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                  <text>Eastern
outlasts
Wahama

Today in
History
EDITORIAL s 4

Thank You
Carol Morrison
Administrative Professionals Day!

SPORTS s 6
60716794

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 66, Volume 71

Wednesday, April 26, 2017 s 50¢

Grand jury returns indictments
Lancaster man indicted for high-speed chase
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY —
The April session of the
Meigs County Grand
Jury was held on April
19, returning indictments
against multiple individuals, including the man
alleged to have led law
enforcement on multiple
counties on a high-speed
chase.
Jason Austin, 34, of
Lancaster, was indicted

by the grand jury on
charges of receiving
stolen property, a fourthdegree felony; failure to
comply with an order or
signal of a police ofﬁcer,
a third-degree felony; and
inducing panic, a ﬁrstdegree misdemeanor.
According to previous Sentinel reports,
the chase on March 15
started in Wood County,
West Virginia, with a
reportedly stolen vehicle
in Parkersburg. The vehi-

cle allegedly driven by
Austin was then chased
into Ohio, with numerous
law enforcement agencies
taking part.
As the vehicle traveled
down Route 7, it crossed
into Meigs County where
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce joined the
efforts to stop the vehicle.
The vehicle continued
down Route 7, going onto
Route 33 toward Athens
before turning around
at Rainbow Lake Road.

The vehicle then turned
off Route 33 onto Route
681 going back toward
Tuppers Plains.
Law enforcement tried
to use spike strips at multiple locations but were
unsuccessful with the
suspect reportedly driving through yards in the
area to avoid the strips.
The vehicle again got on
Route 7 in Tuppers Plains
heading toward Chester.
Deputies were stationed
just below Eastern Local
Schools, which Wood
said led the suspect to
turn into the parking

lot at the school, going
around back toward the
weight room. The suspect
crashed through the fence
by the sewer facility near
the school’s football ﬁeld.
He then jumped out of
the vehicle and laid on
the ground where he was
taken into custody.
Austin, who has a
lengthy criminal record
according to the sheriff’s
ofﬁce, was wanted by the
Lancaster Police Department in Fairﬁeld County
for a robbery charge and
an Adult Parole Authority
warrant at the time of the

incident.
The Grand Jury also
returned indictments
against the following individuals:
Thaddeas Bumgardner,
nonsupport of dependents, a felony of the ﬁfth
degree;
Adam Ross, nonsupport of dependents, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree;
Robert Garnes, nonsupport of dependents, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree;
Jeremy Council, nonsupport of dependents, a
See JURY | 5

Area jobless
rates decline
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Unemployment in both
Meigs and Gallia counties is on the decline again,
according to the latest statistics for March.
Meigs County saw a 1.5 percent decline in
unemployment, going from 10.2 percent in February to 8.7 percent in March.
The decrease allowed Meigs to go from the second highest unemployment in the state to a tie for
fourth.
In Gallia County, the unemployment rate
dropped to 6.9 percent, down from 8.3 percent in
February. This placed Gallia 20th out of 88 counties, in terms of unemployment.
The highest unemployment rate in Ohio in February went to Monroe County which had 9.6 percent unemployment, followed by Jackson County
and Trumbull County at 9.2 percent each, and
Mahonig County which was tied with Meigs at 8.7
percent.
Mercer County had the lowest unemployment
rate at 3.0 percent, followed by Holmes County at
3.3 percent.
Ohio’s unemployment rate was 5.1 percent in
March 2017, unchanged from February 2017.
Ohio’s nonagricultural wage and salary employment decreased 4,100 over the month, from a
revised 5,522,800 in February to 5,518,700 in
March 2017.
The number of workers unemployed in Ohio
in March was 294,000, unchanged from February. The number of unemployed has increased by
9,000 in the past 12 months from 285,000. The
March unemployment rate for Ohio increased
from 5.0 percent in March 2016.
The U.S. unemployment rate for March 2017
was 4.5 percent, 0.2 percentage points lower than
in February 2017, and 0.5 percentage points lower
than in March 2016.
Total Nonagricultural Wage and Salary Employment (Seasonally Adjusted)
Ohio’s nonagricultural wage and salary employment decreased 4,100 over the month, from a
revised 5,522,800 in February to 5,518,700 in
March 2017, according to the latest business
See JOBLESS | 5

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Publishing

Bidwell native Phillip Armstrong “makes good” on his vocal talents with The Ohio Valley Symphony Orchestra Saturday night.

Remembering the Odd legacy
Night of McIntyre memories, music
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Folk
from near and far gathered at the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing
Arts Centre Saturday
evening in memory of
famed Gallipolis columnist and pop culture
reporter Oscar Odd
McIntyre.
A question and answer
session was held by

Special to the Sentinel

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

Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre Executive Director
Lora Snow (left) discusses the McIntyre Suite inspired by Oscar
Odd McIntyre, the famed passed Gallipolis columnist and reporter,
with McIntyre biography writer Scott Williams (center) and area
See LEGACY | 5 actor Seth Argabright (right).

Middleport Council holds April meeting
By Michael Hart

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

author R. Scott Williams, chief operating
ofﬁcer of Washington,
D.C.’s Newseum, over his
recently published book
“An Odd Book: How the
First Modern Pop Culture Reporter Conquered
New York.” Area actor
Seth Argabright, who
would later do monologues in character as
McIntyre as if he were

MIDDLEPORT —
The Middleport Village
Council quickly completed their ﬁnal meeting
of April, having only two
unique agenda items on
Monday night.
Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue
Baker attended Public
Records Training the
previous week, and had
been named each council
member’s representative.
“Everybody took it,
and everybody did very
well,” she joked.
Village ofﬁcials must
take the training course
once during their term,
but may name a designee
if it is clearly stated in

council minutes.
According to Baker,
the three hour class is
essentially “about how
not to violate the Public Records Act, how
to keep records, how
to handle requests,” to
comply with the so called
Sunshine Laws.
The Zoning Appeals
Committee will meet
as needed, rather than
monthly as initially
planned. Building Inspector Mike Hendrickson
stated to council it would
be more effective to
gather the committee
by demand, but that it
would still publish in
advance whenever the
committee intended to
meet.

Hendrickson also
discussed at length
with Councilpersons
Shawn Rice and Richard
Vaughan the status of
various dilapidated structures in town, and ongoing measures remove
them.
Council reviewed the
Salisbury ﬁre protection
issue with Middleport
Fire Chief Jeff Darst,
who conﬁrmed “we’ve
still received no payment
2016 or 2017 from Salisbury for ﬁre protection.”
An ofﬁcial invoice was
delivered since the previous meeting, according
to the council, so the
body held off on further
action.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli

concluded the meeting
by promoting the recent
downtown painting
project, which has been
executed by a variety of
volunteers including the
Masonic Temple.
As part of a signiﬁcant drive by the village
towards beatiﬁcation,
Ianarrelli said “by Memorial Weekend I think you
will see a big difference,
in making things cleaner
and neater.”
The next regularly
scheduled meeting of
Middleport Village Council is May 8 at 7 p.m. in
the Middleport Municipal Building.
Michael Hart is a freelance writer
for The Daily Sentinel

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS BRIEFS

HOUCK

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.

GALLIPOLIS — Billy Houck, 91, Gallipolis, passed
away Friday, April 7, 2017, at the Holzer Senior Care
Center, Bidwell.
A family celebration of Billy’s life, will take place in
the near future. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the
family.

Pancake
breakfast

ADKINS

POMEROY — Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
hosts a pancake breakfast 7 a.m. to 11 a.m., Mulberry Community Center, Saturday April 29, biscuits
and gravy also being served, $5 per person, proceeds go toward purchase of community benches.

HUNTINGTON W.Va. — Clifton Adkins, 67, Huntington, W.Va., passed away Monday April 24, 2017 at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete at this time.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Christina Joann Rice,
58, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away Monday,
April 24, 2017, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
In honoring her wishes, a private service and burial
in Suncrest Cemetery will be observed. Arrangements
are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant.

GALLIPOLIS — The Ohio State Highway
Patrol announced that troopers will operate an OVI
checkpoint to deter and intercept impaired drivers
this week. The county where the checkpoint will
take place will be announced the day prior to the
checkpoint, and the location will be announced the
morning of the checkpoint. If you plan to consume
alcohol, designate a driver or make other travel
arrangements before you drink. Don’t let another
life be lost for the senseless and selﬁsh act of getting
behind the wheel impaired. Operational support for
the sobriety checkpoint will be provided by local
law enforcement agencies.

HUGHES
GALLIPOLIS — Michael Lewis Hughes, 61, died
on Monday April 24, 2017 at his residence.
Services will be 1 p.m., Saturday, April 29, 2017
at the Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Larry Fisher
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. prior to the
service at the funeral home.

Buckeye Hills receives Auditor of State Award
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — A
recent ﬁnancial audit of
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District (now
Buckeye Hills Regional
Council) by the Auditor of State’s ofﬁce has
returned a clean audit
report. Buckeye Hills’
excellent record keeping
has earned it the Ohio
Auditor of State Award.
The award is presented to local governments
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

County. “It is a continuing reassurance to community leaders and to
the residents across the
eight-county region that
public dollars are being
used in a cost-effective
and ﬁscally prudent
manner.”
Buckeye Hills administers state and federal
Aging programs, serves
as a regional transportation planning organization, and provides small
businesses with loans

6

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6:30

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News
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News
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News
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for expansion and supports communities with
accessing funding for
infrastructure, health
care and more.
The Buckeye Hills ﬁscal department is directed by Denise Keyes. She
has been with the organization since 1994. The
department staff also
includes Misty McConnell, Fiscal Manager; and
Fiscal Assistants Esteal
Hendricks and Stephanie
Boice.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26

7

PM

7:30

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

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7:30

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8:30

Blindspot "Regard a Mere
Mad Rager" (N)
Blindspot "Regard a Mere
Mad Rager" (N)
Goldberg (N) Speechless
(N)
Nature "Forest of the Lynx"
(N)

9

PM

9:30

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10:30

Chicago P.D. "Grasping for
Salvation" (N)
Chicago P.D. "Grasping for
Salvation" (N)
Designated Survivor
"Lazarus" (N)
Wild Weather Global
experts demonstrate the
power of weather. (N)
Goldberg (N) Speechless Black "Sister, Black-ish (N) Designated Survivor
(N)
Sister" (N)
"Lazarus" (N)
Survivor: Changers "A Line Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds: Beyond
Drawn in Concrete" (N)
"Unforgettable" (N)
Borders "Blowback" (N)
Shots Fired "Hour 6: The
Empire "Love Is a Smoke" Eyewitness News at 10
Fire This Time" (N)
(N)
Nature "Forest of the Lynx" Nova "Building Chernobyl's Wild Weather Global
(N)
MegaTomb" (N)
experts demonstrate the
power of weather. (N)
Criminal Minds: Beyond
Survivor: Changers "A Line Criminal Minds
Drawn in Concrete" (N)
"Unforgettable" (N)
Borders "Blowback" (N)

8

PM

8:30

Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "The
Newsroom" (N)
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "The
Newsroom" (N)
Black "Sister, Black-ish (N)
Sister" (N)
Nova "Building Chernobyl's
MegaTomb" (N)

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U.S. Marshals ('98, Act) Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. TV14
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Friendly Fire"
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L)
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox Site: Fenway Park (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption SportsCenter
SportsCenter "NFL Nation Mock Draft"
Hey Rookie

40 (DISC)

Telephone: 740-992-2155

and school districts
upon the completion of a
ﬁnancial audit. Entities
that receive the award
must meet a variety of
criteria in accordance
with Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles
(GAAP) for a “clean”
audit report.
“We were very pleased
to learn of the Buckeye
Hills Auditor of State
Award,” said Executive Board President
Ron Moore of Morgan

WEDNESDAY EVENING

39

(USPS 436-840)

Alumni
Banquet

Immunization
Clinic

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@civitasmedia.
com.

Civitas Media, LLC

POMEROY — Volunteers, age 13 and older, are
needed for the Meigs County Clean Up Day Event
from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturday, May 20. Pizza,
snacks and t-shirts will be provided for all volunteers. To register contact Betsy Entsminger at 740992-4629.

POMEROY — Tickets are now on sale for alumni
and guests for the Pomeroy High School Alumni
Banquet to be held on Saturday, May 27, 2017 in
the Meigs High School Cafeteria. Social hour begins
at 5:30, with the banquet being served at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at Francis
Florists, 252 East Main Street, Pomeroy, or by mailing a stamped, self-addressed envelope to PomePOMEROY — The Meigs County Health Depart- roy Alumni Association, Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
ment will conduct an Immunization Clinic from 9-11 45769. Anniversary years will be 1942, 1947, 1952,
1957, 1962 and 1967.
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E. Memorial

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
p.m. at Meigs High School
cafeteria. Tickets must be
purchased by April 21 and
are available from Grange
Masters Kim Romine,
Charles Yost, and Patty
Dyer or from Barbara Fry
or Opal Dyer. Speaker for
the evening will be Deb
Hamilton, Secretary of
the Ohio State Grange.
For more information call
Opal at 740-742-2805.
MIDDLEPORT — The
monthly free community
dinner at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center will be held at
Card Shower
5 p.m. This month they
CHESTER — A card
shower and 90th birthday are serving cheesy ziti,
celebration will be held for salad, garlic bread, and
dessert. The public is
Don Mora on Saturday,
invited.
April 29 from 2-4 p.m. at
the Chester Methodist
Saturday, April 29
Church. No gifts. Cards
LEBANON TWP. —
may also be sent to 34517
The Lebanon Township
State Route 7, Pomeroy,
Trustees will hold their
Ohio 45769.
regular monthly meeting
at 9 a.m. at the township
Thursday, April 27
garage.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water ConMonday, May 1
servation District Board
LETART TWP. — The
of Supervisors will hold
regular meeting of the
their regular monthly
Letart Township Trustmeeting at 11:30 a.m. at
ees will be held at 5 p.m.
the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E. at the Letart Township
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Building. There will be an
organizational meeting
Pomeroy.
of the Letart Community
MARIETTA — The
Association during the
Buckeye Hills Regional
May 1 Letart Township
Transportation Planning
meeting. Ofﬁcers for the
Organization (RTPO)
Letart Community AssoTechnical Advisory and
ciation will be elected.
Citizens Advisory Committee will meet at 10
Tuesday, May 2
a.m. at 1400 Pike Street,
OLIVE TWP. — The
Marietta, Ohio.
Olive Township Trustees
will hold their regular
Friday, April 28
ROCKSPRINGS — The meeting at 6:30 p.m. at
the township garage on
Meigs County Grange
Joppa Road.
Banquet will be held at 6

Clean Up Day
Volunteers Needed

Patrol plans OVI sobriety
checkpoint this week

RICE

Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
pneumonia; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination and availability or
visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

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PREMIUM

Underground (N)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Baseball Tonight (L)
Hey Rookie Hey Rookie
Little Women: Atlanta "Not Little Women: Atlanta
Little Women ATL "Stage Little Women: Atlanta
Little Women: Dallas "Not
So Little Surprises"
"Escape From Atlanta"
Fight" (N)
"Good Deed Gone Bad" (N) So Silent Partner" (N)
The Middle
Coming to America Eddie Murphy. An African prince travels to
Nacho Libre (2006, Comedy) Ana de la Reguera,
"Orlando"
America to avoid an arranged marriage and find a new bride. TV14
Héctor Jiménez, Jack Black. TVPG
(5:00)
Varsity Blues ('99, Spt) Jon
The Blind Side (2009, Sport) Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron, Sandra Bullock. An
The Blind
Voight, James Van Der Beek. TVMA
affluent family takes in a homeless teenager who becomes a star football player. TV14
Side TV14
H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Nicky
GShakers
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Head Case"
NCIS "Family Secret"
To Be Announced
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Lead With Jake Tapper CNN Tonight
Bones
NBA Basketball Playoffs
NBA Basketball Playoffs
(5:00)
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows ('11,
Lethal Weapon ('87, Act) Mel Gibson. An unstable police officer is Lethal
Action) Jude Law, Jared Harris, Robert Downey Jr.. TVPG
partnered with a veteran detective to battle drug dealers. TVM
Weapon 2
The Last Alaskans
Alaskans "Bear Intruder"
Alaskans "Killer Instinct"
The Last Alaskans (N)
Naked and Afraid XL
Storage
Storage
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Storage
Exterminator Exterminator
The First 48 "Silent Rage/ Storage
Tainted Love"
Wars
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Wars
Wars (N)
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(N)
(N)
Tanked!
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Tanked: Sea-lebrity Edition "Top Rope Tanks" (N)
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene "A
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene "The
CSI: Crime Scene "Two and
"Grissom's Divine Comedy" Thousand Days on Earth"
Investigation "Drops Out" Theory of Everything"
a Half Deaths"
Law &amp; Order "Marathon" Law &amp; Order "Patsy"
The Wedding Planner ('01, Rom) Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
Movie
(4:30) How to Lose a Gu... E! News (N)
Total Divas "Group-Sext" Divas "Runaway Bride" (N) Divas "Runaway Bride"
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
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Nobodies (N) Lopez (N)
Alaska State Troopers
Vegas Mafia The key role of Tijuana Drug Lords
American Mob "Tales From Miami Drug Cartel
"Lock'N'Load Neighbors"
Las Vegas to the mob.
the American Mob"
NASCAR
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Nashville Predators at St. Louis Blues (L) NHL Hockey
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
The Ultimate Fighter "Redemption"
The Ultimate Fighter (N)
American Pickers "Museum American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Rock
American Pickers "Hard
(:05) American Pickers "My
Man"
Maineiacs"
and a Hard Place"
Bargains" (N)
Sweet Ford"
Wives "Talk of the Town" Wives "It Girl, Interrupted" Housewives "A New Low" The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives
(:15) Payne
(:50) Payne "Wife Swap"
(:25) Payne
A Madea Christmas ('13, Com) Tyler Perry, Chad Michael Murray. TV14 (:35) Martin
Buying and Selling
Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30) Warm
The Goonies ('85, Adv) Sean Astin. A group of kids are swept up
The Matrix (1999, Action) Laurence Fishburne,
Bodies TVPG in adventure after discovering a treasure map in an attic. TV14
Carrie-Anne Moss, Keanu Reeves. TVMA

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10

PM

10:30

Suicide Squad ('16, Action) Margot Robbie, Joel (:05) The Leftovers "The
wedding day nears, Ben takes James to
Kinnaman, Will Smith. A government official sends a team Book of Kevin"
Miami to investigate a drug ring. TV14
of supervillains to fight a new and powerful threat. TV14
(:10)
Species (1995, Sci-Fi) Michael Madsen, Alfred
The Purge: Election Year A police officer (:50)
Death Race Jason Statham. A
Molina, Ben Kingsley. Sil is a deadly half woman-half alien must protect a Senator from the
framed convict agrees to enter a dangerous
creature that must be destroyed before she breeds. TVMA government hunters during the Purge.
life-or-death race to win his freedom. TVMA
(5:30)
Lincoln ('12, Bio) Sally Field, Daniel DayBurn Motherf*cker, Burn! Civil unrest in (:40)
Enemy at the Gates A Russian
Lewis. America's president fights with cabinet members
California and the relationship between
sniper is hunted by a German adversary
and the struggles on the battlefield. TVPG
African Americans and LAPD. TVMA
during the 1942 battle of Stalingrad. TVMA

CLASSIFIEDS

Vice News
Tonight

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Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 26, 2017 3

Special award for Ohio’s military-friendly schools announced
OHIO — At an event
celebrating the Month of
the Military Child at the
National Museum of the
U.S. Air Force, Superintendent of Public Instruction Paolo DeMaria
announced the creation of
the Purple Star Award for
military-friendly schools.
Ohio now will distinguish
schools across the state
that show a commitment
to serving militaryconnected students and
families.
“It’s our honor to support these students and
their families and provide
them with the resources
they need to be successful,” said Paolo DeMaria,
superintendent of public
instruction. “We look

forward to an ongoing
partnership with Ohio’s
schools to improve services for our military
families.”
“Ohio is proud to be
called home by nearly
900,000 veterans and
members of the military – the sixth-largest
veteran population in the
country,” said John Carey,
chancellor of the Ohio
Department of Higher
Education. “Having our
schools committed to
serving those students
and families with military connections is just
one way that we can say
‘thank you’ and give back
to the veterans and service members who have
already given so much

for their country and our
freedom.”
“School communities
have a direct impact on
military kids’ success in
the classroom and the
community, said Department of Veterans Services Director Col. Chip
Tansill. “The Purple Star
Award is an excellent way
to recognize schools with
best practices for supporting Ohio’s youngest military family heroes.”
“We are grateful for the
Ohio Department of Education’s continued commitment to our military
families. The Purple Star
distinction lets our military-connected students
know they are not alone,
that there are educators

who understand the
unique challenges faced
by students in a military
family and they’re committed to the students’
success,” said Maj. Gen.
Mark E. Bartman, Ohio
adjutant general.
Gov. John Kasich
directed Ohio’s state
agencies to help improve
the lives of service members and their families.
During the last year,
groups of veterans, educators, family members, students, service members
and others came together
to identify ways schools
can better serve military
students and families.
The Purple Star Award
is a direct result of these
conversations.

The Purple Star Advisory Board, formed by
the Ohio departments of
Education, Higher Education, Veterans Services
and the Adjutant General,
will help determine a
school’s eligibility for the
award. To receive the
honor, schools must apply
and meet speciﬁc criteria,
including providing a
staff liaison for military
families. The liaison must
complete professional
development on special
considerations provided
to military students and
families under federal law.
A Purple Star school
will receive the designation for two years. After
two years, the school
must reapply. The Purple

Star emblem was selected
because purple symbolizes support for military
families.
There are 34,000 children in Ohio with one or
more parents serving in
the military. This number
includes the children of
active duty, reserve and
Ohio National Guard
members. Some of these
children will attend six
to nine different schools
throughout their K-12
educational experiences.
Besides changing schools
often, a student also can
be affected by a parent’s
deployment. Schools can
help students and families
face these issues by connecting them with the
resources they need.

Hungary hippo

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

Toy given to police officer as
safety talisman gets to Ohio
CINCINNATI (AP) — Police in Ohio have received
a stuffed toy given by a child to a Pennsylvania police
ofﬁcer to help keep him safe.
The Cincinnati Enquirer (http://cin.ci/2owU8hU
) reports a stuffed moose called Mr. Moosey has
become a traveling protection talisman sent to police
and other ﬁrst responder agencies
around the country.
The toy was ﬁrst given to Towamencin, Pennsylvania, police ofﬁcer
James Gibbas by 5-year-old Mackenzie Brown last year during a trafﬁc
stop. The child said she wanted the
ofﬁcer to have it to help keep him
safe.
Gibbas kept it for a while before
deciding it should be shared with other law enforcement agencies and ﬁre departments around the country.
The toy has made its way to states including Illinois, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and
New Hampshire.

Court agrees to rehear lethal
injection case in win for Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The state on Tuesday
won a round in its efforts to restart executions in
Ohio, though in the short term a court’s ruling will
likely delay efforts to put a condemned child killer to
death.
At issue are arguments about Ohio’s proposed use
in executions of a contested sedative called midazolam and a debate over what a previous U.S. Supreme
Court ruling said about the constitutionality of the
drug.
In January, federal Magistrate Judge Michael Merz
said the state’s three-drug protocol, beginning with
midazolam, “creates a substantial risk of serious
harm.”
Earlier this month, a three-judge panel of the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati agreed
with the judge and kept his order against the execution process in place.
The state appealed, asking the full 6th Circuit to
rehear the case in the hopes it would come to a different conclusion. On Tuesday, the court agreed and
set arguments for June 14. The court lists 14 full-time
judges and several senior judges.
Ohio argues that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld
the use of midazolam in 2015 in a case out of Oklahoma.
The appeals court ruling means at least two executions are now uncertain. On May 10, the prisons
agency is set to put Ronald Phillips to death for raping and killing the 3-year-old daughter of his girlfriend
in Akron in 1993.
Phillips’ execution has been delayed multiple times
over the years.
On June 13, the day before the appeals court arguments, Ohio plans to execute Gary Otte for shooting
two people to death in back-to-back robberies over
two days in Parma, in suburban Cleveland, in 1992.
Republican Gov. John Kasich’s ofﬁce said it was
trying to determine the impact of the ruling on the
executions. The Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction was also reviewing the decision.
The agency “remains committed to carrying out
court-ordered executions in a lawful and humane manner,” said spokeswoman JoEllen Smith.
Lawyers challenging Ohio’s execution process said
they believe the full appeals court will also be convinced that the state’s current method is unconstitutional.
Executions have been on hold since January 2014,
when inmate Dennis McGuire took 26 minutes to
die under a never-before-tried two-drug method that
began with midazolam. The same drug was involved
in a problematic execution later that year in Arizona.

Attila Balazs | MTI via AP

A 2-week-old pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis) rests in the hippopotamus enclosure in Nyiregyhaza Animal Park in
Nyiregyhaza, 227 kilometers east of Budapest, Hungary, Tuesday.

Ivanka Trump hears groans as she defends father
By David Rising

Trump, the American
people, or her own business interests.
BERLIN — Ivanka
“Certainly not the latTrump drew groans and
ter,” Trump said,
hisses Tuesday from an
As Trump described
audience in Berlin while her father as “a tredefending her father’s
mendous champion of
attitude toward women,
supporting families and
but she brushed it aside
enabling them to thrive,”
as “politics” during her
she drew scattered groans
ﬁrst overseas trip as a
and hisses from the audiWhite House adviser.
ence, prompting modAppearing on a higherator Miriam Meckel to
powered panel at a
press her for a response.
conference to push for
“You hear the reacmore support for women tion from the audience,
in business, Trump also
so I need to address
said she was still trying
one more point: Some
to deﬁne her place in her attitudes toward women
father’s administration.
your father has publicly
“I am rather unfamiliar displayed in former times
with this role as well, as
might leave someone
it is quite new to me, it’s questioning whether he
been a little under 100
is such an empowerer for
days,” she said.
women,” said Meckel,
Trump has been a vocal the editor of a business
advocate for policies ben- magazine and a professor
eﬁting working women
of corporate communicaand vocational training.
tions at a Swiss universiBut she also has faced
ty. “Are things changing?”
criticism in the United
Trump replied: “I’ve
States, particularly from
certainly heard the criticism from the media, and
those who think she has
that’s been perpetuated.”
done little to temper
She added that her own
her father’s conservative
personal experience and
agenda.
the fact that “thousands”
Sharing a stage with
of women have worked
German Chancellor
with and for Donald
Angela Merkel, InterTrump for decades in the
national Monetary
private sector “are a tesFund director Christine
tament to his belief and
Lagarde, Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia
Freeland and others,
Trump was asked by
the moderator whom
she was representing
— President Donald
Associated Press

Markus Schreiber | AP

Ivanka Trump, daughter and adviser of U.S. President Donald
Trump, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine
Lagarde and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, from left, attend
a panel at the W20 Summit in Berlin Tuesday. The conference
aims at building support for investment in women’s economic
empowerment programs.

solid conviction in the
potential of women and
their ability to do the job
as well as any man.”
“He encouraged me
and enabled me to
thrive,” Trump said. “I
grew up in a house where
there was no barrier to
what I could accomplish
beyond my own perseverance and my own tenacity.”
There was, she
stressed, “no difference
between me and my
brothers. And I think as a
business leader you saw
that, and as a president
you will absolutely see
that.”
Talking later to a

small group of reporters, Trump said she was
unfazed by Meckel’s
direct questions in a public forum.
“I’m used to it. It’s
ﬁne,” she said, and also
shrugged off the audience’s reaction.
“Politics is politics, as
I’m learning, and there
are many different viewpoints and people with
different options and perspectives,” she said.
Trump, who promoted
child care and family
leave policies during her
father’s campaign, also
told reporters that child
care “is going to be part
of comprehensive tax
reform.”

Saturday, April 29
HARISSONVILLE — A gospel sing
will be held at 7 p.m. at Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church featuring the
McBrides from Albany.

Sunday, April 30
SYRACUSE — Brother Bob Wiseman
will be speaking at Syracuse Community Church, Second Street, Syracuse,
at 6:30 p.m.

60716309

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Scorecard — America
after 100 days of Trump
By Walter Shapiro
Contributing columnist

It may be news to Donald Trump that the original
One Hundred Days ended with Napoleon’s defeat at
Waterloo. In fact, if Trump learned about Napoleon
from “Fox &amp; Friends,” he would probably snarl, “I like
my conquerors of Europe not to end up exiled to an
island so remote you can’t even build a world-class
hotel on it.”
The news media may be reeling in an era of fake
news, but nothing halts the journalistic passion for
predictable rituals like toting up presidential accomplishments after 14 weeks and 2 days in ofﬁce. Trump
himself would admit that he is no Franklin Roosevelt.
After all, the 45th president would have spurned marrying a woman like Eleanor Roosevelt — who was
never mistaken for an international fashion model
when she was touring coal mines on behalf of FDR.
One hundred days remains an unfair standard to
assess any president’s accomplishments, especially
since using that benchmark tends to reward easy
victories and symbolic gestures. A far more fruitful
approach would be to assess what we have learned
about the new president, the Congress and the nation
during the 100 days since Inauguration Day.
Here, then, is an impressionistic early scorecard on
the Chaos Theory Presidency:
TRUMP IS NO AUTOCRAT-IN-CHIEF
The opening months of the Trump administration have offered a crash course in the limitations of
presidential power. The courts blocked two executive
orders banning immigration from seven overwhelmingly Muslim countries. The national security establishment rebelled against the ethically challenged
Michael Flynn, Trump’s short-lived NSC adviser. And
the House balked at passing Trumpcare.
WILD IMPROVISATION IS NOT A LEGISLATIVE
STRATEGY
Unlike Barack Obama, Trump has been willing to
deploy the traditional tools of presidential persuasion
like phone calls and dinners. The problem instead rests
with the president’s impatience, disdain for substance
and complete lack of understanding of the folkways of
Capitol Hill.
This week offers a prime example. Trump, whose
party controls both houses of Congress, has been
nurturing the fantasy that only the Democrats will be
blamed if there is a government shutdown over his
insistence on funding his unpopular border wall. At
the same time, offering some vague campaign-style
promises about an unfunded tax cut is a far cry from
passing complex legislation.
TRUMP’S CONTEMPT FOR ETHICAL NORMS MAY
HAVE LASTING CONSEQUENCES
While no future president is likely to have his name
emblazoned on a hotel within easy walking distance of
the White House, it is easy to imagine Trump’s successors balking at releasing their taxes or fully divesting
their business dealings. Ivanka Trump and her husband Jarred Kushner appear to believe that working in
the White House is just another branding opportunity.
THE ALTERNATIVE FACTS WHITE HOUSE
Nothing is more fatiguing than trying to keep up
with the lies uttered by the president and aides like
Sean Spicer who dance for Trump’s approval. The danger is — whatever the ultimate verdict on the Trump
presidency — we will have permanently poisoned factbased political discussion.
CONGRESS CANNOT MOUNT A CREDIBLE NONPOLITICAL INVESTIGATION OF A PRESIDENT
The Watergate model of a bipartisan group of senators working to ferret out the truth about a corrupt
president now seems a weird 20th century artifact.
The new congressional motto has become, “If the
president is from my party, I have no curiosity about
what is going on behind closed doors in the Executive
Branch.”
Congressional dithering goes well beyond the two
sputtering Russia probes. There is a disturbing lack of
interest on Capitol Hill about the legal justiﬁcation for
Trump’s impulsive cruise-missile attack on Syria. And
it seems almost impolite for any Republican to question the unseemly buckraking by the Trump family.
DEMOCRATS MAY BE HEADING FOR A NOSTALGIC
JOURNEY BACK TO THE 1980S
That was the decade when the Democrats lost three
landslide elections in a row. At a time when the outof-power party should be uniting to battle a polarizing
president with an approval rating of just above 40
percent, the Democrats instead are returning to their
fractious ways.
Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer have adroitly held
congressional Democrats together on issues ranging
from health care to Neil Gorsuch. But away from Capitol Hill, the party keeps reenacting the Hillary Clinton
versus Bernie Sanders battles from the 2016 primaries.
One day it was Sanders snifﬁng that Jon Ossoff, who
almost won Tom Price’s seat in Georgia’s6th District
without a runoff, isn’t a progressive. Then Sanders and
new DNC Chair Tom Perez, in the midst of the Unity
Tour, touched off a furor with NARAL and women’s
groups by endorsing an anti-abortion mayoral candidate in Omaha.
Pretty soon, the derogatory phrase DINO’s (Democrats in Name Only) may enter the political lexicon as
the party decides that ideological purity is more vital
than electoral majorities.

THEIR VIEW

Mobilizing progressive resistance
By James A. Haught
Contributing columnist

The progressive vision
for America — to make
life better for all families,
not just the privileged
elite at the top — has
suffered setbacks. After
the 2016 election, Republicans control the White
House, both chambers
of Congress and more
than half of state governments.
Liberal hopes for free
college, universal health
care, equal opportunity,
female rights, higher
minimum wage, less militarism and less imprisonment seem doomed, at
least for now. All that
reform-minded folks can
do is try to prevent losses of past social progress.
Democratic Senator
Elizabeth Warren of
Massachusetts is trying to rally progressives
into stronger uniﬁed
resistance against the
conservative Trump era.
Her new book, “This
Fight is Our Fight: The
Battle to Save America’s

Middle Class,” is a blunt
weapon.
From the New Deal
to the 1980s, she points
out, America “built the
greatest middle class the
world has ever known.”
She continues:
“We built it ourselves,
using our own hard work
and the tools of government to open up more
opportunities for millions
of people. We used it
all — tax policy, investments in public education, new infrastructure,
support for research,
rules that protected
consumers and investors, antitrust laws — to
promote and expand our
middle class. … Income
growth was widespread,
and the people who did
most of the work — the
90 percent of America
— also got most of the
gains.”
However, trickle-down
economics under President Reagan turned the
tables, giving ever-bigger
favors to the rich, who
used snowballing technology and their amassed

wealth to corral more
power.
Warren, a former Harvard professor, writes
that she spent years
researching the “great
and terrible story” of
middle-class decline.
Today, college debt
hobbles many families.
Job insecurity grows as
electronic breakthroughs
wipe out more jobs.
Wealth keeps amassing
in hands of the 1 percent
who control corporations
and investments — and
who stash their money in
overseas shelters.
“People are angry
because trade deals seem
to be building jobs and
opportunities for workers in other parts of the
world, while leaving
abandoned factories here
at home,” Warren continues. ” … Today, this
country works great for
those at the top. It works
great for every corporation rich enough to hire
an army of lobbyists and
lawyers. It works great
for every billionaire who
pays taxes at lower rates

than the hired help. It
works great for everyone
with the money to buy
favors in Washington.”
She calls President
Trump a man “always
on the hunt for his next
big con.” She urges progressives to follow the
pattern of the millionmember Women’s March
on Washington, to mobilize resistance against
conservative attempts to
slash the public safety
net and human rights.
Another form of resistance is citizen lawsuits
to prevent new law
changes from scuttling
past public gains locked
into statutes.
With Republicans controlling most government
power, will it be possible
for progressives to resist
effectively? Maybe —
maybe not. But at least
conscientious Americans
shouldn’t just surrender.
James A. Haught is editor
emeritus of West Virginia’s largest
newspaper, The Charleston
Gazette-Mail. He can be reached
by phone at 304-348-5199 or by
email at haught@wvgazettemail.
com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
April 26, the 116th day
of 2017. There are 249
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 26, 1777,
according to a widely
accepted account from
the American Revolutionary War, 16-yearold Sybil Ludington,
the eldest child of Col.
Henry Ludington, a
militia commander in
Dutchess County, New
York, rode her horse
into the night to alert
her father’s men of the
approach of British
regular troops who were
sacking Danbury, Connecticut. (Ludington,
sometimes referred
to as “the female Paul
Revere,” was said to
have covered 40 miles,
more than twice the
distance of the Boston
silversmith’s ride.)
On this date:
In 1607, English
colonists went ashore
at present-day Cape
Henry, Virginia, on an
expedition to establish

the ﬁrst permanent Eng- THOUGHT FOR TODAY
lish settlement in the
Western Hemisphere.
“Friends may come and go, but enemies
In 1865, John Wilkes
Booth, the assassin of
accumulate.”
President Abraham Lin— Dr. Thomas F. Jones, Jr.,
coln, was surrounded by
American college official (1916-1981)
federal troops near Port
Royal, Virginia, and
In 1945, Marshal
out to begin spewing
killed.
Henri Philippe Petain
into the atmosphere.
In 1913, Mary Pha(an-REE’ fee-LEEP’
(Dozens of people were
gan, a 13-year-old work- pay-TAN’), the head of
killed in the immediate
er at a Georgia pencil
France’s Vichy governaftermath of the disasfactory, was strangled;
ment during World War ter while the long-term
Leo Frank, the factory
II, was arrested.
death toll from radiation
superintendent, was
In 1952, the destroypoisoning is believed
convicted of her murder er-minesweeper USS
to number in the thouand sentenced to death. Hobson sank in the cen- sands.)
(Frank’s death sentence
tral Atlantic after colIn 1994, voting began
was commuted, but he
liding with the aircraft
in South Africa’s ﬁrst
was lynched by an anticarrier USS Wasp with
all-race elections, resultSemitic mob in 1915.)
the loss of 176 crew
ing in victory for the
In 1923, Britain’s
members.
African National ConPrince Albert, Duke of
In 1964, the African
gress and the inauguraYork (the future King
nations of Tanganyika
tion of Nelson Mandela
George VI), married
and Zanzibar merged to as president. China AirLady Elizabeth Bowesform Tanzania.
lines Flight 140, a TaiLyon at Westminster
In 1972, the ﬁrst
wanese Airbus A-300,
Abbey.
Lockheed L-1011
crashed while landing in
In 1937, German
TriStar went into comNagoya, Japan, killing
and Italian warplanes
mercial service with
264 people (there were
raided the Basque town Eastern Airlines.
seven survivors).
of Guernica during the
In 1986, an explosion
In 2000, Vermont
Spanish Civil War; estiand ﬁre at the Chernob- Gov. Howard Dean
mates of the number of
yl nuclear power plant
signed the nation’s ﬁrst
people killed vary from
in Ukraine (then part
bill allowing same-sex
the hundreds to the
of the Soviet Union)
couples to form civil
thousands.
caused radioactive fallunions.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Jury

Legacy

of the ﬁrst degree;
Joseph Billingsly, disrupting public service,
a felony of the fourth
From page 1
degree
felony of the ﬁfth
Andrew Haning,
degree;
domestic
violence, a
Lee Fitchpatrick, nonfelony
of
the
fourth
support of dependents,
degree;
a felony of the ﬁfth
Carl Casto, Jr.,
degree;
domestic
violence, a felMelissa Dickens,
ony
of
the
third degree.
carrying a concealed
Arrest
warrants
have
weapon, a felony of the
been
issued
for
each
fourth degree;
individual. Cases will
Colton Sparks, misproceed in the Meigs
use of credit cards,
County Court of Coma felony of the ﬁfth
mon Pleas.
degree;
Brandon Branham,
Information from the Meigs
assault, a misdemeanor County Prosecutor’s Office

From page 1

alive during the concert
performance, led questions
with Williams.
McIntyre would start as
a Gallipolis writer before
being read by millions in
the 1920s and 30s era,
growing into the most
popular syndicated columnist of his time. Williams
said towards the end of
McIntyre’s life, the columnist’s syndicate reported he
would have around 100 million readers a day. McIntyre
would start working as a
journalist but would eventually regard himself more as
a writer for entertainment
and was featured in publications across the country.
His wife, Maybelle, would
serve as the engine of the
McIntyre brand business
and she would argue for
McIntyre to have one of the
highest syndicated columnist contracts of the day. He
and his wife would live in
the Hotel Majestic with free
room and board due to his
publicity work.
“Odd was from here in
Gallipolis and he moved to
New York,” said Williams
during his question and
answer session. “He never
forgot about Gallipolis
and never tried to be better than (it). In fact, he
positioned himself as small
town boy who was in the
big city and if he encountered Charlie Chaplin in the
street he wrote from the
way that someone would
write as if they weren’t

Jobless

ernment.
From March 2016 to
March 2017, nonagricultural wage and salFrom page 1
ary employment grew
establishment survey
36,500. Employment in
conducted by the U.S.
goods-producing indusDepartment of Labor
tries increased 14,100.
(Bureau of Labor StaConstruction added
tistics) in cooperation
7,900 jobs. Manufacturwith ODJFS.
ing added 6,500 jobs
Employment in
in nondurable goods
goods-producing
(+5,400) and durable
industries, at 923,300,
goods (+1,100). Minincreased 1,300 over
ing and logging lost
the month in construc300 jobs. The private
tion (+1,000), mining
service-providing
and logging (+200), and sector added 30,100
manufacturing (+100). jobs. Employment
The private servicegains in educational
providing sector, at
and health services
3,826,100, decreased
(+19,400), ﬁnancial
5,200. Employment
activities (+5,200),
losses in trade, transtrade, transportation,
portation, and utilities
and utilities (+4,400),
(-6,000), professional
leisure and hospitality
and business services
(+2,500), and informa(-3,800), leisure and
tion (+1,500) exceeded
hospitality (-2,800),
losses in professional
and ﬁnancial activiand business services
ties (-700) surpassed
(-2,000) and other
gains in educational
services (-900). Govand health services
ernment employment
(+6,300), information
decreased 7,700 as loss(+900), and other seres in state (-5,800) and
vices (+900). Governlocal (-2,700) government employment, at
ment outweighed gains
769,300, decreased 200 in federal government
as losses in local gov(+800).
ernment (-700) exceeded gains in state (+300) Information for this article
and federal (+200) gov- provided by the ODJFS

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

55°

AEP (NYSE)
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)
Big Lots, Inc.
Bob Evans Farms
BorgWarner (NYSE)
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
City Holding (NASDAQ)
Collins (NYSE)
DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)

78°

78°

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. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

Trace
1.72
2.83
12.60
12.77

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:37 a.m.
8:16 p.m.
7:02 a.m.
8:39 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Apr 26

First

Full

Last

May 2 May 10 May 18

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

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

Major
12:16p
12:45a
1:47a
2:53a
4:00a
5:05a
6:05a

Minor
6:02a
6:59a
8:02a
9:08a
10:15a
11:19a
12:19p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
12:44p
1:14p
2:17p
3:23p
4:30p
5:34p
6:33p

Minor
6:30p
7:28p
8:32p
9:39p
10:45p
11:48p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
The northern mountains of Arizona
have a cooler climate than the southern deserts. Still, a 6-inch snowfall
in Flagstaff, Ariz., on April 26, 1963,
was rare.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
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. yesterday

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

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

Level
12.67
18.16
22.21
12.30
12.94
24.49
12.03
29.75
36.42
12.62
27.40
35.70
26.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.14
-0.27
-1.14
-0.33
-0.21
-0.51
-0.56
+0.79
+0.80
+0.52
+1.00
+1.00
+1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

SUNDAY

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

MONDAY

Very warm with
variable cloudiness

Cloudy and warm
with a thunderstorm

Partly sunny and
remaining very warm

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

Logan
84/62

Adelphi
84/64
Chillicothe
85/64

Portsmouth
87/64

Murray City
83/60
Belpre
84/61

Athens
84/60

A morning t-storm
possible; cooler

St. Marys
84/61

Parkersburg
83/61

Coolville
84/61

Elizabeth
84/61

Spencer
84/60

Buffalo
86/60

Ironton
87/64

Milton
86/62

St. Albans
86/62

Huntington
85/63

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
57/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
64/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
81/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

74°
47°

Marietta
84/61

Wilkesville
86/60
POMEROY
Jackson
86/60
85/61
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
85/61
86/61
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
85/64
GALLIPOLIS
87/61
86/61
86/61

Ashland
87/64
Grayson
87/64

TUESDAY

72°
54°
Times of clouds and
sun

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
84/60

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

SATURDAY

Increasing clouds, a
t-storm; warm

South Shore Greenup
87/63
86/64

33
0 50 100 150 200

Symphony in the night’s
music. Bidwell native
Phillip Armstrong would
take the stage in the second half of the evening’s
performance. Armstrong
is noted to have recorded
with the Cincinnati Pops
Orchestra and has served as
a member with the Central
State University Singers.
Snow would comment that
Armstrong was the ideal
choice to help headline
such a performance as a fellow local who made good,
as McIntyre would often
describe himself.
Armstrong would lead
the audience in a group gospel encore of “Amen” with
the crowd singing. The
performance ended with a
standing ovation.

Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
11.28
Wal-Mart (NYSE)
75.05
Wendy’s (NYSE)
14.77
WesBanco (NYSE)
40.89
Worthington (NYSE)
43.85
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
April 25, 2017, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

87°
63°

Lucasville
87/65

Very High

FRIDAY

88.26
29.84
50.60
116.78
28.85
43.65
34.33
114.16
21.44
160.14
13.80
52.75

84°
65°

Very High

Primary: oak, sycamore, other
Mold: 858

JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)
OVBC (NASDAQ)
BBT (NYSE)
Peoples (NASDAQ)
Pepsico (NYSE)
Premier (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE)
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
Royal Dutch Shell

83°
63°

Waverly
85/64

Pollen: 530

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

Low

Snow said the search
took roughly 25 years to
ﬁnd the McIntyre Suite,
written by McIntyre’s friend
Meredith Willson. The
same Willson who would
go on to be known for such
works as “The Music Man”
and “It’s Beginning to Look
a Lot Like Christmas.”
“Sunday Night in Gallipolis” was a piece commission by Willson after
it was requested by Paul
Whiteman, a popular dance
band leader. According to a
letter by Willson, the piece
was meant to convey the
image of a little girl playing
“Chop Sticks” as her sole
musical piece as entertainment during a Sunday night
parlor gathering. McIntyre
was reportedly fond of such
gatherings.
Maestro Ray Fowler
would lead The Ohio Valley

81°
55°

2

Primary: ascospores
Thu.
6:36 a.m.
8:17 p.m.
7:45 a.m.
9:52 p.m.

THURSDAY

Sunny to partly cloudy and very warm today.
Partly cloudy tonight. High 87° / Low 61°

HEALTH TODAY

67.86
30.00
49.57
66.80
40.84
13.62
71.99
105.51
82.21
52.13
29.45
57.21

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

69°
52°
71°
47°
90° in 2009
28° in 1967

jaded. He wrote about how
excited he was to see him
… I think people in small
towns were fascinated by
what he was writing. They
could relate.”
McIntyre’s column was
titled “New York: Day
by Day.” He would make
friends with the likes of
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Fred
Astaire, Meredith Willson,
Charlie Chaplin and more.
He also wrote for publications “Cosmopolitan” and
“Life.”
“I went on this long multiyear search trying to ﬁnd
this (musical) suite,” said
Ariel Opera House Executive Director Lora Snow.
“And I ﬁnally got it. It was
hidden away Williams College in Pennsylvania. We
just felt it was very appropriate to play on an evening
like this.”

STOCKS

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Publishing

Gallia native and singer Phillip Armstrong leads the crowd in an encore presentation of gospel song
“Amen.”

Clendenin
85/60
Charleston
84/60

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
41/25

Billings
57/37

Montreal
61/50
Toronto
62/49

Minneapolis
46/33
Denver
59/36

New York
62/57
Detroit
Chicago 76/62
77/53

Kansas City
51/39

Washington
73/61

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
69/48/c
55/43/c
82/62/s
62/55/r
71/55/pc
57/37/c
53/37/r
57/51/r
84/60/s
82/60/s
53/32/pc
77/53/t
85/62/s
83/64/pc
85/64/s
75/49/t
59/36/pc
54/38/c
76/62/pc
86/72/s
89/55/t
82/60/pc
51/39/r
85/66/pc
75/49/t
81/63/s
87/64/s
86/75/s
46/33/r
85/63/s
86/67/pc
62/57/r
56/40/sh
87/62/s
68/57/r
89/66/s
80/59/s
54/48/r
81/61/pc
77/61/pc
78/49/t
53/42/sh
64/53/c
57/44/sh
73/61/pc

Hi/Lo/W
72/45/pc
53/39/c
77/67/pc
65/57/pc
82/64/pc
48/37/sh
51/33/pc
60/52/r
83/54/pc
82/64/pc
48/27/sh
56/41/sh
70/50/pc
78/51/t
76/51/t
83/67/s
55/31/r
60/43/pc
73/48/t
85/71/sh
84/68/s
63/50/sh
62/49/c
84/63/pc
72/55/pc
82/62/pc
72/52/t
89/78/s
46/32/c
73/52/c
85/73/pc
70/58/pc
71/51/pc
95/69/s
80/61/pc
92/69/s
86/56/t
59/47/r
86/66/pc
87/66/pc
67/56/c
50/37/r
66/52/pc
57/43/sh
86/68/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
82/62

El Paso
80/60

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

High
Low

97° in Zapata, TX
21° in Leadville, CO

Global
Chihuahua
88/55

High
Low

Houston
89/55
Monterrey
101/62

Miami
86/75

114° in Tillabery, Niger
-24° in Cambridge Bay, Canada

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
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RACINE
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60701680

TODAY

Wednesday, April 26, 2017 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

'/.8/=.+CM��:&lt;36� M� ����s�

Wahama rallies past Lady Eagles, 8-7
By Alex Hawley

rallied. Cera Grueser doubled
home both Sidney Cook and
Katlyn Barber, and then GrueHARTFORD, W.Va. — As
ser scored on a Taylynn Rockit turns out, ﬁve days doesn’t
hold double. Abbie Hawley
make that much of a difference singled home Rockhold to give
after all.
EHS a 4-0 advantage.
After handing the Eastern
Eastern added a run to its
softball team its ﬁrst league
advantage in the third inning,
loss of the season, by an 8-7
as Courtney Fitzgerald saccount last Wednesday, Wahama riﬁced home Katlyn Barber.
was at it again on Monday in
With two outs in the top of
Mason County. It took one
the fourth the Lady Eagle lead
extra inning, but the Lady Fal- grew to 7-0, as Katlyn Barber
cons claimed another 8-7 vichit a two-run home run. After
tory over EHS, giving Wahama the blast, EHS managed only
a lead in the Tri-Valley Confer- three hits for the remainder of
ence Hocking Division race by the game.
one game in the win column.
The Lady Falcons (18-8,
After two outs in the top of
12-2) — winners of nine
the ﬁrst inning the Lady Eagles straight decisions — were held
(12-3, 11-2 TVC Hocking)
to just one hit over the ﬁrst

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern sophomore Ally Barber catches a pop up hit by WHS Ashtyn Russell
(left) during Wahama’s 8-7 victory on Monday.

three innings, but snapped out
of the cold spell in the fourth.
Two hits, one walk, one error
and one hit batter allowed
Ashtyn Russell, Logan Eades,
Maddy VanMatre and Emily
VanMatre to score and cut the
WHS deﬁcit to 7-4.
Russell singled home Hannah Rose in the bottom of the
ﬁfth inning, as Wahama pulled
within two runs.
Wahama was retired in order
in the sixth inning, but tied the
game at seven, with two outs
in the bottom of the seventh,
when Taylor McGrew doubled
home Rose and Hannah Billups.
WHS stranded the winning
See WAHAMA | 8

Meigs mauls
Lady Vikings
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

McARTHUR, Ohio — No need to sweat this
one.
The Meigs softball team — which claimed a
two-run victory over Vinton County on April 13
— had a much easier time with the Lady Vikings
on Monday at VCHS, as the Lady Marauders
claimed a 14-2 victory to remain unbeaten in the
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division.
Meigs (13-2, 8-0 TVC Ohio) scored the game’s
ﬁrst run with two outs in the ﬁrst inning, when
Alliyah Pullins singled home Devyn Oliver. Next,
Taylor Swartz scored on an error to give MHS a
2-0 advantage.
Still with two outs in the top of the ﬁrst, Breanna Zirkle doubled home Pullins, Bre Colburn and
Morgan Lodwick, capping off the Lady Marauders’ ﬁve-run ﬁrst.
After a scoreless second frame, Meigs added on
in the third inning, ﬁrst when Zirkle singled home
Colburn, and then when Oliver doubled in Lodwick and Zirkle.
The Lady Marauder lead grew to 10-0 in the top
of the fourth, as Peyton Rowe scored on a single
by Pullins, who was then doubled home by Lodwick.
Vinton County (8-10, 3-6) cut the MHS lead to
10-2 in the bottom of the fourth, when Josie Hembree launched a two-run home run.
Not to be out-done, the Lady Marauders scored
four times in the top of the ﬁfth, ﬁrst when Oliver
and Swartz scored on a Morris single. Then in the
very next at-bat, Pullins blasted a two-run home
run, putting the ﬁnal touches on the MHS 14-2
victory.
Pullins struck out three batters in four innings
and was the winning pitcher of record for Meigs,
allowing two earned runs on four hits and two
walks. Maddison Woodyard pitched the ﬁnal frame
for MHS, allowing just one hit.
Shalynn Reﬁtt suffered the loss for VCHS, allowing ﬁve runs, one earned, on four hits and one
walk. Reﬁtt pitched one inning and struck out one
batter. Destiny Ward threw the ﬁnal four innings
for the hosts, allowing nine runs, ﬁve earned, on
10 hits and three walks.
Pullins helped her own cause, leading the Lady
Marauder offense with a 3-for-4 effort, including a
home run, three runs scored and four runs batted
in.
Zirkle was 2-for-3 with a double, one run scored
and four RBIs, Oliver was 2-for-4 with a double,
two runs scored and two RBIs, while Swartz was
2-for-4 with two runs scored.
Rowe went 1-for-3 with a triple and a run
scored, Lodwick was 1-for-3 with a double, two
runs scored and one RBI, Colburn was 1-for-3 with
two runs scored, while Morris was 1-for-4 with
one run scored and two RBIs.
Kelsey Ward led Vinton County, going 2-for-3
with a triple and a run scored.
See MEIGS | 8

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, April 26
Baseball
Miller at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Softball
Miller at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joseph at Hannan (DH),
5 p.m.
Buffalo at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Tennis
Wheelersburg at Gallia Academy, 4:30
p.m.

Thursday, April 27
Baseball
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Huntington St. Joseph,
5:30 p.m.
Huntington at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Softball
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5:30 p.m.
Track and Field
Eastern, Meigs at Vinton County, 4:30
p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joseph, 4:30 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 4:30 p.m.

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern junior Kaleb Hill (14) steps off of the mound to catch a fly ball during the Eagles’ 8-6 victory, on Monday night in at Wahama.

Eastern outlasts White Falcons, 8-6
By Alex Hawley

fourth inning, when Isaac
Nottingham doubled
home Josh Brewer and
MASON, W.Va. —
Owen Arix.
Lucky number seven.
Wahama reestablished
The Eastern baseball
its lead in the bottom of
team picked up its sevthe fourth, when Grate
enth consecutive vicreached on a dropped
tory, on Monday night
third strike and then
in Mason County, as
scored on an error.
the Eagles came back to
After a scoreless ﬁfth
defeat Tri-Valley Conferinning for both sides, the
ence Hocking Division
Eagles took their ﬁrst
host Wahama by an 8-6
lead of the night with two
count.
outs in the sixth inning,
Eastern (12-3, 11-2
when Colton Reynolds
TVC Hocking) — which
singled home Arix and
also knocked off WHS on
April 19, by a 15-6 count Nate Durst.
The hosts tied the
in Tuppers Plains — was
game
in the bottom of the
held scoreless for the ﬁrst
sixth,
when Tanner Smith
two innings on Monday.
doubled
home Hendrick.
The White Falcons
WHS
left
the bases
(11-7, 9-5) — who have
won eight of their last 10 loaded, however, failing
games with both setbacks to regain the lead.
After an error to start
coming to EHS — scored
the
top of the seventh
the game’s opening run in
inning,
John Little
the bottom of the second
singled
home Austin
inning, on a bases loaded
Coleman
to give EHS a
walk. On the very next at6-5
lead.
Little
was then
bat, David Hendrick and
Bryton Grate scored on a doubled home by Hill,
failed ﬁelder’s choice, giv- who later scored on an
error, extending the Eagle
ing WHS a 3-0 lead.
lead to 8-5.
The Eagles got one
Dalton Kearns scored
run back in the top of
on a two-out error in the
the third frame, when
Kaleb Hill drove in Austin bottom of the seventh,
but Wahama left the
Coleman. Eastern tied
bases loaded yet again, as
the game at three in the

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Eastern claimed the 8-6
win.
EHS junior Ethen
Richmond pitched the
ﬁnal two frames for the
victors, striking out ﬁve
and earning the win.
Richmond allowed two
runs, one earned, on two
hits and four walks.
Hill started on the
mound and pitched two
innings for the Eagles,
striking out three and
allowing three earned
runs, on one hit and
ﬁve walks. Coleman
struck out six batters in
three innings of relief,
while allowing just one
unearned run and one hit.
Philip Hoffman pitched
the ﬁnal inning and suffered loss for Wahama,
allowing three runs,
one earned, on two
hits. Kearns started and
pitched six innings for
WHS, allowing ﬁve runs,
three earned, on six hits
and one walk. Kearns
struck out four batters,
while Hoffman struck out
three.
Hill and Nottingham
both doubled once,
singled once and drove in
two runs runs for EHS,
with Hill adding a run
scored. Little was 2-for-4

with a run scored and a
run batted in, Reynolds
was 1-for-3 with two
RBIs, while Coleman
was 1-for-4 with two runs
scored. Arix crossed
home plate twice in the
win, while Brewer and
Durst both scored once.
Smith was 1-for-4 with
a double and an RBI to
lead the White Falcons.
Jared Oliver singled once
and drove in two runs,
Hendrick singled once
and scored twice, while
Kearns singled once
and scored once. Grate
crossed home plate twice
in the setback, Tyler
Bumgarner scored once,
while Colton Arrington
earned an RBI.
EHS committed two
errors and left six runners
stranded, while Wahama
had four errors and 10
runners left on base.
After a non-conference
tilt against Point Pleasant
on Tuesday, Wahama will
resume league play on
Wednesday, when Miller
visits Mason.
The Eagles return to
the diamond on Wednesday, when Southern visits
Tuppers Plains.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 26, 2017 7

Automotive

LEGALS

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Wanted

Best Deal New &amp; Used

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
CASE NO 20175005
NOTICE OF HEARING TO
MAURO BENIGNO
PILLCOREMA, UNKNOWN
ADDRESS ON THE 7TH DAY
OF APRIL 2017, SERENA &amp;
JOSHUA LARSEN FILED A
PETITION TO ANAELI
LENEYA ROSE
PILLCOREMA,
DOB 12/1/15.
THIS MATTER IS SET FOR
HEARING JUNE 5TH, 2017
AT 9:30 AM AT THE
PROBATE COURT
LOCATED AT 100 EAST
SECOND ST, RM 203
POMEROY, OH. IF YOU
WOULD LIKE TO CONSENT
TO THE ADOPTION PLEASE
CONTACT LINDSEY PRICE,
ATTORNEY FOR
PETITIONERS
AT 740-992-4100
4/12/17,4/19/17,4/26/17,
5/3/17,5/10/17,5/17/17

We are looking for an
enthusiastic person to work
with adults with developmental disabilities. Back ground
search, drug test required, and
clean driving record. Must be
willing to travel. Schedule
must be flexible. Call
Inclusions at 740-416-8863 or
740-416-3655

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am.
Office is located at
1151 Evergreen Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

Echoing Meadows Residential Center a non-profit Christian
organization and equal opportunity employer is now accepting
applications for RN Case Manager with strong organizational
skills to care for individuals with disabilities. This is a full time
salary position eligible for medical, dental, vision and retirement
benefits.

MARK PORTER FORD

60713776

Home of the Car Fairy

Amy Carter
Product Specialist

�����.BZIFX�3E�t�+BDLTPO �0)������

�������������t��������������
Fax: 740-286-5728
BNZDBSUFS!NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN
XXX�NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN
Help Wanted General

Public/Legal Notice:
pursuant to section 307.12
of ORC, Meigs County
Commissioners are
authorizing the sell of
unneeded, obsolete, or unfit
County personal property
through a public auction that
will be held May 9, 2017
at 6 pm on the grounds of
the County Garage. Items
must be paid for in full at the
time of the sale. All items
are sold "as is". Auction is
being handled by
auctioneer Billy Goble.

$$$$$$$$$

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OPPORTUNITY

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NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute

Wanted
The Town Of New Haven
is hiring certified lifeguards.
Applications can be picked up
at City Hall and our hours are
7a.m to 3 p.m. The deadline
fro application in April 30th.
Yard Sale
4 Family Yard Sale
Rodney Community Building
Fri. - Sat 9-6 Longaberger,
bikes clothing and lots more.

OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH

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

For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

$$$$$$$$$

Help Wanted General

60583312

For Sale By Owner

HOME FOR SALE
������43�����t�1PNFSPZ �0IJP
$39,900.00

Please email cover letter,
resume and references
to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

60712943

2 bedroom-1bath
Newer metal roofsubflooring-floorcovering
New bath fixtures &amp; plumbing
updates -out of flood plain-gas
furnace-electric central air
no land contracts

MAKE OFFER
740-416-0914

Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a
results orientated
salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
problem solver, goal oriented,
have a positive attitude, and
have the ability to multi-task
in a demanding,
deadline-oriented
environment. Must have
reliable transportation and
clean driving record. We seek
success driven individuals
looking to build a future with
a growing organization with
publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and
Point Pleasant, WV.

Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Applicants must pass pre-employment screening including but
not limited to drug screen and criminal background checks. Must
have a valid Ohio driverҋs license. Apply in person at Echoing
Meadows, 319 W Union Street, Athens, Ohio.
Phone 740-594-3541.

Notices

Houses For Rent
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LEGALS

The Meigs Department of Job and Family Services is soliciting
proposals from qualified individuals/firms with extensive experience in providing human resource, personnel management, and
labor relations services to assist the Department in the administration of these Department programs.
The successful vendor is expected to have a high level of technical understanding of state civil service laws, state public sector labor relations laws, state and federal employment laws (eg:
discrimination laws, the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Fair
Labor Standards Act), workers compensation and demonstrate
extensive experience in the application of these laws. The successful vendor is expected, consistent with the authority and
consent of the County Prosecutor, to provide a wide range of
services, including consultation on public sector employment
issues, public sector labor relations and administration, personnel and human resources consulting.
Interested persons/firms must submit a proposal which meets
the requirements of the Request for Proposal (RFP). The RFP
which details the scope of services requested, the desired minimum qualifications of proposers, submission guidelines, the
evaluation criteria, and other related items may be obtained by
contacting:
Vince Reiber, Business Administrator, at (740)992-2117 or
1-800-992-2608 ext. 109, or by visiting the agencyҋs offices at
175 Race Street, Middleport, OH 45760. The deadline for submitting proposals is 9:00 A.M. April 28, 2017. Proposals received after this date will be rejected./
4/12/17, 4/19/17, 4/26/17
LEGALS
SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 038, HAI V. DUONG,
PLAINTIFF, VS. ROBERT L. ROGERS, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, May 19, 2017, at 10:00 a.m., the
following described real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY, TOWNSHIP OF SALISBURY,
COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE STATE OF OHIO. A MORE
COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF THE ABOVE NAMED REAL
ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
RECORDERҋS OFFICE, VOLUME 366, PAGE 571, OFFICIAL
RECORDS.
AUDITORҋS PARCEL NOS.: 16-02581.009, 16-02581.010,
16-02581.002
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 441 W. Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769.

The Town of New Haven will be placing the following items out
for bid to the general public.
Item # 1 – Reserve Minimum Bid $1,000.00 (Reserve minimum
bid must be met) 1982 International dump truck (red in color),
model # 1784 with 50,520 miles Issues/Mechanical Problems
Transmission problems Break problems
Item # 2 – Reserve Minimum Bid $500.00 (Reserve minimum
bid must be met) 1997 GMC 2500 Extended cab truck
(Brown/Tan in color) with 191,064 miles. Issues/Mechanical
Problems Needs four new tires Steering problems Passenger
window will not roll down
Item # 3 – Reserve Minimum Bid $500.00(Reserve minimum bid
must be met) 1994 GMC 1500 Extended cab truck (Red in color)
with 156,031 miles. Issues/Mechanical Problems Cab floor has
holes from rust damage Wiring in steering column needs to be
repaired or replaced
Item # 4 – Reserve minimum bid $500.00 (Reserve minimum bid
must be met) 2007 Jeep Patriot (Black in color) with 80,754
miles. Issues/Mechanical Problems Motor knocking
Previous transmission problems (repaired)
The bidding process will begin Monday April 17th, 2017 at 8:00
a.m., and will conclude on Monday April 24th, 2017 at 3:00 p.m.
All vehicles are being sold as is. The Town of New Haven has
the right to accept or reject any and all bids. All bids need to be
turned in to the administrative office of the Town of New Haven.
All bids must be sealed. Bids may only be turned in during
normal business hours. If you have any questions please feel
free to contact the Town of New Haven at (304) 882-3203
Monday – Friday 7:00-3:00
4/26/17

LEGALS
SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 15 CV 019,
PEOPLES BANK formerly known as PEOPLES BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, PLAINTIFF, VS. JONATHAN J.
AVIS AKA JONATHAN JOSEPH JUSTICE AKA JONATHAN
JOSEPH CUNDIFF AKA JONATHN JUSTICE, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, May 19, 2017, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following described real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDERҋS OFFICE, VOLUME 301,
PAGE 379, OFFICIAL RECORDS.
AUDITORҋS PARCEL NO.: 15-01475.000
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 814 Page Street, Middleport, OH
45760.
Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.
Sold subject to accrued 2017 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants
of record.

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.
Sold subject to accrued 2017 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or
covenants of record.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

Said premises appraised at $35,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are
insufficient to cover.

Said premises appraised at $135,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount.In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are
insufficient to cover.

No employees of the Sheriffҋs Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaserҋs
possession.

No employees of the Sheriffҋs Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers.All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaserҋs
possession.

If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered
for sale again on May 26, 2017, at the same time and location
above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid. In
addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those costs,
allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of certified or cashierҋs check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of
confirmation of sale.

TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified or cashierҋs check (cash and personal checks are not
accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00
= deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.

All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email: cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654

All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale.
Email: cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654

KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Michael L. Barr, Attorney for Defendant/CrossClaimant, Elizabeth Shaver, Successor Trustee of the Roscoe
Mills, Jr. Trust Dated January 18, 2013, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp;
BARR, LLP, 211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone: (740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
4/26/17, 5/3/17, 5/10/17

KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Michael L. Barr, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
04/26/17, 05/03/17, 05/10/17

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, April 26, 2017

MLB
Baltimore
New York
Boston
Tampa Bay
Toronto

W
13
11
11
10
5

L
5
7
8
11
14

Cleveland
Detroit
Chicago
Minnesota
Kansas City

W
10
10
9
9
7

L
8
8
9
10
12

Houston
Oakland
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle

W
13
10
9
9
8

L
6
9
11
12
12

Washington
Miami
Philadelphia
New York
Atlanta

W
13
10
9
8
6

L
6
8
9
11
12

Chicago
Cincinnati
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh

W
11
10
10
9
8

L
8
10
11
10
11

Colorado
Arizona
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Francisco

W
14
13
9
8
7

L
6
8
11
13
13

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.722
—
—
.611
2
—
.579
2½
—
.476 4½
2
.263 8½
6
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.556
—
—
.556
—
½
.500
1
1½
.474
1½
2
.368
3½
4
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.684
—
—
.526
3
1
.450 4½
2½
.429
5
3
.400
5½
3½
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.684
—
—
.556
2½
—
.500
3½
1
.421
5
2½
.333 6½
4
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.579
—
—
.500
1½
1
.476
2
1½
.474
2
1½
.421
3
2½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.700
—
—
.619
1½
—
.450
5
2
.381 6½
3½
.350
7
4

L10
7-3
7-3
6-4
4-6
4-6

Str Home
W-1
7-2
L-1
8-1
W-1
7-2
L-2
9-4
L-1
2-7

Away
6-3
3-6
4-6
1-7
3-7

L10
6-4
4-6
5-5
3-7
4-6

Str Home
L-1
2-4
W-2
5-2
W-2
4-5
W-1
5-7
L-5
5-3

Away
8-4
5-6
5-4
4-3
2-9

L10
8-2
5-5
5-5
3-7
6-4

Str Home
W-1
7-4
L-1
7-6
L-1
6-5
W-1
6-4
W-1
6-3

Away
6-2
3-3
3-6
3-8
2-9

L10
8-2
6-4
6-4
2-8
4-6

Str Home
L-1
6-3
W-2
4-2
W-4
5-4
L-4
4-8
L-6
4-3

Away
7-3
6-6
4-5
4-3
2-9

L10
5-5
3-7
4-6
6-4
5-5

Str Home
W-1
4-5
L-1
5-8
W-1
4-8
W-3
5-4
L-1
5-5

Away
7-3
5-2
6-3
4-6
3-6

L10
8-2
6-4
4-6
3-7
3-7

Str Home
W-4
7-3
W-1
9-2
L-1
6-4
L-3
5-4
W-1
4-4

Away
7-3
4-6
3-7
3-9
3-9

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday’s Games
Baltimore 6, Tampa Bay 3
Minnesota 3, Texas 2
Chicago White Sox 12, Kansas City 1

L.A. Angels 2, Toronto 1
Tuesday’s Games
Houston at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Boston, ppd.

Wahama

singled once and scored
once, with Emily VanMatre marking two RBIs and
Russell adding one RBI.
Hendrick, Eades and Billups each scored one run
for the victors.
Leading Eastern’s
offense was Rockhold,
who went 3-for-4 with one
double, one run scored
and one RBI. Katlyn
Barber was 2-for-3 with
a home run, three runs
scored and two RBIs,
Grueser was 2-for-4 with
a double, a run scored
and two RBIs, while Cook
was 2-for-4 with a double
and two runs scored.
Hawley, Emmalea
Durst and Hannah Bailey
each singled once, with
Hawley earning an RBI.
Fitzgerald also drove in
one run for the guests.
The Lady Eagles committed three errors in the
setback, one more than
WHS. A total of 12 runners were left on base, six
for each side.
Both teams are back
in action on Wednesday,
with Eastern hosting
Southern and Wahama
hosting Miller.

From page 6

run in scoring position in
the seventh, but retired
Eastern in order in the
top of the eighth.
With two outs in the
bottom of the eighth,
Rose hit a bloop-single
over third base, bringing
home Cynthia Hendrick
from second base, for the
game-winning run.
McGrew was the winning pitcher of record for
Wahama, allowing seven
runs, ﬁve earned, on
13 hits and a walk. The
WHS senior struck out
seven batters in a complete game effort.
Elaina Hensley struck
out ﬁve and suffered the
loss in a complete game
for Eastern, allowing
eight runs, ﬁve earned,
on eight hits and four
walks.
Rose led the WHS
offense, going 4-for-5
with two runs scored and
the game-winning RBI.
McGrew doubled once
and drove in two runs,
while Emily VanMatre,
Maddy VanMatre and
Ashtyn Russell each

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Daily Sentinel

Ravenswood outlasts Lady Tornadoes, 21-20
By Bryan Walters

exploded for four more
runs in the ninth to take
its ﬁrst lead since the ﬁrst
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
inning at 20-16.
— Score 20 runs and still
The Red Devilettes (13fall below .500 on the sea7), however, rallied by platson. Now that’s a bad night ing ﬁve runs in their half
on the road.
of the ninth after ﬁve hits
The Southern softball
and an error allowed the
team let a four-run lead
host to pick up their third
slip away in the bottom
straight victory.
of the seventh inning on
The game itself featured
Monday night following a
41 runs and 41 hits to go
heartbreaking 21-20 loss
along with 11 errors, with
to host Ravenswood in a
Southern pounding out
non-conference matchup in 21 of those safeties while
Jackson County.
committing only ﬁve of
The visiting Lady Torthe errors. Both teams also
nadoes (7-8) found themstranded 10 runners apiece
selves trailing 6-1 through on the bags.
two innings of play, then
After the ﬁve-inning
both programs scored 10
adventure that led to a
runs apiece over the next
slim 16-15 RHS advantage,
two frames for a 16-11 con- Southern managed to tie
test through four complete. the game in the top of the
The Purple and Gold
seventh as Paige VanMeter
followed by scoring four
blasted a one-out home run
runs in the ﬁfth and added to left-center — tying the
another score in the top of game at 16 while also forcthe seventh to knot things ing extra innings.
up at 16-all through seven
SHS followed in the top
innings of play, then SHS
of the ninth by plating four
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

runs with an error and six
consecutive hits, which
gave the guests a comfortable 20-16 cushion headed
into the home half of the
ﬁnale.
Ravenswood, however,
put together four straight
hits, then received a walk
that was followed by an
error — allowing RHS
to knot the game up at
20-all. Mace singled home
Cubides after the miscue,
allowing the hosts to rally
back for the slim one-run
triumph.
Tabor was the winning
pitcher of record after
allowing 11 runs (nine
earned), 15 hits and one
walk over six innings of
relief while striking out
three. Sydney Cleland took
the tough-luck loss after
surrendering 18 earned
runs, 20 hits and seven
walks over 8.1 frames
while fanning four.
Lauren Lavender led
Southern with four hits,
followed by VanMeter,

Sierra Cleland and Kati
Barton with three safeties
apiece. Jaiden Roberts,
Josie Cundiff and Sydney
Cleland were next with
two hits each, while Shelbi
Daniels and Haley Musser
added a safety apiece in the
setback.
VanMeter — who also
hit a home run in the
ﬁfth — led the guests
with seven RBIs, followed
by Lavender and Sierra
Cleland with three RBIs
apiece. Cundiff led the
Lady Tornadoes with
four runs scored, followed
by VanMeter and Cierra
Whitesell with three runs
apiece.
Bowen and Cubides
paced RHS with four hits
apiece, followed by Mace
and Johnson with three
safeties each. Mace and
Manns also knocked in a
team-high ﬁve RBIs apiece
for the victors.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

Marauders slip past Vikings, 6-4
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

McARTHUR, Ohio — The
Marauder offense came back to life
at just the right time.
After three consecutive scoreless
frames, the Meigs baseball team
broke a three-all tie with three runs
in the top of the sixth inning, and
the Marauders held on for a 6-4
victory over Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division host Vinton County,
on Monday.
Meigs (10-6, 6-2 TVC Ohio)
took a 1-0 lead in the top of the
ﬁrst inning, when Briar Wolfe
drove in Christian Mattox. The
Vikings (5-10, 3-6) tied the game
in the home half of the inning, but
MHS reestablished its advantage
in the top of the second, when Cole
Arnott singled home Tyler Johnson
and Wesley Smith.
Vinton County pulled within one
run in the bottom of the second

Meigs
From page 6

The Lady Vikings

and then tied the game with a run
in the fourth.
The Marauder lead was reestablished in the top of the sixth, when
Smith scored on a sac-bunt by
Arnott. Next, Mattox tripled home
Brentten Young and then scored on
a passed ball, giving the guest a 6-3
advantage.
The hosts scored once in the bottom of the sixth, but never brought
the potential game-winning run to
the plate, falling by a 6-4 count.
Mattox earned the pitching
victory in relief for Meigs, allowing one run, on two hits and one
walk in three innings of work.
MHS starter Matt Gilkey surrendered three runs, on six hits and
two walks in four innings. Both
Marauder pitchers struck out three
batters.
Hayes pitched a complete game
and suffered the loss for VCHS,
striking out two and allowing six
runs, on six hits, two walks and

had four errors in
the loss, three more
than Meigs. VCHS
left six runners on
base, while the Lady

three hit batters.
Arnott led the MHS offense,
going 2-for-2 with three runs batted in. Mattox tripled once, scored
twice and drove in one run, Smith
singled once and scored twice,
Johnson and Young both singled
once and scored once, while Wolfe
had an RBI.
Ousley led the Vikings with two
hits and two runs scored.
Meigs committed all three of the
game’s errors. Vinton County left
eight runners on base in the setback, three more than the Marauders.
The Maroon and Gold also
defeated VCHS on April 13, by an
8-1 ﬁnal in Rocksprings.
Meigs is scheduled to visit Marietta on Tuesday and host Gallia
Academy on Thursday in a pair of
non-league contests.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Marauders committed
one error.
The Maroon and
Gold will have a pair
of non-league games

next on the slate, at
Marietta on Tuesday, and then home
against Gallia Academy on Thursday.

Carpeting

Miscellaneous

LEGALS

Mollohan Carpet
Spring Specials
carpet-vinyl-vinyl planks
Call 740-446-7444
317 ST RT 7 N Gallipolis, Oh
Drive a little Save a lot

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

SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 055, GAIL ST. CLAIR, ET
AL., PLAINTIFFS, VS. CAROLYN WILSON, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

Mollohan Carpet
Spring Specials
carpet-vinyl-vinyl planks
Call 740-446-7444
317 ST RT 7 N Gallipolis, Oh
Drive a little Save a lot

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

LEGALS
SHERIFFҋS SALE OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 15-CV-069
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., not in its individual capacity but
solely as Trustee for RMAC REMIC Trust,
Series 2009-4, Plaintiff
-vsCharles Mohr, et al., Defendants

In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, May 19, 2017, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following described real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF BEDFORD, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDERҋS OFFICE, VOLUME 6, PAGE
801, MEIGS COUNTY OFFICIAL RECORDS.

Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
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Wanted

NOTICE FROM THE
MASON COUNTY ASSESSOR
The Mason County Assessorҋs Office is accepting resumesҋ
for full time employment. Positions available are for Personal
Property and Real Estate Departments. You must have
computer experience, office experience and working with public,
knowledge in reading deeds for Real Estate Department, and
must be ready for employment immediately. You can submit
your application in person Monday thru Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
mail to Mason County Assessor,
200 Sixth Street Suite 4,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550,
or email to
rhickman@assessor.state.wv.us.

AUDITORҋS PARCEL NO.: 01-00732.000
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction in the above county on the
19th day of May, 2017 at 10:00 a.m. at the door of the courthouse steps.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 39481 TR 241 St. Clair Rd., Pomeroy,
OH 45769

The below property was appraised on April 10, 2017.

Sold subject to accrued 2017 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges.

It appraised for $75,000.00. The appraisers DID NOT gain entry
to the house for appraisal This property IS NOT a mobile Home.
Per H.B. 390, if the above property is a NO BID on May 19,
2017, this is the second sale date, Friday, May 26, 2017 @10
a.m This will also have no minimum bid.
All Third-Party Purchasers Shall Make Sale Deposits As Follows:
&lt;/= $10,000 = Deposit of $2,000.00
&gt;$10,000&lt;/= $200,000 = Deposit of $5,000.00
$200,000 = Deposit of $10,000.00
Payment shall be made in the form of a certified/cashierҋs check
(cash and personal checks are not accepted). No deposit is required by the bank. All property as as is and not be entered until
t he deed ins the purchaserҋs possession.
Address: 27430 Old State Route 346, Albany OH 45710
PPN: 0500501002
Situated in the State of Ohio, County of Meigs and in the Township of Columbia. A tract of land located in a part of the west
one-half of Section #29, T-09-N, R-15-W, Columbia Township,
Meigs County, Ohio and being more particularly bounded and
described as follows:
Beginning at an iron pin set in the southwest corner of the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section #29; Thence,
with the south line of said quarter section, S 83 degrees 36" 36"
E, a distance of 1454.27 feet to a point in the centerline of
County Road #55.
Terms of Sale: ALL THIRD PARTY PURCHASERҋS
DEPOSIT(S) SHALL BE MADE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
GUIDELINES AS SET FORTH IN OHIO REVISED CODE SECTION 2329.211
Keith Wood
Sheriff of Meigs County
CLUNK, PAISLEY, HOOSE CO., LPA
Charles V. Gasior #0075946
Attorney for Plaintiff
4500 Courthouse Blvd. Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
notice@cphlpa.com

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.
Said premises appraised at $50,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are
insufficient to cover.
No employees of the Sheriffҋs Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaserҋs
possession.
TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified or cashierҋs check (cash and personal checks are
not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to
$10,000.00 = deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but
less than or equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater
than $200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the
time of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due
within 30 days of confirmation of sale.
All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale.
Email: cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org;
Fax: 740-992-2654
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorneys: Jennifer L. Sheets, Attorney for Defendant, Janet
Peavley, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211-213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
Steven L. Story, Attorney for Plaintiffs, Gail St. Clair and Myrtle
St. Clair, 216 East Main Street, Suite 200, P.O. Box 72,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

4/26/17, 5/3/17, 5/10/17

04/26/17, 05/03/17, 05/10/17

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, April 26, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�10 Wednesday, April 26, 2017

The

Daily Sentinel

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