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                  <text>Ohio Valley
Church
Chats

OVP
Top 5
stories

Museum
is ‘on
track’

CHURCH s 5A

SPORTS s 1B

ALONG THE
RIVER s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 26, Volume 51

Sunday, June 25, 2017 s $2

52 years later

A closer
look at
Meigs’
water
supply
By Michael Hart
Special to Times-Sentinel

OSHP | Courtesy photos

Clifford L. Russell, at far right, who is retired from the Ohio State Highway Patrol, greets Russell Fellure, at center, the man who assisted him after Russell was shot by
a suspect 52 years ago. Far left, Col. Paul Pride who presented Fellure with a certificate of appreciation from the Patrol.

MEIGS COUNTY —
The results of recent lead
mapping by Meigs water
providers are now available to the public.
March 9 was the deadline for all Ohio water
systems to submit maps
detailing known lead service lines, sampling sites,
and likely sources of lead
contaminants, as outlined
in state legislation passed
in 2016.
The mapping process
required system wide
testing for lead, and
representatives for each
Meigs water system said
their results conﬁrmed
no risk to consumers.
House Bill 512, enacted
in June 2016, mandated
all water providers in
Ohio conduct detailed
sampling for lead contamination and submit
maps to the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA).
According to Donald
Poole, general manager
See WATER | 3A

Gallia man recognized for helping
wounded patrolman in 1965

Two arrested
for breaking
and entering

Staff Report

“It had to be the good
Lord. I didn’t know
GALLIPOLIS — Fifty-two
years ago, on a midnight shift at anything… He told me
the Gallipolis Ohio State Patrol what to do evidently.”
Post on May 3, 1965, Patrolman
Clifford L. Russell was patrolling State Route 7 north of Gallipolis. He ran a vehicle check
of a car parked in the roadside
rest area north of town. A few
moments later, the dispatcher
advised Patrolman Russell the
car was involved in a missing
person case in Wood County,
where foul play was suspected.
A case investigation would later
reveal that the driver had killed
an elderly man near Bowling
Green and stole his car.
Upon approach of the car,
Patrolman Russell observed a
lone occupant seated on the
driver’s side of the front seat
lying across to the passenger

Staff Report

— Russell Fellure

side. As Patrolman Russell
opened the driver’s door of the
car, the occupant sat up and
ﬁred point blank. The bullets
struck Patrolman Russell in the
abdomen. Although seriously
wounded, Patrolman Russell
immediately returned ﬁre, striking the suspect.
Patrolman Russell realized
he needed medical assistance
because of his own gunshot
wounds. He made his way to
the edge of the roadway and
used his ﬂashlight to wave for
help. Moments later, a Gallia
County man delivering a load

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Church: 5A
Weather: 6A

From left, Col. Paul Pride of the Ohio State Highway Patrol, Russell Fellure of
Gallipolis with his certificate of appreciation, Clifford Russell, retired from OSHP.

of milk to Marietta recognized
Patrolman Russell’s alerts and
immediately stopped to render
assistance.
Patrolman Russell told the
man he had been shot. The
man offered to take him to the
hospital, but Patrolman Russell
adamantly declined because his
duty was to secure the scene
until backup ofﬁcers arrived
and he was properly relieved.

They would later learn that
the attacker died after Patrolman Russell ﬁred back in
self-defense. But at the time,
without knowing if the suspect
was alive or dead and without
regard to his own safety, the
man chose to stay with Patrolman Russell to assist with
securing the scene and provided
See YEARS | 4A

Jobless rates mixed
bag for Meigs, Gallia

B SPORTS
Sports: 1B
Classifieds: 4B-5B
C ALONG THE RIVER
Television: 3C
Comics: 5C

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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

OHIO VALLEY — It’s a mixed bag
when it comes to the latest unemployment rates for Meigs and Gallia counties.
The unemployment rate in Meigs
declined, dropping from 6.8 percent
in April to 6.5 percent in May. Meigs
also dropped from having the second
highest jobless rate to the third highest in the state, out of 88 counties.
In Gallia, the unemployment rate

inched up, going from 5.6 percent in
April to 5.7 percent in May. Gallia
was ranked 16th out of 88 counties
when it came to jobless rates across
Ohio.
Monroe County continued to have
the highest unemployment rate at 7.2
percent, while Mercer County had the
lowest, at 2.8 percent.
Ohio’s unemployment rate was
4.9 percent in May 2017, down from
5.0 percent in April 2017. Ohio’s
See JOBLESS | 3A

SPRINGFIELD
TOWNSHIP — Gallia
County Sheriff Deputies
received a call about a
breaking and entering in
progress at a residence
located at 5158 Ohio 160
in Springﬁeld Township
where two individuals
were arrested.
The ﬁrst deputy on
the scene reported that
the suspects ﬂed in a
teal sedan and possibly
headed toward Vinton.
Responding deputies
located the suspect’s
vehicle and initiated a
trafﬁc stop on Ohio 160
at Porter Road. Arrested
as a result of the investigation was Robert Peters,
26, of Limerick Road in
Jackson, and Judy Swim,
56, of Vinton, both on a
charge of breaking and
entering, a ﬁfth-degree
felony.
Gallia County Prosecutor Jason Holdren’s
Ofﬁce has been contacted
and is reviewing the case
for the possibility of additional charges.
“Once again, alert
citizens and a quick
response by deputies
resulted in the bad guys
going to jail and the
property being recovered,” said Gallia Sheriff
Matt Champlin. “I cannot emphasize enough
how pleased I am with
the support our ofﬁce is
receiving from the public.”

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Sunday, June 25, 2017

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
NANCY EVELYN CAMPBELL

MARGARET REBECCA BROZAK
GALLIPOLIS — Margaret
Rebecca Brozak,
88, of Gallipolis,
passed away on
Thursday, June
22, 2017 at her
home.
She was born June 6,
1929 in Red Jacket, WV,
daughter of the late Paris
Dink and Easter Melinda
White Gilbert. Margaret
was retired from Robbins-Myers.
Margaret Rebecca
Brozak, devoted and
beloved wife, mother,
grandmother and great
grandmother, was a precious treasure to her family, who rose to call her
blessed. She was such an
inspiration to so many;
they often looked up to
her because of her amazing strength, determination and faith.
Margaret passionately
served throughout her
life to the glory of her
Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ. Margaret was a
very active and devoted
member of her church,
Rodney Pike Church
of God. She attended
church faithfully. She
loved to worship, give
testimony, and pray with
others during their time
of need. She received the
Virtuous Woman of the
Year Award in 2001.
Margaret leaves behind
a wonderful legacy of
faithfulness to God and
love for life. She was
such a beautiful woman,
on both the inside and
out. She provided many
with wonderful, vivid
memories that will
remain with them forever.
Margaret loved to
garden, cook and take
care of her family. She
cherished the moments
when she was able to

open her home up
to family members,
travel and spend
time visiting with
family and friends.
She will be tremendously missed by
those who knew
and loved her.
Surviving are her
daughters and son, Sandra (Joey) Jean Wills of
Cheshire, Sue (Evan)
Grim-Langert of Adelphi,
Maryland, Brenda Gail
Henson of Gallipolis,
son, Robert Eugene Grim
of Gallipolis; six grandchildren, Pamela (Todd)
Casto of Gallipolis,
Danielle (Scott) Stonestreet of Oak Hill, WV,
Jessica (Tony) Ratliff of
Rodney, Suzanne (Mike)
Eachus of Gallipolis,
Tawyna (Jason) Metzger
of Circleville, Drew
(Samantha) Henson of
Columbus; four great
grandchildren, Kierstein
Casto of Dublin, Chayse
Casto of Columbus, Lauren Eachus of Gallipolis
and Josie Metzger of
Circleville.
Margaret in addition to
her parents, is preceded
in death by a son James
Ronald Grim, a grandson
Robert Adam Grim,
husband Andrew J.
Brozak, six siblings and
a son-in-law Jackie Lee
Henson.
Services will be 2 p.m.,
Sunday, June 25, 2017
at Rodney Pike Church
of God with Pastor
Ron Bynum ofﬁciating.
Friends may call from
1 -2 p.m. at the church
prior to the funeral.
Burial will follow in the
Memory Gardens, Athens, Ohio. Willis Funeral
Home is assisting the
family.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

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

CROWN CITY
— Nancy Evelyn
Campbell, age 92
of Crown City
(Mercerville Community), passed
away on Friday
June 23, 2017, at
Genesis Healthcare in
Circleville.
Born July 13, 1924 in
Gallia County, she was
the daughter of the late
Jasper and Myrta Fowler
Sheets. In addition to
her parents, she was preceded by her husband,
Garret E. Campbell and
by brothers, Kenneth
and Howard Sheets.
Nancy was a homemaker and farmed along
with her husband. She
was a loyal and faithful member of the Victory Baptist Church
for over 50 years. She
always enjoyed attending Mercerville High
School Alumni banquets.
She was a loving Wife,
Mother, Grandmother
and Friend, and was a
tireless hard worker and
an inspiration to all who
knew her.
Nancy is survived by,
a daughter, Elizabeth
Ann (Ralph) Fausnaugh
of Grove City, a son,
David (Lori) Campbell

of Kennebuck,
ME, three grandchildren, Kevin
Fausnaugh, Joan
Fausnaugh and
Tyler Campbell, a
great grandchild,
Julie Fausnaugh
and two step great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m., Tuesday June
27, 2017 at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral
Home with Pastor Richard Unroe ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in the
Campbell Family Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home on
Monday from 6-8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be:
Kevin Fausnaugh, Tyler
Campbell, Charlie Brumﬁeld, Jeff Fowler, Bill
Unroe, Richard Unroe
and Scott Hyden.
In lieu of ﬂowers, contributions can be made
to, The Alzheimer’s and
Dementia Association,
PO Box 96011 Washington DC. 20090-6011.
The family would like
everyone to remember
those who suffer from
dementia and their caregivers in your prayers.
An online guest registry is available at waughhalley-wood.com

LYNNETTE FAYE SHANTON
JACKSON — Lynnette
Faye Shanton, age 33,
passed away Friday June
23, 2017.
She was born to Dean
Kiesling and Dawna
Jo (Walker) Kiesling
in Hillsboro, Ohio on
November 19, 1983.
Lynnette attended Good
Shepherd Wesleyan
Church in Jackson, Ohio
and was a member of
the Ohio Education
Association. She worked
as a special education
teacher and worked for
Gallipolis City Schools
at Green Elementary.
She is survived by
her parents, Dean and
Dawna Jo Kiesling;
husband, Sheldon
Shanton; daughters,
Shaelyn and Rylynn;
brother, Jarrod (Sarah)
Kiesling; sister, Lydia
(Doug) Showell;
grandmothers, Dawn
Walker and Ruby
Kiesling; father-in-law
and mother-in-law,
Randy and Brenda
Shanton; sister-in-law,
Scottie Ann (Charles)
Jenkins; brother-inlaw, Shane Shanton;

also many nieces and
nephews.
Visitation will be
held on Monday June
26, 2017 from 2-4
p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at
the University of Rio
Grande Fine Arts Center
in Rio Grande, Ohio.
Funeral Services will
be on Tuesday June 27,
2017 at 1 p.m. also at
the University of Rio
Grande Fine Arts Center
with Pastors Rick and
Andrew Christman
ofﬁciating. Burial to
follow at the Tick Ridge
Cemetery in Jackson,
Ohio.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
contributions can be
made to the Christian
Life Academy Food
Program, 10595
Chillicothe Pike,
Jackson, Ohio 45640 or
to Samaritan’s Purse,
1180 Wesley Ave., Suite
200, Xenia, Ohio 45385.
Services are under
the direction of the
Mayhew-Brown Funeral
Home in Jackson.
Condolences may be
sent to: www.mayhewbrownfuneralhome.com

DEATH NOTICES

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

KENNEDY
VINTON — John W. Kennedy, 74, Vinton, Ohio
passed away unexpectedly Friday, June 23, 2017 at
his home.
Funeral services will be held 1 p.m., Thursday,
June 29, 2017 at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton Chapel with Full Military Rites conducted
by the Vinton American Legion Post 161. Family
and friends may call at the funeral home on
Wednesday, from 6 – 8 p.m.

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Celebrating over 25 Years in Meigs County

Millie’s
Restaurant

NUCKOLS
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Carlos “Bobby”
Nuckols, 89, of Huntington, W.Va., died Wednesday,
June 21, 2017 at Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Funeral services Tuesday, June 27, 2017
Ridgeview Community Bible Church, visitation will
be from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. at the church. Burial will
follow in Springhill Cemetery.
MCCOY
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Ronald Russell McCoy,
74, of Glenwood, W.Va., passed away June 22, 2017
at Piedmont on Peachtree Hospital in Atlanta, Ga.
A graveside service will be held Sunday June 25,
2017 at Moore’s Chapel Cemetery at 2 p.m. Deal
Funeral Home is serving the family.

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SPITZER
PROCTORVILLE — Robert M. Spitzer, 69, of
Proctorville, Ohio passed away Thursday June 22,
2017 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington,
W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Monday
June 26, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, by Minister Richard Harp. Burial will
follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, Ohio. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday June 25,
2017 at the funeral home.

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

Scholarship
applications available
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2017-18
Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are available for legal residents of the village
of Syracuse. Residents may pick up an application
from Gordon Fisher, 1402 Dusky St., Syracuse.
Applications must be returned by June 28. Legal
residents of Syracuse can qualify for scholarship
awards for a maximum of two years.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association is looking for candidates for
a scholarship to be given in early August. Applicants must be a college junior or senior education
major whose home residence is Meigs County. A
GPA of 2.5 or higher is also a requirement. Questions or applications can be obtained by calling
Charlene at 740-444-5498 or Becky at 740-9927096.

Middleport
Yard of the Week
MIDDLEPORT — A yard of the week program
is beginning in the Village of Middleport. Each
week, out of town judges will judge yards in the
village, with a yard of the week to be selected from
one of the following: yards, porches, entry ways,
planter boxes, or overall neatness. One “Yard of
the Week” will be selected each week. Only properties within the village limits will be judged.

Immunization
Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112
E. Memorial 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 statefunded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical
cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia vaccines
are also available. Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

GALLIA, MEIGS
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and The Daily Sentinel appreciate 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:
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com or TDSnews@
civitasmedia.com.

Sunday, June 25
CHESHIRE — The Bradbury-Jenkins
Reunion will be at the Old Kyger FWB Church,
located at 16 Stingy Creek Road. A pot-luck
dinner will be at 1 p.m.

Monday, June 26
ALBANY — Woodland Management Tour
and Cookout will be held at Jeff and Shirley
Latta’s property. Dinner begins at 6 p.m.
and the tour at 7 p.m. Jeff will guide us on a
wagon tour of his 96 acre farm highlighting
his woodland management activities including
crop tree release, grapevine and invasive
species control, tree planting, and erosion
control on access trails. Jeff will describe
how he makes a modest proﬁt by locating
log markets for his “cull trees” and from
his well-established ﬁrewood business. The
Latta property is located in Meigs County
near Albany. Sponsored by the Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest Group, this event
is free and open to all. Visit our web site at
seowig.weebly.com for directions and more
information, or email us at seowig1@gmail.
com.
POMEROY — The next regular meeting of
the Meigs County Agricultural Society will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the fair grounds.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the
Meigs County District Public Library Board
will be held 3:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

Tuesday, June 27
RIO GRANDE — The Records Commission
meeting of the Gallia-Vinton Educational
Service Center (ESC) Governing Board will
be held at 4:45 p.m. at the University of Rio
Grande, Wood Hall, Room 131. Call (740) 2450593 for further details.

Wednesday, June 28
POMEROY — Community Dinner will be
held at the Mulberry Community Center from
4:30-6 p.m. Menu will be hot dog with sauce,
baked beans, salad and dessert. The public is
invited to attend for food and fellowship.

�LOCAL

Jobless
From page 1A

nonagricultural wage
and salary employment
increased 6,300 over the
month, from a revised
5,509,100 in April to
5,515,400 in May 2017.
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in May
was 286,000, down 2,000
from 288,000 in April. The
number of unemployed
has increased by 4,000 in
the past 12 months from
282,000. The May unemployment rate for Ohio, at
4.9 percent, did not change
from May 2016.
The U.S. unemployment
rate for May 2017 was 4.3
percent, 0.1 percentage
points lower than in April
2017, and 0.4 percentage

points lower than in May
2016.
Ohio’s nonagricultural
wage and salary employment increased 6,300
over the month, from a
revised 5,509,100 in April
to 5,515,400 in May 2017,
according to the latest
business establishment
survey conducted by the
U.S. Department of Labor
(Bureau of Labor Statistics)
in cooperation with ODJFS.
Employment in goodsproducing industries, at
905,700, decreased 5,600
over the month as losses
in manufacturing (-3,600)
and construction (-2,100)
exceeded gains in mining
and logging (+100). The
private service-providing
sector, at 3,836,100,
increased 5,200. Employment gains in professional and business services

Sunday, June 25, 2017 3A

(+7,000), educational and
health services (+6,500),
other services (+2,900),
and ﬁnancial activities
(+1,900) surpassed losses
in leisure and hospitality
(-6,000), trade, transportation, and utilities (-5,900),
and information (-1,200).
Government employment,
at 773,600, increased
6,700 in state (+5,000),
local (+1,300), and federal
(+400) government.
From May 2016 to May
2017, nonagricultural wage
and salary employment
grew 41,100. Employment in goods-producing
industries increased 4,500.
Construction added 4,900
jobs. Manufacturing lost
400 jobs as losses in
durable goods (-1,800) surpassed gains in nondurable
goods (+1,400). Mining
and logging employment

Water

Lead mapping – operator response
Again, representatives for each
Meigs water system said their results
From page 1A
conﬁrmed no risk to consumers.
Several water systems are entirely
lead free on the service side, but others
of Tuppers Plains/Chester Water Disstill rely on lead lines or lines of an
trict, lead typically enters the water
supply through lead service lines or lead unknown composition.
All the water operators interviewed
soldering used on copper pipes.
maintained that with proper testing,
Lead service lines will only contamiremaining lead service lines and
nate water if damaged or improperly
maintained, but lead soldering is much soldering were not a risk to the general
more fragile and much of that soldering water supply, though residents of
is on the customer’s side of the system. individual houses with older “ﬁxtures”
The older the house, the greater like- could be at risk.
Racine Operator of Record John
lihood of having lead issues, said Poole.
Holman provided a summary in
Since the mid 80’s, Ohio laws have
Racine’s narrative: “Because it is
gradually reduced the acceptable lead
practically impossible to determine
content in construction.
Information regarding customer side the lead content of an installed ﬁxture,
ﬁtting, or pipe, it should be assumed
risk was included with the submitted
that the manufacture or installation
maps.
date is the primary indicator of the
Several Meigs water operators interviewed said any signiﬁcant contamina- lead content.
Therefore, the characteristics of
tion reaching the greater water supply
buildings and piping solder or ﬁxtures
would be detected in tri-annual testing
would be buildings in Ohio built prior
already mandated by the EPA.
to 1998 or that use plumbing material
Several operators opined the most
or solder manufactured before 1998…”
recent legislation was done in good
Holman said Racine Village’s
spirit, but primarily aimed at districts
water system is in very good shape,
“not doing their job.”
with all distribution lines converted
They applauded updated requireto polyethylene (a plastic used
ments for notifying at-risk customers
extensively in modern piping) in two
following sampling, and the requirephases, in 2010 and 2016.
ment to specify sampling sites.

did not change over the
year. The private serviceproviding sector added
38,700 jobs. Employment
gains in educational and
health services (+22,800),
professional and business
services (+11,300), ﬁnancial activities (+6,300),
leisure and hospitality
(+2,500), and information
(+900) exceeded losses in
trade, transportation, and
utilities (-5,100). Employment in other services
did not change over the
year. Government employment decreased 2,100 as
losses in state government
(-2,900) outweighed gains
in federal (+700) and local
(+100) government.
Information for this article provided by ODJFS.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing, email her at bsergent@
aimmediamidwest.com.

Holman is also responsible for
Syracuse Village’s system, but said
incomplete records indicate service
lines are probably lead. However,
testing during the mapping process
revealed no issues, and Syracuse’s next
sampling is scheduled for 2018.
Beyond digging up the water
system, there is no reliable way to
determine the materials used in a line’s
construction.
“If you could see underground, we’d
all be rich,” Holman said.
Middleport and Pomeroy water
systems are both operated by Joe
Woodall, who conﬁrmed lead service
lines were present in the historic
villages, but has a policy to replace any
lead lines or ﬁxtures discovered.
“When we ﬁnd it, it gets removed. If
it’s exposed, it gets removed,” he said.
The recent sampling also revealed no
signiﬁcant contamination, per Woodall.
Elbert Williams serves as the
operator for Leading Creek and
Rutland Village, and said neither
system had any lead lines, though
Leading Creek’s system had better
documentation stemming from

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- 27.57
Harley-Davidson
(NYSE) - 55.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) 86.86
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.60
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 53.46
Norfolk So (NYSE) 119.29
OVBC (NASDAQ) -

32.35
BBT (NYSE) - 43.17
Peoples (NASDAQ) 31.47
Pepsico (NYSE) 116.96
Premier (NASDAQ) 21.33
Rockwell (NYSE) 162.19
Rocky Brands
(NASDAQ) - 12.70
Royal Dutch Shell 52.61
Sears Holding
(NASDAQ) - 6.95
Wal-Mart (NYSE) 74.84
Wendy’s (NYSE) 15.36
WesBanco (NYSE) 38.09
Worthington (NYSE)
- 45.20
Daily stock reports
are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of
transactions June 23,
2017.

occasions where lines were replaced or
repaired.
Poole, of the Tuppers Plains/Chester
Water District, runs Meigs’s largest
water system and said the district
never utilized lead lines and has never
encountered any during maintenance.
“As far as our system, we have
zero lead lines,” in their 600 miles of
piping, he said.
The district is in the midst of an
extensive mapping and digitizing
project, part of which includes
identifying at-risk areas and residences
for contamination residential side
ﬁxtures.
The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) stated it received
maps from all 1851 water systems
on Ohio, including the seven systems
in Meigs County. The homepage for
EPA mapping is http://epa.ohio.gov/
ddagw/pws/leadandcopper/map.aspx.
All Ohio water system submissions
are available at http://epa.ohio.gov/
ddagw/pws/leadandcopper/map.aspx.
Michael Hart is a freelance writer for the Sunday
Times-Sentinel.

CELEBRATE
INDEPENDENCE DAY
in MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Tuesday, July 4th
DAVE DILES PARK &amp;
DOWNTOWN MIDDLEPORT
Schedule of Events:

4:15 - 7:45-Music with DJ Kip Grueser
5:30-Parade Line-up @ Dairy Queen
6:00-Parade
Don’t Forget our
PULLED-PUSHED-PEDALED &amp; PETS CATEGORY!!
GRAND MARSHAL
Henry Clatworthy: WWII Veteran
Following Parade: Flag Raising by Middleport
Feeney Bennett Post 128 @ Dave Diles Park

7:45-9:45-”Remember Then”
(an oldies but goodies band)

10:00-Fireworks

on the riverbank at the upper
end of Middleport

Sponsored by the Middleport Community Association,
the Village of Mason &amp; our generous sponsors;
both individuals &amp; businesses!
More information:740-992-5877
60725682

60725321

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�4A Sunday, June 25, 2017

credit on himself and
the entire State Highway
Patrol.”
Sgt. Russell recovered
From page 1A
from his wounds and
continued an honorable
career before retiring in
ﬁrst aid.
1991.
For his actions that
As far as the milk
May morning, Patrolman
truck driver who
Russell was awarded
stopped to help that
the Highway Patrol’s
morning, his name
highest award for
is Russell Fellure of
valor, the O.W. Merrell
Gallipolis. If Fellure
Award. The award was
had not answered the
presented by Colonel
Robert Chiaramonte and call for help that night,
the outcome may not
Mr. Merrell himself in
have been the same.
April 1966. The award
states in part, “Although He was thanked for his
assistance at the time by
seriously wounded,
mail, but upon learning
Patrolman Russell
about this story earlier
radioed for assistance
and steadfastly remained this year, Col. Paul Pride
decided to give him a
at the scene until other
more proper thank you –
ofﬁcers arrived. He
even 52 years later.
retained command and
A statement from
even directed others
the Patrol states it
in administering ﬁrst
“was deeply honored
aid to him for his own
critical injury. Patrolman to have Mr. Fellure at
the OSHP Training
Russell’s great courage
Academy, along with
and determination
his wife Judy, during an
exemplify the ﬁnest
annual retiree cookout”
in police tradition and
on Friday in Columbus.
reﬂect outstanding

Years

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LOCAL
At the cookout, Fellure
was given a certiﬁcate of
appreciation. It states:
On May 3, 1965,
Russell Fellure stopped
in a time of emergency
to help an Ohio State
Highway Patrolman.
The patrolman, Clifford
Russell, had been shot
by a motorist while
investigating a car
connected to a missing
person case. After
returning ﬁre at the
suspect and calling
for backup, Patrolman
Russell knew he needed
immediate help due to
his gunshot wounds. He
approached the nearby
roadway, waving his
arms and signaling for
help with a ﬂashlight.
Mr. Fellure didn’t
hesitate to answer the
call for help. Mr. Fellure
provided the necessary
ﬁrst aid and steadfastly
remained with
Patrolman Russell until
backup and emergency
services arrived. He
even kept watch over the
vehicle and the attacker
to ensure Patrolman
Russell was not in any
further danger.
Mr. Fellure, despite
personal risk, showed
great courage and
selﬂessness through
his willingness to
assist a patrolman in
a critical event. His
actions reﬂect well on
his personal courage
and character. For his
courage and actions,
Mr. Russell Fellure is
hereby awarded the
Ohio State Highway
Patrol’s Certiﬁcate of
Appreciation.
Prior to the certiﬁcate

being presented, Fellure
said he wasn’t aware
that he was sitting
across the aisle from the
man he helped all those
years ago. He said in
52 years, they had both
changed, and on that
fateful night when they
met that one time, he
wasn’t worried about
what Russell looked like,
just helping him. After
Fellure was called to the
stage so was Russell and
the two men knowingly
shared the same space
for the ﬁrst time since
that night on State
Route 7 in 1965.
“It was wonderful
meeting him,” Fellure
said. “Everything went
great and I couldn’t ask
for a better day. I’m glad
I got to meet him. His
wife congratulated me
and thanked me…hugged
me.”
Fellure later found
out, the patrolman had
a six-week old baby at
home at the time of the
shooting.
Fellure said he was
shocked to get the call
from the Patrol, stating
they wanted to honor
him. Fellure added, he
got a “nice letter” from
the law enforcement
organization 52 years
ago and, as he put it,
“that’s the last I’d heard
about it until now.”
In fact, as Fellure’s
wife Judy put it, aside
from family and close
friends, not many people
knew of her husband’s
role in the incident all
those years ago. At the
time, she said it didn’t
receive much newspaper
coverage in an age when

Sunday Times-Sentinel

there were no 24-hour
news channels or online
information sources.
She said her friend, Lt.
Col. Kevin Teaford of
the Patrol, had heard
about the story from
dispatcher Bill Brown.
“We haven’t thought
about it for years
and years,” Judy said,
stating at the time, her
husband was only 20
years old (he is now
73) and they were
not married yet, but
engaged back then. “I
just can’t believe they
did this after all these
years. If it hadn’t been
for Bill Brown getting
the information to
Kevin and remembering
it…they (the Patrol)
planned a beautiful day
for us. They all went out
of their way to make him
feel special.”
Part of making the
Fellure’s feel special, was
an escort by the Patrol
from their home in
Gallipolis to Columbus
and back. It was also a
day they got to share
with some of their
family members.
Though Fellure said
he will never forget
Friday’s special day, he
also will never forget
that night on State
Route 7. He said it was
around 2:30 or 3:30 a.m.
He was ﬁlling in for
his brother-in-law and
driving a milk truck,
something he normally
didn’t do. Judy is
convinced too much was
going on to chalk it all
up to coincidence. She
said it’s “one of those
God things. God put him
in the right place to help

For the best local news coverage, visit
mydailytribune.com

60725041

someone.”
The patrolman
deﬁnitely needed help,
with Fellure saying
when he drove up upon
the scene, Russell was
on his knees, waving
his ﬂashlight. Fellure
pulled over and went to
Russell.
“He said, ‘oh my God,
he shot me,’” Fellure
recalled, saying he
offered to take Russell
to the hospital but he
wouldn’t leave without
securing the scene and
the suspect who Fellure
said appeared mortally
wounded and had two
guns in the vehicle with
him. Fellure said as
instructed by Russell, he
helped him over to the
cruiser where Russell
radioed for help.
“He got down on this
knees and laid his head
in the driver’s seat and
radioed in for help,”
Fellure recalled.
Next, Fellure said he
asked if the patrolman
had a ﬁrst aid kit and
Russell indicated one
was in the trunk. He
then got a blanket and
wrapped it around
Russell.
“It had to be the
good Lord,” Fellure
guessed. “I didn’t know
anything…He told me
what to do evidently. I
wasn’t nervous at the
time but it shook me up
afterwards a little, but
I did what needed to be
done.”
Backup soon arrived
and Fellure was about
three hours late making
his milk delivery to
Marietta that night.
“I’d do it again,”
Fellure said.
Sgt. Tiffany L. Meeks of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol and Beth
Sergent, editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing, both contributed to this
article.

60720001

�CHURCH

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GOD’S KIDS KORNER

God cares for all of us
First, I have some fun
“body” facts for you this
week. There are 206
bones in the
adult body;
each of
our hearts
beats about
35 million
times a
year; and we
have almost
Ann
6 quarts of
Moody
Contributing blood inside
us. If one
columnist
laid out our
veins, arteries, and capillaries, they
would be about 60,000
miles long; that’s 2 ½
times around the earth!
The average hair grows
½ inch a month and
keeps growing for about
6 years. We sneeze at 100
miles per hour out our
nose. Kachoo! The human
body is certainly amazing, isn’t it? The Bible
tells us that God made
each one of us unique and
special, but with 7.4 billion people in the world
now, have you ever wondered if God really knows
about you personally?
With that many people
and the world as compli-

how many hairs are on
our head, wouldn’t that
show that He really
Matthew 10: 24-39
knows us each as one
of His children? I think
so! We are so lucky to
have a God that not only
cated as it is now, how
creates us but also takes
could He, you may ask?
care of us for our entire
Well, Matthew 10:29-31
life. He never leaves us
says, “Are not two sparor gives up on us – no
rows sold for a penny?
matter what! Don’t ever
Yet not one of them will
fall to the ground outside forget that our God is a
personal God who knows
your Father’s care. And
us inside and out – and
even the very hairs of
loves us unconditionally!
your head are all numbered. So don’t be afraid; He loves all His creation
you are worth more than and cares for the plants,
the animals, and for each
many sparrows.”
Does God think about of us too!
Let’s say a prayer
us – individually - each
together then. Dear
personally? Does He
Father God, Thank You
really care what’s going
so much for making us
on in our life or hear us
in Your image and then
when we talk to Him?
taking care of us for our
The Bible gives us that
entire lives. We know that
answer when Jesus said
those verses above to you if You love and take care
of even the birds, then
and me. Jesus wanted
You will love and take
us to never doubt and
care of us too – even to
ALWAYS know that we
the point of counting the
are each special and
hairs on our heads. What
loved and cared for by
a wonderful God You are!
our Father in heaven.
Believe that if God takes In Jesus ‘name, Amen.
care of the even little
birds in the air, He takes Ann Moody is pastor of Wilkesville
First Presbyterian Church.
care of us. If God knows

SCRIPTURE

A HUNGER FOR MORE

‘Cainitic spirituality’
giving. The fact is that the “what”
Many Christians today, it
is less important to God than the
seems to me, live a life of wan“how”. God would not overlook
dering. They wander from teachthe fact that Cain’s worship was
ing to teaching, apt to drift to
lukewarm at best nor does He do
what sounds most like what they
so now.
want to hear about God, the
Some might give this passage
world, and themselves. But they
in Genesis a shallow reading. To
also wander from experience to
Thom
experience, seeking something
Mollohan them it might suggest that God
that will satisfy them on the one Contributing favors sheep ranchers to dirt
farmers, but that would be as
hand without requiring full surcolumnist
silly as saying that the Lord likes
render on the other.
plumbers over restaurant managChristianity that is characterers (or restaurant managers over plumbized by shallow and self-absorbed worers), doctors over information technoloship and teaching is reminiscent of the
gists (or the reverse), and so on. But
spirituality of Cain in Genesis chapter
take it from a former career counselor,
4. Cain was a “religious” man. He worCain’s “vocation” was not the problem.
shiped, he tithed, he had what could
His problem was his heart’s attitude.
be called a “relationship with God”. In
No doubt you have heard the story
terms of practice, he is probably as good
an example in ancient times to a typical of Cain and Able. Cain became jealous of Abel’s favor with God. Basically,
Christian in our Post-Modern one.
Abel was getting something out of
Of course, Cain’s “practice” was the
his “religion” that Cain was not. Cain
outﬂow of his heart’s attitude. His
“practice” can hardly be said to be more started jealous and then became suspithan mediocre and was therefore unful- cious, imagining in his heart that Abel’s
wonderful spiritual life was all pretense
ﬁlling to himself and unremarkable to
its intended recipient, God. It had more and pride. Maybe, in a typically human
to do with ritual (religious habit devoid way of underestimating God, he even
wondered if Abel was doing something
of passion) than it did with genuine
down and dirty behind Cain’s back to
worship. It had more to do with the
appeasement of God (the minimum nec- get God to like him. Who knows? What
essary to “get God off his back”) than it we do know is that, as his bitterness fesdid with atonement (the bridging of the tered and grew in his heart, he moved
from being suspicious to injurious,
distance that his sinful nature created
exploding in an eruption of violence
with God). His worship had only to do
that left Abel dead. I doubt, by the way,
with obliging God (fulﬁlling his oblithat it was a murder of passion. My
gation) and nothing whatsoever with
inclination is that it was calculated…
pleasing His Creator.
although stupid – as if God wouldn’t
This lackluster façade of false spirinotice or hadn’t seen what had haptuality pales in comparison to a life
pened. Cain did not comprehend the
authentically given over to its Maker,
“ever-present” and “all-knowing” nature
that of Abel, Cain’s little brother. Abel,
of God. But God saw. He knew. Just as
seems to really “get it”, in contrast to
Cain, who quite clearly doesn’t “get it”. He sees and knows today what is going
on in our hearts and minds.
Abel’s life resonates with worship that
“Cainitic spirituality” abounds today
is a melody of genuine devotion and
but it still has a knack for being shortdelight in God. His heart’s desire is
sighted. Not only that, it leaves us
for more than a “touch of God” but of
thoroughly unsatisﬁed. Sadly, instead of
close and sustained communion with
Him. This attitude of worship outshines submitting to the grace that God gives
us through His Word in challenging our
Cain’s offering as brightly as does the
sun outdo the faint glow of an open cell attitudes as His Spirit strives to help
phone. Abel does not want to just fulﬁll us see the roadblocks that lie within us
(e.g., anger, see verses 6-10), we imaghis obligation, he craves to surpass it
ine that the fault lies with the one who
and please God with his focused and
is spiritually alive and passionate: he
lavish worship.
evidently has some sort of satisfaction
When God looked on Abel’s offerthat we crave for ourselves, a rich and
ing, the genuine nature of it was clear
passionate experience with God, so we
because Abel gave his best and “ﬁrst
become seeded with jealousy. Just as in
dibs” to God (see Genesis 4:4). Cain
Cain’s case, it produces in time a crop
presumably surmised that God was
of injury against our brothers through
not taking Cain’s offering at face value
unjust criticisms, disassociations, or
but was judging it based on what Abel
violence.
was giving (as if God preferred sirloin
This is not to say that we do not
steak to garden salad with scallions
and bacon bits – or vise-versa). It’s that engage error or attitude that grieves
God’s Spirit or that leads the unsusage-old habit of ours to assume that
pecting from the true Gospel of Jesus
estimations of our worth are derived
Christ. On the contrary!
from comparisons with others. But it
But churches often have a way trying
doesn’t work that way. Our value is not
relative to others; it is absolute and the to snuff out the “Abels” among them,
because their desire for “more of God”
Lord’s estimation of our worth is independent of how others are behaving,
See CAINITIC | 6A
what they can do, or what they may be

Sunday, June 25, 2017 5A

TEEN TESTIMONY

Rest – No exceptions!
commanding you to work. He
It’s an exception, I know, to
willingly provides rest to His
the “re—” rhythm. But certired children. God probably
tainly not to life.
isn’t shouting, “Do more.” No, if
If you desire to come closer
anything, He’s trying to say, “Do
to God, rest is unavoidable.
less.”
It puts a fresh spin on the
Actually, God doesn’t just
imagination. It creates a wider
recommend
you rest. It’s not a
perspective. Rest.
Isaiah
preference. Not an option. No
Rest ensures ample opportu- Pauley
nities. Collect your thoughts. Contributing choice. How do I know?
Another translation of Psalm
Enjoy nature. Drink some cof- columnist
23:2 says, “He maketh me to lie
fee. Find the energy required
down…” (KJV).
to continue. But most imporMaybe you think something like
tantly, rest is a taxi to the presence of
this: “God wants more from me. He’s
God.
always demanding this or that. More
Jesus often rests throughout scripBible reading. More prayer. More time
ture. Take a look.
“Early the next morning Jesus went with family. Yada, Yada.”
But according to Psalm 23:2, God’s
out to an isolated place…” (Luke
demanding you to do one task—rest.
4:42).
In the imagery of the Psalm, it’s lying
“But Jesus often withdrew to the
in the grass or walking alongside a
wilderness for prayer” (Luke 5:16).
“One day soon afterward Jesus went trickle of water. For you, it may be
taking a nap or sipping some tea.
up on a mountain to pray, and he
prayed to God all night” (Luke 6:12). Then again, I enjoy walking. But lay
“As they sailed across, Jesus settled in the grass?
Remember the lesson Jesus teaches
down for a nap…” (Luke 8:23).
us about rest? That’s right, prayer.
“One day Jesus left the crowds to
Five of the seven instances I share
pray alone. Only his disciples were
involve prayer. The power of His rest
with him…” (Luke 9:18).
isn’t as much about a place as it is
“About eight days later Jesus took
Peter, John, and James up on a moun- about the presence of His Father.
Often times, however, routines
tain to pray” (Luke 9:28).
develop. Methods are formed. People
“Once Jesus was in a certain place
prefer to rest differently. That’s cool.
praying. As he ﬁnished, one of his
disciples came to him and said, ‘Lord, Just don’t forget to rest with God.
Don’t get so caught up in a mornteach us to pray, just as John taught
ing Bible study that you forget the
his disciples’” (Luke 11:1).
purpose. Refuse to live a checklist.
Is it just me, or does Jesus pray
It’s not about going through motions.
almost every time He rests? I mean,
God isn’t about to smack you because
no wonder the disciples are so curious. Jesus shows us a valuable lesson: you missed Sunday School last week.
rest never excludes God. If you desire Many routines are good. Bible readreal rest, deliberately seek the arms of ings are fantastic. Sunday School
rocks. But it’s not about those things.
your Father.
It’s about Jesus. Just Jesus.
All too often, however, I ﬁll my
Jesus himself claims, “Are you
weariness with more self-discipline.
tired? Worn out? Burned out on reliI believe God wants me to try harder
gion? Come to me. Get away with me
and do more. If I just push a little
harder, I ponder, things will work out. and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show
you how to take a real rest…” (MatBut Jesus shows me otherwise.
thew 11:28-30 MSG). No exceptions!
Let’s focus on the second verse of
Psalm 23. It reads, “He lets me rest in
Isaiah Pauley will be a senior at Wahama High School
green meadows; he leads me beside
this fall. His blogs and videos can be found at www.
peaceful streams” (NLT).
crosswordsblog.weebly.com
Your heavenly Father isn’t always

Trouble? There is help!
tive helpings from the Lord.
If your experience is like
But, there is a second qualimine, it seems that trouble
ﬁer for receiving help from the
of one variety or another is
Lord that the Psalmist came to
often manifested, and we are
realize. Not only should we turn
left to deal with it. That is
to God, but it is right and good
why the Word of God is such
to commit ourselves to God.
a valuable asset as a source of
He references commitment to
encouragement and instrucRev. Ron
God as a part of the process for
tion.
Branch
For example, the Psalmist
Contributing gaining help when he said, “For
thou, O God, have heart my
lamented that, because of
columnist
vows.” Obviously, “vows” infer
his particular problems, his
commitment. He was careful
heart was overwhelmed. Do
not to bargain with God, but rather to
you ever feel as though your heart
make commitment to God.
is overwhelmed with the burdens of
For the most part, people do not
troubles?
Despite the exasperation instigated have a problem in turning to God for
help. It is the common response in the
by great need, he knew that, though
experiences of people during times of
there was trouble, there was help.
their particular trouble. But, so often
It encouraged him to know it, and
the good thing of reciprocating God’s
it encourages us, too. Actually, such
good help with commitment is not
encouragement is qualiﬁed by two
proactively enacted. Herein lies a conpersonal responses, which lead us
into the help. Consider the insight the sideration that must be accepted. The
good of God is sustained with faithful
Psalmist gained about it, and how in
commitment to God. The Psalmist as
turn it helps us.
much as clariﬁed it when he wrote,
The ﬁrst insight is really quite
simple. There is help for troubles that “You have given to me the heritage of
those that fear you name.” In other
seem to overwhelm us when we turn
words, it was only after having turned
to God. The fact that he knew there
to God and after having committed to
was help only as he turned to God is
evident when he declared, “When my God that he began to experience the
good of God like many others experiheart is overwhelmed lead me to the
rock that is higher than I.” The “rock” enced.
The question then becomes what
is a deﬁnite reference to the Lord.
So, by turning to God for help, the commitments does he suggest for
himself and ultimately for us? One
Psalmist realized that he could be
obvious commitment is found in the
lifted above the consequences of his
necessity of being faithful to worship
problems. Therein lay the help. Only
by standing on the wisdom and solu- in the House of God. He is rather adamant about it, for he made the comtions of God can anyone ever truly
possess the proper angle of advantage mitment, “I will abide in you taberfor strength and stability to overcome nacle for ever…I will abide before God
forever.” We need to be mindful to
being overwhelmed.
worship God in a committed fashion,
It is noted about sparrows that,
but we also need to be mindful that
when their nest is torn down, it will
His gracious help is distinctly tied to
rebuild in the same location. But, if
faithful worship, according to many
the nest is torn down a second time,
instinct dictates that there is a neces- Scriptures.
Another commitment mentioned
sity to build at a higher location to get
out of the reach of what is tearing up has to do in terms of “mercy and
truth” prepared by God for him.
its nest. Height is the key to safety.
The same is true for us as indicated Essentially, it has to do with obedience to the revealed will of God for
by the Psalmist. Spiritual height is
his life.
the key to safety, security, and soluNonetheless, in the end, we just
tions when troubles assail us. In
need to remember that, when there is
comparison, how many times have
trouble, there is, oh, most certainly,
you attempted to rebuild the aims,
goals, or expectations of your life only help.
to have them repeatedly torn down?
The Rev. Ron Branch is pastor of Faith Baptist
Determine to build higher on the
Church in Mason, W.Va.
principles, exhortations, and instruc-

�CHURCH

6A Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES

Finding treasures

In like-manner,
and steal. For where
Jesus advised
your treasure is,
one young man,
there your heart will
““If you would be
be also.” (Matthew
There is a certain
perfect, go, sell
6:19-21; ESV)
theme we ﬁnd within
what you possess
Jesus knew that
the preaching of Jesus:
and give to the
not everyone would
a theme of treasures of
poor, and you will
take His advise. He
the heart. Just about
Jonathan spoke of a foolish
have treasure in
everyone has such treaheaven; and come, McAnulty wealthy farmer,
sures. For some it is
property and possessions. follow me.” (Mat- Contributing who died lost, and
whose soul was
For some it is family and thew 19:21; ESV) columnist
Elsewhere,
called to judgment.
friends. For others, it
speaking more generally
Jesus said concerning
might be some favorite
activity or pastime. Jesus to the population at large, the matter, “So is the
He told us, “Do not lay up one who lays up treasure
had quite a bit to say
for yourselves treasures
for himself and is not
about such treasures of
on earth, where moth and rich toward God.” (Luke
the heart in relationship
rust destroy and where
12:21; ESV)
to Christianity and the
thieves break in and steal,
Are we willing to ask
church.
ourselves how well we are
Jesus likened the King- but lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven,
applying the teachings of
dom of God to a great
Christ to our own selves?
treasure hidden in a ﬁeld, where neither moth nor
rust destroys and where
What are those things we
worth selling everything
thieves do not break in
are each individually treafor. (cf. Matthew 13:44)
suring? The things Christ
teaches us to treasure are
not the same things that
the world at large would
have us treasure.
Help Right Here At Home
The Bible teaches:
• Mesothelioma
“Therefore, if anyone is
in Christ, he is a new cre• Lung Cancer
ation. The old has passed
away; behold, the new has
• Wrongful Death
come.” (2 Corinthians

Christopher E. Tenoglia

Cainitic

But it at last came to nothing
when the destruction of the great
Flood swept over the earth after
a lengthy process of increasing
immorality, anarchy, and futility.
But another son was born to
Adam and Eve, trumping the evil
that Cain intended when he killed
Abel. Through Seth the Abelitic
spirit of worship was preserved
even through the cataclysm of
the Great Flood of Noah’s day. It
was the descendants of Seth who
shone in a spiritually dark society
(the civilization of Cain’s lineage)
by “calling on the name of the
Lord” (see verse 26), proclaiming
Him even though those around
them had descended into wickedness and perversion.
What kind of Christian do you
want to be? A “Cainitic Christian” or an “Abelitic Christian”?
One who is lukewarm and does

From page 5A

and their generous spirit towards
the Lord makes others feel uncomfortable with their own ho-hum
religious life. Folks often despise
being reminded that there may be
something missing that they really
do want, but to possess must be
willing to give up everything.
In the end, of course, God deals
with Cain’s murder of his brother
by sending him away. Cain ventures out east of the garden of
Eden to the land of Nod (“Nod”
means wandering).
In a way, Christians today are
dwelling in their own “Land of
Nod.” In ancient times, Cain
and his descendants built a great
civilization. It grew and spread
and seemed to be ﬂourishing.

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Flexible Schedule
Qualifications:

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Phone: 740-446-2206

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

60725219

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Dependable Transportation
Submit to background &amp; Drug Testing
DME experience preferred

61°

74°

72°

Sunshine mixing with clouds today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 78° / Low 53°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

86°
66°
85°
63°
100° in 1930
47° in 1918

Precipitation

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

2.66
4.77
3.08
22.98
21.16

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:05 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
7:51 a.m.
10:28 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jun 30

Jul 8

Last

Jul 16

New

Jul 23

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
1:11a
2:17a
3:21a
4:21a
5:16a
6:06a
6:51a

Minor
7:26a
8:31a
9:34a
10:34a
11:28a
12:17p
12:40a

Major
1:41p
2:46p
3:48p
4:47p
5:40p
6:29p
7:13p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
78/53

Moderate

High

Very High

Minor
7:56p
9:00p
10:02p
10:59p
11:52p
---1:02p

WEATHER HISTORY
On June 25, 1988, extreme heat
baked the Ohio Valley and lower
Great Lakes region. Cleveland, Ohio,
hit 104 degrees, and Ft. Wayne,
Ind., rose to 106 -- both record high
temperatures for these cities.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
12.39
16.94
21.69
12.45
12.85
25.56
13.14
26.42
34.63
12.81
19.60
33.20
20.50

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.10
-0.23
-0.34
-0.10
-0.21
-0.01
+0.21
-0.96
-0.55
-0.25
-1.90
-1.30
-1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

87°
68°

Partly sunny and
warmer

Humid with more
clouds than sun

Marietta
73/52
Belpre
74/52

Athens
76/51

St. Marys
75/53

Parkersburg
76/54

Coolville
75/51

Elizabeth
76/52

Spencer
76/53

Buffalo
78/53
Milton
78/53

Clendenin
78/54

St. Albans
78/55

Huntington
78/55

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
93/61
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
69/57
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
86/66
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

84°
71°
Mostly cloudy with
t-storms possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
78/54

Ashland
77/54
Grayson
78/54

FRIDAY

93°
65°

Wilkesville
77/51
POMEROY
Jackson
77/52
78/52
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
77/53
78/53
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
74/54
GALLIPOLIS
78/53
78/53
78/53

South Shore Greenup
78/54
77/52

31
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
78/54

82°
60°

Murray City
76/51

McArthur
76/51

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 841

Logan
76/52

Thom Mollohan and his family have ministered
in southern Ohio the past 22 years. He is the
author of The Fairy Tale Parables, Crimson
Harvest, and A Heart at Home with God. He blogs
at “unfurledsails.wordpress.com”. Pastor Thom
leads Pathway Community Church and may be
reached for comments or questions by email at
pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com.

THURSDAY

Variable clouds with a Pleasant and warmer
shower; cool
with sunshine

Adelphi
77/53
Chillicothe
77/54

WEDNESDAY

74°
51°

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

Waverly
78/53

Pollen: 10

Low

MOON PHASES

TUESDAY

Cool with partial
sunshine

0

Primary: cladosporium

Mon.
6:05 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
8:59 a.m.
11:15 p.m.

MONDAY

75°
52°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

only what is minimally necessary
or one who lavishes upon God
the best he has to offer? One who
contents himself with the meager
fruit of a nominal Christian life or
one who hungers for more of God
in this life?
In a world full of “Cains,” God
is looking for more “Abels.” It
is time to leave the Land of Nod
and embark upon the greatest
adventure of all. Open your heart
to God, give Him your life, and
let Him make Himself known
to you as you follow His Son…
in Spirit and in truth (see John
4:23-24).

Charleston
77/55

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
64/43

Billings
80/53

Montreal
72/55
Minneapolis
67/52
Chicago
71/54

Denver
79/54

Toronto
69/52
Detroit
72/54

New York
82/65
Washington
86/65

Kansas City
78/56

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
87/65/t
66/50/s
82/62/pc
81/64/s
84/60/s
80/53/s
97/66/s
83/63/s
77/55/s
85/62/pc
71/49/pc
71/54/s
77/53/s
75/57/pc
75/55/pc
85/70/pc
79/54/pc
76/54/pc
72/54/pc
86/75/pc
88/73/t
74/53/s
78/56/pc
113/87/s
83/63/s
86/66/pc
82/57/s
91/79/pc
67/52/pc
83/58/s
85/73/t
82/65/s
83/63/pc
89/73/t
85/64/s
114/89/s
74/53/s
80/58/s
86/62/pc
86/60/s
81/59/s
95/64/s
69/57/pc
93/61/s
86/65/s

Hi/Lo/W
87/66/t
59/51/r
83/63/s
78/63/s
80/58/s
92/63/s
98/66/s
79/60/pc
76/53/s
84/62/s
80/52/s
70/52/pc
72/53/pc
71/55/pc
72/52/pc
85/73/pc
85/61/s
76/51/pc
70/50/sh
87/75/pc
88/73/t
71/51/pc
70/54/pc
109/80/s
83/61/pc
86/64/pc
77/57/pc
90/78/pc
72/52/pc
80/59/pc
84/73/t
79/62/pc
85/65/pc
88/72/t
80/60/pc
112/85/s
70/51/pc
76/55/pc
83/62/s
82/61/s
76/58/pc
101/71/s
69/57/s
79/54/pc
81/63/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
95/70

Chihuahua
97/68

High
Low

Atlanta
82/62

Global

Houston
88/73

Monterrey
93/73

126° in Death Valley, CA
25° in West Yellowstone, MT

High
126° in Death Valley, USA
Low -9° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
91/79

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.
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taught us to seek after an
eternal inheritance, kept
in heaven for the faithful
and the saved. He taught
that the spiritual family
to be found in the church
was of more value and
worth than the physical
family we experienced on
earth (cf. Mathew 12:50;
19:29) (Though in this
regard, the best, the Bible
teaches, is when physical
and spiritual family are
one and the same – cf.
Ephesians 6:1-4; 3 John
1:4) He taught us that
there was no lasting value
to our physical blessings,
except and in so far as we
used them to obtain spiritual blessings through
service to God.
If you would like to
learn more about the
treasures Christ truly
wants to give you, the
church of Christ invites
you to study and worship
with us at 234 Chapel
Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Likewise, if you have any
questions, please share
them with us through
our website chapelhillchurchofchrist.org.

60717682

Attorney at Law

set their mind on earthly
treasures. It is not surprising that such preaching is often quite popular.
But it is, most assuredly, not what Christ
taught. Jesus never
encouraged His disciples
to pray for more money,
and He certainly never
taught them that God
wanted them to have
a bigger house in this
world. The Bible has
a word to describe the
thinking of those who are
focused on gaining worldly treasures. That word is
“covetousness.” Of such
thinking, Jesus warned to
be on our guard against
covetousness, and His
apostle wrote to the
church, teaching that
covetousness was merely
another form of idolatry
(cf. Luke 12:15; Colossians 3:5)
Rather than urging
men to focus on treasures
here on earth, Jesus
emphasized a new set of
treasures. He emphasized
a proper relationship with
God, based on righteousness, love, and mercy. He

5:17; ESV) The NKJV
renders it “behold, all
things are new.” We are
further taught, not to be
conformed to this world,
but be transformed by the
renewing of our mind.
(cf. Romans 12:2) If we,
after coming to Christ,
are still treasuring all
the same old things we
treasured before we came
to Christ, what exactly
is new? If our thinking, post-Christ, is still
focused on the very same
goals we were focused on
pre-Christ, then where is
the transformation of the
mind? Are we deceiving
ourselves into thinking
that Christ wants us craving worldly treasures and
will bless us as we ignore
His clear instructions?
There are admittedly,
some individuals, preachers even, who teach that
God wants you to treasure worldly things. They
advocate a “gospel” of
wealth and health. They
encourage their followers
to pray for more money,
to visualize themselves
in larger houses, and to

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lakers
get
Lonzo
INSIDE s 5B
#?8.+CM��?8/� M� ���s�#/-&gt;398��

76ers take Fultz, Lakers grab Ball to start draft

Matt Slocum | AP

Philadelphia 76ers’ draft pick Markelle Fultz, left, speaks during a news
conference with team president Bryan Colangelo at the team’s NBA basketball
training complex Friday in Camden, NJ.

D;M�OEHA��7F��Å�
Markelle Fultz, Lonzo Ball and
the future of the NBA arrived
Thursday night.
Jimmy Butler and Tom
Thibodeau hope to rekindle
their past.
Fultz and Ball led a recordsetting run of one-and-dones in
the NBA draft, which received
a jolt early in the ﬁrst round
when the Chicago Bulls traded
Butler to the Minnesota Timberwolves.
The Philadelphia 76ers took
Fultz with the No. 1 pick and
the Lakers followed by taking
Ball, with the point guards
from the Pac-12 Conference
beginning a run of seven
straight freshmen. Nine of the
ﬁrst 10 selections played just
one season of college ball.
“Right now it’s unbelievable

really,” Fultz said. “I mean, say
you want to do something, and
to go out and do it is unbelievable.”
Thibodeau has enough young
players in Minnesota and wanted a veteran like he had during
his successful run coaching the
Bulls. He found one in Butler,
m^e�j^[�Mebl[i�WYgk_h[Z�Wbed]�
with the 16th overall pick for
PWY^�BWL_d["�Ah_i�:kdd�WdZ�
the No. 7 pick, which ended up
being — what else? — another
freshman, Arizona’s Lauri
Markkanen.
M^_b[�j^Wj�mWi�X[_d]�Yecpleted, the draft got off to a
familiar start with the same
top-four picks as last year: Philadelphia, the Lakers, Boston
and Phoenix.
Fultz averaged 23.2 points
last season, tops among fresh-

men, and added 5.9 assists
and 5.7 rebounds per game,
the only Division I player to
reach those stats. He walked
across the stage Thursday
night at Barclays Center wearing orange sneakers made of
basketballs .
The 76ers had the No. 1 pick
for the second straight year
after trading with the Boston
Celtics on Monday. Now they
add Fultz to a promising young
core that includes Rookie of
j^[�O[Wh�ÒdWb_iji�@e[b�;cX__Z�
and Dario Saric, plus Ben Simmons, the top pick from last
year who sat out all season
with a foot injury.
Fultz, who played just 25
games in college, said it was
always his dream to be the top
See DRAFT | 2B

The Barn
Swallows of
Southeast Ohio
Okay, while it doesn’t have the same ring to it
as the “Swallows of Capistrano,” every spring I
look forward to the return of the Barn Swallows to
southeastern Ohio.
The Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica) is a familiar spring and summer
visitor to not just our area but to
almost the entire United States, and
much of Canada. In our hemisphere
it is a great migrator, spending the
winters in Central America or South
America, and the summers in North
In the
America.
Open
They usually start to arrive in
Jim
our parts sometime in April, and
Freeman
by October most of them are gone.
Migration has already peaked here,
but now the parents are busy with
young.
The Barn Swallow is a beautiful, small bird, with
an almost metallic dark-blue upper body, with a
creamy “buff” colored breast and orange or rusty
colored throat and forehead. They have tiny black
bills and display swept wings and deeply forked,
v-shaped tails when in ﬂight.
And talk about masterful ﬂyers!
Usually when I am mowing or working with the
tractor in the summertime I am surrounded by a
horde of swallows swooping and diving all around
me, feasting on the insects that are getting kicked
up by the tractor. I sometimes refer to the old
International tractor as the “Swallow Feeder.”
I am always amazed at how fast and graceful
they are, how low they can ﬂy over the top of the
ground, or inches above water, and then turn on a
dime. They ﬂy so close to me on the tractor that
I used to occasionally duck, but despite all of the
apparent close calls I have never had one actually
collide with me.
Smart cattlemen welcome Barn Swallows, which
are beneﬁcial birds that consume large numbers of
ﬂying insects. However, in an odd sort of “friendly
ﬁre,” they will eat the dragonﬂies that also eat
mosquitoes. At my house the Barn Swallows make
up the “day shift” insect eaters, with bats taking
the night shift. The dragonﬂies take over the day
shift starting around September.
Barn Swallows are very vocal on the wing; when
they are swarming about their twittering or chattering is almost constant. You won’t see them milling about or walking around much on the ground,
but they do seem to love to sit out on the driveway
or the concrete pad in front of the barn, and on
utility lines. I used to have my treadmill in front
of the upstairs garage window and oftentimes
they would be lined up on the powerline at my eye
level, apparently watching as I sweated away on
the dreadmill.
Did you know that Barn Swallows are the most
common species of swallow in the world? The can
be found almost everywhere except in the highest
mountains or driest deserts. You can’t attract them
with feeders, but if you have suitable nesting sites
and open ﬁelds or water around, they are almost
certain to ﬁnd you.
They differ from the also-familiar Tree Swallows
in that Tree Swallows are non-communal cavity
nesters. Although the Tree Swallow has a dark,
iridescent blue back, its breast and front are pure
white. They also differ from the Cliff Swallow (of
San Juan Capistrano fame) which has a bright
white spot on its forehead.
Did you also know that Barn Swallows, in the
ZWoi�X[\eh[�;khef[Wd�i[jjb[c[dj"�ki[Z�je�cWa[�
See IM7BBEMI | 2B

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Jessica Cook competes in the Division III girls state cross country race at National Trail Raceway in Hebron, Ohio.

OVP Top 5 stories approaching
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The seasons come and
go. The memories made
during those spans never
disappear.
It was an intriguing
2016-17 sports year
within the Ohio Valley
Publishing area, one that
saw numerous accomplishments come to each
of the 10 high schools
located within Mason,
Meigs and Gallia counties.
There were ups and
there were downs to go
along with feats both
large and small. But, no
matter how tough the
adversity, the athletes
never gave up — which
in turn made for some
really good stories over
the course of the last 10
months.
Being able to look back
on the highlights from
the 2016-17 high school
sports year, ﬁve things
really stuck out in the tricounty area. And, more
importantly, each county
was represented in some
fashion in those ﬁve
selections.
So, starting Tuesday,
the OVP Top 5 Stories of
2016-17 begins a countdown from ﬁve to one —
with the story of the year
scheduled to run in the
weekend sports editions

of the Point Pleasant
Register and the Sunday
Times-Sentinel.
There were plenty of
options in getting the list
down to ﬁve stories, but
the ones that didn’t make
the cut were no less
important. In actuality,
the quintet that did make
the grade simply had
more going on around
them and had a greater
impact at the time.
The tri-county area
accounted for a total
of 60 league championships and almost half as
many postseason titles,
whether it be as a team
or as individuals at the
sectional, district and
regional levels.
The OVP area also
added Marshall football
to its coverage family
this past fall, which led
to a handful of positive
moments to go along
with an otherwise disappointing 3-9 campaign.
In addition, the tricounty area produced
30 student-athletes that
will be continuing their
careers at the collegiate
level, including a trio of
NCAA Division I signees
in Meigs’ Trae Hood
(Campbell wrestling),
Point Pleasant’s Seth
Stewart (Louisiana
State football) and
Point Pleasant’s Aislyn
Hayman (Marshall track

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Grant Safford (37) busts through a hole
during a first half carry against Parkersburg South on September
30, 2016, at OVB Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

and ﬁeld).
Next week’s list, however, is next week. Here’s
a look at some of the
other great accomplishments from the OVP
area during the 2016-17
school year.
Fall
�Ed[�_dZ_l_ZkWb�WdZ�
two teams qualiﬁed for
the district golf tournament in their respective
divisions. Gallia Academy advanced out of its
ninth straight sectional,
while Levi Chapman
appeared in his second
straight district tourna-

ment for Meigs. The
Southern boys also qualiﬁed for the D-3 district
meet.
�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co�med�
the Ohio Valley Conference title outright in
both golf and volleyball,
while the Meigs golf
team went unbeaten in
six matches en route to
winning the TVC Ohio
crown.
�J^[�;Wij[hd�]_hbi�
cross country team won
its sixth straight TVC
Hocking title and also
won the D-3 district title
See IJEH?;I | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, June 25, 2017

Swallows
From page 1B

their nests in caves and cliff cavities, but
now almost exclusively rely on human-built
structures for nesting? The name Barn
Swallow is well-deserved; while many bird and
animal species would do just ﬁne without us,
the barn swallows deﬁnitely beneﬁt from our
presence.
At our house the Barn Swallows used to nest
in the old barn and milking parlor, now they
nest under the overhang or underneath the old
garage. Their nests are made with mud mixed
with grass and other materials. Peak breeding
occurs from May to August, and the typical
clutch of 4 to 6 eggs hatches after 13-15 days
of incubation. The young birds ﬂedge about 20
days after hatching.
Sometimes Barn Swallows will get help
feeding their nestlings from older siblings
from previous clutches, or even from unrelated
juveniles, but male swallows have to protect
their nests from single male Barn Swallows
who may kill the nestlings to break up the
breeding pair. Barn Swallows will mob
intruders to their nest sites, including cats,
snakes, other birds and people.
So enjoy watching these talented aerobatics
while they are here, because in a few short
months they will be taking their air show back
south.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife specialist for the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District. He can be contacted weekdays at 740-9924282 or at jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Stone leads Riverside seniors
man teams and two threesomes.
The ﬁrst place score of
11-under par 59 was ﬁred by the
MASON, W.Va. — Carl Stone,
three separate groups.
of Spencer, has all but wrapped
The winning teams were the
up the championship in the ﬁrst
half of the 2017 Senior Men’s Golf \ekhiec[�e\�&gt;Whho�Gk[[d"�He][h�
Fkjd[o"�@[\\�&gt;kXXWhZ�WdZ�9Whb�
League at Riverside Golf Club,
Stone, the group of Bill Rice,
with just one week to play.
Randall Thornhill, Jim Blake and
Through 11 weeks of play,
John Williams, and the quartet of
Stone’s total of 175 points, leads
Siebert Belcher, Jim Cunningham,
Ykhh[dj�hkdd[h#kf�9^Whb_[�&gt;WhH_Ya�&gt;ebbWdZ�WdZ�9b_\\�H_Y[$
graves by 26 points.
The closest to the pin winners
On Tuesday, a season-high of 82
players were divided into 19 four- were Lantz Repp on the ninth

Staff Report

hole and John Williams on No.
14.
After the ﬁrst half concludes,
there will be a 13-week second
half to the ﬁnish the season.
The current top-10 standings
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F[Wojj��'')$&amp;�$

Blankenship maintains lead of Cliffside seniors
With 13 weeks remaining, a total
of 64 players are in contention for
the championship.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — John
On Tuesday, a total of 42
Blankenship aced the 13th hole
players were on hand and divided
and kept his lead, through nine
weeks of play in the 2017 Senior into three divisions with a
Men’s Golf League at the Cliffside maximum of 14 points available.
The league uses a stoke play
Golf Course.
Blankenship’s total of 89, leads format, with handicap being
determined by senior league play
i[YedZ�fbWY[�;hd_[�IWned�Xo�
three, Ron Jackson by four, Mike only. All ties are broken by the
lowest score on the preceding
Shaffer by ﬁve, Clarence Tucker
handicap holes.
Xo�i_n�WdZ�B[[�&gt;Whh_i�Xo�i[l[d$�

Staff Report

The ﬁrst division was won by
Ron Jackson, followed by Chuck
Marshall and Mike Shaffer. All
three players carded 68.
Division II was won by
Clarence Tucker with a 62,
followed by Tom Nunnery
WdZ�Hed�;bb_i"�Xej^�e\�m^ec�
ﬁred 63.
With a score of 66, Tom
Meadows won Division III by two
i^eji�el[h�Xej^�;hd_[�IWned�WdZ�
Clyde Jarvis.

Draft
From page 1B

pick and wasn’t bothered that Boston traded
the chance to take him.
“In high school I told my trainer Keith I
wanted to be the No. 1 player in the country
and the No. 1 draft pick, so it was a goal I set
out there, and that’s what I was striving for,”
Fultz said.
Ball then got the wish he and his father,
LaVar, wanted all along by staying in Los
Angeles, where he starred last season at
UCLA. LaVar Ball had said his son would
only play for the Lakers, and it was clear that
would happen when Lonzo got a phone call
with the Lakers on the clock .
As Lonzo walked on stage to meet
Commissioner Adam Silver and put on a
purple Lakers hat, LaVar put on a gold and
purple Big Baller Brand hat, the company he
has started.
“Tonight was supposed to be a good night.
Deﬁnitely was, and now I’m just focused on
playing,” Lonzo Ball said. “Just want to get on
the court.”
The Celtics then took Duke’s Jayson Tatum
at No. 3 after moving down two spots in the
trade with Philadelphia, drawing cheers from
a large contingent of their fans at Barclays
Center wearing green. The Suns took Josh
Jackson of Kansas, the Sacramento Kings took
Kentucky guard De’Aaron Fox at No. 5 and the
run of freshmen continued when the Orlando
Magic selected Jonathan Isaac.
Fox ended up in the same state as Ball, who
he outplayed when Kentucky ousted UCLA in
the NCAA Tournament.
“I mean, it’s extremely gratifying for me to
be in that top ﬁve, and we already knew that
this was going to be a pretty tough draft and it
was pretty loaded at the point guard position,
and for me to be up there is just a blessing,”
Fox said.
Silver has talked about changing the NBA’s
limit, saying the current rule that Americanborn players must be 19 and a year out of
high school, but teams seem just ﬁne with the
current system. The run of freshmen bettered
the 2014 record of four straight ﬁrst-year
players to start the draft, ﬁnally ending when
the New York Knicks took French guard Frank
Ntilikina at No. 8 .
The top 10 was rounded out with two more
freshmen: Dennis Smith Jr. of North Carolina
State to Dallas at No. 9, and Gonzaga’s Zach
Collins at No. 10 with the Kings’ second pick,
which was later dealt to Portland for a pair
of picks. Last year’s record of 14 freshmen
fell when Brooklyn grabbed Jarrett Allen
from Texas at No. 22, and there were 16 total
among the 30 ﬁrst-round picks — and just two
seniors.
NBA champion Golden State and
Cleveland didn’t have a pick in the tworound draft, though the Warriors acquired
the rights to second-rounder Jordan Bell from
Chicago.
There have been a ﬂurry of trades since the
Warriors beat the Cavaliers in the NBA Finals,
though most of the moves on draft night were
minor. Things could heat up again in the
coming days before free agency starts on July
1.

60724381

Your Grilling Headquarters

Many Accessories In Stock
Grills-Grill Covers-Griddles-Woks-Cook
Grates- And More!

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�������������t�.�'���� �4BU���� �4VO�����

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule

GAHS football
golf scramble

FE?DJ�FB;7I7DJ"�M$LW$�Å�J^[�iY^[Zkb[�\eh�j^[�
2017 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League
has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Monday, June 12, at the
&gt;_ZZ[d�LWbb[o�=eb\�9ekhi[�_d�Fe_dj�Fb[WiWdj$
Age groups for both young ladies and young men
are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates of
play are as follows: Monday, June 26, at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason; Wednesday, July 5, at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis; and Monday, July 10, at
Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play each week.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m., with play starting
at 9 a.m.
Fb[Wi[�YedjWYj�@[\\�Ibed[�Wj�-*&amp;#(+,#,',&amp;"�@Wd�&gt;WZdox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675-6135 if
you can contribute or have questions concerning the
tour.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy
football golf scramble will be Saturday, July 22, at
Cliffside Golf Course. Registration begins at 7:30 a.m.
and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
The format will be bring your own team, and the
team will be four players with only one handicap
under eight and a team handicap of 40 or greater.
There will be two divisions to choose from. The
blue division is a competitive division that will be
playing for cash prizes. The white division is a fun
division with no handicap requirements and winners
will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be provided at the event.
The deadline for registering is Friday, July 14. To
register or for questions, please call 740-645-1075 or
740-645-5783.
For continued updates, please check out Facebook.
Yec%=7&gt;I8bk[:[l_bi&lt;eejXWbb

Meigs football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs Marauder football
team will host a golf scramble on Saturday, July 22, at
Riverside Golf Course.
The tournament will be a four-man, best-ball scramble that includes bringing your own team. The cost
of the tournament is $240 per team. The team must
have a combined handicap of over 40, and only one
player can have a handicap less than eight.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m., with a 9 a.m. shotgun start following. All checks should be made available to Meigs Football.
Various prizes will be given out on selected holes
and there will also be a double your money Par 3 hole,
a skins game and a cash pot. Prizes will be awarded
for ﬁrst, second and third place ﬁnishers with club
house credit. Also, new Meigs football shirts will be
given out. Food and beverages will be available.
This tournament is the rescheduled event from
April 22, which was canceled due to inclement weather.
Interested golfers should contact Tonya Cox at 740645-4479 or Riverside Golf Course at 304-773-5354.

Stories

Wahama Athletic
HOF nominations
MASON, W.Va. — Nominations for the 2017
MW^WcW�&gt;_]^�IY^eeb�Ifehji�&gt;Wbb�e\�&lt;Wc[�Wh[�dem�
being accepted by the hall of fame board of directors.
They will be accepted through Friday, June 30. Forms
are available from Bobby Greene at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason, or by going online at the Wahama
&gt;_]^�IY^eeb�m[Xi_j[$

GAHS Blue Angel
Volleyball Camp
9;DJ;D7HO"�E^_e�Å�J^[�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co�8bk[�
Angels volleyball teams will be holding a volleyball
camp for girls entering grades 3-8 this coming fall.
The camp will run from Monday, July 10, through
Wednesday, July 12, and be from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. in
j^[�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co�&gt;_]^�IY^eeb�]ocdWi_kc$
Players will practice volleyball skills, work on volleyball fundamentals, and play volleyball games. The
camp will conclude on Wednesday with athletes participating in game play from 6:30-8 p.m. Parents and
spectators are welcome.

both reaching the district championship game.

See 8H?;&lt;I | 3B

The Lady Knights were the only
West Virginia program to get out of
sectional play.
�J^[h[�m[h[�jme�b[W]k[�Y^WcWinter
From page 1B
pions in baseball and softball with�J^[�;Wij[hd�]_hbi�XWia[jXWbb�
in the OVP area, which included a
team won its 12th consecutive
for a sixth straight postseason.
sectional title while also advancing i^Wh[Z�XWi[XWbb�Yhemd�Xo�=7&gt;I�_d�
�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co�^WZ�Xej^�
the OVC and an outright title for
cross country programs qualify for to the program’s eighth straight
Z_ijh_Yj�Y^Wcf_edi^_f�]Wc[$�;&gt;I� MW^WcW�_d�j^[�JL9�&gt;eYa_d]$
the regional cross country meet
�J^[�;Wij[hd�]_hbi�jhWYa�WdZ�
had its season end against state
and also had its soccer program
come away with its ﬁrst-ever win- runner-up Waterford in the regional ﬁeld team won its eighth straight
JL9�&gt;eYa_d]�j_jb[�WdZ�Wbie�
ning season and league champion- tournament.
claimed its sixth district crown in
�J^[h[�m[h[�i_n�'"&amp;&amp;&amp;#fe_dj�
ship.
�Fe_dj�Fb[WiWdj�WdZ�Iekj^[hd� scorers in the area this year, which six years.
�;Wij[hd�WdZ�Iekj^[hd�Xej^�
were the lone playoff qualiﬁers in included OVCS seniors Rachel Sar][dj"�;b_`W^�CY:edWbZ�WdZ�7kij_d� advanced to the district tournathe tri-county area for football. It
was the ninth straight appearance HW]Wd"�;&gt;I�i[d_ehi�BWkhW�Fkbb_di� ment in baseball, while Gallia
WdZ�@[jj�&lt;WY[co[h"�WdZ�I&gt;I�i[d_eh� Academy, Meigs and Southern did
for the Big Blacks in West Virthe same in softball.
Faith Teaford.
ginia, while the Tornadoes made
The No. 5 story of the 2016-17
�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co�med�'(�e\�j^[�
just their second appearance in
14 individual weight class titles en OVP sports season will appear in
program history.
the Tuesday sports editions of the
route to winning the OVC wres�@[ii_YW�9eea��;&gt;I�"�9eddeh�Meb\[��I&gt;I��WdZ�CWho�MWjji� tling crown. River Valley also had a Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point
Pleasant Register and The Daily
trio of TVC Ohio champions.
�=7&gt;I��[WY^�med�_dZ_l_ZkWb�
Sentinel.
league titles in cross country.
�=Wbb_W�7YWZ[co"�;Wij[hd�WdZ� Spring
Southern each won sectional titles
�Fe_dj�Fb[WiWdj�ie\jXWbb�med�_ji� Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.
_d�lebb[oXWbb"�m_j^�=7&gt;I�WdZ�I&gt;I� 12th consecutive sectional title.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Briefs

10-or-under to 18 years old. The
participants will be divided into four
divisions, 10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and
16-18.
From page 2B
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-andunder, and $30 for players 13-18.
The cost is $60 per athlete, and
Clubhouse certiﬁcates and individual
each athlete will receive a camp
awards will be presented to the topt-shirt. Registrations may be picked
three places in each division.
up at the GAHS Ofﬁce Monday
Cart and meal passes will be
through Friday, 8 a.m. until 3 p.m.
and from some local businesses. Play- available for spectators for $15 to
follow kids 13-and-older and $10 to
ers may also register at 5:30 p.m.
Monday, July 10, outside of the GAHS follow kids 12-and-under, so that they
may follow the tournament and eat
gymnasium.
Athletes who come without a parent with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside
need to have the liability form signed
clubhouse at 740-446-4653, or Ed
by a parent in order to participate.
Caudill at 740-245-5919 or 740-645Contact varsity head coach Janice
4381, or by email at rbncaudill@
Rosier at Janice-rosier@att.net for
yahoo.com. Please leave player’s
more information.
name, age as of July 14, 2017 and the
school they are currently attending.

6th Annual John Gray
Upper Mason UMC
Memorial 5K
RACINE, Ohio — The 6th Annual
Parish golf scramble
John Gray Memorial 5k will be held
on Friday, Aug. 11, at Star Mill Park.
The race will begin at approximately
9 p.m. and will go through the town of
Racine.
Race registration is $20 with
proceeds going to the John Gray
Memorial Scholarship Fund.
You may register online at www.
johngraymemorial5k.com and, to
guarantee an event t-shirt, please preregister by July 24. There will also be
day of registration at the park until
8:30 p.m.
Contact Kody Wolfe at 740-4164310 or visit the web at www.
johngraymemorial5k.com for more
information.

MASON, W.Va. — The Upper
Mason UMC Parish will host a golf
scramble for Local Missions on
Saturday, July 1, at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason County.
This is the second year for the
tournament and it will be a fourman, best-ball scramble that includes
bringing your own team.
The cost of the tournament will be
$240 per team. Teams will be made
up of at least one white tee player or
a yellow player, and cannot have more
than two from any one tee box.
Tee Box ages include: White up to
54, yellow 55 to 64, red 65 to 74, and
Orange 75+ and women. There will be
no double bogies allowed.
Registration is set to begin at 8:30
a.m. with a shotgun start around 9
a.m. First Place will receive $500
cash, and payout to the second, third
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside and fourth place teams will receive
club house credit. There will be plenty
Golf Club will be hosting the ninth
of good food and fellowship, along
annual Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside
with door prizes.
golf tournament for junior golfers on
If interested in sponsoring at team,
Thursday, July 13, starting at 10 a.m.
or a hole contact: Pastors Rex Young
Registration will be from 9 a.m. until
304-593-4169 or John Bumgarner 3049:45.
674-0597 or Riverside Golf Course at
This is an individual stroke play
304-773-5354.
tournament open to golfers age

Kiwanis Juniors Golf
Tournament

For the best local news coverage, visit
mydailytribune.com

Sunday, June 25, 2017 3B

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Laparoscopic Cholecystectomey | Removal of Skin Lesions, Tumors,
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JULY

16-17

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Court Size 50’x50’
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call or text: 937.474.9427

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�4B Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

LEGALS

Money To Lend

Land (Acreage)

Perry Township Trustees
will be accepting sealed
bids for the sale of a 1990
International Dump Truck, with
156,476 miles and 8,426
hours. The truck will be sold
"as is". The sealed bids will be
opened at our meeting on July
10, 2017. Please mailed
sealed bids to: Perry Twp
Trustees, Sealed Bid
Cheryl Ruff, Fiscal Officer
26 Boggs School Rd
Patriot, OH. 45658
6/16/17,6/18/17,6/25/17

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

PUBLIC NOTICE OF
CHANGE OF MEETING
DATE JULY 2017
THE CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
WOULD LIKE TO
ANNOUNCE THAT THE
MEETING THAT WAS
SCHEDULED FOR
JULY 4, 2017 AT 5:00pm
HAS BEEN CHANGED TO
WEDNESDAY JULY 5, 2017
AT 5:00pm AT THE
TOWNSHIP BUILDING
IN KYGER.

Program substitutes needed
for the 2017 – 2018
program year to work at
Carleton School and Meigs
Industries with children and
adults with developmental
disabilities. Opportunities
include substitute teachers,
aides, cook, bus and van
drivers, nurse. Qualifications
depend on position.
Submit application or resume
by July 15 to MCBDD,
P.O. Box 307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

AMY EDWARDS
FISCAL OFFICE
CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP

Commercial
For Lease: office or
commercial space, first floor,
Court Street, approx. 1600 sq.
ft., one bathroom, carpeted,
storage area, street parking,
$600 per mo, security deposit
required, condition excellent.
Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425.

Lost &amp; Found
Lost Family Pet
in the Patriot, Oh area
Female English Bulldog
please call 740-645-3620
or 740-379-9392
Reward offered
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
For Lease: one bedroom apt.,
water and trash included, on
Second Ave., off-street
parking behind, no pets, no
smoking. Security deposit
$450, rent $425 per mo.
Call 740-441-7875 or
740-446-4425.

Livestock

Want To Buy

For Lease: Three bedroom,
unfurnished, 2nd floor,
townhouse, over looking City
Park. Off street parking.
Condition excellent. No pets.
Lease application, with
references. $750 security
deposit, $700 per month.
No Smoking.
Call 740-441-7875 or
740-446-4425.

Angus Bulls &amp; Heifers
High EPD's over 40 yrs.
Performance selection,
Top bloodlines,
Priced reasonably,
Call 740-418-0633
www.slaterunangus.com

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

Land (Acreage)
23 Acres off Redmond Ridge.
Nice woods with lots of level
areas. Very private, $29,000.
Financing with $2900 down &amp;
$344//mth for 10 yrs. Call for
maps, (740)989-0260.
www.brunerland.com.

Wanted

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

Check
out our
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for
bargains!

Real Estate Auction

Real Estate Auction June 29, 2017 6:30 PM
409 First Ave., Gallipolis, OH

LIBRARY PAGE/SHELVER
Bossard Library seeks applicants for the position of Library
Page/Shelver. 12-16 hours per week; minimum wage; includes
weekend and evening shifts. Must be a minimum of sixteen (16)
years of age and pass background check.
Job description and application available at Library or online at
www.bossardlibrary.org. Application must be mailed and
postmarked by July 7, 2017 to:
Bossard Library
Attn: Debbie Saunders, Library Director
7 Spruce Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
LEGALS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be received by the Board of Education
of the Meigs Local School District of Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
Treasurerҋs Office until 1:00 p.m. on Monday, July 10, 2017 and
at that time opened by the Treasurer/CFO of said Board for two
(2) new seventy-two (72) passenger diesel school buses (body
and chassis may be bid separately or together as one complete
bus) and one (1) new sixty (60) passenger diesel school bus
(body and chassis may be bid separately or together as one
complete bus). Specifications and instructions to bidders may
be obtained at the Treasurerҋs Office, 41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or by calling (740) 992-5650. The board
reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of Meigs
Local Board of Education, Roy W. Johnson, Jr., Treasurer/CFO.

Houses For Sale

6/11/17,6/18/17,6/25/17,7/2/17

Newly remodeled 2 bedroom
home 1 full bathroom and full
basement fenced in backyard
1 car garage
2813 Jackson Ave
Call 304-675-7531

Personals

Gorgeous Federal Brick located on the majestic Ohio River
in the heart of Historic Downtown Gallipolis.
We are proud to offer this great property to the public,
constructed just 34 years after the City Of Gallipolis was
founded. Great opportunity to own a once in a lifetime
home. For terms &amp; conditions of the auction contact
Wiseman Real Estate at 740-446-3644 or
visit www.wisemanrealestate,com.
David Wiseman, Broker Wiseman Real Estate &amp; Josh
Bodimer, Auctioneer
Prospects may call to set up an appointment to view the property.
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
David Wiseman, Broker
500 SECOND AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

Josh Bodimer Auctioneer

446-3644

740-645-6665
60724150

Yard Sale
Huge Yard Sale June 30 &amp;
July 1. 1 mile south of
Tuppers Plains on Route 7.
Large Selection
Huge Yard Sale
June 30 and July 1 9am-5pm
Rt #160 North 1/4 mile
pass the Korner Store
Automotive

2015 Chevrolet
Camaro LT

60725830

Silver w/black

LEGALS

Auctions

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Trustees of Cheshire Township will receive sealed
bids until 5:00p.m. Daylight Savings Time, Tuesday, July 18,
2017. Patches and overlay on various roads in Cheshire Township, 1000 tons, more or less of ODOT #402 and #404 asphalt.
All patch joints beginning and ending and intersections shall be
asphalt cemented and heated while raking before rolling.
Primes or tackcoat costs to be included in the cost of the #402
and 404.
The attention of bidders is directed to the special statutory
provision (O.R.C. 4115.03) governing the prevailing rate or
wages to be paid on public improvements. The bid shall be
accompanied by a bid bond or certified check on a solvent bank
in the amount of ten percent (10%) of the bid.
In Compliance with the O.R.C. Section 5719.042, a notarized
statement from the contract bidder that all personal property
taxes have been paid is required.
Only qualified bidders for ODOT will be considered. Terms of
payment will be 50 percent upon completion, 25 percent by
January 15, 2017 and the final 25 percent by March 31st, 2017.
The Board of Trustees reserves the right to delete any of the
work items, reduce or add on quantities to adjust the total cost
of the project to budgetary limitations.
The Board of Trustees reserves the right to waive any irregularities and/or informalities, and to reject any or all bids or any part
of the bid. Sealed bids may be left with the Fiscal Officer, or
brought to the Township Building by Tuesday, July 18, 2017
prior to 5:00 p.m. Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud at
5:00 p.m. at the Township Building. By Order of the Board of
Trustees of Cheshire Township.
Amy Edwards
Fiscal Officer
PO Box 146
Cheshire, Ohio 45620
740-367-0313
Or 740-367-0907
6/25/17,7/9/17

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

CLASSIFIEDS

Public Real Estate Auction
Thursday July, 6th 2017 @ 6:00p.m
124 Kineon Drive Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Real Estate Details: Ranch home built in 1955 with 1033 Square Ft. Records show
2 Bedrooms, Kitchen, Living Room, 1 bath, Full Basement, 1 car attached garage,
deck, storage building, level lot 60’ x 100’, home has gas heat. Located in Gallipolis
City School District. Current Taxes: $579.16 with homestead exemption. Parcel
#00707308200. **OPEN HOUSE Thursday June 29th 6:00p.m to 8:00p.m** Real
Estate Terms: Real Estate sells @ 6:00p.m Subject to Confirmation of high bid by Jobs
and Family Services. High Bidder will deposit 10% down day of sale with balance due
within 30 day with no contingencies. For appointment to inspect real estate, call Don
Gleim Jr. Auctioneer/Broker who is selling agent for the seller. Taxes Prorated to day
of closing, with possession within 30 days of closing. All inspections must be done
prior to bidding.
Owner: Mrs. Nancy E. Unroe, Attorney in Fact Michael E. Unroe

Don Gleim Auctions and Real Estate LLC
1499 SR 522, Wheelersburg, Ohio
740-574-2700
Don Gleim Jr: Broker/Auctioneer
Donald Gleim III: Auctioneer/Realtor
www.gleimauctions.com Licensed in Ohio and Kentucky

60726202

White Male would like to meet
nice honest lady 50 to sixties
who would like to dine out take
in a movie and would like to go
to Hawaii with my family.
NO DRUGS. Call if not home
leave message
I will get back with you.
Don 740-388-9624

Less than
11,000 miles
Paid-$34,400
Asking-$26,000
740-416-2424

For lease: Retail/office space,
approx. 18 x 80, (1400 sq. ft.),
corner Second and Pine St.,
off street parking behind,
$550 per mo.
Call 740-446-7875
or 740-446 4425.

Gallia Co. many 5 acre lots
$11,900 +up! Meigs Co. 29
acres $46,900– more@
www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

Apartments/Townhouses

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 25, 2017 5B

RIO GRANDE SUMMER CAMPS

Men’s and women’s soccer
The University of Rio
Grande soccer programs
have announced their 2017
summer camp schedule.
A team camp for girls’ high
school squads is planned for
July 9-12, with a boys’ high
school team camp slated for

July 16-20. Cost for the girls’
camp is $270, while the boys’
camp has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential
camps include lodging,
meals, training sessions and
tournament play.
Camp directors are URG
men’s soccer head coach
Scott Morrissey and women’s
soccer head coach Tony
Daniels.
The camp brochure is
available on both the men’s
soccer and women’s soccer
links of the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.
com. Online registration and
payment is available at www.
rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms should

MLB

Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

W
41
39
40
35
35

L
32
31
36
37
38

Cleveland
Minnesota
Kansas City
Chicago
Detroit

W
39
37
35
32
32

L
33
34
36
40
40

Houston
Seattle
Texas
Los Angeles
Oakland

W
50
38
36
38
32

L
24
37
36
39
42

Washington
Atlanta
Miami
New York
Philadelphia

W
44
35
33
31
23

L
29
38
39
41
48

Milwaukee
Chicago
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Cincinnati

W
40
37
34
33
30

L
36
36
40
39
42

Los Angeles
Arizona
Colorado
San Diego
San Francisco

W
48
46
47
29
27

L
26
27
28
44
48

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.562
—
—
.557
½
—
.526
2½
—
.486
5½
3
.479
6
3½
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.542
—
—
.521
1½
½
.493
3½
2½
.444
7
6
.444
7
6
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.676
—
—
.507 12½
1½
.500
13
2
.494 13½
2½
.432
18
7
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.603
—
—
.479
9
11
.458 10½
12½
.431 12½
14½
.324
20
22
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.526
—
—
.507
1½
9
.459
5
12½
.458
5
12½
.417
8
15½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.649
—
—
.630
1½
—
.627
1½
—
.397 18½
17
.360 21½
20

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Thursday’s Games
Chicago White Sox 9, Minnesota 0
Texas 11, Toronto 4
Houston 12, Oakland 9
Cleveland 6, Baltimore 3
L.A. Angels 10, N.Y. Yankees 5
Seattle 9, Detroit 6
Friday’s Games
Tampa Bay 15, Baltimore 5
Boston 9, L.A. Angels 4
Minnesota 5, Cleveland 0
Oakland 3, Chicago White Sox 0
Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Texas (Bibens-Dirkx 2-0) at N.Y. Yankees
(Cessa 0-1), 1:05 p.m.
Oakland (Gossett 0-2) at Chicago White
Sox (Shields 1-0), 2:10 p.m.
Toronto (Estrada 4-5) at Kansas City
(Vargas 10-3), 2:15 p.m.
Baltimore (Bundy 7-6) at Tampa Bay
(Faria 3-0), 4:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Gibson 4-5) at Cleveland
(Kluber 6-2), 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Ramirez 6-5) at Boston
(Price 2-1), 7:15 p.m.
Detroit (Sanchez 0-0) at San Diego
(Lamet 2-2), 10:10 p.m.
Houston (McCullers 6-1) at Seattle
(Gaviglio 3-1), 10:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Boston, 1:35 p.m.
Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 2:05 p.m.
Oakland at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.
Toronto at Kansas City, 2:15 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 4:40 p.m.
___

L10
6-4
2-8
6-4
5-5
4-6

Str Home
W-1 22-11
L-1 23-11
W-3 24-16
L-1 19-17
L-3 24-14

Away
19-21
16-20
16-20
16-20
11-24

L10
8-2
4-6
8-2
5-5
2-8

Str Home
L-1 15-18
W-1 16-25
W-1 19-17
L-1 15-13
L-6 18-16

Away
24-15
21-9
16-19
17-27
14-24

L10
6-4
6-4
6-4
5-5
5-5

Str Home
W-4 23-16
W-5 24-13
W-1 22-17
L-1 21-16
W-1 22-17

Away
27-8
14-24
14-19
17-23
10-25

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

Str Home
W-1 19-14
W-3 19-19
W-1 19-18
L-4 17-23
W-1 14-20

Away
25-15
16-19
14-21
14-18
9-28

L10
6-4
6-4
5-5
3-7
1-9

Str Home
L-1 21-22
L-1 22-16
W-1 19-18
L-2 18-19
L-3 19-18

Away
19-14
15-20
15-22
15-20
11-24

L10
9-1
9-1
6-4
5-5
1-9

Str Home
W-7 29-10
W-2 26-9
L-2 22-15
W-1 17-18
L-2 14-18

Away
19-16
20-18
25-13
12-26
13-30

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Thursday’s Games
Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 1
Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 2
Arizona 10, Colorado 3
Chicago Cubs 11, Miami 1
Atlanta 12, San Francisco 11
L.A. Dodgers 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Friday’s Games
Washington 6, Cincinnati 5, 10 innings
Miami 2, Chicago Cubs 0
Atlanta 5, Milwaukee 4
Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 3
Philadelphia at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Cincinnati (Bailey 0-0) at Washington
(Ross 3-3), 4:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Lester 4-4) at Miami
(Nicolino 0-1), 4:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (Garza 3-3) at Atlanta (Dickey 5-5), 4:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (deGrom 6-3) at San Francisco
(Cueto 5-7), 7:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Cole 5-6) at St. Louis (Lynn
5-4), 7:15 p.m.
Colorado (Chatwood 6-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 10-2), 10:10 p.m.
Detroit (Sanchez 0-0) at San Diego
(Lamet 2-2), 10:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Lively 1-1) at Arizona (Ray
7-3), 10:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Chicago Cubs at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
Cincinnati at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 4:40 p.m.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 8:05 p.m.

For the best local news coverage,
visit mydailytribune.com

be mailed to URG Lyne
Center, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to We
Storm Soccer Camps.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at 740-2457126, 740-645-6438 or e-mail
scottm@rio.edu; or Daniels at
740-245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.edu
Women’s basketball
The University of Rio
Grande’s 2017 Women’s Basketball Camp is scheduled for
July 9-12 at the Lyne Center
on the URG campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to girls
in grades 4-12. Cost is $285

per camper, which includes
lodging, meals, a certiﬁcate of
participation and a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive
24-hour supervision from
coaches and counselors; lecture/discussion groups and
ﬁlm sessions; daily instruction on shooting, ball-handling, post play and defense;
and use of the school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a camp
store featuring drinks, snacks,
pizza and Rio Grande apparel
for sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketball head coach
David Smalley, who ranks
among the top 10 coaches on
the active wins list with more

than 500, will be the camp
director.
Online registration is available through the women’s
basketball link on the school’s
athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration
forms are available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center during regular business hours.
Registration forms should
be mailed to David Smalley,
Rio Grande Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to
Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact Smalley at 740-245-7491,
1-800-282-7201, or e-mail
dsmalley@rio.edu

Lakers get Lonzo Ball and dad
EL SEGUNDO, Calif.
(AP) — Lonzo Ball is
staying home with the
Los Angeles Lakers,
and the point guard is
one big part of Magic
Johnson’s grand plan to
return them to championship contention.
The Lakers selected
Ball with the second
overall pick in the NBA
draft Thursday night,
eagerly accepting the
potential risks and enormous rewards surrounding the sublime UCLA
playmaker with an attention-grabbing father.
“This is crazy,” a calm
Ball said in a phone
interview. “You can’t really tell by my emotions,
but I feel good. I’m happy
to be home.”
Later in the ﬁrst
round, the Lakers underlined their commitment
to Ball by ofﬁcially trading point guard D’Angelo
Russell, the No. 2 pick in
the 2015 draft. Russell
and Timofey Mozgov’s
onerous contract went
to Brooklyn for Brook
Lopez and the 27th overall pick, Utah forward
Kyle Kuzma.
Los Angeles then
traded the 28th overall
pick to Utah for the 30th
and 42nd picks, landing
Villanova forward Josh
Hart and Indiana center
Thomas Bryant.
The youngsters are a
big part of the Lakers’
future after the worst
four-year stretch in franchise history, but general
manager Rob Pelinka
also conﬁrmed that Johnson’s strategy is to land
big free-agent stars in
2018.
Pelinka said the
16-time NBA champions traded Russell and
Mozgov largely to clear
enough salary cap space
to add two max-contract
players next summer.
Magic and Pelinka

Auctions

AUCTION

Thursday, June 29th, 2017 @ 5:30PM
LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER RT 62 NORTH MASON, W.V.
FURNITURE: 3 piece waterfall bedroom suite, Dry Sink, Walnut Buffet, Daybed, full Sizebed
complete, 2 Ladder back rocking chairs, oak lamp table, enertainment stand, sofa table, bench w/
chicken painting, wicker chair, wooden porch bench, 4 piece white bedrrom suite, shower door.
LIKE NEW washer and dryer set
GLASS AND HOUSEHOLD: Stone ware jugs and crocks, carnival glass, Morecrest pottery, German
decorative bowls, Ruby Glass collection, 1950’s Coca Cola Cooler, pink depression weather vein,
rooster lamps, brass lamps, Home Interior decor, counter top kitchen appliances, baskets, wooden
ducks, 2 pitcher and bowl sets cookware, pressure canner, Pfeltzcraft dish set, milkglass lamp set,
oil lamps, ukulele, mandolin, nice Christmas decorations, Plus MUCH MORE.
Terms: Cash or Check with valid ID Everything Sold As Is.

RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118 www.auctionzip.com for Pictures and Complete Listing.

60726183

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66

Frank Franklin II | AP

Lonzo Ball, right, is greeted by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver after being selected by the Los Angeles
Lakers as the No. 2 overall pick during the NBA basketball draft Thursday in New York.

ﬁrmly believe the Lakers’
famous brand and young
core will be attractive to
a free-agent class likely
to include Paul George,
LeBron James and other
proven veterans.
“There’s just a renewed
energy around here,”
Pelinka said. “With
Earvin’s vision and his
persona, I think the organization is really taking
on that positive joy that
he seems to live with
every day. I think players
around the NBA feel that
as well and are going to
be attracted to that energy here. We know that
the goal here is to compete for championships.
With the leading teams
in the league today, we
felt like to be able to
look them in the eye and
challenge them, we need
two superstar players to
come here and join this
platform and join our
core group of great players that we now have.”
Those schemes are a
year away from fruition,
however. This night
belonged to Ball, the
point guard who led the
nation with 7.7 assists

per game last season
a few miles up the 405
freeway with the Bruins.
With preternatural
court vision, a solid scoring touch and a desire
to become a leader, the
Los Angeles-area native
had everything that his
favorite team’s top brass
wanted.
“He’s the type of player
that, when he’s on the
ﬂoor, all four guys that
are out there with him
become better instantly,”
Lakers coach Luke Walton said. “And that’s a
quality and a trait that
not many people have.
The great ones all have
it, and we hope that by
the way he plays, everyone else on our team
becomes better.”
Pelinka rhapsodized
about Ball’s passing
skills, comparing the
teenager to Steve Nash,
Jason Kidd, Magic himself — and even Tom
Brady and Aaron Rodgers.
“There’s something
very, very special about
his basketball abilities,”
Pelinka said. “The vision
and ability that Lonzo

has just puts him in a
class of being a transcendent talent.”
The Lakers also aren’t
worried about attaching themselves to LaVar
Ball, the voluble family
patriarch with aspirations of building a global
sports empire around his
three talented sons, one
$495 pair of sneakers at
a time.
LaVar Ball has vowed
that oldest son Lonzo
would end up with the
Lakers for two years,
claiming he could speak
his dream into existence.
Moments after it became
a reality at the draft in
New York, LaVar pulled
on a purple-and-gold hat
featuring the logo of his
Big Baller Brand company — and then declared
Lonzo will lead the Lakers back to the playoffs
next season as a rookie.
“I’m a very optimistic
person, but I don’t look
that far into the future,”
Walton said. “Right now,
I’m hoping (Lonzo)
leads us to a couple of
summer league victories,
and we’ll take it from
there.”

Help Wanted General

Excavating

Teaching Position
Preschool Intervention Specialist needed at Carleton School.
Must have current valid Ohio Department of Education
Licensure and have or be eligible to obtain Early Childhood
Intervention Specialist Validation. This Integrated Preschool
Class is part of a Step Up to Quality 5 Star Rated Program.
Send resume and a copy of teaching license by July 7th to:
Carleton School
1310 Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779

Reese Excavating
�Dozer  Backhoe
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 Septic Systems
�Basements
 Land Clearing
 Site Prep  and More!
Large or Small Jobs Since 1963

FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 245-9921

60722924

RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
The University of Rio Grande
Athletic Department has
announced its 2017 Summer
Camps and Clinics schedule.
Camps will be conducted
throughout the months of June
and July on the URG campus.
The schedules, broken down
by individual sports, are as follows:

Check
out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV�
for
bargains!

�6B Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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60725684

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�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 25, 201 7 s Section C

Dean Wright photos | Ohio Valley Publishing

Jim Posey (left), of Rockmill Machinery Transfer, Inc., and James Higginbotham (right), of RJW Construction, Inc., are both supporters of the Gallipolis Freight Station Train Museum and have volunteered
time and labor to the moving of a caboose along with placing rail and rail ties for the museum.

Right on track
the museum as it seeks
to repair an estimated
$25,000 of damage in
the station’s roof.
“(The conductor
am well satisﬁed with
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
the progress that we are and brakeman) watched
com
making. It exceeded my for problems on the
expectations for the ﬁrst train,” Love said. “This
caboose was built in
year.”
GALLIPOLIS —
September of ‘69. It was
“I’d have to second
Nearly a year ago, an old
given to Wheelersburg
that,” said Museum
freight train station on
in ‘82 so it didn’t have
Board Vice President
Third Avenue was little
much road time from the Workers move the trucks of the caboose before laying them on the track in front of the freight station.
Jerry Davis. “The
more than an empty
time it was new to time
community response
building left to decay
Vice President of the
it was in Wheelersburg
has just been
but now
Gallipolis Freight Train
is ﬁnally
“The community fabulous. We Park.”
Station Museum’s
The caboose was
seeing
response has just never thought
Board of Trustees
eventually donated
we’d be this
revitalizaJerry Davis displays
been
fabulous.
far along this by Porter Township
tion efforts
identification marks
We never thought year and the
around Wheelersburg.
steam foron the caboose’s
trucks Friday
Davis at one point
caboose is
we’d be this far
ward with
afternoon. The
had
heard
the
caboose
just
awesome,
a vintage
along this year
identifying marks
was available to be
beyond
caboose set and the caboose
can be followed by
transferred to interested
words.”
on genuine
train enthusiasts to
is just awesome,
parties.
Love ﬁrst
train rail
determine the trucks
beyond words.”
“We started asking
approached
Friday outlifetime use and
—Jerry Davis, Gallipolis City questions, ” said Love.
origin.
side of what
Museum Board Commission
“We met the criteria to
is expected
Vice President about turning (acquire) it. It had to
to become
From left
stay in the state of Ohio,
the aging
a new train
to right
we had to be tax-exempt
station into
museum.
stand Vice
501(c)(3), had to be a
a museum in April
The last man to turn
President of
2016. According to him, corporation. We met all
the key and lock on the
the Gallipolis
the requirements.”
the station was an old
station before it was
Freight Train
“They were interested
freight house and built
ofﬁcially closed was
Station
Museum
in converting the
former telegrapher Cecil in 1901 by Hocking
Board Jerry
Sargent. He was present Valley, a rail company of area that the caboose
Davis,
the time. The building at occupied into more
to see the laying of the
President
the time was considered park space and were
caboose.
Jim Love,
upset that it was falling
“Home,” Sargent said 115 years old and
museum
into disrepair and
that was how the freight Love was considered
supporter
they didn’t want to
and donor
station made him feel. “I a telegrapher of the
Bob Northup,
see that happen,” said
was with the railroad for building as well. He
board
33 years. I worked at the learned beneath Sargent Davis. “I think they
member
were extremely pleased
and Love said the
Kanauga Depot and I’d
Bob Schmoll
that it was staying in
come down here one day experience made them
and board
southeastern Ohio as
lifelong friends.
a week. “
member Dr.
opposed to going out
The caboose placed
Sargent said he would
Bill Thomas.
of state. They have
along rail line laid by
inspect cars as they
been fabulous and have
RJW Construction was
would come into the
worked with us from the
freight station while also used as a station for
very beginning.”
the train conductor
serving as a railroad
The museum board
and brakeman to sit on
telegrapher. He started
plans to bring an engine
the side of the caboose
working with trains in
to the museum site
and look up along the
the 50s. Sargent said
train to see if there was somewhere in the near
he had learned how to
future. Once the station
dragging brake rigging
operate a radio while
building has been
or a hot box where
serving as a radio
rehabilitated, the board
bearings might fail and
operator in the military
intends to ﬁll it with
be smoking. Rockmill
oversees in Germany.
railroad artifacts and
Machinery Transfer
Sargent said he felt
potentially model train
assisted with placing
fortunate to have been
the caboose on the track sets.
a part of the regional
using a crane. Mike
railroad’s history.
Northup as well as Ohio Dean Wright can be reached at 740“We feel great,” said
446-2342, ext. 2103. For more on
Valley Bank recently
Gallipolis Freight Train
the process of placing the caboose
contributed monetary
Station Museum Board
at its new location, find the video at
www.mydailytribune.com.
donations to support
President Jim Love. “I

Caboose finds new home

�ALONG THE RIVER

2C Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

A look at the POWER Grant Care Coordination program
coal impacted counties
The Meigs County
(as determined by the
Health Department has
ARC.) The program’s
recently been awarded
purpose is to create
the Appalachian
sustainable funding
Regional Commission
for Community Health
(ARC) POWER Grant,
Workers (CHW’s) as
which is co-funded
members of a care
by the Sisters Health
Meigs
coordination teams
Foundation and Marshall
Health that serve high risk
University. A three-year
Matters diabetes patients.
grant, the ARC POWER
Leanne
Through this three year
Grant is an economic
Cunningham
process, the program
development grant
will be developing
designed speciﬁcally for

partnerships with health
insurance providers, who
ultimately as payers for the
service, will allow the CHW
position to become sustainable
into the future. The MCHD
has recently employed Laura
Grueser, the ﬁrst of three
planned CHW positions,
to serve high-risk diabetic
patients in Meigs County.
The overall role of the CHW
is to educate and support
patients in their homes and

communities. Speciﬁcally,
Grueser’s role in this program
will be to will equip patients
with self-management decision
making and problem solving
skills, which will enable
them to better manage their
diabetes. Grueser will be a
member of a care coordination
team lead by local clinical
partners who will identify highrisk diabetic patients that will
beneﬁt from these services,
which will include meeting

one-on-one with patients in
a private setting. Presently,
the MCHD is working with
clinical partners to identify
the high-risk diabetic patients
who will be offered enrollment
into the program. More
information about this grant
will be released as the process
unfolds.
Leanne Cunningham, RN, BSN, CLC, is
the Meigs County Health Department’s
Director of Nursing.

Smithsonian scholar to portray Amelia Earhart
Traveling exhibit to
be featured at library
The ever-intriguing life of
Amelia Earhart once again
made headlines in November
2016, as a USA Today article
reported that
From the researchers had
bookshelf uncovered new
evidence supDebbie
Saunders, porting the theory that Earhart
MLIS
did not perish
in a plane crash,
but, rather, as a castaway on
a remote island. Since her
disappearance in 1937, historians have continued to study
the life of this pioneering
woman of aviation.

As a tribute to Earhart,
Bossard Library is pleased to
welcome Smithsonian scholar
and award-winning actress
Mary Ann Jung to the library
on Sunday, June 25 at 2 p.m.
for Jung’s living history
portrayal, “Amelia Earhart:
Dreams Take Flight.” Jung
has appeared on CNN, the
Today Show, Good Morning
America, and in newspapers
around the world as famous
women from history. Ms. Jung
performs as Amelia Earhart
for the National Air and Space
Museum.
“Amelia Earhart, born in
Atchison, Kansas on July 24,
1897, was much more than
just a courageous aviatrix,”
Jung says of Earhart on her
website. She was also a photographer, truck driver, avid

student and teacher, volunteer nurse, social worker, and
even a clothes designer!
Whatever she did, she did
with passion, commitment
and a relaxed sense of humor
that endeared her to the
American public.”
During this fascinating
program, attendees will be
encouraged to follow Earhart’s amazing career in this
energetic recounting of her
life and achievements, and to
learn of the fascinating personalities who were part of
her journey, including Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Attendees will also discover
what the dangers were in
the ﬂedgling ﬁeld of early
twentieth century ﬂying and
re-live the last days before her
dramatic disappearance. This

show is a soaring tribute to
the spirited heroine of both
aviation and women’s rights.
In addition to this living history performance,
the Library will feature a
traveling exhibition, “Flight
to Fame,” from the International Women’s Air and Space
Museum in Cleveland. This
exhibit features photographs
and reproduced documents
related to Amelia Earhart.
This exhibit will be available
for viewing before the performance on Sunday, June 25
from 1 PM to 2 PM and after
the performance from 3:30
p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
For those who wish to read
more on the life of Amelia
Earhart, Bossard Library
offers these selected titles,
among others:

Amelia Earhart: The Mystery Solved
East to the Dawn: The Life
of Amelia Earhart
The Earhart Disappearance:
the British Connection…
Heroes for My Daughter
Amelia Earhart: The Thrill
of It
Women of the Wind: Early
Women Aviators
Night Flight: Amelia Earhart Crosses the Atlantic
Community members of all
ages are sure to beneﬁt from
this entertaining and educational program on the life of
Amelia Earhart. This event is
free and open to the public.
Source: historyaliveshows.
com.
Debbie Saunders is the Library Director for
the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS —
United Producers Inc.,
livestock report of sales
from June 22.

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds,
Steers, $145-$180, Heifers, $130-$170; 425-525

pounds, Steers, $115$180, Heifers, $125$165; 550-625 pounds,
Steers, $110-$155, Heif-

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Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed,
$63-$84; Medium/Lean,
$35-$62; Thin/Light,

$8-$34; Bulls, $81-$105.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $650$1425; Bred Cows,
$350-$1450; Baby Calves,
$70-$300; Bulls, $1700;
Goats, $57.50-$107.50;
Hogs, $45-$52.50; Lambs,
$147.50-$150; Feeder
Pigs, $52.50.

Upcoming specials
Daily herd dispersal
June 28.
Direct sales or
free on-farm visits
Contact Ryan
Vaughn (304) 5141858, or visit the website
at www.uproducers.
com.

Locals named to ‘Dean’s List’

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Many local students from Meigs, Gallia, and Mason Counties are having success in their post secondary education.
Here are many who were named to the
Dean’s List at their respective universities.
Dayton Hardway of Cheshire, a
graduate of River Valley High School
majoring in neuroscience biology and
biology, has been named to the Dean’s
List for the spring 2017 semester at
Baldwin Wallace University, according
to Stephen D. Stahl, Provost. Students
who receive at least a 3.6 GPA for seven
or more graded hours in a single semester are named to the Dean’s List.
Capital University has three lists
denoting academic distinction among
full-time, degree-seeking students: the
President’s List, Provost’s List, and
Dean’s List. The President’s List indicates the highest level of academic distinction. To be named to the President’s
List, students must have achieved a
grade point average of at least 3.85.
These students from Gallia and Meigs
(respectively) have this honor. Logan
Allison of Gallipolis and Breanne Bonnett of Middleport.
Capital University has also
announced its Provost’s List honorees
for the spring 2017 semester - Koleton
Carter of Thurman, and Megan Douglas
of Coolville.
Students have been named to the Residential Undergraduate Program Dean’s
List at Ohio Christian University for the
Spring 2017 Semester. To be eligible for
the Dean’s List, a student must achieve
a semester GPA of 3.5 or better and be
enrolled in at least 12 semester hours.
From Meigs County: Elisha Martindale
of Reedsville. From Gallia County:
Emily Carman of Gallipolis, Kaitlin
Kazee of Thurman, and Morgan Jenkins
of Bidwell.
Kelsey Corbin, of Gallipolis, majoring in psychology, was among 1,920
students at Coastal Carolina University
who made the Spring 2017 Dean’s List.
To qualify for the Dean’s List, freshmen
must earn a 3.25 grade point average,
and upperclassmen must earn a 3.5
grade point average. To qualify for the
President’s List, students must earn a
4.0 grade point average. All students

must be enrolled full time. To be named
on the list, students must be enrolled
full time and achieve a grade point average of 3.5 or better.
Gallipolis resident Samantha Denbow
earned a spot on the University of Dayton spring 2017 dean’s list, which honors undergraduate students achieving
a minimum 3.5 GPA for the semester.
Denbow is a graduate of Gallia Academy High School.
Davis &amp; Elkins College student Tyler
Twyman of Vinton, Ohio has achieved
the Dean’s List for the spring 2017
semester. To earn the honor, full-time
students must achieve a semester GPA
between 3.6 and 4.0. Twyman is the
son of Brandon and Trenia Twyman of
Vinton, Ohio.
Daniel Reed, a Junior Information
Technology major of Gallipolis, was
among approximately 860 Bob Jones
University students named to the
Spring 2017 Dean’s List. The Dean’s
List recognizes students who earn a
3.00-3.74 grade point average during
the semester.
Sarah Walker, an accounting major
at Grove City College, has been named
to the Dean’s List for the Spring 2017
semester. Sarah is a 2013 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and is the
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Philip Walker
(Lorraine) from Gallipolis. Students
eligible for the Dean’s List have a GPA
of 3.40 to 3.59; for the Dean’s List with
Distinction a GPA of 3.60 to 3.84 and
for the Dean’s List with High Distinction a GPA of 3.85 to 4.0.
Marietta College’s Molly Dunlap of
Tuppers Plains Ohio has been named
to the Spring 2017 Dean’s High Honors
List. Marietta College’s John Raike of
Point Pleasant West Virginia, has also
been named to the Spring 2017 Dean’s
List. Any full-time Marietta College student completing at least 15 credit hours
with a grade point average between
3.50 and 3.74 is recognized as a Dean’s
List student for that semester. Raike
is a member of the Class of 2018, and
is majoring in Petroleum Engineering.
Raike is also a graduate of Point Pleasant High School. Dunlap is a member
See LIST | 4C

�ALONG THE RIVER

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 25, 2017 3C

GALLIA, MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Sunday, June 25
ADDISON — Freewill Baptist
Church, Sunday school at
10 a.m. with evening service
at 6 p.m. Special singing
with Fisherman’s Net.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee
Klatch at 9:45 a.m.; Sunday
School at 10a.m., worship
service at 10:30 a.m.;
birthday/ anniversary
service following morning
service, Pastor Bob Hood;
Bulaville Christian Church,
2337 Johnson Ridge Rd.;
740-446-7495 or 740-709-

6107. Everyone is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Adam Hoosier will preach
at Dickey Chapel Church at
6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light”
Worship Service in the
Family Life Center, 9 a.m.;
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
Morning Worship Service,
10:45 a.m.; Evening
Service: 6 p.m.; Youth
Fellowship in the FLC, 6
p.m.; First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The

ANNIVERSARY

Price’s 50th wedding
anniversary

Carriers will be singing
at the Amazing Grace
Community Church in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
(across from the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department) at
10 a.m.
SYRACUSE — Everett
Caldwell speaking,
Syracuse Community

Church, Second Street,
6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, June 27
RACINE — Morning Star
United Methodist Church,
located at US 33 and
Morning Star Road, will
hold Vacation Bible School,
June 27 and 28 from noon
to 4 p.m.

Wednesday, June 28
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church
prayer meeting.
GALLIPOLIS — Bible Study;
6 p.m.; guest speaker Mike
Roach; Pastor Bob Hood;
Bulaville Christian Church,
2337 Johnson Ridge Rd.;
(740-446-7495 or 740-

709-6107). Everyone is
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s
Ministry, 6:45 p.m.; Teen
and Young Adult Bible
Study in the Family Life
Center, 7 p.m.; Prayer &amp;
Praise in the Sanctuary, 7
p.m.; First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

SUNDAY, JUNE 25

6:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly
3 (N)
News
WTAP News NBC Nightly
at Six
News
ABC 6 News ABC World
at 6:00 p.m. News (N)
Living Well Innovations
With "Spice in Medicine
of Life"
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10TV News
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Sunday
Rizzoli &amp; Isles "My Own
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PBS
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NewsHour
"A Year of
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13 News
Weekend
Weekend
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6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

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8:30

9

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9:30

Sunday Night With Megyn
Kelly (N)
Sunday Night With Megyn
Kelly (N)
America's Funniest Home
Videos
Antiques Roadshow
"Vintage Albuquerque"

Despicable Me (2010, Animated) Voices of Jason
Segel, Russell Brand, Steve Carell. TVPG
Despicable Me (2010, Animated) Voices of Jason
Segel, Russell Brand, Steve Carell. TVPG
Celebrity Family Feud (N) Steve Harvey's
Funderdome (N)
Masterpiece Classic "My
Masterpiece "Grantchester"
Mother and Other
Sidney and Geordie are led
Strangers" (N)
down a dark path. (N)
America's Funniest Home Celebrity Family Feud (N) Steve Harvey's
Videos
Funderdome (N)
60 Minutes
NCIS: Los Angeles "Tidings Madam Secretary "The
We Bring"
Dissent Memo"
Bob's
Last Man on Simp. "Caper Family Guy American Grit "Liar Liar"
Burgers
Earth
Chase"
(N)
Globe Trekker "Papua New Masterpiece Classic "My
Masterpiece "Grantchester"
Guinea Islands" The trekkers Mother and Other
Sidney and Geordie are led
explore New Britain Island. Strangers" (N)
down a dark path. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "Tidings Madam Secretary "The
60 Minutes
We Bring"
Dissent Memo"

7

PM

7:30

8

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8:30

9

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9:30

10

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10:30

Little Big Shots: Forever
Young "Forever Young"
Little Big Shots: Forever
Young "Forever Young"
The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Masterpiece Theatre
"Prime Suspect: Tennison"
(N)
The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Code Black "Ave Maria"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Masterpiece Theatre
"Prime Suspect: Tennison"
(N)
Code Black "Ave Maria"

10

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10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
24 (ROOT) Bull Riding Championship
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) (4:00) CFL Football (L)

29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

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58
60
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62 (NGEO)
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72 (BET)
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74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

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6:30

7

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400 (HBO) Johnson. A CIA agent who used to be bullied recruits his

high school friend to help save the world. TV14
(:10)
The Fast and the Furious ('01, Act) Vin Diesel.
450 (MAX) An undercover police officer infiltrates an L.A. street gang
to crack a hijacking ring. TV14
(5:00)
A Bronx Tale I'm Dying Up Here "The
500 (SHOW) ('93, Dra) Chazz Palminteri, Cost of a Free Buffet"
Robert De Niro. TVM

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo
Bay ('08, Com) John Cho. Harold and Kumar are suspected
of being terrorists on a flight to Amsterdam. TVMA
Black Mass ('15, Cri) Joel Edgerton, Johnny Depp. Irish
mob boss Whitey Bulger becomes an FBI informant to help
take down the Italian mafia. TVMA
Twin Peaks "The Return:
Twin Peaks "The Return:
Part Seven"
Part Eight" (N)
(:10)

10

PM

10:30

Silicon
Veep
"Server
"GroundbrError" (N)
eaking" (N)
(:55) Mr. Right ('15, Com)
Erica N. Tazel, Dawn
Halfkenny, Columbus Short.
I'm Dying Up Here "Sugar
and Spice"

60722762

Courtesy

Lloyd and Chong Price, pictured, will celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversay on Monday, June 26. The couple were married June 26,
1967 in Seoul, Korea. The couple has one son, Young (Chong A.)
Choi; grandson, Eugene Y. Choi; granddaughter, Sunsan C. Choi.
Cards can be sent to the couple at 327 Quail Creek Drive, Gallipolis,
Ohio, 45631.

6

(:20) Central Intelligence ('16, Com) Kevin Hart, Dwayne

60723190

27 (LIFE)

Blue Bloods "Open Secrets" Blue Blood "Insult to Injury" BlueB. "Knockout Game"
BlueB. "Righting Wrongs"
Pirates Ball Pirates Ball J. Buck "Wayne Gretzky"
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
SportsCenter (N)
30 for 30 "Catholics vs. Convicts"
SEC "The Book of Manning"
Cradle Swapping (2017, Drama) Brandon Barash, Patrika My Daughter Is Missing (2017, Thriller) Emmet Scanlan, Deadly Ex (Thril) Natasha
Darbo, Amanda Clayton. TV14
Sophie Robertson, Miranda Raison. (P) TV14
Henstridge. TV14
(5:30)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 Daniel Radcliffe. Harry
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
discovers the Deathly Hallows, the most powerful objects in the wizarding world. TVPG ('11, Adv) Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG
Bar Rescue "Spoiled Brat
Bar Rescue "Drunk on
BET Awards The star-studded 2017 BET Awards.
Party"
Punk"
The Thundermans
The Thundermans
H.Danger
H.Danger
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
SVU "Surrendering Noah" SVU "Institutional Fail"
SVU "Assaulting Reality"
SVU "Intersecting Lives"
SVU "Heartfelt Passages"
(4:30) Percy Jackson &amp; th... The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Trinidad"
United Shades Of America
(5:00) Rush Hour TVPG
Get Hard ('15, Com) Kevin Hart, Will Ferrell. TVMA
Claws "Quicksand" (N)
Claws "Quicksand"
(5:30)
The Day After Tomorrow (2004, Action) Jake Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead (N) Preacher "On the Road"
"100"
(SP) (N)
Gyllenhaal, Ian Holm, Dennis Quaid. TV14
Naked "Frozen in Fear"
Naked "Ashes to Ashes"
Naked and Afraid "Deep in the Swamp"
Naked and Afraid XL (N)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Sicilian American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Pinch
American Pickers "Mama
"Pandoras Box"
Standoff"
Million Dollar Mistake"
Picker"
Knows Best"
Monsters "Coral Reef Killer" River Monsters
River Monsters: Loc.
River Monsters: Loc.
Expedition Mungo (N)
Snapped "Whitney Harris" Snapped "Kathleen Wise" Snapped "Michelle Knotek" Snapped "Elizabeth Guthrie- Snapped "Whitney Harris"
(N)
Nail"
CSI:Miami "Death Eminent" CSI: Miami "Shock"
CSI: Miami "Open Water" CSI: Miami "Rampage"
CSI "One of Our Own"
Botched "Supa Fupa"
Botched "Plastic Fantastic" Botched
Botched (N)
Famously Single (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
From the Ashes Americans struggle with
Live Free or Die "Hell or
Live Free or Die "Slash and Water &amp; Power: A
From the
High Water"
Burn"
California Heist
the coal industry's legacy. (N)
Ashes
AVP Volleyball (L)
Tour de France Preview
Mecum10
F1 Auto Racing Azerbaijan Grand Prix
NHRA Drag Racing Summit Racing Equipment Nationals Site: Summit Motorsports Park UFC UFC Fight Night (L)
Forged in Fire "Spiked
Forged in Fire "The
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides ('11, Act) Johnny Depp. Jack Sparrow
Shield"
Cutlass"
learns both he and Blackbeard are looking for the fountain of youth. TV14
Housew. "A Host of Issues" Housewives Potomac
The Real Housewives (N)
Atlanta "Reunion Part 3"
Atlanta "Reunion Part 4"
BET Awards Pre-Show (L)
BET Awards The star-studded 2017 BET Awards. (L)
Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt BeachReno Bargain Hunt Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Hunters (N) Hunters (N) Mexico (N) Mexico (N)
(4:45)
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben
X-Men Origins: Wolverine Hugh Jackman. When Wolverine decides X-Men
Affleck, Bruce Willis. TV14
to leave the forces for a simpler life, his brother seeks revenge. TV14
Origins: W...

�ALONG THE RIVER

4C Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eagles present
scholarships

mydailytribune.com

Dave Harris | Courtesy

The Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 2171 in Pomeroy recently gave out $3,000 worth of scholarships
to four, young college bound seniors. Each student received a $750 scholarship. Pictured from left
to right are Men’s president Mony Wood, Jordan Chadwell, Clayton Wood, Devan Dugan, and Ladies
Auxiliary President Tammy Capehart. Not pictured is Sierra Cleland.

List

60724366

From page 2C

of the Class of 2018 and is majoring
in Land &amp; Energy Management and
Marketing at Marietta and a graduate
of Eastern High School.
Collen Young was named to the
Miami University spring 2017
president’s list. Miami University
students who are ranked in the top
three percent of undergraduate
students within each division for
second semester 2015-16 have

been named to the president’s list
recognizing academic excellence.
Young, from Rutland, is earning a
B.S. in Education majoring in
Integrated English Language Arts
Education.
Jeff Bauer, Provost and Vice
President for Academic Affairs
at Shawnee State University, has
released the Dean’s List for the
Spring Semester 2017. Three of these
students are from Gallia County.
Their major follows; William Sheets,
Management; Caleb Burnett, Athletic
Training; and Jesse Hawks, History.

All vehicles rebuilt on site, over 100 years of combined experience. Selling the best used vehicles since 1989.

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Nothing like getting all your automotive needs taken care of in one stop! Quality, honest service you can rely on.
2008
Nissan
Altima
Coupe
Red, 107K Miles

2008
Pontiac
G6

$5,900

Blue, 78K Miles

2002
Ford
Ranger
V6 Auto, 4 Door

$3,995

$4,750

2009
Honda
Civic
79K Miles

$4,995

$4,995

6 Speed

$5,495

2011
Chevrolet
Impala
White, 50K Miles

Hemi 63K, 4x4,
Vaca Ready

DEAL
of
THE
WEEK

$6,995
2013
Dodge
Ram 1500

$19,995

2013 GMC Terrain
Only 37K Miles, Leather, Sunroof

2013
Dodge
Avenger
Black, 90K Miles

$5,995

Loaded, Sunroof

Blue (RT), 27K Miles

$9,495
2010
Buick
Lucerne

2010
Kia Forte
Koup

2006
Pontiac
G6
Gray, GTP, 6 Speed,
Loaded, 87K Miles

2013
Dodge
Avenger

62K Miles, Very Nice,
All Leather

$8,995
2014
Toyota
Camry

44K Miles

$11,995
2006
Ford
Taurus

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2006
Chevrolet
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Chrysler
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2005
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Silver

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Best deals in
Southeast Ohio!
60726225

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, June 25, 2017 5C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

By Hilary Price

4 6
5
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9
3
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6
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By Bil and Jeff Keane

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6
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8
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2
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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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

3
7
4
5
6
9
1
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2

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

Hank Ketcham’s

2
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�6C Sunday, June 25, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

60724266

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