taxes.
— Provide $2 million
in each of the next two
years to support grants
to reduce infant mortality.
The bill goes next to
the Senate, and likely
to a joint House-Senate
committee to iron out
differences, before DeWine must sign it by the
end of June.

tee, said he appreciated
the bill’s support for
workers, small businesses, schools and people
From page 1
with drug addiction.
The House plan
a Republican from Perry
would eliminate perCounty in southeastern
sonal income taxes for
Ohio.
those earning less than
The GOP-controlled
House approved the plan $22,500 and enact a
89-6 Thursday following 6.6% cut for everyone
its approval by the House else. Over the objection
of some business groups,
Finance Committee a
day earlier. At that vote, the plan also would
lower a business income
minority Democrats
joined majority Republi- deduction from the ﬁrst
cans in a rare unanimous $250,000 in income to
the ﬁrst $100,000.
committee vote.
Among other House
“This will be the ﬁrst
GOP proposals, the twobudget that I will vote
year budget would:
for as a member of the
— Require public uniminority party, and I do
so proudly because of the versities to guarantee
work that’s been done by students the same tuition
rate from their freshman
members of both sides
through senior years.
of the aisle,” Rep. Jack
— Direct the EducaCera, of Bellaire in easttion Department to creern Ohio, said Wednesate a program offering
day.
Cera, the top Democrat breakfast to all students
at schools where seven
on the ﬁnance commit-

Warrant issued
for Jason Milliron
Jason Milliron reportedly failed to appear at
a scheduled hearing in
Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas on May
13, 2019, and a warrant
was issued for his arrest.
If you have information
regarding Milliron’s
whereabouts, you are
asked to contact the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce at 740-992-3371.

their plans for college and their relationship to the alumni member, and
send them to the Pomeroy Alumni
Association, Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Meeting Change
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Board of Elections will not be meeting in the regularly scheduled meeting on May 14, 2019, that meeting
has been rescheduled for May 20 at
11 a.m. for the regular monthly meeting and the ofﬁcial count for the May
7 Special Election.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street
“Middleport Hill” is open but
restricted to one lane. Portable trafﬁc
controllers are installed near the area
of the slip. Please obey all signs and
lights.
CHESTER — A bridge rehabilitation project begins on March 25 on
State Route 248 in Meigs County.
Get Healthy Meigs! meeting
The project is taking place between
MIDDLEPORT — Do you want
Bashan Road and Locust Grove Road.
a voice in community health assessOne lane will be closed in this area
ment and health improvement planning for Meigs County? Do you want and temporary trafﬁc signals will be
in place. The estimated completion
to learn more about what is being
done to make better health outcomes date is June 15, 2019.
MEIGS COUNTY — A tree trimwithin your community? If you
answered yes, please join Get Healthy ming project begins on April 29 on
Meigs! on Thursday, May 16, at 10:30 State Route 143 in Meigs County.
a.m. in the 3rd ﬂoor conference room The project is taking place between
Blackwood Road (Township Road
of the Meigs County Department of
455) and Farmers Road (Township
Jobs and Family Services in MiddleRoad 638). The road will be closed in
port. Guest speaker will be Victoria
sections from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. until May
Baker-Willford of the C.C Baker
31.
Domestic Violence Shelter. RSVP
by May 13 to Michelle Willard at
michelle.willard@meigs-health.com.
Meigs Cooperative Parish Scholarship
Lunch provided by the University of
POMEROY — Applications are
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community
currently being accepted for the
College.
2019-20 Meigs Cooperative Parish
Scholarships. Applicants must attend
a participating church afﬁliated with
Pomeroy Alumni Banquet
the Meigs Cooperative Parish and
POMEROY — Tickets are now
the church supports the scholarship
on sale for alumni and guests for
endowment. Applicants must comthe Pomeroy High School Alumni
Banquet to be held on Saturday, May plete a written application. Applicants
must have completed one year of
25, 2019, in the Meigs High School
higher education after high school,
Cafeteria. Social hour begins at 5:30
p.m. with the banquet being served at with priority given to students 21
6:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 and can be years of age or older. Applicants must
purchased at Francis Florist, 252 East maintain a minimum grade point
average of 2.5 and provide a copy of
Main Street in Pomeroy, or by sendtheir transcript. Scholarships will
ing a stamped, self addressed, envebe awarded in the amount of $500
lope to Pomeroy Alumni Assn., Box
as money is available. Awards will
202, Pomeroy, Oh 45769. Reunion
years are 1944, 1949, 1954, 1959 and be given solely on the basis of the
application. An interview may be
1964.
requested. The deadline for donations
to the scholarship fund is June 2. All
PHS Alumni Scholarship
applications must be returned to the
POMEROY — Deadline for applychurch pastor by June 4, with the
ing for one of the Pomeroy High
pastor to submit applications to the
School Alumni scholarships is May
Cooperative Parish Ofﬁce by June 11.
18, 2019. Scholarships are open to
Scholarships will be awarded at the
graduating seniors who are a grandvolunteer banquet at 6 p.m. on July
child or great grandchild of a Pome15. Applications are available at the
roy High School alumni. Applicants
Meigs Cooperative Parish Ofﬁce at
need to submit an ofﬁcial transcript
of grades, current photo, a letter tell- the Mulberry Community Center or
ing about their accomplishments and from your church ofﬁce.

Meigs

per year.
Approved a tentative
list of graduates for the
Class of 2019.
From page 1
Approved an overImprovement Grant for night ﬁeld trip for the
archery team to attend
Meigs High School in
the amount of $100,000. the NASP National
This is a four year grant. Tournament in Louisville, Kentucky.
Approved a two year
Approved two sumagreement with Julian
mer 2019 purchased
and Grube Inc. for
agreed upon procedures service agreements, not
to exceed $7,500 each,
with Medicaid School
for technology support.
Program for FY20 and
The individuals will
21. The cost is $1,700

report to District Technology Coordinator
Matt Simpson.
Approved minutes of
the previous meeting,
the ﬁnancial report and
bills for April, as well as
the cafeteria report for
March.
The next Meigs Local
Board of Education
meeting is scheduled for
6:30 p.m. on Wednesday,
May 22 at the Meigs
Local Administrative
Ofﬁce.

Pool

Village Council meeting
will be held Thursday,
June 13 at 7 p.m. at
the Syracuse Village
Hall.

From page 1

from the Attorney General Dave Yost. This
will cover the purchase

of three new bullet
proof vests.
The village will also
be advertising the ﬁre
department’s 5 feet by
10 feet utility trailer
for bid.
The next Syracuse

Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

OHIO VALLEY
CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
39560 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5353 740-331-0380

CAMP KICKOFF
SUNDAY MAY 19
1-6PM
FREE FOOD &amp; DRINK
GAMES-MINI TRAIN RIDES-SLIDES-CORN HOLE
BASKETBALL-VOLLEYBALL-INFLATABLES-MUSIC
(Pool opening depending on the weather)

Register for summer camp week at camp kickoff
On line registration: ohiovalleychristianassembly.com

Save $20 on camp fees! Register before May 20th.

Come out and enjoy all the
activities...everyone welcome!
OH-70125473

�S ports
6 Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Daily Sentinel

GA girls 3rd, boys 4th at OVC Championships
By Alex Hawley

63.5, followed by Rock Hill at
58.5, Chesapeake at 41 and
South Point at 40.
The GAHS girls had eight
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio —
top-4 ﬁnishes, including a
Back in the top half.
pair of champions, with Alex
The Gallia Academy track
Barnes posting a winningand ﬁeld team — which ﬁnished ﬁfth in both the girls and mark of 16-6.75 in the long
boys 2018 league standings — jump, and Zoe Smith setting
a pace of 13.5 in the 100m
moved up to third in the girls
competition, and fourth in the dash. Smith was also third in
the 200m dash with a time of
boys, at the 2019 Ohio Valley
Conference championships on 27.27.
The Blue Angels had a pair
Saturday at Portsmouth High
of runner-up relay squads,
School.
as the team of Smith, Aliva
Coal Grove won the girls
team title with a score of 131, Lear, Gabby McConnell and
Gretchen McConnell ran the
just 5.5 ahead runner-up Fair4x100m in 52.58, and the
land. The Blue Angels’ third
Bryan Walters|OVP Sports
place total was 90.5, 5.5 ahead quartet of Brooke Hamilton,
Gallia Academy junior Alex Barnes leaps through the air during an attempt in the
Pilar Ortego, Sarah Watts and
long jump event at the 2019 Battle for the Anchor held May 6 at Gallia Academy of Ironton in fourth. The host
Brooke Johnson posted a time
Lady
Trojans
were
in
ﬁfth
at
High School in Centenary, Ohio.
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

of 10:54.11 in the 4x800.
The GAHS 4x400m team of
Hamilton, Johnson, Gretchen
McConnell and Gabby McConnell was fourth with a time
of 4:46.56, with Johnson also
taking fourth in the 400m dash
at 1:07.32, and Calista Barnes
tying for fourth at 4-4 in the
high jump.
Rock Hill repeated as boys
champion with a score of 146,
7.5 in front of Portsmouth in
second. Coal Grove was third
with 94, followed by the Blue
Devils with 79.5 and Ironton
with 78.5. Chesapeake with
53, Fairland with 48 and South
Point with 20.5 rounded out
the eight-team ﬁeld.
See OVC | 7

Tornadoes top
Athens 3-2 in last
game of season
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

THE PLAINS, Ohio — The perfect way to prepare for the postseason.
The Southern baseball team ended its regular
season in style on Friday in Athens County, defeating Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division champion
Athens by a 3-2 count.
Athens (17-6) scored a run apiece in each of the
ﬁrst two innings, but was held off the board for
the remainder of the contest. The Tornadoes (147) were blanked in the ﬁrst two frames, but took a
3-2 lead on a two-out Jensen Anderson double in
the top of the third.
Gage Shuler pitched ﬁve shut out innings in
relief and earned the victory on the mound for
Southern, striking out two batters, walking one
and giving up ﬁve hits. Billy Harmon tossed the
ﬁrst two frames for SHS, allowing two earned runs
on four hits and a walk, while striking out one.
Rece Lonas took the pitching loss in four
innings for AHS, allowing three earned runs on
two hits and ﬁve walks, while striking out six. Eli
Kennedy struck out one batter and gave up three
hits in three shut out innings of relief for the Bulldogs.
Shuler led the SHS offense, going 2-for-4 with
a run scored. Anderson doubled once and drove
in three runs, Will Wickline and Ryan Laudermilt
added a single apiece, while Harmon and Noah
Diddle both scored once.
Jack Cornwell and Finn Mitchell both singled
twice to lead the hosts at the plate. Nate Trainer
doubled once and drove in one run, Nick Barga
singled once and picked up an RBI, while Reece
Wallace and Andrew Stephens both singled once
and scored once in the setback.
Southern committed two of the game’s three
errors and stranded 18 runners on base, twice as
many as Athens.
The Tornadoes — the No. 2 seed — will host
seventh-seeded Coal Grove in the Division IV sectional ﬁnal on Tuesday at Star Mill Park.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, May 14
Baseball
(9) Miller at (1) Eastern, 5 p.m.
(7) Coal Grove at (2) Southern, 5 p.m.
(6) Waterford winner at (3) Trimble, 5 p.m.
Softball
(4) Eastern vs. (9) Paint Valley at Rio, 4:30
Sherman at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Division II districts at Meigs HS, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, May 15
Baseball
(9) Ironton at (8) Meigs, 5 p.m.
(15) River Valley at (2) Fairland, 5 p.m.
TBD at (1) Wahama, 6 p.m.
Softball
Wahama at Sherman, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Division III districts at Southeastern HS, 3 p.m.
Thursday, May 16
Baseball
GA-ZT winner vs. Athens-VC winner at TBD, 5
p.m.
TBD at (1) Wahama, TBD
Softball
Wahama vs. Sherman at TBD, TBD

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior Logan Southall clears the bar during the high jump event at the 2019 Battle for the Anchor event held May 6 at
Gallia Academy High School in Centenary, Ohio.

Point sending 28 to state
Black Knights, Lady Knights both
finish 2nd at Region IV meet
WINFIELD, W.Va. —
Real close to needing a
bigger bus.
The Point Pleasant
track and ﬁeld program
qualiﬁed a total of 28
kids for state as each
squad earned runner-up
team ﬁnishes on Friday
night at the 2019 Class
AA Region IV Championships held at Winﬁeld
High School in Putnam
County.
Both the Black Knights
and Lady Knights trailed
only Winﬁeld in the ﬁnal
team standings, but the
Red and Black also joined
WHS as the only programs to produce triple
digits in the ﬁnal standings of each competition.
The Point boys came
away with 16 different
state qualiﬁers in 17 of
the 18 events, including
a trio of regional titles
and as many at-large bids
en route to a ﬁnal tally of
142 points. The Generals
won the Region IV crown
with 211 points, while
Poca was third out of
nine scoring teams with
50 points.
All ﬁve relay squads
advanced to state with
top-three ﬁnishes, but the
Point quartet of Kaydean
Eta, Brady Adkins, Logan
Southall and Nick Leport
won the 4x110m shuttle
hurdles relay with a time
of 1:00.36.

Southall secured a
regional title for PPHS in
the high jump (5-10) and
Adkins did the same in
the 300m hurdles (41.95)
event. Southall also qualiﬁed in the 110m hurdles
with a third place time of
16.31 seconds.
Luke Wilson landed a
trio of runner-up efforts
in the 800m (2:03.96),
1600m (4:36.14) and
3200m (9:54.28) events,
while Eta was second
in the 110m hurdles
(16.05). Luke Derenberger was also the high jump
runner-up with a height
of 5 feet, 8 inches.
Preston Taylor was
the 100m dash runnerup with a time of 11.72
seconds, while Trevon
Franklin was second in
the shot put with a throw
of 46 feet, 10 inches.
Leport, Taylor, Jovone
Johnson and Garrett Hatten placed second in the
4x100m relay with a time
of 45.50 seconds. Johnson, Taylor, Hatten and
Adkins were also second
in the 4x200m relay with
a mark of 1:33.56.
Wilson, Leport, Hatten and Adkins were
third in the 4x400m
relay (3:41.04), while
Alberto Castillo, Hector
Castillo, Peyton Hughes
and Ethan Scott ﬁnished
third in the 4x800m
relay (9:23.63). Steven

Point Pleasant senior Allison Henderson takes off after receiving
the baton from teammate Ashley Staats during the 4x200m relay
event at the 2019 Battle for the Anchor event held May 6 at Gallia
Academy High School in Centenary, Ohio.

Trent also qualiﬁed in
the pole vault with third
place effort of 10 feet, 6
inches.
Leport and Johnson
came away with a pair of
at-large berths after placing fourth in the 400m
dash (53.90) and 200m
dash (24.04), respectively. Gabe Hall also
claimed a spot at state in
the shot put with a ﬁfth
place throw of 42 feet, 7.5
inches.
The Point girls came
away with 12 differ-

ent state qualiﬁers in
10 events, including a
single regional champion and four at-large
bids en route to a ﬁnal
tally of 119 points. The
Lady Generals won the
Region IV crown with
256 points, while Sissonville was third out of
nine scoring teams with
52 points.
Samantha Saunders
secured the high jump
title with a cleared height
See STATE | 7

�SPORTS/TELEVISION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 14, 2019 7

Draft lottery may
decide Williamson’s
first NBA stop
CHICAGO (AP) —
Zion Williamson’s immediate future is likely to be
decided by the bounce of
14 pingpong balls.
The NBA draft lottery
is Tuesday night in Chicago, where some team
will be awarded the No. 1
pick in the June 20 draft
— and, presumably, the
chance to grab Williamson with that selection.
New York, Cleveland
and Phoenix share the
best odds: They’ve all
got a 14 percent chance
of winning under a new
format that was designed
in 2017 and put into play
this year to discourage
teams from all-out tanking. Williamson, the consensus college basketball
player of the year this
past season, is expected
to be in the audience
when the lottery results
are announced.
“Whatever NBA team
I land on, that’s where I
want to be,” Williamson,
the now-former Duke star
who is turning pro after
one season with the Blue
Devils, said last month.
“Whoever drafts me,
that’s where I want to be.”
It is very much a lottery; the machine is
exactly like the one used
in many state lotteries
and is manufactured by
Smartplay International,
which works with clients
all over the world for
various drawings. Smartplay even certiﬁes the 14
pingpong balls that will
be used to churn out the
four-number combination
will net some team the
No. 1 pick.
The Knicks, Cavaliers and Suns will all
be assigned 140 of the
possible 1,001 fournumber combinations.
Chicago gets 125, giving
the Bulls the fourth-best
shot. Charlotte, Miami
and Sacramento will be
assigned 10 of those combinations, giving them
the longest odds of winning the No. 1 pick. The
Kings won’t be rooting
to win; their pick goes
to Boston, unless it’s the
ﬁrst pick, and then it

State
From page 6

of 5 feet, 3 inches. Saunders was also the runnerup in both the pole vault
(9-6) and long jump (146.5) competitions.
Addy Cottrill was second in both the shot put
(36-8) and discus (119-0)
events, while Elicia Wood
was the high jump runnerup at 5 feet even.
The quartet of Madison
Hatﬁeld, Teagan Hay,
Sydnee Moore and Ashley
Staats were runners-up
in both the 4x100m relay
(54.03) and 4x200m relay
(1:54.42) events.
Hatﬁeld, Moore, Allison Henderson and Kady
Hughes combined for a
pair of third place efforts
in the 4x400m relay
(4:29.71) and 4x800m
relay (10:37.17). Hay
and Kayla Butler also

goes to Philadelphia.
By the time the telecast
of the lottery begins at
8:30 p.m. Eastern, it will
already have long been
over. The actual drawing
takes place in a secure
room about an hour
beforehand, witnessed
by a representative from
each of the 14 lottery
clubs, NBA ofﬁcials and
some members of the
media. None of them can
leave or communicate
with the outside world
in any way until after the
results are announced on
television.
“I’m not one to waste
a lot of time on things I
can’t control — which is
essentially anything that
happens at my house,
and the lottery,” Atlanta
general manager Travis
Schlenk said.
The Hawks could be
big winners Tuesday. If
Dallas doesn’t get one
of the top four draft
picks, the Mavericks’
pick — which would be
No. 9 if they don’t move
up — goes to Atlanta,
which has its own lottery
pick as well and a 10.5%
chance of winning the
No. 1 selection.
The Knicks are hoping
history repeats: The ﬁrst
draft lottery was 1985,
the Knicks won it and
used that No. 1 pick to
draft Patrick Ewing —
who will represent New
York on stage Tuesday
night.
It’ll be a Georgetown
center reunion — the
Heat are sending Alonzo
Mourning as their
onstage representative.
The conference ﬁnals
take center stage this
week: Portland at Golden
State in Game 1 in the
West, which follows the
draft lottery; Toronto
at Milwaukee in Game
1 in the East, which
begins on Wednesday.
But in Chicago, it’ll be all
about the future — the
G League Elite Camp
started Sunday and concludes Tuesday, then the
draft lottery, and then the
NBA draft combine starts
Thursday.

came away with third
place ﬁnishes in the long
jump (14-0.5) and shot
put (34-4) events, respectively.
Henderson earned
an at-large bid in the
800m run with a time of
2:31.29, while Tristan
Wilson came away with
a pair of at-large spots
after placing fourth in the
discus (95-1) and sixth
in the shot put (32-2.5).
Hannah Gleason also
gained an at-large bid
with a sixth place effort in
the discus (89-4).
The 2019 WVSSAC
Track and Field Championships will be held May
17-18 at Laidley Field in
Charleston.
Visit runwv.com for
complete results of the
2019 Class AA Region IV
track and ﬁeld championships held at Winﬁeld
High School.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Members of the Point Pleasant baseball program pose for a picture in front of the backstop at the beginning of the 2019 spring
sports season in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point Pleasant wins sectional
By Bryan Walters

“We’ve put ourselves in a good
position all the way through the
tournament, and really all year
WINFIELD, W.Va. — The good long. Our guys smelled a little
blood in the water and they wantthing is still going.
ed to go ahead and ﬁnish it out
The Point Pleasant baseball
today,” Blain said. “Our guys have
team secured its ﬁrst regional
put themselves in this position
berth in three years while wrapping up the Class AA Region IV, between the offseason work and
what we’ve done this spring. This
Section 1 crown in an unbeaten
was deﬁnitely an expectation for
fashion on Saturday afternoon
with a 5-1 victory over top-seed- this group and we’ve crossed off
one of our goals.
ed Winﬁeld in Putnam County.
“We’ve proven that we are the
The second-seeded Big Blacks
best team in our section, so now
(22-7) wasted little time in
the goal is to prove that we are
extending their postseason
the best team in the region. It
march as the guests built a 2-0
also means that we need to keep
lead in the top of the ﬁrst, then
getting better, because the games
tacked on two more runs in the
ﬁfth before adding another in the and the competition get even
sixth for a commanding ﬁve-run tougher from here on out. But,
I’m super proud of the guys for
cushion.
what we’ve accomplished today.”
The host Generals (25-8)
The Big Blacks came out of the
ﬁnally broke into the scoring
gates ﬁring as Miles Williams
column in the home half of the
sixth as Sam Ingram came home led the game off with a double,
then Carter Smith reached on an
on a two-out single from Nick
error that put runners at ﬁrst and
Edwards that wrapped up the
second with nobody out. Brody
four-run outcome.
The Red and Black advance to Jeffers followed with a single that
loaded the bases with nobody
their ﬁrst Region IV since 2016
out.
on Monday, May 20, when they
With two away in the top of the
travel to Scott for a ﬁrst pitch of
frame, Hunter Blain singled to
6:30 p.m.
The best-of-three series returns right as Williams came home for
a 1-0 advantage. Kyelar Morrow
to Point at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday,
then singled in Smith for a 2-0
May 21. If needed, Game 3 will
edge midway through the ﬁrst.
be played at Scott at 6:30 p.m.
The score remained that way
Wednesday, May 22.
It is the fourth Region IV, Sec- until the top of the ﬁfth as PPHS
again managed to manufacture
tion 1 title for Point Pleasant
under sixth-year skipper Andrew some offensive output.
Smith and Jeffers provided
Blain, who noted afterwards that
back-to-back singles to lead off
his troops were ﬁred up to ﬁnish off the Generals on Saturday. the inning, then back-to-back
walks to Joel Beattie and Wyatt
Winﬁeld needed to beat PPHS
Wilson allowed Smith to score
twice to advance to the Region
for a three-run lead. Morrow
IV tournament.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

OVC
From page 6

The GAHS boys had a
ﬁve top-4 ﬁnishes, including one relay, as the team
of Justin Day, Cory Call,
Ayden Roettker and Bo
Saxson was third in the
4x100m with a time of
47.06.
Riley Starnes was second in the shot put and

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

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

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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CABLE

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Frontline "One Day in
Gaza" Mass protests on the
Israel-Gaza border. (N)
Black-ish (N) Bless "In Hot 1969 "Generation
Water" (N)
Woodstock" (N)
FBI "Closure" (SF) (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "The
River Styx, Part 2" (SF) (N)
Mental Samurai "Week
Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
Nine" (N)
American Experience
Frontline "One Day in
"Annie Oakley"
Gaza" Mass protests on the
Israel-Gaza border. (N)
FBI "Closure" (SF) (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "The
River Styx, Part 2" (SF) (N)

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "Lonely Hearts Club" Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
The Dan Patrick Show (N) Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh vs Arizona (L)
24 (ROOT) DFL Soccer Bayern Munich at RB Leipzig
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
NBA Countdown (L)
The Jump
NBA Draft
NBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NFL Live
Basketball
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
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)

fourth in the discus throw
with respective distances
of 43-4 and 131-00 for
Gallia Academy, Call was
runner-up in the long
jump at 19-10, while Ian
Hill claimed second in the
300m hurdles at 42.92.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for complete results
of the 2019 Ohio Valley
Conference championships.

grounded into a ﬁelder’s choice
that also brought in Jeffers for a
4-0 advantage midway through
ﬁve complete.
Smith also tripled in Josh
Wamsley with one away in the
sixth to give Point its largest lead
of the day at 5-0.
Winﬁeld produced 13 baserunners in the contest, but only
Ingram managed to reach third
base before scoring in the home
half of the sixth.
The Big Blacks outhit the hosts
by a 9-5 overall margin and also
played an error-free contest,
while WHS did commit a single
error in the setback. PPHS
stranded eight runners on base,
while the Green and White left
seven on the bags.
Hunter Blain was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing
one earned run, three hits and
four walks over ﬁve-plus innings
of work while striking out six.
Landen Fairchild took the loss
after surrendering four runs
(two earned), seven hits and four
walks over ﬁve frames while fanning ﬁve.
Williams, Smith and Jeffers
paced the Big Blacks with two
hits apiece, followed by Blain,
Morrow and Wamsley with a
safety apiece. Morrow led the
guests with two RBIs.
Ingram, Edwards, Peyton Stover, Hunter Morris and Peyton
Gillispie had a hit apiece for the
Generals. Edwards provided the
hosts’ lone RBI.
With more than a week until
its next contest, Point Pleasant
has picked up a road game with
Hurricane on Thursday at 6 p.m.

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

Celebrity Wife Swap "Gary Celebrity Wife Swap
Celeb Wife Swap "Gilbert (:05) Celebrity Wife Swap (:05) Celebrity Wife Swap
Busey/ Ted Haggard"
Gottfried/ Alan Thicke"
"Jenna von Oy/ Jill Zarin"
"Niecy Nash/ Tina Yothers"
(5:30)
Pitch Perfect (2012, Comedy) Brittany Snow, The Bold Type "#TBT" (N)
Sweet Home Alabama (2002, Comedy) Candice
Rebel Wilson, Anna Kendrick. TV14
Bergen, Josh Lucas, Reese Witherspoon. TV14
Mom
Mom
Mom
Mom
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom ('84, Adv) Harrison Ford. Indiana Jones
searches for a village's lost magic stone and stumbles upon a secret cult. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (N)
Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Last O.G. (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:00)
Transformers ('07, Act) Shia LaBeouf. TV14 Central Intelligence ('16, Com) Dwayne Johnson. TV14
Central Intelligence TV14
(5:30)
I, Robot (2004, Sci-Fi) Bridget Moynahan,
Escape Plan ('13, Act) Sylvester Stallone. An expert at escaping from (:35) Escape
Alan Tudyk, Will Smith. TV14
prison is betrayed and locked in the most secure facility. TVMA
Plan TVMA
Deadliest Catch
Catch "Shifting Stack" (N) Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch "Blood in the Water" (N)
Intervention "Addicted Moms"
Intervention "Family of Addicts: Tom and John" A family Kids Behind Bars: Life or
history of drug abuse entrapped the brothers. (N)
Parole "Preston" (N)
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law (N)
Star Law "Stray Bullets" (N) Lone Star Law
Murder for Hire
Murder for Hire
Snapped A profile of women Snapped A profile of women Snapped A profile of women
who are accused of murder. who are accused of murder. who are accused of murder.
Law &amp; Order "Bad Faith"
Law &amp; Order "Purple Heart" Law &amp; Order "Switch"
Law &amp; Order "Pride"
Law &amp; Order "Bitter Fruit"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Sex and the City ('08, Com) Kim Cattrall, Sarah Jessica Parker. TVMA
(:20) Andy Griffith Show
(:55) Griffith A. Griffith
(:05) Ray
(:40) Ray
(:15) Ray
(:50) Two and a Half Men
(:25) 2½Men
Locked Up Abroad "Lima" Locked Up Abroad "Cuzco" Locked Up Abroad "Delhi" Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad "Spain"
"Prisoners of War"
(4:00) UCI Cycling
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Boston Bruins at Carolina Hurricanes (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) Face to Face Boxing Classics
Boxing Premier Champions Jarrett Hurd vs. Julian Williams
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Civil War
Civil War Gold "Tunnel
The Curse of Civil "A Void (:05) Lost Gold of World
"Lost and Founding"
Gold "The Return"
Visions" (N)
At All Costs" (N)
War II "Tunnel Found"
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Beverly "Grilling Me Softly" Beverly Hills (N)
Texicanas (N)
(4:00)
All About the Benjamins ('02, Act) Mike Epps, Ice Cube. TV14 Movie
Games People Play (N)
Ladies Night (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Good Bones (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:25)
The Scorpion King ('02, Act)
Doom ('05, Sci-Fi) Karl Urban. Space marines are forced to go to war
John Carter ('12,
Kelly Hu, Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson. TV14 with demons after investigating a facility on Mars. TV14
Act) Taylor Kitsch. TV14

6

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

50 First Dates
Wyatt Cenac Vice News
Muhamm. Ali The incredible (:25) What's My Name: Ali The incredible (:45)
('04, Rom) Drew Barrymore,
Tonight (N) journey of Muhammad Ali is journey of Muhammad Ali is explored
Geostorm
Adam Sandler. TV14
TV14
explored. Pt. 1 of 2
through new archive material. Pt. 2 of 2
(:15)
The Greatest Showman ('17, Bio) Zac Efron, Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (:35)
Flirting With Disaster Ben Stiller.
Hugh Jackman. Legendary showman P. T. Barnum launches A sexist anchorman feels threatened by a
A neurotic New Yorker searches for his birth
his iconic circus despite countless doubters. TVPG
woman who may be after his job. TV14
parents on a wild cross-country trip. TVMA
(4:30)
The Help (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Emma
WuTangClanMicsandMen The Chi "A Leg Up"
I Feel Pretty Stone. Tension and surprises abound as three women struggle against
Take a look back at the
Brandon competes in the
TV14
prejudice in a small town. TV14
origins of Wu-Tang Clan.
finals.
(5:20)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, May 14, 2019

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The schedule for
the 2019 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior
Golf League has been
released.
The tour ofﬁcially
begins on Wednesday,
June 5, at Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis. Age
groups for both young
ladies and young men
are 10 and under, 11-12,
13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and
dates of play are as
follows: Wednesday,
June 12, at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason;
Tuesday, June 18, at
Meigs County Course in
Pomeroy; Wednesday,
June 26, at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason;
and Tuesday, July 9,
at Meigs County Golf
Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each
tournament is $12 per
player. A small lunch is
included with the fee
and will be served at
the conclusion of play
each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.
with play starting at 9
a.m. Please contact Jeff
Slone at 740-256-6160,
Jan Haddox at 304-6753388, or Bob Blessing
304-675-6135 if you can
contribute or have questions concerning the
tour.

Raptors beat 76ers 92-90 in Game 7
TORONTO (AP) — Kawhi
Leonard bounced, bounced,
bounced, bounced the Philadelphia 76ers out of the playoffs.
Leonard hit a shot from the
corner over Joel Embiid at the
buzzer that bounced off the
rim four times before falling
to give the Toronto Raptors a
92-90 victory over the 76ers on
Sunday night in Game 7 of the
Eastern Conference semiﬁnal
series. It was the ﬁrst winning
buzzer-beater in a Game 7 in
NBA history.
“It was great,” Leonard said.
“That’s something I never
experienced before, Game 7,
a game-winning shot. It was
a blessing to be able to get to
that point and make that shot
and feel that moment.”
After Philadelphia’s Jimmy
Butler tied it with a driving
layup with 4.2 seconds left,
Toronto used its ﬁnal timeout
to draw up a play for Leonard,
who dribbled toward the right
corner and launched the higharching shot.
It bounced to the top of the
backboard, hit the near side
of the rim again, then the
other side twice before going
through, setting off a wild
celebration as the Raptors
advanced to the conference
ﬁnals for the second time in
four seasons. They will open
the conference ﬁnals Wednesday night at Milwaukee.
“It’s tough,” Butler said.
“Nobody likes to lose, not that
way.
Leonard scored 41 points on
16-of-39 shooting.
“He was awesome at both
ends,” Raptors coach Nick
Nurse said. “That’s his uniqueness. Not only can he get you

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Toronto
Raptors
forward
Kawhi
Leonard (2)
celebrates
his lastsecond
basket with
teammates
at the end of
the second
half of an
NBA Eastern
Conference
semifinal
basketball
game Sunday
against the
Philadelphia
76ers in
Toronto.

Frank Gunn | The Canadian Press via AP

30 and anywhere upwards from
that, but there’s moments when
he can just decide you’re not
scoring, either.”
The Raptors ran a similar
play for Leonard during the
ﬁrst round against Orlando.
That time, he caught the ball
and shot without dribbling.
“Remembering that moment,
I knew I had some time to try
to get some space, rather than
just catch and shoot the ball,”
Leonard said. “I ended up
ﬁnding a spot that I like, that
I work on. I just knew I had to
shoot it high.”
Serge Ibaka added 17 points,
and Pascal Siakam had 11
points and 11 rebounds for
Toronto.
Embiid, in tears as he left
the court, led the 76ers with
21 points and 11 rebounds. JJ

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

Redick had 17 points, Butler
added 16, and Tobias Harris
had 15 points and 10 rebounds.
“I give Toronto credit for a
tenacious, switching defense,”
76ers coach Brett Brown said.
“We had a hard time turning the corner once they did
switch.”
Redick tied it at 85 with a
three-point play with 3:29 left.
Nearly two minutes passed
before the next basket, Leonard’s long jumper with 1:41 to
go that was initially ruled a 3,
but changed to a 2 after video
review.
On Philadelphia’s next possession, Kyle Lowry forced a
steal near midcourt and fed
Siakam for a fast-break layup,
giving Toronto an 89-85 lead
with 1:14 left.
Butler made one of two at

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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/HJDO 1RWLFH
All parties shall take notice that the Village of Pomeroy has
filed an action to appropriate the following real property in the
Court of Common Pleas of Meigs County Ohio bearing &amp;DVH
1XPEHU �� &amp;9 ��: Situate in the Village of Pomeroy, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio and more specifically described as
follows:
Beginning at the southwest corner of Lot #8 as it appears in
Volume 8 Page 285 of Meigs County Plat Map on file in the office of the Meigs County Recorder, and running to a point with
coordinates -82.022936, 39.0298 and hereinafter referenced as
Point A; thence from Point A running in a straight line parallel
with the westernmost property line of said Lot #8 to the low
water mark of the Ohio River to a point, hereinafter referenced
as Point B; thence from Point B and running upriver along riverbank and following the low water mark of the Ohio River to another point at the intersection of the low water mark of the Ohio
River and a straight line running parallel with the easternmost
property line of Lot #12 as it appears in Volume 8 Page 285 of
Meigs County Plat Map on file in the office of the Meigs County
Recorder, hereinafter referenced as Point C; thence from Point
C in a straight line parallel to the easternmost property line of
Lot #12 to a point with coordinates -82.022242, 39.029894 and
hereinafter referenced as Point D; thence in a straight line parallel to the easternmost property line of Lot #12 from Point D to
the southeast corner of Lot #12; thence from the southeast corner of Lot #12 in a straight line along with the southernmost
property lines of Lot #12, Lot #11, Lot #10, Lot #9 and Lot#8 to
the place of beginning. 7KH ODVW GD\ WR DQVZHU VDLG DFWLRQ
IRU DSSURSULDWLRQ LV -XQH �UG� ����� DQG WKH ILQDO KHDULQJ LQ
WKLV PDWWHU LV VFKHGXOHG IRU -XO\ ��� ����.
Adam R Salisbury, Esq.
PO BOX 381
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6368
4/9/19, 4/16/19, 4/23/19, 4/30/19, 5/7/19, 5/14/19

SERVICES
Automotive
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UDWH ������������

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

MERCHANDISE
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MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

OH-70004516
OH-70116758

www.markporterauto.com

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

D&amp;M
PIZZA

Apartments/Townhouses

KITCHEN HELP
&amp; DRIVERS

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Best Deal New &amp; Used

Help Wanted General

NOW HIRING

EMPLOYMENT

'ULYHUV :DQWHG
The Wells Group, LLC is
seeking truck drivers with
a Class A or B CDL for our
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benefits including profit
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Please apply at the plant on
161 Georges Creek Rd.
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download an application
from our website
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m
You can also email your
completed application to
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the line and Leonard missed
a pair of jump shots, giving
the 76ers the ball down 89-86
with 24.1 seconds remaining.
Embiid was fouled and made
both, cutting it to 89-88 with
12 seconds left.
Leonard was fouled with
10.8 seconds left. He made the
ﬁrst, but missed the second,
setting up Butler’s tying layup.
“We did a lot of things that
we could have done better but
we found a way to win the
game,” Lowry said. “That’s all
that matters.”
Toronto opens the Eastern
Conference Finals at Milwaukee on Wednesday night. The
Raptors lost three of four
against the Bucks in the regular season and ﬁnished two
games behind Milwaukee in the
race for the NBA’s best record.

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Apply
In Person
After 4pm

Check out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV
online!
Amy Carter
Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
���� ��� ��!� ��� � � ��
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amycarter@markporterauto.com

No Phone
Calls Please
OH-70125541

Tri-County
Junior
Golf
Schedule

Daily Sentinel

45267 SR #124
Syracuse, Ohio

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Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, May 14, 2019 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
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jobmatchohio.com

�10 Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Brandon DeWees, FNP-C
Family Nurse Practitioner

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Brandon DeWees is a Certiﬁed Family Nurse Practitioner who was raised in the
town of Mason, West Virginia. Brandon is pleased to offer medical services to
the people who live in the community that raised him. Brandon has experience
in urgent care, emergency medicine, and psychiatry. He started his nursing career during his senior year at Wahama High School as a state tested nursing
assistant in a rehabilitation center. He then worked at an urgent care center
through college as he gained his Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2009 with
a minor in psychology and a Master of Science in Nursing in 2013, both from
Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.
“I’m excited to transition from the Express Care setting to an office setting.
As a primary care provider, patients can now establish medical care with
me. It’s my privilege to open new avenues of care for patients to help them
along their healthcare journey,” Brandon DeWees, FNP-C.
Brandon provides walk-in sick visits for newborns and older and will establish
care for people 13 years of age and older. While Brandon does schedule and
keep appointments, he’s also happy to take care of walk-in patients without
an appointment.

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2)),&amp;(�+2856��Monday - Friday: 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

OH-70123357

Call today to schedule an appointment with Brandon DeWees, FNP-C.
Appointments available beginning May 6th.

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="528">
              <text>May 14, 2019</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="490">
      <name>burgess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="649">
      <name>campbell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="16">
      <name>casto</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="692">
      <name>preston</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
