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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

'Friday. September 5 , 2008

www.mydail ysentinel :com

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NorU ;t estem
Ohio State
l'l!nn State
W1sconsln

l

0
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l'umue

0

Mich'lll&gt;' St.

0 0
0 0
0 0

llinols
Mlchig;&gt;n .

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Ohio at Ohio St., noon
E. Illinois at lllioos, noon

-Miami (Ohio) at Michigan, roon
• E. Michigan at ~ich1gan St., noon
N. ColoraOO at Purdue, noon
Marshall at Wisconsin, noon
Aa. International at Iowa, noon
Orep1 Stat F\mn State, 3:30p.m.
Murray St. at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Northwestem at Duke, 7 p.m.

Mimesota at BGSU, 7:30p.m.

BIG TEN SlATS
TOTAL OFFENSE

Penn State ........................ 594
lllioois .. .,....... ..................... 532
Ohi:&gt; State ............. ........ .. .495
Northwestem ......... ,.......... 484
Wisconsin .......................... 404
Penn State ... ..................... 334
Indiana .............................. 297
Northwestem .................... 269
Ohio State ........................ 251
MSSING OffENSE

lllirois .. .......'....................... 451
Michigan St.......................321
Penn State ..................... ... 260
Ohio State ........................ 244
Northwestem .......... ;......... 215
TOTAL DEFENSE

Ohio State .... .................. ...... 74
Iowa ............. ..................... 220
Northwestem .................... 225

Penn State ........................ 250
Indiana ...................... ,... .... 282

BIG HN LEAOUI5
RUSHING YARDS
P.J. Hill, Wrs....................... 210
!(ellen Lewis, lnd .................185
T)'Tilll Sutton, NU ................144
Chris Wells, OSU ................ 111 ·
PASSING YAROS
Juioe Williams, Ill. ............. .451
Brian Hoyer, MSU .............. 321

Adam Weber, Minn ............. 298
C.J. Bacher, NU .................. 215
RECEIVING YARDS
Mark Dell, MSU .................. 202

Will Judson, Ill. ..................177
Anelious Benn,lll ................. 92
Etic Decker, Minn .................89
Jack Simll'lOI'I!;, Minn ........... 77

OSU LEADERS
MSSINO YARDS
lOdd Boeckman ................ 187
RUSHING YAROS .
Chris Wells ........................111
RECEIVING YAROS
DeVter R:Jsey ...... ............ .. .... 47

TOUCHDOWNS
Chris Wells ............................1.
Brian Robiskie ........................ 1
DeVter R:Jsey ................... ....... 1

Terre lie f'r)'.ll' ................. .........1
TACIU.ES
~Moeller

..........................6

SACKS
Lawrence Wilson ............. ....... 1

FIElD GOALS
Ryan Pretorius .................... 4/4
TACKLES FOR LOSSES
Lawrence Wilson ............ 1. 5/20

'

tm

Tressel rotts out another motivational gem
COLUMBUS - Obi{) State
football coach Jim Tressel
. throws the book at his players
every year.
Well, actually he hands it to
them. Tressel selects a book,
usually one that explores
themes like teamwork and motivation. and makes it required
reading for the Buckeyes.
But the printed word isn't
the only ·medium the sweatervested one works in when he
tries to create a motivational
work of art.
·
'
One year, he took the whole
team to tight end Ben Hart-

Jim
Naveau
The Lima News

Joaveau@limanews.oom

419·993·2087

sock's family's farm in a ca-

maraderie-building excursion
that had city boys interacting
with farm animals and wa«:hing their coach try to drive a
combine.
This year, one of his motivational stunts was giving each

senior a oontainer with 12 IIIW'- · said we were going to spend aU
bles in it. Each marble repre- those the right way. "
sented one of OSU's regularWhen it was suggested to
.seasongames.Somewerescar- Nicol that giving all the marlet, others were gray. And one, . bles to Tressel would mean the
representing the Michigan players had lost their marbles,
• game, was blue.
he had a quick reply.
.
Every week, the players have
"A~d hopefully ~~en we'll
logiveoneofthe marbles back play for all of them, he said.
to Tressel. ·
One. of the things you've
"When he handed those to heard less and less in the Tresus it took a lot of guys by sur- sel era at Ohio State is players
prise," tight end Rory Nicol saying, "Wejustweren'treudy
said.
to play."
.
·
"You start to look at that litThis year, especially, is a year
tie tiny container that repre- whenOhioStatecan'taffordto
sents our senior season. We not be ready to play any week.

· One stumble and the Buckeyes are probably out of the national championship picture.
One st umble and the Buckeyes' many critks will say, "I
told you so."
Maybe there is something
else at work, too.
Coaches joke about how se- .
niors have already heard all
their speeches. Ohio State has
44 players on its roster who
have been in the program four
years or longer.
·
And judging from Nicol's reaction, the marbles were something nobody saw CQming.·

!kt.1l
!kt. 18
Ott. 25
Nov.S
Nov.15
Nov. 22

'&gt;Wlgst&lt;M&lt;1 State W, 43-0
Noon
@USC
8~m.

01*1

Troy.
Mirnesota
@ Wisoor'Sn
PullliJe
. @ M~St.
Penn State
@NOrthwesem

@nlros
Michigan

1BA
1BA
8 p.m.
1BA
1BA
8 p.m.
1BA
1BA
1BA

Cootont oomplled tiy Jim r-. 11&gt;:1
dllsljJll7; Ra!s Bisldf • The Ume Nels

e 2rollhe urni News. ReJ&gt;ocb:llan d 1t11 or any poniOn &lt;i tnis maoona1
CopAttt

II pmlibiiBd v.thoot- COI'l9S1t.

• Local high school
football action.
-See Page Bl

the

0BDUARIES
Ohio State QB
Terrene Pryor

Page AS
'
• Dr. Donald L. Hannon
• 'Samantha Ahn
Saunders
• Gerald G. Simpson
• Robert Allen Waugh

health care problem in this Height s to
do wntown
rural community.
Middlcpon. It began operatSusan Isaac of ILGARD ing in December through a
attended a National Rural federal FQHC grant . It
Health Care Conference and offers health care servi ces
has traveled to study suc- on a slidin g fee scale to
cessful FQHC/emergen cy patient s both wi th and withroom facilitie s.
out health insurance.
'The goal will be to find a
The ultima te· goal for the
successful model in a set- local health care committee
ting close enough to our is a new medical campu s on ,
own lo be effeclive here," . · U.S. 33 near Rocksprin gs.
Economic
Development The
Meigs
County
Director Perry Varnadoe Community Impro ve ment
said earlier this year.
Corporation has purcha sed
A new medical school land for possible develop- ·
graduate , Dr. Matthew ment as a site for a new hosWeimer, has joined the staff pilal. emergency room and
at Family Heafth Care, and outpatient clinic, hul no
tbe practice has moved from operator has been identified
its location on Mulberry . for such a facilit y.

ect
su
-II I- I

A vi~w of the new

Pomeroy Mason
S~idge shows the
two spans have
come together for
the final concrete
pour thts week
which will take
place at night so
there is little tem perature change
during the initial
concrete set

BY· ELIZABETH RIGEL

ERIGEL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A suspect wamed in the slaying
of a Gallia County man 33
years ago turned himself in
to police in eastern
Kentucky on Thursday after
·a Mil 1autf{)!" his ·=st· was+
,JNSID~
issued at the end of Augusl
by the Ohio State Highway
Patrol.
• JobTrax feature of Fall
Billy Ray Crisp, 59 ,
Career Expo.
Lower John s Creek, Ky.,
SeePageA2
turned himself in to authorities in Pikeville, Ky., exact• It's abourt divorce, not
ly one week after Ohio
g611 clubs. See Page A3
police signed the warrant on
• Frank says gov'i will
what would have been the
stabilize Fannie, Freddie. victim 's birthday. .
Crisp is accused in the
SeePage AS
murder
of
Woodrow
extending from the form
BY BETH SERGENT
· • Hocking president to ·
"Woody" Perroud, a 1969 BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM traveler that is sti II hanggraduate of Gallia Ac(\demy
leave in June.
ing from the Ohio side. As
High
SchooL
Police
found
POMEROY
· SeePageA6
it's jacked down into place
the body of 22-year-old Debunking that old, per- the reinforcing in I he edge
• Delta Queen
Perroud, dead from a gun- sistent rumor that it would
are
coupled
shot wound to the head, at nQt meet in the middle, the girders
supporters plan rally for
the Wakefield Mounds rest new Pomeroy Mason together. "
Tuersday. See Page A6
The actual closure pour
area on U.S. 23 in Pike Bridge is expe.cted to do
County, Ohio, in January just that this week, weath- will take place at night so
there is little temperature
1975.
er per.mitting, when lhe change during the initial
Crisp was reported missing final concrete pour . is
concrete set. The actual
in Kentucky two weeks ago made . .
final pour is a 12-fool .secand Ohio law enforcement
WEATHER
Construction crew s have
tion
of concrete which
been preparing to make
Please see_Suspect A2
that final pour which will amounts- to oi1e hour 's
connect the Ohio and West work, Betzing guessed.
Virginia
spans.
Cary However. he added the
Betzing, proJect engineer hardest part of the pour
with the Ohio Department will be monitoring the
of Transportation, said the hardening concrete and
contractor is working to when it gets to a certain
get the two bridg~ .can- strength, workers then
tilevers as close as possi- stres s the tendons conble be(ore they are perma- .tained in the white cables
·
nently locked together on the bridge.
ODOT estimates traffic
with concrete.
Details on Page A6
Betzing explained: "The will be utilizing the new
cantilevers are locked bridge by the end of the
using high strength bars year.
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Photos courtesy of
Bob Graham

Final concrete pour set on bridge

l

Say what?
"Yeah, a big one."
-Ohio State machJim 'li't;ssd,
whm he was asked ifk hall a dog lu &gt;usc
for players who break his rub ·

Michigan·vs~
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Who holds the
2: Who has the Ohio
Ohio State recoro for · State career record for
touchdown catches in touchcf&lt;l'I.T1 catches in
· a career?
a season?

REED

Meeting ill the middle

the'":' .

HOMEI'OWN: Centerville
OHIO STATE YfARS: 1994-98
CAREER HIGHLIGHTs: T\o\Qoyear staMr
at linebacker on Ohio State teams that 1\011
21 of 25 games in 1997-98. IV.ademic AllBig Ten lour yean;.
·
AFTER OHIO STATE: Signed as a free agent with the
Cleveland Browns in 1999" but did not make the roster.
Worlls as a salesman tor St~r Medical Supplies In
Columbus, writes columns for Bucknuts.com and is an
ana~t on Ohio State football fur WBNS radio.

No. :l:l

r

"

•••'st

NAME: Jerry Rudzinski

J.

fea sible here, and ro deter- nizations, in order to expand
mine if it would meet the medical services in the
community's health care county. A 24-hour emerPOMEROY
needs.
gency room is at the top of
Preliminary results . of a
The Institute for Local .the committee's priorities,
study
of
combined Government and Regional and officials hope the study
Federally-Qualified Health Development at Ohio will help identify models of
Care centers and ,24-hour University has been hired to a combined FQHC family
emergency rooms have complete the study. A pre- medical practice, like that
been delayed until some- liminary report was expect- operated by Family Health
time in the fall.
ed in June , but County Care in Middleport. and 24Earlier this year, Meigs Commissioner
Mick hour emergency care.
County received a $6,000 Davenport said lhe report is · Such models do exist,
grant to study models of not expected until later in Davenport has said, bul not
combined
Federally- the fall, because the scope necessarily in rural areas such
Qualified Health Care fami- of the study has been as this. They have been idenly clinics, · like Family expanded.
tified in urban areas, includHealth Care in Pomeroy,
Davenport has led a ing Chicago. It is the goal of
and emergency room facili- health care committee, the study to determine if such
ties, to determine if such a working closely with legis- an opera\ion could be a feasicombined facility would be lators and health care orga- ble alternative the local
BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.coM

'

Where are
they now?

s 1.:)11 • \'ol. 42,

ER feasibility study takes longer

SPORTS

Buckeyes.await young Bob

KICKOFF REIIJRNS

2008 OSU SCHEDULE

l'onWt'O) • ~liddh•pot1 • &lt;;:tllilmli, • St•ptt-mht•t· - . " ""~

Ohio\ alit') l'nhli,hing ( o.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: OHIO UNIVERSITY

Alook at some of key matchups in the game between DefenliYe ... .
No.3 Ohio State (1-0) and Ohio University (0-1) on Satur- Ohio State's defensive ~ne lim~ed ibung;town
day at Ohio Stadium:
State to 74 yards total offense aild didn't allow
Qulrterblckt
the Penguins to Cioss midfield urtil the final secTheo Scott completed 26 of 35 passes in his first start In onds of the j1Jlme. End~ Wilson made
OhiO University's 21-20 lOss at Wpning lastSaturday. The a solid return from a season-ending injury in
Bobcats have gone to a spread offense and like to M short the 2007 opener with a sack b 18 yards.
Ohio Unrversity senior detersive end Jame. passes. Ohio State starter Todd Boeckman was 14 of 19
for 187 yards and l'M'l.touchddNns, and freshman Terrelle son Hartl&lt;e has 13 career sacks.
Adwli" ge: Ohio State
Pryor was a fan fa\OOte after an 18-)'Cird touchcf&lt;l'I.T1 run in
a 43-0.&lt;Mn r:Ner ibungstown State. Plj&lt;lr was listed as the Uneblckin
No. 3 QUarterback last week but is No. 2 this week.
Marcus Freeman had two unassisted
Advantage: Ohio Stille
tackles, but they must have been @0&lt;1
Rumlng bllc:lls
ares, since he was named OSU's deChris Wells' injured right foot has been Topic No. 1 of dis- fensive player of the !1Jlme against
cussion in Ohio State football and maybe the entre state ~State ~the coaches. He
of Ohio this week. If Wells is held put of the game, as ex- and iyler Moeller each had six over·
pected, Maurice ~lis, Brandon Saine and Dan Herron will all tackles to lead in that cat~ry.
Noah Keller's ~~tackles Jed Ohio
~t the cames. Chris Wells has had 10 games of more than
100 yarns rushing, Maurice v.lllls, Saine and Herron have Unrversity last week. lee Renfro is a
none. Saine's career-best game is 83 yards, and Maurice retuming starter.
Mwant •: Ohio State
wellS' beSt is 70 yards.
Ohio Unive!sity's ~me at W)&lt;omingWI!S played at 7,200 Dwlaulll
feet allCNe sea level, but the Bobcats' rushing statistics
Ohio University has three returning
weren't nearty as lofty. They gained 39 yards on 21 carries. startersMark Parson, Julian R:Jsey and
Advante&amp;'~ Ohio Stille
. ·
· Michael Mitchell- in its defensive back:
ReceMrs
field. Posey is the older brother r '
Brian Rabiskie and Brian Hartline are solidly anbencl1ed OSU's DeVter R:Jsey. Ohio State wil
as the Buckeyes' top two recervers. The interesti~ com- still be two starters short, with cor· ·
pet001 is for pla;;ng time at the third and fourth receiver ·nerback Donald washington sitting
posOO'ls. Freshman DeVierPosey had lour catches fQr 47 out the final game of a two-game
yards, including a 25-yard touchdown catch against suspension, and !Wrt Coleman stil
'lbungstown State. Roy Small et1'lef0ld from coach Jim sidelined ~ an injury. Safety Jer·
Tressel's dog house to cak:h three passes. Dane Sanzen- male Hines was impressf.e as a fiH·
bacher has drawn compliments from Tressel since pre- in for Coleman.
Aclvdage: Ohio State
season practice.
'
Taylor Price's 14 catches tor ou against ~ing 'M:!re SpecW .teams
aschool record. Andrew Moone')/ has 10 career IOUCt'oOOwns. Ohio University's Donte Hardin reAdv8ntage: Ohio State
turned a kickoff 100 yards for a touch·
Offenthe Une
·
down against W)oming, Teammate Chris
Ohio State's big offenSIVe line has a clear aclVantaglil in Garrett has taken a kickoff back for 94 yards
size o.er O!lio University's delensiYe lne, which averages only for a score and returned a punt 88 yards for
260 pounds per· man. Ohio State's smallest starting of- a touchdov.n in his career.
OU kicker Barrett 'IJw.j M field ~Is of 34
fensive lineman IS 297 ·pound center Jim Cordle.
yards
and 31 yards SahJrday in his first
The Buckeyes have. retuming starters at center, both
guards, one tackle and at tight end. They also have three game. osu·s Ryan Pretorius had four
hig)lly rated freshmen finemen -center Mike Brewster and field goals against Youngstown
tackles Mike Adams and J.B. Shugarts- who all played in State and Aaron Pettrey drilled a
the opener.
54-yarder late in
Adwlil' &amp;e1 Ohio
M.iant g : Ohio Stale

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Brandon Saine ................ .. 28.0

Sepl. 20
. Sepl27
Ott. 4

Size matters when making
. a great ratatouille, Dl

An inside look at this week's game

• The uma N&lt;'wo pbotoo

Iowa '" .... """ .... "" ...... " ..... 457
RUSHING OffENSE

Sept 13

Active Aging Week: Putting '.old on hold', Cl

l

1

SATURDAY 'S GAMES

Aug.JO

LIVING

lliCT«&lt; Owral

UIOOI
lnd.ana
lol.e
Mlnnesota

Sopt. 8

ALONG THE RIVER

.
.
3: Who holds the Ohio

State record for career
touchdown catches ~
a tight end?

·Court panel
·recommends
pulling
attorney's
license

'INDEX
4

lo ~·•-= 1. Teny Glem, 17 &lt;n 1995; 2. Da-.&lt;d Boston, 34 from 1996-98;

3. John U.mpl&lt;in, 10 from 1996·98.

.'

SECI10NS-

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds
Comics

1111fll111
. Y11r

IICkiJIIn••
........1

24 PAGES

D Section
insert

Editorials

A4

Movies

cs

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© :mo8 Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co•

Workers prepare for lhe final concrete pour on the new
Pomeroy Mason B~idge to connect the Ohio and West
Virginia spans. The pour is expected this week, weather
permitting.

Imaging services available
at Meigs Medical Center

GALLIPOLIS
An
Ohio Supreme Court panel
has recommended the disbarring of a local attorney
based on alleged instances
of "dishonesty and neglect"
with some of'his clients.
John R. Lentes of
Gallipolis has a 20-day period to appeal or object to the
recommendation of the
Board of Commissioners on
Grievances and Discipline,
which issued a default judgment on Aug. 28 in complaints filed with lhe court
over Lentes' dealings with
the clients and a "failure to
cooperate in the disciplinary
investigation ."
Lentes, who served two
term s as .Meigs County
prosecuting attorney from
1993 until 2001 , is on this
fall's ballot m Gallia

'
POMEROY- O' Bleness Memorial
Hospital will soon
offer imagin'g services at the Meigs Medical Center
(MMC), located at 113 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
The new imaging suite is adjacent to the MMC and .'is
accessible through a connecting doorway. Imaging services
will be available to patients who see physicians at the center, and anyone with orders from other healthcare practitioners, making it a very convenient choice· for those who
live in the area.
No appointment w.ill be needed.
The imaging facility is currently under construction, with
plans to open later !his year. Imaging equipment currently
owned by the hospital and purchased with funds raised
from O' Bleness ' 2006 annual giving campaign will be
installed,
·
Skip Young, 0 ' Bleness ' vice president of clinical services,
said. general services to be offered include X-rays of the

Pleese su Court, Al

Please see Services, Al

STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SubmtHed photo

Larry Cooper, right, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's vice
president of building services , reviews plans for construction at the O'Bieness Meigs Medical Center imaging suite
with Ernie Perry of Healthplex Property Management. The
imaging suite will open later this year, offering services to ·
patients with orders from any healthcare practitioner.

•

'

�iunbap ~times-ienttnd

PageA2

REGIONAL

Sunday, September 7, 2008

CLEVELA'lD (AP) The growing trend of buying
and 'ellin~
foreclosed
homes on eB:1,. i~ making il
diflkuil fnr lo~·al aut horities
to determine who owns
hOmes in need of repair. several Cle,eland-area officials
said.
Cuyahoga Coumy ha&gt;
been hit particularly hard b}
the nation's f'"reclosure crisis. In tile P'"l yea r. both
local onJ outside entrepreneurs have been buying
. vacant hmJ~c" from banks
antl go \·ernmcnt age nci.es
and selling them on eBay.
often to buyers who have
never been to Cleveland.
Flipping home' is nothing
·new, bu t the cBay phenomenon 'has given the pruct ice a
new level of speed. Homes
can he had for as lit tle as a
cottplc thousand dollars. and
often come with boarded
windows and stripped sidlrt ~.

. Cuyahoga
County
Treasurer Jim Rokakis sees
no benefit to the lightning-

quick eBay transactions.
oftt;n made without the
l:luyer ever laying eyes on
the home .
..They ' re the next round or
vultures.'' Rokakis said.
"They have no interest in the
neighborhood. They have no
interest in revitalization.
They have no interest in
Cleveland ...
A review of I00 eBay
,a les by T he East Side
Organizing Project since
late June found that some
sellers misrepresent the conditions of homes and omit
information about tax lien s
and building_ condemnations.
.. The layers on an issue
like this are just cont inuously growing, posi ng severe
problems for the vitality or
neighborhoods," said Man
Laska. housing director for
the
Detroit-Shoreway
Community Organization.
.. We 're ge tting a continued
cycle ot' blight and abandonment."
·
An eBay offer on a home

- GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Health Department wil l provide free immunizations on Tuesday. Sept. 'i at th~ Gallia
Cou nty Health Department at .:1\IY Jackson
Pike, from 8 a.m. unt il 6 p.m.
All children need immun ization' at 2, 4.
6, 12, ami 15 month .s of a2e. a' well as -'Ito
6 and II to 12 years of a)!e. Va&lt;.:&lt;.: ination'
are also available for adu lt s.
Children in need of immunizations must
be accompanied by a paren t or lega l
guardian and bring a curre!lt immu1iization
· record with them
Additional servicc.s, such a,. blood pressure checks and pregnancy tests. wi,ll •tlso

Court from Page AI

. Public meetings

County as a candidate for
probate-juvenile judge.
Master
Commissioner
Harry White wrote t_hat
based · un the investigation ,
Lentes allegedly engaged in
conduct involving . dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepre sentation,
conduct
prejudicial to the administration of justice. conduct
adversely reflecting on his
fitne ss to practice law.
neglect uf an entrusted legal
matter, intentional failure to
carry out a contract of
employment. and intention ,
ally prejudicing or damaging a client in the course of
professional representation.
Efforts to contact Lentes
for comment Friday were

'

.

Judge (D. Dean) Evans' signature resolving the lawsuit
in

Garretson ' s

favor,"

according to the board. In
May
2007.
Garretson
learned there wa ~· no record
of a judgment fn the matter,
and when Garretson produced the fraudulent entry,
Evans filed a ·grievance
against Lentes.
Lentes deposed his side
of
the
matter . that
September
following
requests for rime to obtain
counsel and reported failure to re spond to the·griev. ance. In his deposition,
Lentes said his misconduct
was in part due to difficulties he experienced in representing himself legally in
un s uc~e ssful.
a civil matter.
The board's conclusions
But White fou11d that
stem from a probe 'of while client misrepresentaLentes' alleged -actions in tion usually results in an
three matters.
indefinite suspension of the
In
the
first,
Greg · attorney's license, Lentes
Garretson retained Lentes in ''has .taken such conduct to a
November 2004 in a civil further level by creating an
dispute over repairs to elaborate ruse to mislead his
Garretson's motorcycle.
clients and therea fter creatGarretson alleged that ing a false document in the
Lentes fals.ely advised' him a form of a court order. forglawsuit had been filed in ing the name of the judge
. Gallia Count y Common upon that order. That addiPleas Court, hearings in the tional conduct exhibits an
suit had been sc heduled , ultimate disregard for the
and · a . default judgment profession and justice syswould be entered in tem.''
Garretson's favor aFter a
In the other cases, Jerry
representative of the manu- and Wanda Searles retained
facturer did not appear in · Lentes in September 2005
court. Additionally, Lente s to represent them in Meigs
alleged! y ad vi sed Garretson County Probate-Juvenile
that a sett Iemen! would be Court in an adoption matter,
made to him in lieu ofreturn while
Iva
Marcum·
of the motorcycle.
employed him in October
Lentes is alleged to have 2006 in a property dispute.
produced a fraudulent jud gIn both cases, Lentes is
ment entry "on which the alleged to have falsely
respondent has f9rged advised the clients · that

actions · had been filed on
their behalf, hearings were
scheduled when they were
not and that their cases were
proceeding through the system.
In these cases, disciplinary counsel found failure
to cooperate by Lentes in
the investigation .of the
grieva'nces brought by the
Searles ' and Marcum by
either no response or failure
to submit requested information.
Jonathan W. Marshall, the
board's secretary. said its
default judgment in LenJes'
case was prompted by his
failure io respond.
"The court gets it and
sends it to both parties ,"
Marshall said about what
happ~ ns next with the recommendation. "Both have
20 days to file an objection.
If there is an objection,
briefs will have to be filed
and there will be oral arguments before the court, as in
any civil. case."
" If he (Lentes) doesn ' t
object, the court proceeds to ·
decide on the recommendation of the board," he added.
If
Lente s
appeals,
Marshall estimated that the
court's decision could
come in five to seven
month s. If not, a decision
is ex pected in two to three
month s'.
·
Lentes was admitted to
the Ohio bar in November
1985, and the board noted
that until the se three grievances, he had no prior disciplinary record other than a
failure to reinstate his registration last year.

Suspect rrom Page AI
issued the warrant for his rumored that the motive ror
arrest after he · disappeared. hi's murder may haye
According to Kentucky State involved insurance money.
Police, he also disappeared in Perroud's wife is also report1975 after being questioned edly being questioned as a
about Perroud 's murder. He person of interest and police
was reportedly found later by hope to locate the murder
t'amily members, camping in
a strip mine and armed with a weapon, which they believe
may be in a Kentucky river:
gun.
Crisp was being held withAt the time of his death,
Perroud was married to out bond in the Pike County
Crisp's sister, whose name . Regional Detention Center in
. has not been released. It is Pikeville as or Frid~y.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Se)lt. 8
POMEROY
- Mei~ s
County
Repu bli can
Executive Committee. 7:JO
. pcm.. Courthou,e.
POMEROY - · Mei t!s
County Caticer lnitiativ"e .
' regular meeting. noon , con. ·ference
room,
Mei gs
·County Health· Department.
RACINE
Racine

chest, spine and extremities, can send a patient through
In both the hospital imag- the connecting doorway to
ing department and at the have an X-ray, view tbe
Meigs facility, the filmless image while the patient ,is
Picture Archiving and still at the otlice and then
Communication
Systein begin treatment immediately
(PACS) is used, so digital if appropriate."
images are immediately
The radiologic technolo'
available for physicians. 'gist at MMC can also pr,eRadiology Associates of pare a compact disk (CD)
Athens provides physician
interpretive services for with images for patients to
O' Bleness and also will take to their physicians.
Physician specialties availprovide interpretation for
able
to patients at the center
MMC imaging patients.
'The digital images go include family medicine, gaselectronically from the racil- troenterology, internal mediity to the radiologists, then to cine, cardiology, obstetrics
the patient's physician very and gynecology, podiatry and
·
quickly,"
Young
said. podiatric surgery.
"Healthcare providers with
Fo r more information,
offices in our Meigs facility cctl/ (740) 992-915R.
'

for purchasing

my2008
Market Steer

THANK YOU
Forgey Club

THANK YOU ·
Farmers Bank

for purchasing

for purchasing

my2008

my2008

.Market Lamb

Market Lamb ·

Logan Allison

Nate Allison

Community
events
Sunday, Sept. 7
RIO
GRANDE
''Reunion of former employees ur . Evans/Pennvfurc
' Supermarket · at !;Job Evans
Farm Shelterhouse 2 011
.• Canoe
Livery
Road .
· Covered dish dinner served
at I p.m. For information .
oall446-4289.
: NORTHUP
Descendants of Henry
: "Doc" and Angelique Tope
: Cremeens reunion. Northup
Baptist Church shelte(. A
basket lunch will be .served
at 12:30 p.m. ·
Thesday, Sept. 9
·
, GALLIPOLIS - PERl
meeting, 2 p.m ., me-eting
: room of the First Baptist
: Church, J 100 Fourth Ave .
:' Speaker is Billie Colley.
RN .
GALLIPOLIS - · Gallia
Coun!Ji District Library
Board of Trnstees'' regular
·- monthly meeting. 5 p.m ..
., Bossard Memorial Library.
' , GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
' County Republican Central
; and Executive committees.
:: 7 p.m., at Republican head~: quarters. 1502 Eastern Ave ..
:· instead of the Galli a County
·~ Courthouse. ·
for
this
:: month's meeting. Open to
., the public.
~ GALLIPOLIS
: Riverside Study Club will
:: meet at noon at the
:: Gallipolis Holiday Inn .

Have you ever
perfonned
construction work
at either the
Portsmouth or Paducah·

Church events
Sunday, Sept. 7
SYRACUSE - Second
annual
hume4.:oming at
Syracuse
Community
Church, Second St.. 10 a.m.
Sunday school. potluck at
noon. aftemoon sing at I :~0
p.m. with Paul and Mary
Nichols. Everyone wel come. Joe Gwinn .. pastor.
friday, Sept. 12'
RACINE
Carmel Sutton United Methodist
Church revival. Sept. 12-1.:1.
7 p.m. nig lul y. John Frank
speak ing: special singers.
Glnryland
Be lie1 ers.
Friday. Whit e Oak Quartet.
Saturdav. Trulv Saved.
Sunday:
-

room .

POMEROY Me ie s
County
Cha mber
(Jf
Commerce. business-minded
.luncheo n,
noon.
Pomeroy Library. David
and Lisa Ave rion of Bun \
Party Barn and Milena
Miller of Appalachian
· Comtmtn ttv Vis itin~ Nu rse
1\;,;,q)~,.· iati o·n Hlhprre and
Hea lil1 Sen ice s speak in g.
Piu.;~ Hut ul' Pumcrny ~:a t e r ­
ing. RSVP 9\l~-500{ '
Wedncsda)'• Sept. HI
POMEROY · - Meigs
Hi ~ lt Sd10ol Alumn i Fla~
Fn7ltb;~ll Game practi ce. ·6
p.m .. Meigs Hi gh School
Football Field. Pomeroy.
Thursduy, Sept. II
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club.
6:30
p.m.,
Syracuse
Community Center. Shirley
Hamm to present program
on using dried tlowers to
creat e personalized greeting
' cards.

•

.,

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 7
REEDSVILLE -Fourth
annual Neighborhood Day
to be held at the Belleville
Locks and Dam. Dinner at I
p.m. George Hall to entertain . Local churches sponsor.

Card shower
BIDWELL - Ernestine
Neal Mullen 0 is celebratipg
her 90th birthday on Sept. 8.
Cards can be sent to her at
1016 State Route 850.
Bidweli,"Ohio 45614.
GALLIPOLIS - Hattie
B. Gothard is celebrating
he r 91 st birthday on Sept.
12. Cards can be sent to her
at 242 Magnolia Drive.
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
t:-mail community calendar il.e tiu to kkelly@mydaiFax
lytribuue.com.
OIIIIOllllcemellls to 4463008. Moil items to 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .. AIIIWUIICemelll.~
may also be dropped ojf ot
tile Tribune office.

.

THANK YOU
Cox Cattle Company
for purchasing.

my2008
Market Steer
'

,,

'.' ,

'

Vance Fellure

...

~
Farmers

Bank

Dear Annie: I used to he \ lHI are ~ o ~o rr v there'!\
very dose to my in -law' ·hc&lt;'n a rift and i·ou mi"
and often told pcuple i-f I h~r. Don ' t mcnt iui1 thL' gu lr .
cou ld have placed a .. spe- dubs. Ask wh;~t yo11 c;~n
cial onler.. for in -laws. Lin to repair the br&lt;.:acl1 lor
th ey wou ld have fit the the sa ke oi' the era mlch i1dre(l.
bi II.
llear
An
nie
:
I like my
My father-in -law died 10
fr
iend
..
Lexte
..
a
lot except
~ year:-t ago . For ~i lon g time.
we played golf together for one quirl...
Any time she w;lnt' to
every week. When he was
tel
l me ~n meth ing, ~ he hi.l..,
in the hospita l. my fath erl1er
mom dri ve her to my
in-la w told me he had di scussed with his wik who house in order to ~ a v \vhat
sho\1IJ get his new gnlf ' he cottld ea, il; hai·e " 'id
du bs :md they de cided to o\·er the ph one . She does
give tl1em to me . The gol l-- thi s \\ ith -al l her friends .
du b:-t were le :-t~ than a )'L'H r hut lo r me. she wmcs at
old, and I was '" touched th ~ wor\1 tim e" and due.., by thi s gestu re. Every time n ' t :-;ecmtn carl'.
I' ve tried te lline ht•r tu
I used them. I th ou~h l of
call
instead . but slie won't.
him.
"
Ho
w
can I ask her politely
My husband and
1&lt;1
com
e hack late r without
di vo rced fo.u1: ye a r~ ago .
Last ' ummer. my wonder- end in g tiur fri endship'' ful club~ mag ical ly di :-ap- Anncl\ed in Elkhart, Ind.
llctir Elkhart: MaYbe
peared out nf my house . I
her
lll"m doesn't lc·t -hn
found out later tll&lt;tt my exhusband had c-oerced une usc tbe plwne or. more
of our ~,.·hiiUren imo ~iv in 2 likel y. Lexie ju st. wants
company. You ca n simp ly
the dub s ru him. Mv
t ~l l her. "Lexie. \\' hen '"''
rcfuSt·d to retu rn th em: 'o I - drnp
hy witho ut c:til lng.
se nt an e-marl thr ca t cn in ~
it's
really
inconv e nient.
to Ji~po~e of ~0 11\C o!' !Jj~
I'd much r;~ther ktHl\\' in

ex

helon g in g-. th at were ~ 1ill

in my hot"e if he J id n't
bring hack th ~ gol f dub ....
My e-x sho wed the c-nt: til
to

h i~

X-1.-\car-&lt;lld mntlln.

She ca lk,i

Ill&lt;'

'" 'd 'cllcd.

..,ay i ng lhc clu t,~ no ·longer
belnn~e.d tn Il k'. tllat Ill\

fath e1:i n - l ~n\ \\\luld 11 t' \~·r

ha ve \\·amed me to keep
th e·m unJer ' th L~ cirl·ums tanc ~' - and that our rela1' 111

!:!Oint!. to l~t m v ex ha\'e the
~oir'(:lub&gt;. hui \\llcll , [w uld
do abnul my t'\ - moth~r­

4. 2 3 o/o ~::~age

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains
Gallipolis
Mason
Point Pleasant
www.fbsc.com

Yietd

(740) 992-2136
(740) 667-3161
(740) 446-2265
(304) 773-6400
(304) 674;8200

$10.000 minimum to open account • Annual percentage yield acwrate as of
Augusl 29, 2008 • Subslantial ponally for
Withdrawal · Member FDIC

ad,·ancc . . o I

in -law '! · I mi" her. Kicked Out of the Golf
Club
Dear · Club: Thi , i.sn·r
about the goll dub ,. It 's
about the divorce. Your exmother-in-law has natmally taken her snn's 'ide. ;~nd.
he is riHher vindictive. You

~.:a n '-l'l

aside

' chonl. and clme the door.
Dear· Anni~: I'd lik e to '
add to v'u tlr answer ro
.. Elit:therh:· who ask ed if
it',s OK to let a .:1-year-e ld
hov

~o

intbl

a

men 's

re stI'll\;;,, alone because he
likes to t"e l ile urinal.
A frknu uf mine had a
so luti on. Her ' "n was
allo"·cd to uo 11110 Lh e
m~n·, rc~trun 01 . but un l v if
it W;t\ empty. ff he saw
anynnc else in side. , hl:'' d
rome ri ght out and

hi~

mother wottld take him to
the ladies' rmlln insteau.
\larg'iierit e
in
Gcttyshurg. l'a.
Dear Marguerite: That
\\Ork~ on l y if no one wishes to enter tl1e men\ room
" ili lc her .sn11 is in side.
Otherwise. it can get rather
trickv.
Atinie's Snippet for
(;randparents Da~· (credit Sam Le\'Cnson): The
. ., jmpk ~ t toy. une th at eve n
the younge 'l chtlcl can
operat e. is called a grandparent.
Annie\ Mailbox is written l•v Kotilv Miffhell 011d
Marcy Sugar, longlime
editon
r~l
the A1111
Lamler., column. l'leose
e·mail your qut:.\'·lilnH to

time for vn u.·· If thai due' - null i e s ma i I hnx @ com~
n·t "'""k: t1e un:l\·,,i lahk '" cast.IU!t, or wr;u to:
lliccl) ;1" pn-....,l hle . \~' h e n . .-\ nnie\ .1-tailhox. 1~0.
. ., hl' \..'Pilll'" l \1 tht' dno r. "'l)p /lox 1181 ')fl. Cllicago. , lL
her ri~lll thL'ri: ~t nd ''1\ . . . 1 611fil/ . 1i• .filii/ our 111ore
wi-.h \..'\lltld ,.i . . ll i1o,, ~ hu! a/wul .-\'nnie \ .\lai/hox,
I ll:t' ~ tP rin i -..11 IllY hom~.· ­ and l'{l(ld j'nlfun' " hr other
'\ Prk " ur ··c:tl diti ncr" {lr Crmror.1·· Swdica/;; wrir·· run at t \..' lT ~ tnd .. - \\'llat~,.·,· ­ t.'rs and ('(irtoo11ists, l'isit
L'I' L'\i...' ll'&gt;(' lllL'&lt;IIl' '&gt; h L' . L'; tll '[. ril e Crea/On
Smdica/1'
·.., t,i\'. ThL'Il "\ I \ 'nu · rc r..:\ tl - , lid&gt; page a1 II'WW.cre·
ly ·,nrr y,. ~ ou .. li 'L't' he r i11 a/on. com.

r

..,

r

the relatinthhip yo u onc e
had. but yo u-can make thi s

Wednesday, Sept. 10
RIO GRANDE - GalliaVinton Educational Service
Center Governing Board , 5
p.m.. Room I3 I. Wood Hall
. at the Univers ity or Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College.
Thursday, Sc]Jt. II
GALLIPOLIS - 9/11
Ceremony sponsored by the
Gallia County Veterans
Service Commi"ion. 10
a.m.,
Gallia
County
Veterans Service office.
II 02 Jackson Pike. Til e
public is invited.
Saturday, Sept. 13
GALLIPOLIS
Reunion of Crown City
Mining Co. employees will
be held at the First Church
of God Shelterhou se. Staie
Route 141.. starting at noon.

tntetest Rate

bet tc r.
Call nr write your ex mother-in-law. and tel l her

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

may not· l~e able to rc guin

14 Month CD Special! .

4.15 °/o

Its abourt divorce, not golf clubs

.tion.-..hip wa.-.. at an L'JHL

Great New CD Rates From Farmers Bank-

'.-·

•

CHESTER
Shad e
River Lod ge 453. regular
meeting. 7:30p.m .. refre shme 1tts after.

.,~ ,-....;..-------------

·.··

Call 1-800-866-9663 or visit
www.btmed.or .for more information.

GALLIPOLIS - A 9111 ceremony will
be held Thursday. Sept. II at I0 a.m. at th e
Gallia County Veterans Service offite. 1102
Jackson Pike .
The cvenL spo nsored by the Gallia
County Veterans Servil-e Commission. is
open to the public . Local l:tw enforcement.
emerge ncy. medical and firelighter agency
recognition. a memory balllon release and
candle lig hting will be observed.

Order of Eastern Sta r.
potluck 6:30 p.m .. regular
meetin~ , 7:JD p.m. at lodge
hall.
Thesday, Sept. 9
SY RACUSE - Syracuse
Communit y Center Boaru
of Director,. 7 p.m .. community cen ter.
TUPPERS PLAIN S Eastern Music Boosters. 7
r. m.. lihrary conference

.,

Gaseous Diffusion Plants:
If so, you may be eligible for a
FREE Medical Screening.

VSO plans ceremony

_ Gallia County calendar

Nate Allison

or at any other DOE site?

town ship garage .

· , SHADE
Bedford
, Iownship Tnt stces. 7 p.m ..
town hall .

SerVices from Page AI

J

'

p.m.,

I

THANK YOU
Gallia Co.
Contractors
Association

be offered during the eve ning hours at the
health department ..
If rou hare l illY que.1·1imts or collce ms ,
CiJ/J 44/-2950.

Meigs County calendar
Monday, Sept. 8
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Agricultural
Society will be held at 7:~0
· p.m. in the Coonhunters
Building on the .Rock
Springs Fairgrotmds. The
meeting was postp oned a
week due to the Labor Day
holiday. It is open to the
public.
Thesday, Sept. 9
POMEROY - Salisbury
"Township Tru stees. 6:30
·p:m. .at the home of
Maiming Roush.
· REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees. 6:30

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

: Immunizations scheduled

W.Uls I?fister helps h_ost VUJrlds
Strongest Man

crs participating in Marshall's user name and password to
Hogsett said participants
cmeer fairs or that they have a allow access to the resources are encouraged to bring
personal imerest in teaming on the system, the ability to copies of their resumes and
more about.
.
post ttsown JOb openmgs an9 dress to impress interviewers
Retumrng students regts- 1mmedmte access to apphca- at this free event. She invites
tercd with the former system, tions and interview schedules any business or industry that
EASE, rece1ved a user name d~nng the on-~ampus mter- is in need of or will have a
and a new password by e- vtew scheduhng penod .
.
mail. New students may reg- Employers have the ability to need m the future for entryister by going to www.mar- update their own CO[\tact te;~J employees.
shall .edu/career-services and information, thus having
Marshall students are very
clicking on the JobTrax logo. · more control over the authen- m~ketable m the workforce
A verification messaoe will ticity of their data.
w1th expenences through
be sent to their "e-mail
Career Services will send internships, part-time jobs
addresses. Once veri tied, stu- an e-mail to the contact con- and graduate assistant .posidents mu st complete their firming its registration and lions," Hogsett said.
profiles to be fully active in containing its personal user
The Career Services staff is
Jo~Trax .
name and pa~sword. Contacts available to support students
Wtth JobTrax. emplo~ers may then return to the in their preparation for this
hav~ the abthty to post JObs Job!rax ' employe~ site and and other events with resume
for free tor students and alum- log m.
..
.. .
assistance printing mock
m to v1ew 24 hours a day;
In addtt1on to ofterrng .
. .'
: .
seven days a week," Hogsett JobTrax, Career Services also rntervtewrng and protessronal
said.
has scheduled its Fall Career suumg. A Career E~po
Debby Stoler, assistant Expo for Wednesday, Sept. Success Workshop: rn ":'hich
director for development and I0. Marshall students and these and other toptcs will be
outreach
with
Career alumni may explore new job dtscussed, takes place at 11
Services, encoumges employ- opportunities at the expo, a.m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday,
ers to register for Marshall which runs from 10 a.m. to 2 Sept. 3, in the Memorial
JobTrax by taking the follow- p.m. in the Memorial Student Student Center Alumni ·
ing steps:
Center's Don Morris Room. Lounge. All students are wei• Using an Internet Nearly 90 employers , repre- come to attend.
Browser,
go , · to: senting the corporate, governThe staff also is available to
http://~ww.marshall.edu/care. ment and nonprofit sectors work with any employer that
er-servtces;
..
are expected to attend. .
is interested in attending the
• Cit~~ on the Marshall . Employers and orgamza- Fall Career Expo and mak:in
JobTrax logo; ,
!tons will provide a range of · .
.
g
• Complete the employer opportunittes, including jobs tt a successful recnutment
information that is requested; in banking, computer infor- tool.
• Click the "Submit" button marion technology, criminal
For more information
Stoler said employers may j~stice, financial .advising. about 1/te Fall Career Expo,
regi ster to subscribe to health care, hospitality. insur- JobTrax or ony orher service
Marshall JobTrax free of ance, recreation, retail and proviqed by Career Services,
charge: Each contact has a security.
call (304) 696-2370.

Sunday, September 7,

:Local Briefs

CHARLESTON, W.Va. County and the confiscation
on East 72 nd Street in such &lt;IS the one on East 72nd
'
(AP)
- State conservation of more than 50 pounds of
Cleve land reads, '·N JCE , Street, often happens so fast
officers
have arrested five
CLEAN, Nicer'''
that officials at Cleveland's Wyoming and Summers ginseng on Augt1st 29. Eight
pound' of ginseng were
Its windows are boarded. overburdened building and
county
residents
on
charges
of
found
at another home.
the siding is stripped and the housing department have a
illegally
harvesting
or
selling
In another cal;e, officers
kitchen counters are miss- hard time keeping up.
ginseng.
,
atT~
'ted
two
Summers
ing. Half of the surroundi l1)l
The home i · in the name
The Division , • Natural County re,idents August ' 30
homes are boarded up and of Best Buy Properties: But Resources says the names of
stripped.
often. houses on eBay are those 311ested are being with- and seized 126 roots valued lit
The owner. Best Buy registered in the names of held as part of the ongoing more than $500..
·
Properties of Ch illicothe. previous owners, such as the investigation.
. Ginseng possession in West
has been selling foreclosed · Department of Housing and
Officers were tipped that Virginia is allowed only froin
property on cBay -for eight Urban Development.
through ·
ginseng was being sold on the September
years. It has never seen the
That makes it difticult for Internet and an invt;stigation November, so, the medicinal
house, or repaired it.
the local government to led io the arrest of a dealer plants can reproduce and pr\&gt;A bidder won the house
track down the true owner of and two others in Wyoming · duce .a new crop.
recently for $3,800.
In the ad, Best Buy the homes so they can issue
Properties promises no liens new ciiations, and make
and no violations on the sure that a house is kept up.
home, which. according to Houses arc · sometimes
the county auditor, it bought flipped even before there is
fro m Deut sche Bank for time for a title transfer.
'That's a huge challenge,"
CHARLESTON. W.Va. arranged with organizers to
$2.375 on July 22. But city
records show the house has said department Dir-ector (AP) -- Charleston nati ve h:tve it come to West Virginia.
Pfister says he hopes to do
. two active violations from Edward Rybka. "We spend a Phil Pfister will go for his sechuge
amount
of
time
trying
2005.-and a $257 city bill for
ond World's Strongest Man his. hometown some justioe.
to frnd people."
'
clean ing up the lot.
title in three years in his In 2006 he became the ftrst
And those who buy hometown starting this week- American to win the title in
A Best Buy Properties
spokesman did not answer flipped properties are often end.
24 years:
requests for comment.
surprised when they end up
The competi tion is free and
Governor Manchin· was in
The flipping of houses. in Housing Court. California a year ago watch- open to the public. It will be
ing Pfister compete in the held at venues around the city,
prestigious
powerlifting \vith the tinals al Appalachian
event. The governor · then · Powc"r Park on Sept. 14.

Job Ifax feature of Fall,c;areer ExpoHUNTINGTON. W.Va. Marshall University Career
Service;' is. oftering a new.
more fun ctional Web-based
career management system
called Marshall JobTrax. a
powerful tool that allows students and alumni to search for
on- and oft·-campus part-time
jobs. intemships. and full · time career opportunities.
•·Hundreds of employment
opportunities are at our students' fingettips," said Denise
Hogsett, director of Career
Services. "The improved system provides greater ease of
use for students and employcrs and the management of
recruiting programs, contact
dmabases, and job postings."
Marshall JobTrax has a
variety of additional inforrnatjon. according to Hogsett.
Career Services events are
listed in the calendar and
workshop sections. All of the
open jobs received from
employers are posted on
JobTrax as welL Any informarion studems and .alumni
need to schedule an appointment during on-campus interview ing is just a mouse click
away.
·
Hogsett said JobTrax also
allows students tq upload and
store job-search documents
such as resumes and sample
cover letters, and to apply for
available positions on-line. In
addition, it allows students to
explore employer contact
infom1ation for those employ-

UN

·_: iunbap ttmes ·ientinel

Officials: eBay sales worsening housing problems 5 charged in ginseng bust

PageA.1

Like Working With Computers?
Tum your passron into a paycheck

i' with an Associate Degree of Applied Busmess 1h

a

W Ill!'"
,..........

Computer Applications Technology
or
Technical Support. Specialist

. Galli~olis
Career College
' ' t 'ar~"r:o.·

kcrlllltHI•m••r·

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_www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu
1176 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH

•

Your sight lS
our focus .
Drs. Thomas and Susan Quinn and Dr. Robyn Sargent
are pleased
. to announce the addition of Dr. Shane.
Foster to the practice.
'

.

Dr. Foster is a Cum Laude graduate of the Ohio State
University College of Optometry.
• Doctor Foster is now accepting new patients
• Most major vision and medical plans a ccepted
• Specialty vis1on services as well as treatment of
eye disease and inJury
·

�iunbap ~times-ienttnd

PageA2

REGIONAL

Sunday, September 7, 2008

CLEVELA'lD (AP) The growing trend of buying
and 'ellin~
foreclosed
homes on eB:1,. i~ making il
diflkuil fnr lo~·al aut horities
to determine who owns
hOmes in need of repair. several Cle,eland-area officials
said.
Cuyahoga Coumy ha&gt;
been hit particularly hard b}
the nation's f'"reclosure crisis. In tile P'"l yea r. both
local onJ outside entrepreneurs have been buying
. vacant hmJ~c" from banks
antl go \·ernmcnt age nci.es
and selling them on eBay.
often to buyers who have
never been to Cleveland.
Flipping home' is nothing
·new, bu t the cBay phenomenon 'has given the pruct ice a
new level of speed. Homes
can he had for as lit tle as a
cottplc thousand dollars. and
often come with boarded
windows and stripped sidlrt ~.

. Cuyahoga
County
Treasurer Jim Rokakis sees
no benefit to the lightning-

quick eBay transactions.
oftt;n made without the
l:luyer ever laying eyes on
the home .
..They ' re the next round or
vultures.'' Rokakis said.
"They have no interest in the
neighborhood. They have no
interest in revitalization.
They have no interest in
Cleveland ...
A review of I00 eBay
,a les by T he East Side
Organizing Project since
late June found that some
sellers misrepresent the conditions of homes and omit
information about tax lien s
and building_ condemnations.
.. The layers on an issue
like this are just cont inuously growing, posi ng severe
problems for the vitality or
neighborhoods," said Man
Laska. housing director for
the
Detroit-Shoreway
Community Organization.
.. We 're ge tting a continued
cycle ot' blight and abandonment."
·
An eBay offer on a home

- GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Health Department wil l provide free immunizations on Tuesday. Sept. 'i at th~ Gallia
Cou nty Health Department at .:1\IY Jackson
Pike, from 8 a.m. unt il 6 p.m.
All children need immun ization' at 2, 4.
6, 12, ami 15 month .s of a2e. a' well as -'Ito
6 and II to 12 years of a)!e. Va&lt;.:&lt;.: ination'
are also available for adu lt s.
Children in need of immunizations must
be accompanied by a paren t or lega l
guardian and bring a curre!lt immu1iization
· record with them
Additional servicc.s, such a,. blood pressure checks and pregnancy tests. wi,ll •tlso

Court from Page AI

. Public meetings

County as a candidate for
probate-juvenile judge.
Master
Commissioner
Harry White wrote t_hat
based · un the investigation ,
Lentes allegedly engaged in
conduct involving . dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepre sentation,
conduct
prejudicial to the administration of justice. conduct
adversely reflecting on his
fitne ss to practice law.
neglect uf an entrusted legal
matter, intentional failure to
carry out a contract of
employment. and intention ,
ally prejudicing or damaging a client in the course of
professional representation.
Efforts to contact Lentes
for comment Friday were

'

.

Judge (D. Dean) Evans' signature resolving the lawsuit
in

Garretson ' s

favor,"

according to the board. In
May
2007.
Garretson
learned there wa ~· no record
of a judgment fn the matter,
and when Garretson produced the fraudulent entry,
Evans filed a ·grievance
against Lentes.
Lentes deposed his side
of
the
matter . that
September
following
requests for rime to obtain
counsel and reported failure to re spond to the·griev. ance. In his deposition,
Lentes said his misconduct
was in part due to difficulties he experienced in representing himself legally in
un s uc~e ssful.
a civil matter.
The board's conclusions
But White fou11d that
stem from a probe 'of while client misrepresentaLentes' alleged -actions in tion usually results in an
three matters.
indefinite suspension of the
In
the
first,
Greg · attorney's license, Lentes
Garretson retained Lentes in ''has .taken such conduct to a
November 2004 in a civil further level by creating an
dispute over repairs to elaborate ruse to mislead his
Garretson's motorcycle.
clients and therea fter creatGarretson alleged that ing a false document in the
Lentes fals.ely advised' him a form of a court order. forglawsuit had been filed in ing the name of the judge
. Gallia Count y Common upon that order. That addiPleas Court, hearings in the tional conduct exhibits an
suit had been sc heduled , ultimate disregard for the
and · a . default judgment profession and justice syswould be entered in tem.''
Garretson's favor aFter a
In the other cases, Jerry
representative of the manu- and Wanda Searles retained
facturer did not appear in · Lentes in September 2005
court. Additionally, Lente s to represent them in Meigs
alleged! y ad vi sed Garretson County Probate-Juvenile
that a sett Iemen! would be Court in an adoption matter,
made to him in lieu ofreturn while
Iva
Marcum·
of the motorcycle.
employed him in October
Lentes is alleged to have 2006 in a property dispute.
produced a fraudulent jud gIn both cases, Lentes is
ment entry "on which the alleged to have falsely
respondent has f9rged advised the clients · that

actions · had been filed on
their behalf, hearings were
scheduled when they were
not and that their cases were
proceeding through the system.
In these cases, disciplinary counsel found failure
to cooperate by Lentes in
the investigation .of the
grieva'nces brought by the
Searles ' and Marcum by
either no response or failure
to submit requested information.
Jonathan W. Marshall, the
board's secretary. said its
default judgment in LenJes'
case was prompted by his
failure io respond.
"The court gets it and
sends it to both parties ,"
Marshall said about what
happ~ ns next with the recommendation. "Both have
20 days to file an objection.
If there is an objection,
briefs will have to be filed
and there will be oral arguments before the court, as in
any civil. case."
" If he (Lentes) doesn ' t
object, the court proceeds to ·
decide on the recommendation of the board," he added.
If
Lente s
appeals,
Marshall estimated that the
court's decision could
come in five to seven
month s. If not, a decision
is ex pected in two to three
month s'.
·
Lentes was admitted to
the Ohio bar in November
1985, and the board noted
that until the se three grievances, he had no prior disciplinary record other than a
failure to reinstate his registration last year.

Suspect rrom Page AI
issued the warrant for his rumored that the motive ror
arrest after he · disappeared. hi's murder may haye
According to Kentucky State involved insurance money.
Police, he also disappeared in Perroud's wife is also report1975 after being questioned edly being questioned as a
about Perroud 's murder. He person of interest and police
was reportedly found later by hope to locate the murder
t'amily members, camping in
a strip mine and armed with a weapon, which they believe
may be in a Kentucky river:
gun.
Crisp was being held withAt the time of his death,
Perroud was married to out bond in the Pike County
Crisp's sister, whose name . Regional Detention Center in
. has not been released. It is Pikeville as or Frid~y.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Se)lt. 8
POMEROY
- Mei~ s
County
Repu bli can
Executive Committee. 7:JO
. pcm.. Courthou,e.
POMEROY - · Mei t!s
County Caticer lnitiativ"e .
' regular meeting. noon , con. ·ference
room,
Mei gs
·County Health· Department.
RACINE
Racine

chest, spine and extremities, can send a patient through
In both the hospital imag- the connecting doorway to
ing department and at the have an X-ray, view tbe
Meigs facility, the filmless image while the patient ,is
Picture Archiving and still at the otlice and then
Communication
Systein begin treatment immediately
(PACS) is used, so digital if appropriate."
images are immediately
The radiologic technolo'
available for physicians. 'gist at MMC can also pr,eRadiology Associates of pare a compact disk (CD)
Athens provides physician
interpretive services for with images for patients to
O' Bleness and also will take to their physicians.
Physician specialties availprovide interpretation for
able
to patients at the center
MMC imaging patients.
'The digital images go include family medicine, gaselectronically from the racil- troenterology, internal mediity to the radiologists, then to cine, cardiology, obstetrics
the patient's physician very and gynecology, podiatry and
·
quickly,"
Young
said. podiatric surgery.
"Healthcare providers with
Fo r more information,
offices in our Meigs facility cctl/ (740) 992-915R.
'

for purchasing

my2008
Market Steer

THANK YOU
Forgey Club

THANK YOU ·
Farmers Bank

for purchasing

for purchasing

my2008

my2008

.Market Lamb

Market Lamb ·

Logan Allison

Nate Allison

Community
events
Sunday, Sept. 7
RIO
GRANDE
''Reunion of former employees ur . Evans/Pennvfurc
' Supermarket · at !;Job Evans
Farm Shelterhouse 2 011
.• Canoe
Livery
Road .
· Covered dish dinner served
at I p.m. For information .
oall446-4289.
: NORTHUP
Descendants of Henry
: "Doc" and Angelique Tope
: Cremeens reunion. Northup
Baptist Church shelte(. A
basket lunch will be .served
at 12:30 p.m. ·
Thesday, Sept. 9
·
, GALLIPOLIS - PERl
meeting, 2 p.m ., me-eting
: room of the First Baptist
: Church, J 100 Fourth Ave .
:' Speaker is Billie Colley.
RN .
GALLIPOLIS - · Gallia
Coun!Ji District Library
Board of Trnstees'' regular
·- monthly meeting. 5 p.m ..
., Bossard Memorial Library.
' , GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
' County Republican Central
; and Executive committees.
:: 7 p.m., at Republican head~: quarters. 1502 Eastern Ave ..
:· instead of the Galli a County
·~ Courthouse. ·
for
this
:: month's meeting. Open to
., the public.
~ GALLIPOLIS
: Riverside Study Club will
:: meet at noon at the
:: Gallipolis Holiday Inn .

Have you ever
perfonned
construction work
at either the
Portsmouth or Paducah·

Church events
Sunday, Sept. 7
SYRACUSE - Second
annual
hume4.:oming at
Syracuse
Community
Church, Second St.. 10 a.m.
Sunday school. potluck at
noon. aftemoon sing at I :~0
p.m. with Paul and Mary
Nichols. Everyone wel come. Joe Gwinn .. pastor.
friday, Sept. 12'
RACINE
Carmel Sutton United Methodist
Church revival. Sept. 12-1.:1.
7 p.m. nig lul y. John Frank
speak ing: special singers.
Glnryland
Be lie1 ers.
Friday. Whit e Oak Quartet.
Saturdav. Trulv Saved.
Sunday:
-

room .

POMEROY Me ie s
County
Cha mber
(Jf
Commerce. business-minded
.luncheo n,
noon.
Pomeroy Library. David
and Lisa Ave rion of Bun \
Party Barn and Milena
Miller of Appalachian
· Comtmtn ttv Vis itin~ Nu rse
1\;,;,q)~,.· iati o·n Hlhprre and
Hea lil1 Sen ice s speak in g.
Piu.;~ Hut ul' Pumcrny ~:a t e r ­
ing. RSVP 9\l~-500{ '
Wedncsda)'• Sept. HI
POMEROY · - Meigs
Hi ~ lt Sd10ol Alumn i Fla~
Fn7ltb;~ll Game practi ce. ·6
p.m .. Meigs Hi gh School
Football Field. Pomeroy.
Thursduy, Sept. II
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club.
6:30
p.m.,
Syracuse
Community Center. Shirley
Hamm to present program
on using dried tlowers to
creat e personalized greeting
' cards.

•

.,

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 7
REEDSVILLE -Fourth
annual Neighborhood Day
to be held at the Belleville
Locks and Dam. Dinner at I
p.m. George Hall to entertain . Local churches sponsor.

Card shower
BIDWELL - Ernestine
Neal Mullen 0 is celebratipg
her 90th birthday on Sept. 8.
Cards can be sent to her at
1016 State Route 850.
Bidweli,"Ohio 45614.
GALLIPOLIS - Hattie
B. Gothard is celebrating
he r 91 st birthday on Sept.
12. Cards can be sent to her
at 242 Magnolia Drive.
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
t:-mail community calendar il.e tiu to kkelly@mydaiFax
lytribuue.com.
OIIIIOllllcemellls to 4463008. Moil items to 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .. AIIIWUIICemelll.~
may also be dropped ojf ot
tile Tribune office.

.

THANK YOU
Cox Cattle Company
for purchasing.

my2008
Market Steer
'

,,

'.' ,

'

Vance Fellure

...

~
Farmers

Bank

Dear Annie: I used to he \ lHI are ~ o ~o rr v there'!\
very dose to my in -law' ·hc&lt;'n a rift and i·ou mi"
and often told pcuple i-f I h~r. Don ' t mcnt iui1 thL' gu lr .
cou ld have placed a .. spe- dubs. Ask wh;~t yo11 c;~n
cial onler.. for in -laws. Lin to repair the br&lt;.:acl1 lor
th ey wou ld have fit the the sa ke oi' the era mlch i1dre(l.
bi II.
llear
An
nie
:
I like my
My father-in -law died 10
fr
iend
..
Lexte
..
a
lot except
~ year:-t ago . For ~i lon g time.
we played golf together for one quirl...
Any time she w;lnt' to
every week. When he was
tel
l me ~n meth ing, ~ he hi.l..,
in the hospita l. my fath erl1er
mom dri ve her to my
in-la w told me he had di scussed with his wik who house in order to ~ a v \vhat
sho\1IJ get his new gnlf ' he cottld ea, il; hai·e " 'id
du bs :md they de cided to o\·er the ph one . She does
give tl1em to me . The gol l-- thi s \\ ith -al l her friends .
du b:-t were le :-t~ than a )'L'H r hut lo r me. she wmcs at
old, and I was '" touched th ~ wor\1 tim e" and due.., by thi s gestu re. Every time n ' t :-;ecmtn carl'.
I' ve tried te lline ht•r tu
I used them. I th ou~h l of
call
instead . but slie won't.
him.
"
Ho
w
can I ask her politely
My husband and
1&lt;1
com
e hack late r without
di vo rced fo.u1: ye a r~ ago .
Last ' ummer. my wonder- end in g tiur fri endship'' ful club~ mag ical ly di :-ap- Anncl\ed in Elkhart, Ind.
llctir Elkhart: MaYbe
peared out nf my house . I
her
lll"m doesn't lc·t -hn
found out later tll&lt;tt my exhusband had c-oerced une usc tbe plwne or. more
of our ~,.·hiiUren imo ~iv in 2 likel y. Lexie ju st. wants
company. You ca n simp ly
the dub s ru him. Mv
t ~l l her. "Lexie. \\' hen '"''
rcfuSt·d to retu rn th em: 'o I - drnp
hy witho ut c:til lng.
se nt an e-marl thr ca t cn in ~
it's
really
inconv e nient.
to Ji~po~e of ~0 11\C o!' !Jj~
I'd much r;~ther ktHl\\' in

ex

helon g in g-. th at were ~ 1ill

in my hot"e if he J id n't
bring hack th ~ gol f dub ....
My e-x sho wed the c-nt: til
to

h i~

X-1.-\car-&lt;lld mntlln.

She ca lk,i

Ill&lt;'

'" 'd 'cllcd.

..,ay i ng lhc clu t,~ no ·longer
belnn~e.d tn Il k'. tllat Ill\

fath e1:i n - l ~n\ \\\luld 11 t' \~·r

ha ve \\·amed me to keep
th e·m unJer ' th L~ cirl·ums tanc ~' - and that our rela1' 111

!:!Oint!. to l~t m v ex ha\'e the
~oir'(:lub&gt;. hui \\llcll , [w uld
do abnul my t'\ - moth~r­

4. 2 3 o/o ~::~age

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains
Gallipolis
Mason
Point Pleasant
www.fbsc.com

Yietd

(740) 992-2136
(740) 667-3161
(740) 446-2265
(304) 773-6400
(304) 674;8200

$10.000 minimum to open account • Annual percentage yield acwrate as of
Augusl 29, 2008 • Subslantial ponally for
Withdrawal · Member FDIC

ad,·ancc . . o I

in -law '! · I mi" her. Kicked Out of the Golf
Club
Dear · Club: Thi , i.sn·r
about the goll dub ,. It 's
about the divorce. Your exmother-in-law has natmally taken her snn's 'ide. ;~nd.
he is riHher vindictive. You

~.:a n '-l'l

aside

' chonl. and clme the door.
Dear· Anni~: I'd lik e to '
add to v'u tlr answer ro
.. Elit:therh:· who ask ed if
it',s OK to let a .:1-year-e ld
hov

~o

intbl

a

men 's

re stI'll\;;,, alone because he
likes to t"e l ile urinal.
A frknu uf mine had a
so luti on. Her ' "n was
allo"·cd to uo 11110 Lh e
m~n·, rc~trun 01 . but un l v if
it W;t\ empty. ff he saw
anynnc else in side. , hl:'' d
rome ri ght out and

hi~

mother wottld take him to
the ladies' rmlln insteau.
\larg'iierit e
in
Gcttyshurg. l'a.
Dear Marguerite: That
\\Ork~ on l y if no one wishes to enter tl1e men\ room
" ili lc her .sn11 is in side.
Otherwise. it can get rather
trickv.
Atinie's Snippet for
(;randparents Da~· (credit Sam Le\'Cnson): The
. ., jmpk ~ t toy. une th at eve n
the younge 'l chtlcl can
operat e. is called a grandparent.
Annie\ Mailbox is written l•v Kotilv Miffhell 011d
Marcy Sugar, longlime
editon
r~l
the A1111
Lamler., column. l'leose
e·mail your qut:.\'·lilnH to

time for vn u.·· If thai due' - null i e s ma i I hnx @ com~
n·t "'""k: t1e un:l\·,,i lahk '" cast.IU!t, or wr;u to:
lliccl) ;1" pn-....,l hle . \~' h e n . .-\ nnie\ .1-tailhox. 1~0.
. ., hl' \..'Pilll'" l \1 tht' dno r. "'l)p /lox 1181 ')fl. Cllicago. , lL
her ri~lll thL'ri: ~t nd ''1\ . . . 1 611fil/ . 1i• .filii/ our 111ore
wi-.h \..'\lltld ,.i . . ll i1o,, ~ hu! a/wul .-\'nnie \ .\lai/hox,
I ll:t' ~ tP rin i -..11 IllY hom~.· ­ and l'{l(ld j'nlfun' " hr other
'\ Prk " ur ··c:tl diti ncr" {lr Crmror.1·· Swdica/;; wrir·· run at t \..' lT ~ tnd .. - \\'llat~,.·,· ­ t.'rs and ('(irtoo11ists, l'isit
L'I' L'\i...' ll'&gt;(' lllL'&lt;IIl' '&gt; h L' . L'; tll '[. ril e Crea/On
Smdica/1'
·.., t,i\'. ThL'Il "\ I \ 'nu · rc r..:\ tl - , lid&gt; page a1 II'WW.cre·
ly ·,nrr y,. ~ ou .. li 'L't' he r i11 a/on. com.

r

..,

r

the relatinthhip yo u onc e
had. but yo u-can make thi s

Wednesday, Sept. 10
RIO GRANDE - GalliaVinton Educational Service
Center Governing Board , 5
p.m.. Room I3 I. Wood Hall
. at the Univers ity or Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College.
Thursday, Sc]Jt. II
GALLIPOLIS - 9/11
Ceremony sponsored by the
Gallia County Veterans
Service Commi"ion. 10
a.m.,
Gallia
County
Veterans Service office.
II 02 Jackson Pike. Til e
public is invited.
Saturday, Sept. 13
GALLIPOLIS
Reunion of Crown City
Mining Co. employees will
be held at the First Church
of God Shelterhou se. Staie
Route 141.. starting at noon.

tntetest Rate

bet tc r.
Call nr write your ex mother-in-law. and tel l her

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

may not· l~e able to rc guin

14 Month CD Special! .

4.15 °/o

Its abourt divorce, not golf clubs

.tion.-..hip wa.-.. at an L'JHL

Great New CD Rates From Farmers Bank-

'.-·

•

CHESTER
Shad e
River Lod ge 453. regular
meeting. 7:30p.m .. refre shme 1tts after.

.,~ ,-....;..-------------

·.··

Call 1-800-866-9663 or visit
www.btmed.or .for more information.

GALLIPOLIS - A 9111 ceremony will
be held Thursday. Sept. II at I0 a.m. at th e
Gallia County Veterans Service offite. 1102
Jackson Pike .
The cvenL spo nsored by the Gallia
County Veterans Servil-e Commission. is
open to the public . Local l:tw enforcement.
emerge ncy. medical and firelighter agency
recognition. a memory balllon release and
candle lig hting will be observed.

Order of Eastern Sta r.
potluck 6:30 p.m .. regular
meetin~ , 7:JD p.m. at lodge
hall.
Thesday, Sept. 9
SY RACUSE - Syracuse
Communit y Center Boaru
of Director,. 7 p.m .. community cen ter.
TUPPERS PLAIN S Eastern Music Boosters. 7
r. m.. lihrary conference

.,

Gaseous Diffusion Plants:
If so, you may be eligible for a
FREE Medical Screening.

VSO plans ceremony

_ Gallia County calendar

Nate Allison

or at any other DOE site?

town ship garage .

· , SHADE
Bedford
, Iownship Tnt stces. 7 p.m ..
town hall .

SerVices from Page AI

J

'

p.m.,

I

THANK YOU
Gallia Co.
Contractors
Association

be offered during the eve ning hours at the
health department ..
If rou hare l illY que.1·1imts or collce ms ,
CiJ/J 44/-2950.

Meigs County calendar
Monday, Sept. 8
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Agricultural
Society will be held at 7:~0
· p.m. in the Coonhunters
Building on the .Rock
Springs Fairgrotmds. The
meeting was postp oned a
week due to the Labor Day
holiday. It is open to the
public.
Thesday, Sept. 9
POMEROY - Salisbury
"Township Tru stees. 6:30
·p:m. .at the home of
Maiming Roush.
· REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees. 6:30

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

: Immunizations scheduled

W.Uls I?fister helps h_ost VUJrlds
Strongest Man

crs participating in Marshall's user name and password to
Hogsett said participants
cmeer fairs or that they have a allow access to the resources are encouraged to bring
personal imerest in teaming on the system, the ability to copies of their resumes and
more about.
.
post ttsown JOb openmgs an9 dress to impress interviewers
Retumrng students regts- 1mmedmte access to apphca- at this free event. She invites
tercd with the former system, tions and interview schedules any business or industry that
EASE, rece1ved a user name d~nng the on-~ampus mter- is in need of or will have a
and a new password by e- vtew scheduhng penod .
.
mail. New students may reg- Employers have the ability to need m the future for entryister by going to www.mar- update their own CO[\tact te;~J employees.
shall .edu/career-services and information, thus having
Marshall students are very
clicking on the JobTrax logo. · more control over the authen- m~ketable m the workforce
A verification messaoe will ticity of their data.
w1th expenences through
be sent to their "e-mail
Career Services will send internships, part-time jobs
addresses. Once veri tied, stu- an e-mail to the contact con- and graduate assistant .posidents mu st complete their firming its registration and lions," Hogsett said.
profiles to be fully active in containing its personal user
The Career Services staff is
Jo~Trax .
name and pa~sword. Contacts available to support students
Wtth JobTrax. emplo~ers may then return to the in their preparation for this
hav~ the abthty to post JObs Job!rax ' employe~ site and and other events with resume
for free tor students and alum- log m.
..
.. .
assistance printing mock
m to v1ew 24 hours a day;
In addtt1on to ofterrng .
. .'
: .
seven days a week," Hogsett JobTrax, Career Services also rntervtewrng and protessronal
said.
has scheduled its Fall Career suumg. A Career E~po
Debby Stoler, assistant Expo for Wednesday, Sept. Success Workshop: rn ":'hich
director for development and I0. Marshall students and these and other toptcs will be
outreach
with
Career alumni may explore new job dtscussed, takes place at 11
Services, encoumges employ- opportunities at the expo, a.m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday,
ers to register for Marshall which runs from 10 a.m. to 2 Sept. 3, in the Memorial
JobTrax by taking the follow- p.m. in the Memorial Student Student Center Alumni ·
ing steps:
Center's Don Morris Room. Lounge. All students are wei• Using an Internet Nearly 90 employers , repre- come to attend.
Browser,
go , · to: senting the corporate, governThe staff also is available to
http://~ww.marshall.edu/care. ment and nonprofit sectors work with any employer that
er-servtces;
..
are expected to attend. .
is interested in attending the
• Cit~~ on the Marshall . Employers and orgamza- Fall Career Expo and mak:in
JobTrax logo; ,
!tons will provide a range of · .
.
g
• Complete the employer opportunittes, including jobs tt a successful recnutment
information that is requested; in banking, computer infor- tool.
• Click the "Submit" button marion technology, criminal
For more information
Stoler said employers may j~stice, financial .advising. about 1/te Fall Career Expo,
regi ster to subscribe to health care, hospitality. insur- JobTrax or ony orher service
Marshall JobTrax free of ance, recreation, retail and proviqed by Career Services,
charge: Each contact has a security.
call (304) 696-2370.

Sunday, September 7,

:Local Briefs

CHARLESTON, W.Va. County and the confiscation
on East 72 nd Street in such &lt;IS the one on East 72nd
'
(AP)
- State conservation of more than 50 pounds of
Cleve land reads, '·N JCE , Street, often happens so fast
officers
have arrested five
CLEAN, Nicer'''
that officials at Cleveland's Wyoming and Summers ginseng on Augt1st 29. Eight
pound' of ginseng were
Its windows are boarded. overburdened building and
county
residents
on
charges
of
found
at another home.
the siding is stripped and the housing department have a
illegally
harvesting
or
selling
In another cal;e, officers
kitchen counters are miss- hard time keeping up.
ginseng.
,
atT~
'ted
two
Summers
ing. Half of the surroundi l1)l
The home i · in the name
The Division , • Natural County re,idents August ' 30
homes are boarded up and of Best Buy Properties: But Resources says the names of
stripped.
often. houses on eBay are those 311ested are being with- and seized 126 roots valued lit
The owner. Best Buy registered in the names of held as part of the ongoing more than $500..
·
Properties of Ch illicothe. previous owners, such as the investigation.
. Ginseng possession in West
has been selling foreclosed · Department of Housing and
Officers were tipped that Virginia is allowed only froin
property on cBay -for eight Urban Development.
through ·
ginseng was being sold on the September
years. It has never seen the
That makes it difticult for Internet and an invt;stigation November, so, the medicinal
house, or repaired it.
the local government to led io the arrest of a dealer plants can reproduce and pr\&gt;A bidder won the house
track down the true owner of and two others in Wyoming · duce .a new crop.
recently for $3,800.
In the ad, Best Buy the homes so they can issue
Properties promises no liens new ciiations, and make
and no violations on the sure that a house is kept up.
home, which. according to Houses arc · sometimes
the county auditor, it bought flipped even before there is
fro m Deut sche Bank for time for a title transfer.
'That's a huge challenge,"
CHARLESTON. W.Va. arranged with organizers to
$2.375 on July 22. But city
records show the house has said department Dir-ector (AP) -- Charleston nati ve h:tve it come to West Virginia.
Pfister says he hopes to do
. two active violations from Edward Rybka. "We spend a Phil Pfister will go for his sechuge
amount
of
time
trying
2005.-and a $257 city bill for
ond World's Strongest Man his. hometown some justioe.
to frnd people."
'
clean ing up the lot.
title in three years in his In 2006 he became the ftrst
And those who buy hometown starting this week- American to win the title in
A Best Buy Properties
spokesman did not answer flipped properties are often end.
24 years:
requests for comment.
surprised when they end up
The competi tion is free and
Governor Manchin· was in
The flipping of houses. in Housing Court. California a year ago watch- open to the public. It will be
ing Pfister compete in the held at venues around the city,
prestigious
powerlifting \vith the tinals al Appalachian
event. The governor · then · Powc"r Park on Sept. 14.

Job Ifax feature of Fall,c;areer ExpoHUNTINGTON. W.Va. Marshall University Career
Service;' is. oftering a new.
more fun ctional Web-based
career management system
called Marshall JobTrax. a
powerful tool that allows students and alumni to search for
on- and oft·-campus part-time
jobs. intemships. and full · time career opportunities.
•·Hundreds of employment
opportunities are at our students' fingettips," said Denise
Hogsett, director of Career
Services. "The improved system provides greater ease of
use for students and employcrs and the management of
recruiting programs, contact
dmabases, and job postings."
Marshall JobTrax has a
variety of additional inforrnatjon. according to Hogsett.
Career Services events are
listed in the calendar and
workshop sections. All of the
open jobs received from
employers are posted on
JobTrax as welL Any informarion studems and .alumni
need to schedule an appointment during on-campus interview ing is just a mouse click
away.
·
Hogsett said JobTrax also
allows students tq upload and
store job-search documents
such as resumes and sample
cover letters, and to apply for
available positions on-line. In
addition, it allows students to
explore employer contact
infom1ation for those employ-

UN

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Officials: eBay sales worsening housing problems 5 charged in ginseng bust

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• Doctor Foster is now accepting new patients
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Sunday, September 7, 2008

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PageM:
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OPINION
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Kevin Kelly
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Letters to the editor are welcome. They should·he leJS
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TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Sunday, Sept. 7, the 251 st day of 2008. There
are 115 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On Sept. 7, 1907, the British liner RMS Lusitania set out
from Liverpool, England, on its maiden voyage, arriving
six days later .in New York. (Lusitania was sunk by a
German submarine in 1915.)
. On this date :
· In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the ·
American Revolution, bade . farewell to President John
Quincy Adams at the White House.
In 1908, pioneering heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey
·
was born in Lake Charles, La.
In 1927, American television pioneer Philo T.
Famswonh, 21, succeeded in transmitting the image of a
line through purely electronic means with a device called
an "image dissector."
In 1940, Nazi Germany begari its initial blitz on London
during World War II.
·
In ·1968, feminists protesting outside the Miss America
pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. , tossed articles including cosmetics, girdles and·bras into a trash can ostensibly for burn. ing, although nothing was actually set on fire. (The winner
of the pageant was Miss Illinois Judith Ford.)
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the U.S. to
eventually tum over control of the waterway to Panama,
were signed in Washington by President ·Carter and
Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos. ·
In 1978, Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov, living in
London, was stabbed in the leg by a man carrying an
umbrella; Markov died four days later, an apparent victim
·of the Bulgarian secret police.
In 1987, Erich Honecker became the first East German
head of state to visit West Germany as he arrived for a liveday visit.
·
In 1996, rapper Tupac Shakur was shot and mortally.
wounded on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six days later.
Ten years ago: St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire
equaled Roger Maris ' single-season .home run record as he
hit number 61 during a game against the Chicago Cubs.
Russian lawmakers rejected Boris Yeltsin's candidate for
prime minister, Viktor Chernomyrdin, for a second time,
throwing the country into even deeper political turmoil.
Five years ago: In a speech to the nation on Iraq,
President Bush said he was asking Congress for $87 billion .
to fight terrorism, and cautioned Americans that the strug.gle would "take time and require sacritice." 'Vasser Arafat
tapped the Palestinian parliament speaker, Ahmed Qureia,
. to take over as prime minister following the resignation of
Mahmoud Abbas. In the men's singles final at the U.S.
Open, Andy Roddick beat Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-3, 7-6 (2),
6-3. Bntam-lreland rallied to win the Walker Cup for an
unprecedented third straight time. Singer-songwriter
Warren Zevon died in Los Angeles at age 56.
·
One year ago: Osama bin Laden appeared in a video for
the first time in three year.s, telling Americans they should
convert to Islam tf they wanted the war' in Iraq to end.
Shawn Johnson won the women's all-around title at the
world gymnastics championsh.ips in Stuttgart, Germany:
among the men, China's Yang Wei won his second straight
tttle.
/ th~ou ght fohr ~koday: "Mh y dehfinition of aneducated man is
e ae ow w o nows t eng t thing to do at the time it has
to be done." - Charles F. Kettering. American inventor
(1876-1958).

11

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Sunday, September 7, :&amp;oo8

Dr. Donald L Hannon

A human-resources handbook
ST. PAUL, Minn. Here we go again. Another
woman on the national
political scene, another
rash of sexist comments
and questions. For what
it 's worth, here's our handbook of what we think is
appropriate - and what's
not - for the press and
politicians to ask of and
about Sarah Palin.
Since the country is considering hiring the Alaska
governor for a big job, the
media should act as the
human-re sources department, the people who quiz
the applicant before she
goes before the big bosses
- the vot~rs. What would
be your reaction if you
heard that the questions
aimed at Palin were coming from a personnel officer'?
Women fought long and
hard to in sist that certain
queries were omitted from
job interviews. "Do you
expect to get pregnant?"
was one . regularly posed,
and meant to intimidate, in
the bad old days. The only
correct answer - "none of
your business" - doesn't
tly when you're applying
for a job.
No one asks male candidates, or job applicants,
about their family decisionmaking. Has atiyone asked
whether it's OK for Barack
Obama to miss out on a
year of his little girls' .lives?
Of course not. 'But within
minutes after the announcement of the Palin pick, we

Cokie
·and
Steven
Roberts

heard, "Who's going to
take care of the children?"
It's none of our business.
The Palin family will figure it ·out the way millions
of other families with
working moms figure it
out. Look, we're not naive
about thi s. We know that
most mothers take considerably more responsibility
for childcare than fathers
do -· fully 85 perce.nt of
mothers in an ABC poll
sa id that they were the primary caretakers of tlieir
children - but it's also
true that a majority · of
mothers work outside of
the home and manage.
More decisions that
aren't any .of. our business:
When Sarah Palin decided
to go back to work after
giving birth, and what she
did in her last pregnancy.
When we were having
babies. maternity leave
didn' t exist, so every mom
went right back to work .
We fought for the choice
to stay home - but it's a
choice, not a mandate .
And could it possibly be
appropriate to question a
woman's way to deal with
the complications of
labor ? These incredibly

personal issues have been
part of the conversation .in
St. Paul . this week, along
with discussions about
whether Palin 's daughter
Bristol should marry her
baby's father and keep her
baby.
Barack Obama 's denunciation of any criticism of
the teenager quickly cut it
off. Still, ·Palin's handling
of her daughter 's predicament does raise legitimate
questions that get to the
issue of judgment. If you
know your 17-year-old is
pregnant, why would you
thrust her into the glare of
fierce presidential· campaign? It 's possible that
Gov. Palin, like most neophytes in national politics,
had no idea how hot it is
under the media spotlight.
If
that's true, John
·
McCain's advisers should
have warned ·her.
Now we've come to the
part of the job interview
that '~ not only appropriate
but essential. . How thoroughly did McCain vet the
Alaska governor, did his
lack of scrutiny expose her
to these questions, and
does he really believe that
she is ready to assume the
job of commander in
chief? Those questions are
very much our business. .
So are . critiques of
Palin 's policies - including policies that bear on
family decisions. Her
opposition to abortion and
sex education, her slashing
o( a program to help teen
@U.~

Dr. Donald L. Hannon.
D.P.M., went into the presence of Gou on Sept. 6.
2008, ·at Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis. after a
·short but ~o ur ageo us ban le
with cancer.
· Don was born in Ironton
on July 15, 1929, son of the
·late Gerald C. and Mary A.
.Lycan Hannon .
He
graduated
from
.Ironton High School in
.1947. where he was ll member of the ''Mi llion Dollar
Band." He ane nded Miami
University in Oxford. Ohio.
Dr. Donald L. Hannon
and he continued hi s edttc'!'
tion at the Ohio College of Pod iatry in Cleveland where. in
1953. he received a degree in podiatric medicine.
· Don and hi s wife. Mary Walters. were married on July
•25, 1953, in lrnnton. Thev were married for 55 wonderful
.
years and she surv ives. Also surviving arc daughters. Joan L. (Dr. Carl') Minning
.of Zanesville. and Jane A. (Jim) Noe of Gallipolis: a so n.
:James D. (Jennife r) Hannon of Gallipolis: grandchildren.
Chris A. Minning. Abby E. Minning. Andy J. Noe, Amy
Noe, Tyler Hannon. Rachel Hannon, Sarah Hannon and
Kristen Hannon: siste r-in-law. Joyce Hannon of Carrollton.
Ohio; and a nephew. Rick Hannon. and a niece. Susie
Banchefsky.
Shortly after their marriage, Don served in the U.S. Army
Jor two years from 1953 to 1955 at Brooke Army Hospital
'in San Antonio. Texas. Dr. Hannon served as the podialrist
:at the Gallipoli s Developmental Center for almost 30 years.
He also· maintained. a private practice &lt;ll his former resi'dence on Second Avenue in Gallipolis. He will be remem'bered by his .former patients as a doctor with a gentle touch.
·Dr. Hannon helped many in Gullia County to walk a little
·hit easier.
' Atier retiring in 1992, Don and Mary relocated to
.Leesburg, Fla .. fulfilling a lifelong dream to live in sunny
Florida. They spent 16 years there together, and family and
.friends spent many days vacationing with them.
, Don attended Pine Street Methodist Church while grow,ing up in Ironton. He attended Grace United Methodi st
·Church in Gallipolis and Tavares United Methodist Church

mothers, all should be subjects for political commentary. It's also fair to point
out that, if the shoe were
on the otber foot, the
response would be very
different. If Sarah Palin ·
were a liberal, feminists
groups would be rushing
to her defense. And if a
liberal candidate went
back to work with a brandnew baby and her teenage
daughter showed up pregnant
«Onservatives
would lambaste her.
But it's time to stop.
Stop asking women questions no one would ask of
, a man. Don't tell Elizabeth
Edwards that breast cancer
should keep her from campaigning for her husband,
and don't tell Sarah Palin
that young children should
keep her from campaigning for herself.
Of course, yoters will put
all of a candidate's life into
the mix when they go info
the booth. And they will
consider other intangil/les
like how someone looks
and ·dresses - areas that
personnel officers know
are off-limits. Voters are
the big bosses; they can do
what they please .. But we
here in human resources
should be more careful.
(Cokie. Roberts' latest
book . is "Ladies of
·Liberty: The Women Who
Shaped Our Nation"
(William Morrow, 2008).
Steve and Cokie Roberts
can be reached at ste.-ecokie@gmail.com.)

Robert Allen Waugh

IO-mrr'OJ'IAClr6TTA

. Robert Allen Waugh, 4'1, Hillsboro, died Wednesday, Sept. 3,
2008, after a sudden iII ness.
He is survived by numerous relatives in Ohio and \Vest
Virginia.
Services will be-4:30p.m. Sunday at the Thompson Funeral
Home, Hillsboro. with Dr. Dan Lamb officiating. Friends may
call at the funeral home on Sunday from I p.m. to the time of
services.
Another funeral service is to be held on Monday, Sept. 8.
2008, at the Ball s Chapel Church, Ashton, W.Va., at I p.m.,
with the Rev. B.C. Egnor officiating. Burial will be in the Balls
Chapel Church Cemetery. Deal Funeral Home is in charge of
the local service. ·
·
To sign his online guest book, pleas visit www.thompsonfuneralhomes.com.

INE~PERIENC~

Obama hits McCain on
Social Security

SURGE STIL-L fOS.S'Ie.LE

hymnbooks.
Ha.ving
given
the
Republican Party a muchneeded jolt in the final
weeks of the election,
Palin, no doubi, will now
Donna
become the GOP's poster
Brazile
girl for change. And she
will be able to exercise her
duties without so much as a
backward glance at the last
eight years of Republican
debate with her vice-presi- rule because she wasn't
dential competitor, Sen. Joe around when McCain and
Biden.
Palin brings multiple Bush created the mess. She
over the conservative wing
of the Republican Party.
will attempt to come across
When team McCain-Palin assets to the ticket, not the as a reformer, but Palin's
left Minnesota to hit the least of which is electrify- record . on this issue is
ing an unplugged and
.
campaign trail, they left a · unmotivated GOP base. weak. And, lest ·we forge.t,
GOP party, in the words of Almost to a person, the di:I- she still faces an internal
nominee egates and alternates to the investigation into possible
· Democratic
B
arack Obama, "tired up R bl'
·
charges of lying and abuse
and ready 10 go."
.
epu tcan · convention of power.
arnved in Minnesota in a
What Palin accomplished
.Palin is a game-changer, ' foul mood. Not only did
for sure. Just look. at the they have a hurricane to in Minnesota was a stroke
impact she has already had contend with,' many of of genius. She demonstraton thi s race with her ora to- ·them were simply unenthu- ed tha( she is a skilled
ry skills a~d ability to fire siastic about tlie 2008 pres- politician who. knows how
up the Mse and connect idential race - and had to wrap sarcasm's stiletto
with ordinary folks . And been from the start, thus blade beneath humor's
she's just getting warmed ,explaining the feeble cloak. She has spunk and
up.
· turnout of the GOP base . will use Iter hardworking
Palin is no Hillary . during lhe primary season. mother of five With a
Clinton. She is not steeped ·
Being at the convention grandchild on the way cretn the nuances of public was akin to attending a dentials as a club against
policy, nor does she com- four-day funeral. The dele- all critics. Be prepared for
maud an encyclopedic gates slowly gathered to do charges of sexism and the
knowledge of the. national their duty as if going to a unlikely comparison of
issues that inspired 18 mil- neighbor's church and sexism and racism being
lion Americans to back being unsure of the words leveled against both camClinton in the Democratic to the songs the choir paigns.
But
"Sarah would sing . They came
Palin is fierce · and
primary.
Barracuda" has what most . prepared to say "amen" to uncompromising. She has·
political leaders, male and McCain, but not shout it so already proved that she
female alike, lack: guts.
the rafter timbers would understimds how to deliver
Palin's rolitical resume quake;.
·the professional politician's
is pretty impressive. This
But the funereal mood trick of eviscerating one's
so-called :'hockey mom" lifted with 'the introduction opponent without even
beat a sitting governor in a of Palin. With a speech full mentioning hi s· name .
primary before taking on of the finest-cut red meat Ouch! Wake up, Joe Biden,
and d.efeating a popular (moose, perhaps?) pep- Sarah Palin is no shrinking
Democratic former gover- pered with Western-styled violet. She's on a mission,
nor in the general. She's Tabasco sauce , Palin and she may very well
not someone to un.deresti- brought the moribund dele- believe it's a mission sent
mate, and she'll most likely gates to their feet and to her from the heav·enly
do well in her first and only added a few .words to their Father himself.

Democrats can't afford to
look back and ask whether
putt\~g Hillary Clinton on
the ttcket. would have been
a better choice than Biden.
With the Republicans back
on their feet. and ready to
fight, Democrats have no
time to waste in defining
the choice in this race.
Palin 's family should
remain off limits. But her
record in public office is
fair game. This is · where ·
Democrats must draw the
line in underscoring how
Palin is out of touch with ·
most voters on many
issues. No abortion, even in
cases ·of rape and incest?
Abstinence-only sex education? Global"warming is·
· not manmade? Creationism
taught in public schools?
Can such stands on the
issues
inspire
· Independents, suburban
women and college-educated voters to embrace
McCain-Palin?
· Can Democrats find a
clever way to tie an
increasingly
unpopular.
president to tlJe McCainPalin ticket? And can
Democrats raise the temperature inside their own
party to fight on until
Election Day?
If McCain's cynical chief
.strategist Rick Davis is
right that this ·election is
not ultimately about the
issues facing America, then
I sure as heck hope it turns
qn which candidate can
lead us out of this mess.
(Donna Brazile is a
political commentator on
CNN, ABC and NPR; contributing columnist to Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill; and former
campaign manager for Al
Gore.)

Samantha Ann Saunders
Samantha Ann Saunders. still born daughter of Michael
Saunders and Amber Fowler. of Biuwcll. was born Sept. 3.
2008. at Hol zer Medical Center.
She was preceded by her grandmother. Lori Sn1ith.
In addition to he r parents. she is survived by a sister, Kylee
Saunders of Bidwell: great-grandparents. Paul and Diana
Swisher of Gallipolis: and great-grandfather. Max Snider of
·
Chillicothe.
.·
Services will be II a.m. Monday, Sept. 8, 2008, at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. with Dave Marcum officiating. Burial will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
An online registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com

WASHINGTON (AP) A top House Democrat confirm.ed Saturday that th e
government is planning to
intervene to stabilize troubled ·mortgage finan ce companies Fannie · Mae and
Freddie Mac.
Rep . Barney Frank. DMass., the chairman of the
House Financial Services
Committee, said in a state:.
ment
that
Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson

Gerald G. ·smoke· Simpson
Gera ld Gei1e "Smoke"
Simpson. 75. of Racine.
went home to be with his
Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ on Sept. 4. 2008.
after · rc~cntly accept.ing
salvation.
Born June I0. 1933 . in
Racine. he was th e son of
the late James Edward and
Grella Ho we ll Simpson.
He proudly served hi s
country as a radioman in
' \ ' l"P(
the Navy. He owned .and
operated the Star Supply
Hardware in Racine for
many years. Gerald was an
active membe r of both th e Gerald 'Smoke' Simpson
Radn e Area Co mmunity
Organization ( RACO) and the American Legion Post
602.
Gerald is sur\' ived by his wife of nearly 52 years.
Shirley Jea n Gillilan Simpson: chi luren. Paul Glenn
(S uellen ) Simpson of Port smouth . Sheryl (Rob) Rentas
of Xenia. Mark (Regina) Simpson of Middleport. Lori
(Richard Scott ) Bearhs of Pomerov. and Diana (Todd)
Bi sse ll of Long Bottom: grandchilui·en. Becky. Matthew
and Jon Simpson , Stephanie Stemple Leste r, Jamie
Stemple Carter and Harley Ro se. Joshua and Tiffany
· Simpson. Rachael. Abigail and Brock Bearhs. Andrew.
Brady. Haley and Ty Bi ssell : anu two great-grandchildren. Keegen and Paija .
'
Also a special niece. Jan (Bill) Harm qn and their children . . Ca mcryn and Billy: brother. Ca lvin '"Bud"
Simpson of Ellington. Fla .: and sisters. Lilli,in Hayman
and Mary Louise Shuler. both of Racine . Gerald is also
survived by many nieces. nephews anu srec ial friends.
In addition to hi s parent s. he was pm:eded in death by
an infant daughter. Deanna Jean Simpson. ,
Services will be~ p.m. M~nday . Sept. 8. ' 008. in the
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine. wi th th e Rev. Jim
Satterfield officiating . · Interment will fo llow in . the
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the ·fune(a!
home on Sunday. Sept. 7. 2008. from 2 to -1 and 6 to· 8
p.m.
Expressions of sy mpathy may be sc nt to the familyby
visi ti ng www.cremeensfuneral homes .com.

..,...

"intends to use the powers · matter Friday said the gov- yet to be annoum:cd.
that Congress provided it" ernment was planning to take . Federal
Rese rve
in a law passed in July to over both companies, Which Chairman Ben Bernanke.
enable Fannie Mae and toge ther hold or back halt of Treasury Secretary Henry
Freddie Mac to keep func- the nation \ mortgage debt.
PauJ',on
and
Jan1es
. The intervention, which Lockhart. the companies.'
tioning.
But Frank, who spoke .could cost taxpayers billions. chief regulator. met Friday
with Paulson .late Friday. was expected to include the afternoon with the top exec- .
said he did not "know the · departure of Fannie Mac utivcs from the mortgage
details of the proposed CEO Daniel Mudd and companies and informed
interventions,"
and
a Freddie Mac CEO .Richard them of tile government's
Treasury
spoke swoman Syron, accord ing to the pl:lll 10 put ihc companies
declined to comment.
source. who asked not to be into a conservatorsh ip as
A perspn briefed on the nanied because the plan was early as th is weekend.

For the Record
Highway Patrol

of the vehicle, traveling off
·the righ t side of the road and
striking a guardrail. ac..:ording
to the Gallia-Meigs Post.
He was reportedly uninjured in the accidem, though
his vehicle suffered disabling
damages.

PENIEL - Matthew L.
Duncan. 22, Patriot. was cited
for failure to control followNEWARK, N.J. (AP)- Democratic presideptial nomi- ing a one-vehicle accident
nee Barack Obama crilicized Republican John McCain's that occurred Aug . ~0 at
approach to Social Secttrity on Saturday, saying it would approximately 7:25 a.m. in
••• •
undermine the government program aimed mainly at Greenfield Township.
CHESHIRE
- Deborah
According
to
troopers.
'retirees.
SV. Stewart, 43, Cheshire. was
Obama said McCain 's campaign has suggested trimming Duncan was traveling notth- cited for failing to maintain an
·Social Security benefits and raising the eligibility age, bound in his 1999 Chevy assured clear distance ahead
'according to prepared remarks of his speech to a gathering Cavalier on Evans Road near · following a two-vehicle acciof the AARP. Obama was addressing the group via satellite. the intersection of Peniel dent that occurred last
McCain has not specifically embraced such plans . But by Road when he lost control of Wednesday around 12:30
his vehicle on the gravel road
:saying "ev~rything is on the wble" in discussing changes to and
traveled of the left side of p.m .
·social Security. he has opened himself to such criticisms the road, striking a· telephone
According to troopers.
StewaJt
was driving her 2005
'from Democrats.
pole. ·
Toyota
C'.;unry
southbound on
. Obama also said McC&lt;Nn wants to privatize a portion of
Duncan was not injured in
Ohio
7
when
her
vehicle rear
:social Security. McCain has prai sed the notion of letting the accident: his car sustained
cndeu a 2002 Chevy Malibu
younger workers place a portion of their Social Security non-functional damages.
driwn by Tara M. Gerlach,
'taxes into a package that is inyested and follows them to
·retirement, but he has not made it a campaign promise.
RACINE ·
William 34. Middleport, also southAll workers pay Social Security payroll taxes on the first Heeter Jr.. 70: · Racine. was hound on.Ohio 7, stopped in a
$102,000 of their annual income . The money pay s for ben- cited with failure to .control line at a red light.
No injuries were reported
·eftis for current retirees and for ·other government pro- following a one-vehicle acciand
both vehicles sustained
grams. Analysts say the program will begin running short dent in Letart Township that
·of funds in a few decades if it is not changed.
oc&lt;.:urred at approximately .non-functional damages.
Obama cited his proposals to place a new Social Security 10:30 a.m. Aug. 30.
payroll tax on incomes above $250,000 and to eliminate
Heeter was dri ving his
federal income taxes for older people making less than 1995 Buick Century notth·$50,000 a year. He also said he would "allow the govern- bound on Bashan Road about
OAK HILL · Three
ment to negotiate with drug companies to lower costs for 3.5 miles north of Ohio 124 pieces of logging equipment
.seniors, and we'll allow reimportation of drugs from other when he hit some loose grav- we re burned on Edwards
countries and ensure their safety."
.
el in a curve and lost control Road in Greenfield Township
• The Wall Street Journal reported in March that McCain's
.top aides were ''&lt;:onsidering cost-of-living adjustment cuts
and raising the retire ment age as part of their Social Security
plan." McCain has not endorsed or rejected those ideas:
THANK YOU
. McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds satd the- Repubhcan
U..L SCAP METAI.S RECYCLING, INC
·nominee "has always promised to fiercely protect Social
Security bene fits:·
·
FOR BUYING MY

Palin 5 no shrinking violet
Anyone worried about
the enthusiasm gap of the
Republican Party or the
energy level of conservatives wary of John
McCain's commitment to
fighting for their causes
(abortion, gay rights, guns)
ought to jusl move on.
With the selection of
Sarah Palin. an unknown
governor from the great
state of Alaska as his running mate, McCain woo

in Florida. ln addition. he wa' a long-time member of the
Gallipolis Shrine Club anu the Ironton Masonic Lodge.
Don enjoyed tennis. bicycling . swimming. reading newspapers and m ~gazines. boating. deep sea fishing, Ohio
State football. spending time with his family. and maintaining .his home. He was a loving husband and a proud father.
At all times. he was a man of great patience.
Hi s family would like I&lt;&gt; thank the countless relatives.
friends and clergy who · \'isited. ·ai led. 'ent cards and
prayed during his illness. They\vould also like to thank the
wonderful staffs at the James Cancer Center. Holzer
Medical Center, Holzer Assisted Living. Holzer Ce.nter for
Cancer Care. Holzer Home Care, Holzer Hospice and the
Medical Shoppe for their care and compassion. Most of all,
they would like to thank God for his grace. strengt h and
provision during thi s difficult time.
Also. they want tO offer praise to God for his incredible
gift of salvation and eternal life through Christ.
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday. Sept. I0, 2008. at
Grace Un iteu Meth odist Chu rch. with Pastor John O'Brien
ofliciating. Burial will foll.ow in' Mound Hiil Cemetery.
Friends may call at Grace United Methodist Church on
Tuesday. Sept. '1. 200X. from 5 until 8 p.m.
Will.is Funeral Home is aS&gt;isting the family.
Pallbearers will. be Jim Noe. Andy Noe. Carl .Minning.
Chris Minning. Tyler Hannon and Rick Hannon .
In lieu of flowers, the fami ly requests donations be made
. in Don's memory to River City Fellowship. P.O. Box 1101.
Gall.ipolis, Ohio 45631 : Grace United Methodist Church.
600 Second Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631: or Holzer
Hosp ice. 100 Jack son Pike. Gal lipnl is. Ohio 45631. ·
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Frank says gov't will stabilize Fannie, Freddie

Deaths

HUt.. ME

VI\L\N

:iSlunbap t!:t mrs -E&gt;rnlmrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

...

between
10:30
p.m. equipment belonged to a logWedtlesday night and 8JO ging company run by Ronnie
Shephard Jr. of Oak Hill. .
a.m. Thursday morning.
It was also repotted that
According to the police
·thieves
had been stealing fuel
report. a 1996 John Deere
from
these
pieces of equip640G cable machine skiddcr
valued ell $35.000, a 1996 ment during the past several
Barko 160B loader and a weeks.
1997 sun trailer valued at
$30,000. and a 1997 CfR
4200 sawbuck/slasher valued
at $8.000 were burned
overnight iti a wooded area
near Edwards Road . The

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�•
"

I

Sunday, September 7, 2008

'

PageM:
.

OPINION
.&amp;unbap 'im~ -&amp;entinel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should·he leJS
than 300 words. All lerrers are .vubject ro editi11g and must
be signed a11d include address and telephone number. No
unsigned leller.s will be published. Lerrers should he i11
good taste. addressing issues, not personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Sunday, Sept. 7, the 251 st day of 2008. There
are 115 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On Sept. 7, 1907, the British liner RMS Lusitania set out
from Liverpool, England, on its maiden voyage, arriving
six days later .in New York. (Lusitania was sunk by a
German submarine in 1915.)
. On this date :
· In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the ·
American Revolution, bade . farewell to President John
Quincy Adams at the White House.
In 1908, pioneering heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey
·
was born in Lake Charles, La.
In 1927, American television pioneer Philo T.
Famswonh, 21, succeeded in transmitting the image of a
line through purely electronic means with a device called
an "image dissector."
In 1940, Nazi Germany begari its initial blitz on London
during World War II.
·
In ·1968, feminists protesting outside the Miss America
pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. , tossed articles including cosmetics, girdles and·bras into a trash can ostensibly for burn. ing, although nothing was actually set on fire. (The winner
of the pageant was Miss Illinois Judith Ford.)
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the U.S. to
eventually tum over control of the waterway to Panama,
were signed in Washington by President ·Carter and
Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos. ·
In 1978, Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov, living in
London, was stabbed in the leg by a man carrying an
umbrella; Markov died four days later, an apparent victim
·of the Bulgarian secret police.
In 1987, Erich Honecker became the first East German
head of state to visit West Germany as he arrived for a liveday visit.
·
In 1996, rapper Tupac Shakur was shot and mortally.
wounded on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six days later.
Ten years ago: St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire
equaled Roger Maris ' single-season .home run record as he
hit number 61 during a game against the Chicago Cubs.
Russian lawmakers rejected Boris Yeltsin's candidate for
prime minister, Viktor Chernomyrdin, for a second time,
throwing the country into even deeper political turmoil.
Five years ago: In a speech to the nation on Iraq,
President Bush said he was asking Congress for $87 billion .
to fight terrorism, and cautioned Americans that the strug.gle would "take time and require sacritice." 'Vasser Arafat
tapped the Palestinian parliament speaker, Ahmed Qureia,
. to take over as prime minister following the resignation of
Mahmoud Abbas. In the men's singles final at the U.S.
Open, Andy Roddick beat Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-3, 7-6 (2),
6-3. Bntam-lreland rallied to win the Walker Cup for an
unprecedented third straight time. Singer-songwriter
Warren Zevon died in Los Angeles at age 56.
·
One year ago: Osama bin Laden appeared in a video for
the first time in three year.s, telling Americans they should
convert to Islam tf they wanted the war' in Iraq to end.
Shawn Johnson won the women's all-around title at the
world gymnastics championsh.ips in Stuttgart, Germany:
among the men, China's Yang Wei won his second straight
tttle.
/ th~ou ght fohr ~koday: "Mh y dehfinition of aneducated man is
e ae ow w o nows t eng t thing to do at the time it has
to be done." - Charles F. Kettering. American inventor
(1876-1958).

11

•

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'

Sunday, September 7, :&amp;oo8

Dr. Donald L Hannon

A human-resources handbook
ST. PAUL, Minn. Here we go again. Another
woman on the national
political scene, another
rash of sexist comments
and questions. For what
it 's worth, here's our handbook of what we think is
appropriate - and what's
not - for the press and
politicians to ask of and
about Sarah Palin.
Since the country is considering hiring the Alaska
governor for a big job, the
media should act as the
human-re sources department, the people who quiz
the applicant before she
goes before the big bosses
- the vot~rs. What would
be your reaction if you
heard that the questions
aimed at Palin were coming from a personnel officer'?
Women fought long and
hard to in sist that certain
queries were omitted from
job interviews. "Do you
expect to get pregnant?"
was one . regularly posed,
and meant to intimidate, in
the bad old days. The only
correct answer - "none of
your business" - doesn't
tly when you're applying
for a job.
No one asks male candidates, or job applicants,
about their family decisionmaking. Has atiyone asked
whether it's OK for Barack
Obama to miss out on a
year of his little girls' .lives?
Of course not. 'But within
minutes after the announcement of the Palin pick, we

Cokie
·and
Steven
Roberts

heard, "Who's going to
take care of the children?"
It's none of our business.
The Palin family will figure it ·out the way millions
of other families with
working moms figure it
out. Look, we're not naive
about thi s. We know that
most mothers take considerably more responsibility
for childcare than fathers
do -· fully 85 perce.nt of
mothers in an ABC poll
sa id that they were the primary caretakers of tlieir
children - but it's also
true that a majority · of
mothers work outside of
the home and manage.
More decisions that
aren't any .of. our business:
When Sarah Palin decided
to go back to work after
giving birth, and what she
did in her last pregnancy.
When we were having
babies. maternity leave
didn' t exist, so every mom
went right back to work .
We fought for the choice
to stay home - but it's a
choice, not a mandate .
And could it possibly be
appropriate to question a
woman's way to deal with
the complications of
labor ? These incredibly

personal issues have been
part of the conversation .in
St. Paul . this week, along
with discussions about
whether Palin 's daughter
Bristol should marry her
baby's father and keep her
baby.
Barack Obama 's denunciation of any criticism of
the teenager quickly cut it
off. Still, ·Palin's handling
of her daughter 's predicament does raise legitimate
questions that get to the
issue of judgment. If you
know your 17-year-old is
pregnant, why would you
thrust her into the glare of
fierce presidential· campaign? It 's possible that
Gov. Palin, like most neophytes in national politics,
had no idea how hot it is
under the media spotlight.
If
that's true, John
·
McCain's advisers should
have warned ·her.
Now we've come to the
part of the job interview
that '~ not only appropriate
but essential. . How thoroughly did McCain vet the
Alaska governor, did his
lack of scrutiny expose her
to these questions, and
does he really believe that
she is ready to assume the
job of commander in
chief? Those questions are
very much our business. .
So are . critiques of
Palin 's policies - including policies that bear on
family decisions. Her
opposition to abortion and
sex education, her slashing
o( a program to help teen
@U.~

Dr. Donald L. Hannon.
D.P.M., went into the presence of Gou on Sept. 6.
2008, ·at Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis. after a
·short but ~o ur ageo us ban le
with cancer.
· Don was born in Ironton
on July 15, 1929, son of the
·late Gerald C. and Mary A.
.Lycan Hannon .
He
graduated
from
.Ironton High School in
.1947. where he was ll member of the ''Mi llion Dollar
Band." He ane nded Miami
University in Oxford. Ohio.
Dr. Donald L. Hannon
and he continued hi s edttc'!'
tion at the Ohio College of Pod iatry in Cleveland where. in
1953. he received a degree in podiatric medicine.
· Don and hi s wife. Mary Walters. were married on July
•25, 1953, in lrnnton. Thev were married for 55 wonderful
.
years and she surv ives. Also surviving arc daughters. Joan L. (Dr. Carl') Minning
.of Zanesville. and Jane A. (Jim) Noe of Gallipolis: a so n.
:James D. (Jennife r) Hannon of Gallipolis: grandchildren.
Chris A. Minning. Abby E. Minning. Andy J. Noe, Amy
Noe, Tyler Hannon. Rachel Hannon, Sarah Hannon and
Kristen Hannon: siste r-in-law. Joyce Hannon of Carrollton.
Ohio; and a nephew. Rick Hannon. and a niece. Susie
Banchefsky.
Shortly after their marriage, Don served in the U.S. Army
Jor two years from 1953 to 1955 at Brooke Army Hospital
'in San Antonio. Texas. Dr. Hannon served as the podialrist
:at the Gallipoli s Developmental Center for almost 30 years.
He also· maintained. a private practice &lt;ll his former resi'dence on Second Avenue in Gallipolis. He will be remem'bered by his .former patients as a doctor with a gentle touch.
·Dr. Hannon helped many in Gullia County to walk a little
·hit easier.
' Atier retiring in 1992, Don and Mary relocated to
.Leesburg, Fla .. fulfilling a lifelong dream to live in sunny
Florida. They spent 16 years there together, and family and
.friends spent many days vacationing with them.
, Don attended Pine Street Methodist Church while grow,ing up in Ironton. He attended Grace United Methodi st
·Church in Gallipolis and Tavares United Methodist Church

mothers, all should be subjects for political commentary. It's also fair to point
out that, if the shoe were
on the otber foot, the
response would be very
different. If Sarah Palin ·
were a liberal, feminists
groups would be rushing
to her defense. And if a
liberal candidate went
back to work with a brandnew baby and her teenage
daughter showed up pregnant
«Onservatives
would lambaste her.
But it's time to stop.
Stop asking women questions no one would ask of
, a man. Don't tell Elizabeth
Edwards that breast cancer
should keep her from campaigning for her husband,
and don't tell Sarah Palin
that young children should
keep her from campaigning for herself.
Of course, yoters will put
all of a candidate's life into
the mix when they go info
the booth. And they will
consider other intangil/les
like how someone looks
and ·dresses - areas that
personnel officers know
are off-limits. Voters are
the big bosses; they can do
what they please .. But we
here in human resources
should be more careful.
(Cokie. Roberts' latest
book . is "Ladies of
·Liberty: The Women Who
Shaped Our Nation"
(William Morrow, 2008).
Steve and Cokie Roberts
can be reached at ste.-ecokie@gmail.com.)

Robert Allen Waugh

IO-mrr'OJ'IAClr6TTA

. Robert Allen Waugh, 4'1, Hillsboro, died Wednesday, Sept. 3,
2008, after a sudden iII ness.
He is survived by numerous relatives in Ohio and \Vest
Virginia.
Services will be-4:30p.m. Sunday at the Thompson Funeral
Home, Hillsboro. with Dr. Dan Lamb officiating. Friends may
call at the funeral home on Sunday from I p.m. to the time of
services.
Another funeral service is to be held on Monday, Sept. 8.
2008, at the Ball s Chapel Church, Ashton, W.Va., at I p.m.,
with the Rev. B.C. Egnor officiating. Burial will be in the Balls
Chapel Church Cemetery. Deal Funeral Home is in charge of
the local service. ·
·
To sign his online guest book, pleas visit www.thompsonfuneralhomes.com.

INE~PERIENC~

Obama hits McCain on
Social Security

SURGE STIL-L fOS.S'Ie.LE

hymnbooks.
Ha.ving
given
the
Republican Party a muchneeded jolt in the final
weeks of the election,
Palin, no doubi, will now
Donna
become the GOP's poster
Brazile
girl for change. And she
will be able to exercise her
duties without so much as a
backward glance at the last
eight years of Republican
debate with her vice-presi- rule because she wasn't
dential competitor, Sen. Joe around when McCain and
Biden.
Palin brings multiple Bush created the mess. She
over the conservative wing
of the Republican Party.
will attempt to come across
When team McCain-Palin assets to the ticket, not the as a reformer, but Palin's
left Minnesota to hit the least of which is electrify- record . on this issue is
ing an unplugged and
.
campaign trail, they left a · unmotivated GOP base. weak. And, lest ·we forge.t,
GOP party, in the words of Almost to a person, the di:I- she still faces an internal
nominee egates and alternates to the investigation into possible
· Democratic
B
arack Obama, "tired up R bl'
·
charges of lying and abuse
and ready 10 go."
.
epu tcan · convention of power.
arnved in Minnesota in a
What Palin accomplished
.Palin is a game-changer, ' foul mood. Not only did
for sure. Just look. at the they have a hurricane to in Minnesota was a stroke
impact she has already had contend with,' many of of genius. She demonstraton thi s race with her ora to- ·them were simply unenthu- ed tha( she is a skilled
ry skills a~d ability to fire siastic about tlie 2008 pres- politician who. knows how
up the Mse and connect idential race - and had to wrap sarcasm's stiletto
with ordinary folks . And been from the start, thus blade beneath humor's
she's just getting warmed ,explaining the feeble cloak. She has spunk and
up.
· turnout of the GOP base . will use Iter hardworking
Palin is no Hillary . during lhe primary season. mother of five With a
Clinton. She is not steeped ·
Being at the convention grandchild on the way cretn the nuances of public was akin to attending a dentials as a club against
policy, nor does she com- four-day funeral. The dele- all critics. Be prepared for
maud an encyclopedic gates slowly gathered to do charges of sexism and the
knowledge of the. national their duty as if going to a unlikely comparison of
issues that inspired 18 mil- neighbor's church and sexism and racism being
lion Americans to back being unsure of the words leveled against both camClinton in the Democratic to the songs the choir paigns.
But
"Sarah would sing . They came
Palin is fierce · and
primary.
Barracuda" has what most . prepared to say "amen" to uncompromising. She has·
political leaders, male and McCain, but not shout it so already proved that she
female alike, lack: guts.
the rafter timbers would understimds how to deliver
Palin's rolitical resume quake;.
·the professional politician's
is pretty impressive. This
But the funereal mood trick of eviscerating one's
so-called :'hockey mom" lifted with 'the introduction opponent without even
beat a sitting governor in a of Palin. With a speech full mentioning hi s· name .
primary before taking on of the finest-cut red meat Ouch! Wake up, Joe Biden,
and d.efeating a popular (moose, perhaps?) pep- Sarah Palin is no shrinking
Democratic former gover- pered with Western-styled violet. She's on a mission,
nor in the general. She's Tabasco sauce , Palin and she may very well
not someone to un.deresti- brought the moribund dele- believe it's a mission sent
mate, and she'll most likely gates to their feet and to her from the heav·enly
do well in her first and only added a few .words to their Father himself.

Democrats can't afford to
look back and ask whether
putt\~g Hillary Clinton on
the ttcket. would have been
a better choice than Biden.
With the Republicans back
on their feet. and ready to
fight, Democrats have no
time to waste in defining
the choice in this race.
Palin 's family should
remain off limits. But her
record in public office is
fair game. This is · where ·
Democrats must draw the
line in underscoring how
Palin is out of touch with ·
most voters on many
issues. No abortion, even in
cases ·of rape and incest?
Abstinence-only sex education? Global"warming is·
· not manmade? Creationism
taught in public schools?
Can such stands on the
issues
inspire
· Independents, suburban
women and college-educated voters to embrace
McCain-Palin?
· Can Democrats find a
clever way to tie an
increasingly
unpopular.
president to tlJe McCainPalin ticket? And can
Democrats raise the temperature inside their own
party to fight on until
Election Day?
If McCain's cynical chief
.strategist Rick Davis is
right that this ·election is
not ultimately about the
issues facing America, then
I sure as heck hope it turns
qn which candidate can
lead us out of this mess.
(Donna Brazile is a
political commentator on
CNN, ABC and NPR; contributing columnist to Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill; and former
campaign manager for Al
Gore.)

Samantha Ann Saunders
Samantha Ann Saunders. still born daughter of Michael
Saunders and Amber Fowler. of Biuwcll. was born Sept. 3.
2008. at Hol zer Medical Center.
She was preceded by her grandmother. Lori Sn1ith.
In addition to he r parents. she is survived by a sister, Kylee
Saunders of Bidwell: great-grandparents. Paul and Diana
Swisher of Gallipolis: and great-grandfather. Max Snider of
·
Chillicothe.
.·
Services will be II a.m. Monday, Sept. 8, 2008, at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. with Dave Marcum officiating. Burial will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
An online registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com

WASHINGTON (AP) A top House Democrat confirm.ed Saturday that th e
government is planning to
intervene to stabilize troubled ·mortgage finan ce companies Fannie · Mae and
Freddie Mac.
Rep . Barney Frank. DMass., the chairman of the
House Financial Services
Committee, said in a state:.
ment
that
Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson

Gerald G. ·smoke· Simpson
Gera ld Gei1e "Smoke"
Simpson. 75. of Racine.
went home to be with his
Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ on Sept. 4. 2008.
after · rc~cntly accept.ing
salvation.
Born June I0. 1933 . in
Racine. he was th e son of
the late James Edward and
Grella Ho we ll Simpson.
He proudly served hi s
country as a radioman in
' \ ' l"P(
the Navy. He owned .and
operated the Star Supply
Hardware in Racine for
many years. Gerald was an
active membe r of both th e Gerald 'Smoke' Simpson
Radn e Area Co mmunity
Organization ( RACO) and the American Legion Post
602.
Gerald is sur\' ived by his wife of nearly 52 years.
Shirley Jea n Gillilan Simpson: chi luren. Paul Glenn
(S uellen ) Simpson of Port smouth . Sheryl (Rob) Rentas
of Xenia. Mark (Regina) Simpson of Middleport. Lori
(Richard Scott ) Bearhs of Pomerov. and Diana (Todd)
Bi sse ll of Long Bottom: grandchilui·en. Becky. Matthew
and Jon Simpson , Stephanie Stemple Leste r, Jamie
Stemple Carter and Harley Ro se. Joshua and Tiffany
· Simpson. Rachael. Abigail and Brock Bearhs. Andrew.
Brady. Haley and Ty Bi ssell : anu two great-grandchildren. Keegen and Paija .
'
Also a special niece. Jan (Bill) Harm qn and their children . . Ca mcryn and Billy: brother. Ca lvin '"Bud"
Simpson of Ellington. Fla .: and sisters. Lilli,in Hayman
and Mary Louise Shuler. both of Racine . Gerald is also
survived by many nieces. nephews anu srec ial friends.
In addition to hi s parent s. he was pm:eded in death by
an infant daughter. Deanna Jean Simpson. ,
Services will be~ p.m. M~nday . Sept. 8. ' 008. in the
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine. wi th th e Rev. Jim
Satterfield officiating . · Interment will fo llow in . the
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the ·fune(a!
home on Sunday. Sept. 7. 2008. from 2 to -1 and 6 to· 8
p.m.
Expressions of sy mpathy may be sc nt to the familyby
visi ti ng www.cremeensfuneral homes .com.

..,...

"intends to use the powers · matter Friday said the gov- yet to be annoum:cd.
that Congress provided it" ernment was planning to take . Federal
Rese rve
in a law passed in July to over both companies, Which Chairman Ben Bernanke.
enable Fannie Mae and toge ther hold or back halt of Treasury Secretary Henry
Freddie Mac to keep func- the nation \ mortgage debt.
PauJ',on
and
Jan1es
. The intervention, which Lockhart. the companies.'
tioning.
But Frank, who spoke .could cost taxpayers billions. chief regulator. met Friday
with Paulson .late Friday. was expected to include the afternoon with the top exec- .
said he did not "know the · departure of Fannie Mac utivcs from the mortgage
details of the proposed CEO Daniel Mudd and companies and informed
interventions,"
and
a Freddie Mac CEO .Richard them of tile government's
Treasury
spoke swoman Syron, accord ing to the pl:lll 10 put ihc companies
declined to comment.
source. who asked not to be into a conservatorsh ip as
A perspn briefed on the nanied because the plan was early as th is weekend.

For the Record
Highway Patrol

of the vehicle, traveling off
·the righ t side of the road and
striking a guardrail. ac..:ording
to the Gallia-Meigs Post.
He was reportedly uninjured in the accidem, though
his vehicle suffered disabling
damages.

PENIEL - Matthew L.
Duncan. 22, Patriot. was cited
for failure to control followNEWARK, N.J. (AP)- Democratic presideptial nomi- ing a one-vehicle accident
nee Barack Obama crilicized Republican John McCain's that occurred Aug . ~0 at
approach to Social Secttrity on Saturday, saying it would approximately 7:25 a.m. in
••• •
undermine the government program aimed mainly at Greenfield Township.
CHESHIRE
- Deborah
According
to
troopers.
'retirees.
SV. Stewart, 43, Cheshire. was
Obama said McCain 's campaign has suggested trimming Duncan was traveling notth- cited for failing to maintain an
·Social Security benefits and raising the eligibility age, bound in his 1999 Chevy assured clear distance ahead
'according to prepared remarks of his speech to a gathering Cavalier on Evans Road near · following a two-vehicle acciof the AARP. Obama was addressing the group via satellite. the intersection of Peniel dent that occurred last
McCain has not specifically embraced such plans . But by Road when he lost control of Wednesday around 12:30
his vehicle on the gravel road
:saying "ev~rything is on the wble" in discussing changes to and
traveled of the left side of p.m .
·social Security. he has opened himself to such criticisms the road, striking a· telephone
According to troopers.
StewaJt
was driving her 2005
'from Democrats.
pole. ·
Toyota
C'.;unry
southbound on
. Obama also said McC&lt;Nn wants to privatize a portion of
Duncan was not injured in
Ohio
7
when
her
vehicle rear
:social Security. McCain has prai sed the notion of letting the accident: his car sustained
cndeu a 2002 Chevy Malibu
younger workers place a portion of their Social Security non-functional damages.
driwn by Tara M. Gerlach,
'taxes into a package that is inyested and follows them to
·retirement, but he has not made it a campaign promise.
RACINE ·
William 34. Middleport, also southAll workers pay Social Security payroll taxes on the first Heeter Jr.. 70: · Racine. was hound on.Ohio 7, stopped in a
$102,000 of their annual income . The money pay s for ben- cited with failure to .control line at a red light.
No injuries were reported
·eftis for current retirees and for ·other government pro- following a one-vehicle acciand
both vehicles sustained
grams. Analysts say the program will begin running short dent in Letart Township that
·of funds in a few decades if it is not changed.
oc&lt;.:urred at approximately .non-functional damages.
Obama cited his proposals to place a new Social Security 10:30 a.m. Aug. 30.
payroll tax on incomes above $250,000 and to eliminate
Heeter was dri ving his
federal income taxes for older people making less than 1995 Buick Century notth·$50,000 a year. He also said he would "allow the govern- bound on Bashan Road about
OAK HILL · Three
ment to negotiate with drug companies to lower costs for 3.5 miles north of Ohio 124 pieces of logging equipment
.seniors, and we'll allow reimportation of drugs from other when he hit some loose grav- we re burned on Edwards
countries and ensure their safety."
.
el in a curve and lost control Road in Greenfield Township
• The Wall Street Journal reported in March that McCain's
.top aides were ''&lt;:onsidering cost-of-living adjustment cuts
and raising the retire ment age as part of their Social Security
plan." McCain has not endorsed or rejected those ideas:
THANK YOU
. McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds satd the- Repubhcan
U..L SCAP METAI.S RECYCLING, INC
·nominee "has always promised to fiercely protect Social
Security bene fits:·
·
FOR BUYING MY

Palin 5 no shrinking violet
Anyone worried about
the enthusiasm gap of the
Republican Party or the
energy level of conservatives wary of John
McCain's commitment to
fighting for their causes
(abortion, gay rights, guns)
ought to jusl move on.
With the selection of
Sarah Palin. an unknown
governor from the great
state of Alaska as his running mate, McCain woo

in Florida. ln addition. he wa' a long-time member of the
Gallipolis Shrine Club anu the Ironton Masonic Lodge.
Don enjoyed tennis. bicycling . swimming. reading newspapers and m ~gazines. boating. deep sea fishing, Ohio
State football. spending time with his family. and maintaining .his home. He was a loving husband and a proud father.
At all times. he was a man of great patience.
Hi s family would like I&lt;&gt; thank the countless relatives.
friends and clergy who · \'isited. ·ai led. 'ent cards and
prayed during his illness. They\vould also like to thank the
wonderful staffs at the James Cancer Center. Holzer
Medical Center, Holzer Assisted Living. Holzer Ce.nter for
Cancer Care. Holzer Home Care, Holzer Hospice and the
Medical Shoppe for their care and compassion. Most of all,
they would like to thank God for his grace. strengt h and
provision during thi s difficult time.
Also. they want tO offer praise to God for his incredible
gift of salvation and eternal life through Christ.
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday. Sept. I0, 2008. at
Grace Un iteu Meth odist Chu rch. with Pastor John O'Brien
ofliciating. Burial will foll.ow in' Mound Hiil Cemetery.
Friends may call at Grace United Methodist Church on
Tuesday. Sept. '1. 200X. from 5 until 8 p.m.
Will.is Funeral Home is aS&gt;isting the family.
Pallbearers will. be Jim Noe. Andy Noe. Carl .Minning.
Chris Minning. Tyler Hannon and Rick Hannon .
In lieu of flowers, the fami ly requests donations be made
. in Don's memory to River City Fellowship. P.O. Box 1101.
Gall.ipolis, Ohio 45631 : Grace United Methodist Church.
600 Second Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631: or Holzer
Hosp ice. 100 Jack son Pike. Gal lipnl is. Ohio 45631. ·
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Frank says gov't will stabilize Fannie, Freddie

Deaths

HUt.. ME

VI\L\N

:iSlunbap t!:t mrs -E&gt;rnlmrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

...

between
10:30
p.m. equipment belonged to a logWedtlesday night and 8JO ging company run by Ronnie
Shephard Jr. of Oak Hill. .
a.m. Thursday morning.
It was also repotted that
According to the police
·thieves
had been stealing fuel
report. a 1996 John Deere
from
these
pieces of equip640G cable machine skiddcr
valued ell $35.000, a 1996 ment during the past several
Barko 160B loader and a weeks.
1997 sun trailer valued at
$30,000. and a 1997 CfR
4200 sawbuck/slasher valued
at $8.000 were burned
overnight iti a wooded area
near Edwards Road . The

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OHIO

6unba~ It mess -i~nttnd

Sunday, September 7,

2008

Hocking.epresident
~:;,~~~ers
:_~~!'..~}~~n,~~t!!;f!?roo~f.!l!l~':,
•n June
to leav 1
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

NELSONVILLE (AP) The only ,president Hocking
College has ever had plans
to leave after the current
school year.
Seventy- seven -year-old
John Light announced ·
Thursday that he ' ll retire in
June. He's led the two-year
southern Ohio school since
it was created in 19P8.
His current two-year contract ends June 30. Light
had told trustees that he
would leave when the contract, expired, and he

reminded them in a memo
this week that it's time to
start looking for a successor.
The state auditor, allomey
general' s offi ce and the
Ohio Ethics Commission
are investigating possible
fraud and theft at Hocking
College.
.
Light has denied any
wrongdoing in using a fund
he controls to pay for tens of
thousands of. dollars in foreign travel for himself, his
wife and college trustees.

Delta Queen supporters
plan rally for Tuersday "
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MAYSVILLE, Ky. - A
Save the Delta · Queen
steamboat rally will take
place Tuesday, Sept. 9
beginning at II . a.m. at
Limestone Landing in
.downtown Mays vi lie.
The Delta Queen is the
last traditional steamboat
carrying overnight passengers on America's inland
waterways and for that reason has been designated a
National
Historic
Landmark.
In 1966, she was ·inadvertently caught in the technical provisions of the Safety
at Sea Act, which was
intended to cover oceangoing ships, not riverboats.
Recogl)izing the difference
between boats that operate
on rivers, within yards of
the shore, and ships that sail
the high seas, Congress
established an exemption
· for the Delta Queen in 1968.
Since then, the exemption
has · been renewed nine
times, in virtually every .
case by near-unanimous
votes in both the House and
the Senate.
Without congressional
action, the current exemption will expire at midnight
on Oct. 31, 2008. Bipartisan

legislation to extend the
exemption (H .R. 3852) was
introduced by U.S. Rep .
Steve Chabot of Ohio on
Oct. f6, 2007 : It remains in
the House Committee on
Transportation
and
Infrastructure
because
Committee Chairman James
Oberstar of Minnesota
refuses to release it to be
voted on by the full House
of Representatives.
U,S.
Sen .
George
Voi novich of Ohio has
announced that when
Congress reconvenes after
the August recess, he will
il)troduce an exemption bill
in the Senate.
The rally will feature
·speakers from the Save the
Delta Queen Campaign,
state and local government
representatives,
Bill
Wiemuth, Delt~ Queen historian, and a representative
'from the office of U.S. Rep.
Geoff Davis of Kentucky,
who is a cosponsor of HR
3852. Music will be provided by St. Patrick's elementary and high school choirs

COLUMBUS - It hardly
·seems possible to, improve
upon a ripe, sun-warmed
tomato straight from the
garden . But Linda Casto
and Dominic Verrilli know
how to make the fruit eyen
sweeter: Give it away.
.
The two tend a sprawling
garden on a flood-prone
patch of ground at
Glenwood
United
Methodist Church on the
city's West Side. They grow
food to feed the hungry,
sending hundreds ·of pounds
of fresh produce to neighborhood food pantries.
" It feels good," Casto
said.
Home gardeners with
excess harvest can help, too.
Instead of tossing - or
cursing - surplus zucchini
and .cherry tomatoes, com-

cates sugge~t donati~g. Area
fooc;l pantnes conunut to
face record demand, and
fresh produce is always
needed.
The Mid-Ohio FoodBank
can link local growers and
donors with a pantry near
them, said Evelyn Behm,
senior vice president of food
and strategic initiatives.
"We' ll make matches,"
she said. "We're trying to
enhance the quality of food
at pantries. Fresh fruits and
vegetables are something
that many families don't
have access to."
,
Behm said the produce
supply at ,Mid-Ohio, which
provides food to hundreds of
central Ohio pantries, has
been good this summer. But
the number of families who
need food shows no sign of
easing.
During the first six months

)4 _Percent over the S~~
. penod last year, Behm satd.
Gandening for the needy is
a welcome next step in the
community-gardening movement, said Bill Dawson,
coordinator of the Franklin
Park
Conservatory 's
Growing to Green program.
"In the last couple years,
church gardens have really
taken off." he said.
Plant a Rowforthe Hungry.
a national campaign by the
Garden Writers Association,
also encourages growers· to
plant extra for giving.
And homeowners shouldn't forget their fruit trees .
"Don't let it fall in the yard
and rot," Dawson said.
"Collect it and take it to the
pantry."
Casto said she and other
church members started the
garden a,fter a former pastor
challenged them to find new

community, .whichjndudes
many low-tncome , tmmtgrant and refugee families .
' "People were very enthusiastic," Verrilli said.
Organizers secured grants ·
and plant donations; church ·
members also were offered
separate plots in exchange for
a promise to donate at least
10 percent of their harvest.
"It 's good fellowship,"
Casto said. "We' can laugh
together. Sometimes we cry
together."
One dark day in early
June, Verrilli climbed atop
lhe water tank and took out
his cell phone to call Casto.
The garden, shed and greenhouse were 6 feet under
water. "It's gone," he said.
That likely won't be the last
time they face temporary ruin,
Casto figures. But hope. and
sometimes tomatoes, spring .
eternal.

Inside ·.
TheOVP Scoreboard, Page B2
Point rolls past Sissonville, Page B4
In the Open, Page BS

Sunday, September 7, 2008
LocAl,. SCHEDULE
GALLIPCLIS- A schedule of upcomhg college
and h9J SChool ~arsify sporting events 1r111oMng
I~ I~ GaUia and Meigs COI.I'Ities.

Monday. SePtember B
Volleyball
Eastern at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Gaflia ACademy at Chillicothe, 5:15p.m.
South Gallia , Wellston at OVC (lri), 5

p.m.
Southern at Hannan, TBA
Go~

River Valley, Buffalo, Fairland al Gallia
"cademy (Cliffside), 4:30p.m.
Dutedav Stp'tembtr 8

. .
Soccer
.
OVCS at Gatlia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Volleyball
GB.IIia Academy at Jackson. 5:15p.m.
Meigs at Nels-York, 6 p.m.

Eastern at Southern , 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
~lver Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m.

Golf
Ekllpre at Meigs (Pine Hills). 4:30p.m.
Southern at Miller (Forst Hills) , 4:30p.m.
River Valley at Wahama (Riverside),
4:30p.m.

Wedntaday Sepltmbtr 10
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Meigs , 6 p.m. ·
Coal Grove at South Gama, 5:30p.m.
Golf

Eastern at Trimble (Forest Hills), 4:30
p.m.
Thursdny Sepllmblr 11
.
SOCcer
Warren at GaHia Academy, 5 p.m.

. . Volleyball

Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Miller at Eastern , 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Waterford at Southern , 6 p.m.
Go~

Eastern at Southern (Pine Hills), 4:30

_p.m. .

WEEK

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Sears Holding (NASDAQ)

'5.32

90.68

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 42.46
Colllno (NYSE) - 51.75
DuPont (NYSE)- 44.25
US Bank (NYSE) _: 32.74
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.37
General Electric (NYSE)- 27.88
H-y-Davldoon (NYSE) - 39.20
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.80
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.87
Limited B,.ndl (NYSE) - 20.69
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)' -

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 60.74
Wendy's (NYSE)- 24.31
WesBanco (NYSE)- 25.49
Worthtngton (NYSE)- 18.46
Dolly llock ,.porto are tho 4 p.m.
ET cloalng quotea of tranuc~
llano lor Sept. 5, 2008, provided
by Edward Jones financial advisors louc Millo In Galllpollo at
(740) 441 -11441 and laoley
Marrero In Point Pl1111nt -.,
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

118.38

fOOTBALL ,

South GaMia 14, Southam 0 1 )
Meigs 53, River Valley 20
Point Pl6481nt 42, Sisaotwltle 10, . .
Van 62, Hannan 24
Logan 31, Hamilton lilwri&amp;hlp·D ',.
S!&gt;e~ 34. Chillicothe 13 .

• : Jackson V, Vlnlon County o ,
' • Now Ph.adolphla 39,,l\la"et11i l!O

Whooloraburg ·28, Pori'""'"" 6' '
Wansn 14, Porl&lt;enoburv South 7
· Wheeling Park 26, ~Ia 1
.. Fodellll Hoeldng ZBj FO" Frye 20 OI

'

·

Altxancler 40, Untoto 12 '

.:.. ..~ ..!rt'!)ll!e 261 Belpre 10 ; .

Btoom-Carroil27, A1hons 13
Fairfield Chril!llan 38, 1\llller 34
Bema Union 28, NM.on\lille-Vork 14
Grova City Christian 33, Wetertoril ,3
. waverly ;!5, Wallalon 21
Portomouth West 28. Sou1h Point 7
Shotdon Clark 29, falrtan&lt;l26
Oak Hlll42. Rock Hil 18
Coal Grove 31, Lucaavlle Velley 8
Chet8POakO 48, Syrnrneo\Jalley 6
ChapmanYIIte 24, Herbert Ho(Wer 0 ·
Ravenswood 35, Poda 6
We.yne 91, James Monroe 10

CLARK

.,

MASON, W.Va.
William Zuspan connected
on 11 -of-13 passes for 200
yards and three touchdowns
in leading the - Wahama
White Falcons to its second
straight lop-sided win over a
TVC opponent Friday
evening.
Coach · Ed Cromley 's
White Falcons (2-0) spotted
Eastern .(1-2) an early tirst
period touchdown before
scoring 40 unanswered
points in a 47-19' win over
its Meigs Counly neighbors .
Zuspan tos sed scoring
strikes of 3 I yards to Kyle
Zerkle, 26 yard~ to Garrett
underwood and 15 yards to
Ryan Lee while utilizing the
services of seven different
WHS receivers for his
career high 200 yard passing
total. Zerkle joined Zuspan
in the Wahama limelight by
scoring three first quarter
touchdowns with a I 2-yard
run and a three yard burst to
go with his 31-yard TO

Zuspan

Hupp

re.,eption in addition to
booun~ five of seven point
after ktcks.
Wahama also received
scoring runs by Micaiah
Branch covering three yards
and Jacob Roach with a two
yard plunge in addition to
the three scori n,g passes by
Zuspan. The wm improves
the White Falcons season
record to 2-0 on the year
while Eastern dropped it s
second decision in three tries
on the 2008 grid (ampaign ,
The Eagles reached the
larry Crum/pholo
end zone three times on the
night
with
Kelly Wahama's Luke Ingels (50) and his teammate wrap up Eastern's Kelly Winebrenner during
the second quarter of a high school football game Friday night in Mason, W.Va. Wahama
Pleese see Stuffs, Bl
won the game 47-19.

Marauders roll past RV
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPEC IAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

CHESHIRE - Jeremy
Smith rushed for 212 yards
in just 13 carries, and scored
four touchdowns to lead
Meigs to a 53-29 win over
River
Valley
Friday
evening.
. The win was the
Marauders third in a row to
Well
Curnutte
1
start the young season, all
coming against Ohio Valley minutes of the half. The ·
Conference teams. River Raiders went for the on side
Valley dropped to 0-3 on the kick, but Marauder freshseason.
man Each Sayre pounced on
Meigs opened up the the loose football at the 50
scoring in the first period, yard line. On second down,
when Well hooked up with Smith was off to the races,
Caleb Davis from 20 yards scoring from 46 yard out.
out, capping a nine play 82 The pass was no good, and
yard drive. The drive was the Marauders held an 18-6
kept going by a 32 yard pass lead.
from Well to Clay Bolin·on
On first down Cameron ·
third down. The kick was no Bolin picked off a Curnutte
good, but the Marauders had . pass at the Raitler 41 . Six
the 6-0 lead with 4:57 left in plays later it was · Smith
the period.
again , 1his ti1ne from 26
Smith
brought
the yards out. Smilh added the
Marauder fans to their feat estra points for :t 28-6
when he took a River Valley Marauder lead with 4:04 left
Bryan Walters/photo
. Southern running back Taylor Lemley (21) is dragged down by a South Galli a defender dur- punt 84 yards for the score. in the haiL
The Raiders, could have
ing the first quarter of Friday night's Week 3 football contest at Roger Lee Adams Field in but a block in the back by
Meigs wiped the points off folded up the tent. but they
Racine. The Rebels won their first game of the year by a 14-0 decislon.
the board. Six plays later came storming back driving
Jeremy scored from six 7 I yard in eighl plays with
yards out, after the pass for Tyler Smith scoring trom 10
the extra points was incom- yards out. Kody Johnson
plete the Marauder held a added the extra points to
12-0 lead with II: 17 left in make il 26-13 with just 26
the half. Smith added a 50- seconds left in the half:
BY BRYAN WALTERS
lhen marched down . to the yard run, to aid Meigs in the
Once
again .
Sayre
BWALTER S @MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CO~
guests' 28-yard line when drive.
pounced on the on side kick.
disaster struck again when
River Valley came right On first down , behind a
RAClNE - .Two things
another false start · penalty back after the, Meigs kick- beautiful play fake from
dictated the final outcome of
ultimately stalled an other- off, on first down Clayton Well he went on top to Bolin
Friday night's football game
wise productive drive.
Curnutte hit Jordan Dee) for hitting him in stride for a 50
between South Gallia and
The host defense forced 36 yards to the Raider 49. yard scoring toss. Metts
host Southern. The opening
SGHS to punt after a three- Seven play later: the pair added the extra points and
play of the contest and all of
and-out near t.le end of the hooked up for a 10 yard Meigs was on top 33: 13
the mistakes that followed.
first quarter, but the punt scoring pass. The kick was With 28 seconds lefl.
It wasn't the prettiest of
River Valley fumhled the '
grazed a Southern player on blocked but the Raiders had
evenings at Roger Lee
Clyburn
Jenkins
the return - which allowed cut the Marauder lead in ensuing kick, with Cameron
Adams Field, but the visitSouth Gallia 's Danny half, I 2-6 with 7:43 left in Bolin rewvering for Meigs
ing R~bels made the most of seam straight up the gut and Matney to recover on · the the half.
- ' · at the Raider 27. But the
their few opportunities dur- went untouched over 79 SHS 42 to start the second
That set . up an offensive Marauders were unable to
ing a 14-0 shutout victory
explosion between the two do any more damage and
over the Tornadoes during a yards to give the guests a 6- frame.
lead just 15 seconds into
The Rebels went back- teams, as they ,combined for
non-conference .gridiron 0regulation.
Pluse ••• Roii,'B4
wards on that drive and had 28 points in the final seven
matchup in Week 3.
After that, turnovers and to putit again, giving
The Rebels (1-2) took a 60 advantage on the opening yellow handkerchiefs took Southern . possession at its
kickoff following a 79-yard. over the remainder of the own 24 with 9:37 left in the
return from Jeff Clyburn, contest. South Galli a was half., The hosts marched all
then battled for the rest of flagged eight times for 50 the way down to the SGHS
the night to make that lead yards and had two turnovers, four, then a personal foul
stick before tacking on a while the 'Does were penal- penalty on first-imd-goal
final score with I :56 ized eight times for 60 yards moved the line of scrimremaining in . regulation to and had three turnovers - mage back to the .( 6.
The. Tornadoes never
claim their first win of the all of which •were fumbles.
Southern - which has came closer to the goal line,
2008 season. The triumph
now
gone scoreless in its last then had their 33-yard field
allowed SGHS 10 snap a
I
0
quarters
- appeared to goal attempt blocked by the
five-game regular season
losing streak, the longest for have that streak broken mid- Rebels' A.J. McDaniel the Red and Gold since the way through the fi~st period, giVing possession to · the
when Greg Jenktns broke · guests with 4:48 left until
2004 campaign.
free
on a 47-yard touchdown halftime
·
The guests also managed
Both t~ams traded possesto spoil the Tornadoes' sea- run around the seven minute
son borne opener, despite mark. The subsequent s.core sions, then SGHS caught a
being outgained by SHS (0- - · however - :was nulhfied break on its next drive just
3) by 17 5 yards of total thanks to an tllegal block, before the intermission.
The Rehels committed
offense. The Purple and giving the hosts possession
Gold also suffered their on the Rebels ' 23-yard line. · their first turnover of the
The Tornadoes followed night near midfield when
sixth consecutive regular
season setback, as well as that up with a false start quarterback B·.J. Stanley
their fourth consecutive loss penalty, then coughed up a was picked off by Jerry
to the Rebels. This series is fumble at 6:29 that was Justis with less than 20 secConslance Fowlertoubmll)ed photo
now tied at six wins apiece recovered by South Gallia's onds left, but Ju stis was
all-time.
stripped of the ball on the Meigs running back Jeremy Smitll, rig~t " runs away from the
Jeff Combs at the 26.
River Valley defense during Friday night's n6n·league footClyburn bobbled the openSot~thern forced a punt
during
that
ensuing
series,
Please
see
Outlast.
Bl
ing kickoff, then found a
ball game at Raider Field in Cheshire.

Ironton
roughs up
Blue Devils Rebels
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILVTRIBUNE .COM

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+*GIIIIpDUs 21 41 (,lMem Alit!.. (740) 44b·l-'07

AEP (NYSE) - 37.45
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 58.84
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 37.66
Big Loll (NYSE) - 30.90
Bob Evono (NASDAQ)- 28.99
BorgWorner (NYSE)- 39
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)41.23
Champion (NASDAQ)- 4.51
Charmlrig Shops (NASDAQ) -

3

Ironton 42, Gallla Academy 6
Wahama 47, Eastern 19,

The engineer on Friday
told commissioners who
oversee the Stark County
dump that the readings indicate finis aren't slowing and
are movi!}g toward the landfill 's northwest section.
Officials have been
installing a clay-and-synthetic cap as part of an effort
to stop the tires.
Nearby residents have
complained since 1999
about smells, underground
fires and structural problems at the landfill.

Local Stocks

GARY

fRIDAY'S GAMES

To learn more about the
Save the Delta Queen
Campaign, visit www.savethe-delta-queen.org, or contact Vicki Webster at ( 513)
or
381 -3571
vjw@olypen .com.

evening ... Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers .
and thunderstorms. Highs
around 80. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Tuesday night ... Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 50s.
·
Wednesday .•• Mostly
sunny. Highs around 80.

Bv

SPORTS CORRE SPONDENT

· HS Area Scores

Local Weather
· Sunday.•• Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
East winds around 5
mph ... Becoming south in
the afternoon.
Sunday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. South winds. around 5
mph.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in· the mid 80s.
South winds around 5
mph.
Monday night ... Partly
cloudy
in
the

,

Wahama stuffs Eagles

River Valley, Gallla Academy, Logan at
Jackson (Franklin Valley) , 4:30p.m.
Wellston at Meigs (F'ine Hills), 4:30p .m.

EPA: Underground fires
continuing at NE Ohio dump
BOLIVAR (AP) - A federal environmental official
says underground fires that
ha.ve burned for several
years at one of Ohio 's
largest landfills are continuing to spread.
Paul Ruesch. of the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency
says
newly
installed probe s at the
Countywide Recycling &amp;
Disposal Facility show that
underground temperatures
in some areas ·of the dump
exceed 250 degrees, more
than expected ..

Bl

6unbap Ott me' -&amp;entinel

+lidaon

Com mvn K.:it l io~Conna1101l

7) 1 EMoln$t .. S1('.6,\7401 268· l806
+The lone, 7'1EHuron Sl., {i&lt;40l 286.1}fJ98

MicYI!pOI't lngeh, Elec.:tronics, 106 N 2rd "'~ ­
li 40) 991·2625

IIIOpen S1.mdd)'
+High ~peed lnl ~rnl.'t Sold Hei-e

IRONTON - Not much
went well for the visiting
Gallia Academy football
t e a m
Friday
night during a 42-6
setback to
Ironton in
the · 2008
Southeastern · Ohio
Athletic
League
· Gravely
opener for
both squads
at Tank Memorial Field in
Lawrence County.
· The Blue Devils (2-1, 0-1
sEOAL) suffered their first
setback of the season, lost
their top two quarterbacks
to injury and committed
three first half turnovers all ·
en route to falling behind
35-0 at the intermission.
The Fightin~ Tigers (2-1 ,
1~0) also limtted the Blue
and White to just 27 yards
rushing and four first downs
through three · quarters of

Pluse see Devils, Bl
..

CoNTACf·US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fu- 1·740·446·3008
E·mtll- sportsCmydailytrlbune.com
Sgorta Start

llryen Waltera, Sports Writer
(140) 446-2342, ext. ·33
bwaltersOmydaU~r!bune .com

Larry

Crum, Sports Writer

(740) 446-2342, oxt.-33
Ierum 0 mydaityreglster.com

1--------· -- -

---- -

tor first

Tornadoes lose 14-0, outgain SGHS 298-123 in total yards

- - · - - - - - - - -- ·---

- -- _..

�PageA6

OHIO

6unba~ It mess -i~nttnd

Sunday, September 7,

2008

Hocking.epresident
~:;,~~~ers
:_~~!'..~}~~n,~~t!!;f!?roo~f.!l!l~':,
•n June
to leav 1
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

NELSONVILLE (AP) The only ,president Hocking
College has ever had plans
to leave after the current
school year.
Seventy- seven -year-old
John Light announced ·
Thursday that he ' ll retire in
June. He's led the two-year
southern Ohio school since
it was created in 19P8.
His current two-year contract ends June 30. Light
had told trustees that he
would leave when the contract, expired, and he

reminded them in a memo
this week that it's time to
start looking for a successor.
The state auditor, allomey
general' s offi ce and the
Ohio Ethics Commission
are investigating possible
fraud and theft at Hocking
College.
.
Light has denied any
wrongdoing in using a fund
he controls to pay for tens of
thousands of. dollars in foreign travel for himself, his
wife and college trustees.

Delta Queen supporters
plan rally for Tuersday "
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MAYSVILLE, Ky. - A
Save the Delta · Queen
steamboat rally will take
place Tuesday, Sept. 9
beginning at II . a.m. at
Limestone Landing in
.downtown Mays vi lie.
The Delta Queen is the
last traditional steamboat
carrying overnight passengers on America's inland
waterways and for that reason has been designated a
National
Historic
Landmark.
In 1966, she was ·inadvertently caught in the technical provisions of the Safety
at Sea Act, which was
intended to cover oceangoing ships, not riverboats.
Recogl)izing the difference
between boats that operate
on rivers, within yards of
the shore, and ships that sail
the high seas, Congress
established an exemption
· for the Delta Queen in 1968.
Since then, the exemption
has · been renewed nine
times, in virtually every .
case by near-unanimous
votes in both the House and
the Senate.
Without congressional
action, the current exemption will expire at midnight
on Oct. 31, 2008. Bipartisan

legislation to extend the
exemption (H .R. 3852) was
introduced by U.S. Rep .
Steve Chabot of Ohio on
Oct. f6, 2007 : It remains in
the House Committee on
Transportation
and
Infrastructure
because
Committee Chairman James
Oberstar of Minnesota
refuses to release it to be
voted on by the full House
of Representatives.
U,S.
Sen .
George
Voi novich of Ohio has
announced that when
Congress reconvenes after
the August recess, he will
il)troduce an exemption bill
in the Senate.
The rally will feature
·speakers from the Save the
Delta Queen Campaign,
state and local government
representatives,
Bill
Wiemuth, Delt~ Queen historian, and a representative
'from the office of U.S. Rep.
Geoff Davis of Kentucky,
who is a cosponsor of HR
3852. Music will be provided by St. Patrick's elementary and high school choirs

COLUMBUS - It hardly
·seems possible to, improve
upon a ripe, sun-warmed
tomato straight from the
garden . But Linda Casto
and Dominic Verrilli know
how to make the fruit eyen
sweeter: Give it away.
.
The two tend a sprawling
garden on a flood-prone
patch of ground at
Glenwood
United
Methodist Church on the
city's West Side. They grow
food to feed the hungry,
sending hundreds ·of pounds
of fresh produce to neighborhood food pantries.
" It feels good," Casto
said.
Home gardeners with
excess harvest can help, too.
Instead of tossing - or
cursing - surplus zucchini
and .cherry tomatoes, com-

cates sugge~t donati~g. Area
fooc;l pantnes conunut to
face record demand, and
fresh produce is always
needed.
The Mid-Ohio FoodBank
can link local growers and
donors with a pantry near
them, said Evelyn Behm,
senior vice president of food
and strategic initiatives.
"We' ll make matches,"
she said. "We're trying to
enhance the quality of food
at pantries. Fresh fruits and
vegetables are something
that many families don't
have access to."
,
Behm said the produce
supply at ,Mid-Ohio, which
provides food to hundreds of
central Ohio pantries, has
been good this summer. But
the number of families who
need food shows no sign of
easing.
During the first six months

)4 _Percent over the S~~
. penod last year, Behm satd.
Gandening for the needy is
a welcome next step in the
community-gardening movement, said Bill Dawson,
coordinator of the Franklin
Park
Conservatory 's
Growing to Green program.
"In the last couple years,
church gardens have really
taken off." he said.
Plant a Rowforthe Hungry.
a national campaign by the
Garden Writers Association,
also encourages growers· to
plant extra for giving.
And homeowners shouldn't forget their fruit trees .
"Don't let it fall in the yard
and rot," Dawson said.
"Collect it and take it to the
pantry."
Casto said she and other
church members started the
garden a,fter a former pastor
challenged them to find new

community, .whichjndudes
many low-tncome , tmmtgrant and refugee families .
' "People were very enthusiastic," Verrilli said.
Organizers secured grants ·
and plant donations; church ·
members also were offered
separate plots in exchange for
a promise to donate at least
10 percent of their harvest.
"It 's good fellowship,"
Casto said. "We' can laugh
together. Sometimes we cry
together."
One dark day in early
June, Verrilli climbed atop
lhe water tank and took out
his cell phone to call Casto.
The garden, shed and greenhouse were 6 feet under
water. "It's gone," he said.
That likely won't be the last
time they face temporary ruin,
Casto figures. But hope. and
sometimes tomatoes, spring .
eternal.

Inside ·.
TheOVP Scoreboard, Page B2
Point rolls past Sissonville, Page B4
In the Open, Page BS

Sunday, September 7, 2008
LocAl,. SCHEDULE
GALLIPCLIS- A schedule of upcomhg college
and h9J SChool ~arsify sporting events 1r111oMng
I~ I~ GaUia and Meigs COI.I'Ities.

Monday. SePtember B
Volleyball
Eastern at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Gaflia ACademy at Chillicothe, 5:15p.m.
South Gallia , Wellston at OVC (lri), 5

p.m.
Southern at Hannan, TBA
Go~

River Valley, Buffalo, Fairland al Gallia
"cademy (Cliffside), 4:30p.m.
Dutedav Stp'tembtr 8

. .
Soccer
.
OVCS at Gatlia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Volleyball
GB.IIia Academy at Jackson. 5:15p.m.
Meigs at Nels-York, 6 p.m.

Eastern at Southern , 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
~lver Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m.

Golf
Ekllpre at Meigs (Pine Hills). 4:30p.m.
Southern at Miller (Forst Hills) , 4:30p.m.
River Valley at Wahama (Riverside),
4:30p.m.

Wedntaday Sepltmbtr 10
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Meigs , 6 p.m. ·
Coal Grove at South Gama, 5:30p.m.
Golf

Eastern at Trimble (Forest Hills), 4:30
p.m.
Thursdny Sepllmblr 11
.
SOCcer
Warren at GaHia Academy, 5 p.m.

. . Volleyball

Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Miller at Eastern , 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Waterford at Southern , 6 p.m.
Go~

Eastern at Southern (Pine Hills), 4:30

_p.m. .

WEEK

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) -22
BBT (NYSE) - 31.62
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 20.n
Pepsico (N'i'SE)- 88.92
Pramler (NASDAQ) - 9.50
RockWell (NYSE) - 43.48
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 5.05
Royal Dutch Shall - 62.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)

'5.32

90.68

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 42.46
Colllno (NYSE) - 51.75
DuPont (NYSE)- 44.25
US Bank (NYSE) _: 32.74
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.37
General Electric (NYSE)- 27.88
H-y-Davldoon (NYSE) - 39.20
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.80
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.87
Limited B,.ndl (NYSE) - 20.69
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)' -

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 60.74
Wendy's (NYSE)- 24.31
WesBanco (NYSE)- 25.49
Worthtngton (NYSE)- 18.46
Dolly llock ,.porto are tho 4 p.m.
ET cloalng quotea of tranuc~
llano lor Sept. 5, 2008, provided
by Edward Jones financial advisors louc Millo In Galllpollo at
(740) 441 -11441 and laoley
Marrero In Point Pl1111nt -.,
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

118.38

fOOTBALL ,

South GaMia 14, Southam 0 1 )
Meigs 53, River Valley 20
Point Pl6481nt 42, Sisaotwltle 10, . .
Van 62, Hannan 24
Logan 31, Hamilton lilwri&amp;hlp·D ',.
S!&gt;e~ 34. Chillicothe 13 .

• : Jackson V, Vlnlon County o ,
' • Now Ph.adolphla 39,,l\la"et11i l!O

Whooloraburg ·28, Pori'""'"" 6' '
Wansn 14, Porl&lt;enoburv South 7
· Wheeling Park 26, ~Ia 1
.. Fodellll Hoeldng ZBj FO" Frye 20 OI

'

·

Altxancler 40, Untoto 12 '

.:.. ..~ ..!rt'!)ll!e 261 Belpre 10 ; .

Btoom-Carroil27, A1hons 13
Fairfield Chril!llan 38, 1\llller 34
Bema Union 28, NM.on\lille-Vork 14
Grova City Christian 33, Wetertoril ,3
. waverly ;!5, Wallalon 21
Portomouth West 28. Sou1h Point 7
Shotdon Clark 29, falrtan&lt;l26
Oak Hlll42. Rock Hil 18
Coal Grove 31, Lucaavlle Velley 8
Chet8POakO 48, Syrnrneo\Jalley 6
ChapmanYIIte 24, Herbert Ho(Wer 0 ·
Ravenswood 35, Poda 6
We.yne 91, James Monroe 10

CLARK

.,

MASON, W.Va.
William Zuspan connected
on 11 -of-13 passes for 200
yards and three touchdowns
in leading the - Wahama
White Falcons to its second
straight lop-sided win over a
TVC opponent Friday
evening.
Coach · Ed Cromley 's
White Falcons (2-0) spotted
Eastern .(1-2) an early tirst
period touchdown before
scoring 40 unanswered
points in a 47-19' win over
its Meigs Counly neighbors .
Zuspan tos sed scoring
strikes of 3 I yards to Kyle
Zerkle, 26 yard~ to Garrett
underwood and 15 yards to
Ryan Lee while utilizing the
services of seven different
WHS receivers for his
career high 200 yard passing
total. Zerkle joined Zuspan
in the Wahama limelight by
scoring three first quarter
touchdowns with a I 2-yard
run and a three yard burst to
go with his 31-yard TO

Zuspan

Hupp

re.,eption in addition to
booun~ five of seven point
after ktcks.
Wahama also received
scoring runs by Micaiah
Branch covering three yards
and Jacob Roach with a two
yard plunge in addition to
the three scori n,g passes by
Zuspan. The wm improves
the White Falcons season
record to 2-0 on the year
while Eastern dropped it s
second decision in three tries
on the 2008 grid (ampaign ,
The Eagles reached the
larry Crum/pholo
end zone three times on the
night
with
Kelly Wahama's Luke Ingels (50) and his teammate wrap up Eastern's Kelly Winebrenner during
the second quarter of a high school football game Friday night in Mason, W.Va. Wahama
Pleese see Stuffs, Bl
won the game 47-19.

Marauders roll past RV
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPEC IAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

CHESHIRE - Jeremy
Smith rushed for 212 yards
in just 13 carries, and scored
four touchdowns to lead
Meigs to a 53-29 win over
River
Valley
Friday
evening.
. The win was the
Marauders third in a row to
Well
Curnutte
1
start the young season, all
coming against Ohio Valley minutes of the half. The ·
Conference teams. River Raiders went for the on side
Valley dropped to 0-3 on the kick, but Marauder freshseason.
man Each Sayre pounced on
Meigs opened up the the loose football at the 50
scoring in the first period, yard line. On second down,
when Well hooked up with Smith was off to the races,
Caleb Davis from 20 yards scoring from 46 yard out.
out, capping a nine play 82 The pass was no good, and
yard drive. The drive was the Marauders held an 18-6
kept going by a 32 yard pass lead.
from Well to Clay Bolin·on
On first down Cameron ·
third down. The kick was no Bolin picked off a Curnutte
good, but the Marauders had . pass at the Raitler 41 . Six
the 6-0 lead with 4:57 left in plays later it was · Smith
the period.
again , 1his ti1ne from 26
Smith
brought
the yards out. Smilh added the
Marauder fans to their feat estra points for :t 28-6
when he took a River Valley Marauder lead with 4:04 left
Bryan Walters/photo
. Southern running back Taylor Lemley (21) is dragged down by a South Galli a defender dur- punt 84 yards for the score. in the haiL
The Raiders, could have
ing the first quarter of Friday night's Week 3 football contest at Roger Lee Adams Field in but a block in the back by
Meigs wiped the points off folded up the tent. but they
Racine. The Rebels won their first game of the year by a 14-0 decislon.
the board. Six plays later came storming back driving
Jeremy scored from six 7 I yard in eighl plays with
yards out, after the pass for Tyler Smith scoring trom 10
the extra points was incom- yards out. Kody Johnson
plete the Marauder held a added the extra points to
12-0 lead with II: 17 left in make il 26-13 with just 26
the half. Smith added a 50- seconds left in the half:
BY BRYAN WALTERS
lhen marched down . to the yard run, to aid Meigs in the
Once
again .
Sayre
BWALTER S @MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CO~
guests' 28-yard line when drive.
pounced on the on side kick.
disaster struck again when
River Valley came right On first down , behind a
RAClNE - .Two things
another false start · penalty back after the, Meigs kick- beautiful play fake from
dictated the final outcome of
ultimately stalled an other- off, on first down Clayton Well he went on top to Bolin
Friday night's football game
wise productive drive.
Curnutte hit Jordan Dee) for hitting him in stride for a 50
between South Gallia and
The host defense forced 36 yards to the Raider 49. yard scoring toss. Metts
host Southern. The opening
SGHS to punt after a three- Seven play later: the pair added the extra points and
play of the contest and all of
and-out near t.le end of the hooked up for a 10 yard Meigs was on top 33: 13
the mistakes that followed.
first quarter, but the punt scoring pass. The kick was With 28 seconds lefl.
It wasn't the prettiest of
River Valley fumhled the '
grazed a Southern player on blocked but the Raiders had
evenings at Roger Lee
Clyburn
Jenkins
the return - which allowed cut the Marauder lead in ensuing kick, with Cameron
Adams Field, but the visitSouth Gallia 's Danny half, I 2-6 with 7:43 left in Bolin rewvering for Meigs
ing R~bels made the most of seam straight up the gut and Matney to recover on · the the half.
- ' · at the Raider 27. But the
their few opportunities dur- went untouched over 79 SHS 42 to start the second
That set . up an offensive Marauders were unable to
ing a 14-0 shutout victory
explosion between the two do any more damage and
over the Tornadoes during a yards to give the guests a 6- frame.
lead just 15 seconds into
The Rebels went back- teams, as they ,combined for
non-conference .gridiron 0regulation.
Pluse ••• Roii,'B4
wards on that drive and had 28 points in the final seven
matchup in Week 3.
After that, turnovers and to putit again, giving
The Rebels (1-2) took a 60 advantage on the opening yellow handkerchiefs took Southern . possession at its
kickoff following a 79-yard. over the remainder of the own 24 with 9:37 left in the
return from Jeff Clyburn, contest. South Galli a was half., The hosts marched all
then battled for the rest of flagged eight times for 50 the way down to the SGHS
the night to make that lead yards and had two turnovers, four, then a personal foul
stick before tacking on a while the 'Does were penal- penalty on first-imd-goal
final score with I :56 ized eight times for 60 yards moved the line of scrimremaining in . regulation to and had three turnovers - mage back to the .( 6.
The. Tornadoes never
claim their first win of the all of which •were fumbles.
Southern - which has came closer to the goal line,
2008 season. The triumph
now
gone scoreless in its last then had their 33-yard field
allowed SGHS 10 snap a
I
0
quarters
- appeared to goal attempt blocked by the
five-game regular season
losing streak, the longest for have that streak broken mid- Rebels' A.J. McDaniel the Red and Gold since the way through the fi~st period, giVing possession to · the
when Greg Jenktns broke · guests with 4:48 left until
2004 campaign.
free
on a 47-yard touchdown halftime
·
The guests also managed
Both t~ams traded possesto spoil the Tornadoes' sea- run around the seven minute
son borne opener, despite mark. The subsequent s.core sions, then SGHS caught a
being outgained by SHS (0- - · however - :was nulhfied break on its next drive just
3) by 17 5 yards of total thanks to an tllegal block, before the intermission.
The Rehels committed
offense. The Purple and giving the hosts possession
Gold also suffered their on the Rebels ' 23-yard line. · their first turnover of the
The Tornadoes followed night near midfield when
sixth consecutive regular
season setback, as well as that up with a false start quarterback B·.J. Stanley
their fourth consecutive loss penalty, then coughed up a was picked off by Jerry
to the Rebels. This series is fumble at 6:29 that was Justis with less than 20 secConslance Fowlertoubmll)ed photo
now tied at six wins apiece recovered by South Gallia's onds left, but Ju stis was
all-time.
stripped of the ball on the Meigs running back Jeremy Smitll, rig~t " runs away from the
Jeff Combs at the 26.
River Valley defense during Friday night's n6n·league footClyburn bobbled the openSot~thern forced a punt
during
that
ensuing
series,
Please
see
Outlast.
Bl
ing kickoff, then found a
ball game at Raider Field in Cheshire.

Ironton
roughs up
Blue Devils Rebels
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AEP (NYSE) - 37.45
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 58.84
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 37.66
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3

Ironton 42, Gallla Academy 6
Wahama 47, Eastern 19,

The engineer on Friday
told commissioners who
oversee the Stark County
dump that the readings indicate finis aren't slowing and
are movi!}g toward the landfill 's northwest section.
Officials have been
installing a clay-and-synthetic cap as part of an effort
to stop the tires.
Nearby residents have
complained since 1999
about smells, underground
fires and structural problems at the landfill.

Local Stocks

GARY

fRIDAY'S GAMES

To learn more about the
Save the Delta Queen
Campaign, visit www.savethe-delta-queen.org, or contact Vicki Webster at ( 513)
or
381 -3571
vjw@olypen .com.

evening ... Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers .
and thunderstorms. Highs
around 80. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Tuesday night ... Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 50s.
·
Wednesday .•• Mostly
sunny. Highs around 80.

Bv

SPORTS CORRE SPONDENT

· HS Area Scores

Local Weather
· Sunday.•• Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
East winds around 5
mph ... Becoming south in
the afternoon.
Sunday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. South winds. around 5
mph.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in· the mid 80s.
South winds around 5
mph.
Monday night ... Partly
cloudy
in
the

,

Wahama stuffs Eagles

River Valley, Gallla Academy, Logan at
Jackson (Franklin Valley) , 4:30p.m.
Wellston at Meigs (F'ine Hills), 4:30p .m.

EPA: Underground fires
continuing at NE Ohio dump
BOLIVAR (AP) - A federal environmental official
says underground fires that
ha.ve burned for several
years at one of Ohio 's
largest landfills are continuing to spread.
Paul Ruesch. of the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency
says
newly
installed probe s at the
Countywide Recycling &amp;
Disposal Facility show that
underground temperatures
in some areas ·of the dump
exceed 250 degrees, more
than expected ..

Bl

6unbap Ott me' -&amp;entinel

+lidaon

Com mvn K.:it l io~Conna1101l

7) 1 EMoln$t .. S1('.6,\7401 268· l806
+The lone, 7'1EHuron Sl., {i&lt;40l 286.1}fJ98

MicYI!pOI't lngeh, Elec.:tronics, 106 N 2rd "'~ ­
li 40) 991·2625

IIIOpen S1.mdd)'
+High ~peed lnl ~rnl.'t Sold Hei-e

IRONTON - Not much
went well for the visiting
Gallia Academy football
t e a m
Friday
night during a 42-6
setback to
Ironton in
the · 2008
Southeastern · Ohio
Athletic
League
· Gravely
opener for
both squads
at Tank Memorial Field in
Lawrence County.
· The Blue Devils (2-1, 0-1
sEOAL) suffered their first
setback of the season, lost
their top two quarterbacks
to injury and committed
three first half turnovers all ·
en route to falling behind
35-0 at the intermission.
The Fightin~ Tigers (2-1 ,
1~0) also limtted the Blue
and White to just 27 yards
rushing and four first downs
through three · quarters of

Pluse see Devils, Bl
..

CoNTACf·US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fu- 1·740·446·3008
E·mtll- sportsCmydailytrlbune.com
Sgorta Start

llryen Waltera, Sports Writer
(140) 446-2342, ext. ·33
bwaltersOmydaU~r!bune .com

Larry

Crum, Sports Writer

(740) 446-2342, oxt.-33
Ierum 0 mydaityreglster.com

1--------· -- -

---- -

tor first

Tornadoes lose 14-0, outgain SGHS 298-123 in total yards

- - · - - - - - - - -- ·---

- -- _..

�Page B2 • l&amp;unll&lt;w \l:mtrs -15rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 7, 2008
Sunday, September 7, 2008

The OVP Scoreboard ---Week 3 Prep Football
Fnday's Bmcscores

South Galli a 14, Southern 0
South Gatha 6 0 0 8 - 14
Southern
0 0 0 0 0
Scoring summary
First Quarter
SG-Jeft Clyburn 79 k1ckoff retu rn
(run fa1ted) t t .45
Fourth Quarter
SG-Ciyburn 5 run {Bra ndon
Hamson pass from B.J Stanley)

t56
F~rst

Downs
Rushes-yar(ls
Pass1ng yards
To tal yards
Comp-att-tnt
Fumbles-lost
,Penalt•es- yards

SG
B
35-94
29
t23
2-t 5-2
t -0
B 50

5
12
4t - 188
11 0
29B
5-19-0
5-3
8-60

Individual Stallslles
Rushing : . SG- Cale b McCian ci han
11-41 . Jeff Clyburn 11 -30, Bryce

First Qu.rter
t-Keilh Wetzel 2 rur\(Johnathan

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

Schwe1ckar1 k1ck ) 9 26

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

! -Wetzel 7 run (Schwe1ckart k1ck}
6"25
Second Quarter
1-Wetzel 24.run (Schwe1ckart k1ck)
8:4 9
~hance Freeman 1 run
(SChWOICkart kiCk) 2 20
~Freeman 10 run (Schwe1ckart
kick) 42
Third Quarter
1-Lukas Morns 43 paSs from
SchweiCkart (Schwe1ckart k1ck)
9:05
' Fourth Quarter
GA-Jared Gra'o'ely 4 run (Joe
Jenk1ns kiCk) 5:16
F1rst Downs
Ru shes-yards
Passmg yards
Total yards
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

GA
10
29-61
96
157
12-14-0
6-3
4-25

I
16
36-277
119
396
5-8- t
0-0
8·56

'

North OMolon

SEOAL

AU

W-1. PF
PA
..0-0 .. 0 . 0 .... .. 3-0 , .. 10t .. 24
. ().1) . 0 . ..0 .. ..3-0 _.. 96 .. .34

W-l

Logan .. . . .. .. ..
JaCkson . .. ..
. . ..
Ironton .. . .. _.. _ , .. . t-o
Warren . .. .
.. .. ().1)
GalliaAcademy .. _ •. , ..
.. : . 0-t
POIIllmOuth .. .. . .. . . .. .. . ().1)
Zanesville ........ .. , • . .. . .. .. ().1)
Chlllicothe ............. ·, . C " . . ().1)
Manetta - ......
. , . : .. .. , .. .. .().1)

.

PF

PA .

.. 42
.. 0
.. 6 .
, 0 .
. 0 .

.6 . ..2-t
.0 . ' 2-1
.42 . . 2-1
0
. .1-2
0 .. . t -2
.. o ...o ..
.t-2
'.

0

_.. U8 .35
_.. 31 ...37
, ..65 ...65.
.. .34 .. :17...50 . .75
.. -~ ...68
0-3 ...81 ... 133

.0 ..

Ohio ·Valley Conference

OYC "'.
' . W-L
pf,. PA
W-L
C?.:ee .. ..
.. . .. .. .. ..().1) ... 0 .. •, 0 .. .. .2·1
Coal we .. -.. .. ..... , ... : ..().1) .. 0 . . 0 .. . . 1-2
River alloy . . . . , _. ' .. : .. .\ ,().1) ... 0 . .0 . . .0-3
RockHill · ...,:.. -.. . . , ., .. .'.. .. ,().1) ... 0 . .. 0 .. .. : .0-3
FairtAnd .... ............. .... ,().1) , .. 0 .. . '.0 ...... 0-3
Sou1h Point .. .. .
. ..... ..... . ..0-0 , .. 0 .. ..0 ......0-3
Trf.Vallev

,

' ·

'

1

. ,

•

•

AU ;

' PF ,,· ~
...99 ...7.
: ..51 ...3(1

.. .26
. ..38
...51
...42

.. .126

, .t09
...76
...84

Conference

' •' ' 0111&amp; Dlvlllon

•
'

.

TVC

.W-l

Meras . : .. .... . ..... .. .. ... .. .. :().1)
Nei4onvllt&amp;-York,, . ..... .. .'..... .. 0-0
Alexander ..... . ..... ..... .•.. .. 0-0
Vtnton Counly .. ....... .. . ...... 0-0
~re .... .. .. , , .. .... , .... ... 0-0
Athens . ... .. .... .. .. , . ...... . .o-o
Wellston .. ..... , .... .. ........ o-o

PF

...

AU

PA '

o ....o , .. ..

W-L •. PF
PA
.3-0 ...97 ...50

. .. 0 , : . .0 ... , , .2·1 . . •75
...0 ... 0 ... . , .2·1 ...95
, . o .. ..
1-2 .. .47
. .. 0 . , 0 . .. . , .1-2 ...37
...o ....o . . . . .o-3 ...36
, ..o .... o ..... .0-3 ...48

o ......

.. $5
.. .47

...85

13
Mansfield Sr. 34, Manon Hardmg 24
Maple Hts. 24, Cle. VASJ 22
Mana Ste1r.1 Manon Local 42 ,
Rockford Parkway 14
Marion Elgin 16, Caledoma R1ver
Valley?
Marion Pleasant 35, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 22
Marttns Ferry 26, Cadiz l;larnson
~nt. 20, OT .
Marysv1Ue 35 , Bellefontaine 7
Mason 53, Cin. W1throw 18
Massillon Jackson ~6. Hudson 14
Massillon Perry 48 , St Jean De
Brebeur Secondary, Ontano 13
Massillon TuSiaw 34 , Doylestown
Chippewa 14
Massillon Washington 45, Parma
Normandy 14
Maumee 44, Tot. Bowsher 30
McDonald 25, M1neral Ridge 0 ·
Mechanicsburg 35, Milford Center
Fa111lank's 14
Med1na Highland 48, Sheffield
Brookside 7
Mentor 26, Solon 24
M1am1sburg 14, W Catrolllon 11
Middleburg Hts. Midpark 35 , N
Ridgeville 21
M1ddlef1eld Cardinal 39, Thomp son
Ledgemonl 0
Middletown 69, Lima Sr. 21
Milan EdiSon 27, Wellington 26
Milford 27, Morrow L1ttle Miami 13
Millbury Lake 15, Rossford 12
Minerva 55, Ravenna SE 7
Minford 34, Chillicothe Huntington 0
Mogadore 35, Norton 28
Mogadore F1eld 54, Rootstown 2 1
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 50,
Ridgeway Ridgemont 0
MI. Gilead 18, Galion Northmor' ?
Mt. Orab Western Brown 39
Blanchester 14
N.
Lewisburg
Triad
42 ,
Waynesfield-Goshen 0
N. Lima S. Range 14, Alli ance
Marlington 7
N. Olmsted 22, Lakewood o
N. Royalton 28, Cle John Marshall
12
Navarre Fairless 12, Rittman 10
New Carlisle Tecumseh 38 ,
Wash1ngton C H M1am1 Trace 3 ·
New Concord John Glenn 25,
Crooksville 0
New Lebanon Dixie 37, Ft Loramie
36
New Lexington 44, Philo 14
New London 48, Newcomerstown 0
New Matamoras Front1er 26, Lore
City Buckeye Trail22
New Middletown Spring . 24,
Lowellville 0
New Philadelphia 39, Marietta 14
New Richmond27, Bethel-Tate 0
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 20,
Plymouth 12
Newarl&lt; 19, Thomas Worthington 13
Newark
L1ck1ng
Valley
49 ,
Cambridge 7
Niles McKinley 2t, Cle. JFK B
Norwood 54, N. Bend Taylor 0
Oak Hill42; Ironton Rock Hill 18
Obertin 29, Newbury 12
Oberlin Firelands 27, LaGrange
Keystone 21
Olmsled Falls 2t, Mayt1eld 14
Orange 34, Ashtabula Edgewood
26
Oregon Clay 43, Holland Springfield
35
Orrville 24, Copley 14
Ottawa-Glandorf 29, Kenton 28
Oxford Talawanda 21, Middletown
Fenwick 7
Paden City, W.Va. 36, Bellaire St
John 19
Painesville
Riverside
30,
Painesville Harvey 21
Pandora-Gilboa 55, McComb 41
Parma H1s. Valley Forge 20, Cle. S
14
·Pataskala WatkinS Memortal 28,
Lancaster Fairfield Un1on 20
Paulding 21 , Uma Cent. Cath. 14
Pemberville Eastwood 28, Oak
Harbor o
Peninsula Woodridge 26, Akr
Kenmore 17
Perry 44, Mad1~on 7
Perrysburg 4 t, Tot. Walle 0
Pickenngton Cent. 41 , Westerv111~

Individual Statistics
. .. 49
Rushing: GA-Jared Gravely 7-29,
.. .74
Nate AlliSon 5-28, Ethan Moore 9·
. .9?
12 , KrUIZe Wandhng 2-10 , Tyler
!locking Division ·
Grimm 5·(-8) . Tyler Eastman 1-(·
TYC
AU
10) .
'
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
1- Chance Freeman 13-126, Ke1th Wat~ rfoc'd . . . . . . . . ... ~ . . . .., ,().1) .. 0 ...0 .. . . 2-t _,.72 ...73
Wetzel 6-61 , 'P1erce Re'eves 1-25 , Federal Hocking ... . ..... .. ....o-o .. o . ..o .
.2-t . - .51 ...52
J.P
Taylor 4-20, Pans Btrchheld 4- Trimble . . . . . . . . . . . • • ~ ... o-o
o
.2·1 ...60 . -~
McClanahan 1-15, Danny Matney
Easlem
.
.
..
.
....
..
.
.
.
.
o-o
.
o
...
14,
Johnathan
Schweickart
2·14.
1·2 ...68 - .103
t -14
Miller .... .. .. .
... 0-0 .. 0 ...
. 1-2 .. .47 . 100
S-Greg Jenkms 4 -99 . Sean Courtney Lewis :l-14, Tres Wilks 2- Southern • , . . . . •
... 0-0.0 .. 0
. 0-3 ...3 " .. 108
5. Ethan Preston t -(-2)
Coppick 1-1 1
Passing: GA-Ethan Moore 7-8-0
Independents
64, Tyler Eastman 5·5·0 32, KrUize
ALL
Wahama 47, Eastern 19
W-l PF PA
Eastern
7 6 0 6 - 19 Wandling 0-1-0 0
. .. . . .. .. .. . .. . . .. 2·0 . t 06 . 19
Wahama
21 19 7 0 - 47 1-J ohnathan Sc hwetckarl 5-8-1 Wahama
Sou1h Galha . .. .. . . .. . .. . .. .. I -2
42
76
11 9.
Hannan .. .. . . ... .... _.... .. . 0-2 . 30 . t04
Receiving: GA-Beau Whaley 3Scoring summary
31 , Jared Gravely 2-22 Nate Allison
Cardinal Conference
t:irst Quarter
2-13, ·Austin Wilson 1·11 , Quinhn
CARD
, AU
E-Kelly Winebrenner 8 run (Zach
1\iibert
1·2,
Ethan
Moore
1·0.
W-l
PF
PA
w-L
PF
PA
Hendnx kiCk) 7.38
.. .2·0 . . 65 , . . t 9 , . . . 2-o . ..65 , .. t 9
W-Kyle Zerkle 12 run (Zerkle kiCk) I ~ Lu kas Morr1s 2-66 , Michael 'Chapmanville
Lamb 3-53.
Wayne .. ........ . . , . , .. .. . ,().1) ... o ....o .... . 2-o ...70 ...3t
450
'
Point Pleasant .. .. .. .. . . .. .. ... 1-o ... 42 .. . t 0 .. ... 1-1 ...63 . , 38
W~arrett Underwood 26 pass
Poca , ..... . .... . , .. .... .. ....o-o ... o . ...o .... . .o-2 ...4t ...73
Pomt Pleasant 42,
from Wilham Zuspan (Zerkle kick)
Herbert
Hoover . .. . . . .. . .. ...0-1 ... o .. ..24 ... . .0-2 ...19 ...64
Sissonville
10
3 t0
. 0-2 . 29 . B3 .. . 0·2 ...29 ...
Stssom11lle
3 o 7 7 - 10 Sisscnvi!e . _ .
W-Ze!rkle 6 run (Zerkle kiCk) 1 12
Pt.
Pleasant
7
t4
7
14
42
Second Quarter
Canal Fulton Northwest 37. Ftndlay Liberty-Benton 52, Vanlue 0
W-Zerkle 31 pass from Zuspan
Chardon t6
Fostoria 42, Tot. Whitmer 35
Scoring summary
(Zerkle kick) 9 52
Canal
Wmchester
42,
Whitehall·
Fostona
St. Wendelin 4 t , Lakeside
Firat
Quarter
W-M1caiah Branch 3 run (kick
Yeart1ng 0
Danbury 0
~ared Proctor 20 field goal 7:05
tmled) 4·34
Cardington-Lincoln 20 , Morral Frankfort Adena 32, Wash1ngton
W-Jacob Roach 2 run {k1ck failed) PP- AIIen Wasonga 20 run (Justin
R1dgedale 14, OT
C.H. 20
Weaver
kick)
5
22
1:43
Carey 25, Kansas lakota 21
Franklin Furnace Green 27, Bur,ch,
Second Quarter
E-M1ke Johnson 4 pass from
Casstown Miami E. 49 , lipp C1ty wva 24, 20T
PP-Wasonga 25 run (Weaver
Brayden Pratt (run !ailed) 24
Bethel 0
Fredencktown 38, N Rob1nson Col.
k1ck)
8
08
Third Quarter
Cedarville 33, Yellow Springs 0
Crawford 7
PP-Nalhan Roberts 38 pass from
W-Ayan Lee 15 pass from
Chagnn Falls 24, Burton Berkshire Fremont Ross 28, liffln Columbian
B J. Lloyd 0/Veaver k1ck) 1:33
Zuspan (Zerkle k1ck) 6:43
0,
6
Third
Querter
Fourth Quarter
Chesapeake 48 , Willow Wood Gahanna Cots Academy 23,
5-Chns Hasting 15 pass from
E-Jtsh Hupp 29 pass from
Symmes Valley 6
Centertlurg t 3
Scottte Dernck (Proctor kick) 6 :18
Johnson (kick ta1led) 3'31
Cheslerland W. Geauga 21, Garfield Hts. 35, Ashtabula
PP-Derek Mitchell 3 run (Weaver
Lyndhursl Brush 7
kiCk) 4.17
Lakeside 28
E
w
Cln. Anderson 31, Hamitlon 10
Gates M1lls Gilmour 16, Gates Mills
Fourth Quarter •
F1rst Downs
12
17
Gin.
Clark
Montessori
34, Hawken 7
PP-Wasonga 68 run (Weaver
Rushes-yards
37-181 36-192
Williamsburg 6
Genoa Area 55, Port Clinton 7
kiCk) 10.15
Passmg yards
85
200
C1n. Colerain 33, Highlands, Ky. t 8 Germantown Valley View 28,
PP-Roberts 72 pass from Lloyd
Total yards
266
392
Gin. Elder 30, Cin. Oak Hills 7
Monroe 0
(Weaver k1ck) 1 57
Comp-att-int
8·19-2 t1-13· 0
C1n. F1nneytown 6, Middletown Girard 35, Warren JFK 27 •
Fumbles-lost
2-1
1·0
MadJson 3
pp
Gnadenhunen lnd1an Valley 14,
Penalt1es-yards 3· 30
6-40
Gin. Hills Christian Academy t 3, Magnolia Sandy Valley 6
F1rst Downs
t4
t7
Goshen 21, Batavia Clermont NE 7
Rushes·yards
34-143 38-340 Gin. Manemont 6
Individual Statistics
C1n. La Salle 13, Liberty Twp Grafton M1dv1ew 18, Medma
Pass1ng
yards
Rushing : E- KeJiy Winebrenner
159
117
Lakota E. 10
17-85. Act1on Facemyer 2-35, Kl1nl Total yards
302
Buckeye 12, OT
457
C1n. Madeira 16, Ctn N. Ccllege H1ll Granv1Ue 49, Cots. Grandview Hts.
10-22'-0 4-5-0
Connery 5-25. Kyle Connery 4-23, Comp-at1-1nt
t3
Brad Slone 3-17, Brayden Pratt 3- Fumbles
1
t
7
.
Ctn. McNichOlas 31, Read1ng 0
11 , Tyler Hendnx 1-7. M1ke Johnson Penalties-yards
5-20
Greenvme 23, Franklin o
3·23
Cin . NW 28, Wilmington 6
1-(- 10), Jordan K1mes t -(·12)
Grove C1ty Christian 33, Waterford
Gin Princeton 35, Ctn. Glen Este 7 3
Individual Statistics
W- M1ca1ah Branch 6-37, Jacob
Roach 4-32 , Ryan Lee 5-28, Kyle Rushing: S-Raymond Boggess Cm Purcell Marian 48, Cm. Deer Groveport-Madison 27, Dublin
·
Zerkle 3-22 Zach , Warth 2-19, t8·142, Grant Cummings 2·5, Park 6
Jerome 7
Anthony
Grimm
6-15
Clay Blake Cunningham 1- t, Scottie Gin. St. Xavier 17, lndpls Cathedral, Hamltton Badin 36, Gin. Wyom1ng
VanMeter 2-12, J R Jewell 2- 10, Dernck t0-(·1), Adam Holmes 3-(c Ind. 3
12
C1n. Sycamore 44 , St Bernard Hamilton New M1am129, Batavta 7
Matt Dangert1eld 3-9, Issac Lee 1-9, 4).
Tyler Kitchen 1·0, William Zuspan PP-AIIen Wasonga 14-184, Derek Roger Bacorr 6
Hamler
Patnck .Henry
48,
1-(-1)
M1tchell 14-t 35 , Caleb Wasonga 3· Cm. Walnul Hills 20. Cin. Hughes Monlpelier 8
Passing: E- Brayden Prall 8-15-t 30, M1ke Mus grave 3- 14, Eric ) 4
Hannibal R1ver 27, Woodsfield
C1n . Winton Woods 28, Fa1rfield 6
56, Mike Joh nson 1·3·0 29, Kyle Roberts 1-0, B J . Lloyd 3·(-23)
Monroe Cent. 6
Connery 0-1-1 G
Passing: S-Scott1e Derrick 10·22- Circleville Logan Elm 4 t, Chillicothe Hanoverton United 6Q, N. Jackson
Zane Trace 17
W-W1II1am Zuspan 11 -13-0 200
0 159
Jackson-Milton 0
Clarksville Chnton-Mass1e 28, Lees Hamson 35, Kings Mills Kings t 6
Receiving : E-M1ke Johnson 3-42, PP-B.J Lloyd 4-5·0 117
Josh Hupp t -29. Jorda n K1mes 4· Receiving: S-Chns Hast1ngs 4· Creek E. Clinton 0
Hav1land Wayne Trace 22, Convoy
tB, Kyle Connery t -(-4)
104, Raymond Boggess 2·t7, Clayton Northmont 42, Westerville Crestv1ew 16
W-Matt Dangerfield 2-57, Kyle. Grant Cummi~gs 1-22, Blake S, 12
Healh 33, Utica o
Cia. Cent Cath . 18, Brooklyn t 3
Zerkle 2·40, Garrett Underwood 1· C unn~ngham 3-16
Hicksville 38, Edon 0
N. 0
26,- Colin Pierce 2-26. Micai at1 PP-Nathan Roberts 3-122, Derek Coal Grove Dawson· Bryant 31 , Hilliard Darby 48, Cols. Briggs 0
Pickenngton N 30, Cots Mifflin 12
Lucasville Valley 8
Branch 2·25, Jacob Roach t -15, Mitchell1·(·5).
H1lliard Davidson 15, Grove City 0
Piketon 43, McDermott Sc1oto NW 0
ColdWater 49,. Versailles o
Ryan Lee 1-11 .
HQward E. Knox 54; Millersport o· : Piqua 19, Springboro 16
Cols. Africentric 34, Can T1mken 7 Hubbard 13, Warren Howland 7
Plain City Jonathan Alder t 3, St.
Cots. Beechcroft 30, Cols . St Independence 32, Rocky River
Meigs 53, River Valley 20
Pans Graham 0
Charles t3
Me1gs
6 27 t3 7 - 53
Lutheran W 21
Poland S~mmary 26, L1sbon Beaver
Cols. Brookhaven
37, Day Ironton 42, GallipoliS Gallla 6
R. Valley
0 13 7 0 - 20 Ada 34, Columbus Grove 19
8
Akr. Gart1eld 14, Akr. SVSM 13
Chammade-Julienne 9
Jackson 26, McArthur Vinton Pomeroy Meigs 53, Cheshire R1ver
Akr. Manchester 50 , Sullivan Black Cols. DeSales 28, New Albany 7
Scoring summary
County 14
Valley 20
R1ver 12
Cots. Eas1moor 40, Cols. Harvest Jefferson Area 29, Brookfield 27
First Quarter
Portsmouth 28, Wheelersburg 6
Akr.
North
36,
Stow-Munroe
Falls
Prep
7
M-Caleb Dav1s 20 pass from
Johnstown Northridge 30, Hebron Portsmouth W. 28 , s. Po1nt 7
33
Cots. Franklm Hts 33, Gals. West Lakewood 7
Jacob Well (k1ck ta iled) 4 57
Powell Olentangy Liberty 28,
Alliance 23, Cailf1eld 20, 3DT
13
Second Quarter
Johnstown-Monroe 34. Pataskala Delaware Hayes 22, OT
Andover
Pymatumng
Valley
35,
Cols. Hartley 38, Cols. Bexley 21
M-Jeremy Smith 4 run (pass
Lick~ng His 15
RIChfield Revere 27, Akr Sprtngfield
Orwell Grand Valley 26
Cots Marion-Franklin 34, Cols
failed) 11 ·57
Kettering /Iller 51, Ashland t4
0
Anna
68,
Ft.
Recovery
21
Northland 6
RV-Jordan Deel 10 pass from
Kenering Fairmont 20, W. Chester Rocky River 21, Westlake 20, 20T
Ansonia 51 , Bradford 0
Clayton Curnutte (k1ck fa1t ed) 7·43
Cols. Upper Arlington 41 , Findlay 34 Lakota W. 0
S. Decalur, Ind. 6, C1n Country Day
M-Sm1th 46 run (pass failed) 6:57 Antwerp 28, Tot. Otlawa H1lls 14
Cols. Walnut R1dge 42. Galloway Kirtland 31 , Wickliffe 6
·o
Arcanum
45,
New
Pans
Nat1onal
Westland 18
M-Sm1th 22 run (Smith run) 4 04
Lafayette Allen E. 21, Spencerville 7 Salineville Soulhem 55, Toronto 0
Trall14
Cols wanerson 24, Reynoldsburg Lancaster 37, Cols. Independence
RV-Tyler Sm1lh tO run (Kody
Sanilusky 34, Tel. Seen 12
Archbold 18, Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 12 7
Johnson kiCk) .28
6
Sandusky Perl&lt;ins 28, Norwalk 7
Arlington
35,
Cary-Rawson
t
7
Cots. Whetstone 60, Cols. Soulh 6
M-clay Bolin 50 pass from Jacob
LeavittSburg
LaBrae
24, Shaker Hts, 21 , Bedford t 4
Ashland Crestview 45 , Lucas 0
Columbrana 14, Struthers 7
Weii(Mason Metts k1ck) :26
Shelby 40, Ontano 13
.
Ashville Teays Valley 27, Grove City Columbiana Crestview 55, Oa k Garrettsville Garfield 0
Third Quarter
Lebanon 42, Trotwood-MadiSon 20 Sidney Lehman 28, Lewistown
Cent
CrosSing
14
M-Smith 55 run (Metts ki ck) 11.49
Glen, W.Va. 20
Leeton1a 28, Vienna Mathews 17
Indian lake 7
Attica Seneca E. 52, Monroevtlle 14 Ccrtland Lakev1ew 30, Geneva t4
RV-Oeel 10 pass from Curnutte
Le1psic 27, Van Buren 7
Smithville
28, Akr Coventry 7
Avon
42 , Columbia
Stat1on ·coshocton 27 , Millersburg W.
(Johnson kick) 8 05
Lew1s Center Olenlangy 17, Sparta Highland 13, R1chl'lood N
Columbia
6
M-Bolin 50 pass lrom Well (Metts
Holmes 20
Sunbury B1g Walnut 14
Avon Lake 43, ElyrJa 22 .
kick) 1'46 .
Crestline 26, Greenwich S. Cent. 13 LewiSburg Trf-County N. 49, Union 10
Spring. Calh. Cent 55, Manon
Bainbridge Paint Valley 18, Creston Norwayne 35, Collins
,
Fourth Quarter
Cov1ngton 20
.
Cath.
7
Greenfield
McC
lain
9
!oi-Cory Hutton 1 run (Metts k1ck)
Western Reserve 28
Spring . NW 24 , Jamestown
Baltimore L1berty Union 37 , Crown City S. Gallia 14, Roc1ne LeXIngton 42, Willard 16
11 '56
Liberty Center 49 , Metamora Greeneview 12
Amanda-Ciearcreek 7
.
Southern 0
Evergreen
16
Sprlngfleld ·18, Vandalia Buller 17
Barberton 28, Kent Roosevelt 14
M
RV
Cuyahoga
Falls
CVCA
35,
Lima
Perry
32,
McGuffey
Upper
Sl. Henry 27, New Bremen 13
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 28, Louisville Aquinas t 6
First Downs
16
t4
Scioto Valley 26
Sl. Marys Memorial 25, Calma 20
Gibsonburg
14
Rushes-yards
35-332 3t -79
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu1t 35, Lima Shawnaa 56, Eltda 7
Steubenvilla 45, E. liverpool t4
Bay Village Bay 13, Tol. Llbbay 7
Passing yards
197
199
Cuyahoga Fall s?
Lodi
Cloverleaf
31,
Lorain Suiwart Federal Hocking 28,
Beallsville 51, Cameron, W.Va. 14
529
287
Cuyahoga Hts. 56, Cia. E. Tach o
Total yar~Js
Southview 7
Beverly Ft. Frye 20. OT
Beavercreak
45,
Sidney
21
Comp-an-lnt
8-12·0 14-20-1
Danville 13, Dallon 6
Logan
31,
Cola.
Hamilton
Twp.
0
Slreetsboro 21, Manlua Crestwood
Bellbrook 24, Xenia 17
Fumbles-lost
5·70
1-10
Day. Carroll 20, Tal. St. Francis 17
London
27,
Spring
.
NE
16
20
Bellefonlalne Benjamin Logan 21 , Day. Christian 35, Day. Jefferson 15
1·0
Ptnalllea·yarda 1·0
London Madison Pltlna 2t, S. Slrongovllle 34, Tel. St. John's 6
Spring. Ktnton Ridge 18
Day. Dunbar 22, Day. Marahall14
Charleaton SE 14
Sugtr Grovt, Berne Union 28 ,
Btllevue 38, Clyde 20
lndlvldutl ltotlttlot
Day. Northridge 41 , Day. Belmonl
Lorain
Clearvltw
34,
Fairview
Ntrtonvllle·
York 14
Authlng: M-Jtrtmy Smith 13· Bellville Clllr Fork 2g , LtWII 12
Loudonville
19,
Jerom11vllle Sugarcreek Gerawey 55, Zoarville
212, Jtffory Roua'h 4·47, Cory Ctnler Otentangy Ortngt t 3
Day. Oakwood 34, Cariltle
Hllledale 14
Tutotrawu Vtlley 13
Hunon 8·34, Gabe Hill 3-1~ , Cody Belmont Union Local 28, Bt. Defiance 35, Wapakoneta 9
Loulevlllt 28, Akr. Hoban 3
Sycamore Mohawk 33, Upper
Laudtrmln 2·10, Jacob Wtll 3-1, Clelrtvllli t4
Dltlance Ayertvllta 31, Fremont St.
Loveland 19, Cln. Mt. Hetllhy 18
Sandutky 12
Heath Denwllter 2·3, Zoch Sayre 1· Blloll W. Branoh 4g, Sllem-21
Joeeph 28, OT
Macadonla
Nordonla
38,
Chtgrln
Sylvanlt
Southview 28, Tol. Sltrt 12
Btrea 13, Lorain Admiral King 12
0.
Defiance Tlnora 49, Tontogany
Ftlle Kenaton 3
Tallmadge 42, Akr. Flrttlone 21
RV-Ciayton Curnunt 14·45, Jacob Btrlln Center W11t11n A11ervi 41 , Otllgo7
Malvern 34, E. Can. 7
Thornvllll Sheridan 34, Chllllcolhe
Brown 7-18, Tyler Smllh 3·t 5, Cody Southington Chalker 14
Delphoa Jefferson 28, Blulfton 0
Mansfield
Madlton
27,
Mt.
Vernon
14
Bloon
,-Carroll27,
Alhlnt
13
McAvena 1·2, Zachary Baird S·(· 1).
Delphos St. John 's 3S , Mlnsler 20
Putlngi M-Jtcob Wtll 8· 12·0 Bloomdale Elmwo'od 33, N, Dota Hardin Northern 34, Arcadia
8alllmore 8
197.
16
RV-Giayton Curnutta14·20· t 199. Bowling Gteen 34, Napoleon 21
Dover 48, Can . Cant. Cath. 12
AICtlvlng: M-Clay Bolin 5·1.48, Brookville 80, Camden Preble Dresd.en Tri-Vallay ~7. Zanesville
Caleb Davis 2-42, Jeremy Smith t- Shawnee 3f
Maysville 7
Brunswick
38,
Brecksville- Dublin Coffman 49, Westerville
7.
RV-Jordan Deer 6·104 , Cody Broadview Hts. 37, OT·
Cent. 0
1111111 11 111
J:,rt,, .I II' "
, t '"''' d 1., ••I t ,,t,.,l
M&lt;:Avana 3·43, Travis Roush 2-18, Bryan 50 , Della 23 E. Cenlral, Ind. 23, Trenton
I , Id "' ,\ I,, " '"
Jaccb Brown 1-14, Zak Deal 1· 11, 8ucyrus 10, Galton 9
Edgewood 20
L•11 I •'111!'1• I• f 1, ( ,
I • '"1'•1'11
Tyler Sm1lh 1-9, Brandon Smith 1·8. Bucyrus Wynford 28 , Castalia Eastlake N 46, Cia. Collinwood 12
Margaretta o
Eaton 41, Spring. Greenon 0
'Ironton 42,
Byesville
Meadowbrook . 33, Edgerton 57, Oregon Strltch 27 ·
Gallla Academy 6
Sarah sVIlle Shenandoah 6
Euclid 27, Willoughby S. 13
ISA Certified Arborlst, Certified Ornamental &amp;
GalhaAc.
0 0 0 6 - 6 Caldwe ll 35, Barnesvtlle 12
Fa1rf1eld Christian 38 , Corning Miller
Ironton
14 21 7 0 - 42 Can GlenOak 27, Green 24, 20T
34
Landscape Professlonai,Gall~lis, OH
Can McKinley 24, Uniontown Lake Fairport Harbor Harding 18,
Scoring summary
17
Ashtabula Sts. John and Paul 15
Clary 4·20, B J. Stanley 9·3
S-Greg Jenkins 19-99, Taylor
Lemley 11 -54, M1chael Manuel 1039. Enc Buzzard 1· (·4)
Passing: SG-B.J. Stanley 2-15-2
29
S-M1chael Manuel5-t9-0 110 .
Receiving:
SG- Caleb

.:o ..
o ...
o•..

aa

s

Ohio Scores

Tiffm Calvert 41, Elmore Woodmore
t4
'
T1pp City Tippecanoe 56, Hamillon
Ross 7
Tot Cent Cath 21. Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne t 0
Tot. Chnstlan 21 , Tot Woodward 7
Tal Rogers 62 , Sylvan1a Northv1ew
24
Troy 47 Fairborn 7
Troy Chnst1an 28, Gin Chnstian 7
Tw1nsburg 27, Aurora 6
Uhnchsv111e Claymont 21 , Carrollton

7

W1ntersvllte lnd1an Creek 47, Cte,.
East 0
·
Wooster 35 , Akr Ettet 28
Wooster Triway 15, Apple Creek
Waynedale 12
Worthington Kilbourne 30', Dubhn
SCIOtO 0
,
Youngs . Aust1ntown·F1tch
41 ,
Parma 20
Young s Boa rdman 55, Youngs
Chaney 7
Youngs Ct1n st1an 34, Sebnng
McKmley 0
Youngs Liberty 40, Campbell
Memor1al?
Youngs. Mooney 59, Ely na Cath. 14
Zanesv ille
Rosecrans
46 ,
Strasburg-Franklin 13
Zanesv1lle W MUskingum 21 ,
McConnelsville Morgan o

W.Va. Scores
Balh County, Va 27, East Hardy 26
Beallsville , Oh1 0 51 , Cameron 14'
Braxton County t9, Clay County 12
Brooke 48, Anacost1a, D.C 14
Calhoun County 37,' Aitch1e County
25
Cap1tal 2t , Cabell Midland 7
Chapmanville 24, Herbert Hoover 0
Clay-Battelle 19, Bishop Donahue 8
Columbiana Crestview, Ohio 55,
Oak Glen 20
Doddridge County 21, Valley
Fayette 20
Fa~rmont Semor 41 , North MarieR 6
Faye«ev1lle 40 , Midland Tra1l 21
Frankfort 36, Liberty Hamson 14 '
Franklin Furnace Green, Ohio !7,
Burch 24, 20T
'
Grafton 45, Lew1s County 15
Greenbrier West 55, R1ct1wood o
Hampshire 13, Berkeley Springs :S
Haysi, Va 22, Tug Valley 6
Hurley, Va 48, Montcalm 14
Independence 37, Sherman 31 •
James Wood, Va. 31, WaShington 0
Jefferson 42, Park Vtew-Sterling,
Va 36
·
Keyser 41 , Moorefield 0
Lincoln County 18, Wtnfleld 14
Madonna 42, Hundred t3
Man 54 Mount View 6
Martinsburg 23 Turner Ashby, Va
21
'
Meadow Bndge 42, Williamson 2,0
Morganiown 56, Elkins 19
•
Mount Hope 28 , Oak Hill20
N1cholas County 28, BuckhannOnUpshur 7
Notre Dame 18, Valley Wetzel 12,
OT
•
Pendleton County 46 , PetersbQrg
14
Philip Barbour 27, Lincoln 7
PikeV1ew 34 , Iaeger 26
Pocahonlas Counly 41, Shady
Sprmg 34
Po1n1 Pleasant 42 , Sissonville 1o.
Potomac Falls, Va 68, Hedgesville
0
Pnnceton 15, Bluefield 13
Ravenswood 35 , Poca 6
Ripley 28, Greenbner East 26
R1vers1de 26, Hunt~ngton 23
Scott 35, Wyom1ng East t 4
,
Sherando, Va . 37, Musselman 10
South Charleston 13, George
Washington 12
South Harnson 49, G1lmer Coun~ 7
Spnng Valley 44, Sl Albans 14 •
St Marys 34 , Wirt Coun1y 7
Tot s1a 21 , Webster County 0
,
Tucker Co unty 41 , Tygarts Valley 0
Tyler Consolidated 14, Roaile
County 7
UniverSity 42, East Fairmonl t 7 : ·
Wayne 31 , James Monroe 10 :
We1r 23, R1chmond Edison, OhiO'S
Westside 28. G1tbert 20
:
Williamstown 25, Magnolia 22 ,
Woodrow Wilson 31, ~arkersbQrg
20
'
•

• •11

"We Care For Your Trees"

Stuffs
fromPageBl
Winebrenner soorin g on an
8-yard first qu arter run
' before
Mtke
John so n
grabbed a 4-yard TO toss
· from Brayden Pratt late in
the first half. Eastern tacked
· on a fourth period score late
in the game when Johnson
· connected wtth Josh Hupp
: on a 29-yard scoring strike.
The visitors of coach Kevi n
Welsh opened the contest
with an tmpressive 75-yard.
nine play dri'e wtth
Winebrenner capping the
series with an 8-yard gallop.
.Zach Hendrix tacked on the
' point after to give Eastern a
quick 7-0 advantage before a
' stunned White Falcon followmg.
Wahama was quick to
answer the Eagles early upset
bid when the Bend Area team
' marched 80 yards in nine
plays for the game lying
touchdown. Zerkle scam. pered the final 12 yards
before adding rhe PAT ktck to
even the score at 7-7 with
,. ~:50 remaining in the opening
-quarter.
Tyler Kitchen blocked an
Eagle punl to give WHS
excellent field position fol . lowing the game tying touchdown arJd Zuspan wasted little time in cashin!L in on the
Eastern mistake. 1 he junior
signal caller pirched a 26-yard
strike to Garrett Underwood
who went high over two
Eagle defenders to .snare the
pigskin arJd mce into the end
zone to cap a one play. 26yard drive. Once aga in
Zerkle split rhe uprights on
the point after to giv.e
Wahama .ll 14-7 edge wtth
3:10 remaining m the tirst
-period.
Zerkle would add another
·touchdown and the resulting
PAT kick to his resume before
. the ftrst quarter came 10 an
end after Kevin Klingensmilh
_recovered an Eastern fumble
at the Eagle ,21. Four plays·
later Zerkle rambled acrus~
the goal fine from six yards
away to give Wahama a stun, -ning 21 -71ead.
WHS continued to score in
bunches prior to the conclu'
sion of the half with Zuspan
passing 31 yards to 'Zerkle at
the 9:52 mark of rhe second
canto for one of three Fakon
scores in the quarter. Branch
burst through the middle orl' a
3-yard run with 4:34 left in

h l ~lohU I •

.. fUtU Oiol ll011\al

~ ''"'l•rti i i Y&lt;' p tu,..~

.•

'

llu.,.r•n.:•

' " " 0\ y

,,.1,,., ••h·•" ·~·"'"

h · •~ ' '"'""

th•

f'r•·&gt;t•ll'tn'",'

'

e&gt;f

,{ol•'&amp; :

wu h ,...._ rnd~p&lt;rruk" t

ties, follov.ecl by Taylor
Lemley with 54 yards on 54
toles and Michael Manuel
with 39 y&lt;trds on 10 rushes.
Manue l was also 5-of-19
pa ss ing for 110 yards
Jcnkms also had 99 recetving yards on four catches.
Ctleb McClanahan led the
victors witl14 I rushmg yards
on II e&lt;trnes. followed by
Clyburn w111:t 30 yards on I I
toles. Stanlev went 2-of-15
pas,ing for· 29 yards and
threw 1wo interceptions.
McC!anah,m had one catch
for I 5 yatds and Matney had
nne catc:h for 14 yctrds.
Both teams trayel to Wesr
Virginia next 1-rtelay for a
pa tr of non-conference grid;, on contests. The Rebels
head 10 Mason to battle
unbeaten Wah .tma, while
rhe Torn,tdoes lravel to
As hton to bitllle the Winless
Hannan Wildcat&gt; 111 their
home opener. Bolll games
will ki ckoff at 7:30p.m.

CONTRAc;TING

1\.utn •()w tu l , .

:".~•~

4

99 rushing y&lt;trds on 19 c:ar-

KARR

'

'

~ n .. lu#Unlll

.,,..J

cude the scoring ut 14-0.
that lirst win to oet things
Southern managed to ~et go ing so. ll~at they start
10 1he Rebels' 38-yard .lme understanding and believing
on thetr fmal dnve, but 111 what Ihe y are dm ng.
"A ll 111 all. we had some
turned the ball over on
downs with 46 seconds left good things h.tppen 1onight
as far a~ executing - now
in 1he fourth.
Overall. the Rebel s man- we just have to build on th1s
aged only 123 yards ol total momc ntum:·
offense mcl udin g 94
For SHS c o:~~.:h Dennis
rushing yards on 35 carries Te:tford. il was a demorali zSouthern had 298 y&lt;1rds of mg night. Nor because of the
total otlense, I X8 of whtch c fi(ll1. bllt actually how t11c
came on the gwund through fmal score cmne about.
"This is the kind of thm g
41 totes. The gue sts had
eight first downs in the dcet- that has been hamperi ng us
sion, compared to a dozen all ,year. We gel a dnve
for the Purple and Gold 111 .go1ng. then &lt;:ommit a pena\
ty or a turnover to knock us
defeat.
After lhe ga me. SGHS oul of that dri ve. It's hard to
coach Jusr y Burleson was win games when you shoot
happy rhat ht s young group yourself 111 the loo t l:ly lllrn ·
was able to finally gel the tng the ball over or comnuting penalties al key times,""
monkey otl their back s.
commenred. "We'll
Teaford
·•we needed a win. We
needed to have some suc- jus1 have 10 kee p working,
cess," Burleson commented. go back tu the dr:twtng board
"Anytime you are young aifl on Munday and see if we
have lust a cou ple of ball can· l be beuer nexl week."
Jenkins led the hosls wi1h
games, you've got to have

TM

l•••••••n.:•

whit lo h .. , truly • ., •

Bryan Walters/photo

'

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'

'

--- ---

1- --~--~-

•

k~ocked

South Galli a ·runntng back Bryce Clary (5) 1s tackled from ~ehtnd by a Southern defender
during .Fnday night 's footba ll contest at Roger Lee Adams Field tn Racine.

.

Wot l ,. .lfi!IMft~

c;: ·,..,.,p•n )'

mg before getting

out of the game wt lh an
injury Backup Ethan Moore
lintshed rhe ni~ht 7-of-8 passin u lor 64 ytu:c!s before leaving the game 111 the first half
as v.cll " ilh an inJury.
,
Th1rd-srnngcr
Tyler
Easlman we ill 5-for-5 passing
lor 32 yards under &lt;.:en1er during I he s~:~.:ond half.
GAHS v.as penalized fou r
times for 25 v:uds. whtle lhc
ho"'ts were ~ n agged eigh1
t;mes ll&gt;r 5(3 yari'k Ironton
dtd nnl hale cl punt I ll the Contesl. while the eue&gt;ts krckeu
three' times li1r ~~~ .werage of
33J yards. All three Blue
Devil twnow rs in rhe tit st
Tony Shotsky!submitted photo from Ironton Tribune
h,t!
f led to points.
Gall1a Academy runn1ng back Aust1n Wtlson ts 11auled down
The
toad does n"t gel any
by an Ironton defender Fnday n1g11t -at Tank Stad1um.
easier t(lr Gallia Academy. as
mg one TO and one intercep- for the guests. scorin ~ on a-+- the Devils will tl'ltlelto f&lt;m rtion. Morris led IHS with 66 yard 11111 "'th 5· !6 lcitm rcg- tlme reigning SEOAL chamreceiving yards on two grabs
ulalton 10 conclt1de lhc scor- pton Log&lt;tn next Frtday for a
nnn- l ea~ue conte'l. Ki ckoff is
Galli a Academy ·, Jared in~ at 4:2-6
sclled
uled t&lt;•r 7:30p.m.
Gravely had the lone points
Gravely paced the Devils

Outlast

''

hld011~1111~t•nr

•""""' ' ' w• ...:•n tall.,

o

Tree Care Specialists

Larry Crum
lpholo

play whtle establishing a
42-0 cushion · entering the
frnal period.
IHS 'accumulated 396 yards
of total offense overall in the
triumph, including 271 (l!Shmg yards on 36 carries.
GAHS -. on the other hand
-amassed only 157 yards of
total offense, including just 61
rushing yards on 29 attempts.
The hosts had 16 first downs
compared to the Devils' 10.
Chance Freeman led the
0!'lmge and Black attack with
126 rushing yards and two
TDs on 13 totes, followed by
Keith Wetzel with 61 yards
and three scbres on six carries. That duo combined for
all tive tirst halt scores that
gave IHS ils 35-0 tntennission advantage.
Lukas
Morris scored
lhe half before Roach raced Ironton's lone second• half
around the !eli side on a two touchdown at the 9:05 mark
yard gallop with I :43 to play of the third when he hauled in
as 1he While Falcon lead bal- a 43-yard scoring pass from
John
Schweickart.
looned to 40-7.
5-for-8
Schweickan
went
Edstern marched 58 yards .
down the field in the tina! passing for 119 yards, throwmimtte of the half with Ptatt
and Johnson c:m·ymg the load
fm the Eagles. Wahama continually pounded Prall with
some bone j;mi ng hits during
the drive but 1he 1he "'phofrom Page Bl
more quat1erback proved he
could take a hit and keep
wming back tor more. Pratt play - v.hich was recovstood tall in the pocket and e red by South Gallia's
connected wllh Johnson on a Clyburn at the SHS 44 wirh
34-yard, fourth down pass a dozen licks left 111 the
JUs,t belore Colby Davts lev- quarter.
The guests moved the ball
eled the Eagle qum1erback
to
the SHS 29, but Stanley
wtth a huge htl to set up a 4yard. Pratt to Johnson con- was picked off again on the
nection for rhe touchdown next play by Adam Warden
seconds later.
-concluding the first half.
Wahama added tts final
At the break, Southern had
score of the evening mtdway 189 yards of total offense thtough the third stanza with including 129 rushing yards.
Zuspan again warrmng up his South Gallia mustered only
right arm for a 40-yard com- 30 yards of total olTense -·
pierion to Man Dangertield 15 passing and 15 ntshing and a 15-yard scoring pass to but still led entering lhe
Ryan Lee.
break. The hosts had seven
Eastern conducted the scor- of their penalties (55 yards)
ing late in I he game when the m the lirst half, as'well as all
Eagles drove 93 yards -in II three of their turnovers.
plays for the touchdown. An SGHS liad live penalties for
18-yard run by Kyle Connery,
a 16-yard scamper by 35 yards at the intennisston,
Winebrenner and a 29-yard as well as both of its
carry by Action Facemyer set turnovers.
up a 29-yard touchdown pass · , Afrer trading possessiops
from Johnson to Josh Hupp to start the second half,
for lhe titMI Eastern score of . Southern managed Ia work
the ball deep into Rebel terthe moht.
Wahama tolctled 192 yards ritory. Af'er getting 10 rhe
on the ground with the White 16-yard line with around six
Falcons using 12 different minutes left in the third
players to carry the football in frame, the Tornadoes prothe ouli ng. Micaiah Branch ceeded to go backwards over
paced the WHS ground attack the next Tour plays before
with 37 yards in six carries turning the ball over on
followed by Ryan Lee wtth downs.
32 yards in fmrr tries. Z'uspan
Both teams traded possescompleted 11 -of- 13 passes sion over the next six dnves,
tor 200 yards and three touch- the last of which proved to
downs wilh Dange rfield grab- be dtsaslrous for Soulhcrn.
bmg two receptions for 57 SHS - facing a fow1h -andyards and Zerkle two catches eight at its own'19 - had to
•
for 4() yards.
go tor the ftrst down hecause
Eastern was led o ffen~ely of the scor~. and lhe hosts
by Prall, Johnson and came up short.
Winebrenner as the Eagles
SGHS drove the provertotaled 181 yards on the bial nail in the coffin on that
ground and another 85 ensuing drive, which started
through the airways.
Defenstvely Branch tallied at the SHS 19 with 3:09
10 tackles follo~ved by Ehja!1 remaining in regulalion . The
Honaker wnh etght and Matt guests needed three plays 10
cover 19 yards, rhe fin al
Dangerlield with seven.
Wahama will conclude its blow berng delt vered by
three game home stand to Clyburn on a 5-yard scoring
begin rhe 2008 season next run to make it a 12-0 contest
.week when the White Falcons with I :56 showing on the
welcome South Gallia to the clock. Brandon Harri so n
Bend Area. EasteiT) will host caught- the 2-point converRiver Valley.
sion from Stanley to coni-

We offer t:he
best: prices · :
and protection
for
'

e

with 29 rushini&gt; yard, on
se\en carries. followed b\
Nate AIINm v. ith 28 yards nit
live 101es. GAHS had SIX
re&lt;.:etvcrs haul in one pass. led
by Ae.tu Whaley with 3 1
yards on three gmb,.
Starlin quancrba~k Kruize
Wandltng wenl 0-for-1 pa&lt;S-

fromPageBl

Eastern 's
Mrke
Johnson
, rolls out
to throw a
pass dur·
ing Friday
night's
football
contest
against
Wahama
in Mason,
W.Va.

7
Urbana 28, Spnng. Shawnee 7
Van Wert 34 L1ma Bath 7
V1ncent Warren 14, Parkersburg
South wva 7
W. Alexandna Twin Valley S. 33,
Un1on C1ty M1ss1~sinawa Valley 20
W Jefferson 26. Cots Ready 18
W Lalayelte Ridgewood 34,
Warsaw R1ver V1ew 7
W Liberty-Salem 46, DeGraff
A1vers1de 0
W Salem NW 35 , Ashland
Mapleton 12
W Umty Hilltop 32, Holgate 14
Wahama W Va 47, Ree dsvtlle
Eastern 19
Warren ChampiOIJ 27 , Conneaut
20, SOT
Wauseon 48 , Swanton 0
Waverly 35 Wellston 21
Waynesville 24 , M1 lton-Un1on 20
Weir. W Va. 23. Richmond Edison 6
Wellsville
41 , L1sbon
David
Anderson 0
Wheelmg Central, W Va. 21, Cle
John Adams 0
Wheeling
Pa rk,
W.Va .
26,
Zanesville 7
W1tt1amspor1 Westfall 27, C1rclevjlle

lrmtni -i9rntinel • Page B3

Devils

'

PREP FOOTBALL

~mtba!'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

�Page B2 • l&amp;unll&lt;w \l:mtrs -15rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 7, 2008
Sunday, September 7, 2008

The OVP Scoreboard ---Week 3 Prep Football
Fnday's Bmcscores

South Galli a 14, Southern 0
South Gatha 6 0 0 8 - 14
Southern
0 0 0 0 0
Scoring summary
First Quarter
SG-Jeft Clyburn 79 k1ckoff retu rn
(run fa1ted) t t .45
Fourth Quarter
SG-Ciyburn 5 run {Bra ndon
Hamson pass from B.J Stanley)

t56
F~rst

Downs
Rushes-yar(ls
Pass1ng yards
To tal yards
Comp-att-tnt
Fumbles-lost
,Penalt•es- yards

SG
B
35-94
29
t23
2-t 5-2
t -0
B 50

5
12
4t - 188
11 0
29B
5-19-0
5-3
8-60

Individual Stallslles
Rushing : . SG- Cale b McCian ci han
11-41 . Jeff Clyburn 11 -30, Bryce

First Qu.rter
t-Keilh Wetzel 2 rur\(Johnathan

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

Schwe1ckar1 k1ck ) 9 26

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

! -Wetzel 7 run (Schwe1ckart k1ck}
6"25
Second Quarter
1-Wetzel 24.run (Schwe1ckart k1ck)
8:4 9
~hance Freeman 1 run
(SChWOICkart kiCk) 2 20
~Freeman 10 run (Schwe1ckart
kick) 42
Third Quarter
1-Lukas Morns 43 paSs from
SchweiCkart (Schwe1ckart k1ck)
9:05
' Fourth Quarter
GA-Jared Gra'o'ely 4 run (Joe
Jenk1ns kiCk) 5:16
F1rst Downs
Ru shes-yards
Passmg yards
Total yards
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

GA
10
29-61
96
157
12-14-0
6-3
4-25

I
16
36-277
119
396
5-8- t
0-0
8·56

'

North OMolon

SEOAL

AU

W-1. PF
PA
..0-0 .. 0 . 0 .... .. 3-0 , .. 10t .. 24
. ().1) . 0 . ..0 .. ..3-0 _.. 96 .. .34

W-l

Logan .. . . .. .. ..
JaCkson . .. ..
. . ..
Ironton .. . .. _.. _ , .. . t-o
Warren . .. .
.. .. ().1)
GalliaAcademy .. _ •. , ..
.. : . 0-t
POIIllmOuth .. .. . .. . . .. .. . ().1)
Zanesville ........ .. , • . .. . .. .. ().1)
Chlllicothe ............. ·, . C " . . ().1)
Manetta - ......
. , . : .. .. , .. .. .().1)

.

PF

PA .

.. 42
.. 0
.. 6 .
, 0 .
. 0 .

.6 . ..2-t
.0 . ' 2-1
.42 . . 2-1
0
. .1-2
0 .. . t -2
.. o ...o ..
.t-2
'.

0

_.. U8 .35
_.. 31 ...37
, ..65 ...65.
.. .34 .. :17...50 . .75
.. -~ ...68
0-3 ...81 ... 133

.0 ..

Ohio ·Valley Conference

OYC "'.
' . W-L
pf,. PA
W-L
C?.:ee .. ..
.. . .. .. .. ..().1) ... 0 .. •, 0 .. .. .2·1
Coal we .. -.. .. ..... , ... : ..().1) .. 0 . . 0 .. . . 1-2
River alloy . . . . , _. ' .. : .. .\ ,().1) ... 0 . .0 . . .0-3
RockHill · ...,:.. -.. . . , ., .. .'.. .. ,().1) ... 0 . .. 0 .. .. : .0-3
FairtAnd .... ............. .... ,().1) , .. 0 .. . '.0 ...... 0-3
Sou1h Point .. .. .
. ..... ..... . ..0-0 , .. 0 .. ..0 ......0-3
Trf.Vallev

,

' ·

'

1

. ,

•

•

AU ;

' PF ,,· ~
...99 ...7.
: ..51 ...3(1

.. .26
. ..38
...51
...42

.. .126

, .t09
...76
...84

Conference

' •' ' 0111&amp; Dlvlllon

•
'

.

TVC

.W-l

Meras . : .. .... . ..... .. .. ... .. .. :().1)
Nei4onvllt&amp;-York,, . ..... .. .'..... .. 0-0
Alexander ..... . ..... ..... .•.. .. 0-0
Vtnton Counly .. ....... .. . ...... 0-0
~re .... .. .. , , .. .... , .... ... 0-0
Athens . ... .. .... .. .. , . ...... . .o-o
Wellston .. ..... , .... .. ........ o-o

PF

...

AU

PA '

o ....o , .. ..

W-L •. PF
PA
.3-0 ...97 ...50

. .. 0 , : . .0 ... , , .2·1 . . •75
...0 ... 0 ... . , .2·1 ...95
, . o .. ..
1-2 .. .47
. .. 0 . , 0 . .. . , .1-2 ...37
...o ....o . . . . .o-3 ...36
, ..o .... o ..... .0-3 ...48

o ......

.. $5
.. .47

...85

13
Mansfield Sr. 34, Manon Hardmg 24
Maple Hts. 24, Cle. VASJ 22
Mana Ste1r.1 Manon Local 42 ,
Rockford Parkway 14
Marion Elgin 16, Caledoma R1ver
Valley?
Marion Pleasant 35, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 22
Marttns Ferry 26, Cadiz l;larnson
~nt. 20, OT .
Marysv1Ue 35 , Bellefontaine 7
Mason 53, Cin. W1throw 18
Massillon Jackson ~6. Hudson 14
Massillon Perry 48 , St Jean De
Brebeur Secondary, Ontano 13
Massillon TuSiaw 34 , Doylestown
Chippewa 14
Massillon Washington 45, Parma
Normandy 14
Maumee 44, Tot. Bowsher 30
McDonald 25, M1neral Ridge 0 ·
Mechanicsburg 35, Milford Center
Fa111lank's 14
Med1na Highland 48, Sheffield
Brookside 7
Mentor 26, Solon 24
M1am1sburg 14, W Catrolllon 11
Middleburg Hts. Midpark 35 , N
Ridgeville 21
M1ddlef1eld Cardinal 39, Thomp son
Ledgemonl 0
Middletown 69, Lima Sr. 21
Milan EdiSon 27, Wellington 26
Milford 27, Morrow L1ttle Miami 13
Millbury Lake 15, Rossford 12
Minerva 55, Ravenna SE 7
Minford 34, Chillicothe Huntington 0
Mogadore 35, Norton 28
Mogadore F1eld 54, Rootstown 2 1
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 50,
Ridgeway Ridgemont 0
MI. Gilead 18, Galion Northmor' ?
Mt. Orab Western Brown 39
Blanchester 14
N.
Lewisburg
Triad
42 ,
Waynesfield-Goshen 0
N. Lima S. Range 14, Alli ance
Marlington 7
N. Olmsted 22, Lakewood o
N. Royalton 28, Cle John Marshall
12
Navarre Fairless 12, Rittman 10
New Carlisle Tecumseh 38 ,
Wash1ngton C H M1am1 Trace 3 ·
New Concord John Glenn 25,
Crooksville 0
New Lebanon Dixie 37, Ft Loramie
36
New Lexington 44, Philo 14
New London 48, Newcomerstown 0
New Matamoras Front1er 26, Lore
City Buckeye Trail22
New Middletown Spring . 24,
Lowellville 0
New Philadelphia 39, Marietta 14
New Richmond27, Bethel-Tate 0
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 20,
Plymouth 12
Newarl&lt; 19, Thomas Worthington 13
Newark
L1ck1ng
Valley
49 ,
Cambridge 7
Niles McKinley 2t, Cle. JFK B
Norwood 54, N. Bend Taylor 0
Oak Hill42; Ironton Rock Hill 18
Obertin 29, Newbury 12
Oberlin Firelands 27, LaGrange
Keystone 21
Olmsled Falls 2t, Mayt1eld 14
Orange 34, Ashtabula Edgewood
26
Oregon Clay 43, Holland Springfield
35
Orrville 24, Copley 14
Ottawa-Glandorf 29, Kenton 28
Oxford Talawanda 21, Middletown
Fenwick 7
Paden City, W.Va. 36, Bellaire St
John 19
Painesville
Riverside
30,
Painesville Harvey 21
Pandora-Gilboa 55, McComb 41
Parma H1s. Valley Forge 20, Cle. S
14
·Pataskala WatkinS Memortal 28,
Lancaster Fairfield Un1on 20
Paulding 21 , Uma Cent. Cath. 14
Pemberville Eastwood 28, Oak
Harbor o
Peninsula Woodridge 26, Akr
Kenmore 17
Perry 44, Mad1~on 7
Perrysburg 4 t, Tot. Walle 0
Pickenngton Cent. 41 , Westerv111~

Individual Statistics
. .. 49
Rushing: GA-Jared Gravely 7-29,
.. .74
Nate AlliSon 5-28, Ethan Moore 9·
. .9?
12 , KrUIZe Wandhng 2-10 , Tyler
!locking Division ·
Grimm 5·(-8) . Tyler Eastman 1-(·
TYC
AU
10) .
'
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
1- Chance Freeman 13-126, Ke1th Wat~ rfoc'd . . . . . . . . ... ~ . . . .., ,().1) .. 0 ...0 .. . . 2-t _,.72 ...73
Wetzel 6-61 , 'P1erce Re'eves 1-25 , Federal Hocking ... . ..... .. ....o-o .. o . ..o .
.2-t . - .51 ...52
J.P
Taylor 4-20, Pans Btrchheld 4- Trimble . . . . . . . . . . . • • ~ ... o-o
o
.2·1 ...60 . -~
McClanahan 1-15, Danny Matney
Easlem
.
.
..
.
....
..
.
.
.
.
o-o
.
o
...
14,
Johnathan
Schweickart
2·14.
1·2 ...68 - .103
t -14
Miller .... .. .. .
... 0-0 .. 0 ...
. 1-2 .. .47 . 100
S-Greg Jenkms 4 -99 . Sean Courtney Lewis :l-14, Tres Wilks 2- Southern • , . . . . •
... 0-0.0 .. 0
. 0-3 ...3 " .. 108
5. Ethan Preston t -(-2)
Coppick 1-1 1
Passing: GA-Ethan Moore 7-8-0
Independents
64, Tyler Eastman 5·5·0 32, KrUize
ALL
Wahama 47, Eastern 19
W-l PF PA
Eastern
7 6 0 6 - 19 Wandling 0-1-0 0
. .. . . .. .. .. . .. . . .. 2·0 . t 06 . 19
Wahama
21 19 7 0 - 47 1-J ohnathan Sc hwetckarl 5-8-1 Wahama
Sou1h Galha . .. .. . . .. . .. . .. .. I -2
42
76
11 9.
Hannan .. .. . . ... .... _.... .. . 0-2 . 30 . t04
Receiving: GA-Beau Whaley 3Scoring summary
31 , Jared Gravely 2-22 Nate Allison
Cardinal Conference
t:irst Quarter
2-13, ·Austin Wilson 1·11 , Quinhn
CARD
, AU
E-Kelly Winebrenner 8 run (Zach
1\iibert
1·2,
Ethan
Moore
1·0.
W-l
PF
PA
w-L
PF
PA
Hendnx kiCk) 7.38
.. .2·0 . . 65 , . . t 9 , . . . 2-o . ..65 , .. t 9
W-Kyle Zerkle 12 run (Zerkle kiCk) I ~ Lu kas Morr1s 2-66 , Michael 'Chapmanville
Lamb 3-53.
Wayne .. ........ . . , . , .. .. . ,().1) ... o ....o .... . 2-o ...70 ...3t
450
'
Point Pleasant .. .. .. .. . . .. .. ... 1-o ... 42 .. . t 0 .. ... 1-1 ...63 . , 38
W~arrett Underwood 26 pass
Poca , ..... . .... . , .. .... .. ....o-o ... o . ...o .... . .o-2 ...4t ...73
Pomt Pleasant 42,
from Wilham Zuspan (Zerkle kick)
Herbert
Hoover . .. . . . .. . .. ...0-1 ... o .. ..24 ... . .0-2 ...19 ...64
Sissonville
10
3 t0
. 0-2 . 29 . B3 .. . 0·2 ...29 ...
Stssom11lle
3 o 7 7 - 10 Sisscnvi!e . _ .
W-Ze!rkle 6 run (Zerkle kiCk) 1 12
Pt.
Pleasant
7
t4
7
14
42
Second Quarter
Canal Fulton Northwest 37. Ftndlay Liberty-Benton 52, Vanlue 0
W-Zerkle 31 pass from Zuspan
Chardon t6
Fostoria 42, Tot. Whitmer 35
Scoring summary
(Zerkle kick) 9 52
Canal
Wmchester
42,
Whitehall·
Fostona
St. Wendelin 4 t , Lakeside
Firat
Quarter
W-M1caiah Branch 3 run (kick
Yeart1ng 0
Danbury 0
~ared Proctor 20 field goal 7:05
tmled) 4·34
Cardington-Lincoln 20 , Morral Frankfort Adena 32, Wash1ngton
W-Jacob Roach 2 run {k1ck failed) PP- AIIen Wasonga 20 run (Justin
R1dgedale 14, OT
C.H. 20
Weaver
kick)
5
22
1:43
Carey 25, Kansas lakota 21
Franklin Furnace Green 27, Bur,ch,
Second Quarter
E-M1ke Johnson 4 pass from
Casstown Miami E. 49 , lipp C1ty wva 24, 20T
PP-Wasonga 25 run (Weaver
Brayden Pratt (run !ailed) 24
Bethel 0
Fredencktown 38, N Rob1nson Col.
k1ck)
8
08
Third Quarter
Cedarville 33, Yellow Springs 0
Crawford 7
PP-Nalhan Roberts 38 pass from
W-Ayan Lee 15 pass from
Chagnn Falls 24, Burton Berkshire Fremont Ross 28, liffln Columbian
B J. Lloyd 0/Veaver k1ck) 1:33
Zuspan (Zerkle k1ck) 6:43
0,
6
Third
Querter
Fourth Quarter
Chesapeake 48 , Willow Wood Gahanna Cots Academy 23,
5-Chns Hasting 15 pass from
E-Jtsh Hupp 29 pass from
Symmes Valley 6
Centertlurg t 3
Scottte Dernck (Proctor kick) 6 :18
Johnson (kick ta1led) 3'31
Cheslerland W. Geauga 21, Garfield Hts. 35, Ashtabula
PP-Derek Mitchell 3 run (Weaver
Lyndhursl Brush 7
kiCk) 4.17
Lakeside 28
E
w
Cln. Anderson 31, Hamitlon 10
Gates M1lls Gilmour 16, Gates Mills
Fourth Quarter •
F1rst Downs
12
17
Gin.
Clark
Montessori
34, Hawken 7
PP-Wasonga 68 run (Weaver
Rushes-yards
37-181 36-192
Williamsburg 6
Genoa Area 55, Port Clinton 7
kiCk) 10.15
Passmg yards
85
200
C1n. Colerain 33, Highlands, Ky. t 8 Germantown Valley View 28,
PP-Roberts 72 pass from Lloyd
Total yards
266
392
Gin. Elder 30, Cin. Oak Hills 7
Monroe 0
(Weaver k1ck) 1 57
Comp-att-int
8·19-2 t1-13· 0
C1n. F1nneytown 6, Middletown Girard 35, Warren JFK 27 •
Fumbles-lost
2-1
1·0
MadJson 3
pp
Gnadenhunen lnd1an Valley 14,
Penalt1es-yards 3· 30
6-40
Gin. Hills Christian Academy t 3, Magnolia Sandy Valley 6
F1rst Downs
t4
t7
Goshen 21, Batavia Clermont NE 7
Rushes·yards
34-143 38-340 Gin. Manemont 6
Individual Statistics
C1n. La Salle 13, Liberty Twp Grafton M1dv1ew 18, Medma
Pass1ng
yards
Rushing : E- KeJiy Winebrenner
159
117
Lakota E. 10
17-85. Act1on Facemyer 2-35, Kl1nl Total yards
302
Buckeye 12, OT
457
C1n. Madeira 16, Ctn N. Ccllege H1ll Granv1Ue 49, Cots. Grandview Hts.
10-22'-0 4-5-0
Connery 5-25. Kyle Connery 4-23, Comp-at1-1nt
t3
Brad Slone 3-17, Brayden Pratt 3- Fumbles
1
t
7
.
Ctn. McNichOlas 31, Read1ng 0
11 , Tyler Hendnx 1-7. M1ke Johnson Penalties-yards
5-20
Greenvme 23, Franklin o
3·23
Cin . NW 28, Wilmington 6
1-(- 10), Jordan K1mes t -(·12)
Grove C1ty Christian 33, Waterford
Gin Princeton 35, Ctn. Glen Este 7 3
Individual Statistics
W- M1ca1ah Branch 6-37, Jacob
Roach 4-32 , Ryan Lee 5-28, Kyle Rushing: S-Raymond Boggess Cm Purcell Marian 48, Cm. Deer Groveport-Madison 27, Dublin
·
Zerkle 3-22 Zach , Warth 2-19, t8·142, Grant Cummings 2·5, Park 6
Jerome 7
Anthony
Grimm
6-15
Clay Blake Cunningham 1- t, Scottie Gin. St. Xavier 17, lndpls Cathedral, Hamltton Badin 36, Gin. Wyom1ng
VanMeter 2-12, J R Jewell 2- 10, Dernck t0-(·1), Adam Holmes 3-(c Ind. 3
12
C1n. Sycamore 44 , St Bernard Hamilton New M1am129, Batavta 7
Matt Dangert1eld 3-9, Issac Lee 1-9, 4).
Tyler Kitchen 1·0, William Zuspan PP-AIIen Wasonga 14-184, Derek Roger Bacorr 6
Hamler
Patnck .Henry
48,
1-(-1)
M1tchell 14-t 35 , Caleb Wasonga 3· Cm. Walnul Hills 20. Cin. Hughes Monlpelier 8
Passing: E- Brayden Prall 8-15-t 30, M1ke Mus grave 3- 14, Eric ) 4
Hannibal R1ver 27, Woodsfield
C1n . Winton Woods 28, Fa1rfield 6
56, Mike Joh nson 1·3·0 29, Kyle Roberts 1-0, B J . Lloyd 3·(-23)
Monroe Cent. 6
Connery 0-1-1 G
Passing: S-Scott1e Derrick 10·22- Circleville Logan Elm 4 t, Chillicothe Hanoverton United 6Q, N. Jackson
Zane Trace 17
W-W1II1am Zuspan 11 -13-0 200
0 159
Jackson-Milton 0
Clarksville Chnton-Mass1e 28, Lees Hamson 35, Kings Mills Kings t 6
Receiving : E-M1ke Johnson 3-42, PP-B.J Lloyd 4-5·0 117
Josh Hupp t -29. Jorda n K1mes 4· Receiving: S-Chns Hast1ngs 4· Creek E. Clinton 0
Hav1land Wayne Trace 22, Convoy
tB, Kyle Connery t -(-4)
104, Raymond Boggess 2·t7, Clayton Northmont 42, Westerville Crestv1ew 16
W-Matt Dangerfield 2-57, Kyle. Grant Cummi~gs 1-22, Blake S, 12
Healh 33, Utica o
Cia. Cent Cath . 18, Brooklyn t 3
Zerkle 2·40, Garrett Underwood 1· C unn~ngham 3-16
Hicksville 38, Edon 0
N. 0
26,- Colin Pierce 2-26. Micai at1 PP-Nathan Roberts 3-122, Derek Coal Grove Dawson· Bryant 31 , Hilliard Darby 48, Cols. Briggs 0
Pickenngton N 30, Cots Mifflin 12
Lucasville Valley 8
Branch 2·25, Jacob Roach t -15, Mitchell1·(·5).
H1lliard Davidson 15, Grove City 0
Piketon 43, McDermott Sc1oto NW 0
ColdWater 49,. Versailles o
Ryan Lee 1-11 .
HQward E. Knox 54; Millersport o· : Piqua 19, Springboro 16
Cols. Africentric 34, Can T1mken 7 Hubbard 13, Warren Howland 7
Plain City Jonathan Alder t 3, St.
Cots. Beechcroft 30, Cols . St Independence 32, Rocky River
Meigs 53, River Valley 20
Pans Graham 0
Charles t3
Me1gs
6 27 t3 7 - 53
Lutheran W 21
Poland S~mmary 26, L1sbon Beaver
Cols. Brookhaven
37, Day Ironton 42, GallipoliS Gallla 6
R. Valley
0 13 7 0 - 20 Ada 34, Columbus Grove 19
8
Akr. Gart1eld 14, Akr. SVSM 13
Chammade-Julienne 9
Jackson 26, McArthur Vinton Pomeroy Meigs 53, Cheshire R1ver
Akr. Manchester 50 , Sullivan Black Cols. DeSales 28, New Albany 7
Scoring summary
County 14
Valley 20
R1ver 12
Cots. Eas1moor 40, Cols. Harvest Jefferson Area 29, Brookfield 27
First Quarter
Portsmouth 28, Wheelersburg 6
Akr.
North
36,
Stow-Munroe
Falls
Prep
7
M-Caleb Dav1s 20 pass from
Johnstown Northridge 30, Hebron Portsmouth W. 28 , s. Po1nt 7
33
Cots. Franklm Hts 33, Gals. West Lakewood 7
Jacob Well (k1ck ta iled) 4 57
Powell Olentangy Liberty 28,
Alliance 23, Cailf1eld 20, 3DT
13
Second Quarter
Johnstown-Monroe 34. Pataskala Delaware Hayes 22, OT
Andover
Pymatumng
Valley
35,
Cols. Hartley 38, Cols. Bexley 21
M-Jeremy Smith 4 run (pass
Lick~ng His 15
RIChfield Revere 27, Akr Sprtngfield
Orwell Grand Valley 26
Cots Marion-Franklin 34, Cols
failed) 11 ·57
Kettering /Iller 51, Ashland t4
0
Anna
68,
Ft.
Recovery
21
Northland 6
RV-Jordan Deel 10 pass from
Kenering Fairmont 20, W. Chester Rocky River 21, Westlake 20, 20T
Ansonia 51 , Bradford 0
Clayton Curnutte (k1ck fa1t ed) 7·43
Cols. Upper Arlington 41 , Findlay 34 Lakota W. 0
S. Decalur, Ind. 6, C1n Country Day
M-Sm1th 46 run (pass failed) 6:57 Antwerp 28, Tot. Otlawa H1lls 14
Cols. Walnut R1dge 42. Galloway Kirtland 31 , Wickliffe 6
·o
Arcanum
45,
New
Pans
Nat1onal
Westland 18
M-Sm1th 22 run (Smith run) 4 04
Lafayette Allen E. 21, Spencerville 7 Salineville Soulhem 55, Toronto 0
Trall14
Cols wanerson 24, Reynoldsburg Lancaster 37, Cols. Independence
RV-Tyler Sm1lh tO run (Kody
Sanilusky 34, Tel. Seen 12
Archbold 18, Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 12 7
Johnson kiCk) .28
6
Sandusky Perl&lt;ins 28, Norwalk 7
Arlington
35,
Cary-Rawson
t
7
Cots. Whetstone 60, Cols. Soulh 6
M-clay Bolin 50 pass from Jacob
LeavittSburg
LaBrae
24, Shaker Hts, 21 , Bedford t 4
Ashland Crestview 45 , Lucas 0
Columbrana 14, Struthers 7
Weii(Mason Metts k1ck) :26
Shelby 40, Ontano 13
.
Ashville Teays Valley 27, Grove City Columbiana Crestview 55, Oa k Garrettsville Garfield 0
Third Quarter
Lebanon 42, Trotwood-MadiSon 20 Sidney Lehman 28, Lewistown
Cent
CrosSing
14
M-Smith 55 run (Metts ki ck) 11.49
Glen, W.Va. 20
Leeton1a 28, Vienna Mathews 17
Indian lake 7
Attica Seneca E. 52, Monroevtlle 14 Ccrtland Lakev1ew 30, Geneva t4
RV-Oeel 10 pass from Curnutte
Le1psic 27, Van Buren 7
Smithville
28, Akr Coventry 7
Avon
42 , Columbia
Stat1on ·coshocton 27 , Millersburg W.
(Johnson kick) 8 05
Lew1s Center Olenlangy 17, Sparta Highland 13, R1chl'lood N
Columbia
6
M-Bolin 50 pass lrom Well (Metts
Holmes 20
Sunbury B1g Walnut 14
Avon Lake 43, ElyrJa 22 .
kick) 1'46 .
Crestline 26, Greenwich S. Cent. 13 LewiSburg Trf-County N. 49, Union 10
Spring. Calh. Cent 55, Manon
Bainbridge Paint Valley 18, Creston Norwayne 35, Collins
,
Fourth Quarter
Cov1ngton 20
.
Cath.
7
Greenfield
McC
lain
9
!oi-Cory Hutton 1 run (Metts k1ck)
Western Reserve 28
Spring . NW 24 , Jamestown
Baltimore L1berty Union 37 , Crown City S. Gallia 14, Roc1ne LeXIngton 42, Willard 16
11 '56
Liberty Center 49 , Metamora Greeneview 12
Amanda-Ciearcreek 7
.
Southern 0
Evergreen
16
Sprlngfleld ·18, Vandalia Buller 17
Barberton 28, Kent Roosevelt 14
M
RV
Cuyahoga
Falls
CVCA
35,
Lima
Perry
32,
McGuffey
Upper
Sl. Henry 27, New Bremen 13
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 28, Louisville Aquinas t 6
First Downs
16
t4
Scioto Valley 26
Sl. Marys Memorial 25, Calma 20
Gibsonburg
14
Rushes-yards
35-332 3t -79
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu1t 35, Lima Shawnaa 56, Eltda 7
Steubenvilla 45, E. liverpool t4
Bay Village Bay 13, Tol. Llbbay 7
Passing yards
197
199
Cuyahoga Fall s?
Lodi
Cloverleaf
31,
Lorain Suiwart Federal Hocking 28,
Beallsville 51, Cameron, W.Va. 14
529
287
Cuyahoga Hts. 56, Cia. E. Tach o
Total yar~Js
Southview 7
Beverly Ft. Frye 20. OT
Beavercreak
45,
Sidney
21
Comp-an-lnt
8-12·0 14-20-1
Danville 13, Dallon 6
Logan
31,
Cola.
Hamilton
Twp.
0
Slreetsboro 21, Manlua Crestwood
Bellbrook 24, Xenia 17
Fumbles-lost
5·70
1-10
Day. Carroll 20, Tal. St. Francis 17
London
27,
Spring
.
NE
16
20
Bellefonlalne Benjamin Logan 21 , Day. Christian 35, Day. Jefferson 15
1·0
Ptnalllea·yarda 1·0
London Madison Pltlna 2t, S. Slrongovllle 34, Tel. St. John's 6
Spring. Ktnton Ridge 18
Day. Dunbar 22, Day. Marahall14
Charleaton SE 14
Sugtr Grovt, Berne Union 28 ,
Btllevue 38, Clyde 20
lndlvldutl ltotlttlot
Day. Northridge 41 , Day. Belmonl
Lorain
Clearvltw
34,
Fairview
Ntrtonvllle·
York 14
Authlng: M-Jtrtmy Smith 13· Bellville Clllr Fork 2g , LtWII 12
Loudonville
19,
Jerom11vllle Sugarcreek Gerawey 55, Zoarville
212, Jtffory Roua'h 4·47, Cory Ctnler Otentangy Ortngt t 3
Day. Oakwood 34, Cariltle
Hllledale 14
Tutotrawu Vtlley 13
Hunon 8·34, Gabe Hill 3-1~ , Cody Belmont Union Local 28, Bt. Defiance 35, Wapakoneta 9
Loulevlllt 28, Akr. Hoban 3
Sycamore Mohawk 33, Upper
Laudtrmln 2·10, Jacob Wtll 3-1, Clelrtvllli t4
Dltlance Ayertvllta 31, Fremont St.
Loveland 19, Cln. Mt. Hetllhy 18
Sandutky 12
Heath Denwllter 2·3, Zoch Sayre 1· Blloll W. Branoh 4g, Sllem-21
Joeeph 28, OT
Macadonla
Nordonla
38,
Chtgrln
Sylvanlt
Southview 28, Tol. Sltrt 12
Btrea 13, Lorain Admiral King 12
0.
Defiance Tlnora 49, Tontogany
Ftlle Kenaton 3
Tallmadge 42, Akr. Flrttlone 21
RV-Ciayton Curnunt 14·45, Jacob Btrlln Center W11t11n A11ervi 41 , Otllgo7
Malvern 34, E. Can. 7
Thornvllll Sheridan 34, Chllllcolhe
Brown 7-18, Tyler Smllh 3·t 5, Cody Southington Chalker 14
Delphoa Jefferson 28, Blulfton 0
Mansfield
Madlton
27,
Mt.
Vernon
14
Bloon
,-Carroll27,
Alhlnt
13
McAvena 1·2, Zachary Baird S·(· 1).
Delphos St. John 's 3S , Mlnsler 20
Putlngi M-Jtcob Wtll 8· 12·0 Bloomdale Elmwo'od 33, N, Dota Hardin Northern 34, Arcadia
8alllmore 8
197.
16
RV-Giayton Curnutta14·20· t 199. Bowling Gteen 34, Napoleon 21
Dover 48, Can . Cant. Cath. 12
AICtlvlng: M-Clay Bolin 5·1.48, Brookville 80, Camden Preble Dresd.en Tri-Vallay ~7. Zanesville
Caleb Davis 2-42, Jeremy Smith t- Shawnee 3f
Maysville 7
Brunswick
38,
Brecksville- Dublin Coffman 49, Westerville
7.
RV-Jordan Deer 6·104 , Cody Broadview Hts. 37, OT·
Cent. 0
1111111 11 111
J:,rt,, .I II' "
, t '"''' d 1., ••I t ,,t,.,l
M&lt;:Avana 3·43, Travis Roush 2-18, Bryan 50 , Della 23 E. Cenlral, Ind. 23, Trenton
I , Id "' ,\ I,, " '"
Jaccb Brown 1-14, Zak Deal 1· 11, 8ucyrus 10, Galton 9
Edgewood 20
L•11 I •'111!'1• I• f 1, ( ,
I • '"1'•1'11
Tyler Sm1lh 1-9, Brandon Smith 1·8. Bucyrus Wynford 28 , Castalia Eastlake N 46, Cia. Collinwood 12
Margaretta o
Eaton 41, Spring. Greenon 0
'Ironton 42,
Byesville
Meadowbrook . 33, Edgerton 57, Oregon Strltch 27 ·
Gallla Academy 6
Sarah sVIlle Shenandoah 6
Euclid 27, Willoughby S. 13
ISA Certified Arborlst, Certified Ornamental &amp;
GalhaAc.
0 0 0 6 - 6 Caldwe ll 35, Barnesvtlle 12
Fa1rf1eld Christian 38 , Corning Miller
Ironton
14 21 7 0 - 42 Can GlenOak 27, Green 24, 20T
34
Landscape Professlonai,Gall~lis, OH
Can McKinley 24, Uniontown Lake Fairport Harbor Harding 18,
Scoring summary
17
Ashtabula Sts. John and Paul 15
Clary 4·20, B J. Stanley 9·3
S-Greg Jenkins 19-99, Taylor
Lemley 11 -54, M1chael Manuel 1039. Enc Buzzard 1· (·4)
Passing: SG-B.J. Stanley 2-15-2
29
S-M1chael Manuel5-t9-0 110 .
Receiving:
SG- Caleb

.:o ..
o ...
o•..

aa

s

Ohio Scores

Tiffm Calvert 41, Elmore Woodmore
t4
'
T1pp City Tippecanoe 56, Hamillon
Ross 7
Tot Cent Cath 21. Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne t 0
Tot. Chnstlan 21 , Tot Woodward 7
Tal Rogers 62 , Sylvan1a Northv1ew
24
Troy 47 Fairborn 7
Troy Chnst1an 28, Gin Chnstian 7
Tw1nsburg 27, Aurora 6
Uhnchsv111e Claymont 21 , Carrollton

7

W1ntersvllte lnd1an Creek 47, Cte,.
East 0
·
Wooster 35 , Akr Ettet 28
Wooster Triway 15, Apple Creek
Waynedale 12
Worthington Kilbourne 30', Dubhn
SCIOtO 0
,
Youngs . Aust1ntown·F1tch
41 ,
Parma 20
Young s Boa rdman 55, Youngs
Chaney 7
Youngs Ct1n st1an 34, Sebnng
McKmley 0
Youngs Liberty 40, Campbell
Memor1al?
Youngs. Mooney 59, Ely na Cath. 14
Zanesv ille
Rosecrans
46 ,
Strasburg-Franklin 13
Zanesv1lle W MUskingum 21 ,
McConnelsville Morgan o

W.Va. Scores
Balh County, Va 27, East Hardy 26
Beallsville , Oh1 0 51 , Cameron 14'
Braxton County t9, Clay County 12
Brooke 48, Anacost1a, D.C 14
Calhoun County 37,' Aitch1e County
25
Cap1tal 2t , Cabell Midland 7
Chapmanville 24, Herbert Hoover 0
Clay-Battelle 19, Bishop Donahue 8
Columbiana Crestview, Ohio 55,
Oak Glen 20
Doddridge County 21, Valley
Fayette 20
Fa~rmont Semor 41 , North MarieR 6
Faye«ev1lle 40 , Midland Tra1l 21
Frankfort 36, Liberty Hamson 14 '
Franklin Furnace Green, Ohio !7,
Burch 24, 20T
'
Grafton 45, Lew1s County 15
Greenbrier West 55, R1ct1wood o
Hampshire 13, Berkeley Springs :S
Haysi, Va 22, Tug Valley 6
Hurley, Va 48, Montcalm 14
Independence 37, Sherman 31 •
James Wood, Va. 31, WaShington 0
Jefferson 42, Park Vtew-Sterling,
Va 36
·
Keyser 41 , Moorefield 0
Lincoln County 18, Wtnfleld 14
Madonna 42, Hundred t3
Man 54 Mount View 6
Martinsburg 23 Turner Ashby, Va
21
'
Meadow Bndge 42, Williamson 2,0
Morganiown 56, Elkins 19
•
Mount Hope 28 , Oak Hill20
N1cholas County 28, BuckhannOnUpshur 7
Notre Dame 18, Valley Wetzel 12,
OT
•
Pendleton County 46 , PetersbQrg
14
Philip Barbour 27, Lincoln 7
PikeV1ew 34 , Iaeger 26
Pocahonlas Counly 41, Shady
Sprmg 34
Po1n1 Pleasant 42 , Sissonville 1o.
Potomac Falls, Va 68, Hedgesville
0
Pnnceton 15, Bluefield 13
Ravenswood 35 , Poca 6
Ripley 28, Greenbner East 26
R1vers1de 26, Hunt~ngton 23
Scott 35, Wyom1ng East t 4
,
Sherando, Va . 37, Musselman 10
South Charleston 13, George
Washington 12
South Harnson 49, G1lmer Coun~ 7
Spnng Valley 44, Sl Albans 14 •
St Marys 34 , Wirt Coun1y 7
Tot s1a 21 , Webster County 0
,
Tucker Co unty 41 , Tygarts Valley 0
Tyler Consolidated 14, Roaile
County 7
UniverSity 42, East Fairmonl t 7 : ·
Wayne 31 , James Monroe 10 :
We1r 23, R1chmond Edison, OhiO'S
Westside 28. G1tbert 20
:
Williamstown 25, Magnolia 22 ,
Woodrow Wilson 31, ~arkersbQrg
20
'
•

• •11

"We Care For Your Trees"

Stuffs
fromPageBl
Winebrenner soorin g on an
8-yard first qu arter run
' before
Mtke
John so n
grabbed a 4-yard TO toss
· from Brayden Pratt late in
the first half. Eastern tacked
· on a fourth period score late
in the game when Johnson
· connected wtth Josh Hupp
: on a 29-yard scoring strike.
The visitors of coach Kevi n
Welsh opened the contest
with an tmpressive 75-yard.
nine play dri'e wtth
Winebrenner capping the
series with an 8-yard gallop.
.Zach Hendrix tacked on the
' point after to give Eastern a
quick 7-0 advantage before a
' stunned White Falcon followmg.
Wahama was quick to
answer the Eagles early upset
bid when the Bend Area team
' marched 80 yards in nine
plays for the game lying
touchdown. Zerkle scam. pered the final 12 yards
before adding rhe PAT ktck to
even the score at 7-7 with
,. ~:50 remaining in the opening
-quarter.
Tyler Kitchen blocked an
Eagle punl to give WHS
excellent field position fol . lowing the game tying touchdown arJd Zuspan wasted little time in cashin!L in on the
Eastern mistake. 1 he junior
signal caller pirched a 26-yard
strike to Garrett Underwood
who went high over two
Eagle defenders to .snare the
pigskin arJd mce into the end
zone to cap a one play. 26yard drive. Once aga in
Zerkle split rhe uprights on
the point after to giv.e
Wahama .ll 14-7 edge wtth
3:10 remaining m the tirst
-period.
Zerkle would add another
·touchdown and the resulting
PAT kick to his resume before
. the ftrst quarter came 10 an
end after Kevin Klingensmilh
_recovered an Eastern fumble
at the Eagle ,21. Four plays·
later Zerkle rambled acrus~
the goal fine from six yards
away to give Wahama a stun, -ning 21 -71ead.
WHS continued to score in
bunches prior to the conclu'
sion of the half with Zuspan
passing 31 yards to 'Zerkle at
the 9:52 mark of rhe second
canto for one of three Fakon
scores in the quarter. Branch
burst through the middle orl' a
3-yard run with 4:34 left in

h l ~lohU I •

.. fUtU Oiol ll011\al

~ ''"'l•rti i i Y&lt;' p tu,..~

.•

'

llu.,.r•n.:•

' " " 0\ y

,,.1,,., ••h·•" ·~·"'"

h · •~ ' '"'""

th•

f'r•·&gt;t•ll'tn'",'

'

e&gt;f

,{ol•'&amp; :

wu h ,...._ rnd~p&lt;rruk" t

ties, follov.ecl by Taylor
Lemley with 54 yards on 54
toles and Michael Manuel
with 39 y&lt;trds on 10 rushes.
Manue l was also 5-of-19
pa ss ing for 110 yards
Jcnkms also had 99 recetving yards on four catches.
Ctleb McClanahan led the
victors witl14 I rushmg yards
on II e&lt;trnes. followed by
Clyburn w111:t 30 yards on I I
toles. Stanlev went 2-of-15
pas,ing for· 29 yards and
threw 1wo interceptions.
McC!anah,m had one catch
for I 5 yatds and Matney had
nne catc:h for 14 yctrds.
Both teams trayel to Wesr
Virginia next 1-rtelay for a
pa tr of non-conference grid;, on contests. The Rebels
head 10 Mason to battle
unbeaten Wah .tma, while
rhe Torn,tdoes lravel to
As hton to bitllle the Winless
Hannan Wildcat&gt; 111 their
home opener. Bolll games
will ki ckoff at 7:30p.m.

CONTRAc;TING

1\.utn •()w tu l , .

:".~•~

4

99 rushing y&lt;trds on 19 c:ar-

KARR

'

'

~ n .. lu#Unlll

.,,..J

cude the scoring ut 14-0.
that lirst win to oet things
Southern managed to ~et go ing so. ll~at they start
10 1he Rebels' 38-yard .lme understanding and believing
on thetr fmal dnve, but 111 what Ihe y are dm ng.
"A ll 111 all. we had some
turned the ball over on
downs with 46 seconds left good things h.tppen 1onight
as far a~ executing - now
in 1he fourth.
Overall. the Rebel s man- we just have to build on th1s
aged only 123 yards ol total momc ntum:·
offense mcl udin g 94
For SHS c o:~~.:h Dennis
rushing yards on 35 carries Te:tford. il was a demorali zSouthern had 298 y&lt;1rds of mg night. Nor because of the
total otlense, I X8 of whtch c fi(ll1. bllt actually how t11c
came on the gwund through fmal score cmne about.
"This is the kind of thm g
41 totes. The gue sts had
eight first downs in the dcet- that has been hamperi ng us
sion, compared to a dozen all ,year. We gel a dnve
for the Purple and Gold 111 .go1ng. then &lt;:ommit a pena\
ty or a turnover to knock us
defeat.
After lhe ga me. SGHS oul of that dri ve. It's hard to
coach Jusr y Burleson was win games when you shoot
happy rhat ht s young group yourself 111 the loo t l:ly lllrn ·
was able to finally gel the tng the ball over or comnuting penalties al key times,""
monkey otl their back s.
commenred. "We'll
Teaford
·•we needed a win. We
needed to have some suc- jus1 have 10 kee p working,
cess," Burleson commented. go back tu the dr:twtng board
"Anytime you are young aifl on Munday and see if we
have lust a cou ple of ball can· l be beuer nexl week."
Jenkins led the hosls wi1h
games, you've got to have

TM

l•••••••n.:•

whit lo h .. , truly • ., •

Bryan Walters/photo

'

' ' ''"11&lt;11111111.

rC"r:&gt;•n•o lun ... r h .. '

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The better, strorJger, foster way to build.

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34740 St. At. 7
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-...,.--~------.,-- .

'

'

--- ---

1- --~--~-

•

k~ocked

South Galli a ·runntng back Bryce Clary (5) 1s tackled from ~ehtnd by a Southern defender
during .Fnday night 's footba ll contest at Roger Lee Adams Field tn Racine.

.

Wot l ,. .lfi!IMft~

c;: ·,..,.,p•n )'

mg before getting

out of the game wt lh an
injury Backup Ethan Moore
lintshed rhe ni~ht 7-of-8 passin u lor 64 ytu:c!s before leaving the game 111 the first half
as v.cll " ilh an inJury.
,
Th1rd-srnngcr
Tyler
Easlman we ill 5-for-5 passing
lor 32 yards under &lt;.:en1er during I he s~:~.:ond half.
GAHS v.as penalized fou r
times for 25 v:uds. whtle lhc
ho"'ts were ~ n agged eigh1
t;mes ll&gt;r 5(3 yari'k Ironton
dtd nnl hale cl punt I ll the Contesl. while the eue&gt;ts krckeu
three' times li1r ~~~ .werage of
33J yards. All three Blue
Devil twnow rs in rhe tit st
Tony Shotsky!submitted photo from Ironton Tribune
h,t!
f led to points.
Gall1a Academy runn1ng back Aust1n Wtlson ts 11auled down
The
toad does n"t gel any
by an Ironton defender Fnday n1g11t -at Tank Stad1um.
easier t(lr Gallia Academy. as
mg one TO and one intercep- for the guests. scorin ~ on a-+- the Devils will tl'ltlelto f&lt;m rtion. Morris led IHS with 66 yard 11111 "'th 5· !6 lcitm rcg- tlme reigning SEOAL chamreceiving yards on two grabs
ulalton 10 conclt1de lhc scor- pton Log&lt;tn next Frtday for a
nnn- l ea~ue conte'l. Ki ckoff is
Galli a Academy ·, Jared in~ at 4:2-6
sclled
uled t&lt;•r 7:30p.m.
Gravely had the lone points
Gravely paced the Devils

Outlast

''

hld011~1111~t•nr

•""""' ' ' w• ...:•n tall.,

o

Tree Care Specialists

Larry Crum
lpholo

play whtle establishing a
42-0 cushion · entering the
frnal period.
IHS 'accumulated 396 yards
of total offense overall in the
triumph, including 271 (l!Shmg yards on 36 carries.
GAHS -. on the other hand
-amassed only 157 yards of
total offense, including just 61
rushing yards on 29 attempts.
The hosts had 16 first downs
compared to the Devils' 10.
Chance Freeman led the
0!'lmge and Black attack with
126 rushing yards and two
TDs on 13 totes, followed by
Keith Wetzel with 61 yards
and three scbres on six carries. That duo combined for
all tive tirst halt scores that
gave IHS ils 35-0 tntennission advantage.
Lukas
Morris scored
lhe half before Roach raced Ironton's lone second• half
around the !eli side on a two touchdown at the 9:05 mark
yard gallop with I :43 to play of the third when he hauled in
as 1he While Falcon lead bal- a 43-yard scoring pass from
John
Schweickart.
looned to 40-7.
5-for-8
Schweickan
went
Edstern marched 58 yards .
down the field in the tina! passing for 119 yards, throwmimtte of the half with Ptatt
and Johnson c:m·ymg the load
fm the Eagles. Wahama continually pounded Prall with
some bone j;mi ng hits during
the drive but 1he 1he "'phofrom Page Bl
more quat1erback proved he
could take a hit and keep
wming back tor more. Pratt play - v.hich was recovstood tall in the pocket and e red by South Gallia's
connected wllh Johnson on a Clyburn at the SHS 44 wirh
34-yard, fourth down pass a dozen licks left 111 the
JUs,t belore Colby Davts lev- quarter.
The guests moved the ball
eled the Eagle qum1erback
to
the SHS 29, but Stanley
wtth a huge htl to set up a 4yard. Pratt to Johnson con- was picked off again on the
nection for rhe touchdown next play by Adam Warden
seconds later.
-concluding the first half.
Wahama added tts final
At the break, Southern had
score of the evening mtdway 189 yards of total offense thtough the third stanza with including 129 rushing yards.
Zuspan again warrmng up his South Gallia mustered only
right arm for a 40-yard com- 30 yards of total olTense -·
pierion to Man Dangertield 15 passing and 15 ntshing and a 15-yard scoring pass to but still led entering lhe
Ryan Lee.
break. The hosts had seven
Eastern conducted the scor- of their penalties (55 yards)
ing late in I he game when the m the lirst half, as'well as all
Eagles drove 93 yards -in II three of their turnovers.
plays for the touchdown. An SGHS liad live penalties for
18-yard run by Kyle Connery,
a 16-yard scamper by 35 yards at the intennisston,
Winebrenner and a 29-yard as well as both of its
carry by Action Facemyer set turnovers.
up a 29-yard touchdown pass · , Afrer trading possessiops
from Johnson to Josh Hupp to start the second half,
for lhe titMI Eastern score of . Southern managed Ia work
the ball deep into Rebel terthe moht.
Wahama tolctled 192 yards ritory. Af'er getting 10 rhe
on the ground with the White 16-yard line with around six
Falcons using 12 different minutes left in the third
players to carry the football in frame, the Tornadoes prothe ouli ng. Micaiah Branch ceeded to go backwards over
paced the WHS ground attack the next Tour plays before
with 37 yards in six carries turning the ball over on
followed by Ryan Lee wtth downs.
32 yards in fmrr tries. Z'uspan
Both teams traded possescompleted 11 -of- 13 passes sion over the next six dnves,
tor 200 yards and three touch- the last of which proved to
downs wilh Dange rfield grab- be dtsaslrous for Soulhcrn.
bmg two receptions for 57 SHS - facing a fow1h -andyards and Zerkle two catches eight at its own'19 - had to
•
for 4() yards.
go tor the ftrst down hecause
Eastern was led o ffen~ely of the scor~. and lhe hosts
by Prall, Johnson and came up short.
Winebrenner as the Eagles
SGHS drove the provertotaled 181 yards on the bial nail in the coffin on that
ground and another 85 ensuing drive, which started
through the airways.
Defenstvely Branch tallied at the SHS 19 with 3:09
10 tackles follo~ved by Ehja!1 remaining in regulalion . The
Honaker wnh etght and Matt guests needed three plays 10
cover 19 yards, rhe fin al
Dangerlield with seven.
Wahama will conclude its blow berng delt vered by
three game home stand to Clyburn on a 5-yard scoring
begin rhe 2008 season next run to make it a 12-0 contest
.week when the White Falcons with I :56 showing on the
welcome South Gallia to the clock. Brandon Harri so n
Bend Area. EasteiT) will host caught- the 2-point converRiver Valley.
sion from Stanley to coni-

We offer t:he
best: prices · :
and protection
for
'

e

with 29 rushini&gt; yard, on
se\en carries. followed b\
Nate AIINm v. ith 28 yards nit
live 101es. GAHS had SIX
re&lt;.:etvcrs haul in one pass. led
by Ae.tu Whaley with 3 1
yards on three gmb,.
Starlin quancrba~k Kruize
Wandltng wenl 0-for-1 pa&lt;S-

fromPageBl

Eastern 's
Mrke
Johnson
, rolls out
to throw a
pass dur·
ing Friday
night's
football
contest
against
Wahama
in Mason,
W.Va.

7
Urbana 28, Spnng. Shawnee 7
Van Wert 34 L1ma Bath 7
V1ncent Warren 14, Parkersburg
South wva 7
W. Alexandna Twin Valley S. 33,
Un1on C1ty M1ss1~sinawa Valley 20
W Jefferson 26. Cots Ready 18
W Lalayelte Ridgewood 34,
Warsaw R1ver V1ew 7
W Liberty-Salem 46, DeGraff
A1vers1de 0
W Salem NW 35 , Ashland
Mapleton 12
W Umty Hilltop 32, Holgate 14
Wahama W Va 47, Ree dsvtlle
Eastern 19
Warren ChampiOIJ 27 , Conneaut
20, SOT
Wauseon 48 , Swanton 0
Waverly 35 Wellston 21
Waynesville 24 , M1 lton-Un1on 20
Weir. W Va. 23. Richmond Edison 6
Wellsville
41 , L1sbon
David
Anderson 0
Wheelmg Central, W Va. 21, Cle
John Adams 0
Wheeling
Pa rk,
W.Va .
26,
Zanesville 7
W1tt1amspor1 Westfall 27, C1rclevjlle

lrmtni -i9rntinel • Page B3

Devils

'

PREP FOOTBALL

~mtba!'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

�Sunday, September 7, 2008

-Weekly Ohio Fishing Report.

Point Pleasant racks up nearly 500 yards in 42-10 win over Sissonville
BY lARRY CRUM

'

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - ·Now that is Point
Pleasant football.
Coming off of a disa~pointing loss to Galha
Academy a week ago, the
Big Blacks showed now
signs of a hangover lhis
week in racking up nearly
500 yards of offense in a
dominating 42-10 route of
Cardinal Conference foe
Sissonville Friday night al
Saunders Field.
· "I was really excited with
the way we were able lo
move lhe football . I think the
kids had something to prove
after last week," said PPHS
head coach Dave Darst.
"They feel like they outplayed Gallipolis and didn 't
win. llhought they would be
down on Monday and !hey
went out and had the best
week of practice that I have
been a part of here and it paid
off lomght."
.
Point Pleasanl ( 1-1 . 1-0
Cardinal) had two differenl
players break the I 00-yard
mark while B.J. Lloyd
opened up the passing game
for lhe first time this year,
finishing !he night with J 17
yards and two touchdowns
on 4-of-5 passing.
Bolh of his. scoring strikes
found Nathan Roberts who
finished with lhree receptions for 122 yards.
Allen Wasonga once again
led the Big Blacks ·in total
offense with 184 yards rushing and three touchdowns,
pushing his season total to
six scores through two
.j;ames. Derek Mitchell was
JUSt behind his teammate
wilh 14 carries for 135 yards
and Caleb Wasonga rushed
three times for 30 yards.
While the quintet of players made it look easy against
. the Indians (0-2, 0-1

Cardinal) Friday night, all of
that yardage was made possible. in mosl part, thanks to a
tremendous night from the
offensive line.
"Allen (Wasonga) had a
big night running the ball .
and I was really impressed
with Nathan Roberts catching the football for us
tonight. Our quarterback
·made some good decisions
and he is going to continue to
get better and benet," Darst
said. " But our offensive line .
Clay Krebs, Matt
Thompson, Eric Veith, Chase
Liptrap, Chase Daughertythey all had a big night. They
were moving people out of
!he way all night."
The Big Blacks also
received a boost from a
defense thai kept Sissonville
quarterback Scottie Derrick
on his toes all evening long.
PPHS forced Derrick into
some poor throws and came
up with a few timely sacks
while holding the Indians 'to
a total of I0 points on the
night - a big jump from the
40 points given up to the
Indians.last year.
Larry Crumlphoto
ihe defensive unit was led Point Pleasant's Allen Wasonga rushes for a gain during the third quarter of a .high school
by Derek Pinson and Phillip footb'all game against Sissonville Friday night in Point Pleasant, W Va. Wasonga finished the
Allen who got to the ball on
nearly every down. Mitchell, night with 184 yards and three touchdowns in a 42-10 Point Pleasant victory.
Roberts, Kenny Longwell back Raymond Bogge~s who during last year's 40-7 sea- · night for lhe sophomore.
and Matt Thompson also had eclipsed the 100-yar~ mark son opening loss to the
Afler . the score both
·strong nights on the de fen- with 142 yards on 18 carries. Indians.
defenses stepped up and
sive side of the ball in help'.'We had to make some big
And ·what a difference it forced a standoff that carried
ing shut down the high flying adjuslments tonight on was.
over into the second quarter
Sissonville attack.
After giving up an early where Wasonga again came
defense and when we "Shut
Bul while PPHS kept the that down they went to the field goal to kicker Jared through for the home team
Indians off of the scoreboard, spread and had s'ome sue- p
· ·
h ..
· h 25
d
·
. couldn't'
hold cess, but we still held them 10 roctor, gtvmg 1 e vtstlors a wfl .a -yar scamper, gtvthey
Sissonville back all night. 10 points," Darst said. "That J -0 lead five minutes 'tnto the ing Point a 14 ·-1 lead eight
Point Pleasant went to minutes before the half.
SHS still finished the night defense is really quick, they game.
work and never looked back.
Point Pleasant then exlendwith 302 yards of offense led are going to make some misTwo minutes after . the ed !hat advantage to three
by Derrick who threw for takes, but they make up for a
Sissonville score the Big scores at the break when
159 yards on 10-of-22 pass- lot with !heir quickness."
Point
Pleasant
also
helped
Blacks found the endzone for Lloyd fo~nd Roberts for. a
ing. Chris Hastings was on
the receiving end of most of itself out by only giving up the first lime when a drive . 38-yard pitch and catch with
!hose throws, finishing wilh one turnover on the night, a into the redzone was finished I:33 left in the half.
I04 yards on four receptions. vast difference from the five off with a 20-yard !ouchWhile Point owned all the
Poinl also gave up a few turnovers last week and down run by ·Wasonga -the momentum at the break, it
big plays to Sissonville tail- seven turnovers given away first of lhree scores on lhe was Sissonville I hat came

out with the edge in the second half, forcinj: a turnover
and driving instde the redzone midway through the
third quarter. While the drive
seemed to slaU, on a fourth
and nine Derrick found
Hastings in the endzone for a
15-yard touchdown pass to
cut the lead to 21-10 with
6: 18 left in the canto.
But thai is all !he closer
Sissonville would get as
PPHS posted the final three
scores to extend the lead to
32 points.
Two minutes after lhe
Indians touchdown Point
Pleasant drove deep inlo
Indian territory and finished
off the drive with a 3-yard
touchdown . run by Mitchell
to give the home team a 2810 lead after three quarters of
play.
While Point Pleasant held
a comfortable lead heading
into the final frame, it was in
.the fourth quarter that the
two biggest plays of the .
night were posled as
Wasonga broke free for a 68yard touchdown run and.
Roberts scored his second
touchdown of the night on a
72-yard TO pass from Lloyd.
Kicker Justin Weaver
helped cap the scoring at 4210 !hanks to a perfect 6-for-6
on·extra points.
··
Friday's 32-point viclory
caps a wild three-game
stretch against Indians as
Point posled the mosl points
in a game since the 2006 season finale in a 41-0 route of
Sissonville. . Sandwiched
between the two wins was
last year's 40· 7 loss.
The mosl importanl stat,
however is !he notch in !he
. win coiumn as ,the' Big
.Blacks open up !he season 10 in the conference.
Point Pleasant will next
face South Point during Hall
of Fame Night nexl Friday
starting at 7:30p.m.

Southern golf falls to Waterford
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS4i'MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

WATERFORD - Every
golf team involved in the TnValley Conference Hocking
Division may now be playing for second place, thanks
in large part to Waterford's
• 20-stroke
victory
over
. Southern last Thursday at
: Lakeside Golf Club in
Washington County.
: The Wildcats - the 2007
;TVC Hocking champions improved to 6-0 in league
· play this year and took a two; match lead on !he field with
:just four events left to be
· played.
The Tornadoes (4-2 TVC
Hocking) were alone in second place, but now move
into a tie with Trimble.
WHS fired a team total of
· 159, finishing way ahead of
the Purple and Gold's tally of
179.
But the day was not a complete loss for· the •Does, as
senior Bryan Harris won
medalist honors with a lover par round of 37.
Alex Hawley was next for
SHS with a 45, followed by

500 eatcf)able catfi$h tor a youth caltlsh derby. The ' steelhead is 12 Inches.
e~ wilt run from 9 a.m.·noon at the be~h parking lot
- Tlie black bass daily bag limit 1s fiVe fish with a 14·
off state Route 362. Open to kids 17 and younger. inch minimum size lirrut.
Parents are welcor'l'lfl! to come and hefp their lit11e ones
-The dally bag limit for Lake Erie yellow perch is 25
.'
bring in the big fi8h. For lnlormation call937·29S--20 11 . USh per angl8f in waters west of .the Huron pier. The
da~y bag limit is 30 fish par angler In Ohio waters from
OHIO RIVER
Huron eastward. Any boa~ landing waat of Huron,
CENTRAL OHIO
Ohlo
will be subject to the 25 fish ,dally bag Mmlt, white
Meld&amp;hl Dam lCiermont County) - Anglers are
boats
landing at Huron or points east wt11 be subject to
reporting steady fishing. with catches ot gar, cat fish, a
Alum Creek Lake (Delaware County) - Cast latgt
few wtlit:e ·bass. Try fishing up close to the dam. plugs or spoons into shallow water areas of the a 30 fish daily bag limit. Shore-based anglere west of
Oaylight hOurs until dusk have been producing good recessed bays In the lower end of the lake when seek· the Huron pier will be subject to a 25 fish dally ·bag
nut:nbers but early evenfng until dawn have been good ll'}g muskellunge. When trolling for muskellunge , con· limit, while those on th e pier and easiward will rernt'ln
at 30 fish daily.
for Cat fish. Try chicken 6ver, cut shad.
centrale your efforts at depths of six to 10 feet near the
•
- The walleye bag limit is 6 fish per day. The mini·
dam. Largemou-th bass and crappie wm be Jound In
mum
size limit for walleye is 15 inches. .
shallow water areas that contain eubmerged cover. Try ·
·· SOUTHEAST OHIO
top water baits and spinner baits for tmaltmouth and
Western Basin-Walleye fishing has remained slow
largemouth bass 1T~tHng llve bait figs and crank baits
But-r Qak Lake (Athens and Morgln counties) over
the past _week. The best fishing was around
-are popular for saugeye. Saugeye can move to very
largemouth bass were reported being ·caught ualng shallow water In the evening along the dam and cause· North"M~st Reef (northwest ar West Reef). Drifting with
worm harriesa and plastic worms during the daytime. ways.
bottom bouncers and worm harne98es or casttng
Night flshlrig success. }"'ith lop weter bafts can ,be
mayfly
rigs has been productive. Trollers have been
Dee~ Creek Lake {Fayette , Madison, and Pickaway
' another good technique to try. Night fishing for Channel
catcl11ng
fish on spoons with divers, or worm harness-counties) - Crappie is providing the action at Deer
is normally reliable at most major tributary sites
es
fished
with inline weights, snap weights, bottOm
Creek as we wait for the saugeye rishing to pick up
within the lake. Tight·Une fish ing using night crawlers or
bouncers, or divers.
later this month. Fish woody structure using a jig or
c:htck:en fivers Is the preferred method. An occasional
Yellow Perch fishing has been good l.n the western
minnow suspended by a bobber. Crappie must be nine
saugeye is being reported as an incidental catch white
inches or longer to keep here . Baitfisll abound right basin . The best spots have been the turnaround buoy
fiohing for t&gt;ass.
.
nbw creating a challenge tb anglers. Channel catfish of the Toledo shipping channel, ~tween Green and
Piedrno.nt Lake {Betrnont C9unty} - Saugeye are being caught both In the middle and shoreline of Rattlesnake Islands, north ot Rattlesnake Island, and
· anglers report catches that are In the 12-inch range. the lake using night crawlers In Thl3 evenings
f.ou r miles w"est of North Bass Island. Perch spreaders
'fry fishing•l'n t3 to 14 feet of water. On blight daya fish
or crappie rigs with shiners !1shtd near the bottom prodeeper and 011 overcast- days cast In more shallow
duce the most fish.
NORTHEAST OHIO
water. The M.st saugeye technique has bMn vertiCal
Central Basin-Walleye fishing has slowed west of
jigging with twiS1er tails in a variety of colors tipped with
Cleveland with the best area belng the sandbar
a· night crawler. Largemouth bass fishing has been
Tappan Lake (Harrison CountylAwide variety of fish between Vermilion and lorain. Fishing continues to be
picking up wilh anglers using a variety of crank baits or species can be caught Including crappie, largemouth slow in the Cleveland area this past week so there are
1s&lt;iln~er baits cast along the shoreline. Shad are mov· bass, bluegill, Channel catfish, white bass. and saug· no locat1ons to report. Very good fishing has been
'
I i~B in1kl troe lo•wer end of the lake, making shack:olored eye.
reported 10 to 20 miles north of Geneva In 72 to 74feet
the most successful. Catfish anglers continue to
Atwood lake (Carroll and Tuscarawas counties)- or wate r. and eight to 12 miles north or Ashtabula in 70
bee tt.~Ceessfut bY tight·lining off the bottom with cut Species often caught by anglers llere include saugeye, to 74 feet of water. Trollers are using worm harnesses ,
bait, chicken livers and night crawlers.
largemouth bass, crappie, white bass, and especially spoons or stick baits ott jet divers, dlpsy divers, planer
channel catfish . One olthe best ways to catch saugeye . boards Wld downriggers. Worm harnesses and spoons
Is to use a small jig (1/32 or 118) and tip it with a piece continue to be the lop baits. The. best action has been
SOUTHWEST OHIO
of night crawler. Simply cast , let the ball sink, and slow~ about 25 to 50 feet down , and the best colors have
ly retrieve . The strike will be gentle so cWatch for a been chartreuse , purple. orang&amp;, green, and black with
Acton Lake (Preble County) - Channet catfish are twitch in the line.
·
·
copper or gold/red.
bitfng on c::reek chubs of night crawlers fished along the
YeUow perch fishing is very good oftshore In the
I bottom or between eight to 19 feet deep during the late
Cleveland area and east to donneaut. The best spots
NORTHWEST OHIO
I "'ronl•no or early morning hOurs. Fishing fpr chanr,el
to fi sh are northwest of Gordon Pal'k in 35 to 45 feet of
&lt;
Is productive anywhere In the lake. Blueglll are
water, northwest of Edgewlter Parto: In 40 to 4S feet of
being caught by anglers using wax worms or night
Huron River (Huron County) - The wat~r is clear
water, north of Ashtabula In 65 to 70 feet ol water, and
cn•wl&lt;ol6 as bait Bluegill fishing Is bountiful along the but the river level is low, Rock bass are being taken by
north of Conneaut ii"l 60 to 65 feet of water. You may try
~nks. Saugeye are active in !his take. Currenlly, saug· casting red worms into the deeper holes of the river.
fishing further offshore this week than normal. FiSh
eye are being Caught by anglers using night crawlers, Day time and nlg11t is equally good.
may also be suspended in the '#ater column untit the
bass minnows, or jigs as bait. Fish the ~t by trotting it.
W_iltafd Reservoir (Hu.ron County) - Tile water is
recent upwelling ot low oxygenated water settles back
I llirOUilh In wa1er that is eight 10 10 feet deep.
cltar and.water levels are normal. Channel catfish are
down tO the deeper portiOns ol the lake. Perch spread·
East Fork {Ciermon1 County)- Cr8pple .are being being taken after dark. Still fishing night crawlers on ers or crappi, rigs with shiners fished near the bottom
caught by anglers using wax wOrms, tube" jigs, orn\edi· the bot1om is working well. The fishing can be spotty so usually prOduces the most fish, however, this week you
um ~o large sized minnows tipped on chartreuse Jigs" k~ moving around the shorelir,e until you find a~ may want to fish live to 10 feet up from the bottom due
ball. Ash th8 bait six to eight inches deep or 16 to 20 · araa.
to the conditions. Fish have ranged frorn--eight to 13
fet;t deep. Also look for good crappie fishing back into
Outhwaite Reservoir (Crawford County) - Fair inches.
the cove areas as Well as up and into Tunnel Mitt;, . numbers of channel catfish are being caught during the
White bass fishing has-been good oft Eutlake CEI
Cabin, Barnes·, Poplar. and Cloverllck creeks. Ch&amp;nnel nlghnime hours. The anglers with the most success ·
power plant in 16 to 30 feet ot water. ~aters are using·
'·I cal!lsh are being caught" by anglers fishing tight·lirie al ·are uslng liver for ball and fishing it on ttfe bottom agitalors ·with blue/silver spoons and J!bs tipped with
using night crawlers, large minnows, or chicken Moat c~ennel catfish.are averaging 12 to16 inches. A twister tail s
as ball. Use a No. 1/0 long-shankad hook. Fishing Jew have been In the four to five-pound range.
Smallmouth bass fishing has been very good prior
In water between eight to 20 feet deep. Bluegill
Atley Reservoir (Crawford County)- Fair numbers
to the upwelling of low oxygenated waters this past
are- hlttinQ on wax worm s or red worms on a No. B· . of ehannel tatflsh are being caught during the night·
week. We expect li,shing to pick bad( up in ttle harbor
hook. Keep thij bait under a bobber and about ttme hours. Anglers are using liver lor bait and fishing areas around Cleveland, Fairport HarbOr, Aeh1abuta
to
feet de"p.' Cast anywhf;tM afound the it on the boHt?m . Most olthe fish have been caught in
and ConneaUt harbOrs. Angler~ have been lishing In 15
li:koef!s,
wood, 0r dOW!led Ire~. Hybrid striped ·the OQ(th a~d .northwest corner of the reservoir.
to 25··feet of water. Fish are being caught on wa.ter·
being caught by ~lers fishing the· near &amp;!e
e'ucyrus Reservoir No. 2 (Crawford County) -This
melon. pumpkinseed and green tube jigs and dropmain
and the
near the reservoir is also known as The Pines . Fair numbers of shot goby imitations.
~ cQ tt'a '! channel catfish are being caught during the ,tghttlmiJ
Steethead are being caught by anglers while wall·
o~
crank baitl that· noul-s Wtllle liSing liver for bah and fishing it on the bo1· eye fish ing 7 to 15 miles offshore from Geneva and
ars working well. The earty momlng or tom. These fish are averaging 121016 Inches.
Ashtabula in 65 to 74 feet of wate,. Anglers are catch·
hours are the r:nost productive times.
lng sreefhead on blue or green with silver spoons while
:1 ~~~o;: bass are being caught by anglers using
trolling using qownriggers, dlpsy cJtvers.:or let dtwus, off
'
LAKE
ERIE
~:
, plastic worms, spinner baits,1or deep diving
• pta"et boards.
to 10 feet) crank baits colored shad or fire tiger.
· Based on the nearshore forecast the water temper·
Lake Loramie (Shelby County) - Youth Catlish
-The StHihead trout daily bag limit Sept. 1 through
ature
is 71 off ofTo!edo and Cleveland.
Derby, Satu~day, Sept. 6. The take will be stocked with May 15 drops to 2 fish . The minimum size limit for

r••"'""

I

Hawley

Zach Ash and Andrew
Roseberry with respeclive
rounds of 48 and 49. ·
Taylor Deem and Nalhan
Roush also posted scores of
51 and 59, respectively,
Waterford was led by
Casey Branham with a 38,
followed by Brad Miller with
a 39 and Kyle Allen with a
4Q_ Steve Wetz rounded out
lhe team scoring with a 42,
Aaron Miller and Joe
Rogers also fired respective
rounds of 42 and 55 for the
victors.
Southern returns to TV C
Hocking · action Tuesday
when it plays Miller at Forest
Hills. The match will start at
4:~0p.m.

Check out who is *New to the Castrop Center/
• American Cancer Society Patient Navlgfltor**
J. Stanley Haehl*
• Athens Cancer Center- Radiation Oqcology.**
(located at the north entrance of the Castrop Center)

A,njalf Ambekar, M.D.
Aaron 0. Williams, M.D.

• Athens P•thology ·
Scott A. Jenkinson, D.O.

• Athens Surgery Center**
• Eye Pliysldons and Surgeons of Atlten~ Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, M.D.
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, M.D.

Roll

dowris. Bolin caught fiye
for 148 yards and Davis two
for 42.
For River Valley Curnutte
fromPageBl
had 45 yards in 14 carries.
went into lhe locker room . The jumor also had an outwith a 33-13 lead.
standing game throwing the
Smith returned the second ball completing ·14 of 20 for
h If k' k0 ff 20
d ki k0 ff 199 yards and a couple of
· a
tc
-yar
c
scores. Jordan Dee! caught
· to the Marauder 45, on first
: down Jeremy scored his six for 104 yards , Cody
·. fourth and final score of the McAvena three for 43, and
Travis Roush two for 19 .
: evening going the distance
"This win was for Coach
55 ·yard for the score. The Dixon," Marauder coached
'kick was no good, but
Meifs held the.3 9_13 lead at Mike Chancey said after the
. : the I :44 mark of the third game in honor of Don
Dixon who passed away last
~ peg~ again the Raiders Sunday al his home after a .
long illness. Dixon a long
· d · ·
: re fuse d to qutl, nvmg 67 time lelicher in the Meigs
·,yards in seven plays, with Local School Dislrict was
.;Curnutte hooking up with an assistant coach under
.Oeel from 15 yards out.
Johnson's kick at the 8:05 Mike's dad Charlie when he
was
head
coach.
· mark of the period made it ThenCoach Dixon coached
capped off · the the · junior high teams for
. scoring in !he fourth period several years, and help
scout future opponents for
·:when Cory Hullon· scored Meigs for several years,
:.rrom one yard out on the ,The Mctgs team wore a
~first play of lhe period. black sticker on the helmets
~Metts added the kick to
:·close out the scoring at 53- with the initials DO for the
contest. "He was a great
20
:. Smith
·
led Meigs with his member of the Marauder
•.212 yards in just 13 tries, football family for many
:Jeffery Roush added 47 yars and he will be missed.
·yards in four carries and
Chancey went on to say,
:Hutton 34 in eight. Well had '"River Valley played hard,
:. an oulstanding game com- they didn't give up. This
: pleting eight of 12 for 197 . was a great learn win, but
·yards and three touch- we stan a new season next
week in the TVC."

Linda B. Tome. D.O.

• fflmily •n4 Sports MediCine
Will A. Rosenberg, M.D..

• GenerGI Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt, M.D., F.A.C.S.

• Healtti first Care Cenr.rlmber Coppinger, D.O.
Rebecca Huston, D.O.
Asha Yellamraju. M.D.
Margaret Tonkovich. C.N.P.

•Internal Medicine, Infectious DIStOse
Andrew R. Murry. M.D.

•lnttrn•l Medicine, Gastroenterology
Steven G. Carin Jr., D.O.

•lnternol Medldne, Nephrology
John P. Maclaurin, D.O.
• Lung 0/stoses. Slttp MC41dne
Christopher 5. Ryckman, M.D .. F.C.C.P.
•Neurology
Gary E. Cordingley, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.A.N.

• Neurosurgery
Ward P. Buster, D.O.

.• Oakvltw DemHitology•
Dawn Sammons. D.O.*

Continuous CRP great
program for wildlife
Nationwide. as well as
here in soulheastern Ohio. ·
there i' onefederal program
that
benefits
wildlife.
landowners and the environment.
The
Continuous
CoQservation
Re s.erve
Program is a voluntary program that helps farmer'
improve water quality, control soil erosion and enhance
wildlife habitat. In return.
they receive annual rentai
payments .. CRP is administered by the United Slates
Department of Agriculture's
Farm Service Agency wirh
other agencies providing
technical support.
In our part of the stale.
CRP is ge nerally used ro create "buffer" strips betWeen
streams and paslures. or
between .streams and crop·
fields. These strips, consisting of frees. grasses or
shrubs help prevent soil erosion. reduce sedimentation
in streams and help prevent
pesticides or nutrients from
getting into I he water.
While . the benefits to
wildlife are well documented , how about the benefits to
the landowner'!
CRP can be approved
year-ro!md for eligible sensitive areas nexl ro permanent
streams. lakes and ponds.
Continuous CRP offers automatic acceptance (for eligible properly). guaranteeu
yearly
inco me
despite
floods, drought, you-nameit, little or no 111aintenance
after installation and ' the
po.tential · for future income
from timber harvests.
'
Generally, once the land
has been enrolled into CRP it
cannot be used for agricultural purposes for the life of
the wntract- I 0-to-15-years.
Eligible land includes cropland and marginal pastureland. If cropland, must have
been cropped four out of six
years from 2002 through
2007 as certified through the
Farm Service Agency.
In Meigs County there are
currently 25 CRP contracts
totaling 312 acres. Minimum
'width of the filler strips is 35
feet with a maximum width
of 300 feet in alluvial cropland soi Is and marginal pas-

In the
Open
Jim Freeman
tureland. The co't ;hare rate
for planting trees or planting
grasses is around 90 percent
with a signing ince ntive pay·
ment of SI 00 per acre. ·
· For marginal pastureland.

the annual rental rate is $65
per acre plus a 20 percent
incentive paymcnl and $2
maintenance rate for a total
of $XO per year per acre.
For eligible c:~·upland, the
annual rent;d rate i' based on
soil type; ranging from $48
to SI 02 per &lt;ine plus a 20
percent incenti·ve payment
and $2 maintenance rate for
a total ;111 yw here between
$60 and S12-+ per acre.
An additional CRP is the
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Habital ,Initiative which is
used 10 provide . food and
cover for bnhwhite quail and
other ' wildlife in cropland
areas. The practice involves
the planting of native warmscil~on grasses. leg umes,
forb s and limited shrub and
lree plantings around field
edges of eligible croplands
(which has been cropped
four mil of six yea rs between
2002 and 2007)
Bene(ils uf the Northern
Bobwhite Quail Habitat
Initiative include automatic
enrollment. of eligible crop~
land ~ no competitive ranking, enroll rh e least productive areas of your crop fields
· .the edges. hutfer one, two
or all sides of ynur field s,
buffer
woodlots
and
hedgerows where crop yield
is lowest. us.e to straighten
oul irregular field edges,
reduce soil erosion and pro,
v.ide habilal for bobwhile
quail anclother wildlife.
For more information on
Continuous CRP. contact
your local Farm Service
Agency.

liM RT

The Castrop Center is a spacious facility with healthcare specialists, lab, imaging, physical therapy,
speech therapy and a pharmacy- including several O'Bieness Health System affiliates.

• F•mlly Mtflldnt

~ 46J~igs

COLUMBUS (AP) ..~-_ The weekly fishing report proYklld by Jhe Division of Wildlife olthe Ohio Department
ot NB.tural Resources

..

Harris

$!ilunllav m:imrs-ii&gt;rnttnrl• Page 85

Sundjly, September 7, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

LCRUMOMYOA.ILYREGISTER.COM

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

• 0'81tness DermatolofY Residency Cll'!k"
Shannon Campbell, D.O., Resident
Ramona Sarsama Nixon, D.O., Resident
Sean Stephenson, D.\)., Resident*

• O'lltness Labonrtory StJttllltt**
• O'lleness Patient ReglstNtlon StJttllltt"
• O'lleMss Radioiogy and Imaging Sel"'kes"
Bone Density • Mammography· RadiOgraphy

• 0'8/lfltst Rehabllltt~tlon C.nt.r** ·
Physical Therapy· Speech Therapy

• 0'81eneu Wc!men's Het~lth Residency Clinic••
Linda Barnhar.t, D.O.• Intern*
Leah Goodson, D.O., Intern*
Holly Patton, D.O., Resident
. Megan Porter, D.O., Resident
Tanya Porter, D.O., Resident
Linda Ross, D.O., Resident

• Oncology/Hematology Conwlt•nt.
ofSouthtOsttrn Ohio
Utpal K. Bhanja, M.D. .
• Orthopefllc Surgery
Steven M. Miller, M.D.

• Otomlnol•ryngology (E•;, Nose, •nd Throat}
·Michael W. Tome, D.O.
• Podiatry, Podit1trlc Surrery
Earl L. Driggs, D.P.M.

• RIHt Rose Obstttrla A GynteolotY"
Bruce B. Banias, M.D.
Kathleen M. Bertuna, D.o.•
Jane E. Broecker, M.D.
Michael J. Clark. D.O.
Jack M. Ramey, D.O.
Anna Wright, D.O.*

• The o,.,srore**
Kurt Conkey, Pharm.D.*

. . ' . .$11,006
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i3 793 miles. Bel 01 Factory WarrJnty. local 1!'8d~ . custom Wheels.
culilom gr~le."loacHtd WfliiQulprnem. EPA r11ted 16 MPG

Vehicles Under $10 000
Vehicles Under $10,000 Continued ·
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-- - - - - -- - -

..•

�Sunday, September 7, 2008

-Weekly Ohio Fishing Report.

Point Pleasant racks up nearly 500 yards in 42-10 win over Sissonville
BY lARRY CRUM

'

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - ·Now that is Point
Pleasant football.
Coming off of a disa~pointing loss to Galha
Academy a week ago, the
Big Blacks showed now
signs of a hangover lhis
week in racking up nearly
500 yards of offense in a
dominating 42-10 route of
Cardinal Conference foe
Sissonville Friday night al
Saunders Field.
· "I was really excited with
the way we were able lo
move lhe football . I think the
kids had something to prove
after last week," said PPHS
head coach Dave Darst.
"They feel like they outplayed Gallipolis and didn 't
win. llhought they would be
down on Monday and !hey
went out and had the best
week of practice that I have
been a part of here and it paid
off lomght."
.
Point Pleasanl ( 1-1 . 1-0
Cardinal) had two differenl
players break the I 00-yard
mark while B.J. Lloyd
opened up the passing game
for lhe first time this year,
finishing !he night with J 17
yards and two touchdowns
on 4-of-5 passing.
Bolh of his. scoring strikes
found Nathan Roberts who
finished with lhree receptions for 122 yards.
Allen Wasonga once again
led the Big Blacks ·in total
offense with 184 yards rushing and three touchdowns,
pushing his season total to
six scores through two
.j;ames. Derek Mitchell was
JUSt behind his teammate
wilh 14 carries for 135 yards
and Caleb Wasonga rushed
three times for 30 yards.
While the quintet of players made it look easy against
. the Indians (0-2, 0-1

Cardinal) Friday night, all of
that yardage was made possible. in mosl part, thanks to a
tremendous night from the
offensive line.
"Allen (Wasonga) had a
big night running the ball .
and I was really impressed
with Nathan Roberts catching the football for us
tonight. Our quarterback
·made some good decisions
and he is going to continue to
get better and benet," Darst
said. " But our offensive line .
Clay Krebs, Matt
Thompson, Eric Veith, Chase
Liptrap, Chase Daughertythey all had a big night. They
were moving people out of
!he way all night."
The Big Blacks also
received a boost from a
defense thai kept Sissonville
quarterback Scottie Derrick
on his toes all evening long.
PPHS forced Derrick into
some poor throws and came
up with a few timely sacks
while holding the Indians 'to
a total of I0 points on the
night - a big jump from the
40 points given up to the
Indians.last year.
Larry Crumlphoto
ihe defensive unit was led Point Pleasant's Allen Wasonga rushes for a gain during the third quarter of a .high school
by Derek Pinson and Phillip footb'all game against Sissonville Friday night in Point Pleasant, W Va. Wasonga finished the
Allen who got to the ball on
nearly every down. Mitchell, night with 184 yards and three touchdowns in a 42-10 Point Pleasant victory.
Roberts, Kenny Longwell back Raymond Bogge~s who during last year's 40-7 sea- · night for lhe sophomore.
and Matt Thompson also had eclipsed the 100-yar~ mark son opening loss to the
Afler . the score both
·strong nights on the de fen- with 142 yards on 18 carries. Indians.
defenses stepped up and
sive side of the ball in help'.'We had to make some big
And ·what a difference it forced a standoff that carried
ing shut down the high flying adjuslments tonight on was.
over into the second quarter
Sissonville attack.
After giving up an early where Wasonga again came
defense and when we "Shut
Bul while PPHS kept the that down they went to the field goal to kicker Jared through for the home team
Indians off of the scoreboard, spread and had s'ome sue- p
· ·
h ..
· h 25
d
·
. couldn't'
hold cess, but we still held them 10 roctor, gtvmg 1 e vtstlors a wfl .a -yar scamper, gtvthey
Sissonville back all night. 10 points," Darst said. "That J -0 lead five minutes 'tnto the ing Point a 14 ·-1 lead eight
Point Pleasant went to minutes before the half.
SHS still finished the night defense is really quick, they game.
work and never looked back.
Point Pleasant then exlendwith 302 yards of offense led are going to make some misTwo minutes after . the ed !hat advantage to three
by Derrick who threw for takes, but they make up for a
Sissonville score the Big scores at the break when
159 yards on 10-of-22 pass- lot with !heir quickness."
Point
Pleasant
also
helped
Blacks found the endzone for Lloyd fo~nd Roberts for. a
ing. Chris Hastings was on
the receiving end of most of itself out by only giving up the first lime when a drive . 38-yard pitch and catch with
!hose throws, finishing wilh one turnover on the night, a into the redzone was finished I:33 left in the half.
I04 yards on four receptions. vast difference from the five off with a 20-yard !ouchWhile Point owned all the
Poinl also gave up a few turnovers last week and down run by ·Wasonga -the momentum at the break, it
big plays to Sissonville tail- seven turnovers given away first of lhree scores on lhe was Sissonville I hat came

out with the edge in the second half, forcinj: a turnover
and driving instde the redzone midway through the
third quarter. While the drive
seemed to slaU, on a fourth
and nine Derrick found
Hastings in the endzone for a
15-yard touchdown pass to
cut the lead to 21-10 with
6: 18 left in the canto.
But thai is all !he closer
Sissonville would get as
PPHS posted the final three
scores to extend the lead to
32 points.
Two minutes after lhe
Indians touchdown Point
Pleasant drove deep inlo
Indian territory and finished
off the drive with a 3-yard
touchdown . run by Mitchell
to give the home team a 2810 lead after three quarters of
play.
While Point Pleasant held
a comfortable lead heading
into the final frame, it was in
.the fourth quarter that the
two biggest plays of the .
night were posled as
Wasonga broke free for a 68yard touchdown run and.
Roberts scored his second
touchdown of the night on a
72-yard TO pass from Lloyd.
Kicker Justin Weaver
helped cap the scoring at 4210 !hanks to a perfect 6-for-6
on·extra points.
··
Friday's 32-point viclory
caps a wild three-game
stretch against Indians as
Point posled the mosl points
in a game since the 2006 season finale in a 41-0 route of
Sissonville. . Sandwiched
between the two wins was
last year's 40· 7 loss.
The mosl importanl stat,
however is !he notch in !he
. win coiumn as ,the' Big
.Blacks open up !he season 10 in the conference.
Point Pleasant will next
face South Point during Hall
of Fame Night nexl Friday
starting at 7:30p.m.

Southern golf falls to Waterford
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS4i'MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

WATERFORD - Every
golf team involved in the TnValley Conference Hocking
Division may now be playing for second place, thanks
in large part to Waterford's
• 20-stroke
victory
over
. Southern last Thursday at
: Lakeside Golf Club in
Washington County.
: The Wildcats - the 2007
;TVC Hocking champions improved to 6-0 in league
· play this year and took a two; match lead on !he field with
:just four events left to be
· played.
The Tornadoes (4-2 TVC
Hocking) were alone in second place, but now move
into a tie with Trimble.
WHS fired a team total of
· 159, finishing way ahead of
the Purple and Gold's tally of
179.
But the day was not a complete loss for· the •Does, as
senior Bryan Harris won
medalist honors with a lover par round of 37.
Alex Hawley was next for
SHS with a 45, followed by

500 eatcf)able catfi$h tor a youth caltlsh derby. The ' steelhead is 12 Inches.
e~ wilt run from 9 a.m.·noon at the be~h parking lot
- Tlie black bass daily bag limit 1s fiVe fish with a 14·
off state Route 362. Open to kids 17 and younger. inch minimum size lirrut.
Parents are welcor'l'lfl! to come and hefp their lit11e ones
-The dally bag limit for Lake Erie yellow perch is 25
.'
bring in the big fi8h. For lnlormation call937·29S--20 11 . USh per angl8f in waters west of .the Huron pier. The
da~y bag limit is 30 fish par angler In Ohio waters from
OHIO RIVER
Huron eastward. Any boa~ landing waat of Huron,
CENTRAL OHIO
Ohlo
will be subject to the 25 fish ,dally bag Mmlt, white
Meld&amp;hl Dam lCiermont County) - Anglers are
boats
landing at Huron or points east wt11 be subject to
reporting steady fishing. with catches ot gar, cat fish, a
Alum Creek Lake (Delaware County) - Cast latgt
few wtlit:e ·bass. Try fishing up close to the dam. plugs or spoons into shallow water areas of the a 30 fish daily bag limit. Shore-based anglere west of
Oaylight hOurs until dusk have been producing good recessed bays In the lower end of the lake when seek· the Huron pier will be subject to a 25 fish dally ·bag
nut:nbers but early evenfng until dawn have been good ll'}g muskellunge. When trolling for muskellunge , con· limit, while those on th e pier and easiward will rernt'ln
at 30 fish daily.
for Cat fish. Try chicken 6ver, cut shad.
centrale your efforts at depths of six to 10 feet near the
•
- The walleye bag limit is 6 fish per day. The mini·
dam. Largemou-th bass and crappie wm be Jound In
mum
size limit for walleye is 15 inches. .
shallow water areas that contain eubmerged cover. Try ·
·· SOUTHEAST OHIO
top water baits and spinner baits for tmaltmouth and
Western Basin-Walleye fishing has remained slow
largemouth bass 1T~tHng llve bait figs and crank baits
But-r Qak Lake (Athens and Morgln counties) over
the past _week. The best fishing was around
-are popular for saugeye. Saugeye can move to very
largemouth bass were reported being ·caught ualng shallow water In the evening along the dam and cause· North"M~st Reef (northwest ar West Reef). Drifting with
worm harriesa and plastic worms during the daytime. ways.
bottom bouncers and worm harne98es or casttng
Night flshlrig success. }"'ith lop weter bafts can ,be
mayfly
rigs has been productive. Trollers have been
Dee~ Creek Lake {Fayette , Madison, and Pickaway
' another good technique to try. Night fishing for Channel
catcl11ng
fish on spoons with divers, or worm harness-counties) - Crappie is providing the action at Deer
is normally reliable at most major tributary sites
es
fished
with inline weights, snap weights, bottOm
Creek as we wait for the saugeye rishing to pick up
within the lake. Tight·Une fish ing using night crawlers or
bouncers, or divers.
later this month. Fish woody structure using a jig or
c:htck:en fivers Is the preferred method. An occasional
Yellow Perch fishing has been good l.n the western
minnow suspended by a bobber. Crappie must be nine
saugeye is being reported as an incidental catch white
inches or longer to keep here . Baitfisll abound right basin . The best spots have been the turnaround buoy
fiohing for t&gt;ass.
.
nbw creating a challenge tb anglers. Channel catfish of the Toledo shipping channel, ~tween Green and
Piedrno.nt Lake {Betrnont C9unty} - Saugeye are being caught both In the middle and shoreline of Rattlesnake Islands, north ot Rattlesnake Island, and
· anglers report catches that are In the 12-inch range. the lake using night crawlers In Thl3 evenings
f.ou r miles w"est of North Bass Island. Perch spreaders
'fry fishing•l'n t3 to 14 feet of water. On blight daya fish
or crappie rigs with shiners !1shtd near the bottom prodeeper and 011 overcast- days cast In more shallow
duce the most fish.
NORTHEAST OHIO
water. The M.st saugeye technique has bMn vertiCal
Central Basin-Walleye fishing has slowed west of
jigging with twiS1er tails in a variety of colors tipped with
Cleveland with the best area belng the sandbar
a· night crawler. Largemouth bass fishing has been
Tappan Lake (Harrison CountylAwide variety of fish between Vermilion and lorain. Fishing continues to be
picking up wilh anglers using a variety of crank baits or species can be caught Including crappie, largemouth slow in the Cleveland area this past week so there are
1s&lt;iln~er baits cast along the shoreline. Shad are mov· bass, bluegill, Channel catfish, white bass. and saug· no locat1ons to report. Very good fishing has been
'
I i~B in1kl troe lo•wer end of the lake, making shack:olored eye.
reported 10 to 20 miles north of Geneva In 72 to 74feet
the most successful. Catfish anglers continue to
Atwood lake (Carroll and Tuscarawas counties)- or wate r. and eight to 12 miles north or Ashtabula in 70
bee tt.~Ceessfut bY tight·lining off the bottom with cut Species often caught by anglers llere include saugeye, to 74 feet of water. Trollers are using worm harnesses ,
bait, chicken livers and night crawlers.
largemouth bass, crappie, white bass, and especially spoons or stick baits ott jet divers, dlpsy divers, planer
channel catfish . One olthe best ways to catch saugeye . boards Wld downriggers. Worm harnesses and spoons
Is to use a small jig (1/32 or 118) and tip it with a piece continue to be the lop baits. The. best action has been
SOUTHWEST OHIO
of night crawler. Simply cast , let the ball sink, and slow~ about 25 to 50 feet down , and the best colors have
ly retrieve . The strike will be gentle so cWatch for a been chartreuse , purple. orang&amp;, green, and black with
Acton Lake (Preble County) - Channet catfish are twitch in the line.
·
·
copper or gold/red.
bitfng on c::reek chubs of night crawlers fished along the
YeUow perch fishing is very good oftshore In the
I bottom or between eight to 19 feet deep during the late
Cleveland area and east to donneaut. The best spots
NORTHWEST OHIO
I "'ronl•no or early morning hOurs. Fishing fpr chanr,el
to fi sh are northwest of Gordon Pal'k in 35 to 45 feet of
&lt;
Is productive anywhere In the lake. Blueglll are
water, northwest of Edgewlter Parto: In 40 to 4S feet of
being caught by anglers using wax worms or night
Huron River (Huron County) - The wat~r is clear
water, north of Ashtabula In 65 to 70 feet ol water, and
cn•wl&lt;ol6 as bait Bluegill fishing Is bountiful along the but the river level is low, Rock bass are being taken by
north of Conneaut ii"l 60 to 65 feet of water. You may try
~nks. Saugeye are active in !his take. Currenlly, saug· casting red worms into the deeper holes of the river.
fishing further offshore this week than normal. FiSh
eye are being Caught by anglers using night crawlers, Day time and nlg11t is equally good.
may also be suspended in the '#ater column untit the
bass minnows, or jigs as bait. Fish the ~t by trotting it.
W_iltafd Reservoir (Hu.ron County) - Tile water is
recent upwelling ot low oxygenated water settles back
I llirOUilh In wa1er that is eight 10 10 feet deep.
cltar and.water levels are normal. Channel catfish are
down tO the deeper portiOns ol the lake. Perch spread·
East Fork {Ciermon1 County)- Cr8pple .are being being taken after dark. Still fishing night crawlers on ers or crappi, rigs with shiners fished near the bottom
caught by anglers using wax wOrms, tube" jigs, orn\edi· the bot1om is working well. The fishing can be spotty so usually prOduces the most fish, however, this week you
um ~o large sized minnows tipped on chartreuse Jigs" k~ moving around the shorelir,e until you find a~ may want to fish live to 10 feet up from the bottom due
ball. Ash th8 bait six to eight inches deep or 16 to 20 · araa.
to the conditions. Fish have ranged frorn--eight to 13
fet;t deep. Also look for good crappie fishing back into
Outhwaite Reservoir (Crawford County) - Fair inches.
the cove areas as Well as up and into Tunnel Mitt;, . numbers of channel catfish are being caught during the
White bass fishing has-been good oft Eutlake CEI
Cabin, Barnes·, Poplar. and Cloverllck creeks. Ch&amp;nnel nlghnime hours. The anglers with the most success ·
power plant in 16 to 30 feet ot water. ~aters are using·
'·I cal!lsh are being caught" by anglers fishing tight·lirie al ·are uslng liver for ball and fishing it on ttfe bottom agitalors ·with blue/silver spoons and J!bs tipped with
using night crawlers, large minnows, or chicken Moat c~ennel catfish.are averaging 12 to16 inches. A twister tail s
as ball. Use a No. 1/0 long-shankad hook. Fishing Jew have been In the four to five-pound range.
Smallmouth bass fishing has been very good prior
In water between eight to 20 feet deep. Bluegill
Atley Reservoir (Crawford County)- Fair numbers
to the upwelling of low oxygenated waters this past
are- hlttinQ on wax worm s or red worms on a No. B· . of ehannel tatflsh are being caught during the night·
week. We expect li,shing to pick bad( up in ttle harbor
hook. Keep thij bait under a bobber and about ttme hours. Anglers are using liver lor bait and fishing areas around Cleveland, Fairport HarbOr, Aeh1abuta
to
feet de"p.' Cast anywhf;tM afound the it on the boHt?m . Most olthe fish have been caught in
and ConneaUt harbOrs. Angler~ have been lishing In 15
li:koef!s,
wood, 0r dOW!led Ire~. Hybrid striped ·the OQ(th a~d .northwest corner of the reservoir.
to 25··feet of water. Fish are being caught on wa.ter·
being caught by ~lers fishing the· near &amp;!e
e'ucyrus Reservoir No. 2 (Crawford County) -This
melon. pumpkinseed and green tube jigs and dropmain
and the
near the reservoir is also known as The Pines . Fair numbers of shot goby imitations.
~ cQ tt'a '! channel catfish are being caught during the ,tghttlmiJ
Steethead are being caught by anglers while wall·
o~
crank baitl that· noul-s Wtllle liSing liver for bah and fishing it on the bo1· eye fish ing 7 to 15 miles offshore from Geneva and
ars working well. The earty momlng or tom. These fish are averaging 121016 Inches.
Ashtabula in 65 to 74 feet of wate,. Anglers are catch·
hours are the r:nost productive times.
lng sreefhead on blue or green with silver spoons while
:1 ~~~o;: bass are being caught by anglers using
trolling using qownriggers, dlpsy cJtvers.:or let dtwus, off
'
LAKE
ERIE
~:
, plastic worms, spinner baits,1or deep diving
• pta"et boards.
to 10 feet) crank baits colored shad or fire tiger.
· Based on the nearshore forecast the water temper·
Lake Loramie (Shelby County) - Youth Catlish
-The StHihead trout daily bag limit Sept. 1 through
ature
is 71 off ofTo!edo and Cleveland.
Derby, Satu~day, Sept. 6. The take will be stocked with May 15 drops to 2 fish . The minimum size limit for

r••"'""

I

Hawley

Zach Ash and Andrew
Roseberry with respeclive
rounds of 48 and 49. ·
Taylor Deem and Nalhan
Roush also posted scores of
51 and 59, respectively,
Waterford was led by
Casey Branham with a 38,
followed by Brad Miller with
a 39 and Kyle Allen with a
4Q_ Steve Wetz rounded out
lhe team scoring with a 42,
Aaron Miller and Joe
Rogers also fired respective
rounds of 42 and 55 for the
victors.
Southern returns to TV C
Hocking · action Tuesday
when it plays Miller at Forest
Hills. The match will start at
4:~0p.m.

Check out who is *New to the Castrop Center/
• American Cancer Society Patient Navlgfltor**
J. Stanley Haehl*
• Athens Cancer Center- Radiation Oqcology.**
(located at the north entrance of the Castrop Center)

A,njalf Ambekar, M.D.
Aaron 0. Williams, M.D.

• Athens P•thology ·
Scott A. Jenkinson, D.O.

• Athens Surgery Center**
• Eye Pliysldons and Surgeons of Atlten~ Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, M.D.
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, M.D.

Roll

dowris. Bolin caught fiye
for 148 yards and Davis two
for 42.
For River Valley Curnutte
fromPageBl
had 45 yards in 14 carries.
went into lhe locker room . The jumor also had an outwith a 33-13 lead.
standing game throwing the
Smith returned the second ball completing ·14 of 20 for
h If k' k0 ff 20
d ki k0 ff 199 yards and a couple of
· a
tc
-yar
c
scores. Jordan Dee! caught
· to the Marauder 45, on first
: down Jeremy scored his six for 104 yards , Cody
·. fourth and final score of the McAvena three for 43, and
Travis Roush two for 19 .
: evening going the distance
"This win was for Coach
55 ·yard for the score. The Dixon," Marauder coached
'kick was no good, but
Meifs held the.3 9_13 lead at Mike Chancey said after the
. : the I :44 mark of the third game in honor of Don
Dixon who passed away last
~ peg~ again the Raiders Sunday al his home after a .
long illness. Dixon a long
· d · ·
: re fuse d to qutl, nvmg 67 time lelicher in the Meigs
·,yards in seven plays, with Local School Dislrict was
.;Curnutte hooking up with an assistant coach under
.Oeel from 15 yards out.
Johnson's kick at the 8:05 Mike's dad Charlie when he
was
head
coach.
· mark of the period made it ThenCoach Dixon coached
capped off · the the · junior high teams for
. scoring in !he fourth period several years, and help
scout future opponents for
·:when Cory Hullon· scored Meigs for several years,
:.rrom one yard out on the ,The Mctgs team wore a
~first play of lhe period. black sticker on the helmets
~Metts added the kick to
:·close out the scoring at 53- with the initials DO for the
contest. "He was a great
20
:. Smith
·
led Meigs with his member of the Marauder
•.212 yards in just 13 tries, football family for many
:Jeffery Roush added 47 yars and he will be missed.
·yards in four carries and
Chancey went on to say,
:Hutton 34 in eight. Well had '"River Valley played hard,
:. an oulstanding game com- they didn't give up. This
: pleting eight of 12 for 197 . was a great learn win, but
·yards and three touch- we stan a new season next
week in the TVC."

Linda B. Tome. D.O.

• fflmily •n4 Sports MediCine
Will A. Rosenberg, M.D..

• GenerGI Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt, M.D., F.A.C.S.

• Healtti first Care Cenr.rlmber Coppinger, D.O.
Rebecca Huston, D.O.
Asha Yellamraju. M.D.
Margaret Tonkovich. C.N.P.

•Internal Medicine, Infectious DIStOse
Andrew R. Murry. M.D.

•lnttrn•l Medicine, Gastroenterology
Steven G. Carin Jr., D.O.

•lnternol Medldne, Nephrology
John P. Maclaurin, D.O.
• Lung 0/stoses. Slttp MC41dne
Christopher 5. Ryckman, M.D .. F.C.C.P.
•Neurology
Gary E. Cordingley, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.A.N.

• Neurosurgery
Ward P. Buster, D.O.

.• Oakvltw DemHitology•
Dawn Sammons. D.O.*

Continuous CRP great
program for wildlife
Nationwide. as well as
here in soulheastern Ohio. ·
there i' onefederal program
that
benefits
wildlife.
landowners and the environment.
The
Continuous
CoQservation
Re s.erve
Program is a voluntary program that helps farmer'
improve water quality, control soil erosion and enhance
wildlife habitat. In return.
they receive annual rentai
payments .. CRP is administered by the United Slates
Department of Agriculture's
Farm Service Agency wirh
other agencies providing
technical support.
In our part of the stale.
CRP is ge nerally used ro create "buffer" strips betWeen
streams and paslures. or
between .streams and crop·
fields. These strips, consisting of frees. grasses or
shrubs help prevent soil erosion. reduce sedimentation
in streams and help prevent
pesticides or nutrients from
getting into I he water.
While . the benefits to
wildlife are well documented , how about the benefits to
the landowner'!
CRP can be approved
year-ro!md for eligible sensitive areas nexl ro permanent
streams. lakes and ponds.
Continuous CRP offers automatic acceptance (for eligible properly). guaranteeu
yearly
inco me
despite
floods, drought, you-nameit, little or no 111aintenance
after installation and ' the
po.tential · for future income
from timber harvests.
'
Generally, once the land
has been enrolled into CRP it
cannot be used for agricultural purposes for the life of
the wntract- I 0-to-15-years.
Eligible land includes cropland and marginal pastureland. If cropland, must have
been cropped four out of six
years from 2002 through
2007 as certified through the
Farm Service Agency.
In Meigs County there are
currently 25 CRP contracts
totaling 312 acres. Minimum
'width of the filler strips is 35
feet with a maximum width
of 300 feet in alluvial cropland soi Is and marginal pas-

In the
Open
Jim Freeman
tureland. The co't ;hare rate
for planting trees or planting
grasses is around 90 percent
with a signing ince ntive pay·
ment of SI 00 per acre. ·
· For marginal pastureland.

the annual rental rate is $65
per acre plus a 20 percent
incentive paymcnl and $2
maintenance rate for a total
of $XO per year per acre.
For eligible c:~·upland, the
annual rent;d rate i' based on
soil type; ranging from $48
to SI 02 per &lt;ine plus a 20
percent incenti·ve payment
and $2 maintenance rate for
a total ;111 yw here between
$60 and S12-+ per acre.
An additional CRP is the
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Habital ,Initiative which is
used 10 provide . food and
cover for bnhwhite quail and
other ' wildlife in cropland
areas. The practice involves
the planting of native warmscil~on grasses. leg umes,
forb s and limited shrub and
lree plantings around field
edges of eligible croplands
(which has been cropped
four mil of six yea rs between
2002 and 2007)
Bene(ils uf the Northern
Bobwhite Quail Habitat
Initiative include automatic
enrollment. of eligible crop~
land ~ no competitive ranking, enroll rh e least productive areas of your crop fields
· .the edges. hutfer one, two
or all sides of ynur field s,
buffer
woodlots
and
hedgerows where crop yield
is lowest. us.e to straighten
oul irregular field edges,
reduce soil erosion and pro,
v.ide habilal for bobwhile
quail anclother wildlife.
For more information on
Continuous CRP. contact
your local Farm Service
Agency.

liM RT

The Castrop Center is a spacious facility with healthcare specialists, lab, imaging, physical therapy,
speech therapy and a pharmacy- including several O'Bieness Health System affiliates.

• F•mlly Mtflldnt

~ 46J~igs

COLUMBUS (AP) ..~-_ The weekly fishing report proYklld by Jhe Division of Wildlife olthe Ohio Department
ot NB.tural Resources

..

Harris

$!ilunllav m:imrs-ii&gt;rnttnrl• Page 85

Sundjly, September 7, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

LCRUMOMYOA.ILYREGISTER.COM

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

• 0'81tness DermatolofY Residency Cll'!k"
Shannon Campbell, D.O., Resident
Ramona Sarsama Nixon, D.O., Resident
Sean Stephenson, D.\)., Resident*

• O'lltness Labonrtory StJttllltt**
• O'lleness Patient ReglstNtlon StJttllltt"
• O'lleMss Radioiogy and Imaging Sel"'kes"
Bone Density • Mammography· RadiOgraphy

• 0'8/lfltst Rehabllltt~tlon C.nt.r** ·
Physical Therapy· Speech Therapy

• 0'81eneu Wc!men's Het~lth Residency Clinic••
Linda Barnhar.t, D.O.• Intern*
Leah Goodson, D.O., Intern*
Holly Patton, D.O., Resident
. Megan Porter, D.O., Resident
Tanya Porter, D.O., Resident
Linda Ross, D.O., Resident

• Oncology/Hematology Conwlt•nt.
ofSouthtOsttrn Ohio
Utpal K. Bhanja, M.D. .
• Orthopefllc Surgery
Steven M. Miller, M.D.

• Otomlnol•ryngology (E•;, Nose, •nd Throat}
·Michael W. Tome, D.O.
• Podiatry, Podit1trlc Surrery
Earl L. Driggs, D.P.M.

• RIHt Rose Obstttrla A GynteolotY"
Bruce B. Banias, M.D.
Kathleen M. Bertuna, D.o.•
Jane E. Broecker, M.D.
Michael J. Clark. D.O.
Jack M. Ramey, D.O.
Anna Wright, D.O.*

• The o,.,srore**
Kurt Conkey, Pharm.D.*

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HEALTH SYSTEM

O'BLENESS
'

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Vehicles Under $10 000
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Car Continued
Trucks &amp; SUVa Continued
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-- - - - - -- - -

..•

�Page B6- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport , Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant , WV

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Cl

&amp;unba!' Uti me~ -.&amp;entfnel

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Extended Thru Sept. 3(), 2008

*****PREMIUM PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS **:***
Aerobic classes for seniors
and baby boomers are held
in the beautiful indoor pool
at the Kountry Resort
Campground.

2007 Buick Lecroa. . CX
Only 4K Actual. Miles!
White With Tan Interior

2008 Pontl•c G8 GT

817

IOOJ Pontaao GNnd Pita
Well Equipped
New Car Warranty

812,990

2008 Buick Lucerne CXL

Only 8K Low Miles, Sunroof
V6 Performance

Popular Gold Mist Finish
Leather Interior, Sunroof

817,800

ONLY 821,8- ·

1111 cua~t~tct Dft

2001 Chevy Malibu Cll•ilc

Miles, GMAC Lease Return
Like New Condition! Balance of 48mo/
50K Mile Warranty!
Only 21K

LT. V6.
Silver ·

••

·814,110

827,800 '

PUtting 'old on hold'
·lOOt Che"Y llftpala LT
Aluminum Wt\eels, P. Seats
V6 Economy, 29 MPG!

aoo?
Chevv ·Aveo
Hatchback, Gas Savel"
810,800

H08 OMC Bft~V aL•

..IOOia"•ott
bnGIIt'fCMA
AWD, Burgundy

812,8-

lttt,...
·~··c... c.
V8, Leather, Lariat

Locally Owned. New Premium Tires

SAVE

lliMt CMrw 'hlttu LT

Silver, Loaded With Options
Local Owned. 3 Seats, Was $25 ,900

NDWS22,800

4x4. LT, We Sold It New I
Black With Leather, Sunroof

814,800

• c.q•s•• Clwtllt
LT Model, Only 37K Miles, Was $17,900

IOWSII,.

•nctut-nsa.._,

ON ULE813,800

White, Nav. Radeo
DVD, Leather

1111 $13,-rromMSRP

UNDER

.

8 10 ,.000 SPECIALS!
2006
2001
2001
2002
2003
2000
1998
1997
2000
2002
2004
2004
1994
1996

Chevy Cobalt 2DR....... $9,900
Chevy Venture.~ ........... $5,995
GMC Jimmy 4x4 .......... $6,995
Pontiac Grand Am ...... $6,995
Chevy Malibu .............. $4,995
Pontiac Grand Prix... :. $3,995
Ford Explorer 4x4 ....... $3~990
Buick Park Avenue ..... $5,990
Buick Century.............. $4,995
Jeep Grand Cherokee $5,995
Saturn lon .................... $9,995
Chrysler P. T. Cruiser... $7,990
GMC Sierra Ext. 4x4.... $5,995
Chevy Sllverado.4x4 ... $5,995

t•• ••• hr larl•tlr•

Bl..iiCK.
. .

.

ment and doing water aerobi~s. There are
classes
like Pilates, Yoga, Tai Chi, 20/20/20,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHDMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
PACE (People with Arthritis Can Exercise),
personal training and lifestyle management.
POMEROY- It's no secret- exercising Hiking trips, group .walks, canoeing, and other
is one way of putting old on hold, for a time at activities are offered. Treadmills, recumbent
least. And who doesn't want to do that!
bicycles, elliptical trainers, rowing machines,
One of the healthiest things a person can do air-dyne bicycles, and a weight room with
is exercise - in fact not exercising is consid- dumbbells, hand weights, universal weiight
ered "risky behavior," accordin~ to .a studr by m~s; 3~1d al;ldominlll .
.
the Journal: of the'American Genatnc SOCiety. able for use by 'those 40
.
· ··
The goal of most seniors is to stay healthy
Fitrtess goals are reviewed with Hoffman or
and independent so that they can "age in Matson when someone new comes in and then
place." Exercising for balance, endurance, they help the individual in developing a perflexibility and strength can pay off toward sonalized exercise plan. Participants are
achieving that goal.
f
h · ·
The Meigs Wellness Center this month, in · required to obiain clearance rom t e1r pnmaobservance of the approaching Active Aging ry physicians before. starting any program,
Week, is shining a spotlight on the role exer- however.
. •
cise plays in the lives of not only seniors but
The center is open from 7 a.m .. to 7 p.m. on
. those of the baby boomer generation. The Mondays, Wednesdaysand Thursdays, from 7
activities offered there are a part of the Meigs · a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Fridays. and 7 a.m. to
County Council on Aging 's lifestyle programs. 5:30p.m. on Thesdays.
·
Bryan Hoffman, exercise physiologist and
Hoffman said thai in observance of Active
long-time director of the Well ness Center, and . Aging Week, Sept. 22-28, several special onhis assistant Lindsay Matson, strive to educate site and off-site activities for not only seniors
and assist, encourage and inspire those pursu- and boomers but other community membe.rs
ing a healthier lifestyle through exercise.
have been planned. Wellness Center fees w1ll
Under Hoffman's leadership the facilities · be waived for new exercise participants during
have been expanded, more equipment secured, that week.
and new activities added to accommodate the
The special activities include group walking
interests of seniors and baby boomers. Just on the Pomeroy walking path along the Ohio
recently water aerobic cla~se s in the beautiful River at 9 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 22; a Bocci
injjoor pool at the Kountry Resort Ball at the Center on Tuesday, Sept. 23; anothCampground ' (formerly Royal Oak Resort) er group outing on the P6meroy walking path Danny Thomas works out on the universal weight machine at the Meigs Well ness: Center,
have been added. Classes are offered there on at 9 a.m., and a com hole tournament at .I p.m. as Bryan Hollman, director. looks on . Jimmy Cummins uses the abdominal machine.
Tuesdays 5:45 to 6:45 p.m., Thursdays 10 to on Wednesday, Sept. 24. All of the regular
II a.m., and Saturdays I0 to II a.m. Hoffman exercise programs will also be held that week.
and Matson are the mstructors.
The Wellness Center established in 1997 in
"Our main focus of water aerobics is to get a small craft room with 10 members has seen
people act1ve. There are those who suffer from tremendous expansion over the past 10 years.
knee, h1p, and/or ot~c:r JOint pam that JUSt can- Last year there were 6,542 visits with total
not tolerate the trad11Jonal exerc1se equ1pment
· · ho rs of 7 365 Participation conlike a treadmill, bicycle, etc. With water aero- exerclsmg u
• ·
..
bics, the water alleviates some of the stress tmues to .grow now that the fac1h!J' has
. from the joints, relieving the aches and pail)s," expanded mt? another room for card1o and
said Hoffman,
·
strength trammg, and the number of programs
''The good thing about water aerobics is that and acllv1t1es offered has mcreased.
.
you do.n' r have to know . how to swim,"
As Barbara E. ~ley, d1rect~r of the Oh10
Matson added. ".Our classes consist of general Department of Agmg. says Regardless of.
·stretching, warm-up activities and upper and your ~ge or even how mtense your wo~kout 1s,
lower body movements that promote tlexibili- exerc1se bnngs a sense of well-bemg and
ty,. balance, stamina, rdnge of motion, cardio- achievement into your life." She encourages it
vascular and muscular enhancement.''
for not only semors but baby boomers who·are
But there's more than exercising on equip- intent on putting old on hold.
STORY AND PHOTOS

..

1M Cbw» lubw-an LTI

81&amp;,800

H03 Chrwv 'httboe

Ge

••

Only 35K Miles, Locally Owned

. 4x4, LT. 2 Tone, Black &amp; Sliver
Sunroof. Leather

lllll 11 I•

V6, Air, Auto
Arctic White

Auto Tl"ans, Ail"
Ovel" 30 MPGI

819,880

White, Cloth, Just Traded!
V6, 4x4 Model

2007 Pontiac

PONTIAC
1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

. £ot:lll 7 . . . . . . . . . . . ....u ,
•

•• ,..,.,....._....
--·-

._

Maxine Little , shown on a rowing machine. along with her husband, Bill, have been steadies at the Well ness Center, usually five days a week, for the past 10 years. Both are in their
80s.

,,

.••

,,

Bill Little and Jim Snyder get a workout on two of the center's treadmills .

..

�Page B6- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport , Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant , WV

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Cl

&amp;unba!' Uti me~ -.&amp;entfnel

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Extended Thru Sept. 3(), 2008

*****PREMIUM PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS **:***
Aerobic classes for seniors
and baby boomers are held
in the beautiful indoor pool
at the Kountry Resort
Campground.

2007 Buick Lecroa. . CX
Only 4K Actual. Miles!
White With Tan Interior

2008 Pontl•c G8 GT

817

IOOJ Pontaao GNnd Pita
Well Equipped
New Car Warranty

812,990

2008 Buick Lucerne CXL

Only 8K Low Miles, Sunroof
V6 Performance

Popular Gold Mist Finish
Leather Interior, Sunroof

817,800

ONLY 821,8- ·

1111 cua~t~tct Dft

2001 Chevy Malibu Cll•ilc

Miles, GMAC Lease Return
Like New Condition! Balance of 48mo/
50K Mile Warranty!
Only 21K

LT. V6.
Silver ·

••

·814,110

827,800 '

PUtting 'old on hold'
·lOOt Che"Y llftpala LT
Aluminum Wt\eels, P. Seats
V6 Economy, 29 MPG!

aoo?
Chevv ·Aveo
Hatchback, Gas Savel"
810,800

H08 OMC Bft~V aL•

..IOOia"•ott
bnGIIt'fCMA
AWD, Burgundy

812,8-

lttt,...
·~··c... c.
V8, Leather, Lariat

Locally Owned. New Premium Tires

SAVE

lliMt CMrw 'hlttu LT

Silver, Loaded With Options
Local Owned. 3 Seats, Was $25 ,900

NDWS22,800

4x4. LT, We Sold It New I
Black With Leather, Sunroof

814,800

• c.q•s•• Clwtllt
LT Model, Only 37K Miles, Was $17,900

IOWSII,.

•nctut-nsa.._,

ON ULE813,800

White, Nav. Radeo
DVD, Leather

1111 $13,-rromMSRP

UNDER

.

8 10 ,.000 SPECIALS!
2006
2001
2001
2002
2003
2000
1998
1997
2000
2002
2004
2004
1994
1996

Chevy Cobalt 2DR....... $9,900
Chevy Venture.~ ........... $5,995
GMC Jimmy 4x4 .......... $6,995
Pontiac Grand Am ...... $6,995
Chevy Malibu .............. $4,995
Pontiac Grand Prix... :. $3,995
Ford Explorer 4x4 ....... $3~990
Buick Park Avenue ..... $5,990
Buick Century.............. $4,995
Jeep Grand Cherokee $5,995
Saturn lon .................... $9,995
Chrysler P. T. Cruiser... $7,990
GMC Sierra Ext. 4x4.... $5,995
Chevy Sllverado.4x4 ... $5,995

t•• ••• hr larl•tlr•

Bl..iiCK.
. .

.

ment and doing water aerobi~s. There are
classes
like Pilates, Yoga, Tai Chi, 20/20/20,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHDMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
PACE (People with Arthritis Can Exercise),
personal training and lifestyle management.
POMEROY- It's no secret- exercising Hiking trips, group .walks, canoeing, and other
is one way of putting old on hold, for a time at activities are offered. Treadmills, recumbent
least. And who doesn't want to do that!
bicycles, elliptical trainers, rowing machines,
One of the healthiest things a person can do air-dyne bicycles, and a weight room with
is exercise - in fact not exercising is consid- dumbbells, hand weights, universal weiight
ered "risky behavior," accordin~ to .a studr by m~s; 3~1d al;ldominlll .
.
the Journal: of the'American Genatnc SOCiety. able for use by 'those 40
.
· ··
The goal of most seniors is to stay healthy
Fitrtess goals are reviewed with Hoffman or
and independent so that they can "age in Matson when someone new comes in and then
place." Exercising for balance, endurance, they help the individual in developing a perflexibility and strength can pay off toward sonalized exercise plan. Participants are
achieving that goal.
f
h · ·
The Meigs Wellness Center this month, in · required to obiain clearance rom t e1r pnmaobservance of the approaching Active Aging ry physicians before. starting any program,
Week, is shining a spotlight on the role exer- however.
. •
cise plays in the lives of not only seniors but
The center is open from 7 a.m .. to 7 p.m. on
. those of the baby boomer generation. The Mondays, Wednesdaysand Thursdays, from 7
activities offered there are a part of the Meigs · a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Fridays. and 7 a.m. to
County Council on Aging 's lifestyle programs. 5:30p.m. on Thesdays.
·
Bryan Hoffman, exercise physiologist and
Hoffman said thai in observance of Active
long-time director of the Well ness Center, and . Aging Week, Sept. 22-28, several special onhis assistant Lindsay Matson, strive to educate site and off-site activities for not only seniors
and assist, encourage and inspire those pursu- and boomers but other community membe.rs
ing a healthier lifestyle through exercise.
have been planned. Wellness Center fees w1ll
Under Hoffman's leadership the facilities · be waived for new exercise participants during
have been expanded, more equipment secured, that week.
and new activities added to accommodate the
The special activities include group walking
interests of seniors and baby boomers. Just on the Pomeroy walking path along the Ohio
recently water aerobic cla~se s in the beautiful River at 9 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 22; a Bocci
injjoor pool at the Kountry Resort Ball at the Center on Tuesday, Sept. 23; anothCampground ' (formerly Royal Oak Resort) er group outing on the P6meroy walking path Danny Thomas works out on the universal weight machine at the Meigs Well ness: Center,
have been added. Classes are offered there on at 9 a.m., and a com hole tournament at .I p.m. as Bryan Hollman, director. looks on . Jimmy Cummins uses the abdominal machine.
Tuesdays 5:45 to 6:45 p.m., Thursdays 10 to on Wednesday, Sept. 24. All of the regular
II a.m., and Saturdays I0 to II a.m. Hoffman exercise programs will also be held that week.
and Matson are the mstructors.
The Wellness Center established in 1997 in
"Our main focus of water aerobics is to get a small craft room with 10 members has seen
people act1ve. There are those who suffer from tremendous expansion over the past 10 years.
knee, h1p, and/or ot~c:r JOint pam that JUSt can- Last year there were 6,542 visits with total
not tolerate the trad11Jonal exerc1se equ1pment
· · ho rs of 7 365 Participation conlike a treadmill, bicycle, etc. With water aero- exerclsmg u
• ·
..
bics, the water alleviates some of the stress tmues to .grow now that the fac1h!J' has
. from the joints, relieving the aches and pail)s," expanded mt? another room for card1o and
said Hoffman,
·
strength trammg, and the number of programs
''The good thing about water aerobics is that and acllv1t1es offered has mcreased.
.
you do.n' r have to know . how to swim,"
As Barbara E. ~ley, d1rect~r of the Oh10
Matson added. ".Our classes consist of general Department of Agmg. says Regardless of.
·stretching, warm-up activities and upper and your ~ge or even how mtense your wo~kout 1s,
lower body movements that promote tlexibili- exerc1se bnngs a sense of well-bemg and
ty,. balance, stamina, rdnge of motion, cardio- achievement into your life." She encourages it
vascular and muscular enhancement.''
for not only semors but baby boomers who·are
But there's more than exercising on equip- intent on putting old on hold.
STORY AND PHOTOS

..

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Ge

••

Only 35K Miles, Locally Owned

. 4x4, LT. 2 Tone, Black &amp; Sliver
Sunroof. Leather

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Arctic White

Auto Tl"ans, Ail"
Ovel" 30 MPGI

819,880

White, Cloth, Just Traded!
V6, 4x4 Model

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PONTIAC
1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

. £ot:lll 7 . . . . . . . . . . . ....u ,
•

•• ,..,.,....._....
--·-

._

Maxine Little , shown on a rowing machine. along with her husband, Bill, have been steadies at the Well ness Center, usually five days a week, for the past 10 years. Both are in their
80s.

,,

.••

,,

Bill Little and Jim Snyder get a workout on two of the center's treadmills .

..

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•

YOUR HOMETOWN

iunba~ m:tmes -ientinel

PageC2

.'

Sunday, September 7, 2008

iunbap m:tmes -ientinel

.

'

Shawnee State faculty member AAA7 plans Senior EXPO for Sept. 1~
honored for partnering with AAA 7
I

RIO GRANDE - The
2008 Partnership .of the
Year Award from the Area
Agency o n Aging District
7 Inc . was pre,ented to Dr.
Chiiqine
Raber
at
Shawnee State University
for support and assistance
of aging ~en' ices a.nd programs.
Raber. a&gt;Sociate professor of the Department of
Occupational Thera py at
Shawnee State. met with
Kaye lnoshita. director of
the AAA?'s Long-Term
Care ·
Ombuusman
Program to discussed students wo~king with the
Ross County Senior Home
Program ·
Inspection
(SHIP). ·
What was discussed was
to · provide the fall assessment piece of the projep
by using the students'
knowledge in helping the
older adults to be. safe in
their h9mes . During the
first meeting , lnoshita
realized' that
quickly
Raber was passionate
about her work and about
providing the best of edttcational experiences for
her students.
She was very willing to
collaborate on this special
project and began attend ing the SHIP development
meetings in Chi \1\ic othe.
Raber brought to the table
her academic knowledge,
experience and abil iti es.
Raber was the navigator ·
for her students. navigating OT st udents through
the SHIP by teaching them
how to interview the
seniors, and to evaluate
their homes and functional
skills.
.
Finally, Raber was the
keeping
statistician, ·
records of visits. a sum. mary of services , and
working to · develop a
·client satisfaction survey.
She knows the importance
of keeping slats to help
measure the success of the
project in order, to be eligi- '
ble for various grants and.
funding streams.
In addition to her work on
the SHIP. Raber opel]ed her
clasi this year to the AAA 7
staff allowing AAA 7 to
educate her students about

•

Submitted photo
Dr. Christine Raber of Shawnee State University, \ell, is the
2008 recipient of the Area Agency on Aging District 7 Inc.'s,
Partnership of the Year Award. At right is Kaye lnoshita.
director ol AAA7's Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program.

elder abuse and aging services. She was also very
supportive of the AAA 7's
Elder Abuse Conference
held at Shawnee State U
a nil provided the opportunity for her students to attend
and participate in the con- .
ference.
AAA 7 administers progr.ams for older adults
funded by the - state and
federal
governments.
Federal funds managed by
the Administration on
Aging and the . CMS
(Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Services), as

well as all state funds , are
received through the Ohio
Department of Aging. The
agency co ntracts with
agen.cies and then channels funds through this
network
of
service
providers. These agency
providers include sen ior
centers, community action
agencies, home . he.a lth
agencies, health departments, etc.
AAA 7 serves the following counties Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike,
Ross, Scioto and Vinton.

Betty ·Bryant went from·showboat to school
Bv JAMES SANDS

In the October 1938 editions of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, two ads
appear announcing the
of
dancing
opening
schools. One ad was for
the Lee Perry Dancing
School, "with personal
instruction in all types of
tap and ballroom dancing ."
This school was held in the
Riviera Ballro·dm, which
in 1938 was on Court
Street. Earlier in the
de~ade,
the
Riviera
Ballroom had been located
in the Lupton Building.
The other ad announced
the opening of the Betty
Bryant school in the
Woodmen Hall , which was
located at the corner of
, Third and State in the old
Hayward building. The ads
stated that "Miss Bryant is
a graduate pupil of Jack
Blue of New York and has
danced for Dick Powell ,
Vincent Lopez, Ben Bernie
and the late Flo Ziegfeld."
the odd thing about this
school was that Betty
Bryant was in her 16th
year of being in show business ~nd she was only 16
years of age, she being the
daughter of showboat
impresario Billy Bryant
and wife Josephine.
When just a few weeks
old in 1922, Betty had
appeared in the play
"Uncle Tom's Cabin.." She' '
went on to become by
1937 a leading lady on the
showboat at the young age
of 15.
According
to
the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
on Aug. 14, 1937, "Billy's
daughter, Betty, growing
in stature, grace and histrionic talent, made up for
any shortcomings in the
role of 'Lena' . by some
clever dancing ." · Bryant's
Showboat had stopped in
Gallipolis to do the play

.
'

"Lena Rivers."
Betty would later write
about being a star actress,
"A dependable leading
lady must be able. to run,
duck, fall, get up, fall
again, crawl over a bed
and under · a dresser,
scream, swing by a rope,
deliver an uppercut, struggle and kick and still have
enough breath left to say,
' lf thi s is aristocracy,
thank God l'm a country
gi rl. "'
.
. The Showboat season ran
from April to ' early
October with rehearsals in
late March. The rest of the
year, the Bryants lived
some years in Point
Pleasant and a few years in
Gallipolis. It was during
the off-season that Betty
Bryant went to New York
to study dance with Jack
Blue.
Blue was also ·the dance
teacher for such greats as
George M. Cohan, Eddie
Cantor, Ruby Keeler and
Patsy Kelly. In time, Betty
Bryant, in the olio part of
the showboat, would often
do her imitations of these
great stars. During the
winter, the Bryants also
worked in theaters in New
York and Chic'ago, which
is probably when Betty
danced with the 'likes of
Dick Powell and Ben
Bernie.
It was in 1994 that Betty
Bryant wrote the book
about her family, Here
Comes the Showboat.
Betty 's grandfather, Sam
Bryant, who started the
family in the showboat
business~ was a one-time
gardener at Buckingham
Palace
.in
London,
England. But one day he
fell in love with a young
actress who was playing in
a Gilbert and Sullivan
operetta. Violet Chapman
and Sam Bryant were married in England and came

to the U.S. in 1884.
Violet persuaded Sam to
take up the thespian arts
and the pair traveled in a
horse-drawn
medicine
show where "Dr. Sam"
would hawk his cure-all
drugs (a mixture of gasoline and red pepper). Two
children
(Billy and
Florence ) were born to
Sam and Violet. The children were also part· of the
medicine show as well as
the vaudeville act, where
they were known as "The
Four Bryants."
Eventually, in 1900, the
Bryant family played a
summer on a showboat a'nd
got the "river bug." In time
they purchased their own
boat and in .1918 had one
built just for them,
"Bryant's
New
Showboat."
The Bryants stayed on
the river until 1942 when
Billy bought a retirement
home for Sam and Violet
in Point Pleasant. They
lived into their 90s . Billy .
and ·Josephine traveled the
. country doing plays and
radio shows as well asgiving lectures. Billy died in
1968 and Josephine in
1972 . Florence passed
away in 1970.
In 1942, Betty married
fellow showboat actor Jat
Herod and the two traveled
the world entertaining U.S.
troops .. The pair had two
daughters, J oAieene and
Mary. Betty and Jat wsere
divorced in 1962 and from
then until her death in
1999, Betty Bryant lived
mostly in Park Ridge, Ill.,
. where she gave dance
lessons, directed plays and
gave lectures about showboating. .
(James Sands is a special correspondent for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
He can be contacted by
writing to Box 92,
Norwich, Ohio 43767-) .,

RIO GRANDE- Friday, Center, Alternative Nursing
Sept. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3 Care, Alternative Home
p.m .. at the Scioto County Care, Boyd County Ford.
Fairgrounds in Lucasville, Consulate Health Care dba
Manor
of
senior citizens and the com- Edgewood
Edgewood
munity in general are invit- Lucasville.
ed to the annual Area Manor of Gtcc tl' cld ami
Agency on Aging District 7, Piketon . Nursing Center,
Inc. (AAA 7) Senior EXPO, Country Living . Home
highlighted this year with a Care, Inc. , Heartland Home
Storybook theme - " Once . Health
&amp;
Hospice.
Upon a. Time ... "
Hemps!ead Manor. Hill
A variety of interesting . View, Interim Health Care ,
activities planned for the Ohio Valley Bank, Ohio
2008 Senior EXPO show- Valley
Home
Health ,
case the talents and hand- Southern Ohio Behavioral
·made crafts of seniors Health , Unity I Home
from Adams,
Brown, Health · Care.
and
Gallia, Highland, Jackson, USSA/Scioto
County
Lawrence, . Pike, Ross, Senior Center.
Scioto and Vinton counSilver sponsors include
ties; promote services and · ABCAP
Home
Care,
products catering to the Advartage Home Health
needs . and wants of Care Inc ., Family Senior
seniors; and, educate a.nd Care, Guardian Medical
perform . health screens Monitoring, Home Helpers,
geared toward seniors, just Leading
Respiratory
to name a few.
Services Inc., Oths, Heiser
Over I 00 exhibitors and &amp; Miller, Resthaven Rehab
sponsors are on board to &amp; Healthcare ,Facility. and
promote "Once Upon a Traditions
at
Bristol
Time ..." making the Senior Village.
EXPO very interesting and
Bronze sponsors are
entertaining for everyone.
Abbott Home Care Inc.,
Platinum sponsors part- Adena Health · Care, Alert
nering with Af':.A 7 this year One, Arthritis Foundation.
are Best Choice Home Care, Best Care Nursing ·and·
Everyday Home Care, Rehabilitation
Center,
Holzer Health S~stems. Life Community
Hospice.
Ambulance, .Sc10to County Crystal
Care
Center.
Joini
Vocational Frontier
Community
School/Criminal
Justice Services, Hallmark Home
Program, Southern Ohio Health Cure, Heartland
Medical Center, Ultimate Nursing and Rehab of
Health Care, Inc., and Portsmouth,
Heartland
WesBanco Bank Inc.
Nursing and Rehab of
Gold sponsors are A&amp;L JKkwn,
Hometown
Home Care and Training Medical Supplies Inc ..

•

Med-Ox Home Medics!,
Pike Community Hospitill,
ResCare Home Care, Scidto
County Democratic Party.
Southern
Ohio
c~'lllnlunit:ations Services
Inc .,
Spec ial
Touch
Homecare, Staker's Drugs,
The Scioto Foundation, Tub
Cutter, Vi II a Georgetown
Skilling
Nursing, and
Westmoreland Place.
A-om the Bingo Barn 01)
one
end,
to
the
Antique/Classic Car Show
on the other, during Senior
EXPO the Fairgrouflds ·
will he filled with amusements. food. and fun for
all. Stage acts begin at: 9
a.m. with the Veterans
Program,
Recognition
Cake Au.ction, Awards .
Presentation. ending the
day with the sounds of the
Joe Freeman Band. Look
for plenty of other attractions , including the M11rk
Wood Fun Show, chair
Caricature
volleybalL
Art, 'Birthday Chronicle,
First Name Almanac, craft
displays, exhibits, games,
and
continuous
door
prizes .... as well as food
booths ·and free treats of
popcorn and water:
Final door prizes worth
$ 1.5QO in gi ft certficates·
drawn at end of the day, and
you must be present to win'
Senior EXPO is sure to be
an exci ting place to spend
the day'
.
For additional injormarirm. m/1 Sharon Bowman
ar (800) 5?12-7277.

Anna Lee and Gerald Mollett

Lee-Mollett engagement
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Norma n Lee and Cynthia
. Hamilton of Kentucky ;md Jerry m1d Rhonua Mo\lctl of
· Poinr Pl eascmt, W.Va .. ;. mno~m cc the upcoming marrai gc of
their children. Ann;t l~ce anu Gerald Mollett .
, · The couple will . e.,change vows on Monday. Dec. 15.
-. 200R, at the Na~ar~nc Church in Point Plqsant.
· . . The bride is 19 years old and from Round Hill. Ky. She
' · is currqn ly employed with Speedway ..
The groom is 18 year' old anu resides in Point Pleasant.

ACROSS
1 Orchestra member
6 Island greetmg
11 Fms
16 Commence
21 Monarch
22 Writer of a thesaurus
23 01 bees
24 Hue
25 Rapty to a knock 1
26 Ethical
27 WMeol
"Wheat ol Fo~une·
28 Prepare
29 Cup handle
30 Inquired
31 Gel ready
32 Levin or Gershwin
34 Mafter, in law
35 Creature ollegend
38 Sunday dinner item
40 Gust
41 Bon42 "- - althe Races·

44 Tureen
45 Sp!ing time
47 On in years
49 Fad
52 Hunter constella1ion
54 Misrep-esentation
56 lenglh times widttl
60 HeadquMers
61 Be abuzz
62 Mus&lt;al sound
63 ShM-tai~d rodent
65 Honest6&amp; Off~ially au1horized
67 Plunder
68 Soft dnnk
69 Panel truck
70 Transgression

71 Under the covers
72 Dueling
vice president
73 Roman 54
74 Room
76 Lured
76 Word
w~h board ·or ~deo
79 Bundle
80 leans
81 Seaman
82 Fastener for a lid
63 Face card
84 Chinese pan
85 Someth1ng ol value
88 Porridge

89 Glass square
90 March rh~m ·
94 Hindu teacher
95 Snake
96 Fashion
97 Game ptayed
on horseback
98 Macaw genus
99Can
100 Solemn promise
102 Mature
103- oiTroy
104 Swamp
105 Exlretne
107 Cny on 1he Tiber
108 Doughnu1 shape
109 Corn bread
110 Quant~y ol paper
111 Wrinkle
113 Ant~oKi n ·, .
114 The yam. e.g.
115 Amerindian
117 Charge
118- colada
119 Sign gas
121 Insane
124 Bod~y structure
(abbr)
126 Strange
128 Reach
132 Mineral
133 "- a boy!"
134 Goldie !he actress
135 Rool•r Yale
139 Opp 01 NNW
140 Kingly
142Terre144 Des1roy by degrees
145 Carries wittl effo~
t47 Trap
141! Garden tool
149 Norman Vincent 150 Prevent
151 Facili tated
152 Crystal-gazers153 Did sums
154 Drills

DOWN
1 Liberated
2 Of the moon
3 Ne ptus4 Golf bait stand
5 Gaol
6 Weapons
7 Appearance
8 Fairy tale monster
9 Ve~ical space
10 Pan ol NATO (abbr.)
11 Bette or Jefferson
12 Flat
13 Peel
14 Light brown
15 Escargot
16 Write carelessly
17 Shoe pa~
18 Make frightened
19 Cowboy show
20 Meeting of lovers
30 lilerary collection·
31 Colleen
33 Cheered
36 Stare
37 Wor.k in verse
.. 39 Possess
40 Parting word
43 Cried roudly
44 - of paradtse
46 EKpe~
48 Barrier built
by beavers
49 Go after
50 Batman's·sidekick
51 Catkin
53 Police aet1on .
54 Kind of prize
55 "-- Lucy"
57 Foe
58 Make .(nlo law
59 De Mille or
Moorehead
61 Sword
62 Ripped
64 Extinct relat1ve
olthe eleph ant
66 Getaway lrom worl&lt;
67 Dollop
68 lustrous Iabrie
72 Party
73 Shoestnng
75 Spear
77 Particular .
78 Brealhe with diH~utty
79 Poison
82 Be qUiet'

83
84
85
86
87
88

89
90
91

92
93
96
97
101
102

SemipreCious stone
Where Cardiff is
Moving about
Pigs
-Claus
AlmaThe bishop ol Rome
Upright suppo~
Wealthy person
Witch
A~d

Bv

I

L •, '

.'

DEBORAH SHELTON,

BSN
RNtAP COORDINATOR
GALLI A COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

'

' "

Rmaviru:-. is a recom' ;111ended vaccine for chi\::: 1!\re n from ag cs 2 1l1ro ugh i\
:::(llonths of . age. ' The
. ;Vaccine
for
Children
: ;Program (YFCl supplie&lt;
&gt;e ligible chi ldren, this vac:::~ine free of charge in order
;;:to stay healthy and is avail..; able at your Gallia County
::; Health Department. ·
::;- Eligible ch ildren for
. : 1 VFC
program includes:
' I

Sunday, September 7, 2008

GALLIPOLIS - Holt.cr . in direct counseling with
Medical Center Inpati ent pharmacy. all he/she has to
Phann&lt;tcy Department pro- do is let their nursi ng staff
vide ~ pharmaceutical ser- know they would like to utivices for the acute care lize this service." said
needs of patients. including Sherri Adams. R.. Ph .. · the
counseling ;erv'icc to dis' hospital's
director
of
cuss any new prescriptions Inpatient Pharmacy.
or how to handle current . "Patients and their litmiprescriptions when they are lies are very happy with this
discharged.
counsel ing service we .proAs needed, a pharmacist vide . free of charge,-· she
will go to a patient's room continued. "Our department
and meet with the patient is .more than happy to meet
and/or family members to with any patient to answer
do discharge counselfng any pharmacy questions
regardin g med icatio ns, go . he/she may have: ·
over information on new
Clinical services provided
medications. create a chan by the department include
fnr home use to track doses renal Urug monitoring. drug
(c sp~c iall y for patients on
interaction
monit o rin~. ·
multiple prescriptions) .
pharmal'okinetic dosing,
Currently. th ~ Pharm;JCy warfmin dosing. drug ·order
Department i~ choosing review. information ~ upport
IXtticnts to niTer thpe ser- for care providers. and med vices too. huwe vt::r ~ui y ication
education
as
pati ent is eligible for this requested fur paticllts. fiuniservice. Nursing units _are 1ies. and other care
equipped with form s to rec- providers.
ommend a pittient for this
The pharnm&lt;:y is also
Inpatient Pharmacy coun- active in evaluating mcdi&lt;.:aseling service .
·
tion use at Holzer Medical
"If someone is interestell ·Center through nur ongoing

Submitted photo
Seen here is Jared Vernon, RPh ., clinical pharmacist at
Holzer Medical Center, left , counseling a patient on new
medications.

program of medil:atiun use col/ Adams &lt;1/ (7-10) 441ievaluations (MUEs).
. 52./.J
or
l'isir
t ·or more il!f'o rmati rm. . ;I'H'lt'.Jio/;,£'1:01~~·

.

.

Meclicaid -eligible
''r 20-60 deatns ... Bcrorc their
alre"dy Medicaid enrolled: fifth birthday. almost all
Unin&gt;urecl:
AmeriCan children are infected with
lndi&lt;111 or . Ala., ka native: the rotavir'us. Children ge t
and Underinsurcu'. Babies ·the rot~tvirus infection by
and youn g children usually being around other chilarc the victim s ui' this dren who already have the
virus. resulting in intense infection .
Jiarrbeil, vomiting. and
Most rotavirus infection
fever.
is
spread
between
The Centers for Disease November and M&lt;ty.
Contro l report' that · each
The best way to protect
year rotaviru s infection your chi\&lt;) from the
causes babies and chil- rotavirus infection is to get
dren ," more than 400 .000 your child vaccinated. This
doctor visit s; more than is an 'oral vaccine (swal 200,000 .emergency depart- lowed by mouth) ; no shot
ment visits: 55,000- 70,000 is necessary!
hospital admissions , and
Rotavirus vaccine wil l

not prevent ymtr chi ld
from having vomiting or
diarrhea cuuseu by other
types of germs. The majority of children already vaccinated with rotavinJS vaccine will not have diarrhea
or vomitin1!. The CDC
states, " Around 98 percent
of · children who ger the
vaccine will 110Lget severe
rotavirus diarrhea, anti
abou1 74 percent do not get
rota virus diarrhea at ;r\1 ."
· It is recommended children receive three doses of
roravirus vaccine at ages 2,
4, and , 6 month of age.
(Remember, this is not a

shot; it's a liquid the child
swallows). All three doses
111ust be given hy the time
your child is :12 weeks. of
age (.J months olu ).
P~rents :

vou are welcome

10 bring );Our children to
the health department
Munuay through Friday
Jrom 8 a. m. to 4 p.m.
(cxdudin)! Federal holidays ). No appointments are
necessary. Please bring
your child's immunization
record. If you. the parent or
cuardiatT. are unable to
~ccompany your child. a
consent form signed by you
will be needed.

The necessary consent
form is Ul'ailabk for pickup (or can he faxed to you I
at the health department
and neeus to be completed
bd'ure. your chilu is
brought in for vw:cinatiop.
If you have any ques·tion s, please contact us at
441 -2950. or stop in . We
· want to · help you protect
and ·keep your children as
healthy as possible!
Reference : Department
of Health and Human
Services: Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Preve'ntion; and National
Immunization Program

· :----------~--~--~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------' '
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S1lant partormer
Neighbor ol Chile
A going up
Fragrant liquid
12 wds.)
103 Round dance
106 Flighiless bird
107 "Norma-" .
108 Offered formally
109 Kick
112 Naw1
113 Kn1ght's lile
114 Child
116 Followed in secret
11 B Bowler's target
120 - de cologne
121 Coda name
122 Place of contest
123 French painter
125 Fire residue .
127 P1tchers
129 RaylkJwer
130 Ri11er in France
131 Aenes
134 Mammoth
136 Burden
137 Lazy
138 Pay attention to
141 Exist
143 Sweel dflnk
144 Clean-air org.
145 Keyboard key
146 Ab - (lrom ihe
beginmng)

MUNI1Y
HMC Inpatient Pharmacy provides service

.·. Rotavirus vaccine reconm1ended for children between 2-6 months

..

SUNDAY PUZZLER

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Social •Security benefits: The basics

:'•____:::..:...==::..:.==--'

fam ily.
efits later than your FRA.
It is my gmt! in wntmg they will be increased
:.! Let's face it , planning for thi s first in a two-pan series. . slight ly for each year he
::; retirement is scary. The on Social Security benefits works between the normal
:·• economy is in terr ible ,hape to provide the reade r with a retirement age and age 70.
:·:with no sign ofTecnvering · better understanding of \10w If ym1 l1ave reachcu your
• :·any time soon. Th e .so- Social Security\ retirement FRA , ynu can earn any
: • &lt;:ailed experts can ' t even benefits ai·e Cillculated. and additional amount and stwl
: :agree whether our economy hnw to eva luate for yourself · receive full benellt amounl.
·-!in its curre nt condi tion con- tile proper time to begin tak- If you 4re under the FRA
::; stitutes " recess ton or ing benefits . In weeks that when you start getting your
::• whether it's merely in "a fol low. we wi ll explore payments. $1 in benefits
:-:prolonged state of decline" · other issu es important to . will be deducted for ·each $2
.:.;(whatever th;H means) .
your retirement including you earn above the an11ual
: •• Whatever the technical usinu annuitic ~ in retire- limit. The theory behind
. :definition of our economy is men!: the home as a retire- taking Social Security bene,•., doesn ' t really help lhe aver- ment resource. inco111c tax fits sooner or later i, easy to
·.,age man to make ends meet. is~Ue s durin g re r irem~nt and unders1and. The govern:.; The most important · thing the usc of qualified retire- ment will pay you iiiore in
::• for most Americans is 'lllere- ment plans anu peusion s in the way ·of monthly puy:·: ly to tread the fin;mciul retirement income pla11ning. ments the longer vuu defer
·: waters of our ·time until the
However, the first stop on the .i nitial payment~
: 1 rides
of prosperity rise our road into retirement
However, the risk of
·.:again. The question for planning most logically delayi ng the beginning of
.: most of us when consider- leads us to lh c topic of Social Secttrit y payments
' : ing our retirement · 'years Social Security henefits. for someone in their 60s
·:• becomes. "What must do "'Retirement Planning" for comes when the benefit::we do in order to survive the many Americans means seeker dies before he or she
; hard times so that we are nothing more than awaiting would ''break even" from
· ;able to support ourse lves. the day at which time they the as a result of hitving
• · :and our family, during our ·yualify for Social Scctlrity delayed the beginning pay:• retirement years'" The benefits. However, even this ments in exchange for the
·•: answer
lor
young seemingly simple task is not higher monthly ·rate . In
·;Americans is simple without peril.
other words , Iike many
. • '.'stay the course, persevere
'To qualify for Social annuitie.s. if the' Social
:; ~nd over titi1C the market S~curity . retirement ilene- Security· applicant dies in
. ·:will bounce back. and, in fits, a worker must liavc the first few years after
:time : all will . be .right earned 40 credits, cakulatcd qualifying t(J receive Socia l
·· again ."
·
as follows : One credit for Se(urity benefits , it would
for
tho se · each $1 .000 earned in cov- have been much wiser to
· ; . However.
us
who
are ered employment. for a have begun the initial pay·; among
::approaching. or in the mid- maximum of four cred its ments early on at the lower
:• ille of, their retiremem ye;1rs per year ($4,000). Four monthly rate. However, if
·: now, the situation becomes credits per year· fo r I!) years the benefit seeker will live
:much more .serious. After eqtwls '40 credits: the work- beyond the '"break-even
:all, if you arc forced · to er is "fuUy insured ."' When· point," the delay of begin-,
:spend your retirement years a worker reache s Full ning Social Security bene.; ~uring a downturn in the Retirement Age .(FRAI. he . fits could result in a much
~stock market. you may can receive full retirement higher total gain over the
:· ~ever be able to recover the benefits. The FRA used to years.
::losses suffered by your be 65. but now varies based ·
Though the theory behind
the · Social
:: retirement account if you on your year of birth. You be,innin'u
.; are making withdrawals can collect reduced retire- Se~mity benefir, is a simple
·~: from your "nest egg" during ment benefits as early as one, the choice is seldom
:·(hat time period in order to age 62 (with 40 credits), or, easy because of the uncer~ ~uppo!1 yourself and your if you begin collecting ben- tainty of the applicant \ life
BY JAMES HENRY

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Let Me Show You How To
Increase The Size Of Your
Retirement Accounty By 10%

span . However, one seldomused ·alternative exists that
allows the retiree who possesses enough discipline to
"hedge his bets" so tltat the
right choice is more easily
detefmi ned. To uo thi,, the
reti ree wh&lt;\ begins the p;tyment of his benefits at the
earliest possible age wou iJ
simply pay back the bene his received after he has
aged sufficient ly to qualify
for the higher benefit.
As a result, after paying
·hack the Social Security
benefits
retireme nt
received, he would then file
a new application allow ing
him to receive larger monthly checks. based on his
older age .
Cons ider this example:
Mr. , and Mrs. McCain_ a
mitrried coupk. both age .
70, started collecti n ~ Social
Security retirement benefits
in their early 60s and each
will get $\3,250 thi s year.. If .
they had waited until present day to apply. they
would each get $20.693. or
56 percent more. If they
repay all benefit ~ previously
received, they may reapply
and receive lhe highcr-yearlv benefits of $20.693 annuallv for the remainder of
iheir lives.
So where's the catch'' If
you have already received'
Social Security benefits for
a number of years, tl1ere
really isn't one. So long as
you have the cash available
on hand to pay back the
money you received in '(last
years. you can start collecting bigger monthly checks
almost. immediately. A benefit exists where 1he bei1efit
seeker is able to reev&lt;Jiuate
his health after having
received several years of
benefits to better determine
the likelihoo~,of a long life-

time. not to mention the tinue our examination of
benefits from receiving the Social Security benefits by
payments effectively inter- examining how -spouse and
est free for the years of Sllrvi vor benefits are reg ureceiving payments .
lated.
. Additionally, if your
(}ames Henry is· an attorspotl'e is younger than ynu·.
or has a· famil y hi story of IICY and· i11surmrce agml
longevity, the strategy licensed ;,, tire state.~ of
might make 1i1ore sense, Ohio and West Virginia. He
because your widow or wid- is tire founder of Frenclr
ower would get those higher City
Estate
Planning
benefit checks for the rest of Solutiom,
LLC,
with
'her li!C. This cou ld make offices
located
·;II
particular sense where one
souse· didn't get paid as Gallipolis. He can be conmuch an.d derives all or part tacted at allyjamesrhell·or
or her benefit from the other ry @lwtmail.cpm, ·
www.OirioEstateP/anningS
spouse's earnings record. ·
Nex t week. we will con- olutirms.com.)

Thank You
City Ice &amp; Fuel

THANK YOU
Blosser Concrete
Pumping

for buying
my 2008
Market Hog

forbuylng my

2008

And ·

.Market Hog
)
'

Jarrett Martin
Triangle 4-H

Supporting
ttl
,.., · .. ~he Youth r~f
(J · •.lltt.. Gallia
;Jii i

~,,

f;

Co.

.

Kelly
Havely ·
Si lver
Streaks 4-H

The
Joint Implant Center

'

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement. we offer .office hours at:
3554 U.S . Route-60 East,
Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is Friday, Sept. 19.
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement
"

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•

YOUR HOMETOWN

iunba~ m:tmes -ientinel

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Sunday, September 7, 2008

iunbap m:tmes -ientinel

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Shawnee State faculty member AAA7 plans Senior EXPO for Sept. 1~
honored for partnering with AAA 7
I

RIO GRANDE - The
2008 Partnership .of the
Year Award from the Area
Agency o n Aging District
7 Inc . was pre,ented to Dr.
Chiiqine
Raber
at
Shawnee State University
for support and assistance
of aging ~en' ices a.nd programs.
Raber. a&gt;Sociate professor of the Department of
Occupational Thera py at
Shawnee State. met with
Kaye lnoshita. director of
the AAA?'s Long-Term
Care ·
Ombuusman
Program to discussed students wo~king with the
Ross County Senior Home
Program ·
Inspection
(SHIP). ·
What was discussed was
to · provide the fall assessment piece of the projep
by using the students'
knowledge in helping the
older adults to be. safe in
their h9mes . During the
first meeting , lnoshita
realized' that
quickly
Raber was passionate
about her work and about
providing the best of edttcational experiences for
her students.
She was very willing to
collaborate on this special
project and began attend ing the SHIP development
meetings in Chi \1\ic othe.
Raber brought to the table
her academic knowledge,
experience and abil iti es.
Raber was the navigator ·
for her students. navigating OT st udents through
the SHIP by teaching them
how to interview the
seniors, and to evaluate
their homes and functional
skills.
.
Finally, Raber was the
keeping
statistician, ·
records of visits. a sum. mary of services , and
working to · develop a
·client satisfaction survey.
She knows the importance
of keeping slats to help
measure the success of the
project in order, to be eligi- '
ble for various grants and.
funding streams.
In addition to her work on
the SHIP. Raber opel]ed her
clasi this year to the AAA 7
staff allowing AAA 7 to
educate her students about

•

Submitted photo
Dr. Christine Raber of Shawnee State University, \ell, is the
2008 recipient of the Area Agency on Aging District 7 Inc.'s,
Partnership of the Year Award. At right is Kaye lnoshita.
director ol AAA7's Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program.

elder abuse and aging services. She was also very
supportive of the AAA 7's
Elder Abuse Conference
held at Shawnee State U
a nil provided the opportunity for her students to attend
and participate in the con- .
ference.
AAA 7 administers progr.ams for older adults
funded by the - state and
federal
governments.
Federal funds managed by
the Administration on
Aging and the . CMS
(Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Services), as

well as all state funds , are
received through the Ohio
Department of Aging. The
agency co ntracts with
agen.cies and then channels funds through this
network
of
service
providers. These agency
providers include sen ior
centers, community action
agencies, home . he.a lth
agencies, health departments, etc.
AAA 7 serves the following counties Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike,
Ross, Scioto and Vinton.

Betty ·Bryant went from·showboat to school
Bv JAMES SANDS

In the October 1938 editions of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, two ads
appear announcing the
of
dancing
opening
schools. One ad was for
the Lee Perry Dancing
School, "with personal
instruction in all types of
tap and ballroom dancing ."
This school was held in the
Riviera Ballro·dm, which
in 1938 was on Court
Street. Earlier in the
de~ade,
the
Riviera
Ballroom had been located
in the Lupton Building.
The other ad announced
the opening of the Betty
Bryant school in the
Woodmen Hall , which was
located at the corner of
, Third and State in the old
Hayward building. The ads
stated that "Miss Bryant is
a graduate pupil of Jack
Blue of New York and has
danced for Dick Powell ,
Vincent Lopez, Ben Bernie
and the late Flo Ziegfeld."
the odd thing about this
school was that Betty
Bryant was in her 16th
year of being in show business ~nd she was only 16
years of age, she being the
daughter of showboat
impresario Billy Bryant
and wife Josephine.
When just a few weeks
old in 1922, Betty had
appeared in the play
"Uncle Tom's Cabin.." She' '
went on to become by
1937 a leading lady on the
showboat at the young age
of 15.
According
to
the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
on Aug. 14, 1937, "Billy's
daughter, Betty, growing
in stature, grace and histrionic talent, made up for
any shortcomings in the
role of 'Lena' . by some
clever dancing ." · Bryant's
Showboat had stopped in
Gallipolis to do the play

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"Lena Rivers."
Betty would later write
about being a star actress,
"A dependable leading
lady must be able. to run,
duck, fall, get up, fall
again, crawl over a bed
and under · a dresser,
scream, swing by a rope,
deliver an uppercut, struggle and kick and still have
enough breath left to say,
' lf thi s is aristocracy,
thank God l'm a country
gi rl. "'
.
. The Showboat season ran
from April to ' early
October with rehearsals in
late March. The rest of the
year, the Bryants lived
some years in Point
Pleasant and a few years in
Gallipolis. It was during
the off-season that Betty
Bryant went to New York
to study dance with Jack
Blue.
Blue was also ·the dance
teacher for such greats as
George M. Cohan, Eddie
Cantor, Ruby Keeler and
Patsy Kelly. In time, Betty
Bryant, in the olio part of
the showboat, would often
do her imitations of these
great stars. During the
winter, the Bryants also
worked in theaters in New
York and Chic'ago, which
is probably when Betty
danced with the 'likes of
Dick Powell and Ben
Bernie.
It was in 1994 that Betty
Bryant wrote the book
about her family, Here
Comes the Showboat.
Betty 's grandfather, Sam
Bryant, who started the
family in the showboat
business~ was a one-time
gardener at Buckingham
Palace
.in
London,
England. But one day he
fell in love with a young
actress who was playing in
a Gilbert and Sullivan
operetta. Violet Chapman
and Sam Bryant were married in England and came

to the U.S. in 1884.
Violet persuaded Sam to
take up the thespian arts
and the pair traveled in a
horse-drawn
medicine
show where "Dr. Sam"
would hawk his cure-all
drugs (a mixture of gasoline and red pepper). Two
children
(Billy and
Florence ) were born to
Sam and Violet. The children were also part· of the
medicine show as well as
the vaudeville act, where
they were known as "The
Four Bryants."
Eventually, in 1900, the
Bryant family played a
summer on a showboat a'nd
got the "river bug." In time
they purchased their own
boat and in .1918 had one
built just for them,
"Bryant's
New
Showboat."
The Bryants stayed on
the river until 1942 when
Billy bought a retirement
home for Sam and Violet
in Point Pleasant. They
lived into their 90s . Billy .
and ·Josephine traveled the
. country doing plays and
radio shows as well asgiving lectures. Billy died in
1968 and Josephine in
1972 . Florence passed
away in 1970.
In 1942, Betty married
fellow showboat actor Jat
Herod and the two traveled
the world entertaining U.S.
troops .. The pair had two
daughters, J oAieene and
Mary. Betty and Jat wsere
divorced in 1962 and from
then until her death in
1999, Betty Bryant lived
mostly in Park Ridge, Ill.,
. where she gave dance
lessons, directed plays and
gave lectures about showboating. .
(James Sands is a special correspondent for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
He can be contacted by
writing to Box 92,
Norwich, Ohio 43767-) .,

RIO GRANDE- Friday, Center, Alternative Nursing
Sept. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3 Care, Alternative Home
p.m .. at the Scioto County Care, Boyd County Ford.
Fairgrounds in Lucasville, Consulate Health Care dba
Manor
of
senior citizens and the com- Edgewood
Edgewood
munity in general are invit- Lucasville.
ed to the annual Area Manor of Gtcc tl' cld ami
Agency on Aging District 7, Piketon . Nursing Center,
Inc. (AAA 7) Senior EXPO, Country Living . Home
highlighted this year with a Care, Inc. , Heartland Home
Storybook theme - " Once . Health
&amp;
Hospice.
Upon a. Time ... "
Hemps!ead Manor. Hill
A variety of interesting . View, Interim Health Care ,
activities planned for the Ohio Valley Bank, Ohio
2008 Senior EXPO show- Valley
Home
Health ,
case the talents and hand- Southern Ohio Behavioral
·made crafts of seniors Health , Unity I Home
from Adams,
Brown, Health · Care.
and
Gallia, Highland, Jackson, USSA/Scioto
County
Lawrence, . Pike, Ross, Senior Center.
Scioto and Vinton counSilver sponsors include
ties; promote services and · ABCAP
Home
Care,
products catering to the Advartage Home Health
needs . and wants of Care Inc ., Family Senior
seniors; and, educate a.nd Care, Guardian Medical
perform . health screens Monitoring, Home Helpers,
geared toward seniors, just Leading
Respiratory
to name a few.
Services Inc., Oths, Heiser
Over I 00 exhibitors and &amp; Miller, Resthaven Rehab
sponsors are on board to &amp; Healthcare ,Facility. and
promote "Once Upon a Traditions
at
Bristol
Time ..." making the Senior Village.
EXPO very interesting and
Bronze sponsors are
entertaining for everyone.
Abbott Home Care Inc.,
Platinum sponsors part- Adena Health · Care, Alert
nering with Af':.A 7 this year One, Arthritis Foundation.
are Best Choice Home Care, Best Care Nursing ·and·
Everyday Home Care, Rehabilitation
Center,
Holzer Health S~stems. Life Community
Hospice.
Ambulance, .Sc10to County Crystal
Care
Center.
Joini
Vocational Frontier
Community
School/Criminal
Justice Services, Hallmark Home
Program, Southern Ohio Health Cure, Heartland
Medical Center, Ultimate Nursing and Rehab of
Health Care, Inc., and Portsmouth,
Heartland
WesBanco Bank Inc.
Nursing and Rehab of
Gold sponsors are A&amp;L JKkwn,
Hometown
Home Care and Training Medical Supplies Inc ..

•

Med-Ox Home Medics!,
Pike Community Hospitill,
ResCare Home Care, Scidto
County Democratic Party.
Southern
Ohio
c~'lllnlunit:ations Services
Inc .,
Spec ial
Touch
Homecare, Staker's Drugs,
The Scioto Foundation, Tub
Cutter, Vi II a Georgetown
Skilling
Nursing, and
Westmoreland Place.
A-om the Bingo Barn 01)
one
end,
to
the
Antique/Classic Car Show
on the other, during Senior
EXPO the Fairgrouflds ·
will he filled with amusements. food. and fun for
all. Stage acts begin at: 9
a.m. with the Veterans
Program,
Recognition
Cake Au.ction, Awards .
Presentation. ending the
day with the sounds of the
Joe Freeman Band. Look
for plenty of other attractions , including the M11rk
Wood Fun Show, chair
Caricature
volleybalL
Art, 'Birthday Chronicle,
First Name Almanac, craft
displays, exhibits, games,
and
continuous
door
prizes .... as well as food
booths ·and free treats of
popcorn and water:
Final door prizes worth
$ 1.5QO in gi ft certficates·
drawn at end of the day, and
you must be present to win'
Senior EXPO is sure to be
an exci ting place to spend
the day'
.
For additional injormarirm. m/1 Sharon Bowman
ar (800) 5?12-7277.

Anna Lee and Gerald Mollett

Lee-Mollett engagement
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Norma n Lee and Cynthia
. Hamilton of Kentucky ;md Jerry m1d Rhonua Mo\lctl of
· Poinr Pl eascmt, W.Va .. ;. mno~m cc the upcoming marrai gc of
their children. Ann;t l~ce anu Gerald Mollett .
, · The couple will . e.,change vows on Monday. Dec. 15.
-. 200R, at the Na~ar~nc Church in Point Plqsant.
· . . The bride is 19 years old and from Round Hill. Ky. She
' · is currqn ly employed with Speedway ..
The groom is 18 year' old anu resides in Point Pleasant.

ACROSS
1 Orchestra member
6 Island greetmg
11 Fms
16 Commence
21 Monarch
22 Writer of a thesaurus
23 01 bees
24 Hue
25 Rapty to a knock 1
26 Ethical
27 WMeol
"Wheat ol Fo~une·
28 Prepare
29 Cup handle
30 Inquired
31 Gel ready
32 Levin or Gershwin
34 Mafter, in law
35 Creature ollegend
38 Sunday dinner item
40 Gust
41 Bon42 "- - althe Races·

44 Tureen
45 Sp!ing time
47 On in years
49 Fad
52 Hunter constella1ion
54 Misrep-esentation
56 lenglh times widttl
60 HeadquMers
61 Be abuzz
62 Mus&lt;al sound
63 ShM-tai~d rodent
65 Honest6&amp; Off~ially au1horized
67 Plunder
68 Soft dnnk
69 Panel truck
70 Transgression

71 Under the covers
72 Dueling
vice president
73 Roman 54
74 Room
76 Lured
76 Word
w~h board ·or ~deo
79 Bundle
80 leans
81 Seaman
82 Fastener for a lid
63 Face card
84 Chinese pan
85 Someth1ng ol value
88 Porridge

89 Glass square
90 March rh~m ·
94 Hindu teacher
95 Snake
96 Fashion
97 Game ptayed
on horseback
98 Macaw genus
99Can
100 Solemn promise
102 Mature
103- oiTroy
104 Swamp
105 Exlretne
107 Cny on 1he Tiber
108 Doughnu1 shape
109 Corn bread
110 Quant~y ol paper
111 Wrinkle
113 Ant~oKi n ·, .
114 The yam. e.g.
115 Amerindian
117 Charge
118- colada
119 Sign gas
121 Insane
124 Bod~y structure
(abbr)
126 Strange
128 Reach
132 Mineral
133 "- a boy!"
134 Goldie !he actress
135 Rool•r Yale
139 Opp 01 NNW
140 Kingly
142Terre144 Des1roy by degrees
145 Carries wittl effo~
t47 Trap
141! Garden tool
149 Norman Vincent 150 Prevent
151 Facili tated
152 Crystal-gazers153 Did sums
154 Drills

DOWN
1 Liberated
2 Of the moon
3 Ne ptus4 Golf bait stand
5 Gaol
6 Weapons
7 Appearance
8 Fairy tale monster
9 Ve~ical space
10 Pan ol NATO (abbr.)
11 Bette or Jefferson
12 Flat
13 Peel
14 Light brown
15 Escargot
16 Write carelessly
17 Shoe pa~
18 Make frightened
19 Cowboy show
20 Meeting of lovers
30 lilerary collection·
31 Colleen
33 Cheered
36 Stare
37 Wor.k in verse
.. 39 Possess
40 Parting word
43 Cried roudly
44 - of paradtse
46 EKpe~
48 Barrier built
by beavers
49 Go after
50 Batman's·sidekick
51 Catkin
53 Police aet1on .
54 Kind of prize
55 "-- Lucy"
57 Foe
58 Make .(nlo law
59 De Mille or
Moorehead
61 Sword
62 Ripped
64 Extinct relat1ve
olthe eleph ant
66 Getaway lrom worl&lt;
67 Dollop
68 lustrous Iabrie
72 Party
73 Shoestnng
75 Spear
77 Particular .
78 Brealhe with diH~utty
79 Poison
82 Be qUiet'

83
84
85
86
87
88

89
90
91

92
93
96
97
101
102

SemipreCious stone
Where Cardiff is
Moving about
Pigs
-Claus
AlmaThe bishop ol Rome
Upright suppo~
Wealthy person
Witch
A~d

Bv

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L •, '

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DEBORAH SHELTON,

BSN
RNtAP COORDINATOR
GALLI A COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

'

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Rmaviru:-. is a recom' ;111ended vaccine for chi\::: 1!\re n from ag cs 2 1l1ro ugh i\
:::(llonths of . age. ' The
. ;Vaccine
for
Children
: ;Program (YFCl supplie&lt;
&gt;e ligible chi ldren, this vac:::~ine free of charge in order
;;:to stay healthy and is avail..; able at your Gallia County
::; Health Department. ·
::;- Eligible ch ildren for
. : 1 VFC
program includes:
' I

Sunday, September 7, 2008

GALLIPOLIS - Holt.cr . in direct counseling with
Medical Center Inpati ent pharmacy. all he/she has to
Phann&lt;tcy Department pro- do is let their nursi ng staff
vide ~ pharmaceutical ser- know they would like to utivices for the acute care lize this service." said
needs of patients. including Sherri Adams. R.. Ph .. · the
counseling ;erv'icc to dis' hospital's
director
of
cuss any new prescriptions Inpatient Pharmacy.
or how to handle current . "Patients and their litmiprescriptions when they are lies are very happy with this
discharged.
counsel ing service we .proAs needed, a pharmacist vide . free of charge,-· she
will go to a patient's room continued. "Our department
and meet with the patient is .more than happy to meet
and/or family members to with any patient to answer
do discharge counselfng any pharmacy questions
regardin g med icatio ns, go . he/she may have: ·
over information on new
Clinical services provided
medications. create a chan by the department include
fnr home use to track doses renal Urug monitoring. drug
(c sp~c iall y for patients on
interaction
monit o rin~. ·
multiple prescriptions) .
pharmal'okinetic dosing,
Currently. th ~ Pharm;JCy warfmin dosing. drug ·order
Department i~ choosing review. information ~ upport
IXtticnts to niTer thpe ser- for care providers. and med vices too. huwe vt::r ~ui y ication
education
as
pati ent is eligible for this requested fur paticllts. fiuniservice. Nursing units _are 1ies. and other care
equipped with form s to rec- providers.
ommend a pittient for this
The pharnm&lt;:y is also
Inpatient Pharmacy coun- active in evaluating mcdi&lt;.:aseling service .
·
tion use at Holzer Medical
"If someone is interestell ·Center through nur ongoing

Submitted photo
Seen here is Jared Vernon, RPh ., clinical pharmacist at
Holzer Medical Center, left , counseling a patient on new
medications.

program of medil:atiun use col/ Adams &lt;1/ (7-10) 441ievaluations (MUEs).
. 52./.J
or
l'isir
t ·or more il!f'o rmati rm. . ;I'H'lt'.Jio/;,£'1:01~~·

.

.

Meclicaid -eligible
''r 20-60 deatns ... Bcrorc their
alre"dy Medicaid enrolled: fifth birthday. almost all
Unin&gt;urecl:
AmeriCan children are infected with
lndi&lt;111 or . Ala., ka native: the rotavir'us. Children ge t
and Underinsurcu'. Babies ·the rot~tvirus infection by
and youn g children usually being around other chilarc the victim s ui' this dren who already have the
virus. resulting in intense infection .
Jiarrbeil, vomiting. and
Most rotavirus infection
fever.
is
spread
between
The Centers for Disease November and M&lt;ty.
Contro l report' that · each
The best way to protect
year rotaviru s infection your chi\&lt;) from the
causes babies and chil- rotavirus infection is to get
dren ," more than 400 .000 your child vaccinated. This
doctor visit s; more than is an 'oral vaccine (swal 200,000 .emergency depart- lowed by mouth) ; no shot
ment visits: 55,000- 70,000 is necessary!
hospital admissions , and
Rotavirus vaccine wil l

not prevent ymtr chi ld
from having vomiting or
diarrhea cuuseu by other
types of germs. The majority of children already vaccinated with rotavinJS vaccine will not have diarrhea
or vomitin1!. The CDC
states, " Around 98 percent
of · children who ger the
vaccine will 110Lget severe
rotavirus diarrhea, anti
abou1 74 percent do not get
rota virus diarrhea at ;r\1 ."
· It is recommended children receive three doses of
roravirus vaccine at ages 2,
4, and , 6 month of age.
(Remember, this is not a

shot; it's a liquid the child
swallows). All three doses
111ust be given hy the time
your child is :12 weeks. of
age (.J months olu ).
P~rents :

vou are welcome

10 bring );Our children to
the health department
Munuay through Friday
Jrom 8 a. m. to 4 p.m.
(cxdudin)! Federal holidays ). No appointments are
necessary. Please bring
your child's immunization
record. If you. the parent or
cuardiatT. are unable to
~ccompany your child. a
consent form signed by you
will be needed.

The necessary consent
form is Ul'ailabk for pickup (or can he faxed to you I
at the health department
and neeus to be completed
bd'ure. your chilu is
brought in for vw:cinatiop.
If you have any ques·tion s, please contact us at
441 -2950. or stop in . We
· want to · help you protect
and ·keep your children as
healthy as possible!
Reference : Department
of Health and Human
Services: Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Preve'ntion; and National
Immunization Program

· :----------~--~--~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------' '
'''

.,..
'•
·~

S1lant partormer
Neighbor ol Chile
A going up
Fragrant liquid
12 wds.)
103 Round dance
106 Flighiless bird
107 "Norma-" .
108 Offered formally
109 Kick
112 Naw1
113 Kn1ght's lile
114 Child
116 Followed in secret
11 B Bowler's target
120 - de cologne
121 Coda name
122 Place of contest
123 French painter
125 Fire residue .
127 P1tchers
129 RaylkJwer
130 Ri11er in France
131 Aenes
134 Mammoth
136 Burden
137 Lazy
138 Pay attention to
141 Exist
143 Sweel dflnk
144 Clean-air org.
145 Keyboard key
146 Ab - (lrom ihe
beginmng)

MUNI1Y
HMC Inpatient Pharmacy provides service

.·. Rotavirus vaccine reconm1ended for children between 2-6 months

..

SUNDAY PUZZLER

PageC3

'

..

'

.'

..•'.,

Social •Security benefits: The basics

:'•____:::..:...==::..:.==--'

fam ily.
efits later than your FRA.
It is my gmt! in wntmg they will be increased
:.! Let's face it , planning for thi s first in a two-pan series. . slight ly for each year he
::; retirement is scary. The on Social Security benefits works between the normal
:·• economy is in terr ible ,hape to provide the reade r with a retirement age and age 70.
:·:with no sign ofTecnvering · better understanding of \10w If ym1 l1ave reachcu your
• :·any time soon. Th e .so- Social Security\ retirement FRA , ynu can earn any
: • &lt;:ailed experts can ' t even benefits ai·e Cillculated. and additional amount and stwl
: :agree whether our economy hnw to eva luate for yourself · receive full benellt amounl.
·-!in its curre nt condi tion con- tile proper time to begin tak- If you 4re under the FRA
::; stitutes " recess ton or ing benefits . In weeks that when you start getting your
::• whether it's merely in "a fol low. we wi ll explore payments. $1 in benefits
:-:prolonged state of decline" · other issu es important to . will be deducted for ·each $2
.:.;(whatever th;H means) .
your retirement including you earn above the an11ual
: •• Whatever the technical usinu annuitic ~ in retire- limit. The theory behind
. :definition of our economy is men!: the home as a retire- taking Social Security bene,•., doesn ' t really help lhe aver- ment resource. inco111c tax fits sooner or later i, easy to
·.,age man to make ends meet. is~Ue s durin g re r irem~nt and unders1and. The govern:.; The most important · thing the usc of qualified retire- ment will pay you iiiore in
::• for most Americans is 'lllere- ment plans anu peusion s in the way ·of monthly puy:·: ly to tread the fin;mciul retirement income pla11ning. ments the longer vuu defer
·: waters of our ·time until the
However, the first stop on the .i nitial payment~
: 1 rides
of prosperity rise our road into retirement
However, the risk of
·.:again. The question for planning most logically delayi ng the beginning of
.: most of us when consider- leads us to lh c topic of Social Secttrit y payments
' : ing our retirement · 'years Social Security henefits. for someone in their 60s
·:• becomes. "What must do "'Retirement Planning" for comes when the benefit::we do in order to survive the many Americans means seeker dies before he or she
; hard times so that we are nothing more than awaiting would ''break even" from
· ;able to support ourse lves. the day at which time they the as a result of hitving
• · :and our family, during our ·yualify for Social Scctlrity delayed the beginning pay:• retirement years'" The benefits. However, even this ments in exchange for the
·•: answer
lor
young seemingly simple task is not higher monthly ·rate . In
·;Americans is simple without peril.
other words , Iike many
. • '.'stay the course, persevere
'To qualify for Social annuitie.s. if the' Social
:; ~nd over titi1C the market S~curity . retirement ilene- Security· applicant dies in
. ·:will bounce back. and, in fits, a worker must liavc the first few years after
:time : all will . be .right earned 40 credits, cakulatcd qualifying t(J receive Socia l
·· again ."
·
as follows : One credit for Se(urity benefits , it would
for
tho se · each $1 .000 earned in cov- have been much wiser to
· ; . However.
us
who
are ered employment. for a have begun the initial pay·; among
::approaching. or in the mid- maximum of four cred its ments early on at the lower
:• ille of, their retiremem ye;1rs per year ($4,000). Four monthly rate. However, if
·: now, the situation becomes credits per year· fo r I!) years the benefit seeker will live
:much more .serious. After eqtwls '40 credits: the work- beyond the '"break-even
:all, if you arc forced · to er is "fuUy insured ."' When· point," the delay of begin-,
:spend your retirement years a worker reache s Full ning Social Security bene.; ~uring a downturn in the Retirement Age .(FRAI. he . fits could result in a much
~stock market. you may can receive full retirement higher total gain over the
:· ~ever be able to recover the benefits. The FRA used to years.
::losses suffered by your be 65. but now varies based ·
Though the theory behind
the · Social
:: retirement account if you on your year of birth. You be,innin'u
.; are making withdrawals can collect reduced retire- Se~mity benefir, is a simple
·~: from your "nest egg" during ment benefits as early as one, the choice is seldom
:·(hat time period in order to age 62 (with 40 credits), or, easy because of the uncer~ ~uppo!1 yourself and your if you begin collecting ben- tainty of the applicant \ life
BY JAMES HENRY

• •
'

Let Me Show You How To
Increase The Size Of Your
Retirement Accounty By 10%

span . However, one seldomused ·alternative exists that
allows the retiree who possesses enough discipline to
"hedge his bets" so tltat the
right choice is more easily
detefmi ned. To uo thi,, the
reti ree wh&lt;\ begins the p;tyment of his benefits at the
earliest possible age wou iJ
simply pay back the bene his received after he has
aged sufficient ly to qualify
for the higher benefit.
As a result, after paying
·hack the Social Security
benefits
retireme nt
received, he would then file
a new application allow ing
him to receive larger monthly checks. based on his
older age .
Cons ider this example:
Mr. , and Mrs. McCain_ a
mitrried coupk. both age .
70, started collecti n ~ Social
Security retirement benefits
in their early 60s and each
will get $\3,250 thi s year.. If .
they had waited until present day to apply. they
would each get $20.693. or
56 percent more. If they
repay all benefit ~ previously
received, they may reapply
and receive lhe highcr-yearlv benefits of $20.693 annuallv for the remainder of
iheir lives.
So where's the catch'' If
you have already received'
Social Security benefits for
a number of years, tl1ere
really isn't one. So long as
you have the cash available
on hand to pay back the
money you received in '(last
years. you can start collecting bigger monthly checks
almost. immediately. A benefit exists where 1he bei1efit
seeker is able to reev&lt;Jiuate
his health after having
received several years of
benefits to better determine
the likelihoo~,of a long life-

time. not to mention the tinue our examination of
benefits from receiving the Social Security benefits by
payments effectively inter- examining how -spouse and
est free for the years of Sllrvi vor benefits are reg ureceiving payments .
lated.
. Additionally, if your
(}ames Henry is· an attorspotl'e is younger than ynu·.
or has a· famil y hi story of IICY and· i11surmrce agml
longevity, the strategy licensed ;,, tire state.~ of
might make 1i1ore sense, Ohio and West Virginia. He
because your widow or wid- is tire founder of Frenclr
ower would get those higher City
Estate
Planning
benefit checks for the rest of Solutiom,
LLC,
with
'her li!C. This cou ld make offices
located
·;II
particular sense where one
souse· didn't get paid as Gallipolis. He can be conmuch an.d derives all or part tacted at allyjamesrhell·or
or her benefit from the other ry @lwtmail.cpm, ·
www.OirioEstateP/anningS
spouse's earnings record. ·
Nex t week. we will con- olutirms.com.)

Thank You
City Ice &amp; Fuel

THANK YOU
Blosser Concrete
Pumping

for buying
my 2008
Market Hog

forbuylng my

2008

And ·

.Market Hog
)
'

Jarrett Martin
Triangle 4-H

Supporting
ttl
,.., · .. ~he Youth r~f
(J · •.lltt.. Gallia
;Jii i

~,,

f;

Co.

.

Kelly
Havely ·
Si lver
Streaks 4-H

The
Joint Implant Center

'

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement. we offer .office hours at:
3554 U.S . Route-60 East,
Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is Friday, Sept. 19.
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement
"

•

�ELEBRATIONS

~unbap t!rlmes -ienttnel

PageC4 ·
Sunday, September 7, 2008

.

Mills-Shoults engagement
SYRACUSE - Homer Mills Jr. and Diana S. Mills, both
of Syran•se. annotml·e the engage ment and upcoming marriage of their daughter. Amber Lee Mills. to Eric David
Shoults. son ol: Roger and Mary Shoults uf Racine.
. The hride-elect is a 2004 grad uate of Southern High
'
School. and currently self-e mployed. She is the grandREEDSVILLE - Sherry Lynn Hawley of Reedsville daughter of Emmogenc Hamilton of Syracuse, and the late
ond Larry Michael l.csler Jr. of Meclianicsbmg were mar-. Homer allll Goldie Mills of Lake Wales. Fla.
rice! on June 7. 200R. at the Gospel Baptist Church at Torch
Her fiai1ce h a 1992 graduate of Southern High School.
by Pastor Jay Huhbaru.
and is current!y employed at Toyota Motor Manufactnring
The bride is the daughter of Jerry and Joyce Burke of 111 Bulfalo ...... va. He ts the gra ndson of Betty Shoults of
Reedsville. The groom\ parents are Larry Sr. and Jennie New Lexington. and the late Harold and Margaret Walker
of Rocine.
Lester. and Joyce Lester. of Phin City.
The cmtple will exchange vows on Saturday. Sept. 27.
Serving as matron of hunor for the bride was Leslie
2008,
at 2:30 p.'m. The open church wedding will toke place
Rayburn of Pomeroy. Flower girl was MacKenzie Lester of
at
the
Asbury United Methodist Church, State Route 124,
Plain City, niece of the gruom. and the ring bearer was
Austin Lester of Plain Ci ty. nephew of the groom. The Syrm:use.
groom's best man was hi s brother. Keith Lester of Plain
City.
\ . ,t
Music for the wedding was provided by Aust.in Lute of
Coolville. nephew of the hridc.
.
A small reception was .held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
.following the ceremony. A honcymm1n is plan·ncd for later.
The couple res ick at 7460~ State Route IH7.
;!.,•
Mechanicsburg. Ohio ~30-14.
'"";j;
The bride isa 1997 graduate of Eastern High School and
· a 2007 graduate of the Mountain State Scho&lt;\1 of Massage.
Lester graduated from Jonathan Alder High School in
· ·J991 , and the Col umbu' State Community College with a
degree in ciyil eng ineering in)003 . He is employed hy the
City of Hilliard in puhlic service man:Jgement.

Tiffany Baker and Nicholas Tab'or

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lester Jr.

Hawley-Lester wedding
.

.

'

Baker-Tabor engagement .~
GALLIPOLIS -· Tiffany A. Baker aod Nicholas A.
Tabor are announcing ·the'ir engage ment and upcoming
.
wedding.
Tiffany is the daughter of Steven and Kristi Baker of
Waterloo, and the late Jim and Mary Stewart of Gallipolis.
She is a 2003 gn1duate of South Gallia High School and is
employed with the Gallipolis City Schools.
Nick is the son of Bonnie Tabor of Gallipolis, and Melvin
and Jan Tabor of Gallipolis. He is a 2ll(Y4 graduate of Galli a
Academy High School and is employed by the family business, Tabor's Hoor Covering.
Nick and Tiffany will exchange vows on Saturday, Oct.
4. 2008. at Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis. A
reception will follow the ceremony at the Elks Farm.

I

Koren Moore and James Custer
Jennifer ·Hill and Shawn Mount

Moore-Custer
engagement
Hill-Mount engagement
•

Amy Williams and Denis McFall

Williams-McFall
engagement

VINTON - Jennifer Renee Hill and Shawn Matthew
Mount arc announcing their engagement and upcoming
wellding. .
.
·
The bride-to-be is the daughter ofTerry and Paula Hill of .
Vinton, and the granddaughter of Homer mid Ethel Hill of
Bidwell. and Louise Nickels of Vinton.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Terry and Zane
Colley, and Gary and Brandy Mount of Gallipolis. He is the
grandson of Barbara and Ted Glassburn, and Norman
Mount. all of Bidwell.
Jennifer is a 2005 graduate of River Valley High School
and will graduate from Ohio State University in June 2009.
She is employed by HouseCalls for Dogs and Cats.
Shawn is a 2005 graduate of River Valley High School
and ts employed by American. Electric Power River
Operations.
The wedding has. been set . for Del'. 2 1. 20'0~ . in
yallipolis.

POINT PLEASANT, W Va. - Ken and l'erri Moore of
Point Pleasant, and Deborah Moore, also of Point Pleasant,
are proud to announce the engagement of their daughter,
Koren Lee Moore, .to James Matthew Custer, son of Linda
Custer of Bunker Hill , W.Va.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Marsliall University and
currently attends veterinary school at the University of
Georgia's College of Veteritiary Medicine in Athens, Ga.
The prospective bridegroom is a veteran who served two
tours in Afghanistan. He attended Marshall University. He
ts currently employed as ·an officer with the Athens-Clarke
County Polil'e Department.
Koren is the granddaughter of Joan Moore and the late
Dr. James Moore of Point Pleasant, Charles Cottrill and the
late Jewell Cottrill , also of Point Pleasant, and Tom and
Thelma Woodward of Gallipolis.
.
· ·
James is the grandson of the late Paul and Bertha Custer
·of Inwood, W.Va.
A May 2009 wedding is planned.

Auditions are scheduled
for upcoming production

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - With excitement and
anticipation. Gage and Zach McFall anti Emilee, Ethan· and
Hannah Bias w()uld like to announce the engagement and
. upcoming marriage of their parents, Denis Ryan McFall
and Amy Nichole William s (Bias).
POINT
PLEASANT,
Also celebrating the announcement are the couple's parents, Carl and Becky McFall, Teresa Butts , and Jack and W.Va. - Mason County
Performin g Arts Council
Peggy Williams.
and
MCACT will be perA formal wedding and reception is being planned for
forming
"C urse of the
Sept. 27, 2008. The custom of open church will' be
observed by the children and parents lor family and friends Werewolf' by Tim. Kelly
to celebrate the union and new hegi nning of love and fam,- (with · permission from the
Dramatic Publishing Co ..
il y.
Staff Sgt. McFall i., in the U.S. Army and l1as served the Wood stock , II I.) at the
country for the past nine years, both overseas and in the State Theater tn Point
United States. The bride-to-be is employed by the Holier Pleasant. ·
Cardiovascular Institute as a RNIBSN in the catheterization
are
·Performances
expected for Friday, Oct.
lab.
Plans are being made for the family to reside in Fort 3 1 at 8 p.m .. with preBragg. N.C. . while McFall continues hi s service in the show starting &lt;It 6:30p.m.:
. 82nd Airborne Division of the U.S. Army.
_5a(urday, Nov. I :It 8 p.m.;

and Sunday, Nov. 2 at I
p.m.
Ticket information will
be announced soon.
Auditions will be held:
Friday, Sept. 19 from 6 to
8 p.m.;.and Saturday, Sept.
20 from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m. at Christ Episcopal
Church, 804 Main St..
Point Pleasant. The cast of
12 includes seven females
and five males , or six .
females and six males.
There is one part for a
girl age 12- 16. but all oth-

ers are adu It characters
which could be played by
actors mid-teen and up. All
experience levels are welcome.
There are no Sl{lall children parts in this play, but
our Friday pre-show will
involve a costume. runway

show for kids or all ages.
More informatiort will be
sluuwl at the next MCACT
meeting , Monday. Sept. 8
at 6 p.m., CJrrisi Episcopal
Church. ur yuu may C(ll/
(304) 675-6687 after 5
p.m.

Owen Lloyd of
Access Drywall Supply Co.
for purchasin g my 2008
. Market Hog and supporting
I he youth of 4-H'
Tori Tack ell
~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

. GALLIPOLIS - John
:and Jody Yeauger of
;Reynoldsburg 'and their
·daughter, Kathy Flattu of
:Minneapolis, recently visit:ed the Gallia County
:Genealogical Society, OGS
·Chapter at 57 Court St. ·in
:search of family roots.
Janes was ·a longtime
resident of Gallipolis ,
growing up in a home on
·the 600 block of Second
:Avenue. Hi s parents were
:Frank and Charley Janes
\ and one brother was the
late Bill Janes, attorney.
Janes recalled his days at
Gallia Academy and play: ing tennis on the . old
·Cherrington · tennis court
:that was once locJlted on
, first Avenue.
.
' Jody was in search of her
,: family, the Yeaugers, from
Cheshire Township . The
.society was able to help
them discover marriages,
wills and even a Civil War
soldier in the family. Jody
and daughter plan to complete application~ for several of the local lineage societies.
The society is open
Wednesday through Friday ·
'from IO .a.m. to 4 p.m. and
other hours by appointment.

Wit h Olll p rotection"'

We first meet Gertie
' Nevels, heroine of The
:Dol/maker by Harriette
' Arnow, astride a mule in
: rural Kentucky, her small
:· son in her arms. She will
·stand in the middle of the
road to flag down a car so .
she can get him to a doctor.
·She forces an Army man
·and his driver off the road.
..Time is of the essence.
:When she realizes the boy is
choking, she pulls out her
knife and cuts a hole in his
, throat s.o he can breathe.
;. Gertie, mother of five, has
· a dream. She and husband,
Clovis, live on a rented farm
and must give half of what
they raise to the landlord.
There is a neighboring farm
·for sale, and Gertie has been
:scrimping and saving for
years to buy it. It is the
American dream - to own
a piece of land, all your
own.
The time is World War II .
Clovis is called for a physical. He is a trifling ·man,
·given to tinkering. Not very
ambitious, he is a kind, but
inept, father. He is told to go
: to Detroit to work in a fac. tory to help with the war
effort. He calls for Gertie
·and the children to join him ·
there. Gertie's dream is
:deferred, perhaps lost forever.
The Dol/maker is a
tragedy. From that first
. scene where Gertie is strong
and decisive, everything
' goes downhill for her and
her family. In stark contrast
to the lovely hills and valleys of Kentucky with the
mist in the mornings and the
sound of cattle lowing is the
terrible ugliness of industrial Detroit, with the noise of
passing planes and trains
and traffic, the dirt and
despair of the projects.
They come to a line of
joined tiny houses, where
you can hear every snore
and moan through the walls.
The Nevels feel they have
entered an alien land. They
are ridiculed as "hillbillies"
by . their neighbors, and the
. children are made fun of at
.school.
After still another humili, ation, the oldest son, Enoch,

for purchasing my 2008
Market Hog and your conlinued
s upport of 4 -H!

Zack Tackett

!&gt;ubmilted photo

Kathy Flattu of Minneapolis is seen with her parents, Jody
and John Janes of Reynoldsburg, while .researching family ·
history at the Gallia County Genealogical Society, OGS
Chapter.
The group is currently
adding many items to its
probat~ index. There are
over 12,000 original probate
cases and a complete index
has not always been avai lable.
·
The group also has a web
site , galliagenealogy.org,
with over 38,000 tombstones and a collection of

obituaries and photographs
as well as tax li sts, rosters
and business information.
Look for an announcement
of a new pttblicat ion in. the
near future. This will be a
book for all members of the
community and there will
be a pre-pubEcation sale
which will be cheaper than
the final cost.

.'

Beverly
Gettles

~:~~sa~~ ~;~d~w~~cro~
Kentucky. The
next two
Clytie
and
children,
.
Reu ben, seem to adJUSt to
the circumstances better.
Joyce Carol Oates, who
wrote an· afterword in my
coP.y of the book, says the
chtldren Jearn to deal with
the capitalistic society, to
"sell themselves." 1 suppose
in some way, we all "sell
ourselves'"' to some kind of
work, . but usually we can
choose our occopation.
These folks can't. They
have no skills, no education
which applies in the new
industrial economy. They
try to keep food on their
table in the city. tlack home,
they grew their own food .
All of this is totally foreign
to them. especially to the
adults.
This is not just' a good
book, it is a great book, a
true American Classic. H
most reminds me of The
Grapes of Wrath, another
story about a family forced
out of their home and familiar circumstances by eco-

.. .

.

. .

Open House
I Tuesd~y, S,eptember ~ 6 .
5:00 ·pm to 6·:-30 pn1
·r

. ,

·

~

· ·.

.·,

Holzer Ceilt'erfor Cancer Care
170 Jackson Piice; Gallipolis, ..,,..,u.
The public isi'\vel~ome! . . .· v
Refreshmen~~iil be se.Ved. .
'

;;.,qit-f''

(;~~~~1!:~~4 or .
1-800-821 ~3 860

·

Sponsored by
Gadlng. OH 6.. WMI'O

For more Info. call: 740-949-2217

Insurance
• N.uonwld•• comp•nr

•

.•.

.

.For m~ ·nfult~p, about pr~ Schuster

after Car Show

,

SPR IN G VALLEY
OLDAOLIIf-l'&gt;Wf,J

~

Trust. ·Hope. &lt;Closer tO You

.

·

7

1:1MJAC~\OtlPI~I

44b 4524

FRI915/08 · THURS 9/11/08

WWW.SPAINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Box Office Opens@
6:30PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp; '

12:30PMFOR
,
SAT. &amp; SUN ONLY MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT

BANGKOK DANGEROUS (R)
1:00~ 3:15, 7:00 &amp; 9:15
BABYLON A.D. (PG13)
t:10, 3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10
- - ·-----COLLEGE (R)
1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30
DISASTER MOVIE (PG13)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
---THE HOUSE BUNNY (PGI3,
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
.
MtRRQRS(R)
3:30, 7:10 &amp; 9:30 .
-- 1:10,
----TROPIC THUNDER (R)
1:30, 3:30, 7,:30 &amp; 9:30

-

.

.

!

Award~ny

Allied .
On Y'our Slct.ll

.

I'

FREE Concert Begins
at 7Jlrrl

740-992·3600

or

For more il!{ormalion 011 hmr
you c'(l} l signup.fi.&gt;r your library
can.J. l'isir /Jos.w nl Uhrml' a l 7
Sprun' Sr._Cial!rj Jo/is. or f1i10ne
446·RI:."AD 1732.1!.

. Medical Director, Holzer. Center for Cancer Care

J-4 pn $ JO enay fee
)udlng 3:30-&lt;ipm

1

GALLIPOLIS
September is Library Card
Sign-up Month. and the Dr.
Samuel L. l3u;sarll Memorial
Library wants to make sure
that your child is equipped
with the smanest card o( all
- a library card.
A I ibrary card can give your
child access to homework
help. matcriJJ, to research
tho'c term paper&gt;. or information for the1r next book report.
It can also help make life after
school more fun : with free
access to books. music, the
Internet. anll nmre.
. Studies show that children
who arc read to in the home
and who use the library perform better in 'chool and are
more likdv to continue to use
the libr,uy· as a source of lifetime lcm·nmg.
"A librwy card has always
been the most ' important
school supply of all," .said
Bossard Library Director ·
Debbie Saunders.
Of course. libr;uy cards are
not just for kids. According to
a recent household survey by
the
American
Library
Association. 44 percent of
parentneport that they bring
their ch ildren to the library
becau~c it gi'e~ them some·
thing to Jo together.
.
Parents can help their children explore new interests tmd,
at the same iime. enjoy a family progranl' m pick out a best
sel ler for the mselves. Best of
all. fami ly time at the library
won't break the bank. Patrons
have acces:-. tu book~. muSic.
the lmcmet. and much more
tor free with a lib•~"Y care!. .
. This monlh. make sure
yom kids gear up for school
by sign ing ur for a library
card. No matter how
crammed the backpack or a
family's s&lt;.:hedule. there's
alwavs room fur the snuutest
carll all. a libr&lt;uy card.

Grae L. Schuster, M.D.

Registration

Insurance Agency .

D

Woodward-Mills wedding

GALLIPOLIS - Jessica Marie Woodward and David
Anthony Mills Jr. were united in man·iage on SatLirday. June
28. 200S, at the First Baptist Church in Gallipolis. with Pastor
Alvis Pollard olliciating the double ring ceremony.
Jessica is the daughter of Kevin ~md Ellen WetTy, and Scott
Woodward of Gallipolis. David is the son of David and Lisa
Mills of Crown City. ·
Jessica wore a straples~. all-over beaded bee ivory gown
.with a scalloped sweetheart neckline. She wore an ivory cathedral length veil with a scalloped beaded edge. Her bouquet· w:"
made of coral and fuchsia roses.
Maid of honor was Krystal Kiski s. friend of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Niki Mill s tUld Stacey Mills, sisters of the
groom, and Leila Hojat and Moriah Daniels. friends of the
bride. They wore long coral chiffon dresses and carried bouquets of fuchsia roses.
Lilly Rees, 'friend of the bride. dropped rose petals as she prenomic hardship. The strong ceded the bride down the aisle.
character in that story is
Qearld Cade, fiiend of the groom, served as best man. ·
also it woman, Ma Joad, one Groomsmen were Joe Martin. Chris Temple and Nathan Biars .
of the towering figures of. triends of the groom, and Kaleb Werry, stepbrother of the bride.
American fiction.
Justin Butler. cousin of the groom. was ring bearer.
I .think you will find
The groom wore a black suit with an ivmy vest and tie. and
Genre Nevels, who loves to · a coral rose boutonniere. The men in the wedding pany wore
whittle and finds a way to . black suits with coral vests and ties and titchsia rose boutonsupport her family, no less a meres.
remar ka bl e
cItanicter.
Gertie has carried with her a
Preceding tl)e ceremony, piano music was played by Carla
block of wood, which she Swain. cousin of the bride. The wedding,guests were registered
hopes to carve into a tigure. by' Kristine Bostic, cousin of the groom. Olivia Woodward,
Throughout the book, she cousin of the .bride, was the program attendant.
sees Christ 1·11 the wood. but
The guests enjoyed a reception after the ceremony with din-·
· at the Frene h Art co1ony. Th e '.our-uere
· d we d.
can't seem to find the right ner and dancmg
image for the face of Chrt's·t. ding cake was topped with fuchsia and coral rose petals and
d
d ·h
d
ecorate Wtt stran s of pearls.
There are several memorable minor characters who
Alter a honeymoon in Myrtle Beach. S.C., the couple now
work in the factories and resides on Hannan Trace Road near Crmvn City.
live in the projects and
Jessica is a 2008 graduate of the Rio Grande School of
share the fate of the Nevels Nursing and is employed as an RN at Hol1.er Medical Center.
family, each of them trying David is employed by Carmichael Equipment of Huntington,
to cope · in their .own way. W.Va., as an agriculture technician.
There are the Catholic
Jessica is the granddaughter of Howard and the late Jessie
Dalys, ths social scientist Waugh, and George and Nona Woodward of Gallipolis.
and his "proper" wife, the
David is the grandson of Harry and Mmy Fellure of
dissatisfied waitress wl1o Gallipolis, and Eloise and the late Frank Mills Jr. of Crown
leaves her distraught hus- City.
band. the peddler who sells
fruit and vegetables in the
Office Administration is m demand
alley.
Brighten your financJatoulfook with an
·There are union conflicts,
Associate Degree of Applied Business in
a murder, toil and trouble
Executive Office Assitant
everywhere. There is also
or
companionship, as the
women of the projects help
'Medical Office Adminlstartlon
one another through child
Gallipolis
birth and deaths and acciCareer
College
dents and poverty. Thi s is a
"Career~; CWsu Tu Home."
strong book, a wonllerful
1-800-214-0452 • 7 40-446-4367
book. but not a happy one,
www.gatlipoliscareercollege.edu
You will remember Gertie
1176 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH
Nevels and her family and
friends long after you have
, finished this story.

Saturday September 13th

Reed &amp; Baur

www . reedb~ur . com

Mr. and Mrs. David A. Mills Jr.

'

Alhcd lnsuranve .
Feel inde pendent .

22 0 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH

Get the
Smartest Card

'The Dollmaker':
An American classic

'L

Thank You
John &amp; Josh Burnett
of Burnett's Heating
&amp; Cooling

Sunday, Sept~mber 7, 2008

at your library

4th Annual
Cruisin' Saturday Night
· Car Show &amp;. Concert
bel1ind you , hitting
t he road is a breeze . .(,

Thank You

ON .THE BOOKSHELF

Janes family visits genealogical society

Amber Lee Mills and Eric Shoults
'

·. 6unbap limts ·itnttnel

PageCs

�ELEBRATIONS

~unbap t!rlmes -ienttnel

PageC4 ·
Sunday, September 7, 2008

.

Mills-Shoults engagement
SYRACUSE - Homer Mills Jr. and Diana S. Mills, both
of Syran•se. annotml·e the engage ment and upcoming marriage of their daughter. Amber Lee Mills. to Eric David
Shoults. son ol: Roger and Mary Shoults uf Racine.
. The hride-elect is a 2004 grad uate of Southern High
'
School. and currently self-e mployed. She is the grandREEDSVILLE - Sherry Lynn Hawley of Reedsville daughter of Emmogenc Hamilton of Syracuse, and the late
ond Larry Michael l.csler Jr. of Meclianicsbmg were mar-. Homer allll Goldie Mills of Lake Wales. Fla.
rice! on June 7. 200R. at the Gospel Baptist Church at Torch
Her fiai1ce h a 1992 graduate of Southern High School.
by Pastor Jay Huhbaru.
and is current!y employed at Toyota Motor Manufactnring
The bride is the daughter of Jerry and Joyce Burke of 111 Bulfalo ...... va. He ts the gra ndson of Betty Shoults of
Reedsville. The groom\ parents are Larry Sr. and Jennie New Lexington. and the late Harold and Margaret Walker
of Rocine.
Lester. and Joyce Lester. of Phin City.
The cmtple will exchange vows on Saturday. Sept. 27.
Serving as matron of hunor for the bride was Leslie
2008,
at 2:30 p.'m. The open church wedding will toke place
Rayburn of Pomeroy. Flower girl was MacKenzie Lester of
at
the
Asbury United Methodist Church, State Route 124,
Plain City, niece of the gruom. and the ring bearer was
Austin Lester of Plain Ci ty. nephew of the groom. The Syrm:use.
groom's best man was hi s brother. Keith Lester of Plain
City.
\ . ,t
Music for the wedding was provided by Aust.in Lute of
Coolville. nephew of the hridc.
.
A small reception was .held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
.following the ceremony. A honcymm1n is plan·ncd for later.
The couple res ick at 7460~ State Route IH7.
;!.,•
Mechanicsburg. Ohio ~30-14.
'"";j;
The bride isa 1997 graduate of Eastern High School and
· a 2007 graduate of the Mountain State Scho&lt;\1 of Massage.
Lester graduated from Jonathan Alder High School in
· ·J991 , and the Col umbu' State Community College with a
degree in ciyil eng ineering in)003 . He is employed hy the
City of Hilliard in puhlic service man:Jgement.

Tiffany Baker and Nicholas Tab'or

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lester Jr.

Hawley-Lester wedding
.

.

'

Baker-Tabor engagement .~
GALLIPOLIS -· Tiffany A. Baker aod Nicholas A.
Tabor are announcing ·the'ir engage ment and upcoming
.
wedding.
Tiffany is the daughter of Steven and Kristi Baker of
Waterloo, and the late Jim and Mary Stewart of Gallipolis.
She is a 2003 gn1duate of South Gallia High School and is
employed with the Gallipolis City Schools.
Nick is the son of Bonnie Tabor of Gallipolis, and Melvin
and Jan Tabor of Gallipolis. He is a 2ll(Y4 graduate of Galli a
Academy High School and is employed by the family business, Tabor's Hoor Covering.
Nick and Tiffany will exchange vows on Saturday, Oct.
4. 2008. at Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis. A
reception will follow the ceremony at the Elks Farm.

I

Koren Moore and James Custer
Jennifer ·Hill and Shawn Mount

Moore-Custer
engagement
Hill-Mount engagement
•

Amy Williams and Denis McFall

Williams-McFall
engagement

VINTON - Jennifer Renee Hill and Shawn Matthew
Mount arc announcing their engagement and upcoming
wellding. .
.
·
The bride-to-be is the daughter ofTerry and Paula Hill of .
Vinton, and the granddaughter of Homer mid Ethel Hill of
Bidwell. and Louise Nickels of Vinton.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Terry and Zane
Colley, and Gary and Brandy Mount of Gallipolis. He is the
grandson of Barbara and Ted Glassburn, and Norman
Mount. all of Bidwell.
Jennifer is a 2005 graduate of River Valley High School
and will graduate from Ohio State University in June 2009.
She is employed by HouseCalls for Dogs and Cats.
Shawn is a 2005 graduate of River Valley High School
and ts employed by American. Electric Power River
Operations.
The wedding has. been set . for Del'. 2 1. 20'0~ . in
yallipolis.

POINT PLEASANT, W Va. - Ken and l'erri Moore of
Point Pleasant, and Deborah Moore, also of Point Pleasant,
are proud to announce the engagement of their daughter,
Koren Lee Moore, .to James Matthew Custer, son of Linda
Custer of Bunker Hill , W.Va.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Marsliall University and
currently attends veterinary school at the University of
Georgia's College of Veteritiary Medicine in Athens, Ga.
The prospective bridegroom is a veteran who served two
tours in Afghanistan. He attended Marshall University. He
ts currently employed as ·an officer with the Athens-Clarke
County Polil'e Department.
Koren is the granddaughter of Joan Moore and the late
Dr. James Moore of Point Pleasant, Charles Cottrill and the
late Jewell Cottrill , also of Point Pleasant, and Tom and
Thelma Woodward of Gallipolis.
.
· ·
James is the grandson of the late Paul and Bertha Custer
·of Inwood, W.Va.
A May 2009 wedding is planned.

Auditions are scheduled
for upcoming production

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - With excitement and
anticipation. Gage and Zach McFall anti Emilee, Ethan· and
Hannah Bias w()uld like to announce the engagement and
. upcoming marriage of their parents, Denis Ryan McFall
and Amy Nichole William s (Bias).
POINT
PLEASANT,
Also celebrating the announcement are the couple's parents, Carl and Becky McFall, Teresa Butts , and Jack and W.Va. - Mason County
Performin g Arts Council
Peggy Williams.
and
MCACT will be perA formal wedding and reception is being planned for
forming
"C urse of the
Sept. 27, 2008. The custom of open church will' be
observed by the children and parents lor family and friends Werewolf' by Tim. Kelly
to celebrate the union and new hegi nning of love and fam,- (with · permission from the
Dramatic Publishing Co ..
il y.
Staff Sgt. McFall i., in the U.S. Army and l1as served the Wood stock , II I.) at the
country for the past nine years, both overseas and in the State Theater tn Point
United States. The bride-to-be is employed by the Holier Pleasant. ·
Cardiovascular Institute as a RNIBSN in the catheterization
are
·Performances
expected for Friday, Oct.
lab.
Plans are being made for the family to reside in Fort 3 1 at 8 p.m .. with preBragg. N.C. . while McFall continues hi s service in the show starting &lt;It 6:30p.m.:
. 82nd Airborne Division of the U.S. Army.
_5a(urday, Nov. I :It 8 p.m.;

and Sunday, Nov. 2 at I
p.m.
Ticket information will
be announced soon.
Auditions will be held:
Friday, Sept. 19 from 6 to
8 p.m.;.and Saturday, Sept.
20 from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m. at Christ Episcopal
Church, 804 Main St..
Point Pleasant. The cast of
12 includes seven females
and five males , or six .
females and six males.
There is one part for a
girl age 12- 16. but all oth-

ers are adu It characters
which could be played by
actors mid-teen and up. All
experience levels are welcome.
There are no Sl{lall children parts in this play, but
our Friday pre-show will
involve a costume. runway

show for kids or all ages.
More informatiort will be
sluuwl at the next MCACT
meeting , Monday. Sept. 8
at 6 p.m., CJrrisi Episcopal
Church. ur yuu may C(ll/
(304) 675-6687 after 5
p.m.

Owen Lloyd of
Access Drywall Supply Co.
for purchasin g my 2008
. Market Hog and supporting
I he youth of 4-H'
Tori Tack ell
~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

. GALLIPOLIS - John
:and Jody Yeauger of
;Reynoldsburg 'and their
·daughter, Kathy Flattu of
:Minneapolis, recently visit:ed the Gallia County
:Genealogical Society, OGS
·Chapter at 57 Court St. ·in
:search of family roots.
Janes was ·a longtime
resident of Gallipolis ,
growing up in a home on
·the 600 block of Second
:Avenue. Hi s parents were
:Frank and Charley Janes
\ and one brother was the
late Bill Janes, attorney.
Janes recalled his days at
Gallia Academy and play: ing tennis on the . old
·Cherrington · tennis court
:that was once locJlted on
, first Avenue.
.
' Jody was in search of her
,: family, the Yeaugers, from
Cheshire Township . The
.society was able to help
them discover marriages,
wills and even a Civil War
soldier in the family. Jody
and daughter plan to complete application~ for several of the local lineage societies.
The society is open
Wednesday through Friday ·
'from IO .a.m. to 4 p.m. and
other hours by appointment.

Wit h Olll p rotection"'

We first meet Gertie
' Nevels, heroine of The
:Dol/maker by Harriette
' Arnow, astride a mule in
: rural Kentucky, her small
:· son in her arms. She will
·stand in the middle of the
road to flag down a car so .
she can get him to a doctor.
·She forces an Army man
·and his driver off the road.
..Time is of the essence.
:When she realizes the boy is
choking, she pulls out her
knife and cuts a hole in his
, throat s.o he can breathe.
;. Gertie, mother of five, has
· a dream. She and husband,
Clovis, live on a rented farm
and must give half of what
they raise to the landlord.
There is a neighboring farm
·for sale, and Gertie has been
:scrimping and saving for
years to buy it. It is the
American dream - to own
a piece of land, all your
own.
The time is World War II .
Clovis is called for a physical. He is a trifling ·man,
·given to tinkering. Not very
ambitious, he is a kind, but
inept, father. He is told to go
: to Detroit to work in a fac. tory to help with the war
effort. He calls for Gertie
·and the children to join him ·
there. Gertie's dream is
:deferred, perhaps lost forever.
The Dol/maker is a
tragedy. From that first
. scene where Gertie is strong
and decisive, everything
' goes downhill for her and
her family. In stark contrast
to the lovely hills and valleys of Kentucky with the
mist in the mornings and the
sound of cattle lowing is the
terrible ugliness of industrial Detroit, with the noise of
passing planes and trains
and traffic, the dirt and
despair of the projects.
They come to a line of
joined tiny houses, where
you can hear every snore
and moan through the walls.
The Nevels feel they have
entered an alien land. They
are ridiculed as "hillbillies"
by . their neighbors, and the
. children are made fun of at
.school.
After still another humili, ation, the oldest son, Enoch,

for purchasing my 2008
Market Hog and your conlinued
s upport of 4 -H!

Zack Tackett

!&gt;ubmilted photo

Kathy Flattu of Minneapolis is seen with her parents, Jody
and John Janes of Reynoldsburg, while .researching family ·
history at the Gallia County Genealogical Society, OGS
Chapter.
The group is currently
adding many items to its
probat~ index. There are
over 12,000 original probate
cases and a complete index
has not always been avai lable.
·
The group also has a web
site , galliagenealogy.org,
with over 38,000 tombstones and a collection of

obituaries and photographs
as well as tax li sts, rosters
and business information.
Look for an announcement
of a new pttblicat ion in. the
near future. This will be a
book for all members of the
community and there will
be a pre-pubEcation sale
which will be cheaper than
the final cost.

.'

Beverly
Gettles

~:~~sa~~ ~;~d~w~~cro~
Kentucky. The
next two
Clytie
and
children,
.
Reu ben, seem to adJUSt to
the circumstances better.
Joyce Carol Oates, who
wrote an· afterword in my
coP.y of the book, says the
chtldren Jearn to deal with
the capitalistic society, to
"sell themselves." 1 suppose
in some way, we all "sell
ourselves'"' to some kind of
work, . but usually we can
choose our occopation.
These folks can't. They
have no skills, no education
which applies in the new
industrial economy. They
try to keep food on their
table in the city. tlack home,
they grew their own food .
All of this is totally foreign
to them. especially to the
adults.
This is not just' a good
book, it is a great book, a
true American Classic. H
most reminds me of The
Grapes of Wrath, another
story about a family forced
out of their home and familiar circumstances by eco-

.. .

.

. .

Open House
I Tuesd~y, S,eptember ~ 6 .
5:00 ·pm to 6·:-30 pn1
·r

. ,

·

~

· ·.

.·,

Holzer Ceilt'erfor Cancer Care
170 Jackson Piice; Gallipolis, ..,,..,u.
The public isi'\vel~ome! . . .· v
Refreshmen~~iil be se.Ved. .
'

;;.,qit-f''

(;~~~~1!:~~4 or .
1-800-821 ~3 860

·

Sponsored by
Gadlng. OH 6.. WMI'O

For more Info. call: 740-949-2217

Insurance
• N.uonwld•• comp•nr

•

.•.

.

.For m~ ·nfult~p, about pr~ Schuster

after Car Show

,

SPR IN G VALLEY
OLDAOLIIf-l'&gt;Wf,J

~

Trust. ·Hope. &lt;Closer tO You

.

·

7

1:1MJAC~\OtlPI~I

44b 4524

FRI915/08 · THURS 9/11/08

WWW.SPAINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Box Office Opens@
6:30PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp; '

12:30PMFOR
,
SAT. &amp; SUN ONLY MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT

BANGKOK DANGEROUS (R)
1:00~ 3:15, 7:00 &amp; 9:15
BABYLON A.D. (PG13)
t:10, 3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10
- - ·-----COLLEGE (R)
1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30
DISASTER MOVIE (PG13)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
---THE HOUSE BUNNY (PGI3,
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
.
MtRRQRS(R)
3:30, 7:10 &amp; 9:30 .
-- 1:10,
----TROPIC THUNDER (R)
1:30, 3:30, 7,:30 &amp; 9:30

-

.

.

!

Award~ny

Allied .
On Y'our Slct.ll

.

I'

FREE Concert Begins
at 7Jlrrl

740-992·3600

or

For more il!{ormalion 011 hmr
you c'(l} l signup.fi.&gt;r your library
can.J. l'isir /Jos.w nl Uhrml' a l 7
Sprun' Sr._Cial!rj Jo/is. or f1i10ne
446·RI:."AD 1732.1!.

. Medical Director, Holzer. Center for Cancer Care

J-4 pn $ JO enay fee
)udlng 3:30-&lt;ipm

1

GALLIPOLIS
September is Library Card
Sign-up Month. and the Dr.
Samuel L. l3u;sarll Memorial
Library wants to make sure
that your child is equipped
with the smanest card o( all
- a library card.
A I ibrary card can give your
child access to homework
help. matcriJJ, to research
tho'c term paper&gt;. or information for the1r next book report.
It can also help make life after
school more fun : with free
access to books. music, the
Internet. anll nmre.
. Studies show that children
who arc read to in the home
and who use the library perform better in 'chool and are
more likdv to continue to use
the libr,uy· as a source of lifetime lcm·nmg.
"A librwy card has always
been the most ' important
school supply of all," .said
Bossard Library Director ·
Debbie Saunders.
Of course. libr;uy cards are
not just for kids. According to
a recent household survey by
the
American
Library
Association. 44 percent of
parentneport that they bring
their ch ildren to the library
becau~c it gi'e~ them some·
thing to Jo together.
.
Parents can help their children explore new interests tmd,
at the same iime. enjoy a family progranl' m pick out a best
sel ler for the mselves. Best of
all. fami ly time at the library
won't break the bank. Patrons
have acces:-. tu book~. muSic.
the lmcmet. and much more
tor free with a lib•~"Y care!. .
. This monlh. make sure
yom kids gear up for school
by sign ing ur for a library
card. No matter how
crammed the backpack or a
family's s&lt;.:hedule. there's
alwavs room fur the snuutest
carll all. a libr&lt;uy card.

Grae L. Schuster, M.D.

Registration

Insurance Agency .

D

Woodward-Mills wedding

GALLIPOLIS - Jessica Marie Woodward and David
Anthony Mills Jr. were united in man·iage on SatLirday. June
28. 200S, at the First Baptist Church in Gallipolis. with Pastor
Alvis Pollard olliciating the double ring ceremony.
Jessica is the daughter of Kevin ~md Ellen WetTy, and Scott
Woodward of Gallipolis. David is the son of David and Lisa
Mills of Crown City. ·
Jessica wore a straples~. all-over beaded bee ivory gown
.with a scalloped sweetheart neckline. She wore an ivory cathedral length veil with a scalloped beaded edge. Her bouquet· w:"
made of coral and fuchsia roses.
Maid of honor was Krystal Kiski s. friend of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Niki Mill s tUld Stacey Mills, sisters of the
groom, and Leila Hojat and Moriah Daniels. friends of the
bride. They wore long coral chiffon dresses and carried bouquets of fuchsia roses.
Lilly Rees, 'friend of the bride. dropped rose petals as she prenomic hardship. The strong ceded the bride down the aisle.
character in that story is
Qearld Cade, fiiend of the groom, served as best man. ·
also it woman, Ma Joad, one Groomsmen were Joe Martin. Chris Temple and Nathan Biars .
of the towering figures of. triends of the groom, and Kaleb Werry, stepbrother of the bride.
American fiction.
Justin Butler. cousin of the groom. was ring bearer.
I .think you will find
The groom wore a black suit with an ivmy vest and tie. and
Genre Nevels, who loves to · a coral rose boutonniere. The men in the wedding pany wore
whittle and finds a way to . black suits with coral vests and ties and titchsia rose boutonsupport her family, no less a meres.
remar ka bl e
cItanicter.
Gertie has carried with her a
Preceding tl)e ceremony, piano music was played by Carla
block of wood, which she Swain. cousin of the bride. The wedding,guests were registered
hopes to carve into a tigure. by' Kristine Bostic, cousin of the groom. Olivia Woodward,
Throughout the book, she cousin of the .bride, was the program attendant.
sees Christ 1·11 the wood. but
The guests enjoyed a reception after the ceremony with din-·
· at the Frene h Art co1ony. Th e '.our-uere
· d we d.
can't seem to find the right ner and dancmg
image for the face of Chrt's·t. ding cake was topped with fuchsia and coral rose petals and
d
d ·h
d
ecorate Wtt stran s of pearls.
There are several memorable minor characters who
Alter a honeymoon in Myrtle Beach. S.C., the couple now
work in the factories and resides on Hannan Trace Road near Crmvn City.
live in the projects and
Jessica is a 2008 graduate of the Rio Grande School of
share the fate of the Nevels Nursing and is employed as an RN at Hol1.er Medical Center.
family, each of them trying David is employed by Carmichael Equipment of Huntington,
to cope · in their .own way. W.Va., as an agriculture technician.
There are the Catholic
Jessica is the granddaughter of Howard and the late Jessie
Dalys, ths social scientist Waugh, and George and Nona Woodward of Gallipolis.
and his "proper" wife, the
David is the grandson of Harry and Mmy Fellure of
dissatisfied waitress wl1o Gallipolis, and Eloise and the late Frank Mills Jr. of Crown
leaves her distraught hus- City.
band. the peddler who sells
fruit and vegetables in the
Office Administration is m demand
alley.
Brighten your financJatoulfook with an
·There are union conflicts,
Associate Degree of Applied Business in
a murder, toil and trouble
Executive Office Assitant
everywhere. There is also
or
companionship, as the
women of the projects help
'Medical Office Adminlstartlon
one another through child
Gallipolis
birth and deaths and acciCareer
College
dents and poverty. Thi s is a
"Career~; CWsu Tu Home."
strong book, a wonllerful
1-800-214-0452 • 7 40-446-4367
book. but not a happy one,
www.gatlipoliscareercollege.edu
You will remember Gertie
1176 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH
Nevels and her family and
friends long after you have
, finished this story.

Saturday September 13th

Reed &amp; Baur

www . reedb~ur . com

Mr. and Mrs. David A. Mills Jr.

'

Alhcd lnsuranve .
Feel inde pendent .

22 0 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH

Get the
Smartest Card

'The Dollmaker':
An American classic

'L

Thank You
John &amp; Josh Burnett
of Burnett's Heating
&amp; Cooling

Sunday, Sept~mber 7, 2008

at your library

4th Annual
Cruisin' Saturday Night
· Car Show &amp;. Concert
bel1ind you , hitting
t he road is a breeze . .(,

Thank You

ON .THE BOOKSHELF

Janes family visits genealogical society

Amber Lee Mills and Eric Shoults
'

·. 6unbap limts ·itnttnel

PageCs

�Page C6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday. September 7. 2008

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasam,WV

INSIDE

·&amp;unba!' Uti

Down on the Farm, Page 02

\

~
. I
QI

me' -&amp;enttnel

Dl

\

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Flavors of the Uieek
Careful cutting key
to a great ratatouille

National Grandparents Day
September 7, 2008
Be sure to tell them
you love them!
In Memory of...

. In Honor of. .. .

In Honor of...

Ruby Hysell

Guy Hysell

Leonard
Scarbrough

Remembering you

·Remembering you

on this special day!

on this special day!

Love and miss you
CRand Kim

Love,
Kim and CR

Bv THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS

Ratatouille is a great
early fall dish, calling for
many of the vegetables
piling up at farmers markets. lt also can be prepared in large batches, as
it only improves with age
and tastes as good cold as
warm . Pair it with a fresh

In Honor of...

lnHonorof. ..

Richard &amp; Kay Scott
&amp; Grandma ·oeneva
Scott

Richard &amp; Kay
Scott &amp; Grandma
Beneva Scott

•

•

.....

baguette, tossed with pasta
or folded into an .omelet.
If after the hour-long
simmer, the ratatouille has
more than a few tablespoons of water in the pan,
use a spoon 10 drain and
discard it. This usually is a
problem only if you ' ve
used large vegetables,
which have a higher water
content than smaller ones.

Ratatouille is seen in this
Sunday, Aug. 24 photo.
. Ratatouille is great late
summer dish, calling for
many of the v!)getables pil·
ing up at farmers markets.
It also can be prepared in
large batches, as il only
improves with age and
tastes as good cold as
warm. Pair il with a fresh
baguette, tossed with pasta
or folded into an omelet.

•••

r·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·,

i . RATATOUILLE · i
, Start to finish: 2 hours (1 hour active) • Servings: 6 to 8 ,

I•
I
.; .
....,

'
We love you Grandpa!
Love, Michelle &amp; Mary

In Honor of. ..

t

Love, Brandon &amp; Carrie

In Honor of...

In Honor of...

Mama a11d Papa

Robert Jeffers

...
,·

.•

-~

L()n. Matthew,

&amp;Amla

In Memory of. ..

McCarty

2 medium or 4 smau eggplants, cut into 112-inch -I
p1eces
1 tablespoon kosher salt
3 sprigs fresh thyme
3 sprigs fresh basil
3 sprigs fresh parsley
2 beefsteak tomatoes
1plum tomato
4 tablespoons olive oil, divided ·
2 medium yellow onions, cut into 114-inch pieces
1yellow bell pepper, cored and cut into 114-inch
· p1eces
.
1 green bell pepper, cored and cut into 1/4-inch
· pieces .
6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
· 1 bay leaf
3 medium or 4 to 5 small zucchini, cut into l-inch
p1eces
..J medi~'!l or 4 small su~mer squash cut into l-inch
p1eces
Extra-virgin olive oil, to finish
•
Salt and ground black pepper, to taste

AP photo .

f

You ' re one " Special" lady on
this special day! We love yuu,
Kristin, Molly. Joclyn . Sara,
I.benez

In Honor of...
Momaw &amp; Poppy

To my spet:ial grandparents

I love you!

Alivia Grace McCarty

Grandma, ·
I loved you a bushel and a
peck but I sure miss all your

hugs around my neck.

We miss you Ma-Ma.
To a very spccia.l grandpa

Love you

Jerry Ray &amp; .Jan

Tyler and Kristin

s~t

·In Honor of...
Jim &amp; Ann Rife

In Honor of ..

In Honor of...

Mama and Papa
McCarty

Granny and
Grandpa

If grandparents were
flowers , we'd still
.., pick you!
Love, Tyler, Tessa,
Tristen and Layne

xxooxo

God has ~iven' us u big blessing
The best grandparents in the world.
are very
l
to
ha ve had such wonderful , lov ing,

Grandpa an~ Grandma
Love, Ronald, Jllnita, Angie
Clickenger, Jim &amp; Kat ie , Delaney,
Avery &amp; Em my Clickenger

In Memory of...
David

K. Hill .

was a baby. I was 6 years old
when you lefr me. We ate
pancakes together. I love you
forever. Grandson Aaron- Age 8

Morgan , Ken1zie . Oli via.
Brayden, Sharla. Matt . Mark ,

I
In a large bowl, toss the tomatoes, discarding •
the eggplant pieces with any tough cores . Set 1
I·the kosher salt. Transfer aside.
• the pieces to a colander
In a large Dutch oven •
or in the · oi large skillet . over I
Ismk.overLeta bowl
dram for 30 medium, heat 2 table-

We love you. Thanlo:s for. always
being there for us.
From your grandchildren:
R, Ronald J . White, Angie
Clickenger.Jim &amp; Kat ie Harrison,
Delaney,Avery. Emmy Clickinger

I love you
AIivia Grace McCarty

I Love You
Alivia Grace McCarty

In Memory of ..

In Honor of...

Hollis M(JIOD!ey

Fern M(JIODI~Y

In Honor of...

Michael , Paul William , Shane

You were the greatest dad an
grandpa. We love &amp; miss you.

we,;lev, Aleaho Shayna. urD.CIC.
Gretchen . Lindsey. Josh

112012005
Your Family

Thanks for being a great
mom &amp; grandma
We lore you!
Your Famil

Mama and Papa

To my special
Mama and Papa
I love you
Alivia Grace McCarty

' ·minutes . Gently press spoons of the olive oil.
the pieces with paper Add the onions and both
towels to absorb any peppers, then saute until
, remaining liquid. Set soft, about 7 minutes.
aside.
Add the garlic, and
Meanwhile,
bundle saute another 3 minutes.
, together the thyme, basil Add the bundle of fresh
and
parsley,
using herbs, bay leaf and
kitchen twine to tie. them chopped tomatoes. Cook
, together. Set aside.
until only a little liquid
Bring a large sa~cepan remains, about 5 minof water to a boil. Fill a utes. Set aside.
~-~arge , bowl with ice
In separate large skillet
· water.
·
over medium, heat'· the
While the water heats; remaining 2 mblespoons
• use a knife to cut .very of olive .oil. Add the eggshallow crosses in the plants, zucchini" · and
tops and boltoms of all squash, then saute until
three tomatoes. The cuts just tender, about 5 to 7
•. ~ hould go only deep · minutes.
enough to break the
Add the eggplant mix·
skins of the tomatoes .·
ture to the onion mix~-, Use a slotted spoon to ture, then set the Dutch •
place the tomatoes in the oven over medium-low
boiling water. After 30 and let cook, uncovered,
~ seconds, use the spoon to for I hour. Stir ·gently •
transfer the tomatoes to now and again to make
... ~he ice wat~r. Once the sure the vegetables are
·~matoes are cool, the
not sticking.
•
;skins should peel off easRemove and discard J
~ly.
the herb bun4le and bay
.•. C.ul each tomato in leaf. Drizzle with a few •
·half, then use a spoon to tablespoons of extra-vir-~
scrape out and di scard giri ohve oil, then season
~ the seeds. Coarsely chop willi salt and pepper.
•

I
I
I
:
l
J.

J

l

EDITOR 'S NOTE: Tlte
Recipe Reporter is an
occasional series report·
ing on the tecl111ique s,
ingredienrs, science and
art used to create the best
versions of ,popular dish·
es.
· ·
.BY PERVAIZ SHALLWANI
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In
Provence,
every
grandmother worth her
Dutch oven has a rata·
touille recipe that family
· members swear is unsurpassed.
· But in the U.S., this divine
stew of late summer and
· early fall vegetables too often
is a victim of kitchen sink
syndrome, resulting in a sloppy hodgepodge of ingredients
lacking focus and detinition.
"The first thing that people don't understand is
that ratatouille consists of
very specific vegetables,
not just what you have in
your . refrigerator." says
Mediterranean food expert
Clifford Wright.
"It's as if you are -making clam chowder and
started adding beans," he
says. "It's no longer a
clam chowder, but a bean

·1

1

I.

1

l
I.

~·-·-·-·- · -·-·~·~

...

Size matters when
making a great ratatouille .

SOUJ?."

In Memory of...
·Luther B. Lemley

In Memory of...

In Memory of...

In Memory of. ..

In Memory of...

Mama Patty

Sharon Rupe

Bill Rope

Mary Ann Figgins

!CARAMEL IATTE POPS
·

Grandma,
I love you and miss you.
I wish you were here to
spend grandparents day
with us. I think about
you all the time.
Akeisha &amp; Jonathan

I love you and
miss you so much
Alivia Grace McCarty

Start to flnleh: 8 houre, 15 minutn (15 mlnutu active)
Makes about 8 pope, depending on mold elze

6 to B shots freshly brewed espresso
4 112 cups milk
114 cup caramel sauce
114 cup finely diced soft caramel candies
In a medium bowl, combine all ingredients and stir
·
well. Pour the mixture into pop, molds.
Altematlvely, divide the mixture between espresso
cups. Cover each cup with plastic wrap and insert a
wooden pop stick throug~ it at the center o( each cup.
Freeze for 6 hours, or untd fll1ll.
Remove the pops from the 'eezer. Let stand at room
temperature for 5 minutes liefore removing from the
molds.

'
•,

•

I

-- --·· -·

-

______

,__

Historians have traced
ratatouille's origins to the
French coastal town of
Nice early in the last century. It entered the American
culinary lexicon thanks to
Julia Child and Gourmet
magazine, then became
firmly entrenched last year
after Disney turned the
recipe into a movie. ·
Done well, it tastes as
good warm as cold and is
versatile c; nough to be a
side, starter (its true intention ), nestled inside an
omelet, or paired with
crusty bread , pa sta or meat
and offered as an entree.
Ready to ditch the kitchen
sink and do it right? Here's
what you need to know.

-- ---------- - - -

-

•••

THE
VEGETABLES
Though .
many
Americans have come to
think of ratatouill e as just
a fancy name for vegetable stew, traditi onal
versions call for specific
vegetables - onions. garlic, zucchini, squash,
green peppers, egg plant
and tomatoes.
Within this mix , chefs
mix it up by using different colored peppers and
squash, but that's where
the impro ~ should end.
Other flavorings a re limited to fresh he(bs, such as
thyme , basil and bay
leaves , and extra-virgin
olive oil.
And while everyone
knows fre sh is best, in
ratatouille it 's more than
just a shopping tip. The
older and larger a vegetable is, the more water it
contains. During cooking
and on the plate , that
water will seep out, watering down the flavors and
turning the ingredients to
mush.
That's why chef Thomas
Keller, who consulted on
the movie " Ratato uill e,"
recommends
avoiding
large eggplants, zucchini
. and squ ash. Small and
medium vegetables . will
have a lower water content.
As for tomatoes, in addition to adding flavor, they
also serve as a binder,
cooking down into a paste
as th e dish simmers. A
blend of beefsteak (whic h
stand up to long simmers)
· and p.lum (w hi ch thicken
as they cook) is best.

•••

THE PREP

works well · for · the hom e
. cook.
The traditional method
The most time-consuming part"of a ratatouille is sautes each vegetable sep· cutting ·the vegetables. arately, then combines the
And that 's because size ingredients over low heat
matters.
to allow the flavor s to
Each vegetable cooks at a blend . This approach
different speed. so cutting accommodates differe nt
each to the optimal size to cooking times for dillerent
ensure· even cooking - and vegetables. but. is timecooking that i-s evenly consuming.
paced with the other ingreThe alternative often is
dienls
- is important.
.
to
dump everythi-ng _in the
Generally speaking, the
faster a vegetable cooks, pan together. While thi s
the larger the pieces it does save time , it . also
should be cut into. invariably leaves so me
overcooked
Likewi se, vegetables that · vegetables
take longer to cook get cut and some undercooked.
into smaller chunks.
Better is to borrow a bit
For example, Jacq ues from each method .. ·
Pepin suggests cutting
. By followin g Pepin's
squash larger than eggplant, 'a dvice and cutting the
· which takes the longest to
cook. Because the tomatoes vegetables according to
mostly melt down anyway, the speed at which they
cook, it 's · possi ble to
size is less of an issue.
And because eggplant divide the ingredients into
can be bitter, once you've two batches (one slow. one
got it cut' it's a good idea .to fast) and cook the)ll in two
give it some time to drain. pans.
This is done by sprinkling
Finally, ratatouille is a
the pieces with salt, then dish that needs time .
letting them rest on paper Cooking the combined .
towels or in a colander. This ingredients over low heat
also prevents the' eggplant . for roughly an hour allows
from absorbing too much
the vegetables to tenderi ze
oil during cooking.
(but
not become mushy),
While it's not crucial to
seed the tomatoes, Keller some of the water to evapsays doing so allows for orate, and the flavors to
greater control over fla- meld.
If there still is too mu ch
vor. The seed area contains significant amounts liquid at the end of an
of water and can add bitter houc of sillJmering (more
flavors .
than a few tablespoons is
,Keller also urges remov- too much and will water
ing the · tomato skin s. down the flavo rs of the
which
can lend
an dish) drain · most of it
. unpleasan t texture.
before fini shin g with
extra-virgin olive oi l. .

•••

THE
COOKING
There are two co mmon
approac hes an(! neither

---

•••
Have a recipe

_\'Ul4

want

investigated? E-ma il AP
Food Editor J.M. Hirsch
at jhirsch(lit )ap.org .

·---·-·-

.,,.

�Page C6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday. September 7. 2008

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasam,WV

INSIDE

·&amp;unba!' Uti

Down on the Farm, Page 02

\

~
. I
QI

me' -&amp;enttnel

Dl

\

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Flavors of the Uieek
Careful cutting key
to a great ratatouille

National Grandparents Day
September 7, 2008
Be sure to tell them
you love them!
In Memory of...

. In Honor of. .. .

In Honor of...

Ruby Hysell

Guy Hysell

Leonard
Scarbrough

Remembering you

·Remembering you

on this special day!

on this special day!

Love and miss you
CRand Kim

Love,
Kim and CR

Bv THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS

Ratatouille is a great
early fall dish, calling for
many of the vegetables
piling up at farmers markets. lt also can be prepared in large batches, as
it only improves with age
and tastes as good cold as
warm . Pair it with a fresh

In Honor of...

lnHonorof. ..

Richard &amp; Kay Scott
&amp; Grandma ·oeneva
Scott

Richard &amp; Kay
Scott &amp; Grandma
Beneva Scott

•

•

.....

baguette, tossed with pasta
or folded into an .omelet.
If after the hour-long
simmer, the ratatouille has
more than a few tablespoons of water in the pan,
use a spoon 10 drain and
discard it. This usually is a
problem only if you ' ve
used large vegetables,
which have a higher water
content than smaller ones.

Ratatouille is seen in this
Sunday, Aug. 24 photo.
. Ratatouille is great late
summer dish, calling for
many of the v!)getables pil·
ing up at farmers markets.
It also can be prepared in
large batches, as il only
improves with age and
tastes as good cold as
warm. Pair il with a fresh
baguette, tossed with pasta
or folded into an omelet.

•••

r·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·,

i . RATATOUILLE · i
, Start to finish: 2 hours (1 hour active) • Servings: 6 to 8 ,

I•
I
.; .
....,

'
We love you Grandpa!
Love, Michelle &amp; Mary

In Honor of. ..

t

Love, Brandon &amp; Carrie

In Honor of...

In Honor of...

Mama a11d Papa

Robert Jeffers

...
,·

.•

-~

L()n. Matthew,

&amp;Amla

In Memory of. ..

McCarty

2 medium or 4 smau eggplants, cut into 112-inch -I
p1eces
1 tablespoon kosher salt
3 sprigs fresh thyme
3 sprigs fresh basil
3 sprigs fresh parsley
2 beefsteak tomatoes
1plum tomato
4 tablespoons olive oil, divided ·
2 medium yellow onions, cut into 114-inch pieces
1yellow bell pepper, cored and cut into 114-inch
· p1eces
.
1 green bell pepper, cored and cut into 1/4-inch
· pieces .
6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
· 1 bay leaf
3 medium or 4 to 5 small zucchini, cut into l-inch
p1eces
..J medi~'!l or 4 small su~mer squash cut into l-inch
p1eces
Extra-virgin olive oil, to finish
•
Salt and ground black pepper, to taste

AP photo .

f

You ' re one " Special" lady on
this special day! We love yuu,
Kristin, Molly. Joclyn . Sara,
I.benez

In Honor of...
Momaw &amp; Poppy

To my spet:ial grandparents

I love you!

Alivia Grace McCarty

Grandma, ·
I loved you a bushel and a
peck but I sure miss all your

hugs around my neck.

We miss you Ma-Ma.
To a very spccia.l grandpa

Love you

Jerry Ray &amp; .Jan

Tyler and Kristin

s~t

·In Honor of...
Jim &amp; Ann Rife

In Honor of ..

In Honor of...

Mama and Papa
McCarty

Granny and
Grandpa

If grandparents were
flowers , we'd still
.., pick you!
Love, Tyler, Tessa,
Tristen and Layne

xxooxo

God has ~iven' us u big blessing
The best grandparents in the world.
are very
l
to
ha ve had such wonderful , lov ing,

Grandpa an~ Grandma
Love, Ronald, Jllnita, Angie
Clickenger, Jim &amp; Kat ie , Delaney,
Avery &amp; Em my Clickenger

In Memory of...
David

K. Hill .

was a baby. I was 6 years old
when you lefr me. We ate
pancakes together. I love you
forever. Grandson Aaron- Age 8

Morgan , Ken1zie . Oli via.
Brayden, Sharla. Matt . Mark ,

I
In a large bowl, toss the tomatoes, discarding •
the eggplant pieces with any tough cores . Set 1
I·the kosher salt. Transfer aside.
• the pieces to a colander
In a large Dutch oven •
or in the · oi large skillet . over I
Ismk.overLeta bowl
dram for 30 medium, heat 2 table-

We love you. Thanlo:s for. always
being there for us.
From your grandchildren:
R, Ronald J . White, Angie
Clickenger.Jim &amp; Kat ie Harrison,
Delaney,Avery. Emmy Clickinger

I love you
AIivia Grace McCarty

I Love You
Alivia Grace McCarty

In Memory of ..

In Honor of...

Hollis M(JIOD!ey

Fern M(JIODI~Y

In Honor of...

Michael , Paul William , Shane

You were the greatest dad an
grandpa. We love &amp; miss you.

we,;lev, Aleaho Shayna. urD.CIC.
Gretchen . Lindsey. Josh

112012005
Your Family

Thanks for being a great
mom &amp; grandma
We lore you!
Your Famil

Mama and Papa

To my special
Mama and Papa
I love you
Alivia Grace McCarty

' ·minutes . Gently press spoons of the olive oil.
the pieces with paper Add the onions and both
towels to absorb any peppers, then saute until
, remaining liquid. Set soft, about 7 minutes.
aside.
Add the garlic, and
Meanwhile,
bundle saute another 3 minutes.
, together the thyme, basil Add the bundle of fresh
and
parsley,
using herbs, bay leaf and
kitchen twine to tie. them chopped tomatoes. Cook
, together. Set aside.
until only a little liquid
Bring a large sa~cepan remains, about 5 minof water to a boil. Fill a utes. Set aside.
~-~arge , bowl with ice
In separate large skillet
· water.
·
over medium, heat'· the
While the water heats; remaining 2 mblespoons
• use a knife to cut .very of olive .oil. Add the eggshallow crosses in the plants, zucchini" · and
tops and boltoms of all squash, then saute until
three tomatoes. The cuts just tender, about 5 to 7
•. ~ hould go only deep · minutes.
enough to break the
Add the eggplant mix·
skins of the tomatoes .·
ture to the onion mix~-, Use a slotted spoon to ture, then set the Dutch •
place the tomatoes in the oven over medium-low
boiling water. After 30 and let cook, uncovered,
~ seconds, use the spoon to for I hour. Stir ·gently •
transfer the tomatoes to now and again to make
... ~he ice wat~r. Once the sure the vegetables are
·~matoes are cool, the
not sticking.
•
;skins should peel off easRemove and discard J
~ly.
the herb bun4le and bay
.•. C.ul each tomato in leaf. Drizzle with a few •
·half, then use a spoon to tablespoons of extra-vir-~
scrape out and di scard giri ohve oil, then season
~ the seeds. Coarsely chop willi salt and pepper.
•

I
I
I
:
l
J.

J

l

EDITOR 'S NOTE: Tlte
Recipe Reporter is an
occasional series report·
ing on the tecl111ique s,
ingredienrs, science and
art used to create the best
versions of ,popular dish·
es.
· ·
.BY PERVAIZ SHALLWANI
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In
Provence,
every
grandmother worth her
Dutch oven has a rata·
touille recipe that family
· members swear is unsurpassed.
· But in the U.S., this divine
stew of late summer and
· early fall vegetables too often
is a victim of kitchen sink
syndrome, resulting in a sloppy hodgepodge of ingredients
lacking focus and detinition.
"The first thing that people don't understand is
that ratatouille consists of
very specific vegetables,
not just what you have in
your . refrigerator." says
Mediterranean food expert
Clifford Wright.
"It's as if you are -making clam chowder and
started adding beans," he
says. "It's no longer a
clam chowder, but a bean

·1

1

I.

1

l
I.

~·-·-·-·- · -·-·~·~

...

Size matters when
making a great ratatouille .

SOUJ?."

In Memory of...
·Luther B. Lemley

In Memory of...

In Memory of...

In Memory of. ..

In Memory of...

Mama Patty

Sharon Rupe

Bill Rope

Mary Ann Figgins

!CARAMEL IATTE POPS
·

Grandma,
I love you and miss you.
I wish you were here to
spend grandparents day
with us. I think about
you all the time.
Akeisha &amp; Jonathan

I love you and
miss you so much
Alivia Grace McCarty

Start to flnleh: 8 houre, 15 minutn (15 mlnutu active)
Makes about 8 pope, depending on mold elze

6 to B shots freshly brewed espresso
4 112 cups milk
114 cup caramel sauce
114 cup finely diced soft caramel candies
In a medium bowl, combine all ingredients and stir
·
well. Pour the mixture into pop, molds.
Altematlvely, divide the mixture between espresso
cups. Cover each cup with plastic wrap and insert a
wooden pop stick throug~ it at the center o( each cup.
Freeze for 6 hours, or untd fll1ll.
Remove the pops from the 'eezer. Let stand at room
temperature for 5 minutes liefore removing from the
molds.

'
•,

•

I

-- --·· -·

-

______

,__

Historians have traced
ratatouille's origins to the
French coastal town of
Nice early in the last century. It entered the American
culinary lexicon thanks to
Julia Child and Gourmet
magazine, then became
firmly entrenched last year
after Disney turned the
recipe into a movie. ·
Done well, it tastes as
good warm as cold and is
versatile c; nough to be a
side, starter (its true intention ), nestled inside an
omelet, or paired with
crusty bread , pa sta or meat
and offered as an entree.
Ready to ditch the kitchen
sink and do it right? Here's
what you need to know.

-- ---------- - - -

-

•••

THE
VEGETABLES
Though .
many
Americans have come to
think of ratatouill e as just
a fancy name for vegetable stew, traditi onal
versions call for specific
vegetables - onions. garlic, zucchini, squash,
green peppers, egg plant
and tomatoes.
Within this mix , chefs
mix it up by using different colored peppers and
squash, but that's where
the impro ~ should end.
Other flavorings a re limited to fresh he(bs, such as
thyme , basil and bay
leaves , and extra-virgin
olive oil.
And while everyone
knows fre sh is best, in
ratatouille it 's more than
just a shopping tip. The
older and larger a vegetable is, the more water it
contains. During cooking
and on the plate , that
water will seep out, watering down the flavors and
turning the ingredients to
mush.
That's why chef Thomas
Keller, who consulted on
the movie " Ratato uill e,"
recommends
avoiding
large eggplants, zucchini
. and squ ash. Small and
medium vegetables . will
have a lower water content.
As for tomatoes, in addition to adding flavor, they
also serve as a binder,
cooking down into a paste
as th e dish simmers. A
blend of beefsteak (whic h
stand up to long simmers)
· and p.lum (w hi ch thicken
as they cook) is best.

•••

THE PREP

works well · for · the hom e
. cook.
The traditional method
The most time-consuming part"of a ratatouille is sautes each vegetable sep· cutting ·the vegetables. arately, then combines the
And that 's because size ingredients over low heat
matters.
to allow the flavor s to
Each vegetable cooks at a blend . This approach
different speed. so cutting accommodates differe nt
each to the optimal size to cooking times for dillerent
ensure· even cooking - and vegetables. but. is timecooking that i-s evenly consuming.
paced with the other ingreThe alternative often is
dienls
- is important.
.
to
dump everythi-ng _in the
Generally speaking, the
faster a vegetable cooks, pan together. While thi s
the larger the pieces it does save time , it . also
should be cut into. invariably leaves so me
overcooked
Likewi se, vegetables that · vegetables
take longer to cook get cut and some undercooked.
into smaller chunks.
Better is to borrow a bit
For example, Jacq ues from each method .. ·
Pepin suggests cutting
. By followin g Pepin's
squash larger than eggplant, 'a dvice and cutting the
· which takes the longest to
cook. Because the tomatoes vegetables according to
mostly melt down anyway, the speed at which they
cook, it 's · possi ble to
size is less of an issue.
And because eggplant divide the ingredients into
can be bitter, once you've two batches (one slow. one
got it cut' it's a good idea .to fast) and cook the)ll in two
give it some time to drain. pans.
This is done by sprinkling
Finally, ratatouille is a
the pieces with salt, then dish that needs time .
letting them rest on paper Cooking the combined .
towels or in a colander. This ingredients over low heat
also prevents the' eggplant . for roughly an hour allows
from absorbing too much
the vegetables to tenderi ze
oil during cooking.
(but
not become mushy),
While it's not crucial to
seed the tomatoes, Keller some of the water to evapsays doing so allows for orate, and the flavors to
greater control over fla- meld.
If there still is too mu ch
vor. The seed area contains significant amounts liquid at the end of an
of water and can add bitter houc of sillJmering (more
flavors .
than a few tablespoons is
,Keller also urges remov- too much and will water
ing the · tomato skin s. down the flavo rs of the
which
can lend
an dish) drain · most of it
. unpleasan t texture.
before fini shin g with
extra-virgin olive oi l. .

•••

THE
COOKING
There are two co mmon
approac hes an(! neither

---

•••
Have a recipe

_\'Ul4

want

investigated? E-ma il AP
Food Editor J.M. Hirsch
at jhirsch(lit )ap.org .

·---·-·-

.,,.

�I

iunbap ~tmeg -ienttntl

DOWN ON.· THE FARM

Woodward to
serve as delegate
GALLIPOLIS - Tom F.
Woodward Ill of Gallipoli s
has been elected .ts a delegate to the !25th Annual
Amen cdn
An gus
As sQ&lt;.:JdtJon ® Coll ~ cntJoll
ol Delegates. Nov. 17 Ill
LouJsvJIIC . Ky. reports
Bryce Sc:hullMnn . ch1el
execut1 ve ofll c:er ol the
Amcncan
Angus
AssocJatJon
Woodw,1rd. " member ol
the
Amenc.Jn
Angus
AssocwtJ0\1 "ith hemlqu.JJ ters 10 St Joseph. Mo .. IS
one of 402 Angus b1eeders
who have becJl clcc:ted by
fellow members Ill their
state to serve as a representa(lve at the annual mcct10g.

Representing 45 states,
the District of ColumbJU
and Canada. the delegates
will participate 10 the bu siness meetmg and elect new
otT!cers and live directors to
the
Amcncan
Angus
Association board.
The annual eve nt 1s held
Ill COnJUnCUOn With the
annual banquet and the
Super Po1nt Roll of Victory
Angus show. Nov. 15- 18
during the North Amencan
lntellldt!Olldl
Livestock
Exposrlion
The Amencan Angu s
Assoc 1al1on has more than
34,000 act1ve members and
IS the largest beet breed
orgamzauon 10 the world.

0 DNR proposes closure
of Marietta nursery site

PageD2
Sunday, September 7, 2008

Foods stamps come to more farmers markets
BY VALERIES BAUMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ALBANY. N.Y. - More
farmers markets natmnwide
are accepung food stamps
for their summer squash,
apples and other fresh produce - fattemng profns for
farm ers while creating
health1er opuons for lowmcome tamil1es as food
pnces soar
The federal Food Stamp
Program is helping New
York ,
Massachu seus,
Vermont , Mich1gan and
othe1 states provide handheld wrreless termi1Mi s for
electronic benefit transfers
- the modern debit card
vers1on of food stamps - to
farmers markets at no extra
cost Massachusetts, New
Mextco, Vermont and other
states plan to equ1p more
markets to accept the cards
th1s year.
It can 't come soon enough
for people l1ke Wilfred
Negron
Negron shops for groceries for h1s family 10
Brooklyn using an EBT
card to buy fresh fru1ts and
vegetables. but he said he
would rather use h1s card to
buy produce at a farmer 's
market. He sa1d the nearby
stores don' t offer the same
kind of variety.
"When you do shop at the
grocery store, It's very limited - they don' t have a
very wrde selection," he
said. "I th10k 1f we had a
farmers market, I think we
would shop more, and eat
more produce."
On the other side of the
counter are farmers l1ke
Richard Hayberger 10
Hamlin, N.Y. Hay berger
said he makes an extra $500
a month from Rochesteratea
farmers
markets
because of the wireless program that has brought htm

COLUMBUS - In an ol nursery stall over the past
effort to provide more 80-some years, whtch has led
focused support to pnvate to the plant10g of tens of milwoodland owners and the lions ot trees m Ohio," said
state forest system, the Oh10 Lytle "However, as our state
Department ot Natural forests have successfully
Resources h.ts p1 oposed been reforested, and other
clos10g the M,1netta State public and private sources
Nursery efte&lt;.:l!ve Nov. 8. me available to prov1de tree
2008
seedlings, we must focus our
"Over the past decade. avmlable resources on those
annual tree seedling sales pnor1t1es that return the
have steadily dropped from greatest possible serv1ces to
6 milliOn trees lll 1997. to the people of Ohro "
nearly 4 million 10 2003, to
Lytle said he understands
this year's low of less than the difficult 1mpact that
I 5 million seedl10gs," saJd closing the Manetta State
Dav1d Lytle, d11ef of the Nursery will have on both
ODNR DivJsJOn of Forestry. state workers and seedling
"As sales have decl10ed customers
through the years, the Green
"Please know that we Will
Spnngs State Nursery was make every effort to support
closed Ill 1984, and the 1mpacted
employees
Zanesville State Nurse1y through this tough transi!!On
was closed in 2003 •·
penod." he smd. "We will
The
Manetta · State also be workmg to ass1st
Nursery began operat ions m customers of the Manetta
1925 as a prov1der of State Nursery m fmdmg
seedlings tor reforestmg avmlable sources of tree
land purchased as part of the seed lings"
BY HEATHER CLARK
state f01est system. Over
The
Marietta
State
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
time. the nurseries at Nursery employs eight pelMarietta. Green Spnngs and manent and about 20 seaALBUQUERQUE, NM
Zanesville supported tree sonal employees. Th1s clo- - Dan Schuster breezes
plantmg on both state torests sure 1s pendmg rev1ew and down the road m h1s green
and pnvate lands. The approval from the D1rector and yellow John Deere tracManetta State Nursery has of the Department of tor, passing fast-food restaubeen operatmg at a deflcu Admmistrative Services as rants and stnp malls on hts
over the past several years requ1red by the Oh1o way to work
The closing of the nUJsery Revised Code. Employees
You 1mght say Schuster rs
w1ll help the diVISIOn operate and the public w1ll be noti- an urban tanner
more efficiently.
fied of th1s dec1sion as 1t
He does custom plowmg
"We honor the hard work becomes avmlah le
for landowners in the
Albuquerque area and manages Rio Grande Comll]unity
Farms, a tax-dollar supported
urban farm and educat1on
center
Commumty
gardemng
orgamzers and experts nationWide say growers like
Jackson Sml and Water ·Schuster - 1md urban areas
Bv RAND! ESPINOZA
SPECIAL TO THE T·S
Conservation D1stnct, are like Albuquerque are
included Ill the cost.
bringing agJJculture into cities
JACKSON - Less stress
Contact Well s at (740) and suburbs m new ways as
for cattle can mean less 286-3803
or people won-y about the envistress lor cattle producers, wells.296@osu edu
tor ronment, rismg food costs and
too. Hear why at Oh10 State detail s and to register food safety. City folks also are
Umverstty's first-ever Low Participants are asked to relearmng how de'Iic10us
Stress Cattle Handling register by Sept. 12.
homegrown food can be.
Workshop, 9 a.m. to 4 p m.,
Throughout the program,
Dnve down a srx-lane highSaturday, Sept. 20, at the Wells said, the speakers will way through thts central New
Oh10 Agncultural Research emphasize the importance Mexico city and you can see
and Development Center's of reducing stress on cattle. cows chewing their cud.
Jackson Mmimizing stress, he said, Small fanns in the city's
(OARDC)
Agncultural
Research 1mproves safety for both South Valley along the Rio
Station
cattle and people, reduces Grande are a short bicycle
The topics mclude cattle adverse effects on the am- nde from downtown skybehavior, low-stress han- mats' growth and perfor- scrapers. And the c1ty has· a
dling methods, and how mance, and makes cattle lement ordmance about backthose methods can 1mprove handling eas1er
yard chicken coops
the an1mals' performance,
Wells and Steve Boyles,
"We're so far behmd, we' re
and health and welfare an OSU Extension beef cat- ahead," Schuster said "When
while keepmg handlers safe tle specialiSt, will discuss all those (other CJtJes) were
Speaking will be Ron and demonstrate another gettmg populated and built
Gill , livestock extension lower-stress method, fencespecialist, Texas A&amp;M lme weanmg
UnJversJty, and Curt Pate,
"Fenceline weaning 1s a
rancher and livestock han- method where calves are
dling clinicran from Helena, exposed to the1r dams
GALUPOLJS- United
Mont.
across a fenceline for about
Ptoducers Inc. market
Cattle flight zones and a week post-weaning,"
report from Gallipolis for
other behaviors w1ll be dis- Wells , explained "Thts is
sales
conducted
on
cussed. Effective ways to dtfferimt from most tradiWednesday, Sept. 3, 2008.
sort cattle and move cattle tional methods, m which
through working facililles calves are abruptly separatwill be demonstrated .
' ed from dams at the lime of
Feeder Cattle-Steady
"The event will be very weanmg. Fencehne weanhands-on," sard Kenny mg results m less stress on
275-415 lbs , Steers, $90WeUs, Jackson station man- calves and thetr mothers."
$117, Heifers, $85-$103,
ager. "We will be spendmg
The station is located two
425-525 lbs., Steers, $90most of our time in the cor- miles southeast of Jackson on
$115, Heifers, $8.5-$103.
rals and working factlities Oh10 93, at 019 Standpipe
550-625 lbs., Steers, $85watching and listemng to the Road in Jackson County.
$110, Heifers, $80-$95;
'presenters as they work wrth OARDC and OSU Extension
650-725 lbs., Steers, $85cattle. It wtll be completely are the research and outreach
$108, Heifers, $80-$94,
focused on workmg with arms, respecl!vely, of Oh10
750-850 lbs., Steers, $85commercial cattle in a real State's College of Food,
$105, Hetfers, $80-$92.
production environment "
and
Agncu ltural,
Regtstration costs $5 per Envrronmental Sc1ences.
Cows-Steady/Lower
(Randr Espinoza rs with
person. Lunch, g1ven by the
Jackson County Cattlemen's th e 0/ria Agrrcultural
Well -Muscled/Fleshed,
AssociatiOn, and refresh- Resean h and Development
ments, provided by the Center&gt; at lf:!cksan.)

more customers
"The market's much,
I' m
much
bus1er
impre,sed," he sa1d
In ~007 , 40 markets in
New York state accepted
food stamps This year, 87
of•the state's approx imately
400 markets are equipped to
sell food to families using
the EBT cards, said Diane
Eggert. executive director
of the Farmers' Market
Federation of New York
Food stamp sales at New
York farmers markets have
increased statewtde from
$3,000 m 2002 to $90,000
m 2007 , she said.
' Massachusetts
has
expanded from f1ve markets
to seven that accept EBT
cards wJrelessly, Vermont
planned to go from three
markets "it h wire less
access m 2007 to nme in
2008, and M1ehigan went
from, two farmers markets
acceptmg food stamps to
eleven m 2007
''We' re already outpacjng
2007, so I think we're going
to see significant growth,"
Eggert sa1d.
Another state program,
NY Fresh Checks, grves
food stamp families $5
coupon mcentives for
spending a mm1mum of $5.
They only get one check per
market day, but are encouraged to come back regularly
for the coupons
Across the country, 46
states have at least one
farmer's market accepting
EBT cards. In 2007, 21 states
had farmers markets that
extended access to lowincome families through
alternate means, like the wireless EBT machines and a system exchahgu1g EBT credit
for wooden tokens that can be
spent at markets m New York,
accordmg to the U.S.
Df;!lartment of Agriculture.
Iowa had I03 markets

m:rtbune - Sentinel i\egister
CLASSIFIED

l\egister

To Place
Your Ad,
Call Today•••

(304) 675-1333
Or

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
APphoto
Electronic benefit transfer tokens are seen at the
Schenectady Farmers Market 1n Schenectady, N.Y.,
Thursday, Aug. 7 ' More farmers mar~ets nationwide are
accepting food stamps for the1r summer squash, apples
and other fresh produce - fatten1ng proftts for farmers
while creat1ng healthter opt1ons for low-111come fam1l1es as
food pnces soar.
acceptmg food stamps ill
2007 That year Washmgton
had 24 markets. whtle Oregon
and Connecucut each had 18
markets acceptmg EBT cards,
accordmg to the USDA
In New Yotk, the roughly
$130,000 in fundmg to
expand the wireless EBT
program would only accommodate up to about 130
Wireless food stamp terminals across the state , wh1ch

',

..

HOW lQ WRIJE

Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

would only ,\ccount for
about a thud of the state's
nMrkets , Eggert sa1d.
"It helps the local farmer, it
helps tile tam1ltes both stretch
theJr food dolldrs and makes
sme they are gettmg access to
I runs and vegetables," said
Cathy Roberts, a semor paralegal at the Emp1re Just1ce
Center. a statewide, nonprofit
lav. firm hclpmg poor and
low-income families

Publishing reserves
the right to ed1t
reject or cancel any
ad at any ttme
&gt;Errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of publication an
he Trtbune·Sentinel
egtster
will b
esponslble for n
Of'e tl'lan the cost o
l'le space occuple
y the error and onl
e first lnsertton W
hall not be liable fo

Box number ads ar
lways conlldentlal
&gt;Current rate

car

pplles
)All Real
Eslat
dvertisements ar
air Housing Act

W\NHJ)

roBn

Found young fe male black
Lab
Ju ot
ou lstde
of
REWAR D $500 reward lor Mtddlepor1
Blue Collar
u1tormat1on lead11lg to the recently been spayed sttll
arrest and conYtctton at the has st1tct1es tn bett y 740·
person or persons that stole !)92 232 9
on or about 8115108 a V1ctor
culltng torch set and Cline Lost Male 1ongha1red dog tn
Weldtng ta nks IIM609370 vtctntty of 2nd Ave Ca ll 446
and 22742
Also John 3478
Deere nd1ng mower model
GT
275
senal
11
M027SB059575
If you
have tnlormaiiOn ple ase call !~;!';-""':':--::---..,.,
Ed Carson 304-773· 5332 or fH2
YMm SALF·
contact Mason Count y
G
Shenff Department
"---'li'lil.li UO.'Oi l li-"O,S_.1

Junk cars pay1ng $50 $300
If no answer leave a mes
sage 740·388 00 11
-------''-Now buytng Ginseng 740
274 0326
Tools &amp; etc mach power
tools ca rpenter tools lawn &amp;
garden kmles &amp; watches
jewelry Buy trade or sell
nome 388· 151 5 or cell 208
0320
Tool s &amp; etc mac h power
tools carpenter tools lawn &amp;
gard en kmles &amp; watches
jewelry Buy trade or sell ,
home 388 151 5 or cell ?08

Rooms avatlahle at Darst Sept 13 at 7 18 Porter Ad
Group Home male or Wmte r clothes furniture ,
craft stuff
- - -- - - - - : - lemale, (7401992·5023
iii
1 . Want to buy JUNK Cars
Uf4
Y,\KI) SAil .·
$250 00 Full Car 740 416
GJVK\WA\
l'm~r;Rm·/Mmm .E 1594

r~

---.,----:-

8&amp;10 week old Kittens 3
males 1 female 304 882
277 4 Ktm 304 882 8288
Danyal

RACO Scholar6hiP
Mill
Yar d
Sale Sta r
Park Racuw Sept 9 ifom 9·
6 Sept 10 from 9 4 Sept 11
from 9 2 all tterns 1/2 pnce
Med size mtxed bt eed and Clothing $ 1 00 a bag
female dog 7 months ol d New 1tems each day
Thanks for our su orl
304 937·3192 eventngs

Want to buy Junk Cars call
740 388-0884

Wanted to Buy·Paw Paws
Black Walnuts Call 740
698 6060

I \11'10\\W\1
"il· lt\ HIs

0

wm

)We
not knowing
y accept any adver
lsement in vlolatlo

fthelew

Found Bla ck &amp; while collt e
mtK malo dog outstde of
c neshlfe on 912 Call 740
367 0260
Found Sma 1dog 1n Rodney
on Cora Mill Ad Call to 1den
lily 740 2455146

HIU WAN'li.D

CLASSIFIED INDEX

A LOCAL MANUFACTUA·
ER IS taktng appllcattons for
E.x.pmie.n.c.ltd..M1g Welders
Please apply 1n pe1son a1
2150
Eas1 ern
Ave
Gall tpOIIS OH
Several cltHerent Yard
Sale on Sta tf House Rd
Pt Pleasan t Fn 5th &amp;
Sal 6th 9 2 f1rst Rd to lett
by Fttrm Museum
Fatrground
Al•CIIOr'\ ,\!'I ll
Fl I A M \RKt:l

4x.4's For Sale ..

. 725
Announcement .................... .... ... .. .... 030
Antiques. ..
530
Apartments for Rent..... ..... ... .. .... •.... ... 440
Auction and Flea Market.
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories....... ..... ... ... 760
Auto Repair. .
Autos for Sale... .. . •.•. ..... .•• . ... .... .. ... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale . .
... . 750
1 Building Supplies ..... ... .... • .•
... 550
t
Business and Buildings .. . . .
. 340
1
Business Opportuntty .... .. . ... ....... 210
Bualness Training .
. ... ..
• 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes . ....... ............. 790

no

Camping Equipment

1
•

1

•

1

'
••

..

.. , •

.

Help Wented...

•
I
~

;

·Back To The Fann:
,
1

~
1

•
1: '

'•
' :

1

. 780

Cards oJ Thanks. ..
.... ... .............. 010
ChlldiEiderly Care .
. 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ... ... ... .••. .... . .. ... 840
Equipment for Rent..
. . 480
Excavating ........ ............ ........ ........ 830
Farm Equipment
.
. 610
Farms for Rent.
.... ..... .. . . •. ... 430
Farms for Sate...
..
.•
.. 330
For Lease .
... .... .... .••. . . 490
For Sale
.
585
For Sale or Trac:Je .. .
.... .•.. . ..... .... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables.
. 580
Furnished Rooms....
... .. .. .. ... ..... 450
850
General Hauling
Giveaway . .. .
.. •... 040
050
Happy Ads..... ..
Hay &amp; Grain ... ... .
. .640
Home Improvements .... ··· ~ ..
Homes for Sate.
..
Household Goods.... .... .... .....
Houses for Rent
In Memoriam .
.... ... ....
Insurance ..... •.
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........
Livestock... ... . . .
Lost and Found. ..... .... ..... .... ... ..
Lots 1 Acreage . .
Miscellaneous
... ..... . ... .. ..
Miscellaneous Merchandise .
Mobile Home Repatr .. ... . ........
Mobile Homes for Rent . . ...
Mobile Homes for Sale... ..... •..
Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers... . . .
Musical Instruments
..
..
Personals.................. .

GUN SHOW &amp; SALE
MARlETIA, OH
Comfort Inn
Sal &amp; Sui} Sep/13&amp; 14

VendoriOealor tables S25
Dally Adt'nlsston $4 00
" SUY'SELL' TRADE""
Open to the Public

740·667-0412
W\~1Tn

110

. .. .810
310
510
410
020
130
660
630
. . 060
350
,170
..540
.860
420
320
.220
. . 740
.... 570
•• 005
Pets tor Sale ...,
..
.. . . .. .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating . .... .
.
.•. 820
Protesalonal Services . .. ... ... ............. 230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair. ... . .. .
.
160
Real Estate Wanted .
.. •..... .. .. .... 360

, ~~ Schoolalnstructlon ...... ... .. . ... ..... 150
•• SHd Plant &amp; Ferttllzer. ........... ..... . ... 650
:-- Sltuat'lons Wanted.
.. 120
1
Space for Rent. ••
. 460
; 1 Sporting Goods ...
. 520
• : SUV's for Sale. . •..
. 720
Trucks for Sal9 .. ...
. 7t5

: ' Upholstery .. .. .... ........... . ... ..

Cross Creek
Auction Buffalo
Saturdays 6pm
Sate start Gpm t!IJ 12 or
l am
BUJidtng IS Full of Used
Merchandtse tnstd(l &amp; out
stde, Starttng to sell high
quality kntves such as Case
Buck &amp; Mossy Oak
Air
Cond1110ned
VISa and
Master Card &amp; Debt! (304)
550· 16 Hi Stephen Reedy
1639

870

Vans For Sale...... ., . .. . ............. ,.....730
Wanted to Buy ............ ..... ,p.
..
.090
... Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .. ...... . 620
~Wanted To Do . ...... ...!...... ... . .... . 180
•._ • Wanted to Rent..... .... . ... . ........... ..... ... 470
.~· ~ Yard Sale- Gallipolis.... . ......... .•.. . • . 072
.. ...... 074
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle.
v,rd Sale-Pt Pleasant..... ..
076

lYl BLIV
Absolute Top Dolla1
stl
ye rlgold
co1ns
any
10KI 14KI1 8K gold jewelry
dental gold pre 1935 US
cu rrency prool1m tnl se1s
diamonds MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenuo GallipOlis
446·2842

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 . 00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays Paper

A
local
Me1gsi Att1e ns
County Company IS cu rrent
ly accepting a ~pllcattons for
the posttton ot Account ant
Thts ts a full t1me pOSII!on
wtth an ex ce llent benefit
Thts mctuaes
package
Rettrement (OPERS) vaca
t1on personal t1me stck It me
&amp; healthcat e pa ckage The
work1ng hours are Monday ·
Fnday dey sh1tt only It IS
preferred but not required
tt1at applicant be sktlled tn
Peachtree Accounting pro
gram as we ll a Mtcrosoft
Word &amp; Excel Must be a
qUick learner tn a fast paced
oHtce and work well wtth the
pubhc
A degree m
Accountmg ts required but
wtll constd er applicants With
at leasl 10 yeai of worki ng
eKpenence 1n accountmg
Send Resume to Dt:uly
Senttnet P 0 BOX 729·39
Pomeroy, OH 45769
An Excellent way lo earn
mone y The New Avon
Call Martlyn"J04-882 2645
AVON' All Areas t To Buy or
Sell
Shtr l e ~ Spears 304
675 1429

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reserves th e right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Errors must be reported on the firs! day ol publication and the
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regiater will be reaponaibje for no more than the cost of the spaco occupied ~y the error and only the first Insertion We shall not be liable for
any loa s or e1pense that results from the publication Or omission of an adverti!H!ment Correctloo w!ll be macle In the first available edition Box number ads
Current rate C!Ud appl!es
AU rut ast&amp;te advertleBmants IHI'! subject to the Federal Fair ~ouslng Act of 1966 ·This newspajJer
are always conllllanl!al
aceepts only help wanted l!ldll meellng EOE standftrd&amp; We wnl not knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the law Will not be responsible lor any
errors In an ad l.!iken over the phone

II

II

II
HUJl WANTI-J)

Commercial Banker
WesBanco Bank has a
ca1eer opportuntly for a
t11 ghty motivated
Commerc1al Banker tor
soutneastern Ot110 Ml,ISI
ha ve substantial expenence
111 commerc•al lendtng
com mercial real estate
lending and relat•onshtp
management Supe nor
bu stness development
communtca11on and credtl
analysts skillS requtred
Degree Preferred
Outstanding opportunt1y for
an expertenc ed
profess• onat Excellent
salary and beneftts
tnctudlng mce nttYes health
and I tie tnsurance and
profit sh anngl401 k
Pre-employment drug
testtng requ1 red To submtt
an appllcatton tor thts
postllon vtstl our webstte at
www wesbanco com
EOE M/F/ON

FEDERAL

POSTAL JOBS
S17 89 $28 27/hr now htr
tng For appli cation and free
governement rob tnfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
913·599·8226 24/hrs emp
serv
-M-ib_a_S:-on- le_1_ U
_S
:-A- L-LC
- ,-1s
pleased to announce act1ve
recrwtmg tor the new opera
!tons to be loc at ed m
McCon nelsv111 e OH Mtba
srntered components are
h1gh prec1son h1gh strengtl1
parts produced us1ng spe
c1al process powdered metal
technology They are used
tn car engmes transm•s·
stons steenng systems and

WV BOhr Underground
Housekeeper needed Apply
Mtner Class starttng soon
PLUMBERS
WANTED at Regency Inn 151 Upper
Wlut Co Tramu1 g 304 372·
l ocal resldenhal plumbtng Rtver Ad Gallipolis Ohto
8346
contractor accept1n g appi1 44 6·0241
cattons for plumbers wtth
new restden ttal co nstructton - - - - - - - el\penenc-e Excellent wage
an d
bene fit
package
Applicants must have valid
Ohto Onv ers l1cense Drug
free work place Call (6t4)
491 2519 between 9 oo and
5 00 PM Monday through
Frt day
Job Sites ts In
Athens Oh10

r-rooking For
ANew Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

on
SAVINGS
Mtddleton Estates 1s current
ly accepttng apph cattOilS for
a Full Ttme Matntenance
Wo rke.
Ouahf1cattons
tncl ude Must have know!edge ot patntmg electncal
plumbm g
AC/hea ttrg
!el ngeratton aul o mechantcs
and home repans mcludtng
walls fl oormg wmcto .... s
doors etc Must possess a
valid
dnvers
license
Applical!ons can be submt1
!eel al 8204 Carla Dn ye
Ga lllpO its Ohto Monday
through Fnday Bam to 4pm
Resumes may be e matled
to rharn son @rescare com
No phone ca lls w111 be
accepted
- - -- - -- -

i=:H:e~lp~W:a:n:;te:d==:~;:;H:e~l~p~W~a~n:t~e~d=;;;
~

Holler Clinic of Gallipolis

seeks

Application Analyst
Hol ze r Cltrll ~ rs ucceptmg re., urncs lrnm
q u .llt !t~ d

~.:o m p u tc r p rolc ,~wnaJo..

!or th t•

ot Appl lt.:ntton An alys1

The rx1s1 tron n:qUt rc~ .t b.tchd ur s dq!l\:e or
ht ghcr rn &lt;t ft eld r~ l.tt ed tn Jnl ornl.ltt on
System . . 01 Compul cr Suencc an d cxpc n e n ~.: c
"upportrll);! end - u~e r ap Jllr t: at ron ~ E\pc rre ncc
\~ 11 1\ hL•,tl \11 llllilllll!l ll lll d ntl IH , l ll oi ~CITH:' ll !
"Y ~IL' tlh

The

ts dc., t.. bk
A ppll t.: tll ton A nal vs t

rcsp,m:,ible lot

ts

pttmartl y

t m ple men tln ~. m.unt,ll ntng

;~ nd upg t,ld rn g m.tJ OT d !nrc.tl or bmtriess
appl u.:.r t tun"

The

p os 11 1o n

I"

h .r... cd

111

Gu lli polls. O H
Holze r C ltntc prm 11..!~~ &lt;:&gt;.~.:clknt hcncf tt .,

Shoe Sensalton m the Stt'o'er
Br tdge Plaza ts lookmg tor a
mature lull tt me A.ss1stant
Manager wtth a mtntmum ot
two years reta il expert ence
We otter b1 weekly compen
sa!IOn and benefi ts after 90
days Appl y at the store or
ema il
resumes
to
rpn tchard@shoesensatton c
om

Shop the
Classifieds!

0

-;;;:;H;;;e;lp:W;:;a;;;n:te;;;d;:;;;::~=H;;;e;;;lp=W:a:n:t:ed;:;:j

r

'"C" InfoCisim'

snock
ab sorbers
the
McConnelsville Fa ctltty IS
111 11
•
the newest stte tn the M1ba
S1ntered DIVISIOn and Will
be m productt on m 2009 To
learn more about Mtba tis
Now Hrrlng 15..Ful1 Time
th re e dtvtstons and th e
employees lor openings
expected growth of the cor
In our Gallipolis.. location•
Customer Service/Teller poratton
pl ease
vt stt
WesBan co nas a lull ltme www mtba co m Resum es
No expertence reqUtro rfl
opp011un1ty tn our GaUlpohs are betng acce pt ed tor all
No Cred1t Card Sales•
ofllce lor frtendly energettc postltons
and wtll be
No Collecltors•
persons to pto'o'tde supen01 relatned for one year Those
customer servtce process poSI!tons focused on at tt1 1s
You choose th e types of
transactions and promote ttme are
calls you want to take
bank servtces Should have · Plant Manager
Aecrutt volunteers tor
customer servt ce or cash ter • Process Appli catmns
leadtng non prol tl
expenence preferably 111 a Engmeer
organt zattons
bank or credtt umon
· Press Techntctan
OR
We offer opportuntty for
Quality Engtneer
Ratse funds and renew
advancement exce llent
Interested candidates may
me mbersh tps for the
compensation and beneftt s subm11 resumes to
Natt onal Attie Assoctatton
and a great wo rk
M1ba
enwo nm e!'nl
5037 North State R.oute 60
.- Full and Part t1me
Pre employment drug
McConnelSVIlle OH 43756
Postltons1
testtng reqwred Vt stt our
C10
Mtba Stnter USA
"
Everyooe
gets Sunday
we bstte at
Resume
OFF I
www wesbanco co m
or
Jta
email
to
.- Protess1onarwork
to com plete an onlme
hr reply @mtba us com AE
Envtronmentl
appl tcahon to apply tor thiS Sm ter Posttton
" Medtcal Dental EAP,
pOSthon EOE M/F/DN
40 1KI
Mtddleton Estates 1s current" On stte Ooctotl
Drrve1s
ly acceptin g applicatiOns tor ,; Weekly Pay and Bonus
DRIVERS WANTED
a Full ttme RN Supervtsor
lncenttves 1
Ewpenenced Dnve rs
Posrt1on
Apphc
atmns
ca
n
Needed
be submrlted at 8204 Carla
Cafl TODAYr
Class B COL &amp; clean
Gall tpolls 0111 0
fntervlew TOMORROW II
Drtve
drt'ftng record necessary
Work NEXT WEEK" '
Fuel &amp;bulk 011 detwery exp Monday tl1rough Frtday
wltanker &amp; haz end a plu s, 8am to 4pm Resumes may
be e mailed lo angta@sud
1-888-IMC-PAYU
wrll tra1n Competlttve
denlinkmatl
com
No
pt1one
Ex1 2455
houtly wage &amp; beneftl s
Apply online.
{401 k rnedlcal/dental/lrfe calls w111 be a(Cepted
http://]obs infociston com
1ns pa1d holldays/vacaiiOn )
ayors a ng
9
Submtl re sume vta faK to
ResCare Home Care 1s
Vout
si 3·831 ·1392 or e matl
accepti
ng apphcat•ons for
Now htnng State Tesled
hr @tyk•nscompantas co m
Support ASSOCiates CNA &amp;
Nursmg As s1stants,
Fam1ly owned &amp; operated
Licensed Practtcal Nurses STNA MA/0 0 exp pre
petroleum marketer stnce
!erred Apply at 8204 Cada
and AN &amp; EOE
1948
Dnve GallipoliS Mon Frt
E~ ce ll en l Wages
84
Email resume to
Flextble Schedules
Dnvers CDL·A Teams 56·
rharnson@rescare com
Call 740·446 3305 for
82 Split, Solo 35 ' Spec1altty
app01ntmbnt
Cargo Plenty of Mdes 1Da n
Man Thurs
800 625 6885 x2189 Apply
Help Wanted
10am -2 m
www randrtruck com

p(IS!Itnn

i

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
tJ~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

• All ads must pe prepaid'

FOL'NIJ

o

&gt;This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meelln
EOE standards

, i,

..L

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

968

,.

Next sale, Wednesday,
Sept. 10, I0 a.m.
Far mare mformation,
call De Wayne at (740) 3390241 or Staq at (304) 6340224. Visit the website at
www.uproducers. com.

Daily In-Column: 9:00a . m .
Monday - Friday for In§ertlon
In Ne)(t Day's P11per
Sunday In-Column: 9 00 a.m
Fr1day For Sunday&amp; Paper

IA&gt;ST \NIJ

blec! to the Fedora

• r'!

Upcoming specials:

Djsplay Ads

o;zo

lon ot an adverti
ent Corrections wil
made m the firs
vallable edltton

' •

Cow/Calf Pairs, $200$1,11 0; Bred Cows, $300$795; Goats, $ll-$130;
Lambs, $79-$1 08; Hogs,
$48-$51.50.

AN~OUJ\C I :\IJ.NI~

Ohio Valley

Wgrd Ads

• Slart Your Ads With A. Kevword • Include Complete
Descrtpt1on • Include A Pr1ce • Avoid Abbrevn1t1ons
• I nclude Phone Number r-nd Addr ess When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

*POLICIES*

'

$54-$65.25.
Medmm!Lean, $42-$52.
Thm/Llght, $10-$40.
' Bulls, $50-$70.

Afi AJ2

Fax To (304) 675·5234

G.ET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offtee- If()~~

on, we were s!ill growing commumties and subdJVJBut not everyone in
food here to eat. We s!ill had swns.
Albuquerque IS as optimistic
families that were feeding
And local farmers - who as Schuster and LaBadie
themselves because they in recent years have brought about local food productiOn.
couldn't afford !ood except organic produce mto fam1er's
Water 1s a constant concern
tor what they could grow."
markets, restaurants ami 111 th 1s southwestern city,
The rural lifestyle of back- schools where urban dwelle!S wh1ch has about 600 miles of
yard horse stables, fresh eggs can try it - are choosmg to 1rngation and d1ainage ditchfor breakfast, fruit trees and plant vegetables based on es called acequias crisscross•
vegetable gardens that people nutnt10nal value and taste, mg 1ts neighborhoods near the
take for granted in many rather than makmg dec JsJons II VCr
Albuquerque neighborhoods based on a business contract
A lot of growers despair
is catchmg on around the or how long a vegetable can that small farms often are
country.
Sit on a shelf.
being subdivided mto tmy lots
"The actual phenomenon of
"It ldnd of opens up pea- - the v..Jter nghts to the
urban farming is absolutely pie's imaginations of whdt p,u·cels lost.
takmg off even more'," srud can be done closer to home."
A~ncultUJe
1s "under
TaJa Seve lie, founder and he said.
mcreclibly heavy pressure
executive drrector of Urban
In Albuquerque , K T from developers," satd John
has
started Shipley, v1ce president of the
Farmmg, a Detroit-based LaBadie
nonprofit that, turns vacant www.urbanchickens org She R1o Grande Agncu!tural Land
lots into gardens. "People are trains urban and suburban res- Trust. 'Why can't they leave
worried about the environ- idents to keep chickens m the farmland alone on the valment, the nsmg cost of food. their backyards TI1e City has ley llooi ., The loss of agriculPeople feel safer about their one of the most lement ordJ- tural water and farmland IS a
food bemg b&lt;rown eloser to nances affectmg chickens m ma1or th1eat to the continuahome "
the country, allowmg up to 15 tion of tm11111g."
Urban Fannmg started wrth chickens per' household, she
As thmgs stand now,
three gardens m Detroit in said.
Albuquerque produces only
2005. This year they have 600
'The urban chicken thmg about 3 percent of the food
gardens and have expanded has really taken off," she said
across the country into cities "It's a draw to bnng people to that the City eats, Shipley said.
like New York, St. Loms, your cities and 1t's somcthmg
Ch1cago,
Atlanta, that should be preserved"
New
Schuster, too, keeps
Minneapolis and
THANK YOU
Orleans, she said.
chickens and sells the extra
United
Greg Bowman, communi- eggs to h1s neighbors, who
I'
cattons manager at the • leave 20 dollar bills .on his
Producers
'
Rodale
Institute
in porch penodJcally when
'
for purchasing
!&lt;utztqwn, Pe!ln., a nonprof- they pick up their 'eggs He
my2008
1t that promotes and also grows flowe1 s that he
researches organic farming sells at local shops and he
Market Steer
methods,. said urban plan- allows a beekeeper to mamJacob
ners are mtegrall!Jg sustam- tam a hive on his property
able agnculture mto devel- from which he gets some of
opments like retirement the honey.

. --- ·- --

Gallia

Webs1tes
www myda1lytnb une com
www myda1lysentJnel com
www.myda11yreg1ste r com

E-mail
classJfJed @mydallytnbune com

LivESTOCK REPORT

- --- ~ -- - --

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties ·Like
NoOne
Else Can!

County,
OH

Urban farms grow as cities seek safe~ cheap food

OSU qffirs low stress
cattle handling workshop

Meigs County, OH

Respiratory Therapist
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal is currently
acceptmg resumes for a full-time
Resp1ratory Therap1st Mu!t be a graduate
of an approved Respiratory Therap1st
program Current West Vng1ma ltcense
requned
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(l94) 675-4340
304-675-6975, or apply on-line

Or 'fax

at www.pvalley.orK
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

HEALTH CARE
OPPORTUNITIES
Arl! you lookm g lor .t ~.h.d kngt'
ltke

hl

u ~c \tllft

"kdls to lll.tl.:c

1

IViluld )'Q U

.t drllcrc n~.:c 1

I!

S\) \'t' nMv h,t \C' ,, po, llton lnt ,nu A thnt s .11
Ga l llpo l1 ~

ts

c wr~ lltl )

.:.tmllli,Jt c"

tn JOin

uur

sct·~tntt:.mn~

qLt.tlt l teU
l t',\111

1 he

lollow rng pm111nn " . u~ ,\V,tt l.! hk
• R~ g1 s ten:J Nurs ~
• Lr t.: L' tb~d Pt .rCtK.rl Nurse

• Sidle Te,h:~d Nur ~ m£ A sst st,mt
Fur .tdd rllllll dl rnlnrn~t~t l on ,tppl y 111

pe r~nn

.tt

Arbors at Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
E4ll.11 Opportun!l } En1plnycT M / FIDIV

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Position Announcement
B o~s.ml

Mcmon,d Lthr.lr)
Srrv1qs Associah:.

sec ~" &lt;1ppli1.t nt ~ l ot the po ~t uon

nl ~

Worktng undt•r 1hc d1rcu ~up~r v t~wn o! thL' ) llUth Scn•tL' C" Pro!!r.ull
Comdt lllltnr lh~o. 'wu th Scrv 11.C'~ Associ .t ic must be ,J uc.tt l \ 1.: cn.: rgd!L
r ndr v rtlu &lt;~ l v.htl •\\111 pro\ rtle r xceptton ,rl cht lllt cn\ ~\. 1\I L C" th1nugh
,l s~ T ~ llng wtth pl.J tlnl n~ ~,;on Ju~.;tm g .111d .H.ho-.attng s~.:nrcc" lh.Hmcet
the needs nl the ~,; h r\ U t crl &amp; }DUih 111 the cornnmrr11 y Av.. rsh rrr th e
creattng tmpl emc tH.!IJon ,md p!~.;' s cm,n wn o! lihJ ,If\ .md cnlnmutllty
progr.m1s l or childrenl ) nuth with spect,l\ emph &lt;l:o;ls otl ages 0-) . •md
' ed pw.gr.um lor p.~rcn h c.trcg n er" .md te,t~.. hl'l' ~
Lhtld-rel,rt
Schedule 10 ( th t t1~ ) h ou r~ per •~ ~.:~.· ~
D.t} ltmc E\c nrng .md Weekend bou ts
Mu ~t be .1hle In mcut the llcx thlc "Lhcdulin ~ nt•cJ., nt t h~ Lr bnu v
Po"HIOll l~e:-ipOth 1bi llttcs Compl ctc JOb dt· ~' 11pt iO tJ av,td.thk .11 L1br ,try
C trcul.lttnn Dl' s~

MINIMUM .JOB QUALIFtCAI'IONS
Educatjop
H 1gh S~. hool D1plom,1 or cqut \a kt11 rcqum: d ~ c qun ~·~ ~.:u mhn 1.1t1011 {,f
h1giler .:Jucat1on . t'xpen c nee t.:L' ft 11 ~t.:a!J nn . and tr;unmg whJell pt O\ t tle~
the k nm ... ledgc. ~ktll" .rnd .t h drtl t'~ ncce~s.H) to pt.&gt;llonn the \\Or~
assoctat~d \\tlh thr s p o ~ t !r on

ExperjenceD'ra1ning
Mu st have CXJ&gt;cn cncc

wot~tng ~\ llh chtldrcn. Strong. publll sr,c.tkmg
mterpcrson.tl commumcnt Jon skill-. cssentMl Some l1br.H) · rc \,ttcd
cx perrc ncc rs h t~ h !v Jcsrr.Jblc M11 ~1 p o s!&gt;.C!&gt;.S ,1 \&lt;l lrd Orn er" LICen se
,J!ld h.t \IJ ,\LL ~SS 10 ,\ \C hi Lk
M u!-.1 pa ~" 1.:1 rr w rw ll1.1dgnnmJ dH'L~

,md

&lt;.:ompetttl\le P•'Y l o r work 111 .1 ch,d kngmg

tnleresled apptican" should obtain an application and job

and ~ uppo11 tve c nv tronmcn t E mp loyee~ ~ llJOY

descnptton from the l.ihraQ Circulation J)csk. Return application
(by mail on I) ) in seull·d rn\'l'·lope to Ucbbil' Suundcrs. Library

and

opport unttJes l o t

~.: a reer

gn , w t h

professiOnal devcl opnu.:: nt

.trH.l

Director. 7 Spruce Street. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Applications
must he postmarked by Scpl. 19, 200R

Apphc.tnls muy apply to

www .holzerclin ic.com
Equal Opportun rty EtnphJ)e•

,

Tlw Dr S.tmul'l l Bu,.,;mJ llllllllllllli l thr ln ,(i,Lilt.l (\ •mtl\ lJI\tnu I thr tn 1~ .1 11
~ '-!ll.ll oppo. •rtun1l\ \' tn plo) ~ r ollld J~-.e~ Jl(lt d I ~CIIrll lll ,l! l llll lh ~; h,\(1' 1•l r,,, ~ rcltgwn
Ltll11r nlltml.ll lll l!,!lll .L ~ l' '~ ~ gl.'ntlt r d•... nhllt! \ m 111&gt; n lh~r~h tr.ll ten' !Jl J lrol~l.'re d
h\

1 .1\~

�I

iunbap ~tmeg -ienttntl

DOWN ON.· THE FARM

Woodward to
serve as delegate
GALLIPOLIS - Tom F.
Woodward Ill of Gallipoli s
has been elected .ts a delegate to the !25th Annual
Amen cdn
An gus
As sQ&lt;.:JdtJon ® Coll ~ cntJoll
ol Delegates. Nov. 17 Ill
LouJsvJIIC . Ky. reports
Bryce Sc:hullMnn . ch1el
execut1 ve ofll c:er ol the
Amcncan
Angus
AssocJatJon
Woodw,1rd. " member ol
the
Amenc.Jn
Angus
AssocwtJ0\1 "ith hemlqu.JJ ters 10 St Joseph. Mo .. IS
one of 402 Angus b1eeders
who have becJl clcc:ted by
fellow members Ill their
state to serve as a representa(lve at the annual mcct10g.

Representing 45 states,
the District of ColumbJU
and Canada. the delegates
will participate 10 the bu siness meetmg and elect new
otT!cers and live directors to
the
Amcncan
Angus
Association board.
The annual eve nt 1s held
Ill COnJUnCUOn With the
annual banquet and the
Super Po1nt Roll of Victory
Angus show. Nov. 15- 18
during the North Amencan
lntellldt!Olldl
Livestock
Exposrlion
The Amencan Angu s
Assoc 1al1on has more than
34,000 act1ve members and
IS the largest beet breed
orgamzauon 10 the world.

0 DNR proposes closure
of Marietta nursery site

PageD2
Sunday, September 7, 2008

Foods stamps come to more farmers markets
BY VALERIES BAUMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ALBANY. N.Y. - More
farmers markets natmnwide
are accepung food stamps
for their summer squash,
apples and other fresh produce - fattemng profns for
farm ers while creating
health1er opuons for lowmcome tamil1es as food
pnces soar
The federal Food Stamp
Program is helping New
York ,
Massachu seus,
Vermont , Mich1gan and
othe1 states provide handheld wrreless termi1Mi s for
electronic benefit transfers
- the modern debit card
vers1on of food stamps - to
farmers markets at no extra
cost Massachusetts, New
Mextco, Vermont and other
states plan to equ1p more
markets to accept the cards
th1s year.
It can 't come soon enough
for people l1ke Wilfred
Negron
Negron shops for groceries for h1s family 10
Brooklyn using an EBT
card to buy fresh fru1ts and
vegetables. but he said he
would rather use h1s card to
buy produce at a farmer 's
market. He sa1d the nearby
stores don' t offer the same
kind of variety.
"When you do shop at the
grocery store, It's very limited - they don' t have a
very wrde selection," he
said. "I th10k 1f we had a
farmers market, I think we
would shop more, and eat
more produce."
On the other side of the
counter are farmers l1ke
Richard Hayberger 10
Hamlin, N.Y. Hay berger
said he makes an extra $500
a month from Rochesteratea
farmers
markets
because of the wireless program that has brought htm

COLUMBUS - In an ol nursery stall over the past
effort to provide more 80-some years, whtch has led
focused support to pnvate to the plant10g of tens of milwoodland owners and the lions ot trees m Ohio," said
state forest system, the Oh10 Lytle "However, as our state
Department ot Natural forests have successfully
Resources h.ts p1 oposed been reforested, and other
clos10g the M,1netta State public and private sources
Nursery efte&lt;.:l!ve Nov. 8. me available to prov1de tree
2008
seedlings, we must focus our
"Over the past decade. avmlable resources on those
annual tree seedling sales pnor1t1es that return the
have steadily dropped from greatest possible serv1ces to
6 milliOn trees lll 1997. to the people of Ohro "
nearly 4 million 10 2003, to
Lytle said he understands
this year's low of less than the difficult 1mpact that
I 5 million seedl10gs," saJd closing the Manetta State
Dav1d Lytle, d11ef of the Nursery will have on both
ODNR DivJsJOn of Forestry. state workers and seedling
"As sales have decl10ed customers
through the years, the Green
"Please know that we Will
Spnngs State Nursery was make every effort to support
closed Ill 1984, and the 1mpacted
employees
Zanesville State Nurse1y through this tough transi!!On
was closed in 2003 •·
penod." he smd. "We will
The
Manetta · State also be workmg to ass1st
Nursery began operat ions m customers of the Manetta
1925 as a prov1der of State Nursery m fmdmg
seedlings tor reforestmg avmlable sources of tree
land purchased as part of the seed lings"
BY HEATHER CLARK
state f01est system. Over
The
Marietta
State
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
time. the nurseries at Nursery employs eight pelMarietta. Green Spnngs and manent and about 20 seaALBUQUERQUE, NM
Zanesville supported tree sonal employees. Th1s clo- - Dan Schuster breezes
plantmg on both state torests sure 1s pendmg rev1ew and down the road m h1s green
and pnvate lands. The approval from the D1rector and yellow John Deere tracManetta State Nursery has of the Department of tor, passing fast-food restaubeen operatmg at a deflcu Admmistrative Services as rants and stnp malls on hts
over the past several years requ1red by the Oh1o way to work
The closing of the nUJsery Revised Code. Employees
You 1mght say Schuster rs
w1ll help the diVISIOn operate and the public w1ll be noti- an urban tanner
more efficiently.
fied of th1s dec1sion as 1t
He does custom plowmg
"We honor the hard work becomes avmlah le
for landowners in the
Albuquerque area and manages Rio Grande Comll]unity
Farms, a tax-dollar supported
urban farm and educat1on
center
Commumty
gardemng
orgamzers and experts nationWide say growers like
Jackson Sml and Water ·Schuster - 1md urban areas
Bv RAND! ESPINOZA
SPECIAL TO THE T·S
Conservation D1stnct, are like Albuquerque are
included Ill the cost.
bringing agJJculture into cities
JACKSON - Less stress
Contact Well s at (740) and suburbs m new ways as
for cattle can mean less 286-3803
or people won-y about the envistress lor cattle producers, wells.296@osu edu
tor ronment, rismg food costs and
too. Hear why at Oh10 State detail s and to register food safety. City folks also are
Umverstty's first-ever Low Participants are asked to relearmng how de'Iic10us
Stress Cattle Handling register by Sept. 12.
homegrown food can be.
Workshop, 9 a.m. to 4 p m.,
Throughout the program,
Dnve down a srx-lane highSaturday, Sept. 20, at the Wells said, the speakers will way through thts central New
Oh10 Agncultural Research emphasize the importance Mexico city and you can see
and Development Center's of reducing stress on cattle. cows chewing their cud.
Jackson Mmimizing stress, he said, Small fanns in the city's
(OARDC)
Agncultural
Research 1mproves safety for both South Valley along the Rio
Station
cattle and people, reduces Grande are a short bicycle
The topics mclude cattle adverse effects on the am- nde from downtown skybehavior, low-stress han- mats' growth and perfor- scrapers. And the c1ty has· a
dling methods, and how mance, and makes cattle lement ordmance about backthose methods can 1mprove handling eas1er
yard chicken coops
the an1mals' performance,
Wells and Steve Boyles,
"We're so far behmd, we' re
and health and welfare an OSU Extension beef cat- ahead," Schuster said "When
while keepmg handlers safe tle specialiSt, will discuss all those (other CJtJes) were
Speaking will be Ron and demonstrate another gettmg populated and built
Gill , livestock extension lower-stress method, fencespecialist, Texas A&amp;M lme weanmg
UnJversJty, and Curt Pate,
"Fenceline weaning 1s a
rancher and livestock han- method where calves are
dling clinicran from Helena, exposed to the1r dams
GALUPOLJS- United
Mont.
across a fenceline for about
Ptoducers Inc. market
Cattle flight zones and a week post-weaning,"
report from Gallipolis for
other behaviors w1ll be dis- Wells , explained "Thts is
sales
conducted
on
cussed. Effective ways to dtfferimt from most tradiWednesday, Sept. 3, 2008.
sort cattle and move cattle tional methods, m which
through working facililles calves are abruptly separatwill be demonstrated .
' ed from dams at the lime of
Feeder Cattle-Steady
"The event will be very weanmg. Fencehne weanhands-on," sard Kenny mg results m less stress on
275-415 lbs , Steers, $90WeUs, Jackson station man- calves and thetr mothers."
$117, Heifers, $85-$103,
ager. "We will be spendmg
The station is located two
425-525 lbs., Steers, $90most of our time in the cor- miles southeast of Jackson on
$115, Heifers, $8.5-$103.
rals and working factlities Oh10 93, at 019 Standpipe
550-625 lbs., Steers, $85watching and listemng to the Road in Jackson County.
$110, Heifers, $80-$95;
'presenters as they work wrth OARDC and OSU Extension
650-725 lbs., Steers, $85cattle. It wtll be completely are the research and outreach
$108, Heifers, $80-$94,
focused on workmg with arms, respecl!vely, of Oh10
750-850 lbs., Steers, $85commercial cattle in a real State's College of Food,
$105, Hetfers, $80-$92.
production environment "
and
Agncu ltural,
Regtstration costs $5 per Envrronmental Sc1ences.
Cows-Steady/Lower
(Randr Espinoza rs with
person. Lunch, g1ven by the
Jackson County Cattlemen's th e 0/ria Agrrcultural
Well -Muscled/Fleshed,
AssociatiOn, and refresh- Resean h and Development
ments, provided by the Center&gt; at lf:!cksan.)

more customers
"The market's much,
I' m
much
bus1er
impre,sed," he sa1d
In ~007 , 40 markets in
New York state accepted
food stamps This year, 87
of•the state's approx imately
400 markets are equipped to
sell food to families using
the EBT cards, said Diane
Eggert. executive director
of the Farmers' Market
Federation of New York
Food stamp sales at New
York farmers markets have
increased statewtde from
$3,000 m 2002 to $90,000
m 2007 , she said.
' Massachusetts
has
expanded from f1ve markets
to seven that accept EBT
cards wJrelessly, Vermont
planned to go from three
markets "it h wire less
access m 2007 to nme in
2008, and M1ehigan went
from, two farmers markets
acceptmg food stamps to
eleven m 2007
''We' re already outpacjng
2007, so I think we're going
to see significant growth,"
Eggert sa1d.
Another state program,
NY Fresh Checks, grves
food stamp families $5
coupon mcentives for
spending a mm1mum of $5.
They only get one check per
market day, but are encouraged to come back regularly
for the coupons
Across the country, 46
states have at least one
farmer's market accepting
EBT cards. In 2007, 21 states
had farmers markets that
extended access to lowincome families through
alternate means, like the wireless EBT machines and a system exchahgu1g EBT credit
for wooden tokens that can be
spent at markets m New York,
accordmg to the U.S.
Df;!lartment of Agriculture.
Iowa had I03 markets

m:rtbune - Sentinel i\egister
CLASSIFIED

l\egister

To Place
Your Ad,
Call Today•••

(304) 675-1333
Or

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
APphoto
Electronic benefit transfer tokens are seen at the
Schenectady Farmers Market 1n Schenectady, N.Y.,
Thursday, Aug. 7 ' More farmers mar~ets nationwide are
accepting food stamps for the1r summer squash, apples
and other fresh produce - fatten1ng proftts for farmers
while creat1ng healthter opt1ons for low-111come fam1l1es as
food pnces soar.
acceptmg food stamps ill
2007 That year Washmgton
had 24 markets. whtle Oregon
and Connecucut each had 18
markets acceptmg EBT cards,
accordmg to the USDA
In New Yotk, the roughly
$130,000 in fundmg to
expand the wireless EBT
program would only accommodate up to about 130
Wireless food stamp terminals across the state , wh1ch

',

..

HOW lQ WRIJE

Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

would only ,\ccount for
about a thud of the state's
nMrkets , Eggert sa1d.
"It helps the local farmer, it
helps tile tam1ltes both stretch
theJr food dolldrs and makes
sme they are gettmg access to
I runs and vegetables," said
Cathy Roberts, a semor paralegal at the Emp1re Just1ce
Center. a statewide, nonprofit
lav. firm hclpmg poor and
low-income families

Publishing reserves
the right to ed1t
reject or cancel any
ad at any ttme
&gt;Errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of publication an
he Trtbune·Sentinel
egtster
will b
esponslble for n
Of'e tl'lan the cost o
l'le space occuple
y the error and onl
e first lnsertton W
hall not be liable fo

Box number ads ar
lways conlldentlal
&gt;Current rate

car

pplles
)All Real
Eslat
dvertisements ar
air Housing Act

W\NHJ)

roBn

Found young fe male black
Lab
Ju ot
ou lstde
of
REWAR D $500 reward lor Mtddlepor1
Blue Collar
u1tormat1on lead11lg to the recently been spayed sttll
arrest and conYtctton at the has st1tct1es tn bett y 740·
person or persons that stole !)92 232 9
on or about 8115108 a V1ctor
culltng torch set and Cline Lost Male 1ongha1red dog tn
Weldtng ta nks IIM609370 vtctntty of 2nd Ave Ca ll 446
and 22742
Also John 3478
Deere nd1ng mower model
GT
275
senal
11
M027SB059575
If you
have tnlormaiiOn ple ase call !~;!';-""':':--::---..,.,
Ed Carson 304-773· 5332 or fH2
YMm SALF·
contact Mason Count y
G
Shenff Department
"---'li'lil.li UO.'Oi l li-"O,S_.1

Junk cars pay1ng $50 $300
If no answer leave a mes
sage 740·388 00 11
-------''-Now buytng Ginseng 740
274 0326
Tools &amp; etc mach power
tools ca rpenter tools lawn &amp;
garden kmles &amp; watches
jewelry Buy trade or sell
nome 388· 151 5 or cell 208
0320
Tool s &amp; etc mac h power
tools carpenter tools lawn &amp;
gard en kmles &amp; watches
jewelry Buy trade or sell ,
home 388 151 5 or cell ?08

Rooms avatlahle at Darst Sept 13 at 7 18 Porter Ad
Group Home male or Wmte r clothes furniture ,
craft stuff
- - -- - - - - : - lemale, (7401992·5023
iii
1 . Want to buy JUNK Cars
Uf4
Y,\KI) SAil .·
$250 00 Full Car 740 416
GJVK\WA\
l'm~r;Rm·/Mmm .E 1594

r~

---.,----:-

8&amp;10 week old Kittens 3
males 1 female 304 882
277 4 Ktm 304 882 8288
Danyal

RACO Scholar6hiP
Mill
Yar d
Sale Sta r
Park Racuw Sept 9 ifom 9·
6 Sept 10 from 9 4 Sept 11
from 9 2 all tterns 1/2 pnce
Med size mtxed bt eed and Clothing $ 1 00 a bag
female dog 7 months ol d New 1tems each day
Thanks for our su orl
304 937·3192 eventngs

Want to buy Junk Cars call
740 388-0884

Wanted to Buy·Paw Paws
Black Walnuts Call 740
698 6060

I \11'10\\W\1
"il· lt\ HIs

0

wm

)We
not knowing
y accept any adver
lsement in vlolatlo

fthelew

Found Bla ck &amp; while collt e
mtK malo dog outstde of
c neshlfe on 912 Call 740
367 0260
Found Sma 1dog 1n Rodney
on Cora Mill Ad Call to 1den
lily 740 2455146

HIU WAN'li.D

CLASSIFIED INDEX

A LOCAL MANUFACTUA·
ER IS taktng appllcattons for
E.x.pmie.n.c.ltd..M1g Welders
Please apply 1n pe1son a1
2150
Eas1 ern
Ave
Gall tpOIIS OH
Several cltHerent Yard
Sale on Sta tf House Rd
Pt Pleasan t Fn 5th &amp;
Sal 6th 9 2 f1rst Rd to lett
by Fttrm Museum
Fatrground
Al•CIIOr'\ ,\!'I ll
Fl I A M \RKt:l

4x.4's For Sale ..

. 725
Announcement .................... .... ... .. .... 030
Antiques. ..
530
Apartments for Rent..... ..... ... .. .... •.... ... 440
Auction and Flea Market.
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories....... ..... ... ... 760
Auto Repair. .
Autos for Sale... .. . •.•. ..... .•• . ... .... .. ... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale . .
... . 750
1 Building Supplies ..... ... .... • .•
... 550
t
Business and Buildings .. . . .
. 340
1
Business Opportuntty .... .. . ... ....... 210
Bualness Training .
. ... ..
• 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes . ....... ............. 790

no

Camping Equipment

1
•

1

•

1

'
••

..

.. , •

.

Help Wented...

•
I
~

;

·Back To The Fann:
,
1

~
1

•
1: '

'•
' :

1

. 780

Cards oJ Thanks. ..
.... ... .............. 010
ChlldiEiderly Care .
. 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ... ... ... .••. .... . .. ... 840
Equipment for Rent..
. . 480
Excavating ........ ............ ........ ........ 830
Farm Equipment
.
. 610
Farms for Rent.
.... ..... .. . . •. ... 430
Farms for Sate...
..
.•
.. 330
For Lease .
... .... .... .••. . . 490
For Sale
.
585
For Sale or Trac:Je .. .
.... .•.. . ..... .... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables.
. 580
Furnished Rooms....
... .. .. .. ... ..... 450
850
General Hauling
Giveaway . .. .
.. •... 040
050
Happy Ads..... ..
Hay &amp; Grain ... ... .
. .640
Home Improvements .... ··· ~ ..
Homes for Sate.
..
Household Goods.... .... .... .....
Houses for Rent
In Memoriam .
.... ... ....
Insurance ..... •.
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........
Livestock... ... . . .
Lost and Found. ..... .... ..... .... ... ..
Lots 1 Acreage . .
Miscellaneous
... ..... . ... .. ..
Miscellaneous Merchandise .
Mobile Home Repatr .. ... . ........
Mobile Homes for Rent . . ...
Mobile Homes for Sale... ..... •..
Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers... . . .
Musical Instruments
..
..
Personals.................. .

GUN SHOW &amp; SALE
MARlETIA, OH
Comfort Inn
Sal &amp; Sui} Sep/13&amp; 14

VendoriOealor tables S25
Dally Adt'nlsston $4 00
" SUY'SELL' TRADE""
Open to the Public

740·667-0412
W\~1Tn

110

. .. .810
310
510
410
020
130
660
630
. . 060
350
,170
..540
.860
420
320
.220
. . 740
.... 570
•• 005
Pets tor Sale ...,
..
.. . . .. .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating . .... .
.
.•. 820
Protesalonal Services . .. ... ... ............. 230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair. ... . .. .
.
160
Real Estate Wanted .
.. •..... .. .. .... 360

, ~~ Schoolalnstructlon ...... ... .. . ... ..... 150
•• SHd Plant &amp; Ferttllzer. ........... ..... . ... 650
:-- Sltuat'lons Wanted.
.. 120
1
Space for Rent. ••
. 460
; 1 Sporting Goods ...
. 520
• : SUV's for Sale. . •..
. 720
Trucks for Sal9 .. ...
. 7t5

: ' Upholstery .. .. .... ........... . ... ..

Cross Creek
Auction Buffalo
Saturdays 6pm
Sate start Gpm t!IJ 12 or
l am
BUJidtng IS Full of Used
Merchandtse tnstd(l &amp; out
stde, Starttng to sell high
quality kntves such as Case
Buck &amp; Mossy Oak
Air
Cond1110ned
VISa and
Master Card &amp; Debt! (304)
550· 16 Hi Stephen Reedy
1639

870

Vans For Sale...... ., . .. . ............. ,.....730
Wanted to Buy ............ ..... ,p.
..
.090
... Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .. ...... . 620
~Wanted To Do . ...... ...!...... ... . .... . 180
•._ • Wanted to Rent..... .... . ... . ........... ..... ... 470
.~· ~ Yard Sale- Gallipolis.... . ......... .•.. . • . 072
.. ...... 074
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle.
v,rd Sale-Pt Pleasant..... ..
076

lYl BLIV
Absolute Top Dolla1
stl
ye rlgold
co1ns
any
10KI 14KI1 8K gold jewelry
dental gold pre 1935 US
cu rrency prool1m tnl se1s
diamonds MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenuo GallipOlis
446·2842

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 . 00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays Paper

A
local
Me1gsi Att1e ns
County Company IS cu rrent
ly accepting a ~pllcattons for
the posttton ot Account ant
Thts ts a full t1me pOSII!on
wtth an ex ce llent benefit
Thts mctuaes
package
Rettrement (OPERS) vaca
t1on personal t1me stck It me
&amp; healthcat e pa ckage The
work1ng hours are Monday ·
Fnday dey sh1tt only It IS
preferred but not required
tt1at applicant be sktlled tn
Peachtree Accounting pro
gram as we ll a Mtcrosoft
Word &amp; Excel Must be a
qUick learner tn a fast paced
oHtce and work well wtth the
pubhc
A degree m
Accountmg ts required but
wtll constd er applicants With
at leasl 10 yeai of worki ng
eKpenence 1n accountmg
Send Resume to Dt:uly
Senttnet P 0 BOX 729·39
Pomeroy, OH 45769
An Excellent way lo earn
mone y The New Avon
Call Martlyn"J04-882 2645
AVON' All Areas t To Buy or
Sell
Shtr l e ~ Spears 304
675 1429

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reserves th e right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Errors must be reported on the firs! day ol publication and the
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regiater will be reaponaibje for no more than the cost of the spaco occupied ~y the error and only the first Insertion We shall not be liable for
any loa s or e1pense that results from the publication Or omission of an adverti!H!ment Correctloo w!ll be macle In the first available edition Box number ads
Current rate C!Ud appl!es
AU rut ast&amp;te advertleBmants IHI'! subject to the Federal Fair ~ouslng Act of 1966 ·This newspajJer
are always conllllanl!al
aceepts only help wanted l!ldll meellng EOE standftrd&amp; We wnl not knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the law Will not be responsible lor any
errors In an ad l.!iken over the phone

II

II

II
HUJl WANTI-J)

Commercial Banker
WesBanco Bank has a
ca1eer opportuntly for a
t11 ghty motivated
Commerc1al Banker tor
soutneastern Ot110 Ml,ISI
ha ve substantial expenence
111 commerc•al lendtng
com mercial real estate
lending and relat•onshtp
management Supe nor
bu stness development
communtca11on and credtl
analysts skillS requtred
Degree Preferred
Outstanding opportunt1y for
an expertenc ed
profess• onat Excellent
salary and beneftts
tnctudlng mce nttYes health
and I tie tnsurance and
profit sh anngl401 k
Pre-employment drug
testtng requ1 red To submtt
an appllcatton tor thts
postllon vtstl our webstte at
www wesbanco com
EOE M/F/ON

FEDERAL

POSTAL JOBS
S17 89 $28 27/hr now htr
tng For appli cation and free
governement rob tnfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
913·599·8226 24/hrs emp
serv
-M-ib_a_S:-on- le_1_ U
_S
:-A- L-LC
- ,-1s
pleased to announce act1ve
recrwtmg tor the new opera
!tons to be loc at ed m
McCon nelsv111 e OH Mtba
srntered components are
h1gh prec1son h1gh strengtl1
parts produced us1ng spe
c1al process powdered metal
technology They are used
tn car engmes transm•s·
stons steenng systems and

WV BOhr Underground
Housekeeper needed Apply
Mtner Class starttng soon
PLUMBERS
WANTED at Regency Inn 151 Upper
Wlut Co Tramu1 g 304 372·
l ocal resldenhal plumbtng Rtver Ad Gallipolis Ohto
8346
contractor accept1n g appi1 44 6·0241
cattons for plumbers wtth
new restden ttal co nstructton - - - - - - - el\penenc-e Excellent wage
an d
bene fit
package
Applicants must have valid
Ohto Onv ers l1cense Drug
free work place Call (6t4)
491 2519 between 9 oo and
5 00 PM Monday through
Frt day
Job Sites ts In
Athens Oh10

r-rooking For
ANew Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

on
SAVINGS
Mtddleton Estates 1s current
ly accepttng apph cattOilS for
a Full Ttme Matntenance
Wo rke.
Ouahf1cattons
tncl ude Must have know!edge ot patntmg electncal
plumbm g
AC/hea ttrg
!el ngeratton aul o mechantcs
and home repans mcludtng
walls fl oormg wmcto .... s
doors etc Must possess a
valid
dnvers
license
Applical!ons can be submt1
!eel al 8204 Carla Dn ye
Ga lllpO its Ohto Monday
through Fnday Bam to 4pm
Resumes may be e matled
to rharn son @rescare com
No phone ca lls w111 be
accepted
- - -- - -- -

i=:H:e~lp~W:a:n:;te:d==:~;:;H:e~l~p~W~a~n:t~e~d=;;;
~

Holler Clinic of Gallipolis

seeks

Application Analyst
Hol ze r Cltrll ~ rs ucceptmg re., urncs lrnm
q u .llt !t~ d

~.:o m p u tc r p rolc ,~wnaJo..

!or th t•

ot Appl lt.:ntton An alys1

The rx1s1 tron n:qUt rc~ .t b.tchd ur s dq!l\:e or
ht ghcr rn &lt;t ft eld r~ l.tt ed tn Jnl ornl.ltt on
System . . 01 Compul cr Suencc an d cxpc n e n ~.: c
"upportrll);! end - u~e r ap Jllr t: at ron ~ E\pc rre ncc
\~ 11 1\ hL•,tl \11 llllilllll!l ll lll d ntl IH , l ll oi ~CITH:' ll !
"Y ~IL' tlh

The

ts dc., t.. bk
A ppll t.: tll ton A nal vs t

rcsp,m:,ible lot

ts

pttmartl y

t m ple men tln ~. m.unt,ll ntng

;~ nd upg t,ld rn g m.tJ OT d !nrc.tl or bmtriess
appl u.:.r t tun"

The

p os 11 1o n

I"

h .r... cd

111

Gu lli polls. O H
Holze r C ltntc prm 11..!~~ &lt;:&gt;.~.:clknt hcncf tt .,

Shoe Sensalton m the Stt'o'er
Br tdge Plaza ts lookmg tor a
mature lull tt me A.ss1stant
Manager wtth a mtntmum ot
two years reta il expert ence
We otter b1 weekly compen
sa!IOn and benefi ts after 90
days Appl y at the store or
ema il
resumes
to
rpn tchard@shoesensatton c
om

Shop the
Classifieds!

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'"C" InfoCisim'

snock
ab sorbers
the
McConnelsville Fa ctltty IS
111 11
•
the newest stte tn the M1ba
S1ntered DIVISIOn and Will
be m productt on m 2009 To
learn more about Mtba tis
Now Hrrlng 15..Ful1 Time
th re e dtvtstons and th e
employees lor openings
expected growth of the cor
In our Gallipolis.. location•
Customer Service/Teller poratton
pl ease
vt stt
WesBan co nas a lull ltme www mtba co m Resum es
No expertence reqUtro rfl
opp011un1ty tn our GaUlpohs are betng acce pt ed tor all
No Cred1t Card Sales•
ofllce lor frtendly energettc postltons
and wtll be
No Collecltors•
persons to pto'o'tde supen01 relatned for one year Those
customer servtce process poSI!tons focused on at tt1 1s
You choose th e types of
transactions and promote ttme are
calls you want to take
bank servtces Should have · Plant Manager
Aecrutt volunteers tor
customer servt ce or cash ter • Process Appli catmns
leadtng non prol tl
expenence preferably 111 a Engmeer
organt zattons
bank or credtt umon
· Press Techntctan
OR
We offer opportuntty for
Quality Engtneer
Ratse funds and renew
advancement exce llent
Interested candidates may
me mbersh tps for the
compensation and beneftt s subm11 resumes to
Natt onal Attie Assoctatton
and a great wo rk
M1ba
enwo nm e!'nl
5037 North State R.oute 60
.- Full and Part t1me
Pre employment drug
McConnelSVIlle OH 43756
Postltons1
testtng reqwred Vt stt our
C10
Mtba Stnter USA
"
Everyooe
gets Sunday
we bstte at
Resume
OFF I
www wesbanco co m
or
Jta
email
to
.- Protess1onarwork
to com plete an onlme
hr reply @mtba us com AE
Envtronmentl
appl tcahon to apply tor thiS Sm ter Posttton
" Medtcal Dental EAP,
pOSthon EOE M/F/DN
40 1KI
Mtddleton Estates 1s current" On stte Ooctotl
Drrve1s
ly acceptin g applicatiOns tor ,; Weekly Pay and Bonus
DRIVERS WANTED
a Full ttme RN Supervtsor
lncenttves 1
Ewpenenced Dnve rs
Posrt1on
Apphc
atmns
ca
n
Needed
be submrlted at 8204 Carla
Cafl TODAYr
Class B COL &amp; clean
Gall tpolls 0111 0
fntervlew TOMORROW II
Drtve
drt'ftng record necessary
Work NEXT WEEK" '
Fuel &amp;bulk 011 detwery exp Monday tl1rough Frtday
wltanker &amp; haz end a plu s, 8am to 4pm Resumes may
be e mailed lo angta@sud
1-888-IMC-PAYU
wrll tra1n Competlttve
denlinkmatl
com
No
pt1one
Ex1 2455
houtly wage &amp; beneftl s
Apply online.
{401 k rnedlcal/dental/lrfe calls w111 be a(Cepted
http://]obs infociston com
1ns pa1d holldays/vacaiiOn )
ayors a ng
9
Submtl re sume vta faK to
ResCare Home Care 1s
Vout
si 3·831 ·1392 or e matl
accepti
ng apphcat•ons for
Now htnng State Tesled
hr @tyk•nscompantas co m
Support ASSOCiates CNA &amp;
Nursmg As s1stants,
Fam1ly owned &amp; operated
Licensed Practtcal Nurses STNA MA/0 0 exp pre
petroleum marketer stnce
!erred Apply at 8204 Cada
and AN &amp; EOE
1948
Dnve GallipoliS Mon Frt
E~ ce ll en l Wages
84
Email resume to
Flextble Schedules
Dnvers CDL·A Teams 56·
rharnson@rescare com
Call 740·446 3305 for
82 Split, Solo 35 ' Spec1altty
app01ntmbnt
Cargo Plenty of Mdes 1Da n
Man Thurs
800 625 6885 x2189 Apply
Help Wanted
10am -2 m
www randrtruck com

p(IS!Itnn

i

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
tJ~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

• All ads must pe prepaid'

FOL'NIJ

o

&gt;This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meelln
EOE standards

, i,

..L

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

968

,.

Next sale, Wednesday,
Sept. 10, I0 a.m.
Far mare mformation,
call De Wayne at (740) 3390241 or Staq at (304) 6340224. Visit the website at
www.uproducers. com.

Daily In-Column: 9:00a . m .
Monday - Friday for In§ertlon
In Ne)(t Day's P11per
Sunday In-Column: 9 00 a.m
Fr1day For Sunday&amp; Paper

IA&gt;ST \NIJ

blec! to the Fedora

• r'!

Upcoming specials:

Djsplay Ads

o;zo

lon ot an adverti
ent Corrections wil
made m the firs
vallable edltton

' •

Cow/Calf Pairs, $200$1,11 0; Bred Cows, $300$795; Goats, $ll-$130;
Lambs, $79-$1 08; Hogs,
$48-$51.50.

AN~OUJ\C I :\IJ.NI~

Ohio Valley

Wgrd Ads

• Slart Your Ads With A. Kevword • Include Complete
Descrtpt1on • Include A Pr1ce • Avoid Abbrevn1t1ons
• I nclude Phone Number r-nd Addr ess When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

*POLICIES*

'

$54-$65.25.
Medmm!Lean, $42-$52.
Thm/Llght, $10-$40.
' Bulls, $50-$70.

Afi AJ2

Fax To (304) 675·5234

G.ET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offtee- If()~~

on, we were s!ill growing commumties and subdJVJBut not everyone in
food here to eat. We s!ill had swns.
Albuquerque IS as optimistic
families that were feeding
And local farmers - who as Schuster and LaBadie
themselves because they in recent years have brought about local food productiOn.
couldn't afford !ood except organic produce mto fam1er's
Water 1s a constant concern
tor what they could grow."
markets, restaurants ami 111 th 1s southwestern city,
The rural lifestyle of back- schools where urban dwelle!S wh1ch has about 600 miles of
yard horse stables, fresh eggs can try it - are choosmg to 1rngation and d1ainage ditchfor breakfast, fruit trees and plant vegetables based on es called acequias crisscross•
vegetable gardens that people nutnt10nal value and taste, mg 1ts neighborhoods near the
take for granted in many rather than makmg dec JsJons II VCr
Albuquerque neighborhoods based on a business contract
A lot of growers despair
is catchmg on around the or how long a vegetable can that small farms often are
country.
Sit on a shelf.
being subdivided mto tmy lots
"The actual phenomenon of
"It ldnd of opens up pea- - the v..Jter nghts to the
urban farming is absolutely pie's imaginations of whdt p,u·cels lost.
takmg off even more'," srud can be done closer to home."
A~ncultUJe
1s "under
TaJa Seve lie, founder and he said.
mcreclibly heavy pressure
executive drrector of Urban
In Albuquerque , K T from developers," satd John
has
started Shipley, v1ce president of the
Farmmg, a Detroit-based LaBadie
nonprofit that, turns vacant www.urbanchickens org She R1o Grande Agncu!tural Land
lots into gardens. "People are trains urban and suburban res- Trust. 'Why can't they leave
worried about the environ- idents to keep chickens m the farmland alone on the valment, the nsmg cost of food. their backyards TI1e City has ley llooi ., The loss of agriculPeople feel safer about their one of the most lement ordJ- tural water and farmland IS a
food bemg b&lt;rown eloser to nances affectmg chickens m ma1or th1eat to the continuahome "
the country, allowmg up to 15 tion of tm11111g."
Urban Fannmg started wrth chickens per' household, she
As thmgs stand now,
three gardens m Detroit in said.
Albuquerque produces only
2005. This year they have 600
'The urban chicken thmg about 3 percent of the food
gardens and have expanded has really taken off," she said
across the country into cities "It's a draw to bnng people to that the City eats, Shipley said.
like New York, St. Loms, your cities and 1t's somcthmg
Ch1cago,
Atlanta, that should be preserved"
New
Schuster, too, keeps
Minneapolis and
THANK YOU
Orleans, she said.
chickens and sells the extra
United
Greg Bowman, communi- eggs to h1s neighbors, who
I'
cattons manager at the • leave 20 dollar bills .on his
Producers
'
Rodale
Institute
in porch penodJcally when
'
for purchasing
!&lt;utztqwn, Pe!ln., a nonprof- they pick up their 'eggs He
my2008
1t that promotes and also grows flowe1 s that he
researches organic farming sells at local shops and he
Market Steer
methods,. said urban plan- allows a beekeeper to mamJacob
ners are mtegrall!Jg sustam- tam a hive on his property
able agnculture mto devel- from which he gets some of
opments like retirement the honey.

. --- ·- --

Gallia

Webs1tes
www myda1lytnb une com
www myda1lysentJnel com
www.myda11yreg1ste r com

E-mail
classJfJed @mydallytnbune com

LivESTOCK REPORT

- --- ~ -- - --

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties ·Like
NoOne
Else Can!

County,
OH

Urban farms grow as cities seek safe~ cheap food

OSU qffirs low stress
cattle handling workshop

Meigs County, OH

Respiratory Therapist
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal is currently
acceptmg resumes for a full-time
Resp1ratory Therap1st Mu!t be a graduate
of an approved Respiratory Therap1st
program Current West Vng1ma ltcense
requned
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(l94) 675-4340
304-675-6975, or apply on-line

Or 'fax

at www.pvalley.orK
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

HEALTH CARE
OPPORTUNITIES
Arl! you lookm g lor .t ~.h.d kngt'
ltke

hl

u ~c \tllft

"kdls to lll.tl.:c

1

IViluld )'Q U

.t drllcrc n~.:c 1

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S\) \'t' nMv h,t \C' ,, po, llton lnt ,nu A thnt s .11
Ga l llpo l1 ~

ts

c wr~ lltl )

.:.tmllli,Jt c"

tn JOin

uur

sct·~tntt:.mn~

qLt.tlt l teU
l t',\111

1 he

lollow rng pm111nn " . u~ ,\V,tt l.! hk
• R~ g1 s ten:J Nurs ~
• Lr t.: L' tb~d Pt .rCtK.rl Nurse

• Sidle Te,h:~d Nur ~ m£ A sst st,mt
Fur .tdd rllllll dl rnlnrn~t~t l on ,tppl y 111

pe r~nn

.tt

Arbors at Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
E4ll.11 Opportun!l } En1plnycT M / FIDIV

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Position Announcement
B o~s.ml

Mcmon,d Lthr.lr)
Srrv1qs Associah:.

sec ~" &lt;1ppli1.t nt ~ l ot the po ~t uon

nl ~

Worktng undt•r 1hc d1rcu ~up~r v t~wn o! thL' ) llUth Scn•tL' C" Pro!!r.ull
Comdt lllltnr lh~o. 'wu th Scrv 11.C'~ Associ .t ic must be ,J uc.tt l \ 1.: cn.: rgd!L
r ndr v rtlu &lt;~ l v.htl •\\111 pro\ rtle r xceptton ,rl cht lllt cn\ ~\. 1\I L C" th1nugh
,l s~ T ~ llng wtth pl.J tlnl n~ ~,;on Ju~.;tm g .111d .H.ho-.attng s~.:nrcc" lh.Hmcet
the needs nl the ~,; h r\ U t crl &amp; }DUih 111 the cornnmrr11 y Av.. rsh rrr th e
creattng tmpl emc tH.!IJon ,md p!~.;' s cm,n wn o! lihJ ,If\ .md cnlnmutllty
progr.m1s l or childrenl ) nuth with spect,l\ emph &lt;l:o;ls otl ages 0-) . •md
' ed pw.gr.um lor p.~rcn h c.trcg n er" .md te,t~.. hl'l' ~
Lhtld-rel,rt
Schedule 10 ( th t t1~ ) h ou r~ per •~ ~.:~.· ~
D.t} ltmc E\c nrng .md Weekend bou ts
Mu ~t be .1hle In mcut the llcx thlc "Lhcdulin ~ nt•cJ., nt t h~ Lr bnu v
Po"HIOll l~e:-ipOth 1bi llttcs Compl ctc JOb dt· ~' 11pt iO tJ av,td.thk .11 L1br ,try
C trcul.lttnn Dl' s~

MINIMUM .JOB QUALIFtCAI'IONS
Educatjop
H 1gh S~. hool D1plom,1 or cqut \a kt11 rcqum: d ~ c qun ~·~ ~.:u mhn 1.1t1011 {,f
h1giler .:Jucat1on . t'xpen c nee t.:L' ft 11 ~t.:a!J nn . and tr;unmg whJell pt O\ t tle~
the k nm ... ledgc. ~ktll" .rnd .t h drtl t'~ ncce~s.H) to pt.&gt;llonn the \\Or~
assoctat~d \\tlh thr s p o ~ t !r on

ExperjenceD'ra1ning
Mu st have CXJ&gt;cn cncc

wot~tng ~\ llh chtldrcn. Strong. publll sr,c.tkmg
mterpcrson.tl commumcnt Jon skill-. cssentMl Some l1br.H) · rc \,ttcd
cx perrc ncc rs h t~ h !v Jcsrr.Jblc M11 ~1 p o s!&gt;.C!&gt;.S ,1 \&lt;l lrd Orn er" LICen se
,J!ld h.t \IJ ,\LL ~SS 10 ,\ \C hi Lk
M u!-.1 pa ~" 1.:1 rr w rw ll1.1dgnnmJ dH'L~

,md

&lt;.:ompetttl\le P•'Y l o r work 111 .1 ch,d kngmg

tnleresled apptican" should obtain an application and job

and ~ uppo11 tve c nv tronmcn t E mp loyee~ ~ llJOY

descnptton from the l.ihraQ Circulation J)csk. Return application
(by mail on I) ) in seull·d rn\'l'·lope to Ucbbil' Suundcrs. Library

and

opport unttJes l o t

~.: a reer

gn , w t h

professiOnal devcl opnu.:: nt

.trH.l

Director. 7 Spruce Street. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Applications
must he postmarked by Scpl. 19, 200R

Apphc.tnls muy apply to

www .holzerclin ic.com
Equal Opportun rty EtnphJ)e•

,

Tlw Dr S.tmul'l l Bu,.,;mJ llllllllllllli l thr ln ,(i,Lilt.l (\ •mtl\ lJI\tnu I thr tn 1~ .1 11
~ '-!ll.ll oppo. •rtun1l\ \' tn plo) ~ r ollld J~-.e~ Jl(lt d I ~CIIrll lll ,l! l llll lh ~; h,\(1' 1•l r,,, ~ rcltgwn
Ltll11r nlltml.ll lll l!,!lll .L ~ l' '~ ~ gl.'ntlt r d•... nhllt! \ m 111&gt; n lh~r~h tr.ll ten' !Jl J lrol~l.'re d
h\

1 .1\~

�Page 04 • 6unba!' l:itJWj -6entinel
r1u

r-

'

llfl"l' W ,\NI}])
'

Overbrook
Aehabilrtatron
· Center rs now Arcephnq
applicatrons for a full trme
Marntenance Assr~tant Th,s

wrll be a short term posrtron
general marntenance rnc!lrdcarpenh

J,Jiumbrng ·

electr ical telephone and
, cable ·rnstallatran. parr:Jtrng .

grounds worlo; evaluo;~tr o rr w11! be responsrb te tor rmpt eand mspectron of emer· mentrng after. school rnter gency eqUtprnent.
rtem'
ventron and ennchment pro·
assem bly and barter system
gr ams
R e~ po nsrbrlrtl eS
ope(atron Conta cr ,Charta
rnc'turJe work;rng w1th l amr·
Br o w n - M c G u r r e Ires. teactte rs and admm is·
Administrator wrth queshons 11aturs to rdenli!y a nd Uevel-

at (740)992- 6472. Ouuhhed up

candidates may apply at 333

Page Street Mrdrtteport Oh
45760 EOE
Part ·Time Merct"land1ser to
se rv1ce reading &amp; sun qlf!Sses monthly dt ' stor-es in
Gallipolis &amp; Porn ! Ple&lt;!Silnt
Horn e computer &amp; auto
requrred. Call Wendy at BOD·
283-30 90 e•r 2378
P-art Time Empl oym ent ·
tmm edrate fy
Av arl abte
Seekr ng a qtJalthed , wefl·
rnd1vrdual
spoKen
OuahtrcatiOr:tS that mu st be
met include Know ledge of
Micr osott Otfrce. 111clud1ng
E~ cel . Word computer abrl•·
ty. and typrrrg sk rll s Welt
sp o ~ e n . good phone manners. nbte to deaf wrth th e
public. and exp eri ence rn
b o ok o~.ee ping
knowledge
Plea se send resume to PO
Box ~6 9 CLA 103. Gall1poh s.
OhiO 4563 1 II ca ll ed tor an
mtervtew ple ase lte prepared to take a small test on
the above rtems

rnnova t1ve hands-on
tearnrng dl:llvrtms 111 all academic areas. assrst1ng m
r.JI&lt;mn1ng &amp; development of
p•oa•am. 1ncludrng contractrng for serv rces mat meet
•dentrl1ej leanlii i\J needs:
wor kr11g wrtt)rn a specrfr ed
budget
assis11ng
With
reciUr tment. h1 nn g and
superv•s1on of prog ram statf
&amp; volunteers. and other
adrn1 n1Str a!i ve dutres and
re ports as requr rr.d Th1 s IS a
par1- t1me TANF grant-funded posilior.l (523) per hr.}
LeHer of mterest. resume
and references must be
received bv 12:00 .no on
Sept. 12 Submrt to John D.
Costanzo. Sup errntendent .
Athens-Mergs Edu cational
Serv1ce Center. 320- 1/2 E
Marn St . PomerOy. Oh
4576 9 Equal Opportunity
E1npl oyer/P10vider

House.

2

lot s

Three

Bd .

2

Bath

Dodrill's Pr1vate Home Care
Operring lor one elderly man
or woman Total care provlded · tor your loved one
Pr1vate pay only. Pliscrlla
:Do_d_,_m-:
. 7_4-:0-3-:
88-:·-:81_9::-3---::George's Portabl e Sawm1tt.
don't haul your Logs to the
MrU ju st call304 -675-1 95 7

in Honey Suckle Hills currenUY Berber Carpel S6.95 yd. car-

304 -773·9,1 92, garage. Handicap accesS!· BR umts, laundry &amp; emer304-812-rio2 tlea~e messa ge ble $650 per M.
740- gency
maintenance
949-2303
Country livrng 5 rhinu.tes
Momu: How:-;
from maJOr shopping , med·
icat etc. calf today' tor addimHSAI.E
Hum:s
tiona! info and to make
fUll Rmr ·
appointment 740-446·3344
t4x70 2 br 2 ba. on rental
to t 2 miles N. Pt Pleasant 2BR at Johnsons Mobile Monday, Wednesday, and
304-675·7631 or 606 -922· Home Park , Call 740-645- Friday 1OA - 4P. ·
9002
0506 or 740·446-2003

M0111u:

--=-:-:::-==--::--:--:---:

Mollohan Carpet 22 12
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis. Oh.
740-446·7444
~----::-=:---'-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Ca ll Roo Evans. 1800-5;17 ·95f8. ,

r

ro

ACIIEIIGf:

SfJIVICf:S

2BR ap1. CIA.
0194

(740) 441 ·

r

lures.

FOR SALE

2009 " Montana "

In this newepaper Ia
. sub}ectto lhe Federal
Fair Housing Acl of 1968
whlih makes It Illegal to
advertise "any
preterence,·Uniitatlon or
dlscrlmlninton baaed on
·race, color, religion, sea:
familial status or naHonal
origin, or any Intention to
make flny such
praference,limltatlon or
dlacrlmlnallon. "
This newspaper will not
knowtngtr accept
ad11ertlsemen!s for real
estate which Is In
violation of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings ad11ertlaed In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

2br. lba, on 2 1st. St. Pt. Pl.
$350/month, $350/deposit
304-674-0259

3 be droom. 2 bath. with
dishwasher, W/0 , CIA. Need
Ret w/ dep . and rent. Call
2&amp;3BA apts $385 and up,
after 5pm. 304-576-2574
Cel:ltrar Air, WID Hookup,
3 BR house in Gallipolis .. Tenant pays
.• eleclric.
WtD conn.
$425(mo. EHO
$150/dep. Ydl pay all utili·
ties . No Section 8 .pr
View Apts.
HUDCatl Wayne 404-456 ·
(304)882·3017
3802

EUm

Reduced Price. 4 bedroom.
2 112 bath tog home, 34286
New Crew Ad ., Pomeroy. lg.
pole building &amp; out building
on
6
acres
w/pond,
18 16}668·0758

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Viitage
Manor and Riverside Apls.
in Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
::-:-:-:-: - : : - - : - - Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications 'for waiting
list lor Hud-subsidized, 1·br
apartme nt
for
the
elderly/disabled, call 675HOUSE .for rent. 4 bed1oom - 6679
2 bath in Pomeroy. Call
740· 59 1·9700 after 6:00
P M.

Reduced! New. Never lived
in 2br, 2 bath w/ whirlpool
Pet Cremat1ons. C&lt;JII 740- tubs. large LA On 3 acres
446 -3745
mil. $75,000. 740-446-7029

0 11 SA 141 , 3BR. 2BA.
applian ces. basement, t car Middlepor1 N 4th Ave., 2Br.
garage,
SSOOi mo
plus furnished APT., no pet dep.
deposit (614) 226·06~9
&amp; ret. 992-0 165.

Foreclosure
4br..
only
$25,000! Priced to Sell! For
listings 800·620-4946 -ex
1 462

4br, 2ba. HUD! only $238.
month! Great location! (5%
doWn , 20yrs.
8%APR)
Listings 800-620-4946 e)l ,
1 46 1
::-- --::---::-- -:-::--:5 room house at 44 Olive Sl ·
Has stove/fridge $425/rent
plus depos1t, No pets. 446·
3945

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Over 2, 000 Sq

1st Time

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·rlrlor--~-:-"----,

F.ur.1

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FOI!SUVS•~"

healthy

do h:.n'e contro l over what foods you cat -

help lower

cho lt:~t em l

in

especially those

a nat ur;il . ([rug- f ree way.
fomb. Oat hran ;md r ice hran have hl'l'\1

fQOd s

that

may be

hi g h i n ~muratcd

*Choose legumes several time~

fm - a

a week . R eplace

con tribu10r

d iet (meat and poultry) w ith p l ~uu prot~ in . Bea ns are a

l

with· soy-based producl s.

FoR SAtE

i ·

EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
VALLEY

HO AS E / Lt V ESTOCK

TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS ,

·

*Go fo r g arli c. Re se arc h indicatCs

good so urL·c of proarL' a l~o efl~c t i\.'e

VANs
Ji'oR SALE

I

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M!YIURCY&lt;Ull/

w ay

a~

p~scription cholesterol-lowering drug~. Ra w and Cno~ed g arl1c

have simililr effe cts . So choose g arlic to 11avor, fonds for

an

1
· 1·
Not &lt;til fah o ut there are bad . Omcgu-. cs:-c ntta latt y
levels of "good"' cholt:sterul. o r HD L. GooJ fa t foods

ra ise

incl ude ol i ve o il. avocados.

06 HD Street Bob, sa Cubic

and

has

olive~. and

so me

n ut~.

pome granate juice . This tart treat ~~ fu ll trf antiox.iJant:1 t
\
been touted for ye ar~ as a :-.outid choice fm impro vi ng ll!a t h .'

* Pour a g lass

of

CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; Inch motor, 6 spd, under National Academy of Scie nce s study showed that pome granute ju ice ·
b ·
·
· ·
'd
xJ ·
0 M E S T A D E A 6000 miles, 2 seats (solo &amp;
H ARGO/CONCESSION
E
dual rider), sadd le bags. reduces cholestero l pl aque buildup y mcre:tsmg 11 1tm : ox1 I! prl Uo.::tltJIL
C
rc se;:;,m.:h that indiTRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· road pegs, motor tights, tank * Grab so me '&gt;•ogurt with live active cultures. There

®alltpolisllailp Utribune

i~

(740) 446-2342

NECK

HITCHES. bra.

fork

bag.

new

CARMICHAEL
EQUIP - hetmetfgtasses/ lightweight
E T C A
C H E L riding jacket, riding gloves.
A
M N I A MI
11 .,·_4_41_.1_5_06::-----::-::
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- _$__·5_00
VICE.
SPECIAL
20FT
1998 Yamaha Gas Golf
GOOSENECK FLATBED Cart, 4 -stroke, gas enclne,

The Daily Sentinel
(740) .992-2155

c holesterol buck into the blood stream.

* Look

for supplemented

foods

Stano! esters

an

d I

I
pant stcro s arc

produced compounds that block t he absorption of cholesterol

I

punth ·
in t e tiHCS·

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE new tires, tune-up , belt. tines. Some foods and margr~rine:- are addin g pl anl Ste rols to he lp fig ht
TRAILER INVENTORY AT $2,500 more available 304- hi gh Cholesterol .

oint ,Jileallllnt l\egister

WWW .C ARM ICHAEl- 675-7386 or 304-675·5631
TRAILEAS.COM 740-4462007 Yamaha 250 Big
3825
Bear 4· wheeler utility
model tess than 2 rkUng
~ave you priced a John
Deere lately? YoU'll be sur- lime $2,500 304·675·3824

(304) 675-1333

prised! Check out our used
·at
inventory
WWW .CAREQ.COM
Cannichaat
Equipment.
740·446-2412

Harley Davidson Springer
Soft Tail Bad Boy. Pri~tin~
Condition. 13900 mites.
$11,500. 740-441 -1333 or
740-645-Q546

Jim's Farm Equipment lnc.
740·446·9777.
End
ol
Summer Clearance Sate,
new am;l used titters, new RV Service at Carmichael
and used Ki(lg Kutter Bush
Trailers 740·446·3825
Hogs, on and off road dump
-., 1 H\ II I ..,
trailers.
financing on
select models of new
HOME
MaSsey Ferguson and New
IMPROVF.MI&lt;NIS .
Holland tractors . w.ac .

.r .

L!VFSIOCK

Angus Butts, show heilers .
outstanding crossbred hatter broke bull or sieer.
Excellent Breeding, Top
Performance ,
Priced
Reasonably
www .slata runa.ngus. co m ,
740 286-5395

MAKE

I
I

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _

oil

I

I

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ _

•

I

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mall or drop off this coupon along
I
:
with a copy of your photo ID to
I
1.'"!I
Ohio
Valley Publishing
_________
_ P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :

--- ----------------.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
Auction

La Marce Beauty
Shop

Auction

Ohio Valley
Bank
.

Main St.

.

Public . Auction
..
September 13, 2008

Pleasant

Many Different Stylb&gt;
. Starti~g at

$7.99

Great rates

61 Vine St. M-Fl-6, Sal8·5. Sun 10·4

would like to welcome

Personal Service

new stylist

Call for a quote

GRAND VICTORIA
RESORT &amp; CASINO

304·675-3040 or
740-339-0351 for appt.
Walk'ins welcome

·'

$5. 00 all with this clipping

#542499
#305973

$11 0/person • quad occupancy
$150/person • single occupancy

Repair. We stock

Glass, Plexiglass, Charcoal
Alumin•m Screen

&amp;

Fiberglass Screen
61 Vine St. , M-F 7-6, Sc;~t. 8-5. Sun 10-4

Second AVenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
800-447·8235

clean family looking for

2

or more acres of land in

Gallia County with an existing
hOme or to build or p lace
prs-buill home on.

740-645,8624,
.740-645-2096 .

French City Childcare

Leave message!

limited Space Available
Includes breakfastbuffet, dinner

Serenity House

'.
'
'

.

buffet

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800-942-9577
'

&amp; overnight

accommodations.

To make reservations
please call
PVH Community
Relations,
304·675:4340 Ext. 1326

.,

lor Pre- School 3 · 4 · 5 yr. olds
Call

446-4467 or 446-4468

Back .to school special:

HOMECOMING
Need A Dres s
Want To Sell One

VIne &amp; Co.

Accept cash, credit and checks

Consignment Shop

LIMITED SEATSI

354 2nd Ave . 446·0214

.,
·,

441 - 10 38. OVB reserves the righl to accept/ reject any and all b ids. and withdraw items lrom
sale prior to sale'. Terms of sale : CASH OR CASHIER 'S CHECK.

------- -

.

Standalone shots
Portrait Photography

Buckeye

The se items are available at the Ohio Valley BankAnnex. 143 3rdAvenue. Gallipolis, OH on

or implied warranty &amp;may be seen by calling lhe Collection Departmenl at1 -888-

322

$115/person :triple occupancy

11202618

the date and time specilied above . Sold ' to t!1e highest bidder · as-is, where-is" without

The Lynch Agency

$120/persDn • double occupancy

#213662
#729085
#692163

&amp; Screen

Please call

#249310
#246822
#EV0228
#C04534
#715372
#A72217
#146949
11'111809

· O'Dell True Value Lumber
Glass

We are a young , loving and

Rising Sun, Indiana
October 19 &amp; 20, 2008

will offer for sale by public auction the following items:

REDMAN MIRAGE
CHEVROLET MALIBU
JAYCO RLS 27.5 TT
FORD WINDSTAR
TRAIL CRUI.SER TC
FORD FREESTAR
CHEVY MALIBU
PONTIAC GRANO PRIX
CHEVY CAVALIER
DODGE DAKOTA
CHRYSLER 300M
DODGE CARAVAN
NISSAN FRONTIER XE
CHEVY' BLAZER

Truckload Paneling Sale

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

Shirley Cremeans

10:00 a.m.
The Ohio Valley Bank

Pt:

O'Dell True Value Lumber

I
I
I
I

BULLETIN BOARD

'Ml828.2J50

I

I

I

mymidwesthomt.com

~~-

I

Shop
Classlfieds!

(304) 675-1333

I

I
I
I

I

may help you to reduce cholesterol levels.

health/medical dining/c ntcnainment food /beve rage

Joint i)lea5'ant l\rgistrr

Auction

I
I
I

I

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-21 ~5

FHA &amp;3"UIWI

I
I

I

I
I
I

like olive

I

I
I

•

I

Foods

(740) 446-2342

'

I.

I \110\

304·675·8068

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

1984 Chrysler 5th Avenue in

B.tgt~ttr

Subscriber's Name ---.:....:...____ __ _

I

good condilion $1,000 OBO

t)otnt .t)leat(ant

I

GRAIN

AIJI'OS

t!trtbune

.... --- ------------ -- ------- --- --

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional. lifetime guar·
antae. local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call '24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

HAv&amp;

~~~

maintaining adequate

~unbap tEime~ -~enttnel

I
I
I

II{ \ \\ I '(

·

Distrlct '.s system.
By Board of Leading
Creek Conservancy
Dlslrlct , President,
Fenton Taylor.
(9)7. 4, 21

~alltpolts mail!'
.

Round baled sHaw, .also ,
New Holland square baler.
Call 256-6011

SOMfONf'S
DAY!

Conservanc ~

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or :mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

can Llo more tl1an j us t
may help to prevent r~ah~o rption of

ca tes that yogun with act i ve culture s (probiot ics}
set tle you r sto mach ai lme nts. Yogu n

Notice to Engineering
Firms:
L,.,ading
Creek
Conservancy District
is
seeking
an
Engineering firm to
evaluate their water
system, to, make recommendations
.on
lowering
system
pressures, while still

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

* Factor in good fat.s .

help

Public Notice

Senior. Discount*

* Get the benelit s of blueberries. Stud ic~ show that :1 i.:ompound in b lu ebcrries (pte rost i lbcne) may help lowe r cholc~tcrol as cff~:.:tively &lt;ts ({l rnt1l crci al
drugs , with fewer siJe effect:-.
·
acids c an

pressure to their CUI
tomers.
Before September 23
2008 lnteresled firm '
should call 740·742
2411. for date I&lt;
review Leading Creel

Fenton Taylor.
(9) 7, 14, 21

If so, you qualify for a

;iddr:d hea lth

bcnef i1.

. 4 \'VHEELERS
.
L,;.;,.iitiiiililiiiiiiii-_.J
·

~a me

Public Notice

· or older?

lwre and there

It wmb in rntll:h till'

Public Notice

Are you 65

.:holes-

th&lt;~l compounJ~ i n g&lt;~rlic hel p to ~taun~.·h

production o f c holesterol in· the Ji vt! r,
.some of the

In

t he anima l protein in your

food~

4x4

98 Ford 'windstar asking
$BOO. OBO. Call lor details
740-388-1! 22

f.Ql.lwMENr

(!pallipoli!lllallp 'QJ:ribune

N.ow Availflble !

expressed

levels . Whil\! i t\ relatively

99 Ford F-150 Supercab
Stepside, 58,000 mileS, oH sec m arked result~ . Sti ll. fiber i~ good
road package, tow package. I ittl e bit helps in t he fight against c holesterol.
multi dis c CD changer, ~ Co n s u me five serv ings o f fruits and vcge labh.:s dotil y . huit:-. &lt;tnd vcg"c t able~
Rhino bed liner. roll up bed
are hi g h in antioxidants. which in general are good for fend ing t) !'f di;o;c;:ase s
cover. Cal1740·441·0260
in the body. Filling up on he althy food s may also fe nd off .:ra v ing~ f o r k ss

FOR SA!£

1995
2004
2006
2000
2008
2005
2005 .
2006
2005
2000
1999
2006
1999
2001

heart Lli~t:a~e. hcan
the dark ahout hOw

a health y
3 packet~ of instant oatmeal) to
for the body in l.J i her \~oay~. anJ ew ry

condit1on . $5200. 446 -2815

For more infonnatliln, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

HOIEBIYEIS
Free Rent
Special!!!

that

st ill in

change what you've in heri ted from a long lin!! of re l at ives

impossible to
before

lead to

it

show n to m od.:ra tely reduce c hole~ternl le ve l ~ . But re~uh~ tl'lJllire

~~-ali~t.re~74 :ic~:~·d~~:~ ~~:~. ~~~~~A:~~- ~~~d

aren't only for
buying or selling
Items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
• You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

noon

388·8743

All real estate advertlaing

is well known that high cho lest l!rol lcvel'i can
attac ks and st rok e. H owever. many peop le are
they com conquer rho lestero l.
Diet and herec..! ity pi ll)' ke}• role s in cholesterol

By now.

helping each and ev·e r y Jay lapproXinmtely

Ij725

a~celtent

BUILT,

million have !nels of ::!40 or atxJ\C .

age,
vary
dependable · tein a'nd fiber and c·an m ake for filling 1neab. Sny productS
2700 379 217
S
for keeping cho le sterol in t:heck. Try rep lacing ;1 few
·
·
9

r..-lliiiiiiiiiiiiii-rJ
Canning tomatoes.

a to tal blood cholesterol va h1e uf 200 mg/dl and

37.2

Public Notice

Notice
to Conservancy
Contractors:
District's office local·
Leading
Creek ed at 34481 Corn
Conservancy District Hollow
Road,
is seeking bids for
Rulland, OH 45775.
the Installation of a Call 740-742·2411 tor
fluoride lab at their an appointment to
trealment planl facili- review the plans .
ty. The bid will
Bids will be ~ccepted
Include lnstalla'tion of until 4:00 p.m. on
pro1abricated build· September 23, 2008.
ing, lab .equipment, LCCD reserves the
electrical·; water, and
right to accept or
waste water storage.
reject any or all bids.
A complete set of . By Board of Leading
plans Is avalla,ble at
Cree~ Conservancy
leading
Creek
district, Presldenl,

·o%

s~eel frame w/ 2 axles. 471

2br.
1
ba,
Quite
Neighborhood. No Smoking,
No Pels S450 month plus
Deposit &amp; References.
WaterfTrashiSewer
paid
140-446·6939

higher. Oftho~e. about

Pullllc Notice

tM~~~~ ;

GM Power unit. $7500 740,

•FREE RENT SPECIAL
Jordan landing
2br, 31:lr &amp; 4br's
Available
No Pets. Tenant
Responsible for Rent &amp;
Electric
304·674-0023 or
304-610-0776

Flluns &amp;
VEGE:rAIJLI!;

~

· 2 BB Grill $50 each. Electric
Lawn Mower $50 Trimmer
$50, VCR $25, F;idge $50.
Dining Room Ta ble w/2 ·
leaves &amp; 6 chairs $650. Call
740-645-4907

3 head block sawmill on

2br in Pt. Plea sant, $465
month, Homestead Really
Broker. Nancy 304-675·
5540 or 304-675-0799

According to Amerkan Heart A!lsoci3tion est i mate~. 106.7 mi llion &lt;lduhs in
the United Stutes live with

*E njoy o;l! mca l J nd tllhcr fiber- rich

play. Never needs tuned .
882·3474 look it up on line 97 Ford Expedition 5.4l, VB,
to see it and all ot its lea- 4)14. 3rd row seat , tow pack·

Femal e Blchon. mi crochip,
GIBBS ANTIQUES ·Also.
ACA registered. 5 months .
restore furnitu re. Located on
3 rooms and bath upstairs. Tornado Ad. off At . 33, selling du e to work, hours.
Completely furnished with Racine (Park&amp; Aide) e)lit $300 304-773 -9192 . 304812·0021 leave message
WID. No · pels. References ii7Ci40il'·9;;:4~9-:;:2:.:2;;:46;_-,_.~,
Req . 740-441-&lt;1245
ML'&gt;(..'tl-1-~NfXJUS
For Sate-· Bmer Puppies
CKC . $300. 740-742·1154
Apartment available now l.oo-oiMmEiiHCii'liiWiiNiiliiiliSii'F..;;,_.1
or 740-4t6-1620
Alverbend Apts. New ,Haven

Mel g s Co. 5 acres on Cook
or landaker Ad . $19,900.
Sa lem Ctr. nice 18+ acres
NOW $50.500! Danville 8
acres $22,500 . Reedsville
12 wooded acres $22.500!
Gallla Co. 8 or 10 acres
$12 ,500! Call 740·4 '11 · 1492
tor
maps
or
visit WV. Now ac_cepting applicawww.brunertand.com. We lions for Hud-Subsidiz ed,
one Bedroom Apts. Ut11ities
tina net:!!
in cludEid. Based on 30% ol
adiusted income. Call 304882-3 121 , available for
Senior and Disabled people.

These Foods Can Help Lower
Cholesterol (MS)

Memory wilt store what you •~-----~iiii-,..1 tern) .

740-38~·8743

r

before

MI.ICI·:U.ANH!t:S

YAMAHA
ElE CTRIC
PIANO ydp223. Retails for
1229·1599. Asking $950.
Barely used. .Bench comes
.with it. 88Keys. Gradad
H(l.mmar Action. 14 Voices.
Transposes automatically.

·--lliiiiiiiiii--rJ -

!'""'

TRUCKS
FOil.Sru:

MUSICAL
INsrRUMENTS

. . . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiil_.l

ILj5iO

·•~11'._•.'~~~

Irs

r

'""

2007
Homesteader
Cargo T railer 6)C12 With 2
doors on back $2 ,000
firm 304-675·4795 call

li"l lQ;".- ------,

Police Impounds/ Cars from
Special Bichon Frise non
$500! , Hondas, Chevys,
allergenic, non shedding , Jeeps, Fords, &amp; more! for
not aggressive, beaut iful
listings 8C!0·620·4876 eM V435
pels. 740-441 -95 10.

NEW AND USED STEE~
Steel B,eams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle .
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Gratrng
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fr1day, Bam-4 30pm. Closed'
Thufsday.
Sa turday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

~

HOMf");
m~ SALt:

West Virginra Un1versi ty
Career opportunity
WVU Extens1on service rs
recruit1ng lor a tenure track .
tw elve monrh Exte!"lsron
Agent for Putnam County.
Mas1er"s degree requrred. at
least one degree must be iil
an agriculture-related fi eld.
In additio n to the requ ir ed
master's degree, an equiva lent combination of directly
related experience in agri·
ClJltur e may be accepted in
lieu of thf! speci1ic deg1ee
reqlJ rrement.
For
comp lete
posi tion
announcement and application proces s. vis it our web site at hnp:liwww.wvu .edu/exten/. clo sing date Sept.
24 2008. WVU is an
EEO/AA organization.

Found in Tycoon lake area, 00 Chevy Monte Carlo
mate Pomeranian mix. Can under 100,000 miles, V6,
740-245-5497
auto, sunroof, nice car.
$3999. Great buy. 740-256·
Miniature Dachshunds CKC 6251
registerad,shots, wormed ,
male &amp; females , lpng &amp; short 1998 Pontiac Sunfire. well
5
speed,
hair, red, black &amp; tan, maintained,
$400.00 mates 5450.00 118 ,000 miles. 740-645 0022 or 740-649·7289
lemales 304-593-3820

$39.000. I m1te from Mason Pomeroy. Basement with takrng applications for t to 2 pet remnants $40. &amp; up.

jiiO

1&lt;1 \/l .'-'! 1\11·

anCJ5crmal9 12748

'

Rmr

ML..CFJJANEXXJS
MEHCHANOISE

1974 3 BA Hallmark, needs 2br Mobile Home in' Mason.
rewrred , $1.000. 1968 2 BR Kitchen
Furn ., deposit
Ru th A Kirby. Call' me at 740- S900
Must be moved
required 304 -675-7783
-:---:---:--:----:-388·80 15 tor prrvale care.
Modern t Bedroom apr. Call
Shown by appointment only
Two 2 bdm1. trailers w/tront 446· 0390
843 810- t825.
II \ \\(. I \I
porch and other updates . -:---::---::--::--::--:-$400,
possible rent to own, New Haven. One Bd. room ,
t
998
16x70
Ht iSfNI·X';
Marquee
(740}243·58 11 JR
Apt . No Pet$. Dep. &amp; Ret.
Traile
r.
move
in
cond
.
2
bed.
OPt'OM'IliN£1"\'
740·992·0165.
2 bath . LP .furnace &amp;' stove ,
Al'IIKI!&gt;I~NIS
250 gal. tank is full. new
Newl Be the first to live in a
fUR RENI'
fridge &amp; WJD combo, vinyl
.•NOTICEnew log duple~ - 2BA, 1
siQrng, shingle root. On rentOHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
bath. HA/CA. Porter area. Pole Barn 30)14Qx 10 on ly
1 &amp; 2 bed apt. 1st Ave.
lNG co r e Co mm ~;mds
ed tot at l 0 Quail Creek
No pets. Deposit &amp; ref, $550 $6,995. ·other sizes Free
Park, Lot rent $t651mo incls Gallipolis. W/D hookup. per month . Call 446-280 I
Delivery 877 · 773-8356
!hal you do business wilh
$300-5350 .. Call 339 -3063
tot, watei, trash .. . sewage.
peoP.Ie you know.
Toaster Oven $40, VCR
Dep &amp; Re!. No Hud.
Smn:
NOT 10 send money Call lor viewing 740-245$30, 26~ Bicycle $40, Printer
5728. Asking $25,000
through the mail until you
~UHRfNr
I and 2 bedroom apart·
$40, Lawn Tnmmer $40, ;?
have Investigated the
ments. fum1shed and unfurBBQ
Grills $50 each. 4462 2006 t6xE\I) Clayton 3 b9t:t
oHering.
nished, and houses in 1400-2000 sq tt comm er- 4333
2
bat h,
2000
1 6~70
Pomeroy and Middleport . Cial/retail space for rent. - - - - - - - - , - Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
security deposit required. no great location busy down- Waterline · 3 Quarter inch at
MONEY
1999 For1une 3 bed 2 bath
town corner by park. 1 yr $.30 a loot 100·500 toot
pets. 740-992-2218.
·rn I.o1\N
We deliver block level and
teasecall740-709· 1690
rolls 1" at $.45 a foot 100·
anchor. We can do the fool - 1BR Apt , WID hookups.
1000 foot roll s. Call Ron
ers also. Daytime 740-388- satell1te TV incl. wJrent ,
Evans. 800"537-9528
**NOTI«:E•• 0000 0' 740·368-8513. close to hospital. Call 740·
HotJSI'JfOI.J)
Evening 740-388-801 7 or
l'f: IS
339-0362
. GilOI.~
740 -245·9213.
n!RSAJ.E
Borrow Smart. Con tact
1BR tri-l evel &lt;ipt .. close to
the Ohio Division ol
hospital
. 10 min to Rio Brown with burgundy &amp;
Brand
new
3bed
2bath
on
Frnancral
Institution's
AKC I yr old mate Maltese
+ - half acre in PL Pleasant Grande. Rei
&amp; Dcp green cushions . toveseat &amp; dog $200 304-675-2308 or
Ott ice
ot
Consumer
co uch $300 Good Cone:!. 2
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL· Required. 740·208-8889
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
304-593-3499
nance your . home m ABLE. 740-446 -3570
2 bdrm. apt. . remodeled . 112 yrs . old. 446-2815
-:-:-:-:--::---:::-:-----:::---::--::---:::---::-- AKC Boston Terrier puppies,
obta in .a loAn. BEWARE
Federal Funds just released river frontage. washer/dryer Dining Room Table w/ 2 B wks old. females, marked
ot requests for any farge
5450
740
243
for land Own~rs . No CIOS·
· (
)
· leaves and · 6. chairs $500 good. $ 150.
advance payments ot
ing cost and ZERO DOWN!
7 40 44 6 4 3 33
fees or insurance Ca ll
Will
......- , CKC Miniature Pinschers.
do
Land
the Otfice of Consumer
2 bedroom apartment for
SI'OKI.ING
Two 5 month old males .
Improvements. Bankruptcy rent
in Middleport, no· pets.
Affairs toll fr ee at 1-866·
Gonus
ta11s. ears. shots done. M&amp;F
8 Bad Credit OK. 2. 3, 4 and (740)992-58 58
278-0003 to learn if the
also lor sate. 388·8788
5 bedrooms available. 740·
mortgage
broker
0'
Semi furnished Trailer, Compound Bow -Mathews
446·3384
CKC
Registered
lender
is
properl9
New Haven. 3 bedroom, MO-t , left handed, 7011 @29"
Dachshunds. Black and Tan
licensed . (Thi s IS a public
New 3 Bedroom homes from 2 bathrooms, &amp; 2 beddraw. Complete w/ sights, .3 mates ready to go 740servrce announcement $2 14.36 per monH1 . Includes
room,
1
bath
;
3
.RV
lots
rest and quiver. $400. 446- 446·6830
I rom the Oh10 Valley many, upgrades, delivery &amp;
all utilities available 304- 2816
Publishing Company)
set-up (740)385 -2434
Cocker Spaniel puppies. full
593-301 1 or 304-675 blooded, buff color. $125.
ANnQUf:S
0141
LUis&amp;
Call 388-040 I
PRnn:&amp;"'iiHN r\1 .

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W•n!
1·888 -582-3345

,._lliiiiitiiiiiiioiiiiiiw

,,·'
.

HJH

304-593 - Walmart

6421

E

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Cente r
ha s ANTICIPATED POSt·
TION OPENINGS !01 ED
Teache•s tor the 2008-2009
Applica nt s
School Year
mu st be certified/li censed as
an Intervention Specialist
(K-12) or be eligible to get a
Suppl emental L1cense This
POSition IS a 9-!00nlh contra ct wi!h O.oard approved
benefits
Salary w1ll be
based on expe rience and
cenrlication acco rding to the
salary schedule. Submit letter of interest and res ume to
John
D
CostanzO.
Supenntendent.
AthensMeigs Educational Serv1ce
Center.
507
Richland
S&lt;..ltOOI.tii
Avenue. S u ite~ lOB. Athens.
INSTRt...:c nor\
OH 45701.
App lrcation
Deadline: Septemb er J 9.
· 2008, 4:30 p.m.
The Gallipolis Career College
AMESC is
an
Equal (Careers Close To Home)
O p p o r t u n i t y Call Today! 740- 446-4367.
Employer/Provider
1-800·21 4·0452
'
www gall-'lollscamcrcnlleg"' etlu
. A~~ r e !liiOO Me mbe r · ."lccre!lol•ng
Councrl fo1 l r11J op~ n!lcnt Colleges

and learn

Small

r

r

ArAKI~UXI~

2

Reg1on&lt;11
Du mp.
and
Pneumatic Tanke r Dr1vers
R&amp; J Trucking Compa ny rn
Marietta . OH is sea rching for
qualified CDL-A drivers for
regional dump and pneu matic tanke r positions
Qualified applicants must be
at lea st 23yrs. have a min1·
mum at 1 years of sa te commercial driving expenence in
a truck. Haz Mat certification ,
clean MVR and good stability. We otter competitive
bene lrts plus 40 t (k) and
vaca tion pay. Contac t K enl
at 800-462 -9365 to apply or
go to www.qtrucking.com
EOE

Read your

~

Hm rst:s
fllH Rl1&gt;T

~~

FOR"TALE

iii;i

HIRING
Avi:J Pay $20/hr 9r
S57K/yr. Includes
Fed Ben OT.
P!aced by adSource. not
aftrhated wrth USPS '&lt;\ho
h11es.
1-866-403-2582

m

t:

To Do

HO\If:S
FOHSAu:

~~~~~~-

POST OFFICE NOW

Sportswriter
The Oh10 Valley
PubliSh1nq Co. is_. seeking
a motivated. people -orient·
ed 1ndivrduat 10 fill a
vacancy rn tile 11ews
depm"lment as a spor1s·
'Writer. The successful can. didate Wilt cover hlgh
sc hool athl etrcs in the area
for the daily edition ot th e
newspaper. as well as
assist with the production
ot spo r1 s pages. Excellent
wrr1ing and English skill s.
photography skills and
knowledge of desk.top
publishing are sought. The
ppsihon is lull -lime, 40
hours a week . with Qeneli!s. Interested parties can
send resumes to Kevin
kelly. Managing Editor.
Ohro Valley PubliShing
Co .. 825 Third Av e.,
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631. or
kkelty@ mydaitytrrbune.co

Wwrm

Has an antrcrpated pos1t1on 1740) 416·7305-

Must have e ~ pe r re:n c e m
lng

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

The
Athens-Mer gs All Types Masonry. BriCk
Ec:lu.;:atronal Servrce Center Brock Stone, Free Esl1mate
lor a part-tune After Scnool
Educat1 on Coo rdu~al or tor
EeJste1n El emen tary ano
Me1 gs
Middle
Schoo l
Bacl1elor s
Degree
rn
Educa lr on or 1elated t1etd
re'-lwred The coordm ator

Sunday, Septembe;:.r.:.7:.:,2;0;0;.8--...,.-::::--____.:P~o~m:.::e:.:r;oy!._·..::M~id;:d::l~ep~o::rt7-·:;:.G: :a: .:l i~po: l: .:is:.:.,_:O_:_H:_·_:_Pt::... .:. P. :.Ie..::a.:.:sa:.. n. ::t':_w_:_v_ _-:--___,_tlllb=ll=-!'
~tm=tl=·=6=enti-=ne=I=·=P=a=g=e=D=5
=

Senior pictures for
$50
Call (74) 245·5019
to schedule an
appointment

I

�Page 04 • 6unba!' l:itJWj -6entinel
r1u

r-

'

llfl"l' W ,\NI}])
'

Overbrook
Aehabilrtatron
· Center rs now Arcephnq
applicatrons for a full trme
Marntenance Assr~tant Th,s

wrll be a short term posrtron
general marntenance rnc!lrdcarpenh

J,Jiumbrng ·

electr ical telephone and
, cable ·rnstallatran. parr:Jtrng .

grounds worlo; evaluo;~tr o rr w11! be responsrb te tor rmpt eand mspectron of emer· mentrng after. school rnter gency eqUtprnent.
rtem'
ventron and ennchment pro·
assem bly and barter system
gr ams
R e~ po nsrbrlrtl eS
ope(atron Conta cr ,Charta
rnc'turJe work;rng w1th l amr·
Br o w n - M c G u r r e Ires. teactte rs and admm is·
Administrator wrth queshons 11aturs to rdenli!y a nd Uevel-

at (740)992- 6472. Ouuhhed up

candidates may apply at 333

Page Street Mrdrtteport Oh
45760 EOE
Part ·Time Merct"land1ser to
se rv1ce reading &amp; sun qlf!Sses monthly dt ' stor-es in
Gallipolis &amp; Porn ! Ple&lt;!Silnt
Horn e computer &amp; auto
requrred. Call Wendy at BOD·
283-30 90 e•r 2378
P-art Time Empl oym ent ·
tmm edrate fy
Av arl abte
Seekr ng a qtJalthed , wefl·
rnd1vrdual
spoKen
OuahtrcatiOr:tS that mu st be
met include Know ledge of
Micr osott Otfrce. 111clud1ng
E~ cel . Word computer abrl•·
ty. and typrrrg sk rll s Welt
sp o ~ e n . good phone manners. nbte to deaf wrth th e
public. and exp eri ence rn
b o ok o~.ee ping
knowledge
Plea se send resume to PO
Box ~6 9 CLA 103. Gall1poh s.
OhiO 4563 1 II ca ll ed tor an
mtervtew ple ase lte prepared to take a small test on
the above rtems

rnnova t1ve hands-on
tearnrng dl:llvrtms 111 all academic areas. assrst1ng m
r.JI&lt;mn1ng &amp; development of
p•oa•am. 1ncludrng contractrng for serv rces mat meet
•dentrl1ej leanlii i\J needs:
wor kr11g wrtt)rn a specrfr ed
budget
assis11ng
With
reciUr tment. h1 nn g and
superv•s1on of prog ram statf
&amp; volunteers. and other
adrn1 n1Str a!i ve dutres and
re ports as requr rr.d Th1 s IS a
par1- t1me TANF grant-funded posilior.l (523) per hr.}
LeHer of mterest. resume
and references must be
received bv 12:00 .no on
Sept. 12 Submrt to John D.
Costanzo. Sup errntendent .
Athens-Mergs Edu cational
Serv1ce Center. 320- 1/2 E
Marn St . PomerOy. Oh
4576 9 Equal Opportunity
E1npl oyer/P10vider

House.

2

lot s

Three

Bd .

2

Bath

Dodrill's Pr1vate Home Care
Operring lor one elderly man
or woman Total care provlded · tor your loved one
Pr1vate pay only. Pliscrlla
:Do_d_,_m-:
. 7_4-:0-3-:
88-:·-:81_9::-3---::George's Portabl e Sawm1tt.
don't haul your Logs to the
MrU ju st call304 -675-1 95 7

in Honey Suckle Hills currenUY Berber Carpel S6.95 yd. car-

304 -773·9,1 92, garage. Handicap accesS!· BR umts, laundry &amp; emer304-812-rio2 tlea~e messa ge ble $650 per M.
740- gency
maintenance
949-2303
Country livrng 5 rhinu.tes
Momu: How:-;
from maJOr shopping , med·
icat etc. calf today' tor addimHSAI.E
Hum:s
tiona! info and to make
fUll Rmr ·
appointment 740-446·3344
t4x70 2 br 2 ba. on rental
to t 2 miles N. Pt Pleasant 2BR at Johnsons Mobile Monday, Wednesday, and
304-675·7631 or 606 -922· Home Park , Call 740-645- Friday 1OA - 4P. ·
9002
0506 or 740·446-2003

M0111u:

--=-:-:::-==--::--:--:---:

Mollohan Carpet 22 12
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis. Oh.
740-446·7444
~----::-=:---'-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Ca ll Roo Evans. 1800-5;17 ·95f8. ,

r

ro

ACIIEIIGf:

SfJIVICf:S

2BR ap1. CIA.
0194

(740) 441 ·

r

lures.

FOR SALE

2009 " Montana "

In this newepaper Ia
. sub}ectto lhe Federal
Fair Housing Acl of 1968
whlih makes It Illegal to
advertise "any
preterence,·Uniitatlon or
dlscrlmlninton baaed on
·race, color, religion, sea:
familial status or naHonal
origin, or any Intention to
make flny such
praference,limltatlon or
dlacrlmlnallon. "
This newspaper will not
knowtngtr accept
ad11ertlsemen!s for real
estate which Is In
violation of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings ad11ertlaed In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

2br. lba, on 2 1st. St. Pt. Pl.
$350/month, $350/deposit
304-674-0259

3 be droom. 2 bath. with
dishwasher, W/0 , CIA. Need
Ret w/ dep . and rent. Call
2&amp;3BA apts $385 and up,
after 5pm. 304-576-2574
Cel:ltrar Air, WID Hookup,
3 BR house in Gallipolis .. Tenant pays
.• eleclric.
WtD conn.
$425(mo. EHO
$150/dep. Ydl pay all utili·
ties . No Section 8 .pr
View Apts.
HUDCatl Wayne 404-456 ·
(304)882·3017
3802

EUm

Reduced Price. 4 bedroom.
2 112 bath tog home, 34286
New Crew Ad ., Pomeroy. lg.
pole building &amp; out building
on
6
acres
w/pond,
18 16}668·0758

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Viitage
Manor and Riverside Apls.
in Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
::-:-:-:-: - : : - - : - - Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications 'for waiting
list lor Hud-subsidized, 1·br
apartme nt
for
the
elderly/disabled, call 675HOUSE .for rent. 4 bed1oom - 6679
2 bath in Pomeroy. Call
740· 59 1·9700 after 6:00
P M.

Reduced! New. Never lived
in 2br, 2 bath w/ whirlpool
Pet Cremat1ons. C&lt;JII 740- tubs. large LA On 3 acres
446 -3745
mil. $75,000. 740-446-7029

0 11 SA 141 , 3BR. 2BA.
applian ces. basement, t car Middlepor1 N 4th Ave., 2Br.
garage,
SSOOi mo
plus furnished APT., no pet dep.
deposit (614) 226·06~9
&amp; ret. 992-0 165.

Foreclosure
4br..
only
$25,000! Priced to Sell! For
listings 800·620-4946 -ex
1 462

4br, 2ba. HUD! only $238.
month! Great location! (5%
doWn , 20yrs.
8%APR)
Listings 800-620-4946 e)l ,
1 46 1
::-- --::---::-- -:-::--:5 room house at 44 Olive Sl ·
Has stove/fridge $425/rent
plus depos1t, No pets. 446·
3945

/

'

·-

"'

.
'

•1ft"the
' '•. -

·I "

.,.. ,

', y -.(
'•' '

{

'

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you. you

c;m

ue•-n1111

Over 2, 000 Sq

1st Time

.

I \ tn t \ I 1' 1' 1 II \
,\. I I \ I \ I I J( t..

·rlrlor--~-:-"----,

F.ur.1

r

FOI!SUVS•~"

healthy

do h:.n'e contro l over what foods you cat -

help lower

cho lt:~t em l

in

especially those

a nat ur;il . ([rug- f ree way.
fomb. Oat hran ;md r ice hran have hl'l'\1

fQOd s

that

may be

hi g h i n ~muratcd

*Choose legumes several time~

fm - a

a week . R eplace

con tribu10r

d iet (meat and poultry) w ith p l ~uu prot~ in . Bea ns are a

l

with· soy-based producl s.

FoR SAtE

i ·

EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
VALLEY

HO AS E / Lt V ESTOCK

TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS ,

·

*Go fo r g arli c. Re se arc h indicatCs

good so urL·c of proarL' a l~o efl~c t i\.'e

VANs
Ji'oR SALE

I

~~ii411F~~~~--:-:'i~
M!YIURCY&lt;Ull/

w ay

a~

p~scription cholesterol-lowering drug~. Ra w and Cno~ed g arl1c

have simililr effe cts . So choose g arlic to 11avor, fonds for

an

1
· 1·
Not &lt;til fah o ut there are bad . Omcgu-. cs:-c ntta latt y
levels of "good"' cholt:sterul. o r HD L. GooJ fa t foods

ra ise

incl ude ol i ve o il. avocados.

06 HD Street Bob, sa Cubic

and

has

olive~. and

so me

n ut~.

pome granate juice . This tart treat ~~ fu ll trf antiox.iJant:1 t
\
been touted for ye ar~ as a :-.outid choice fm impro vi ng ll!a t h .'

* Pour a g lass

of

CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; Inch motor, 6 spd, under National Academy of Scie nce s study showed that pome granute ju ice ·
b ·
·
· ·
'd
xJ ·
0 M E S T A D E A 6000 miles, 2 seats (solo &amp;
H ARGO/CONCESSION
E
dual rider), sadd le bags. reduces cholestero l pl aque buildup y mcre:tsmg 11 1tm : ox1 I! prl Uo.::tltJIL
C
rc se;:;,m.:h that indiTRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· road pegs, motor tights, tank * Grab so me '&gt;•ogurt with live active cultures. There

®alltpolisllailp Utribune

i~

(740) 446-2342

NECK

HITCHES. bra.

fork

bag.

new

CARMICHAEL
EQUIP - hetmetfgtasses/ lightweight
E T C A
C H E L riding jacket, riding gloves.
A
M N I A MI
11 .,·_4_41_.1_5_06::-----::-::
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- _$__·5_00
VICE.
SPECIAL
20FT
1998 Yamaha Gas Golf
GOOSENECK FLATBED Cart, 4 -stroke, gas enclne,

The Daily Sentinel
(740) .992-2155

c holesterol buck into the blood stream.

* Look

for supplemented

foods

Stano! esters

an

d I

I
pant stcro s arc

produced compounds that block t he absorption of cholesterol

I

punth ·
in t e tiHCS·

$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE new tires, tune-up , belt. tines. Some foods and margr~rine:- are addin g pl anl Ste rols to he lp fig ht
TRAILER INVENTORY AT $2,500 more available 304- hi gh Cholesterol .

oint ,Jileallllnt l\egister

WWW .C ARM ICHAEl- 675-7386 or 304-675·5631
TRAILEAS.COM 740-4462007 Yamaha 250 Big
3825
Bear 4· wheeler utility
model tess than 2 rkUng
~ave you priced a John
Deere lately? YoU'll be sur- lime $2,500 304·675·3824

(304) 675-1333

prised! Check out our used
·at
inventory
WWW .CAREQ.COM
Cannichaat
Equipment.
740·446-2412

Harley Davidson Springer
Soft Tail Bad Boy. Pri~tin~
Condition. 13900 mites.
$11,500. 740-441 -1333 or
740-645-Q546

Jim's Farm Equipment lnc.
740·446·9777.
End
ol
Summer Clearance Sate,
new am;l used titters, new RV Service at Carmichael
and used Ki(lg Kutter Bush
Trailers 740·446·3825
Hogs, on and off road dump
-., 1 H\ II I ..,
trailers.
financing on
select models of new
HOME
MaSsey Ferguson and New
IMPROVF.MI&lt;NIS .
Holland tractors . w.ac .

.r .

L!VFSIOCK

Angus Butts, show heilers .
outstanding crossbred hatter broke bull or sieer.
Excellent Breeding, Top
Performance ,
Priced
Reasonably
www .slata runa.ngus. co m ,
740 286-5395

MAKE

I
I

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _

oil

I

I

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ _

•

I

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mall or drop off this coupon along
I
:
with a copy of your photo ID to
I
1.'"!I
Ohio
Valley Publishing
_________
_ P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :

--- ----------------.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
Auction

La Marce Beauty
Shop

Auction

Ohio Valley
Bank
.

Main St.

.

Public . Auction
..
September 13, 2008

Pleasant

Many Different Stylb&gt;
. Starti~g at

$7.99

Great rates

61 Vine St. M-Fl-6, Sal8·5. Sun 10·4

would like to welcome

Personal Service

new stylist

Call for a quote

GRAND VICTORIA
RESORT &amp; CASINO

304·675-3040 or
740-339-0351 for appt.
Walk'ins welcome

·'

$5. 00 all with this clipping

#542499
#305973

$11 0/person • quad occupancy
$150/person • single occupancy

Repair. We stock

Glass, Plexiglass, Charcoal
Alumin•m Screen

&amp;

Fiberglass Screen
61 Vine St. , M-F 7-6, Sc;~t. 8-5. Sun 10-4

Second AVenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
800-447·8235

clean family looking for

2

or more acres of land in

Gallia County with an existing
hOme or to build or p lace
prs-buill home on.

740-645,8624,
.740-645-2096 .

French City Childcare

Leave message!

limited Space Available
Includes breakfastbuffet, dinner

Serenity House

'.
'
'

.

buffet

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800-942-9577
'

&amp; overnight

accommodations.

To make reservations
please call
PVH Community
Relations,
304·675:4340 Ext. 1326

.,

lor Pre- School 3 · 4 · 5 yr. olds
Call

446-4467 or 446-4468

Back .to school special:

HOMECOMING
Need A Dres s
Want To Sell One

VIne &amp; Co.

Accept cash, credit and checks

Consignment Shop

LIMITED SEATSI

354 2nd Ave . 446·0214

.,
·,

441 - 10 38. OVB reserves the righl to accept/ reject any and all b ids. and withdraw items lrom
sale prior to sale'. Terms of sale : CASH OR CASHIER 'S CHECK.

------- -

.

Standalone shots
Portrait Photography

Buckeye

The se items are available at the Ohio Valley BankAnnex. 143 3rdAvenue. Gallipolis, OH on

or implied warranty &amp;may be seen by calling lhe Collection Departmenl at1 -888-

322

$115/person :triple occupancy

11202618

the date and time specilied above . Sold ' to t!1e highest bidder · as-is, where-is" without

The Lynch Agency

$120/persDn • double occupancy

#213662
#729085
#692163

&amp; Screen

Please call

#249310
#246822
#EV0228
#C04534
#715372
#A72217
#146949
11'111809

· O'Dell True Value Lumber
Glass

We are a young , loving and

Rising Sun, Indiana
October 19 &amp; 20, 2008

will offer for sale by public auction the following items:

REDMAN MIRAGE
CHEVROLET MALIBU
JAYCO RLS 27.5 TT
FORD WINDSTAR
TRAIL CRUI.SER TC
FORD FREESTAR
CHEVY MALIBU
PONTIAC GRANO PRIX
CHEVY CAVALIER
DODGE DAKOTA
CHRYSLER 300M
DODGE CARAVAN
NISSAN FRONTIER XE
CHEVY' BLAZER

Truckload Paneling Sale

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

Shirley Cremeans

10:00 a.m.
The Ohio Valley Bank

Pt:

O'Dell True Value Lumber

I
I
I
I

BULLETIN BOARD

'Ml828.2J50

I

I

I

mymidwesthomt.com

~~-

I

Shop
Classlfieds!

(304) 675-1333

I

I
I
I

I

may help you to reduce cholesterol levels.

health/medical dining/c ntcnainment food /beve rage

Joint i)lea5'ant l\rgistrr

Auction

I
I
I

I

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-21 ~5

FHA &amp;3"UIWI

I
I

I

I
I
I

like olive

I

I
I

•

I

Foods

(740) 446-2342

'

I.

I \110\

304·675·8068

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

1984 Chrysler 5th Avenue in

B.tgt~ttr

Subscriber's Name ---.:....:...____ __ _

I

good condilion $1,000 OBO

t)otnt .t)leat(ant

I

GRAIN

AIJI'OS

t!trtbune

.... --- ------------ -- ------- --- --

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional. lifetime guar·
antae. local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call '24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

HAv&amp;

~~~

maintaining adequate

~unbap tEime~ -~enttnel

I
I
I

II{ \ \\ I '(

·

Distrlct '.s system.
By Board of Leading
Creek Conservancy
Dlslrlct , President,
Fenton Taylor.
(9)7. 4, 21

~alltpolts mail!'
.

Round baled sHaw, .also ,
New Holland square baler.
Call 256-6011

SOMfONf'S
DAY!

Conservanc ~

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or :mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

can Llo more tl1an j us t
may help to prevent r~ah~o rption of

ca tes that yogun with act i ve culture s (probiot ics}
set tle you r sto mach ai lme nts. Yogu n

Notice to Engineering
Firms:
L,.,ading
Creek
Conservancy District
is
seeking
an
Engineering firm to
evaluate their water
system, to, make recommendations
.on
lowering
system
pressures, while still

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

* Factor in good fat.s .

help

Public Notice

Senior. Discount*

* Get the benelit s of blueberries. Stud ic~ show that :1 i.:ompound in b lu ebcrries (pte rost i lbcne) may help lowe r cholc~tcrol as cff~:.:tively &lt;ts ({l rnt1l crci al
drugs , with fewer siJe effect:-.
·
acids c an

pressure to their CUI
tomers.
Before September 23
2008 lnteresled firm '
should call 740·742
2411. for date I&lt;
review Leading Creel

Fenton Taylor.
(9) 7, 14, 21

If so, you qualify for a

;iddr:d hea lth

bcnef i1.

. 4 \'VHEELERS
.
L,;.;,.iitiiiililiiiiiiii-_.J
·

~a me

Public Notice

· or older?

lwre and there

It wmb in rntll:h till'

Public Notice

Are you 65

.:holes-

th&lt;~l compounJ~ i n g&lt;~rlic hel p to ~taun~.·h

production o f c holesterol in· the Ji vt! r,
.some of the

In

t he anima l protein in your

food~

4x4

98 Ford 'windstar asking
$BOO. OBO. Call lor details
740-388-1! 22

f.Ql.lwMENr

(!pallipoli!lllallp 'QJ:ribune

N.ow Availflble !

expressed

levels . Whil\! i t\ relatively

99 Ford F-150 Supercab
Stepside, 58,000 mileS, oH sec m arked result~ . Sti ll. fiber i~ good
road package, tow package. I ittl e bit helps in t he fight against c holesterol.
multi dis c CD changer, ~ Co n s u me five serv ings o f fruits and vcge labh.:s dotil y . huit:-. &lt;tnd vcg"c t able~
Rhino bed liner. roll up bed
are hi g h in antioxidants. which in general are good for fend ing t) !'f di;o;c;:ase s
cover. Cal1740·441·0260
in the body. Filling up on he althy food s may also fe nd off .:ra v ing~ f o r k ss

FOR SA!£

1995
2004
2006
2000
2008
2005
2005 .
2006
2005
2000
1999
2006
1999
2001

heart Lli~t:a~e. hcan
the dark ahout hOw

a health y
3 packet~ of instant oatmeal) to
for the body in l.J i her \~oay~. anJ ew ry

condit1on . $5200. 446 -2815

For more infonnatliln, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

HOIEBIYEIS
Free Rent
Special!!!

that

st ill in

change what you've in heri ted from a long lin!! of re l at ives

impossible to
before

lead to

it

show n to m od.:ra tely reduce c hole~ternl le ve l ~ . But re~uh~ tl'lJllire

~~-ali~t.re~74 :ic~:~·d~~:~ ~~:~. ~~~~~A:~~- ~~~d

aren't only for
buying or selling
Items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
• You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

noon

388·8743

All real estate advertlaing

is well known that high cho lest l!rol lcvel'i can
attac ks and st rok e. H owever. many peop le are
they com conquer rho lestero l.
Diet and herec..! ity pi ll)' ke}• role s in cholesterol

By now.

helping each and ev·e r y Jay lapproXinmtely

Ij725

a~celtent

BUILT,

million have !nels of ::!40 or atxJ\C .

age,
vary
dependable · tein a'nd fiber and c·an m ake for filling 1neab. Sny productS
2700 379 217
S
for keeping cho le sterol in t:heck. Try rep lacing ;1 few
·
·
9

r..-lliiiiiiiiiiiiii-rJ
Canning tomatoes.

a to tal blood cholesterol va h1e uf 200 mg/dl and

37.2

Public Notice

Notice
to Conservancy
Contractors:
District's office local·
Leading
Creek ed at 34481 Corn
Conservancy District Hollow
Road,
is seeking bids for
Rulland, OH 45775.
the Installation of a Call 740-742·2411 tor
fluoride lab at their an appointment to
trealment planl facili- review the plans .
ty. The bid will
Bids will be ~ccepted
Include lnstalla'tion of until 4:00 p.m. on
pro1abricated build· September 23, 2008.
ing, lab .equipment, LCCD reserves the
electrical·; water, and
right to accept or
waste water storage.
reject any or all bids.
A complete set of . By Board of Leading
plans Is avalla,ble at
Cree~ Conservancy
leading
Creek
district, Presldenl,

·o%

s~eel frame w/ 2 axles. 471

2br.
1
ba,
Quite
Neighborhood. No Smoking,
No Pels S450 month plus
Deposit &amp; References.
WaterfTrashiSewer
paid
140-446·6939

higher. Oftho~e. about

Pullllc Notice

tM~~~~ ;

GM Power unit. $7500 740,

•FREE RENT SPECIAL
Jordan landing
2br, 31:lr &amp; 4br's
Available
No Pets. Tenant
Responsible for Rent &amp;
Electric
304·674-0023 or
304-610-0776

Flluns &amp;
VEGE:rAIJLI!;

~

· 2 BB Grill $50 each. Electric
Lawn Mower $50 Trimmer
$50, VCR $25, F;idge $50.
Dining Room Ta ble w/2 ·
leaves &amp; 6 chairs $650. Call
740-645-4907

3 head block sawmill on

2br in Pt. Plea sant, $465
month, Homestead Really
Broker. Nancy 304-675·
5540 or 304-675-0799

According to Amerkan Heart A!lsoci3tion est i mate~. 106.7 mi llion &lt;lduhs in
the United Stutes live with

*E njoy o;l! mca l J nd tllhcr fiber- rich

play. Never needs tuned .
882·3474 look it up on line 97 Ford Expedition 5.4l, VB,
to see it and all ot its lea- 4)14. 3rd row seat , tow pack·

Femal e Blchon. mi crochip,
GIBBS ANTIQUES ·Also.
ACA registered. 5 months .
restore furnitu re. Located on
3 rooms and bath upstairs. Tornado Ad. off At . 33, selling du e to work, hours.
Completely furnished with Racine (Park&amp; Aide) e)lit $300 304-773 -9192 . 304812·0021 leave message
WID. No · pels. References ii7Ci40il'·9;;:4~9-:;:2:.:2;;:46;_-,_.~,
Req . 740-441-&lt;1245
ML'&gt;(..'tl-1-~NfXJUS
For Sate-· Bmer Puppies
CKC . $300. 740-742·1154
Apartment available now l.oo-oiMmEiiHCii'liiWiiNiiliiiliSii'F..;;,_.1
or 740-4t6-1620
Alverbend Apts. New ,Haven

Mel g s Co. 5 acres on Cook
or landaker Ad . $19,900.
Sa lem Ctr. nice 18+ acres
NOW $50.500! Danville 8
acres $22,500 . Reedsville
12 wooded acres $22.500!
Gallla Co. 8 or 10 acres
$12 ,500! Call 740·4 '11 · 1492
tor
maps
or
visit WV. Now ac_cepting applicawww.brunertand.com. We lions for Hud-Subsidiz ed,
one Bedroom Apts. Ut11ities
tina net:!!
in cludEid. Based on 30% ol
adiusted income. Call 304882-3 121 , available for
Senior and Disabled people.

These Foods Can Help Lower
Cholesterol (MS)

Memory wilt store what you •~-----~iiii-,..1 tern) .

740-38~·8743

r

before

MI.ICI·:U.ANH!t:S

YAMAHA
ElE CTRIC
PIANO ydp223. Retails for
1229·1599. Asking $950.
Barely used. .Bench comes
.with it. 88Keys. Gradad
H(l.mmar Action. 14 Voices.
Transposes automatically.

·--lliiiiiiiiii--rJ -

!'""'

TRUCKS
FOil.Sru:

MUSICAL
INsrRUMENTS

. . . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiil_.l

ILj5iO

·•~11'._•.'~~~

Irs

r

'""

2007
Homesteader
Cargo T railer 6)C12 With 2
doors on back $2 ,000
firm 304-675·4795 call

li"l lQ;".- ------,

Police Impounds/ Cars from
Special Bichon Frise non
$500! , Hondas, Chevys,
allergenic, non shedding , Jeeps, Fords, &amp; more! for
not aggressive, beaut iful
listings 8C!0·620·4876 eM V435
pels. 740-441 -95 10.

NEW AND USED STEE~
Steel B,eams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle .
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Gratrng
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fr1day, Bam-4 30pm. Closed'
Thufsday.
Sa turday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

~

HOMf");
m~ SALt:

West Virginra Un1versi ty
Career opportunity
WVU Extens1on service rs
recruit1ng lor a tenure track .
tw elve monrh Exte!"lsron
Agent for Putnam County.
Mas1er"s degree requrred. at
least one degree must be iil
an agriculture-related fi eld.
In additio n to the requ ir ed
master's degree, an equiva lent combination of directly
related experience in agri·
ClJltur e may be accepted in
lieu of thf! speci1ic deg1ee
reqlJ rrement.
For
comp lete
posi tion
announcement and application proces s. vis it our web site at hnp:liwww.wvu .edu/exten/. clo sing date Sept.
24 2008. WVU is an
EEO/AA organization.

Found in Tycoon lake area, 00 Chevy Monte Carlo
mate Pomeranian mix. Can under 100,000 miles, V6,
740-245-5497
auto, sunroof, nice car.
$3999. Great buy. 740-256·
Miniature Dachshunds CKC 6251
registerad,shots, wormed ,
male &amp; females , lpng &amp; short 1998 Pontiac Sunfire. well
5
speed,
hair, red, black &amp; tan, maintained,
$400.00 mates 5450.00 118 ,000 miles. 740-645 0022 or 740-649·7289
lemales 304-593-3820

$39.000. I m1te from Mason Pomeroy. Basement with takrng applications for t to 2 pet remnants $40. &amp; up.

jiiO

1&lt;1 \/l .'-'! 1\11·

anCJ5crmal9 12748

'

Rmr

ML..CFJJANEXXJS
MEHCHANOISE

1974 3 BA Hallmark, needs 2br Mobile Home in' Mason.
rewrred , $1.000. 1968 2 BR Kitchen
Furn ., deposit
Ru th A Kirby. Call' me at 740- S900
Must be moved
required 304 -675-7783
-:---:---:--:----:-388·80 15 tor prrvale care.
Modern t Bedroom apr. Call
Shown by appointment only
Two 2 bdm1. trailers w/tront 446· 0390
843 810- t825.
II \ \\(. I \I
porch and other updates . -:---::---::--::--::--:-$400,
possible rent to own, New Haven. One Bd. room ,
t
998
16x70
Ht iSfNI·X';
Marquee
(740}243·58 11 JR
Apt . No Pet$. Dep. &amp; Ret.
Traile
r.
move
in
cond
.
2
bed.
OPt'OM'IliN£1"\'
740·992·0165.
2 bath . LP .furnace &amp;' stove ,
Al'IIKI!&gt;I~NIS
250 gal. tank is full. new
Newl Be the first to live in a
fUR RENI'
fridge &amp; WJD combo, vinyl
.•NOTICEnew log duple~ - 2BA, 1
siQrng, shingle root. On rentOHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
bath. HA/CA. Porter area. Pole Barn 30)14Qx 10 on ly
1 &amp; 2 bed apt. 1st Ave.
lNG co r e Co mm ~;mds
ed tot at l 0 Quail Creek
No pets. Deposit &amp; ref, $550 $6,995. ·other sizes Free
Park, Lot rent $t651mo incls Gallipolis. W/D hookup. per month . Call 446-280 I
Delivery 877 · 773-8356
!hal you do business wilh
$300-5350 .. Call 339 -3063
tot, watei, trash .. . sewage.
peoP.Ie you know.
Toaster Oven $40, VCR
Dep &amp; Re!. No Hud.
Smn:
NOT 10 send money Call lor viewing 740-245$30, 26~ Bicycle $40, Printer
5728. Asking $25,000
through the mail until you
~UHRfNr
I and 2 bedroom apart·
$40, Lawn Tnmmer $40, ;?
have Investigated the
ments. fum1shed and unfurBBQ
Grills $50 each. 4462 2006 t6xE\I) Clayton 3 b9t:t
oHering.
nished, and houses in 1400-2000 sq tt comm er- 4333
2
bat h,
2000
1 6~70
Pomeroy and Middleport . Cial/retail space for rent. - - - - - - - - , - Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
security deposit required. no great location busy down- Waterline · 3 Quarter inch at
MONEY
1999 For1une 3 bed 2 bath
town corner by park. 1 yr $.30 a loot 100·500 toot
pets. 740-992-2218.
·rn I.o1\N
We deliver block level and
teasecall740-709· 1690
rolls 1" at $.45 a foot 100·
anchor. We can do the fool - 1BR Apt , WID hookups.
1000 foot roll s. Call Ron
ers also. Daytime 740-388- satell1te TV incl. wJrent ,
Evans. 800"537-9528
**NOTI«:E•• 0000 0' 740·368-8513. close to hospital. Call 740·
HotJSI'JfOI.J)
Evening 740-388-801 7 or
l'f: IS
339-0362
. GilOI.~
740 -245·9213.
n!RSAJ.E
Borrow Smart. Con tact
1BR tri-l evel &lt;ipt .. close to
the Ohio Division ol
hospital
. 10 min to Rio Brown with burgundy &amp;
Brand
new
3bed
2bath
on
Frnancral
Institution's
AKC I yr old mate Maltese
+ - half acre in PL Pleasant Grande. Rei
&amp; Dcp green cushions . toveseat &amp; dog $200 304-675-2308 or
Ott ice
ot
Consumer
co uch $300 Good Cone:!. 2
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL· Required. 740·208-8889
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
304-593-3499
nance your . home m ABLE. 740-446 -3570
2 bdrm. apt. . remodeled . 112 yrs . old. 446-2815
-:-:-:-:--::---:::-:-----:::---::--::---:::---::-- AKC Boston Terrier puppies,
obta in .a loAn. BEWARE
Federal Funds just released river frontage. washer/dryer Dining Room Table w/ 2 B wks old. females, marked
ot requests for any farge
5450
740
243
for land Own~rs . No CIOS·
· (
)
· leaves and · 6. chairs $500 good. $ 150.
advance payments ot
ing cost and ZERO DOWN!
7 40 44 6 4 3 33
fees or insurance Ca ll
Will
......- , CKC Miniature Pinschers.
do
Land
the Otfice of Consumer
2 bedroom apartment for
SI'OKI.ING
Two 5 month old males .
Improvements. Bankruptcy rent
in Middleport, no· pets.
Affairs toll fr ee at 1-866·
Gonus
ta11s. ears. shots done. M&amp;F
8 Bad Credit OK. 2. 3, 4 and (740)992-58 58
278-0003 to learn if the
also lor sate. 388·8788
5 bedrooms available. 740·
mortgage
broker
0'
Semi furnished Trailer, Compound Bow -Mathews
446·3384
CKC
Registered
lender
is
properl9
New Haven. 3 bedroom, MO-t , left handed, 7011 @29"
Dachshunds. Black and Tan
licensed . (Thi s IS a public
New 3 Bedroom homes from 2 bathrooms, &amp; 2 beddraw. Complete w/ sights, .3 mates ready to go 740servrce announcement $2 14.36 per monH1 . Includes
room,
1
bath
;
3
.RV
lots
rest and quiver. $400. 446- 446·6830
I rom the Oh10 Valley many, upgrades, delivery &amp;
all utilities available 304- 2816
Publishing Company)
set-up (740)385 -2434
Cocker Spaniel puppies. full
593-301 1 or 304-675 blooded, buff color. $125.
ANnQUf:S
0141
LUis&amp;
Call 388-040 I
PRnn:&amp;"'iiHN r\1 .

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W•n!
1·888 -582-3345

,._lliiiiitiiiiiiioiiiiiiw

,,·'
.

HJH

304-593 - Walmart

6421

E

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Cente r
ha s ANTICIPATED POSt·
TION OPENINGS !01 ED
Teache•s tor the 2008-2009
Applica nt s
School Year
mu st be certified/li censed as
an Intervention Specialist
(K-12) or be eligible to get a
Suppl emental L1cense This
POSition IS a 9-!00nlh contra ct wi!h O.oard approved
benefits
Salary w1ll be
based on expe rience and
cenrlication acco rding to the
salary schedule. Submit letter of interest and res ume to
John
D
CostanzO.
Supenntendent.
AthensMeigs Educational Serv1ce
Center.
507
Richland
S&lt;..ltOOI.tii
Avenue. S u ite~ lOB. Athens.
INSTRt...:c nor\
OH 45701.
App lrcation
Deadline: Septemb er J 9.
· 2008, 4:30 p.m.
The Gallipolis Career College
AMESC is
an
Equal (Careers Close To Home)
O p p o r t u n i t y Call Today! 740- 446-4367.
Employer/Provider
1-800·21 4·0452
'
www gall-'lollscamcrcnlleg"' etlu
. A~~ r e !liiOO Me mbe r · ."lccre!lol•ng
Councrl fo1 l r11J op~ n!lcnt Colleges

and learn

Small

r

r

ArAKI~UXI~

2

Reg1on&lt;11
Du mp.
and
Pneumatic Tanke r Dr1vers
R&amp; J Trucking Compa ny rn
Marietta . OH is sea rching for
qualified CDL-A drivers for
regional dump and pneu matic tanke r positions
Qualified applicants must be
at lea st 23yrs. have a min1·
mum at 1 years of sa te commercial driving expenence in
a truck. Haz Mat certification ,
clean MVR and good stability. We otter competitive
bene lrts plus 40 t (k) and
vaca tion pay. Contac t K enl
at 800-462 -9365 to apply or
go to www.qtrucking.com
EOE

Read your

~

Hm rst:s
fllH Rl1&gt;T

~~

FOR"TALE

iii;i

HIRING
Avi:J Pay $20/hr 9r
S57K/yr. Includes
Fed Ben OT.
P!aced by adSource. not
aftrhated wrth USPS '&lt;\ho
h11es.
1-866-403-2582

m

t:

To Do

HO\If:S
FOHSAu:

~~~~~~-

POST OFFICE NOW

Sportswriter
The Oh10 Valley
PubliSh1nq Co. is_. seeking
a motivated. people -orient·
ed 1ndivrduat 10 fill a
vacancy rn tile 11ews
depm"lment as a spor1s·
'Writer. The successful can. didate Wilt cover hlgh
sc hool athl etrcs in the area
for the daily edition ot th e
newspaper. as well as
assist with the production
ot spo r1 s pages. Excellent
wrr1ing and English skill s.
photography skills and
knowledge of desk.top
publishing are sought. The
ppsihon is lull -lime, 40
hours a week . with Qeneli!s. Interested parties can
send resumes to Kevin
kelly. Managing Editor.
Ohro Valley PubliShing
Co .. 825 Third Av e.,
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631. or
kkelty@ mydaitytrrbune.co

Wwrm

Has an antrcrpated pos1t1on 1740) 416·7305-

Must have e ~ pe r re:n c e m
lng

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

The
Athens-Mer gs All Types Masonry. BriCk
Ec:lu.;:atronal Servrce Center Brock Stone, Free Esl1mate
lor a part-tune After Scnool
Educat1 on Coo rdu~al or tor
EeJste1n El emen tary ano
Me1 gs
Middle
Schoo l
Bacl1elor s
Degree
rn
Educa lr on or 1elated t1etd
re'-lwred The coordm ator

Sunday, Septembe;:.r.:.7:.:,2;0;0;.8--...,.-::::--____.:P~o~m:.::e:.:r;oy!._·..::M~id;:d::l~ep~o::rt7-·:;:.G: :a: .:l i~po: l: .:is:.:.,_:O_:_H:_·_:_Pt::... .:. P. :.Ie..::a.:.:sa:.. n. ::t':_w_:_v_ _-:--___,_tlllb=ll=-!'
~tm=tl=·=6=enti-=ne=I=·=P=a=g=e=D=5
=

Senior pictures for
$50
Call (74) 245·5019
to schedule an
appointment

I

�•

iuRbap lime~-ienttnel

DO'WN ON THE

FARM·

PageD6
Sunday, September 7, 2008

Liver disease plagues
obese adolescents, A2

Ohio corn production encouraging
MARION - The late't
USDA production numbers
show that Ohio's com crop is
doing well despite setbacks
due to a soggy spring planting
season.
The government fi gures
show 3.35 million acres of
~om in production in Ohio,
down slightly from last year
but still the second highest
harvest on record.
"The numbers show that
com growers are resilient."
said Ohio Corn Growers
Assocation Pre sident Mark
Drewes.
Com 2rowers in Ohio have
increased yields from 150
bushels per ane to a projected
160 bushels per acre1 The
average crop yield' in the U.S.
is projected at 155 bushels per
acre. Higher yields make it
possible to plant more com on

fewer acres.\
that, with thi s larger crop, we
Across !he nation. USDA's are now expecting a larger
tirst survey-based forecast for carry-out into 2009, of 1.1 bil2008 com production is 12.3 .lion bushels, indicating !hat
billion busheb, up 573 mil- total production is pacing
lion from last month's projec- growth in demand this year
tion with h i~; he r forecast and better positions domestic
yields and increased harvest- stocks for next year.
ed area.
. "Growers have always
' Nationwide
believed you can achieve sigUSDA estimates
nificant production boosts
without dramatically increas• Since the July repot1, com
ing com acres," Drewes said. acres· planted decreased from
"And while total planted 87.3 million to R7 million.
acreage estimates decreased
• Harvest acres increased
by 300 million. harvested from 78.9 million to 79.3 milacres rose by 400 million, sig- lion.'
naling the rebound from the , • Com production increased
spring noocts."
from 11.7 billion bushels to
The USDA numbers mean 12.3 billion bushels.
.com growers can meet some
• Average yield increased
energy needs and provide a from .148.4 bushels per acre to
large'r carry-out than exJ)ect- 155 bushels per acre.
ed. Perhaps most imponant is
• Average price for coro

decreased from S6 per bushel
to $5.40.
• The total com supply for
2008 is now estimated at I J 9
billion bushels.
• Total com consumption is
. estimated at 12 .7 billion
bushels.
• Ending stocks are now
projected at 1.1 billion
bushels.
The Ohio Com Growers
Association represents the
interests of more than 20,000
com growers in the state.
OCGA works in Washington
and at the Ohio Statehouse to
ensure government participation inle1;islation is beneficial
to Ohio's growers.
For more infonnntion, go
to www.ohiocnn1.nrg, or cim·
tcrct Nara/ie Lehner at (6/4)
499-7111,
nlelmer @ohiocom.org.

Bv

DEAN

FOSDICK

Many of the most drought
tolerant succulents are not
creatures of the desert. The
origins of some familiar
species - hens and chicks,
for j:xample - have been
traced to !he snowy slopes of
the European Alps.
Before replacing your
yard's thirsty plant assortment
with easy-care, cold-hardy
succulents. become familiar
with the USDA Hardiness
Zone Map, which divides
America into 11 zones based
on average wintenime tem,
perature minim.ums.
Zone I, with readings in
winter averijging .more than
50 degrees below zero, is the
coldest. Zone II, averaging
more than 40 degrees above,
is !he warmest.
Here are some of the most
common cold-hardy perennial succulents, along with a
few recommendations for
gardeners who live at higher
altitudes or deep in the

Snowbelt:
·Hens and chicks, or
houseleeks (Sempervivums):
Can carpet an entire 'area with
many colors, sizes and textures. But generally, the
smaller the rosettes, !he slower the rate of growlh, so be
size-selective if you're looking to cover a large area fast.
TI1ere are more than 4.000
named varieties, providing
many opportunities to mix
and match for contrast.
··sempervivum tectorum has
incredibly rich red coloration
.on such a small statured plant
that tucks so well into any
crevice with soil and light"
said Karl Gercerrs, conservatory
horticulturist with
Longwood Gardens, Kennett
Square, Pa: Good for zones 37.
lee
J?lants
(Delosperma): "Origmally
hails from the mountains of
South Africa, where it covers
the rocky slopes with its
intensely colored flowers in
the summer," Gercens said.
These . tiny ice plants are

tough enough to line freeways or highlight alpine gardens, where they produce
delicate magenta, yellow,
reddish and white blooms.
They generally prefer full
sun and a con sistent water
supply. Also . important is
placing them in a welldrained sitf;. Gercen s recom mends the Delosperma
cooperi, a tough species with
traditional fuchsia-purple
!lowers covering a 6-to-Hinch-tall carpet through the
growing season. Zones 4-9.
Prickly
pears

so CENTS • Vol. 58, No. 41

• Cowboys rough
up Browns in opener.
See Page Bl

Joy Kocmoudlphoto
A' crop of heallhy corn stalks stretches toward the sky on
Ohio 325 near Rio Grande , a product of more pleasant conditions Ihis summer. Warmer weather has been the norm in
southeastern Ohio for the last several weeks.

and the stifling heat of last
week put that drying time
and thus the traffic pattern
POMEROY -Although change behind.
the traffic pattern. on the
Cary Betzing, project
Mason, W.Va . side of the engineer with the Ohio
new
Pome'roy
Mason Department
of
Bridge was expected to Transportation which is
change last week, the heat overseeing con struction of
interfered with the plan .
the bridge and nearby traffic
To meet the slope of the patterns , said when the .
new bridge, W. Ya. 62 had to asphalt is applied it hits
be raised nearly three feet at temperatures over 300
the deepest point. This degrees and in order to put
meant the application of lay- another
layer
of
ers of asphalt. In between- asphalt/pavement to add to
the layers, a 'cenain amount that lift, the previous layer
of drying time is required must cool oft which didn't
BY BETH SERGENT

Bv BRIAN

Page A~

www.galtlpollscareercoltege.edu
1176 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH

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MIDDLEPORT
Monthly luncheons have
raised nearly $1,500 for
next year's July 4 fireworks
in Middleport.
The
Middleport
Community Association
began sponsoring their
"Lunch Along the River"
· fundraisers in July, after the
fireworks company in
charge of the annual display
advised the association it
could have a much bigger
and better fireworks show
for a relatively small
increase in price.
Through donations and
fundraising events, the
association raised $5,000
for this year's event, but
w0rked furiously in the
weeks just before the holiday to raise the money.
Next year, the association
hopes to spend around
$7,000 for fireworks, and
President
Association
Brenda Phalin said the
monthly lunch fundraisers
have been very successful
in giving the association a
jump start
The luncheons are held
from II a.m. to I p.m. on
the last Friday of each
month, in Dave Diles Park.
The association plans to
serve chicken and noodles
at its Sept. 26 luncheon.
"Every month, we have
seen new 'faces," Phalin
said. "The original idea
behind · the lunches. was to
raise funds, of course, but
they have developed into
something more . Not only.
are we ·able to supplement
our treasury for next year,
but it really has brought the
community together."
Phalin said several people
from · the
neighboring

I

.J.-

• OU Chillicothe
Campus hosts Health
Literacy Conference.
See Page A3
-• ~-cruise open to
publici. See Page A3
• Family Medicine: Jury
still out on chelation
therapy. See Page AS

• Cleland opens law
office. see .Page AS
Name: Gary ·
Occupation: Mechanic
Surgery Date: 7102107

WEAmER .

Lost 178 Pounds!

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POMEROY - · The Second Annual
Reunion on the River, a homecoming
event for the hundreds who have graduated from Meigs High School, will
be held on Friday and Saturday.
The returning alumni will not only
be having their own lineup of activities, they will be active participants in
the Sternwheel Riverfest which takes
place the same weekend.
The kickoff for alumni fun will come
on Friday night with a family fun tailgate from 5:-30 to 7 p.m. near the front
gate at lhe stadium parking lot. Alumni
are asked to wear maroon and gold.
Just before the Marauder homecoming feslivities and football game begins
on the .Bob Roberts Field there will be a
ceremony to honor those who have gone
on in the world to represent Meigs Local
and the community wilh class and distinction in fields such as .academia, arts,
athletics, business, clergy, medicine,
military, public service or philanlhropy.
Also to be recognized with a distinguished service award will be some
Meigs Local employees or members of
the community that have provided .
exemplary service to the school district.

Recommendations for those to be Saturday parade. Dingess requests
honored have come from alumni to the that the dress indude alumni t-shirts
MLAA officers and board of directors which can be purchased at Locker 219
where the decision of those to be rec- in Middleport.
.
ognized took place. The award recipiTo encourage panicipation in the
ents will be honored during a pre- . parade, the Marauders, past, present
game ceremony as part of the home- and future, are encouraged to "show
coming game presentation.
their pride" by taking part in the parade,
At half-time , during the Meigs Prizes will be awarded by the Alumni
Marauder game, the Mei~s Alumni Association for the best float by an
Band directed by Toney Duigess will alumni class, the best entry from future
play. Practice will be held Monday Marauders, and the best entry from a
(tonight) from 6 to 8 p.m. in the MHS current MHS organization. For more
bandroom. Dingess emphasized that information or to register forthe parade
attendance at .the practice is not contact Erin Krawsczyn Roush at 304- .
required in order to perform at home- 773-5467 or erinkraw@hotmail.com
coming. He said those who cannot
On Saturday afternoon Court· Street
attend the practice can email him at will be shutoff for use by the alumni as
toney.dingess@meigslocal.org and he a place where they can meet and greet,
will mail the music. Selections to be reminisce and reflect. A special cruise
played by the band include "Long Train ·on the Ruble for alumni has been
Running," "Carry on my Wayward planned for 2: 15 Saturday afternoon.
Son," "Build Me Up Buttercup:" "Rock to be followed by an·alumni memorial
and Roll, Part 2 (Hey Song)," the Fight balloon launch at 3:30p.m.
The climax for the alumni event will
Song and th~ Alma Mater.
There will be post-game entertain- be a fla~ football gam~ on Bob
ment by Meigs Alumni musicians, Roberts Fteld at 5 p.m. where former ·
"Marauder" featuring Lyle Moon, Phil Meigs football players will tuke the
Moon, Keith Krautter and Nick field. Matt Stewart at 740-444"2537 '
Michael on the amphitheater stage.
has details. Complete ·information on
The Alumni Band will also march the Reunion by the River can h~
with the Marauder Band in the I p.m. viewed on www.meigsalumni .com.

Calendars
Classifieds.

.

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Add! !5. _ _ _..___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.n:

Cruisin' Saturday·Night Car Show set
BY BETH SERGENT

Annie's Mailbox

''

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.CDM

BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SEcnONS ~ 12· PAGES

ForDniufiawatim:a.Lolldlthe-vi•uceumiBphm!fld
ilrtbe.S,pilrm Wfftetoo•dwt
P'VJ Wi!IMiiW, EIH uti we Din:dur .t 740 441 9633

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dooatioo to Haber A..;rtecii.iviDs. 300 Briau:Mhl Dr.
GaBipolia, Obio 456:P-

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Please see ~uncheons, AS

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INSIDE

To. Ho111e."
1·800·214-0452. 740.446-4367

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Jennifer
Bartrum,
MLAA vice
president,
Toney
Dingess,
al4mni band
. director, and
Amy Blake,
MLAA secretary. left to
' right, wear
,the new "gqld
out" alumni
shirts to
show !heir
Marauder
pride . The
shi'rts in youth
and adult
sizes ·can be
purchased for
$10 at Locker
219in
Middleport
and allhe
homecoming
game.
Staff photo

• Crystal R. Standley, 29'

C~•n CWs.•

$

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.

A3
A3
83-4

Comics
Editorials

Bs
A4

Movies
:Obituaries
'
Sports
:Weather

As
As
B Section

A3

' .

@2008 Ohio Valley Puhllshlng Co.

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.
·

happen in time cto meet the . ic time/date has been deter- This will allow the earthanticipated change in the mined, yet.
work to be completed on the
traffic pattern this past
When traffic does finally east side of Ohio 833 before
Thursday.
shift , motorists will be inclement weather "ts in.
However, this past Friday rerouted onto the new WalBetzing said curb and gutBetzing said crew s were . Mart Drive and the East side ter work, final grat ing on the
able to finish the paving/lift of W. Ya. 62 that was recent~ slopes and removal of the
on the new section of W.Va. ly paved. This change will old pavement on the old
62 which traffic was to be allow work to continue to Ohio 833 remain&gt; to be finmoved onto this past the nonh of the drive into ished in the area. When all is
Thursday. Unfortunately, Wai-Mart where the contrac- said and constructeu. there
the striping crew used to tor will finish drainage items will be four lanes coming
mark the new lanes won' t and sidewalk in that area,
off the new bridge. There
be available until possibly
On the Pomeroy side of will also eventuall y be a
this Thursday. If the crew the bridge, last week traffic traffic light to replace the
arrives ·on Thursday, the was moved onto the new three-way
stop · sign
traffic shift should happen Ohio 833 which runs along- motorists are currently using
soon after though no specif- . side the new retaining wall. near the existing bridge.

Association
luncheons
successful
fundraisers

OBITUARIES

GcilliP-OliS
Career College

N~wsprint

'"'"·"'~d~il~"·ntind.wm

MONDAY, SEPTEJ\fBER 8, 2008

BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

(Opuntia): The
spiny
Opuntia polyacantha is the
most common prickly. pear
variety in the western Great
Plain s, growing from
Arizona to Alberta. according to Gwen Moore
Kelaidis in her book ,
''Hardy Succulents: Tough
Plants for Every Climate''
(Storey Publishing, 2008 l
"Thev are similar in size
and design value to dwarf
shrubs or conifers and they
offer year-round interest in
foliage and form, " Kelaidis
said. Zones 3-9.

Business Administration
or
Accounting

Rrcycled

Heat delays traffic change in Mason, W.Va.

SPORTS

Business Managers and Accountants are
vital to the growth and expansion of busine,;s!l
Start your career training in:

11

Prinltdon IUU 'if

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Know your hardiness zones when choosing succu.lents
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Teacher recognized for
class C;tchievement, A3

,..

File photo
The Fourth Annual Cruisin' Saturday Night will take place this Saturday in
Racine with 55 trophies up for grabs, live music, door prizes, a special US
Postal stamps unveiling and cancellalion stamp and food vendors. Money
raised finances scholarships for Soulhern High School graduates.

RACINE - The Fourth Annual
Ctuisin' Saturday Night is becoming a tradition in Racine which .is
not just about showcasing the best
looking cars but about giving a
helping hand to deserving . student s graduating from Southern
High School.
Held this Saturday in downtown
Racine, the Cruisin' Saturday
Night turns a fun day of music,
food and cars · into scholarship
money for graduating seniors. Last
year the event provided $2,400 in
s cholarship funds to the Class of
2008, scholarships divided into
four, $600 awards.
The show is held on Third Street
·· in Racine and is sponsored by Hill's
Automotive Class Car Restorations,
Gatling Ohio and Home National
Bank. Registration is from 1-4 p.m ..

with an entry fee of $1 0 per car with
d~sh plaques given to the first 50
entries. Last year tl1e show continued to grow with 65 entries.
Judging will take pl ace from
3:30-6 p.m. with :\) trophi es
awarded in · -c ate2ories like
Mayor 's
Choic e,~ Fireman's
Choice. Best Interior, People's
.Choice , Best Motorc ycle , Best
Project, Top 40 Cars. Best of trophies in six classes, Runner-up
Best of Show, Best of Show.
Melody McKay of Hill 's
Automotive
Classic
Car
Restorations who l1clps organize
the event said this year there will
be a free concert at 7 p.111 . with
Everett Deen &amp; the hipno7 playing
classic pop songs. The band will
play behind Home Nationnl Ban~
with the concert sponsored by
Gatling Ohio and WMPO.
Please see Car show, AS

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