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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

59°

74°

71°

A thunderstorm around today. A shower and
t-storm around tonight. High 80° / Low 59°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Ohio
bicycle
laws

Named to
All-OVC
list

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 93, Volume 73

Wednesday, June 12, 2019 s 50¢

Removing the hive

Council
approves
trash truck
purchase
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Village Council approved to accept
funding from the USDA
to purchase two trash
packer trucks in a 3 to 2
vote.
Village Administrator
Joe Woodall applied for
funding through the United States Department
of Agriculture (USDA)
to purchase two trash
packer trucks, which will
allow the village to haul
their own refuse starting
in January 2020. In the
grant, the village asked
for $241,000. The USDA
awarded $177,300 in
grant funds and $72,700
in a 10 year loan.
Council approved the
purchase with council
members Emerson Heighton, Ben Reed and Brian
Conde voting in favor.
Council members Sharon Older and Carolyn
French voted against the
purchase. Councilperson
Susan Page was absent
from the meeting.
Photos courtesy of Christina Coglietti

See PURCHASE | 5

Two men, one of whom was in his 80s, recently removed an old bee hive from a house on Front Street
in Middleport. According to photographer Christina Coglietti, the men first worked with only protection
over their faces, then one put on a suit before smoking out the remaining bees from the hive. It is a
hobby for both men.

TOWNSHIP TALES AND TIDBITS

Rutland Township Part 2, Post Office
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP —
In the second part of Tales and
Tidbits: Rutland, Donna Jenkins recalled the history of post
ofﬁces in Rutland Township
and their importance to the
community.
The post ofﬁce was the hub
of communication, especially
so in rural areas. It was part of
everyday life to anxiously wait
for mail deliveries, and a visit
to the post ofﬁce was something very special.
When the ﬁrst railroad depot
was built in Rutland around
1886, it meant a faster means of
mail delivery. A letter that could
take months to be delivered
could now arrive at the post
ofﬁce in weeks or even days.
It was also during this time

that residents of rural areas
begin enjoying free home delivery. Before the establishment
of the service, mail was picked
up by the recipient at the post
ofﬁce, which could be a day’s
travel for those living in rural
areas.
According to Meigs County
History Volume II, approximately one bushel of mail
entered the Rutland Post Ofﬁce
daily. The amount of mail arriving increased in 1913 with the
establishment of the Parcel
Post, which allowed people to
receive packages.
Jenkins noted there is much
nostalgia surrounding mail
delivery.
“Until recently, mail was the
primary means of communication. Growing up in Rutland, it

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

Staff Report

See TOWNSHIP | 5 The Rutland Post Office around 1900

Courtesy photo

Recovering the past
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Pieces of Silver
Bridge Collapse
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

KANAUGA, Ohio —
Approaching 52 years
later, pieces of the Silver
Bridge Collapse are
being recovered by the
West Virginia Department of Transportation
along the banks of the
Ohio River in Kanauga,
Ohio.
The disaster wreck-

Fred Nero
appointed
to Racine
Council

Dean Wright | OVP

West Virginia Department of Transportation crews work to
excavate pieces of the Silver Bridge Collapse.

age that gained national
attention and claimed
the lives of 46 indi-

viduals in the freezing
See BRIDGE | 2

RACINE — Fred Nero
was appointed to ﬁll the
vacant seat on Racine
Village Council in a split
vote last week.
Three individuals were
interviews after submitting letters of interest for
the position left vacant
by the resignation of
Jeff Morris. Those interviewed were Mony Wood,
Ron Clark and Nero.
Council went into executive session regarding
the appointment and held
a vote on the appointment after returning from
the closed door session.
Nero received four votes,
with Clark receiving one
vote.
Mayor Scott Hill issued
the oath of ofﬁce to Nero
who then took his seat at
the table to participate in
the business of the meeting.
There will be two council seats, as well as Village
Mayor, to appear on the
November General Election ballot. Candidates
must ﬁle petitions by
Aug. 7 with the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
In other business, it
was noted that the papers
regarding condemnation of the former Layne
property on Elm Street
had been delivered to the
registered owner Pamela
McFall.
Village Administrator
John Holman reported
See RACINE | 5

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2 Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS BRIEFS

RIZER
Margaret Caroline “Sis” Rizer, 95, died Monday,
June 10, 2019.
Graveside service will be 1:30 p.m., Wednesday,
June 12, 2019 at Union Cemetery, Letart, W.Va., with
Reverend Rex Young ofﬁciating. Visitation will be
from noon until 1 p.m. on Wednesday at FoglesongCasto Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va. Foglesong-Casto
Funeral Home, Mason, is assisting the family.

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.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip until further notice.
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 18, Kingsbury Road, west of State Route 33 will be closed
for approximately 2 months beginning Tuesday,
May 28, in order to complete a bridge replacement project. This bridge is located just west of
the intersection of County Road 19, Peach Fork
Road.
CHESTER — A bridge rehabilitation project
begins on March 25 on State Route 248 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place between Bashan
Road and Locust Grove Road. One lane will be
closed in this area and temporary trafﬁc signals will
be in place. The estimated completion date is June
15, 2019.

MCDERMITT
GALLIPOLIS FERRY — James Scott McDermitt,
68, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died at his home June
10, 2019. Arrangements will be announced by Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., when they
become available.
DAVID L. SPEARS AND RAYMOND L. SPEARS
David L. Spears and Raymond L. Spears will be laid
to rest together at 1 p.m., Saturday, June 15, 2019, at
Concord Cemetery, in Henderson, W.Va., with graveside rites by Pastor Bob Patterson.
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Scholarship Applications

MCCARTNEY
BIDWELL — Catherine Ann McCartney, 53, of
Bidwell, Ohio, died Sunday, June 9, 2019 at her residence. Visitation will be on Thursday, June13, 2019
from 5-7 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home. A graveside
service will be on Friday, June 14, 2019 at 10 a.m. in
Centerpoint Cemetery.

SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2019-20
Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are available for legal residents of the Village
of Syracuse and may be picked up at 1402 Dusky
St., Syracuse, and returned by June 24. Legal
residents of Syracuse can qualify for a scholarship award for a maximum of two years. For more

A tire and a piece of old vehicle trim can be seen resting among and under pieces of the Silver Bridge
Collapse.

Bridge
From page 1

waters of the Ohio on
December 15, 1967 is

being pulled from mud
and river on the banks of
612 State Route 7.
“I’ve had a lot of people
asking why it’s still here,”
said landowner Terry
Burnett. “I don’t know.

Grandpa couldn’t get it
removed and Dad couldn’t
get it removed. My family
owned the land and I do
now. My grandparents
and parents lived here.
I’ve been here since

Rest Easy
Help for sleep problems
is now close to home.
Pleasant Valley Hospital’s Sleep Disorders Center is designed to help
you and your doctor learn more about your sleep problems. Some
of the conditions the Sleep Disorders Center can test for include
sleep apnea, narcolepsy, insomnia, snoring, restless legs syndrome
and problems from shift work. Testing to ﬁnd out whether you have
any of these conditions is simple and painless.

What is a Sleep Study?
A sleep study (polysomnogram) is a procedure that measures bodily functions
during sleep. Your sleep study is designed for your individual case. Some of the
measurements taken include brain waves, heart beat, eye movement, muscle tension, leg movement, airﬂow breathing, chest and abdominal breathing and blood
oxygen levels.

information contact Gordon Fisher at 740-99922836.
POMEROY — Applications for the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association scholarship are available until the end of June. The applicant must be a
college junior or senior majoring in education, have
at least a 2.5 GPA and have a home residence in
Meigs County. For applications or more information
call Becky at 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-4445498.

Volunteer Information Event
POMEROY — The American Red Cross and
the COAD-RSVP senior volunteer program will
hold a Volunteer Interest meeting in Meigs County on Saturday, June 15, at 11 a.m. at Emi’s Place
Park beside the Pomeroy ball ﬁelds in Pomeroy.
Information will be available on volunteer positions including Disaster Action Team member for
those who offer Red Cross help to families after
house ﬁres, ﬂoods or other disasters. Volunteers
can also sign up to greet donors at the blood
drives held in the Pomeroy/Middleport area every
two months. Lacee Arms, coordinator for the
COAD-RSVP program, will have information on
beneﬁts of volunteering for those who are 55 and
over, plus ideas on a number of great volunteer
opportunities in Meigs County.
For information or to request a meeting at
another time, email sandy.shirey2@redcross.org
or call 740-593-5273.

Photos by Dean Wright | OVP

The remains of the Silver Bridge Collapse still rest beneath parts of the Ohio River and along its bank
as West Virginia Department of Transportation crews remove concrete debris, metal and remains of
an old car.

1960.”
Burnett said she retired
and getting the disaster
wreckage cleared had
been on her “bucket list”
for years.
“There was a gal here
from North Carolina and
she brought her father-inlaw back,” said Burnett.
“He was actually hanging
on the outside of a truck
when he was rescued
(during the disaster), a
tractor trailer. She convinced me to go to West
Virginia for the collapse’s
50th anniversary, so I did.
We thought there might
be someone there that
might listen to me.”
Burnett was able to
establish contact with
West Virginia Department
of Transportation’s Division of Highways District
One Bridge Engineer
Tracy Brown. She sent
him photos of the remaining wreckage around her
property and neighboring
property.
“It’s hard to tell what’s
in the water still but
it’s on the land and the
water,” said Burnett.
“There’s a car down there
somewhere too.”
Burnett said some

of the wreckage being
cleared could be found
on the adjoining property
also owned by the Hall
family. An agreement was
made with WVDOH to
retrieve the wreckage and
crews started work Monday at 9 a.m.
“It’s history,” said
Brown. “This started the
bridge inspection program nationwide. I always
say that for someone who
works in bridges coming
here to Point Pleasant and
Gallipolis is like visiting
the Holy Land. That’s
our equivalent because
this is where our work
started. There wasn’t even
a bridge department in
the (WVDOH) districts
until this happened. Now
each district has a bridge
inspection program and
engineer that has to make
national standards.”
“We want to display
(the recovered wreckage)
in a particular way so that
future bridge engineers,
inspectors and designers remember this,” said
Brown. “It’s something
that they need to remember so that they know the
history of how important
this work is and what the

Dean Wright can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2103.

Why Take These Measurements?
During sleep, your body functions differently from when you are awake. Disrupted sleep can disturb daytime activities, and sometimes medical problems that
occur while you are sleeping are a risk to your health.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

Are Sleep Studies Covered by Insurance?
For most patients, sleep studies are covered under major medical insurance plans.
The percentage of coverage depends on your speciﬁc plan. Check with your
insurance company to ﬁnd out the details of your policy.

Call 304.857.3514 today to learn more
or visit pvalley.org.

Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
OH-70124613

results are when you don’t
put the importance on it
that it deserves. There
can be no mistakes in this
line of work. This is what
happens when you make
a mistake. We’re hoping
to put (the remains) in a
prominent location where
it stands out. Maybe a
sidewalk leading into our
headquarters in Charleston (W.Va.) with a plaque
telling some of the history
of the bridge or something like that.”
Brown said roughly an
eighth of an inch fracture
in an eyebar of the Silver
Bridge caused a chain
reaction which resulted
in it falling into the Ohio
River as drivers were
attempting to pass over
the bridge in rush hour
trafﬁc during the holiday
season.
Burnett said she would
be happy to see the
wreckage gone and in
the hands of people who
could appreciate and
spread its lessons.
The Silver Bridge was
built in 1928 and was considered an eyebar-chain
suspension bridge noted
for its silver color. The
Silver Memorial Bridge,
built to replace the Silver
Bridge, was completed in
1969.

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

Inmate pleads not
guilty in slaying
MARION, Ohio (AP)
— A death row inmate
accused of killing a Louisiana woman in 2006 in
Ohio has pleaded not
guilty to charges including aggravated murder.
Inmate Shawn Grate
was previously convicted
of four slayings in northern Ohio's Ashland and
Richland counties. He
pleaded not guilty Monday in Marion County to
charges in the slaying of
23-year-old Dana Nicole
Lowrey, of Minden,
Louisiana. Her body was
found in a ﬁeld in Marion
County in 2007. She was
identiﬁed last week.

�LOCAL/STATE/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Harrisonville Scipio
Alumni meet for 90th
HARRISONVILLE —
The Harrisonville Scipio
Alumni Association held
its 90th annual banquet
on May 25 at the Harrisonville Alumni Center
on Harold and Janet
Graham’s farm near Harrisonville with 54 members and guest attending.
Classes of 1949 and 1959
were recognized. Class
of 1949 had no members
present. The Class of
1959 had one member
present, Virgil Reeves.
Pledge of Allegiance
was led by Gerald Wears
with the invocation
given by Delores King.
Joe Stanley and Richard
Epple were recognized
as the oldest members
present.
Albany Cafe, Albany,

Ohio, catered the banquet. Three scholarships
were approved by all
members.
Those donating gifts
were Farmers Bank,
Home National Bank,
Lowe’s of Athens, Powell’s Foodfair, Taco Bell,
Wal-Mart, Wendy’s, Auto
Zone, Bob Evans, Bob’s
Market, Carter Lumber,
Clark’s Jewelry, Dairy
Queen, Dettwiller’s,
Domino Pizza, El Camino
Mexican Restaurant, The
Fabric Shop, Forest Run
Ready Mix, Fox’s Pizza
Den, Francis Florist,
Front Paige Outﬁtters,
Haband Catalog Co.,
Hartwell House, KFC/
Long John Silvers, King
Ace Hardware, McClure’s,
McDonald’s, Meigs

Wednesday, June 12, 2019 3

Prices Good
Thurs. June 13th
thru Sat. June 15th

Carpet and Decorating
Center, Millie’s Restaurant, Mitch’s Greenhouse,
Peking Buffet, Pomeroy
Flower Shop, Quality
Print Shop, Rio Bravo
Mexican Restaurant,
River Roasters, Fruth
Pharmacy, Rutland Bottle
Gas, Save-a-Lot, Subway,
Syracuse TNT Gas Station, Tractor Supply,
Twisted Scissors Beauty
Salon, Troyer’s Greenhouse, Valley Lumber,
Weaving Stitches.
Ofﬁcers elected were
Harold Graham, President; Rachael Burbridge
Lefebre, Vice President;
Mary Wyant Haning, Secretary; and Joe Wiseman
Clark, Treasurer.

y SALE
!!

June 13, 14 &amp; 15

3
DAYS
ONLY!

Pomeroy, Jackson,
Bidwell, &amp; Waverly, OH,

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LASTS!

A
Wh ll Purp
ite
Pot ose
ato
es

3
DAYS
ONLY!

3
DAYS
ONLY!

3
DAYS
ONLY!

TRU
C
3 Da KLOAD

Frozen
Chicken Leg
Quarters

Plum Rose
Sliced Bacon

40 lb. Case

10 lb. Box

Bone-in Pork
Sirloin Steaks

1900 14

148

99

Lb.

10 lb. or more

Holten
Restaurant
Quality
Beef Patties

14

Submitted by Mary Wyant Haning.

8 AM

PEPSI PRODUCTS
Steve Evans
Pork Ribs

11

WEATHER

59°

74°

71°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

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.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

73°
53°
82°
60°
98° in 1914
41° in 1988

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

Trace
1.83
1.58
21.69
19.66

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:54 p.m.
4:04 p.m.
3:14 a.m.

3
DAYS
ONLY!

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Jun 17 Jun 25

New

Jul 2

First

Jul 9

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

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

Major
8:26a
9:09a
9:53a
10:38a
11:27a
12:19p
12:46a

Minor
2:14a
2:57a
3:40a
4:25a
5:14a
6:05a
6:59a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
8:51p
9:34p
10:18p
11:04p
11:53p
---1:13p

Minor
2:38p
3:22p
4:05p
4:51p
5:40p
6:32p
7:26p

WEATHER HISTORY
A strong storm brought ﬂooding to
the Paciﬁc Northwest prior to June
12, 1948. A ﬂood along the Columbia
River yielded the highest water levels
since 1894.

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. Tue.

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

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

Level
12.41
17.67
21.87
12.62
13.13
24.44
12.27
26.90
34.74
12.79
20.80
34.50
21.10

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.54
+0.20
-0.05
none
+0.15
-0.33
+0.11
-0.33
-0.44
-0.33
-0.60
none
-1.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

OH-70130905

Nectarines,
Plums
or Peaches

89¢8 pack

3
DAYS
ONLY!

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

Logan
77/57

4 $5

78°
65°

81°
66°

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
78/58
Belpre
79/58

Today

St. Marys
79/58

Parkersburg
77/57

Coolville
78/58

Elizabeth
79/58

Spencer
78/58

Buffalo
79/59
Milton
80/60

Clendenin
79/58

St. Albans
80/59

Huntington
77/58

NATIONAL FORECAST

Charleston
77/57

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
69/47
Montreal
77/57
Minneapolis
68/48

Billings
80/56

Detroit
77/58

Toronto
74/58

New York
74/58

Chicago
70/51
Kansas City
69/47

Denver
73/52

Washington
77/64
Atlanta
74/63

City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
86/63/s
Anchorage
66/52/pc
Atlanta
74/63/t
Atlantic City
71/62/s
Baltimore
76/62/pc
Billings
80/56/pc
Boise
92/64/s
Boston
74/57/s
Charleston, WV 77/57/pc
Charlotte
70/60/t
Cheyenne
68/46/pc
Chicago
70/51/t
Cincinnati
75/56/t
Cleveland
80/58/pc
Columbus
79/60/t
Dallas
86/64/pc
Denver
73/52/s
Des Moines
70/49/c
Detroit
77/58/pc
Honolulu
90/75/s
Houston
92/70/pc
Indianapolis
76/52/pc
Kansas City
69/47/pc
Las Vegas
107/81/pc
Little Rock
83/59/pc
Los Angeles
84/62/pc
Louisville
77/61/t
Miami
90/77/t
Minneapolis
68/48/pc
Nashville
81/61/t
New Orleans
90/71/pc
New York City
74/58/s
Oklahoma City
81/54/s
Orlando
86/73/t
Philadelphia
76/60/s
Phoenix
111/85/s
Pittsburgh
76/56/pc
Portland, ME
75/51/s
Raleigh
72/61/t
Richmond
76/61/t
St. Louis
72/55/t
Salt Lake City
86/63/s
San Francisco
77/56/pc
Seattle
90/62/pc
Washington, DC 77/64/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY
High
Low

114° in Thermal, CA
26° in Aspen Springs, CO

Global

Houston
92/70
Monterrey
89/70

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
91/63/pc
66/53/c
80/58/s
73/62/t
78/57/t
84/61/pc
87/61/pc
66/60/r
67/49/t
80/54/s
76/53/t
69/54/pc
65/51/c
68/54/t
65/51/sh
82/65/s
81/56/t
72/57/s
64/51/sh
90/74/s
92/69/s
67/50/c
74/58/s
105/78/s
80/59/s
76/62/pc
69/54/pc
90/76/t
75/57/s
75/54/s
91/73/s
66/59/r
74/60/pc
86/70/t
75/58/t
110/80/s
66/49/t
63/52/r
81/56/pc
80/56/t
73/55/s
86/62/pc
70/55/pc
78/55/s
78/58/t

National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
95/70

Chihuahua
94/65

TUESDAY

A couple of t-storms Cloudy, thunderstorms Cloudy, thunderstorms
in the afternoon
possible; humid
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our partners —our constituents, and
the citizens of Ohio —enjoy in Ohio’s
success,” Dolan said. “And so it’s really
important to us that returning tax dollars to Ohioans is the signature statement by the Senate.”
The Senate plan includes $550 million that by Republican Gov. Mike
DeWine sought to boost educational
wraparound services, plus $125 million
more toward education-related spending, such as private-school scholarships
and more money for growing school districts whose funding has been capped.
And unlike the House version, the
Senate proposal would maintain tax
credits for the motion picture industry.
The top Democrat in the Senate, Sen.
Kenny Yuko, of Richmond Heights, said
he was “encouraged by the potential
reinvestment” in the bill.

2 PM

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
would lower income taxes for individuals and direct more money toward
water quality initiatives, local governments and libraries under a two-year
state budget proposal introduced Tuesday in the Republican-controlled state
Senate.
It eliminates the bottom two tax
brackets and decreases personal income
tax rates for the others by 8% over two
years. The income tax cut in the $69
billion proposal approved by the GOPled House was 6.6%.
That and other proposed tax changes
affecting businesses would reduce taxes
by more than $600 million, said Republican Sen. Matt Dolan, who leads the
Senate committee considering the plan.
“One of the more important strategic
investments for us is to make sure that

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�Opinion
4 Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Supporting initiatives
for parents important
for today’s youth
As a pastor, I have seen the devastating effect
of the opioid epidemic and poverty on children
and families ﬁrsthand. That’s why I’m pleased
that Governor DeWine and the Ohio
House, including our RepresentaAdam
tive Jay Edwards, are supporting
Will
initiatives that help struggling moms
Contributing
and dads become better parents
columnist
while working to improve child care
options as well.
To encourage responsible parenting, Governor
DeWine proposed a $30 million increase to the
Help Me Grow program, which enables nurses
and other trained professionals to help young
inexperienced parents deal with stressful child
rearing situations while working toward their own
self-sufﬁciency. The coaching includes tips on how
to “baby-proof” a home and what to expect during
pregnancy. It also offers advice on how parents
can complete their education, gain job training
and employment and become more ﬁnancially
stable. Research proves these voluntary home
visiting programs can promote better health for
the children, more ﬁnancial independence for the
parents, and more academic success for both generations.
What’s especially important about this coaching
is the likelihood that it will help parents respond
better to challenging situations that could otherwise lead to child abuse or neglect. The stakes
are high — every year, there are roughly 700,000
conﬁrmed cases of abuse or neglect in the United
States, including nearly 20,000 in Ohio. While the
faith community is doing everything we can to
address these issues by providing crucial support
to parents and families, I’ll be the ﬁrst to tell you
we can’t do it alone. That’s why many of us are so
happy that the House of Representatives passed
a budget that includes the governor’s $30 million
increase.
The governor and legislature are also working to expand affordable child care options for
working parents by increasing funding for child
care vouchers. This is another important step for
thousands of working parents and a smart move
for improving our economy as well since a recent
ReadyNation report shows the child care crisis is
costing families, employers and taxpayers about
$57 billion a year.
Employers lose about $13 billion due to lower
productivity and revenues when parents struggle
to ﬁnd child care. Taxpayers lose about $7 billion
due to lower GDP based on the economic damage of the child care crisis. Parents fare the worst
though, losing about $37 billion based on lost
earnings and lower upward mobility because they
can’t ﬁnd dependable child care.
Of course I, and other member of the faith community, would love to see more parents being able
to stay at home full-time to fulﬁll their mission to
be “a child’s ﬁrst teacher,” Unfortunately, this isn’t
possible for the vast majority of Ohio’s families,
who need two incomes to survive.
All of these measures are important enough on
their own, but especially for communities struggling with the decimation of so many families due
to parental opioid addiction. That addiction and
related struggles are robbing children of parental
love and support, leading to abuse and neglect of
children, and placing foster care systems and kinship caregivers under more duress.
That struggle reminds me daily that the Bible
commands us to “Train up a child in the way
they should go, and when he is old, he will not
depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6 and to “Speak out
on behalf of the voiceless, and for the rights of all
who are vulnerable” Proverbs 31:8
That’s all the more reason to support increased
investments in these programs, which will support vulnerable children and families today and
strengthen our communities in the years to come.
Adam Will is the Lead Pastor of Mount Hermon United Brethren
Church in Pomeroy

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Songwriter Richard M. Sherman is 91. Jazz
musician Chick Corea is 78. Sportscaster Marv
Albert is 78. Singer Roy Harper is 78. Pop singer
Len Barry is 77. Actor Roger Aaron Brown is 70.
Actress Sonia Manzano is 69. Rock musician Bun
E. Carlos (Cheap Trick) is 68. Country singermusician Junior Brown is 67. Singer-songwriter
Rocky Burnette is 66. Actor Timothy Busﬁeld is
62. Singer Meredith Brooks is 61. Actress Jenilee
Harrison is 61. Rock musician John Linnell (They
Might Be Giants) is 60. Actor John Enos is 57.
Rapper Grandmaster Dee (Whodini) is 57. Actor
Paul Schulze is 57. Actor Eamonn Walker is 57.
Actress Paula Marshall is 55. Actress Frances
O’Connor is 52. Rock musician Bardi Martin is 50.
Actor Rick Hoffman is 49. Actor-comedian Finesse
Mitchell is 47. Actor Mel Rodriguez is 46. Actor
Jason Mewes is 45. Actor Michael Muhney is 44.
Blues musician Kenny Wayne Shepherd is 42.
Actor Timothy Simons is 41. Actor Wil Horneff is
40. Rock singer-musician John Gourley (Portugal.
The Man) is 38. Actor Luke Youngblood is 33.

THEIR VIEW

Navigating Ohio’s bicycle laws
Nice weather can lead
many people to pull out
bicycles, pump up the
tires and hit the road to
exercise and travel in an
environmentally responsible fashion.
Ohio’s laws concerning roadways and motor
vehicles also generally apply to bicycles and
their operation. However,
some laws are interpreted
differently as to bicycles,
and there are several
laws that are speciﬁc to
bicycles.
Bicycles are not
allowed on all Ohio
roadways. Freeways,
which include interstate
highways, are areas upon
which bicycles cannot be
operated.
Additionally, bicycles
must be operated at safe
speeds based upon the
context of the road and
trafﬁc. A safe speed is
deﬁned as neither too
slow nor too fast. Therefore, a bicyclist traveling
at 10 mph may not be
permitted to enter onto
or otherwise travel upon
a busy highway that

Similarly, riding
already has car trafbicycles without
ﬁc moving at 55
putting hands on
mph.
the handlebars is
Like cars,
sometimes physibicycles must be
cally possible if the
operated within a
bike is properly
lane of trafﬁc. But,
adjusted to travel
like motorcyclists, Lee R.
bicyclists can travel Schroeder straight. However,
two abreast, which Contributing bicyclists who
“ride without
means that two
columnist
their hands” can
bicycles can be
be found to be
ridden beside each
other in the same lane of recklessly operating their
bicycles. Therefore, drinktrafﬁc.
However, circumstanc- ing a water or Mountain
Dew while traveling on a
es can require that bicybicycle may couple with
clists who are not travelother factors (such as
ing two abreast stay to
the right within the travel traveling on the left side
of a lane or waving to a
lane. In other words,
passer-by) to make the
a bicyclist who travels
within a foot of the center bicycle’s operation illegal
in that situation.
line of a street might be
In elementary school,
traveling illegally if it is
reasonably possible to be we were taught hand
traveling down the street signals to use when
closer to the right side of intending to stop, turn
right or turn left on a
that lane of travel.
bicycle. Even if there is
Occasionally, despite
inadvisability, car drivers virtually no trafﬁc in the
area where the bicycle
will remove their hands
is being ridden, use of
from steering wheels
those hand signals by
for brief periods of time
when adjusting knobs or each bicycle operator is
buttons on the dashboard. still required.

It is never a good idea
to ride a bicycle at night.
However, if a bicycle is
operated on a road at
night or in conditions
when visibility is less
than one-ﬁfth of a mile,
the bicycle must be operated with a white light
that illuminates at least
500 feet in front of the
bicycle.
Additionally, during
those times, bicycles
must have a rear light
that either ﬂashes or
remains fully illuminated
in red. The rear light
must also be visible from
at least 500 feet. And, the
rear light must be reﬂective, or an additional rear
reﬂector must be mounted on the bicycle.
Lee R. Schroeder is an Ohio
licensed attorney at Schroeder
Law LLC in Putnam County. He
limits his practice to business,
real estate, estate planning and
agriculture issues in northwest
Ohio. He can be reached at Lee@
LeeSchroeder.com or at 419-6592058. This article is not intended to
serve as legal advice, and specific
advice should be sought from the
licensed attorney of your choice
based upon the specific facts and
circumstances that you face.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
June 12, the 163rd day of
2019. There are 202 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On June 12, 2016, an
American-born Muslim
opened ﬁre at the Pulse
nightclub, a gay establishment in Orlando, Florida,
leaving 49 people dead
and 53 wounded before
being shot dead by police.
On this date:
In 1665, England
installed a municipal
government in New York,
formerly the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam,
and appointed its ﬁrst
mayor, Thomas Willett.
In 1776, Virginia’s colonial legislature adopted a
Declaration of Rights.
In 1939, the National
Baseball Hall of Fame and
Museum was dedicated in
Cooperstown, New York.
In 1942, Anne Frank,
a German-born Jewish
girl living in Amsterdam,
received a diary for her
13th birthday, less than a
month before she and her
family went into hiding
from the Nazis.
In 1963, civil rights
leader Medgar Evers, 37,
was shot and killed out-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Adventure is not outside man; it is within.”
— George Eliot,
English novelist (1819-1880)

side his home in Jackson,
Mississippi. (In 1994,
Byron De La Beckwith
was convicted of murdering Evers and sentenced
to life in prison; he died
in 2001.)
In 1964, South African
black nationalist Nelson
Mandela was sentenced
to life in prison along
with seven other people,
including Walter Sisulu,
for committing sabotage
against the apartheid
regime (all were eventually released, Mandela in
1990).
In 1967, the U.S.
Supreme Court, in Loving v. Virginia, unanimously struck down state
laws prohibiting interracial marriages.
In 1978, David Berkowitz was sentenced to 25
years to life in prison for
each of the six “Son of
Sam” .44-caliber killings
that terriﬁed New Yorkers.
In 1981, major league
baseball players began
a 49-day strike over the

issue of free-agent compensation. (The season
did not resume until Aug.
10.) “Raiders of the Lost
Ark,” directed by Steven
Spielberg and starring
Harrison Ford as Indiana
Jones, was ﬁrst released.
In 1987, President Ronald Reagan, during a visit
to the divided German
city of Berlin, exhorted
Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev to “tear down
this wall.”
In 1994, Nicole Brown
Simpson and Ronald
Goldman were slashed
to death outside her Los
Angeles home. (O.J.
Simpson was later acquitted of the killings in a
criminal trial, but was
eventually held liable in a
civil action.)
In 2004, former President Ronald Reagan’s
body was sealed inside a
tomb at his presidential
library in Simi Valley, California, following a week
of mourning and remembrance by world leaders
and regular Americans.

Ten years ago: U.S.
television stations ended
analog broadcasts in favor
of digital transmission.
Congress approved legislation banning “light” or
candy-ﬂavored cigarettes
and requiring tobacco
companies to make bigger warning labels and
run fewer ads. The U.N.
Security Council imposed
sanctions on North Korea
for its second nuclear
test.
Five years ago: During
a tightly controlled tour
of a converted warehouse
at Port Hueneme, California, a government ofﬁcial said the number of
migrant children housed
at the facility after they
were caught entering the
country illegally could
more than triple to 575
by the following week.
One year ago: After a
ﬁve-hour summit in Singapore, President Donald
Trump and North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un
signed a joint statement
agreeing to work toward
a denuclearized Korean
Peninsula, although
the timeline and tactics
were left unclear; Trump
declared that he and Kim
had developed “a very
special bond.”

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Township

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card Shower
Donna Watson Brooks,
formerly of Tuppers
Plains and alumni of
Olive Orange High
School, will be celebrating her 89th birthday on
June 16. Birthday cards
may be sent to her at 113
E Memorial Drive, Apartment 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
Bob and Dove White
of Coolville will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on June 14. Cards
of well wishes may be
sent to 44107 Carr Road
Coolville, OH 45723

Wednesday,
June 12
RACINE — Summer
Reading Kickoff, Racine
Library, 2-4 p.m. Bounce
houses, snow cones, face
painting, space photo
props, intergalactic crafts,
physical activities, and
more.
POMEROY — Gardening Series, Pomeroy
Library, 10:30 a.m. OSU
Extension Educator
Michelle Stumbo is on
hand to answer gardening
questions.
SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio
Township Trustees regular monthly meeting is
scheduled for 7 p.m. at
the Scipio Volunteer Fire
Department.

Friday,
June 14
POMEROY — Inspirational Book Club,
Pomeroy Library, 10:30
a.m. Read and discuss
The Postcard by Beverly
Lewis.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 5 p.m., Teen
Movie Night: Captain
Marvel, rated PG-13,
will be shown. Popcorn
and lemonade will be
served.

Purchase

Saturday,
June 15

POMEROY — The
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter NSDAR will
meet at 1 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. Members are
asked to bring in an old
family recipe to share.
Programs for the upcoming 2019-2020 year will
be discussed.

Monday,
June 17
LETART TWP. — The
regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
at the Letart Township
Building.

Wednesday,
June 19
POMEROY — Big
Blast of Space Science
Show, Pomeroy Library
4:30 p.m. Professor
Rocket will host a silly
science show about
space.

Saturday,
June 22
MIDDLEPORT — A
ﬁsh fry will be held at the
Middleport Fire Department with serving starting at 11 a.m.

Monday,
June 24
POMEROY — Book
Club Meeting, Pomeroy
Library, 6 p.m. Read and
discuss The Bookshop at
Water’s End by Patti Callahan Henry.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Meigs County Veteran
Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. in the
ofﬁce located at 97 North
Second Avenue, Suite 2,
Middleport.

Tuesday,
June 25
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the Library,
Pomeroy Library 6 p.m.
Bring an instrument and
play along. Listeners welcome.

Wednesday,
June 26
POMEROY — COSI:

zone information to
allow a car lot to be in
the space. French said
she did not like the idea
From page 1
of a used car lot being on
the property. Conde said
Council adopted Ordihe was not against any
nance 121-19, which
states the project funding business coming into the
with Ohio Department of village. Heighton suggested that Hendrickson
Transportation (ODOT)
talk to the neighbors to
to repair the slip on Mill
see what their thoughts
Street. As previously
and concerns are on the
reported by The Daily
matter. Hendrickson said
Sentinel, ODOT will
he will get in touch with
pay for 100 percent the
the neighbors and report
repairs if the project is
completed by October 28. back to council.
Council accepted the
After that deadline, the
village will be required to resignation of Steve
Bunch from the Public
pay 20 percent to comWorks department.
plete the work.
Woodall said he hired
The roadway will
Jeff Darst to mow on a
remain closed until the
seasonal contract until
repairs are complete.
November 1.
Building Inspector
Village resident Robert
Mike Hendrickson told
Saltzman spoke to council
council that someone is
about police presence
interested in purchason behalf of the Village
ing the Mill End Fabric
Manor apartments.
building and the vacant
Saltzman asked if the
lot beside the building.
police would walk around
The prospective buyer
the apartment complex to
wants to put a used car
lot on the property with patrol the drug activity.
Jail Administrator and
ﬁve to six cars. They
Assistant Police Chief
would also rent out the
Mony Wood said it is
upstairs apartment and
use the store front as an not the job of the police
department to be “priofﬁce space. Hendrickvate security for Village
son said property is not
Manor.”
zoned for that type of
“The police departbusiness, but he asked
ment is being targeted
council if they would
because we don’t go walkconsider changing the

I walk down the long driveway of
stones,
glossy tulip poplar leaves tumble at
my feet.
From page 1
Cats slip from barns purring rings
around my ankles. My dog and the
was exciting to wait for the mailneighbor’s
man. Who knew what news he
dogs bay and tremble with each
might bring each day in those letters. Packages would arrive contain- new scent, and
the road lies open, twisting quesing merchandise from Sears (and
tions
other retailers); it was always with
just out of sight.
anticipation that we waited each day
News rises over mountains spreadfor the mailman.”
ing
Jenkins ended her presentation
wings from an envelope of ﬂame,
with a poem by local author Cathy
a redCultice Lentes. She said the poem
tailed hawk spins circles above me,
captured the feelings about the mail
calling
she and others had experienced
crying my name.
growing up.
Cathy Cultice Lentes, used with
permission, Getting the Mail (C)
Getting The Mail
2016; Finishing Line Press, GeorgePaper is the heart of it—
words coming and going, the mys- town, Kentucky www.cathyculticelentes.com
tery
of what’s hinged behind that
Township Tales and Tidbits for Rutland Township
door—
were presented by Donna Jenkins during the Chester
Shade Historical Association Banquet.
but this is only part of it.

ENERGY Program, Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m. Visit
COSI without leaving
Meigs County. Explore
the ENERGY exhibit as
the Summer Reading Program continues.

Thursday,
June 27
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 5 p.m., Out
of This World DIY. Teens
create their own “galaxy”
t-shirts. Participants are
asked to bring a dark
blue, purple, or black
shirt. All other supplies
are provided.

Wednesday,
July 3
POMEROY — Nancy
the Turtle Lady, Pomeroy
Library, Two programs:
11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Learn about reptiles and
amphibians with Nancy
and her real-life creatures.

Racine

Council member Ashli
Peterman reported
that help is still needed
with the organizing of
From page 1
events at Star Mill Park
for July 4. She hopes
that the drain on Third
Street by the Post Ofﬁce to have entertainment
and activities starting
had been repaired by
Rose Excavating. It was at 4 p.m. and concludnoted that the pipe was ing at 10 p.m. for the
not connected, just butt- ﬁreworks. She is looking
for some entertainers
ed together with a gap.
that would be willing to
Also, one side of the
man hole had collapsed. donate their talent. The
frog jumping contest is
Holman also requested to purchase a 14 foot planed and a could food
vendors have indicated
trailer. He advised that
they would come.
if he had the trailer the
Mayor Hill reported
new village mower could
be transported and used that the Elm Street sidewalk project is moving
at the cemetery, which
along. They did not have
could cut the mowing
enough blocks for the
time at the cemetery
wall and have to wait
by at least 3 1/2 hours.
until more are made.
Council approved the
The splash park is
purchase with funds to
moving slowly. Mayor
be taken from various
Hill reported that four
sources as the trailer
will be used in different benches have been
ordered for the park
capacities.

Thursday,
July 4
MEIGS COUNTY —
All branches of the Meigs
County District Public
Library will be closed in
observance of Independence Day.

Wednesday,
July 10
POMEROY — Didgeridoo Down Under, Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m. The
Meigs Library’s Summer
Reading Program continues with this Australian
music program.

Friday,
July 12
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library 11 a.m.-8
p.m., Star Wars Retro
Movie Marathon. Episode
IV-VI will be shown backto-back.

Thursday,
July 18
RACINE — Summer
Reading Bubble Bash,
Racine Library, 5-7 p.m.
Celebrate the end of the
Summer Reading Program with water slide,
foam machine, bubbles,
games, prizes, and more.

ing around, which I don’t
think we should,” Wood
said. “We don’t go walking around your house.”
Wood said the residents
of the apartments cannot
get along and the police
department is called for
verbal disputes at the
property.
Mary Kimes spoke
to council about a new
church group moving to
Middleport. LifePoint of
Middleport will open on
Saturday, June 29, starting at 1 p.m. with a community block party at 337
North Second Avenue.
Kimes said the ministry
is “for the people in this
generation facing life
issues, drug addiction,
depression, and loneliness.” LifePoint will be
holding church services
on Saturday evenings at 5
p.m. They also offer drug
counseling, after school
kids programs promoting a drug free life, youth
group, and bible studies.
LifePoint of Middleport
is a second location from
LifePoint of Athens, a
Pentecostal church dating
back to 1915.
The next Middleport
Village Council meeting
will be held Monday, June
24 at 7 p.m. at the Village
Hall on Pearl Street.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

and would like these
to be the standard for
future benches. He has
had a couple inquiries
about people purchasing
benches in memory of
family members.
Discussion was held
regarding some residents living in trailers
and residences that
have no water or sewer
service. The health
department is going to
be contacted.
Minutes, bills and
ﬁnancial statements
were accepted. There
was no police activity
report. Mayor’s Court
ﬁnancials for the month
of May were $60, with
$30 going to the state.
The next meeting of
Racine Village Council is
scheduled for 6:30 p.m.
on July 1.
Information provided by
Councilman Bob Beegle.

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

OH-70129851

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.
Events can be emailed
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Wednesday, June 12, 2019 5

�S ports
6 Wednesday, June 12, 2019

ANALYSIS

Golden State won,
and both teams
lost Game 5
TORONTO (AP) — The scoreboard said Golden State 106, Toronto 105.
The reality was both teams lost.
It’s almost unimaginable: An NBA Finals game
where neither team felt like celebrating afterward. That was the bizarre reality on Monday
night, after the Warriors staved off elimination
by rallying in the ﬁnal moments to beat the Raptors and send this series back to Oracle Arena
for Game 6 — on a night where Kevin Durant’s
season came to an end.
Durant has an Achilles injury. The Warriors
know it’s bad. They’ll ﬁnd out how bad on Tuesday.
“It’s devastating,” Toronto forward Kawhi
Leonard said.
He wasn’t talking about losing the game.
He was talking about seeing Durant get hurt.
Leonard knows what it’s like to have the game
taken away by injury. He missed most of last
season with a leg injury, one that limited him to
nine games. He had his commitment to the game
questioned — the same way Durant had by some
in recent days — and came out the other side an
even better player.
That was the hope after Game 5 of the NBA
Finals. The series truly seemed insigniﬁcant,
with both sides aching over Durant’s situation.
“I love KD,” Raptors coach Nick Nurse said.
“I love watching him play. When anybody goes
down you’re saddened by it, but when one of
the great players like that goes down, it’s almost
shocking.”
Durant had missed the previous nine games
with what the Warriors insist was a strained calf
muscle. This is not a calf injury anymore. Warriors general manager Bob Myers gave a postgame news conference where he delivered the
emotional news that Durant hurt his Achilles.
“Kevin takes a lot of hits sometimes, but he just
wants to play basketball and right now he can’t,”
Myers said. “Basketball has gotten him through
his life. I don’t know that we can all understand
how much it means to him. He just wants to play
basketball with his teammates and compete.”
This should have gone so differently for the
Warriors, the team that might be going for a ﬁfth
consecutive championship had they not wasted a
3-1 lead in the 2016 ﬁnals against LeBron James
and the Cleveland Cavaliers.
They’re the ones who were down 3-1 in this
title series. All they did on Monday night was
rally from six points down in the ﬁnal 3 minutes,
get a fantastic defensive stand on the last play of
the game to deny Toronto a win and a championship, send the series back to their home for one
ﬁnal game at Oracle before moving to San Francisco next season.
They have a chance at the ultimate comeuppance, a 3-1 ﬁnals rally of their own.
Maybe when practice resumes Wednesday, that
will bring some joy.
There was no joy on Monday night. The Raptors weren’t celebrating. Neither were the winners, who lost much more than Toronto did.
“Those talking heads who say we’re better
without him, that’s just ludicrous,” Warriors
guard Klay Thompson said. “Like, that’s crazy.
This is the best player in the world. You could
put him on the 30th best team in the league, and
that team will make the playoffs. That’s how talented he is.”
The Warriors won the last two NBA championships largely because of Durant.
If they win the next two games for another
championship, it’ll be for Durant.
“It’s a team full of heart,” said Warriors center
DeMarcus Cousins, who spent a year recovering
from an Achilles injury that denied him a monster contract last summer and saw him sign with
Golden State on a mid-level deal. “It’s as simple
as that. We’re ﬁghters. it’s in our DNA. We’re
going to go down ﬁghting. Period.”
Durant would want it no other way.
“I’m just going to pray for the guy,” Thompson
said.
Leonard said he will be praying for Durant
also.
“In this league we’re all brothers,” Raptors
guard Kyle Lowry said. “At the end of the day,
we’re all brothers and it’s a small brotherhood
and you never want to see a competitor like him
go down.”
The atmosphere will be raucous on Thursday
night. The Raptors, with a second swing at winning a title. The Warriors, looking to make sure
they end their Oracle era with a victory.
The joy that should have come out from one
locker room on Monday night will, for certain, be
exhibited by someone on Thursday night.
“We’re going to give everything we got,” Warriors guard Stephen Curry said. “I would like to
say I would guarantee the win — who knows how
it’s going to end up — but we’re going to give
everything we got. We’re going to ﬁght, we’re
going to compete, and I know if we get a chance
to talk to him the next two days, that’s what he
would expect.”

Daily Sentinel

5 Blue Angels on All-OVC list
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Alex Barnes settles under a
flyball, during the Blue Angels’ April 10 contest in
Centenary, Ohio.

CENTENARY, Ohio — A
quartet of repeats and one
ﬁrst time honoree.
The Gallia Academy softball
team — which took second
place in the eight-team Ohio
Valley Conference — had ﬁve
players chosen to the 2019
All-OVC teams, as selected by
league coaches.
The Blue Angels’ ﬁrst team
choices were Alex Barnes,
Malerie Stanley and Bailie
Young.
Barnes, a junior shortstop,
is back on the ﬁrst team for a
second straight season, after
being named honorable mention as a freshman. Young, a

sophomore outﬁelder, is on
the ﬁrst team for a second
year in a row, while Stanley, a
sophomore second baseman,
picked up her ﬁrst career allleague honor.
Junior third baseman and
pitcher Bailey Meadows, and
sophomore outﬁelder Chasity
Adams both repeated as the
Blue Angels’ honorable mention selections. It’s the third
time Meadows was named to
the honorable mention list.
Ironton’s Missy Fields was
named the OVC Coach of the
Year, leading the Lady Tigers
to the 2019 championship
with a perfect 14-0 league
mark.
See ALL-OVC | 7

Chris Young | The Canadian Press via AP

Toronto Raptors forward Kawhi Leonard (2) draws a foul as he drives to the net against Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus
Cousins (0), forward Draymond Green (23) and forward Andre Iguodala (9) during the second half of Game 5 of the NBA Finals on
Monday in Toronto.

Warriors hang on to stay alive
Golden State wins Game 5 of NBA Finals
TORONTO (AP) —
The Golden State Warriors aren’t letting go of
the NBA title just yet.
With Stephen Curry
and Klay Thompson
shooting and Draymond
Green swatting, the
champions found a way
to win even after a gutwrenching loss.
Curry scored 31
points, Thompson added
26 and they led a seasonsaving surge long after
Kevin Durant was injured
again to give the Warriors a 106-105 victory
over the Toronto Raptors on Monday night
in Game 5 of the NBA
Finals.
Devastated by the loss
of Durant, the All-Stars
that the Warriors had left
made sure there was celebration along with their
sadness, pulling out what
Green thought had to be
the greatest win during
their run to ﬁve straight
NBA Finals.
“When you’re down six
with a couple minutes
to go in an elimination
for these guys to win a
championship, we could
have thrown in the towel.
We could have folded,
but we didn’t,” Green
said. “I said it before: I’ve
never seen this group
fold. And that stands
true still.”
Curry and Thompson,
nicknamed the Splash
Brothers, combined for
three straight 3-pointers
in the closing minutes
after Toronto had taken a
six-point lead with under

3½ minutes remaining in
front of a raucous, redshirted crowd.
“Even going down
six with three minutes
left, their ball, we didn’t
panic,” Thompson said.
“We just do what we do.”
The Warriors lost
Durant barely a quarter
after getting him back
but got the win, cutting
Toronto’s lead to 3-2
and sending the series
back to Oracle Arena for
Game 6 on Thursday.
Kawhi Leonard scored
26 points for the Raptors
but couldn’t get the ﬁnal
shot, which went to Kyle
Lowry and was blocked
by Green.
The two-time defending champion Warriors
were minutes away from
their title reign ending,
having lost Durant and a
14-point lead during an
emotionally exhausting
game. They had controlled Leonard for three
quarters, but he scored
10 straight Toronto
points in the fourth and
the Raptors were close to
their ﬁrst championship
and a party that would
have stretched coast to
coast in Canada.
But even after everything the Warriors had
lost, they still had two
of the best perimeter
shooters in the world on
the ﬂoor. Thompson hit
a 3, and Curry followed
with one to tie it at 103.
Golden State got it back
to Thompson and the
Raptors lost sight of him
just long enough for the

Frank Gunn | The Canadian Press via AP

Golden State Warriors forward Kevin Durant, left, falls over Toronto
Raptors center Serge Ibaka, bottom, as Warriors forward Andre
Iguodala (9) looks on during the first half of Game 5 of the NBA
Finals on Monday in Toronto.

tiebreaking shot with 57
seconds to go.
Toronto cut it to one
when Kyle Lowry was
credited with a basket
and the Raptors got
a ﬁnal chance when
DeMarcus Cousins
was called for an illegal
screen. Leonard had the
ball but the Warriors
forced him to pass and it
ended up in the corner to
Lowry, but Green sprinted over to get a hand on
his shot as the buzzer
sounded.
“He got a piece of it,
that’s what great defenders do,” Lowry said. “He
got a piece of it and we’ll
continue to look at it and
see how we can be better
for the next game.”
Cousins had 14 points
for the Warriors and
Green ﬁnished with 10
points, 10 rebounds and
eight assists.
Golden State is the
only team to lose a 3-1
lead in the NBA Finals,
when Cleveland came
back to win in 2016.

Now the Warriors have
a chance to pull off the
feat themselves, but it
became more difﬁcult
after Durant limped off
in the second quarter
after he had missed the
previous nine games with
a strained right calf.
“We understand the
moment and I think we
can rally, considering
how the second half went
tonight,” Curry said.
Durant, the two-time
NBA Finals MVP, was
attempting to dribble
past Serge Ibaka early in
the second quarter when
he suddenly came to a
stop, lost the ball and
limped sideways before
grabbing at his lower
right calf as he fell to the
court.
Fans at ﬁrst cheered
but then, spurred in part
by some Raptors players, chanted “KD! KD!”
as he was helped to the
locker room area joined
by Curry, Andre Iguodala
See WARRIORS | 7

�SPORTS/TELEVISION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 12, 2019 7

Logano edges Kurt Busch, Truex in overtime
BROOKLYN, Mich.
(AP) — Joey Logano
won the pole in qualifying and then led for more
than three-quarters of the
actual race.
It was an impressive
display, but all that could
have gone for naught if
he hadn’t been sharp on
one ﬁnal restart.
Logano won his second
NASCAR Cup Series race
of the season, holding off
Kurt Busch and Martin
Truex Jr. in overtime
Monday at Michigan
International Speedway.
Logano was trying to
hold on to a dwindling
lead over Truex and
Busch with ﬁve laps
remaining, but around
that time, Erik Jones
went onto the grass,
bringing out the caution
ﬂag that forced overtime.
“As the leader, you’re
like, ‘Ohhhh.’ Right?”
Logano said. “But the
race fan part of me is
like, ‘Heck yeah, this is
going to be a great race
for everyone to watch.’”
Logano and Truex were
up front on the restart,
along with Kurt and
Kyle Busch, and Logano
pulled ahead in his No.
22 Ford.
“He jumped the restart
by over a car length,”
Truex said. “I don’t know.
I guess they don’t enforce
those rules anymore.

All-OVC
From page 6

But this time we had the
speed and had the execution going along with it.”

The Ohio Valley
Conference does not
select a player of the
year.

Who’s hot
Logano earned Team
Penske’s ﬁfth Cup victory
of the season. Owner
Roger Penske was in
Washington, where
Simon Pagenaud was
welcomed to the White
House in recognition of
his Indianapolis 500 victory.
Joe Gibbs Racing has
nine Cup wins this year
Carlos Osorio | AP and put two cars in the
Joey Logano (22) defeats Kurt Busch (1) and Martin Truex Jr. (19) to win a NASCAR Cup Series auto top ﬁve at Michigan:
Truex and Kyle Busch.
race at Michigan International Speedway on Monday in Brooklyn, Mich.
We’ll have to remember
that for next time.”
Logano, not surprisingly, had a different view.
“I was able to see it
right in front of me. I
hit it when I got there,”
Logano said. “I had a
good start though, wasn’t
it? That was a good one.
That one felt good.”
NASCAR said it
reviews all restarts and
did not ﬁnd anything
problematic with this
one.
It was the third win in
a row for Ford at MIS.
This was the 100th race
at Michigan for NASCAR’s top series.
The race was held
Monday after being
rained out Sunday.

Logano won the ﬁrst
stage but had to pit
toward the end of the second. Austin Dillon won
that stage.
It was a dominant visit
to MIS for Logano, who
led a track-record 163
laps in the race. The previous mark of 162 was set
in 1989 by Rusty Wallace
— although Logano’s
race was extended by the
overtime.
The race was scheduled for 200 laps and
400 miles. After lap 191,
Logano had a lead of
1.302 seconds. Truex had
cut that to 0.153 after
lap 195, and Kurt Busch
was right there too —
but that all became moot
because of the last cau-

tion.
“I really wanted it to
go green at the end with
Truex,” Busch said. “I
was going to push him
straight through the 22.”
Logano won for the
23rd time in his career
and took over the points
lead from Kyle Busch.
Kurt Busch ﬁnished second Monday, followed by
Truex, Daniel Suarez and
Kyle Busch.
“You don’t have days
like that, that are so close
to perfect. That doesn’t
happen very often in our
sport,” said Logano, the
defending series champion. “I’m very proud of
the effort that we’ve had
really the last few weeks,
from the execution side.

Who’s not
Clint Bowyer and Kevin
Harvick, who won the
two MIS races last year,
remained winless this
season. Bowyer was out
of it after he went into
the wall early in the ﬁnal
stage. Harvick had to pit
toward the end of the ﬁrst
stage with a loose wheel.
He worked his way back
into contention but ﬁnished seventh.
“We had a really fast
Busch Light Ford and just
made a lot of mistakes
today,” Harvick said.

contribute or have questions concerning the
tour.

a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual
stroke play tournament
open to golfers ages
10-or-under to 18 years
old. The participants
will be divided into four
divisions, 10-under,
11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for
players 12-and-under,
and $30 for players
13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and individual
awards will be presented
to the top-three places
in each division.

Cart and meal passes
will be available for
spectators to follow
kids for $15 apiece, so
that they may follow the
tournament and eat with
the kids.
To enter please
contact the Cliffside
clubhouse at 740-4464653, or Ed Caudill at
740-245-5919 or 740645-4381. Please leave
player’s name, age as of
July 18, 2019 and the
school the individual is
currently attending.

2019 All-OVC
Softball Team
First Team
IRONTON (140): Keegan Moore,
Taiya Hamlet ,Peighton Rowe, Mary
Beth Burton.
GALLIA ACADEMY (10-4): Alex
Barnes, Malerie Stanley, Bailie
Young.
PORTSMOUTH
(8-6): Jacquelin Bautista, Madison Perry.
ROCK HILL
(8-6): Grace Stevens,
Kylee Howard.
COAL GROVE
(7-7): Lauren Crum,
Addi Dillow.
SOUTH POINT
(5-9): Holly Ramey,
Sara Allen.
CHESAPEAKE
(3-11): Ryleigh
Swann.
FAIRLAND
(1-13): Emily
Bowen.
Coach of the Year:
Missy Fields, Fairland.
Honorable
Mention
IRONTON: Haylee Stevens, Demi
Sands.
GALLIA ACADEMY: Bailey Meadows, Chasity Adams.
PORTSMOUTH:
Olivia Ramey, Kylee
Montgomery.
ROCK HILL:
Rileigh Morris,
Makenzie Hanshaw.
COAL GROVE:
Jaidyn Grifﬁth,
Kaleigh Murphy.
SOUTH POINT:
Kylee Ellison, Emily
Byrd.
CHESAPEAKE:
Ashley Tackett, Jordan Storms.
FAIRLAND: Libby
Judge, Adrianna
Hoffman.

Up next
The series takes next
weekend off before resuming June 23 at Sonoma.
Truex won there last year.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Junior Golf
Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The schedule for
the 2019 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior
Golf League has been
released.
The tour ofﬁcially
began 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

Warriors

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

that have popped up in
and around Toronto. The
crowd inside the arena
that included hockey Hall
From page 6
of Famer Wayne Gretzky
and general manager Bob and former Raptors star
Vince Carter thought it
Myers.
would witness history as
Durant left the arena
Leonard powered past his
on crutches with what a
defenders repeatedly in
tearful Myers said was
an Achilles tendon injury the fourth quarter.
But the Raptors needed
and the Warriors said
one more basket, and
he would get an MRI on
the only way the local
Tuesday.
fans can see them win in
They were initially
OK without him because person is if it goes the full
Cousins — who returned seven games and Toronto
from injury himself in this wins it at home on Sunday.
series — came off the
“We had a chance to
bench to score their next
seven points before feed- win a championship
ing Green for a layup that tonight and we didn’t do
gave them a 48-37 lead. It it,” guard Fred VanVleet
got as high as 13 on Cur- said. “We didn’t play well
enough, we didn’t execute
ry’s four-point play, and
Golden State led 62-56 at enough down the stretch
and that stings a little
halftime.
But eventually it would bit.”
come down to Curry and
Thompson, who both
Tip-ins
logged more than 41
Warriors: Golden State
minutes and will have
also lost Kevon Looney
to be ready to go again
again after he aggravated
Thursday in what will be his injury to upper body
the ﬁnal game in Oracle
cartilage. … Durant ﬁnArena.
ished with 11 points. He
Lowry had 18 points
came in averaging 31.7
and Marc Gasol scored 17 points per game in the
for the Raptors, who were NBA Finals, trailing only
trying to give Canada its Rick Barry and Michael
ﬁrst championship in one Jordan on the career list.
of the traditional major
Raptors: Serge Ibaka
sports since the Blue Jays scored 15 points and Vanwon the World Series in
Vleet had 11 off Toronto’s
1993.
bench.
Fans had been waiting
through on-and-off rain all Up next
day — some since SunGolden State hosts
day — to watch at one of Game 6 on Thursday
the outdoor watch parties night.

Juniors Golf
Tournament
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— Cliffside Golf Course
will be hosting the 11th
annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for junior golfers
on Thursday, July 18,
starting at 10 a.m. Registration will be from 9

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OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
The Incredible Hulk Edward Norton. TV14
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017, Action) Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Chris Pratt.
(5:00)
National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007,
Cast Away (2000, Drama) Helen Hunt, Nick Searcy, Tom Hanks. The lone survivor
Adventure) Jon Voight, Ed Harris, Nicolas Cage. TV14
of a plane crash must adapt to solitary life on a remote island. TVPG
Exp.Unk. "Viking Sunstone" Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown: Rediscovered "Lost Warriors" (N) Homestead "Line of Fire"
(4:00) Live PD
Live PD (N) /(:05) Live PD: Live PD Live access inside the country's busiest police forces and the communities they
Rewind (N)
patrol. (N)
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
North Woods Law "The Trouble with Youth" (N)
North Woods Law
NCIS "Identity Crisis"
NCIS "Leap of Faith"
NCIS "Chimera"
NCIS "Requiem" A team
NCIS "Designated Target"
member's life is in jeopardy.
Law &amp; Order "Killerz"
Law &amp; Order "DNR"
Law &amp; Order "Merger"
Law &amp; Order "Justice"
Law &amp; Order "Marathon"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Coyote Ugly ('00, Com/Dra) Piper Perabo. TV14
(:15)
Coyote Ugly TV14
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
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Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) (:35) Queens
Drugs, Inc. "Designer
Drugs, Inc. "Marijuana"
Drugs, Inc. "Zombie Island" Drugs, Inc.: The Fix
Drugs, Inc. "Motor City
Drugs"
"Sleeping Pill Overkill" (N) Rush"
NHL Live! (L)
Monster Jam "Detroit"
Monster Jam "Seattle"
Monster Jam "Seattle"
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
U.S. Open Epics (N)
FIFA Soccer World Cup Women's
Fox Soccer Tonight (L)
Forged in Fire "Butterfly
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450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

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former assassin from a top secret project is Tonight (N)
framed for a botched CIA operation. TV14
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(:15) Wildlife (2018, Drama) Jake Gyllenhaal, Carey
Mulligan, Ed Oxenbould. A teenage boy deals with the
consequences of his father's abandonment. TVPG
(5:40)

8

PM

Big Little
Lies

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Conspiracy Theory (1997, Action) Julia Roberts, Patrick
Stewart, Mel Gibson. A paranoid New York taxi driver becomes a target
when he uncovers a conspiracy. TVMA
American Made ('17, Act) Sarah Wright, Tom Cruise. A
(:55)
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pilot recruited by the CIA to perform reconnaissance flights Dra) Cameron Diaz, Tom
starts smuggling drugs. TV14
Cruise. TVMA
Fast Times at Ridgemont High Follow six
Risky Business A high school senior
teenagers through every one of their
has a wild weekend with a sexy call girl
escapades for one year of high school.
while his parents are away. TVMA
(:50)

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, June 12, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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see what’s brewing on the

job market.
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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 12, 2019 9

Bruins’ consistency faces final test in Game 7 vs. Blues
By Stephen Whyno

“Same playlist I’ve been
playing for months now,”
Krug said. “It’s been the
same music for months
ST. LOUIS — The
on end.”
strains of Jay-Z and
And the same BruLinkin Park’s “Numb/
ins, whose consistent
Encore” mashup emaapproach on and off the
nated from a small
ice will be tested one
speaker on the hallway
ﬂoor outside the visiting more time Wednesday
locker room following the in Game 7 of the Stanley
Cup Final against the
Boston Bruins’ morning
St. Louis Blues. This is
skate.
an experienced Boston
“I don’t know what
you’re expecting of me ... roster with ﬁve players
put under the pressure ... left from the 2011 Cup
of walking in your shoes.” championship team that
vanquished the Canucks
Despite all the pressure on Boston, team DJ in Vancouver, also the
Torey Krug wouldn’t dare most recent time the ﬁnal
went to a seventh and
change anything in the
deciding game.
face of elimination.

AP Hockey Writer

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

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

Scott Kane | AP

Boston Bruins left wing Jake DeBrusk (74) joins the celebration
after Brandon Carlo, right, scored a goal against the St. Louis Blues
during the third period of Game 6 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup
Final on Sunday in St. Louis.

“There’s never been a
(Cup Final) Game 7 in
Boston, (so) I would say

lean on past experience
with that, but there is
none,” Krug said Monday.

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
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under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
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AUCTIONS
Auto Auction

PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
CASE NO 20195006 &amp; 20195007
NOTICE OF HEARING TO KAYLA GHEEN, FRANKIE
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ADDRESSES THAT ON THE 22ND DAY OF MARCH,
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PETITIONERS AT 740-992-7101
5/8/19,5/15/19,5/22/19,5/29/19,6/5/19,6/12/19

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, June 14, 2019
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679

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from a 5-1 rainstorm
on St. Louis’ potential
parade in Game 6.
Four of the previous
ﬁve times in the 2019
playoffs that a team down
3-2 won Game 6, it also
won Game 7.
The Blues are marching
in the wrong direction
after failing to close out a
series for the ﬁrst time in
the playoffs. They eliminated Winnipeg, Dallas
and San Jose on the ﬁrst
chance each time and all
on home ice.
Now they go on the
road where they’re 9-3
this postseason with two
of those victories coming
in Boston.

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

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“There is experience from
guys who played in Game
7 in Vancouver.
“It’s tough. It’s the
most exciting game in all
of our lives and I think
whoever maintains their
composure and discipline
within their system, how
they play and how they
approach the game is
probably going to prevail.”
The smart money is on
the Bruins recapturing
the Stanley Cup on home
ice, and sportsbooks give
them the edge. Not only
do they own an experience advantage in these
situations, but carry with
them some momentum

825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
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�10 Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Good health begins
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Primary care physicians and nurse practitioners at Pleasant
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Internal, Pediatric &amp; Adolescent
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2520 Valley Drive, Suite 118
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

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emergency situations, and are trained to
treat common conditions, and to direct
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Brandon DeWees, FNP-C
Family Nurse Practitioner
2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260

OH-70130700

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Pleasant Valley Hospital is a partner of
Cabell Huntington Hospital and the Marshall
University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine.

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