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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

68°

78°

76°

Partial sunshine today. Clear to partly cloudy
and humid tonight. High 83° / Low 64°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Church in
the lonesome
pines

Hunt
promises
to ‘lay low’

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 124, Volume 73

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 s 50¢

Pomeroy man charged in fatal crash
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — A
Pomeroy man who was
allegedly involved in a
crash which killed two
people on a motorcycle
on Sunday appeared in
Meigs County Court on
Tuesday afternoon.
Austin R. Halfhill, 22,
of Pomeroy, is currently
charged with one count
of aggravated vehicular

homicide, a felony of the
second degree.
According to the
charge read by Judge
Michael Barr, Halfhill
was alleged to have been
driving under the inﬂuence at the time of the
crash.
John N. McElfresh, 62,
of Glouster, and Brenda
Suttle, 59, of Crooksville,
died as a result of the
crash which occurred
Sunday afternoon on

Council approves
water meter
replacement

State Route 7 near Chester. Suttle’s body was
located on Monday near
the initial crash site.
A news release from
the Gallipolis Post of the
Ohio State Highway stated that Halfhill allegedly
traveled left of center
striking McElfresh’s Harley Davidson motorcycle
head-on.
Assistant Prosecutor
Jeff Adkins requested
bond for Halfhill to be

set at $250,000 given
the seriousness of the
offense and possible
charges when the case is
presented to the grand
jury. Adkins stated that
Halfhill may have been
driving under suspension
at the time of the crash,
a factor which could elevate the charges he faces.
In addition, a second victim was located after the
initial charge was ﬁled.
Adkins stated that Half-

hill could potentially face
two ﬁrst-degree felony
charges of aggravated
vehicular homicide when
the case is presented to a
grand jury.
Judge Barr set bond at
$250,000 as requested
and scheduled a preliminary hearing in the case
for Tuesday, Aug. 13 at
2 p.m., with Attorney
Charles Knight appointed to represent Halfhill.
In an unrelated case,

Halfhill was arraigned
on a ﬁrst-degree misdemeanor theft charge for
a crime which allegedly
occurred in February
at the TP One Stop
in Tuppers Plains. A
not guilty plea to that
charge was entered on
his behalf, with a ﬁnal
pretrial to take place at 2
p.m. on Tuesday.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

TOWNSHIP TALES AND TIDBITS

By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — Pomeroy Village Council
approved a loan to purchase new water meters,
as well as the renewal of insurance for employees,
and various payments during their meeting on
Monday evening.
Council unanimously voted to pass a resolution
to take a zero interest loan for the purchase and
installation of water meters. All meters throughout
the village will be replaced. Mayor Don Anderson
said he expects the water revenue to increase
enough to make the payments for the loan. The
project is expected to start around the end of September and will take six months to complete.
Anderson reminded council that 75 percent of
the existing meters were inaccurate by at least 25
percent. Anderson also said that many households
currently paying for the minimum water usage will
likely see an increase in their bill due to accurate
readings.
Anderson also mentioned wanting to consider
requiring each household to have their own shut
off valve.
Council unanimously voted to renew the eye,
dental and life insurance for village employees.
The plan is through the same provider with the
same coverage and cost as the last year.
Council made the ﬁrst disbursement for the
Union Street and Prospect Street storm sewer
project. The payment was for $27,720.30. Seventyﬁve percent of the project is covered by an emergency funded grant and the village is responsible
for 25 percent of the cost.
Council made the third payment for the 833
sewer project in the amount of $80,982.36. Anderson said additional funds were required to cross
733, therefore, the new sewer line will not extend
as far as originally planned.
Anderson said that Farmers Bank extended the
loan for the ﬁre department to $150,000 to pay for
upgrades to the two used ﬁretrucks. The department still needs $20,000 to cover the costs. Fiscal
ofﬁcer Sue Baker said the addition money will be
paid from the ﬁre department fund.
Anderson wants to move forward with the parking lot electrical upgrades before the Sternwheeler
Festival. The grant money of $2,800 has to be
spent before February 2020. Anderson said there
See WATER | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9

Photos courtesy of the Meigs County Library, Mark Meinhart Photo Collection

Marker at Rock Springs “Indian watering place,”

Salisbury Twp., Rock Springs
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

ROCK SPRINGS —
Opal Grueser focused the
ﬁrst part of her presentation of “Tales and Tidbits: Salisbury Township”
on Rock Springs early
history and continued
importance to the area.
“The name is Rock
Springs, not Rocksprings
as some, including
Google spell it, the name
is Rock Spring, two
words, and it is named
for the numerous springs
located in the area. The
springs were probably
ﬁrst discovered by the
Shawnee, and other
migratory tribes used the
springs. Settlers found an
area abundant in timber
and game as a result of
the springs, and there

was fresh water, so it
became a cross roads for
travelers coming from
Marietta to Chillicothe
and from Pomeroy to
Athens, so the area
grew.”
“Soon there was a
two-room schoolhouse,
not a one room as was
most common, but a tworoom schoolhouse, a post
ofﬁce, grist mill, a cider
mill to process apples
from the numerous
orchards, a store, a doctor, and a blacksmith.”
“Rock Springs was a
stage coach stop, and
travelers stayed at an
inn with a saloon, where
they found good food,
fresh water, and a place
to have a night’s rest
before going onto their
destination.”
“The springs them-

Ohio Pallet Company

selves were a vital part of
everyday life for the settlers, not only providing
fresh water, but food was
stored in the springs thru

the early 1900’s. There is
a record of food from the
Meigs County Fair being
See TALES | 5

‘Breaking Chains Festival’ to return
By Erin (Perkins) Johnson
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

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

POINT PLEASANT
— The musical festival
that not only provides
its festival goers with
a night full of soulful
music, but also with messages on understanding
addiction through worship, prayer, and education will be returning for
its second year.
The Breaking Chains
Festival, organized by
the New Life Clinic, is
File Photo

See FESTIVAL | 3 The inaugural Breaking Chains Festival was such a success last year, it is returning for its second year.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, August 7, 2019

DEATH NOTICES
HILL
BLACKSBURG, Va. — Charles E. “Chuck” Hill, 70,
of Blacksburg, Va., died Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019 at LewisGale Hospital Montgomery in Blacksburg.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Friday, Aug.
9, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. with Pastor Rob Grady ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at Evergreen Cemetery in Letart, W.Va. with
military graveside services by the West Virginia Army
Honor Guard. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Thursday at the funeral home.
MILAM
CROWN CITY — Henry Milam, 37, of Crown City,
hio passed away Saturday August 3, 2019 at his home.
A celebration of life service will be held 2 to 3 p.m.,
Friday, August 9, 2019 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, with Proctorville V.F.W. Post
6878 conducting military rites at 2 p.m.
MCGUIRE
CROWN CITY — On August 6, 2019, Inez Marie
(Waugh) McGuire died.
Her care has been entrusted to Willis Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday, August 9, 2019 from noon-2 p.m.
with services immediately following with Pastor Paul
Johnson ofﬁciating. She will be buried at Old Mercerville Cemetery.
GUTHRIE
COOLVILLE — Juanita Guthrie, 97, of Coolville,
Ohio, died Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2019, at Close To Home
Assisted Living in Albany, Ohio.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, Ohio.
BRIGHT
GALLIPOLIS — Michael Eugene Bright, 64, of Gallipolis, passed away at 4:20 p.m., Thursday, July 18,
2019, at Riverside Methodist hospital in Columbus.
A graveside service will be held at Addison Reynolds Cemetery on Saturday August 10 at 1 p.m.

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

Wednesday, Aug. 7
HARRISONVILLE — A free dinner will be held at
the Scipio Township Fire Department in Harrisonville, State Route 684, featuring country fried steak,
mashed potatoes with country gravy, glazed carrots,
dinner roll, orange dreamsicle cake and beverages.
Dinner will be served from 5-6 p.m.

Thursday, Aug. 8
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of Director’s will meet at 3:30
p.m. at the district ofﬁce in Wellston.

Daily Sentinel

FBI reviewing shooter’s ideology
By John Seewer
and Kantele Franko
Associated Press

DAYTON, Ohio —
The gunman who killed
nine people in Dayton,
Ohio, had expressed a
desire to commit a mass
shooting and showed
an interest in violent
ideology, investigators
said Tuesday as the FBI
announced it is opening
an investigation.
Federal investigators
will try to determine
what ideologies inﬂuenced 24-year-old Connor Betts, who might
have helped him or
knew in advance of his
plan, and why he chose
the speciﬁc target of
Dayton’s Oregon entertainment district for the
shooting early Sunday,
said Special Agent Todd
Wickerham, the head of
the FBI’s Cincinnati ﬁeld
ofﬁce.
Dayton Police Chief
Richard Biehl said Betts
had “violent ideations
that include mass shootings and had expressed a
desire to commit a mass
shooting.”
Wickerham didn’t say
whether the FBI is looking at if the case could
be treated as domestic
terrorism, as the agency
has done in the El Paso,
Texas, mass shooting
earlier in the weekend.
He said Betts hadn’t
been on the FBI’s radar.
He declined to discuss
what speciﬁc ideologies
might be linked to Betts’
actions but said there
was no evidence so far
that they were racially
motivated.
Meanwhile, public
conversation around the
shooting shifted Tuesday
toward how to address
people with mental
health issues who might
pose a threat of violence, as a woman who
brieﬂy dated the gunman
recounted their bonding over struggles with
mental illness and the
governor called for more
mental health support
along with gun safety
measures.
Investigators haven’t
publicly offered a motive
for why Betts, wearing

John Minchillo | AP

Mourners embrace after bringing flowers to a makeshift memorial Tuesday for the slain and
injured in the Oregon District after a mass shooting early Sunday morning in Dayton, Ohio.

a mask and body armor,
opened ﬁre with an
AR-15 style gun outside
a strip of nightclubs in
Dayton early Sunday,
killing his sister and
eight others before ofﬁcers fatally shot him less
than 30 seconds into his
rampage.
A woman who said she
brieﬂy dated him earlier
this year wrote in an
online essay that Betts
had “dark thoughts,”
including about wanting
to hurt people. Adelia
Johnson, 24, said they
met in a college psychology class and bonded
over dealing with mental
illness, which she said
allowed Betts to open up
to her.
Johnson said she was
in treatment but that
Betts “didn’t want to
seek help because of the
stigma.” He told her he
thought he had mental
illnesses including bipolar disorder, she said.
“When he started
joking about his dark
thoughts, I understood,”
she wrote. “Dark
thoughts for someone
with a mental illness
are just a symptom that
we have to learn how to
manage.”
Johnson said on their
ﬁrst date, Betts showed
her a video of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting. She said Betts had
“uncontrollable urges”
that she called “red
ﬂags,” which eventually
led her to call things off

in May. When she broke
up with him, she said
she reached out to his
mother to express her
concern, but she didn’t
elaborate on what they
discussed.
It’s unknown whether
any of the Dayton victims were targeted .
Besides Betts’ sister
Megan, 22, the others
who died were Monica
Brickhouse, 39; Nicholas Cumer, 25; Derrick
Fudge, 57; Thomas
McNichols, 25; Lois
Oglesby, 27; Saeed
Saleh, 38; Logan Turner,
30; and Beatrice N.
Warren-Curtis, 36.
Betts was white and
six of the nine killed
were black, but police
said the speed of the
rampage made any discrimination in the shooting seem unlikely.
Hospital ofﬁcials said
37 people have been
treated for injuries,
including 14 with gunshot wounds.
The shooting and
another mass shooting
in El Paso, Texas , over
the weekend left 31
people dead and more
than 50 injured in less
than 24 hours.
Johnson’s comments
add to a conﬂicting
picture emerging of
Betts, with some people
defending him as a nice
guy and friendly neighbor while former schoolmates recall a troubled
teenager.
Two former classmates

told The Associated
Press that Betts was suspended from Bellbrook
High School after a hit
list was found scrawled
in a school bathroom.
That followed an earlier
suspension after Betts
came to school with a
list of female students
he wanted to sexually
assault, according to the
two classmates, a man
and a woman who spoke
on condition of anonymity out of concern they
might face harassment.
Others remembered
how he tried to intimidate classmates.
“It’s bafﬂing and horrible that somebody who’s
been talking for 10 years
about wanting to shoot
people could easily, so
easily, get access to a
military grade weapon
and that much ammo,”
said Hannah Shows, a
former high classmate
who remembered seeing Betts look at people
and imitate shooting at
them.
“He was someone who
enjoyed making people
afraid,” she said.
Brad Howard said
he also long attended
school with Betts but
recalled him differently.
“The Connor Betts
that I knew was a nice
kid,” Howard said.
Bellbrook-Sugarcreek
Schools wouldn’t comment and refused to
release information
about his student
records.

Saturday, Aug. 10
CHESHIRE —Belles &amp; Beaus 50th Anniversary
square dance will be held from 7-10 p.m. at the Gavin
Recreation Bldg.

By Zeke Miller
and Jonathan Lemire

Sunday, Aug. 11
RACINE — The Charles and Alma Snyder family reunion will be held at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Please bring a covered dish. Lunch will be served at
noon.

Monday, Aug. 12
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m.
at the Bedford Town Hall.

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Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Trump vows urgent action after shootings

SPORTS EDITOR
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bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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have proved ﬂeeting.
His path to the White
Associated Press
House was built on the
politics of division, and
aides say he views his
WASHINGTON —
road to reelection on
Speaking out against
again sowing discord
weekend mass shootings
and unease about culthat rocked a nation,
tural, economic and
President Donald Trump
demographic changes.
called for bipartisan
Democrats on Monsolutions to the bloodday accused Trump of
shed but offered few
fostering an environdetails and faced pointed
ment of hate that led to
questions from DemoJohn Minchillo | AP
the shootings, and they
crats about whether he
A protester holds a sign outside city hall Tuesday in Dayton,
had the moral authority
Ohio, to protest against an upcoming visit from President angrily renewed their
calls for his defeat next
to rally America against Donald Trump.
year.
the spasm of violence
“He’s been racist
day, though some local
tion policy just a few
and racism.
from day one — before
hours after proposing it. lawmakers and others
Trump, back at the
day one when he was
signaled opposition,
“We vow to act with
White House on Monday
and the Federal Aviation questioning whether
urgent resolve,” Trump
after remaining largely
Barack Obama was born
Administration advised
out of view for two days said as the death toll
in the United States,”
pilots of a presidential
from the shootings in
at his New Jersey golf
said former Rep. Beto
visit to Dayton.
club, declared the shoot- El Paso and Dayton
O’Rourke, a 2020 presiAt the White House,
reached 31 late Monday.
ings in Texas and Ohio
Trump declared, “In one dential contender who
barbaric crimes “against His scripted remarks
represented El Paso.
voice, our nation must
all humanity” and called included a solitary
condemn racism, bigotry “He’s trafﬁcked in this
denunciation of white
for unity to respond to
stuff from the very
and white supremacy.”
supremacy, which he
an epidemic of gun vioHe said he had direct- beginning, and we are
lence. He blamed mental has been reluctant to
reaping right now what
ed the FBI to examine
criticize, and he made
illness and video games
he has sown and what
steps to identify and
but made no mention of no mention of the antihis supporters in Conaddress domestic terimmigration rhetoric
more limits on the ﬁrefound in an online screed rorism. “These sinister gress have sown. We
arms that can be sold.
have to put a stop to it.”
ideologies must be
Trump said he wanted posted just before the
Former President
defeated. Hate has no
El Paso attack that mirlegislation providing
Obama posted a staterored his own incendiary place in America,” he
“strong background
ment in which he called
said.
language. Detectives
checks” for gun users,
for the nation to “soundIn the past, the
sought to determine if it
though he has reneged
ly reject language compresident’s calls to the
was written by the man
on previous promises
ing out of the mouths of
nation’s better angels,
along that line after mass who was arrested.
The mayor of El Paso without renouncing his any of our leaders that
attacks. He seemed to
feeds a climate of fear
own divisive language
said at a news conferabandon his latest idea
and hatred or normalabout immigrants and
ence that Trump would
of linking gun control
izes racist statements.”
political opponents,
visit the city Wedneslegislation to immigra-

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Festival

prices vary for event,
but general admission
for the event is $25.
Children ages three and
From page 1
under are permitted in
free.
set for Sunday, Aug. 18
“The small increase
at the Mason County
in ticket prices is justiFairgrounds located at
ﬁed for the talent we
1277 Fairground Road
brought this year, but is
in Point Pleasant. The
gates will open at 4 p.m. still much lower than the
and the music will begin average ticket cost for
a much smaller show,”
at 6 p.m., wrapping up
said Bowen.
at 10 p.m.
Approximately 1,000
The musical line up
for this year’s event
tickets have been sold so
will be popular praise
far. Tickets can be purbands. The ﬁrst to take
chased online by visiting
the stage will be We the https://breakingchainsKingdom, followed by
festival.com or tickets
Ryan Stevenson, then
can be purchased at the
Zach Williams will take gate. Tickets come on
the stage, and Mercy Me a ﬁrst come, ﬁrst serve
will be the closing act of basis and purchases are
the night.
non-refundable as the
“I wanted to bring the concert will go on whethsame style lineup as last er rain or shine occurs
year, but with multiple
on the day of the event.
headliners,” said Todd
“This is an addiction
Bowen of New Life
awareness event where
Clinic. “We had a good
we will pass out cards
turnout last year and we with statistics as well as
wanted to bring an even other important messagbigger show this year.”
es that our public should
Prior to the start of
know about addiction
the concert, an opening treatment,” said Bowen.
prayer will be held. Also, “We believe people must
throughout the event,
know the game plan to
announcements will be
be able to buy into it.
given by pastors.
We don’t steer business
Tickets are on sale
to our facilities with this
now and those who
event, we only give facts
purchase a ticket from
that are helpful for pubnow until Saturday, Aug. lic knowledge.”
17 will get $5 off their
The event will have
ticket purchase. Ticket
concessions as well as

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 3

World mourns the death of
Nobel laureate Toni Morrison

merchandise available
for purchase.
Since this is an
outdoor event, those
planning on attending
may bring their own
blankets, lawn chairs,
and umbrellas. Those
who purchase VIP Platinum will be given a take
home chair or VIP Gold
tickets will be provided
a returnable chair as
well as given ﬁrst come,
ﬁrst serve seating at the
bleachers.
This year, to help prevent congestion of having thousands of event
attendees, multiple entry
gates and additional
parking with much
easier access in and out
of event has been added.
VIP Platinum ticket
holders will be provided
with a parking pass in
front of the gate.
“Overall, we’re hoping
for a great turnout and a
wonderful night of worship,” said Bowen. “If
we have a large turnout
and proﬁt any amount,
100 percent of that
proﬁt will go to pay for
much needed services
for our patients who cannot afford treatment or
have an insurance plan
that frequently denies
addiction treatment.”

By Hillel Italie
AP National Writer

NEW YORK — Nobel
laureate Toni Morrison,
a pioneer and reigning
giant of modern literature
whose imaginative power
in “Beloved,” ‘’Song of
Solomon” and other
works transformed American letters by dramatizing the pursuit of freedom
within the boundaries of
race, has died at age 88.
Publisher Alfred A.
Knopf announced that
Morrison died Monday
night at Monteﬁore Medical Center in New York.
Morrison’s family issued
a statement through
Knopf saying she died
after a brief illness.
“Toni Morrison passed
away peacefully last night
surrounded by family
and friends,” the family
announced. “The consummate writer who treasured the written word,
whether her own, her students or others, she read
voraciously and was most

Patrick Semansky | AP

Visitors view a portrait of Nobel laureate Toni Morrison, painted by
the artist Robert McCurdy, Tuesday at the National Portrait Gallery
in Washington. Morrison, a pioneer and reigning giant of modern
literature, died Monday at age 88.

at home when writing.”
Few authors rose in
such rapid, spectacular
style. She was nearly
40 when her ﬁrst novel,
“The Bluest Eye,” was
published. By her early
60s, after just six novels,
she had become the ﬁrst
black woman to receive
the Nobel literature prize,
praised in 1993 by the
Swedish academy for her
“visionary force” and for
her delving into “language itself, a language

she wants to liberate”
from categories of black
and white. In 2012,
Barack Obama awarded
her a Presidential Medal
of Freedom.
“Her writing was not
just beautiful but meaningful — a challenge to
our conscience and a
call to greater empathy,”
Obama wrote Tuesday on
his Facebook page. “She
was as good a storyteller,
as captivating, in person
as she was on the page.”

Erin (Perkins) Johnson is a staff
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.
Reach her at (304) 675-1333,
extension 1992.

$500 FOR SAFE RETURN
In loving memory of Ramona E. “Mona” Roush
on her birthday, August 7, 1937.

OH-70140764

OH-70140836

Wishing you were here today for even just a while
So I could say “Happy Birthday” &amp; see your loving smile
The only gift today will be your sweet memory left behind
Of laughter, love, joy &amp; happiness that echo on, in my mind
May angels hold you closely &amp; sing you happy songs
And I will be sending loving wishes today &amp; all year long

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

68°

78°

76°

Partial sunshine today. Clear to partly cloudy
and humid tonight. High 83° / Low 64°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.02
0.02
0.77
28.33
27.28

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:35 a.m.
8:34 p.m.
2:01 p.m.
12:23 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Last

New

Aug 7 Aug 15 Aug 23 Aug 30

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

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

Major
6:05a
6:54a
7:42a
8:28a
9:14a
10:00a
10:46a

Minor
12:17p
12:42a
1:29a
2:16a
3:02a
3:47a
4:34a

Major
6:30p
7:20p
8:07p
8:54p
9:40p
10:26p
11:11p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

Lucasville
82/64
High

Very High

Minor
---1:07p
1:55p
2:41p
3:27p
4:13p
4:58p

WEATHER HISTORY
Philadelphia, Pa., had a high temperature of 106 degrees on Aug. 7,
1918. This mark was not matched
until 1936 and has yet to reach that
high again.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. 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
12.91
15.87
21.34
12.90
13.22
24.93
12.82
25.24
34.20
12.72
15.20
33.90
14.00

Portsmouth
82/64

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.20
+0.04
-0.13
+0.11
+0.41
-0.27
-0.71
-0.87
-0.57
-0.50
-1.60
-0.50
-0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SUNDAY

86°
62°

Partly sunny and nice

Beautiful with clouds
and sun

87°
64°
Increasing clouds

Marietta
81/63

Murray City
79/61
Belpre
81/63

Athens
80/62

87°
67°
Cloudy, a
thunderstorm
possible; humid

Today

St. Marys
81/64

Parkersburg
80/62

Coolville
80/63

Elizabeth
82/64

Spencer
82/64

Buffalo
84/65
Milton
84/65

Clendenin
83/64

St. Albans
85/66

Huntington
83/64

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
82/60
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/59
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
83/64
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
83/65

Ashland
82/65
Grayson
82/65

MONDAY

85°
59°

Wilkesville
80/62
POMEROY
Jackson
83/63
81/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
83/64
82/63
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
84/65
GALLIPOLIS
83/64
84/65
83/64

South Shore Greenup
82/65
81/63

68

Logan
80/62

McArthur
79/61

Very High

Primary: other/grass
Mold: 2770

Nice with periods
of sun

Adelphi
81/63
Chillicothe
82/63

SATURDAY

82°
60°

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

Waverly
81/62

Pollen: 17

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Some sun; a strong
t-storm at night

5

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
6:35 a.m.
8:32 p.m.
3:07 p.m.
12:57 a.m.

THURSDAY

86°
65°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

89°
66°
86°
65°
102° in 1918
48° in 1957

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Happy Birthday in Heaven!
Sadly missed by your husband, Manning

Charleston
85/65

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
71/51
Montreal
80/67

Billings
88/63

Minneapolis
83/59

Toronto
79/65

Detroit
Chicago 84/67
87/69

Denver
90/61

New York
86/72
Washington
91/70

Kansas City
85/71

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/73

High
Low

El Paso
100/77

Chihuahua
95/68

Thu.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
92/70/t 92/68/pc
Anchorage
73/55/pc 73/57/pc
Atlanta
91/73/pc 93/75/pc
Atlantic City
86/74/t 85/74/pc
Baltimore
92/69/t 90/69/pc
Billings
88/63/pc 94/67/pc
Boise
97/68/pc 89/64/s
Boston
85/73/pc
85/69/t
Charleston, WV
85/65/t 88/66/pc
Charlotte
92/69/t 92/70/s
Cheyenne
84/57/t 81/57/pc
Chicago
87/69/s 81/61/pc
Cincinnati
84/67/pc
88/65/t
Cleveland
81/66/t
83/64/t
Columbus
84/66/t
87/61/t
Dallas
100/81/pc 100/81/pc
Denver
90/61/t 90/61/pc
Des Moines
87/65/t 80/63/pc
Detroit
84/67/pc
83/59/t
Honolulu
89/78/sh 90/78/pc
Houston
98/80/t 100/80/pc
Indianapolis
86/69/pc
87/63/t
Kansas City
85/71/t
85/69/t
Las Vegas
101/83/pc 103/81/s
Little Rock
97/76/t
94/77/t
Los Angeles
83/64/pc 83/62/pc
Louisville
89/71/pc 93/72/pc
Miami
90/79/t
91/79/t
Minneapolis
83/59/t 78/58/s
Nashville
91/68/t 91/71/pc
New Orleans
92/79/t
92/80/t
New York City
86/72/t 86/72/pc
Oklahoma City 101/77/pc 97/76/pc
Orlando
89/74/t
89/74/t
Philadelphia
90/72/t 89/72/pc
Phoenix
104/88/t 106/87/pc
Pittsburgh
78/64/t
80/62/t
Portland, ME
78/64/c
79/62/t
Raleigh
91/69/t 92/69/s
Richmond
92/71/t 91/71/pc
St. Louis
90/74/pc 89/69/pc
Salt Lake City
94/72/pc 89/69/pc
San Francisco
71/59/pc 71/60/pc
Seattle
82/60/c 75/60/pc
Washington, DC
91/70/t 90/74/s

107° in Needles, CA
39° in Leadville, CO

Global
High
121° in Zabol, Iran
Low -11° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
98/80
Monterrey
100/73

Miami
90/79

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

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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w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Finding the
church in the
lonesome pines
My wife’s late mother, Margaret Whitt Freeman, grew up in southwest Virginia not far from
the Clinch Mountains, where the air is pure, the
streams are clean, and the people are respectable.
Margaret grew up as one of 11 children farming
off the rugged, rocky, mountainous land that was difﬁcult, but they
persevered. The Whitts raised hogs,
chickens, and cattle to help feed the
family.
There were eight girls and three
boys, so much of the heavy farming
fell to the girls of the family. The
Pat
tough, proud family worked hard and
Haley
although there was plenty of love,
Contributing life was unforgiving, particularly durcolumnist
ing the Great Depression years when
harsh poverty reigned.
Every Sunday the Whitts hooked up their horses
to a wagon and trekked across the high, remote
mountains to attend Little Flock Primitive Baptist
Church. When the winds blew hard and the snow
or rain piled up, the preachers came to the homes
of the members to hold their church services.
It was during this time that Margaret met Landon Colley and Junior Davis, some of the Primitive
Baptist preachers. Landon and Junior were good
friends with Margaret’s brothers-in-law, Stewart
Owens and Kermit Hinkle, who also became Primitive Baptist preachers.
There was another young man growing up in the
region, but his path in life diverged from local Appalachian family life. That man, Dr. Ralph Stanley,
would travel the world playing bluegrass music.
In February 1927 Ralph was born in McClure,
Virginia, a lumber and coal-mining area at Big
Spraddle just up the holler from where he moved
and lived for the rest of his life in Dickenson
County.
Margaret was born less than two months later
just across the mountain. Although Ralph and
Margaret knew each other, Ralph began touring
with his brother, Carter and The Clinch Mountain
Boys, and was seldom home.
Two weeks ago, my wife, Brenda, and I were
watching the “American Pickers” television show
when Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz pulled their van
into the barnyard of an Appalachian man, Hayder
Kiser. Mike and Frank had accidentally come
across Hayder’s hideaway in Clinchco, Virginia
ﬁlled with a treasure trove of memorabilia that had
belonged to Ralph Stanley.
According to Hayder, “I lived in Mansﬁeld, Ohio
in the 1950s and worked at the Malo Brothers
Junkyard, where I collected an assortment of items
and stuff by sifting through the trash.” He said he
collected thousands of pieces over the years.
Hayder, a soft-spoken, kind man impressed Mike
and Frank with his humility and politeness. Brenda said he was typical of the men of Appalachia
she had known as a child.
Hayder lived close to Ralph, and they became
good friends. After Hayder opened his own garbage service, he supplied Ralph sanitation service
for over 20 years.
As Ralph grew older, he couldn’t store all of his
memorabilia in his home but wanted to ensure his
collection was kept for the younger generation of
those living in Appalachia. One Saturday morning,
Ralph drove his pick-up truck over to Hayder’s
home and gave him all his old tapes, banjoes, guitars, jackets, shoes, and letters.
Eager to preserve this piece of bluegrass history,
Mike and Frank bought all of Ralph’s memorabilia
from Hayder and donated it to the Ralph Stanley
Museum in Hayder’s name.
Ralph’s music career spanned 60 years. He performed for everyone from presidents to local farmers, singing about life, death, and everything in
between. His simple, old-time music is the music
of the Primitive Baptist religion.
Later in life, Ralph Stanley admitted his greatest accomplishment didn’t come while performing
on stage. It happened in a river in the mountains
of southwestern Virginia. It was there that Ralph
Stanley was baptized.
The road had a way of keeping Ralph out of
church, but in the end, God had His way.
Ralph recalled tossing and turning in bed one
night after a dream.
“I dreamed one night I was out walking and met
a preacher. I didn’t know his name. He reached
down and shook hands and gave me a cold handshake. His name was Landon Colley. He had
preached at my mother’s funeral and at Carter’s
funeral. That stayed with me, a vision, you know. I
couldn’t sleep, it hit me so hard.”
Ralph and Margaret’s friends, preachers Landon
Colley and Junior Davis, took Ralph to the mountain river, high in the lonesome pines, baptized
him in the name of Jesus, and cried, “Hallelujah”
when his head went under, just as Brenda’s mother
was baptized many years before.
Ralph Edmund Stanley died peacefully on June
23, 2016 in the mountains of Virginia, with his
family and friends by his side.
Pat Haley is former Clinton County Commissioner and former Clinton
County Sheriff.

THEIR VIEW

Dog Spit and other sports memories
As a boy I was placed
on a baseball team called
the Gnats, and as a man I
played on a softball team
named Dog Spit.
Is it that I don’t like
sports or that sports
don’t like me?
Back in the day, when
coaches could stack
teams, my Gnats were
aptly named.
I don’t remember much
about the season, played
on the Shawnee ball diamonds, except the losing.
What do you expect from
a team preordained by
name to be on the wrong
side of swatting?
Today’s “what’s in a
name” police would be
all over the Gnats. A
team name like that can
take you from low selfesteem to no self-esteem
in a couple of innings
against Bulldogs, Tigers,
Giants, Braves or Any
Kind of Sox. Man, when
the generic locker room
aroma of a name like Sox
trumps your puny insect
name, you’re stepping
up to the plate with two
strikes.
Dog Spit, on the other
hand, was our own creation. I don’t remember
where it fell in the succession of names that

me from caring
included Sleepmuch about baseless Knights and
ball. It was one
Montana Red Dog.
summer, it’s now
It was a team of
a memory that’s
mostly co-workers,
mostly gone.
and we had fun,
Dog Spit played
we were OK. Our
with
pride. Other
team legend was,
Gary
team
names honhowever, forever
Presley
tarnished by losing Contributing ored the sport
along the lines of
to The Accouncolumnist
the James Earl
tants, to whom
Jones speech in
we handed what I
believe was their sole vic- “Field of Dreams” – “The
one constant through
tory, possibly in forever.
all the years …has been
If it drools like Dog
baseball.” We honored
Spit …
the sport, too, but did it
You never know what
will drag memories from with a goofy grin. I have
no idea what our record
their dark resting places
was through the seasons,
into the light of today.
but I’d play with those
Maybe it was the recent
guys anytime. Slowly and
All-Star break, which
creakily now, but it would
makes me ask, “Is it that
still be fun.
time already?” Maybe it
(Right about here is
was thinking about my
where a column should
son, who skipped most
of the youth soccer thing veer into Something
Important to make it
only to decide in high
worth the reader’s time.
school that he wanted to
Something like “words
play, busted his butt and
made the school’s varsity and labels matter …”)
Words and labels matsquad.
ter, and how those labels
He was an Eagle, not
are applied counts.
a lowly Gnat or … am I
As Gnats we were little
copping to this again? …
boys, wanting to have fun
Dog Spit.
and trying on a game to
I don’t hold a grudge
see how it ﬁt. We knew
against the forces
Gnats weren’t Tigers, but
that made me a Gnat,
although it may have kept we didn’t really care. We

were playing ball!
As Dog Spit, most of
us (not me) deeply knew
and loved the game and
wanted to be part of it. I
enjoyed my teammates’
company, and was pretty
good at getting on base
so they could hit me in.
It was worth the drooly
label to imagine the
other team standing in a
huddle, looking at their
schedule and thinking …
“Dog Spit??”
It didn’t matter whether we were Gnats or ’Spit,
we found fun. Once we
hit the diamond the label
didn’t matter. We played
our best. Sometimes we
went down swinging, but
we got a chance to swing.
That what’s important
– staying in the game and
swinging. Taking turns.
Respecting the other
team regardless of the
outcome, no matter who
crushed who in the game.
And that the most
important label is the one
you put on yourself. Even
if it is Dog Spit.
Gary Presley is the pagination
director for AIM Media Midwest
and can be reached at gpresley@
aimmediamidwest.com. The views
expressed in this column are solely
his own, and do not reflect the
views of this newspaper.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday,
Aug. 7, the 219th day of
2019. There are 146 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On August 7, 1998,
terrorist bombs at U.S.
embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania killed 224
people, including 12
Americans.
On this date:
In 1782, Gen. George
Washington created
the Order of the Purple
Heart, a decoration to
recognize merit in enlisted men and noncommissioned ofﬁcers.
In 1789, the U.S.
Department of War was
established by Congress.
In 1942, U.S. and other
allied forces landed at
Guadalcanal, marking
the start of the ﬁrst
major allied offensive in
the Paciﬁc during World
War II. (Japanese forces
abandoned the island the
following February.)
In 1959, the United
States launched the
Explorer 6 satellite,
which sent back images

of Earth.
In 1961, Yale psychology professor Stanley Milgram began conducting
his controversial human
behavior experiments
concerning obedience
toward authority ﬁgures.
In 1964, Congress
passed the Gulf of Tonkin
resolution, giving President Lyndon B. Johnson
broad powers in dealing
with reported North Vietnamese attacks on U.S.
forces.
In 1971, the Apollo 15
moon mission ended successfully as its command
module splashed down in
the Paciﬁc Ocean.
In 1989, a plane carrying U.S. Rep. Mickey
Leland, D-Texas, and 14
others disappeared over
Ethiopia. (The wreckage
of the plane was found six
days later; there were no
survivors.)
In 2000, Vice President
and Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore
selected Connecticut Sen.
Joseph Lieberman as his
running mate; Lieberman
became the ﬁrst Jew on a
major party’s presidential
ticket.

In 2005, ABC News
anchorman Peter Jennings died in New York at
age 67.
In 2010, Elena Kagan
was sworn in as the 112th
justice and fourth woman
to serve on the U.S.
Supreme Court.
In 2017, medical examiners said the remains
of a man who’d been
killed at the World Trade
Center on 9/11 had been
identiﬁed, nearly 16 years
after the attacks.
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, on a tour of
Africa, urged South Africans to press for political
and economic reforms in
neighboring Zimbabwe.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama
authorized U.S. airstrikes
in northern Iraq, warning
they would be launched if
needed to defend Americans from advancing
Islamic militants and protect civilians under siege.
President Obama signed
a $16.3 billion measure
aimed at helping veterans avoid long waits for
health care. A jury convicted a suburban Detroit

homeowner of seconddegree murder and manslaughter in the killing of
an unarmed woman on
his porch, rejecting Theodore Wafer’s claim that
he was afraid for his life
when he heard Renisha
McBride pounding on his
door in the middle of the
night and had acted in
self-defense. (Wafer was
sentenced to at least 17
years in prison.)
One year ago: Sharice
Davids won a Democratic
congressional primary
in Kansas, becoming the
state’s ﬁrst Native American and gay nominee for
Congress. (Davids went
on to become one of the
ﬁrst two Native American women elected to
the House.) The fourth
suspect in the shooting death of emerging
South Florida rap star
XXXTentacion turned
himself in to authorities.
Chicago police said they
would deploy hundreds
of additional ofﬁcers to
neighborhoods where a
burst of gun violence over
the weekend left at least
11 people dead and 70
wounded.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

Tales

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.

From page 1

stored in the nice cold
spring.”
“Sawmills were popular
in the county, timber here
was a vital part of the
economy, on a personal
note, my husband’s father
started the Grueser Sawmill in Rock Springs in
1945 when my husband
was a teenager. My husband was Roy Grueser
and his father Lewis.”
The interest in milling
began in Roy’s grandfather’s barnyard with the
purchase of a used sawmill for their personal use
on the farm.
“The mill developed
and began making pallets,
crates and boxes.”
Lumber from the mill
was used for multiple purposes: “Some of the lumber went to Racine skiff
maker Boone Weaver,
wood from the mill was
used in making replacement paddles for the paddle wheelers that went up
and down the Ohio River.
The mill resold logs used
to make veneer, and
high-grade logs were purchased by companies to
make handles for shoves
and other farm tools.
The white oak boards

Water
From page 1

were issues with overload
during the Blues Bash.
Council unanimously
agreed to endorse the
countywide levy from
Meigs County in partnership with the Meigs
County Humane Society
to expand the Canine
Shelter to house felines.
As previously reported
by The Daily Sentinel,
the levy is for 1 mill and
will be used primarily

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 5

Immunization clinics
POMEROY — In an effort to get children ready
for the school year, the Meigs County Health
Department will be hosting two walk-in, extended
hours shot clinics during the month of August.
The clinics are being held on Tuesday, Aug. 6 and
Tuesday, Aug. 27 from 8 a.m. to noon and 1-6 p.m.
Please bring the child’s shot records and insurance
card. Vaccines are also available to children who
have no insurance or whose insurance does not
cover vaccines. A $30 administration fee is appreciated, but not required. Walk-in immunization
services are also offered Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. to noon and 1-4 p.m. Please call 740992-6626 if you have any questions.
Photo courtesy of the Meigs County Library, Mark Meinhart Photo Collection

Dwelling that was constructed out of a cave at Rock Springs.

were frequently shipped
to Kentucky where they
were used to make barrel
staves that would later be
turned into barrels that
held Kentucky whiskey.
Over the years many
homes in the area were
built with wood from the
mill.”
Father and son were
partners in the company,
and when Lewis retired,
he sold his half to Harold
Blackston. Roy kept the
other half, and the company became known as
the Ohio Pallet Company.
“My husband Roy was

a mill owner-operator for
44 years, until he retired
in 1990.”
The Ohio Pallet Company is still in business.

to establish a county cat
shelter as an extension of
the current canine shelter,
but could also be used for
the dog shelter. Council
member John Musser,
who is a member of the
humane society, said
many of the cats will be
spayed or neutered then
released back to the location they were picked up
from. Musser said there
will not be much space
at the shelter to house
many cats, but decreasing
the reproduction rate will
reduce the overpopulation
issue. Council will sign a

proclamation to announce
their endorsement.
In his report to council,
Mayor Don Anderson
said,
- The leftover materials
from the riverbank project will be used to reinforce the lower wall.
- The village is looking
to hire a part-time assistant water clerk.
In council member
updates,
- Maureen Hennessy
said several merchants
requested more advertising space on the sign at
the stop light at State

Tidbits
· Brigadier General
John Hunt Morgan and
his Confederate raiders
used Rock Springs as a
resting place following
their encounter with
Union troops in Salisbury
Township
· The Meigs County
Agricultural Society held
its second Fair at the
Rock Springs Hotel on

October 31, 1852. Subsequent fairs were held
in various parts of the
county until the permanent site of the Fair was
established with the purchase of the ﬁrst section
of land in Rock Springs in
March 14, 1868.

RACINE — Morning Star United Methodist
Church (US 33 and Morning Star Road) annual yard
sale will be held Aug. 9- 10, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — Heath United Methodist
Church, 229 South Third Avenue, Middleport, will
host a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Aug. 9
and 10 in the church basement.

Township Tales and Tidbits for
Salisbury Township were presented
by Opal Grueser during the Chester
Shade Historical Association
Banquet. There is so much to learn
about Meigs County, so many
interesting “Tales and Tidbits”. If you
have some you would like to share,
please send them to L.Faudree.Hart@
gmail.com. Lorna Hart is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

HARRISONVILLE — Harrisonville Presbyterian Church, 35490 State Route 143 in Harrisonville, announces its 11th annual school supply
giveaway on Saturday, Aug. 10 from 11 a. m. to 1
p. m. at the church. 150 backpacks as well as other
school supplies will be given away. We will also
provide $25 dollar coupons to be used to purchase
school shoes or boots at Shoe Show in Mason,
W.Va. Food (hot dogs, chips and cookies) and soft
drinks will be provided. There will be popcorn and
games and a limited number of new clothing items
may be available. The child must be present to
receive free items. This year we welcome our new
partner, the First Presbyterian Church of Athens,
who are bringing the school supplies.

Route 833 and State
Route 124. Anderson
said they are hoping to
upgrade the signs and
add 10-12 more spots.
- Vic Young said he
noticed the pot holes
on Lincoln Hill need
patched. Anderson said
the holes are continually
patched, but the material
comes out of the holes.
The next meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council
is scheduled for Monday,
Aug. 19 at 7 p.m.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

School supply giveaway

Road closure
SALISBURY TWP. — Salisbury Township
Trustees will be closing Bailey Run Road (Twp.
Road 165) on Aug. 19 until repairs can be made.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets
will be issued to those who drive through the
closed portion of the road.
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.

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Popovich, finally, gets
his turn at leading
USA Basketball
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Gregg Popovich walked
into USA Basketball’s ﬁrst team meeting in
advance of World Cup training camp, and it
seemed to some in the room that he was having a
little difﬁculty keeping his emotions in check.
He talked about tradition, about what it means
to play for your country, about expectations,
about sacriﬁce, about playing the right way, about
respect for opponents.
The only downside was that when he was done
speaking, the ﬁrst practice was still about 18 hours
away.
“Shoot, from the get-go, I think everybody was
ready to play a game or run through a brick wall
for him after that talk,” Brooklyn guard Joe Harris
said.
With that, Camp Pop had arrived.
Popovich’s ﬁrst training camp practice as coach
of the U.S. men’s national team went into the
books Monday, less than a month before the Americans will begin play at the FIBA World Cup in
China. The U.S. has won the last two World Cup
gold medals, both won under now-former coach
Mike Krzyzewski, and now it’s Popovich’s turn to
lead the red, white and blue.
“It’s been on my mind every day, what I want
to do and what needs to be done,” said Popovich,
the longtime San Antonio Spurs coach who was
picked as Krzyzewski’s successor nearly four years
ago. “It’s been like thinking about two teams at the
same time for that period. But Coach K did that
for 12 years. So I think I can probably try to do the
same.”
Popovich was all over the ﬂoor in his ﬁrst
practice, pulling some guys aside for 1-on-1 chats
during a scrimmage and other times gathering the
entire team around him to discuss the nuance of
proper box-out technique.
“You can’t help but teach here and there,” Popovich said.
Popovich calls it “a huge responsibility” to both
represent the country and continue the program’s
long tradition of winning. He and his assistants
have been meeting for weeks, going over every
possible detail.
“He is so passionate about this project and he’s

Kitchens dismisses criticism

Ron Schwane | AP

Cleveland Browns head coach Freddie Kitchens
calls in a play as quarterback Baker Mayfield
(6) looks on during practice at the NFL football
team’s training facility Monday in Berea, Ohio.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Browns coach Freddie Kitchens
ﬁred back Monday at former
offensive line coach Bob Wylie,
who worked alongside him
last season and said over the
weekend that Kitchens received
too much credit for Cleveland’s
second-half turnaround.
“Bob doesn’t wear brown
and orange anymore,” Kitchens
said. “I had the opportunity to
hire Bob. I did not want to.”
During a Saturday interview
with CBS Sports Radio, Wylie
made stinging remarks about
Kitchens, who began 2018 as
the Browns’ running backs
coach before being promoted to
offensive coordinator after eight
games and ultimately hired as
head coach in January.
Wylie, who was popular

with Browns players and fans,
said he found out he was ﬁred
while in the hospital recovering
from a serious leg injury. He
former quarterbacks coach Ken
Zampese — not Kitchens —
deserved the credit for rookie
QB Baker Mayﬁeld’s emergence
in the second half last season.
Wylie added he felt defensive
coordinator Gregg Williams
may have been a stronger head
coaching candidate, and that
Kitchens probably got the job
because of his close relationship
with Mayﬁeld.
That didn’t sit well with
Kitchens, who was not asked
about Wylie’s remarks after
Saturday’s scrimmage. Following Monday’s 2-hour practice,

See KITCHENS | 7

See POPOVICH | 7

Hendrick Motorsports
making strides from
awful 2018 showing
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Rick Hendrick
minced no words at the start of the season, when
the NASCAR team owner dismissed the previous year as one of the worst in the history of his
mighty organization. Hendrick stated: “Last year
sucked. I ain’t gonna do that no more.”
The rebuild at Hendrick Motorsports has been
slow, but the organization with 12 Cup titles is
inching closer to weekly relevance. Chase Elliott
won his second race of the season on Sunday at
Watkins Glen to close a bold week for the team.
Hendrick made a rare midseason crew chief
change for seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson
at the start of last week to ofﬁcially end the winless 21-race trial run with Kevin Mendeering.
Johnson hasn’t won a race in more than two years
and new crew chief Cliff Daniels managed a 19thplace ﬁnish in his debut with the future Hall of
Famer.
But the Johnson saga is just one element of a
huge effort at Hendrick Motorsports to return the
organization to its position as a strong championship contender. During last year’s misery, Johnson
went winless for the ﬁrst time in his career,
Elliott’s three wins were the only victories for
the organization and Hendrick failed to place a
driver in the championship ﬁnale.
So Watkins Glen felt pretty darn good to Hendrick, who is in far better shape at this point of
the season than his team was last year. Elliott’s
win was the third this season for the organization
— Alex Bowman won at Chicago in June to lock
down a spot in the playoffs — and both William
Byron and Johnson are currently mathematically
eligible to make the playoffs.
“I think all our cars ran pretty good, so looking
forward to the rest of the races,” Hendrick said
for the ﬁrst time in recent memory.
It was Elliott who dominated the day by leading all but 10 of the 90 laps and winning on the
road course for the second consecutive year. But
Byron certainly drew attention when he sparred
on track with Kyle Busch. The back-and-forth
began when Busch spun racing for position
against Byron, and retaliated by knocking Byron
into the grass.
Then Chad Knaus, the crew chief who led
Johnson to all seven of his titles before he was
moved to Byron’s team this year, ordered the
21-year-old not to be pushed around by Busch.
So Byron caught up to Busch and got even by
ramming into the back of Busch’s car.
See HENDRICK | 7

Ron Schwane | AP

Cleveland Browns running back Kareem Hunt (27) greets young fans during practice at the NFL football team’s training facility Monday
in Berea, Ohio.

Hunt promises to ‘lay low’ after bar argument
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— Kareem Hunt has
learned there’s only one
way to avoid trouble.
“Lay low,” he said.
The Browns’ suspended running back said
Monday that a recent
off-ﬁeld incident, which
led to police questioning and raised team
concerns, served as a
reminder of his public
proﬁle and provided
another wake-up call in
his journey to become a
better person.
“I’m going to learn
from everything and not
make the same mistake
again,” he said. “Deﬁnitely learning from it.”
Hunt, who will serve
an eight-game NFL suspension for past violent
altercations — in one
case, shoving and kicking a woman — before
he plays in a meaningful
game for his hometown
team, spoke to reporters
for the ﬁrst time in training camp and ﬁrst time
since his involvement
in an argument with a
friend outside a Cleveland bar in July.
Hunt wasn’t arrested
or charged, but the incident prompted a strong
message from Browns
coach Freddie Kitchens
and general manager
John Dorsey.
“It was a misunderstanding and I appreciate that the Browns still
had my back and it was
just something that was

a misunderstanding
and I know I can’t have
those,” Hunt said, “so
I look to move forward
and continue bettering
myself and working and
getting ready for the
season.”
Last week, Browns
owners Dee and Jimmy
Haslam, who signed
Hunt in March on
Dorsey’s recommendation, remained supportive of Hunt while
making it clear he still
had to prove himself to
his teammates and community.
“We know that Kareem
has work to do, and he
is in counseling working really hard,” Dee
Haslam said. “It truly
is up to him. We have
high expectations for our
players.”
Other than the one
instance, it appears Hunt
has kept his word and
behaved. He’s continued
to receive counseling
and feels good about the
progress he’s made.
He’s nowhere near
done.
“I’m deﬁnitely always
going to have work to
do,” he said. “Since I
stepped in the building,
I’ve had work to do,
so I’m just gonna keep
staying in my lane and
doing whatever it takes
to take my game to the
next level and stay out of
trouble.”
Kitchens said Hunt
may have grown too

comfortable, and
allowed himself to fall
into bad habits.
“It is really one of
those things where
sometimes if you start
feeling good about
yourself about what you
are doing as a person,
then maybe I can do a
few other things, whatever those things are,”
Kitchens said. “I think it
kind of just brought him
back to reality that you
are in the NFL, man.
You are Kareem Hunt.
You got to be careful in
everything that you do
because these things
right here (cameras) are
everywhere.
“I am pleased with
Kareem. Do not misinterpret that. I am
pleased with Kareem on
the progress he is making off the ﬁeld, more so
than anything.”
The former Kansas
Chiefs star has been
sidelined for most of
training camp with a
groin injury he sustained during offseason
workouts. He returned
for the team’s stadium
scrimmage on Saturday,
but was limited to only
individual drills during
Monday’s workout. It’s
still not known if he’ll
play in Thursday’s exhibition opener against the
Washington Redskins.
Hunt is waiting to
ﬁnd out from the league
if he’s going to be able
to stay with the team

once the regular season
starts. He said the interactions with teammates
have helped him adjust,
keep his mind on football and heal.
If he can’t be with the
Browns, Hunt already
knows what he’ll do.
“I got a plan,” he said.
“You know, chill out, get
good workouts and lay
low.”
Notes
Superstar WR Odell
Beckham Jr. was kept
indoors during practice
with an unspeciﬁed
illness. … Cleveland’s
entire defensive front —
Myles Garrett, Sheldon
Richardson, Olivier Vernon and Larry Ogunjobi
— was out with what
Kitchens termed “bumps
and bruises.” … Kitchens
called QB Baker Mayﬁeld’s beer-chugging
antics at the Indians’
game “impressive” and
joked that he wouldn’t
try biting into a beer
can. “Can I? No, I do not
drink beer anymore,” he
said. “That is a lie, I told
you all I would not lie that is a lie.” … WR Derrick Willies made a sensational one-handed TD
catch on a 50-yard pass
from Mayﬁeld. … Rookie
CB Greedy Williams
intercepted Mayﬁeld
near the goal line. … RB
Nick Chubb on the prospect of him and Hunt in
the same backﬁeld. “It’s
going to be scary.”

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Kitchens

the players do? Did they
have anything to do
with the turnaround?
I really truly feel this
From page 6
game is about the players.
Kitchens unloaded on
“It is not about me. It
his ex-colleague.
“I know Bob Wylie to is not about Bob. It is
not about the staff. Our
be a good person and
job is to get them ready
out of respect to his
to play. It is about them.
family, I won’t get into
any of that because he’s When do they get their
a father, he’s a husband, credit? They had to
he’s a granddad,” Kitch- make a conscious decision to turn it around,
ens said. “But I would
and they did that.”
just say this about that
Kitchens rebutted
whole situation: Bob
knows what happened. Wylie’s contention he
was forgotten while hosBob knows what was
pitalized for nearly four
going on, and when
months:
he was here, he knew
“I went to the hoseverything about it. Lispital to see Bob every
ten, Bob wasn’t under
week he was in the
contract. He forgot to
hospital. I FaceTimed
tell everybody that.
“He had talked about Bob before every game
before we went out as a
retiring forever, all
staff just so he would
right? So sometimes
continue to feel a part
when a person says
of it. At what point
something, they have
does Bob realize it was
to be made to feel relevant, OK? Bob’s a good the players and not the
person and I don’t want coaches that turned it
around? Now, that is
to lose sight of that. I
the last thing I will say
have too much respect
about it.”
for him as a person.”
Kitchens did offer
However, Kitchens
Wylie some praise,
didn’t stop there when
saying he “did a hell
he was asked if he was
angered by Wylie’s com- of a job” but that all
credit should go to the
ments.
Browns for going 5-3
“I know what hapin the second half after
pened. He knows what
coach Hue Jackson was
happened and the staff
knows what happened,” ﬁred to ﬁnish 7-8-1.
“I know where the
he said. “Here is the
credit needs to be,”
thing that gets lost in
Kitchens said. “It
the shufﬂe with all of
needs to be on the
that. … I have never
players because they
worried about any
made the decision to
appreciation or asked
do it — not Bob, not
for any tooting of my
me, not anybody. Bob
horn or anything like
did not go out and play
that, but we seem to
a down, the players
ask for it. What about
did.”
the players? What did

Popovich
From page 6

so well-prepared,” Golden State coach and USA
Basketball assistant Steve Kerr said.
There is also some pressure, of course.
When the Americans start World Cup play in
Shanghai on Sept. 1 against the Czech Republic,
it’ll be exactly 13 years since the national team
program lost a game at the world championships,
now known as the World Cup, or in Olympic competition.
On Sept. 1, 2006, the U.S. lost to Greece in the
world championships semiﬁnals. Since then, the
Americans are 76-0 — a run that started with the
bronze medal game in the 2006 worlds followed by
gold-medal runs in the 2007 FIBA Americas tournament, the 2008 Olympics, the 2010 world championships, the 2012 Olympics, the 2014 World
Cup and ﬁnally the 2016 Olympics.
USA Basketball has lost at times since 2006,
including twice during the 12-game World Cup
qualifying run.
But none of the defeats came against the fullﬂedged U.S. varsity, the level that Popovich is now
overseeing.
“He’s taken on the challenge of leading the
USA team and he’s taking on the challenge with
seriousness,” said Atlanta coach Lloyd Pierce, a
Popovich assistant this summer. “The ﬁrst conversation I had with him, he said that we would enjoy
this and we would have fun. But when we meet
as coaches, you walk into the room and there are
tables full of notes and easels full of notes already.
He’s not taking this for granted.”
There are some natural, and coincidental,
parallels with Popovich following Krzyzewski as
national team coach.
Both were military and service academy men:
Krzyzewski graduated from Army West Point in
1969, Popovich from the U.S. Air Force Academy
in 1970. The Army put Krzyzewski into its Hall
of Fame; the Air Force Academy did the same for
Popovich. Krzyzewski has ﬁve NCAA titles; Popovich has ﬁve NBA titles.
In 2016, Krzyzewski called the pending coaching change “succession” — another term heard
often in military circles when talking about the
transfer of leadership. “I have the unit right now,”
Krzyzewski said in 2016. “He’s going to take command of the unit.”
That day has arrived, and it was a long time
coming for Popovich.
He was announced as Krzyzewski’s successor
as national team coach on Oct. 23, 2015 — nearly
a year before the Rio Games ended, nearly four
years before the ﬁrst game he’ll actually coach for
the red, white and blue.
Popovich oversaw a two-day minicamp in Las
Vegas last summer, a couple of light practices that
became a get-to-know-you session for invitees
and little else. But Monday’s was the ﬁrst practice
of the Popovich national-team era with an actual
game in sight, and came less than two weeks
before the World Cup roster is selected and planes
are boarded to Australia for ﬁnal pre-China preparations.
“This is beyond playing for an NBA team,”
Popovich said. “This is the highest level you can
be.”

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 7

Raiders ready for ‘Hard Knocks’ debut
NAPA, Calif. (AP) —
Quarterback Derek Carr
angrily yelling at teammates. Jon Gruden showing a softer, gentler side
for some of his younger
players and ditching his
trademark snarl. Vontaze
Burﬁct politely helping
an offensive linemen get
off the ground.
What in the name of
Al Davis is going on
here?
The Raiders may have
another month to go
before playing games
that matter but they’ll be
making an early appearance on TV on Tuesday
night when the HBO
series “Hard Knocks”
makes its season debut.
“It’s been really cool to
be honest because people get to see us in our
real environment,” Carr
said. “People (usually)
don’t get to see coach
Gruden telling some of
our rookies how much
he loves them. They just
see clips of him yelling at
people. They don’t get to
see me jumping people,
competing and talking
trash. What it does is it
opens up the world to us
to show who we really

are.”
Ever since the cable
network series began
in 2001 the Raiders
have been mentioned
as potential stars of
the show. But Davis,
the team’s Hall of Fame
owner who passed away
in 2011, was staunchly
against having the cameras invading the team’s
practices.
Gruden and general
manager Mike Mayock
also were initially
against it, worried that
the cameras and crew
documenting players’
every step would be a
distraction.
Yet here they are.
The Raiders, at least
this year’s version, would
seem to be a perfect ﬁt
for the behind-the-scenes
series with a cast of
colorful characters that
includes Gruden, wide
receiver Antonio Brown
and offensive lineman
Richie Incognito.
Burﬁct knows ﬁrsthand what to expect. He
spent his ﬁrst seven NFL
seasons in Cincinnati
and the Bengals were on
“Hard Knocks” in 2013.
“I just think it’s excit-

ing for people to see
what type of team we
have because the team
chemistry we have is
just amazing,” Burﬁct
said. “This is my second
team, but it’s the ﬁrst
time I’ve had a team like
this and everybody gets
along. It doesn’t matter what type of day it
is. We’re all here to see
each other get better
and motivate each other.
We’ve got a lot of characters, in a good way.”
The ﬁrst episode
generally focuses on the
days before camp begins,
the ﬁrst few practices
and the interactions
between younger players
and the coaches.
This year ﬁgures to
be different. Brown,
who was traded to the
Raiders by Pittsburgh in
the offseason, is already
staking his claim as the
star of the show.
The ﬂamboyant wide
receiver took a hot air
balloon ride on the
morning of check-in day,
then was placed on the
non-football injury list
later that night. Since
then, Brown has practiced only a handful of

Hendrick

him to — but if I’d had a radio I’d
probably tell him the same thing
(to retaliate.)”
Hendrick also supported the
From page 6
crew chief change for Johnson,
which reunites him with the lead
Byron still needs to learn the
engineer from his seventh chamnuances of payback because the
pionship, in 2016. When Daniels
action caused signiﬁcant damage
was a traveling member of Johnto Byron’s car, but the point had
son’s No. 48 team, a rapport was
been made.
“I think you have to stand your built that Johnson lacked with
Mendeering.
ground in this sport. If you let
Sitting 16th and last in the
people push you around, they’re
playoff standings, Johnson doesn’t
going to push you around,” said
Hendrick, who was unaware until have a ton of time to turn his season around and bringing Daniels
after the race that Knaus had
back to the pit box was the clear
ordered the retaliation.
solution.
“He got the worst end of the
“They have a chemistry togethdeal when Kyle brake-checked him
er … the communication, knowing
and knocked the front end out of
what Jimmie likes,” Hendrick said.
(Byron’s) car, but sometimes in
“I think it gave Jimmie some comthe heat of the battle you want
fort. Kevin is one of the smartest
to do things, and if you thought
guys in the garage, but you can’t
about it a little bit more maybe
replace time and years together,
you’d just settle down and go ﬁnish the race. But in the heat of bat- and I think that’s all Jimmie wanttle — and I didn’t know Chad told ed. So I think it’s going to work

out. Cliff is a sharp young guy.”
Hendrick Motorsports has a
long way to go before it is consistently racing for wins each week
and developing multiple title
contenders. Elliott has carried the
banner the last two seasons, and
getting him into the title race is
going to require advanced behindthe-scenes work at Hendrick’s
sprawling campus. The owner said
he wasn’t going to put up with
another lousy season, and now
that the organization has turned a
corner, the boss can’t stop pushing
in his quest to recover from last
season.
“I think Chase has shown that
he can win at any track. He’s really
good with equipment, doesn’t tear
up anything,” Hendrick said. “I
think if we can get the car good
enough for Chase, he can win a
championship, and he can win
it this year. So we’ll just have to
keep tuning on the car and giving
him good stuff.”

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeop. "Teen
Fortune
Tournament"
Wheel of
Jeop. "Teen
Fortune
Tournament"
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeop. "Teen Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Tournament" Fortune
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV (N)
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

6 PM

6:30

times while dealing with
an unknown foot injury.
But even when he’s
standing on the sidelines, Brown has had
cameras tailing his every
move. He’s relished
every moment, too, playfully talking straight into
the camera at times.
Tyrell Williams, another veteran receiver who
signed with Oakland as
a free agent, is looking
forward to Tuesday’s
premiere.
“I loved watching
‘Hard Knocks’ growing
up and so just being on
it is going to be crazy,”
Williams said. “I was just
watching the scene with
Shannon Sharpe and Ray
Lewis, that one from a
while ago. It’s just crazy
that we’re going to actually be in that situation.
It’s cool. I’m excited to
be able to go back and
watch it.”
Carr said he and
Gruden have tried to
take a lighthearted
approach to having
“Hard Knocks” in camp
and admitted the two
might have a few tricks
up their sleeves for the
cameras.

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Ellen's Game of Games
"Oh Shipwrecked"
Ellen's Game of Games
"Oh Shipwrecked"
Press Your Luck (SF) (N)

9 PM

9:30

Ellen's Game of Games
"Some Like It Hot Hands"
Ellen's Game of Games
"Some Like It Hot Hands"
Card Sharks (N)

10 PM

10:30

The InBetween "The Devil's
Refugee" (N)
The InBetween "The Devil's
Refugee" (N)
Match Game (N)

Ancient Skies "Our Place in Nova "Saturn" NASA's
the Universe" (N)
Cassini explores Saturn for
13 years. (N)
Press Your Luck (SF) (N)
Card Sharks (N)

To Catch a Comet A
spacecraft will attempt to
land on a comet's surface.
Match Game (N)

Love Island (SF) (N)

Big Brother (N)

S.W.A.T. "Cash Flow"

MasterChef "NASCAR Finish Line Feed" (N)
Ancient Skies "Our Place in
the Universe" (N)

BH90210 "The Reunion" (P)
(N)
Nova "Saturn" NASA's
Cassini explores Saturn for
13 years. (N)
Big Brother (N)

Eyewitness News at 10:00
p.m. (N)
To Catch a Comet A
spacecraft will attempt to
land on a comet's surface.
S.W.A.T. "Cash Flow"

Love Island (SF) (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Bad Santa (‘03, Com) Billy Bob Thornton. TVMA
Bad Santa (‘03, Com) Billy Bob Thornton. TVMA
18 (WGN) JAG "Critical Condition" 3/3
MLB Baseball Milwaukee Brewers at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
MLB Baseball (L)
SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Electricians Champ (N)
Sign Spin (N) Slippery (N) Cornhole
Dodgeball
Dodgeball: A True Unde...
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)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Married at First Sight "One Month Down, Marrying Millions "No
Marrying "Royal Pains" (N) Married at First Sight "How Married at
Can I Trust You?"
First Si. (N) Never to Go" (N)
Pressure, No Diamond" (N)
Grown-ish
10 Things I Hate About You (1999, Comedy) Julia Grown-ish
The Wedding Singer (1998, Comedy) Drew
Stiles, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Heath Ledger. TV14
(N)
Barrymore, Christine Taylor, Adam Sandler. TV14
Yellowstone "Resurrection
Mom
Mom
National Treasure (‘04, Adv) Diane Kruger, Justin Bartha, Nicolas Cage. Fortune
hunters search for treasure using clues found in the Declaration of Independence. TVPG Day" (N)
Loud House Loud House Smarter
Smarter
To Be Announced
Friends
Law&amp;O: SVU "Resilience" SVU "Imprisoned Lives"
SVU "American Tragedy"
Suits "Cairo" (N)
Pearson (N)
Family Guy Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
300: Rise of an Empire Sullivan Stapleton. TVMA
The Huntsman: Winter's War (‘16, Adv) Chris Hemsworth. TV14
Movie
(5:30)
Ghostbusters II (1989, Comedy) Sigourney
Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Richard Gere. A wealthy businessman (:35) Double
Weaver, Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray. TVPG
hires a free-spirited call girl to be his companion for a week. TV14
Jeopardy
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown (N)
Expedition Unknown (N)
Contact (N)
Ghost Hunters "The Fear
Ghost Hunters "Crossing
Ghost Hunters "Please Sign Ghost Hunters "Inn of the Ghost Hunters "Uninvited
Cage"
Over"
the Ghost Book"
Dead"
Guests"
North Woods Law
Woods Law "Hit and Run" Law "Decoy Detail"
North Woods "Wild Winter" L. Star Law "Crash Course"
NCIS
NCIS
NCIS
NCIS
NCIS
Law &amp; Order "Ramparts"
The Kardashians
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Drugs, Inc. "Meth
Madness"
NASCAR (N)
(4:00) USGA Golf
Forged in Fire "The Navaja"

Law &amp; Order "Hunters"
Law &amp; Order "Haven"
Law &amp; Order "Sideshow"
Law &amp; Order "Disciple"
E! News (N)
Botched "Plastic Fantastic" Botched
Botched "Baby Got Boobs"
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) (:35) Queens
Drugs, Inc. "Opioid
Drugs, Inc. "Hurricane
Drugs, Inc.: The Fix "New Drugs, Inc. "Rocky
Epidemic"
Blow"
Orleans Blues" (N)
Mountain High"
NASCAR Whelen Series (N) American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
FairGame (N) Basketb. Junior NBA Global Championship Basketb. Junior NBA Global Championship Whiparound
Forged in Fire "The OForged in Fire "The Cane
Forged in Fire "The Boar
(:05) Strong.M "Strongmen
Katana"
Sword" (N)
Sword" (N)
Go to Vegas" (N)
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
S. Charm "Outfoxed" (N)
South-CharmNewOrlean
John Q (2002, Drama) Gabriela Oltean, Kimberly Elise, Denzel Washington. TV14
American Gangster Denzel Washington. TVMA
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:00) Harry Potter and the (:05)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (‘11, Adv) Daniel Radcliffe. Krypton "Blood Moon" (N)
Deathly Hallows: Part 1
Harry, Ron and Hermione return to Hogwarts to find the last of the horcruxes. TVPG

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Vice News
Hard Knocks "Training
Camp With the Oakland
Tonight (N)
Justice
League TV14 Raiders"
(5:50)
Men of Honor (‘00, Dra) Cuba Gooding Jr.,
Robert De Niro. A man is determined to become a navy
diver despite the overwhelming obstacles in his way. TV14
City Slickers (1991, Comedy) Daniel Stern, Jack
Palance, Billy Crystal. Three middle-aged friends sign up for
a two-week cattle drive in the western wilderness. TV14
(4:30)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Favourite (2018, Biography) Rachel Weisz, Emma
Real Sports 'Real Sports'
explores the booming video
Stone, Olivia Colman. Two jealous cousins spar to be
game business.
Queen Anne's closest friend and most trusted advisor.
The Take (‘16, Act) Idris Elba. A pickpocket (:35)
Unknown Liam Neeson. After
is forced to join forces with a rogue CIA
awakening from a coma, a man discovers
agent when they are both targeted. TVMA that his identity was stolen. TV14
Tombstone (1993, Western) Val Kilmer, Michael
City on a Hill "High On The
Looming Gallows Tree"
Biehn, Kurt Russell. Wyatt Earp comes out of retirement
and forms a group to fight a gang of unruly outlaws. TVMA

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, August 7, 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

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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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

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

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

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LEGALS

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

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

ANIMALS
Legals

Middleport Impound Auction
8/8/19 @ 6pm at the Middleport Police Department.
8/6/19, 8/7/19, 8/8/19
EMPLOYMENT

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Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26

MERCHANDISE

Other

Wednesday, August 7, 2019 9

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

The State of Ohio, Meigs County.

MOTOR ROUTE

US BANK
Plaintiff
vs.
Debora Kennedy, et al.
Defendant
No. 18-CV-087
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction, 203 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, in the above named County, on August
9, 2019, at 10:00 am, with a provisional sale date on August
23, 2019 at 10:00 am, on the steps of the courthouse, at the
following described real estate, Copy of full legal description
can be found at the Meigs County Courthouse.
Permanent Parcel No. 1600799000, 1600800000, and
1600801000
PRIOR INSTRUMENT REFERENCE: Volume 90, Page 889

Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
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Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle &amp; provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute

Said Premises Located at 203 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
Said Premises Appraised at $8000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% down at time of sale, balance due in
30 days

Check out our
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online!

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

The purchaser shall be responsible for costs, allowances, and
taxes that the proceeds of sale are insufficient to cover.

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov

Sheriff Keith Wood
Meigs County, OH
Jeffrey R. Helms
Attorney
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
attyemail@lsrlaw.com
7/24/19,7/31/19,8/7/19

Final Issuance of Permit to Install
Village of Middleport
Facility Description: Wastewater
ID #: 1294241
Date of Action: 07/30/2019
This final action not preceded by proposed action and is appealable to ERAC.
Project: Middleport sewer separation project phase 3 north end
Project Location: N Second Ave,Walnut, Rutland, Hudson,
Middleport
8/7/19

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

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�10 Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Good health begins
with great primary care.
Primary care physicians and nurse practitioners at Pleasant
Valley Hospital are here to help people of all ages manage
acute and chronic illnesses. With a full spectrum of medical services, our goal is to keep you and your family well.
From preventive care and routine checkups to diagnosing and delivering the most advanced treatment options
available, our primary care providers are here to help
you make the healthcare decisions that are right for you
and your family...

... because good health begins with
great primary care.
H. Edward Ayers Jr., MD

Internal, Pediatric &amp; Adolescent
Medicine
2520 Valley Drive, Suite 118
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

:K\�LV�LW�LPSRUWDQW�WR�KDYH�
D�3ULPDU\�&amp;DUH�3URYLGHU"

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A PARTNER IN YOUR CARE
Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD

Someone who knows your healthcare
goals and history

Family Medicine &amp; Pediatrics
2520 Valley Drive, Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

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HEALTHCARE CAPTAIN
Someone who coordinates your care
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Randall Hawkins, MD

ILLNESS PREVENTION

2520 Valley Drive, Suite 212
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Someone who provides regular screenings
and catches diseases early

Internal Medicine

304.675.7700

FEWER EMERGENCY TRIPS
Wes Lieving, DO
Internal Medicine

Someone who keeps you healthy by offering
treatment options based on your history

2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260

304.773.5179

COMFORT &amp; FAMILIARITY
Someone who you feel comfortable asking
questions and sharing private information

Robert Tayengco, MD
Internal Medicine

2416 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.675.4200

Tess Simon, MD

Internal Medicine

2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.857.6538

Brandon DeWees, FNP-C

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Family Nurse Practitioner
2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260

OH-70130700

304.773.5179

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

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