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•
•

. ALONG THE RIVER
Beacon of hope: Meigs' economy
.
•
rolls with the changes, Cl
..•.
•

LIVINC
A stew that starts on
the stove, ends in the oven, Dl

'

tme

•

·HometoWn News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties ·
Ohio\ aile~ l'uhli,hin~ ( o.

l'onwro~ • \lid&lt;ll&lt;'p&lt;H'I • (;allip..li,, • S&lt;"ph'mh&lt;•o· :!t, :!ouX

$1.50 • Vol. 42. No. :l5

Rentech out, but Meigs site still marketable

SPORTS
•.Local high school
. lootball action.

Bv

J.

il is a prime site for devel- ly $4 billion to build and s idered for the federal govopment,
Economic would · have · employed ernment's FutureGen proDevelopment ·
Director around 250 to operate.
ject. and adjoins land where ·
GREAT BEND - A Perry Varnadoe said.
The Ohio Department of American Electric Power
Colorado-based company .
Rentech ,
which Developmenl made a com-· mi ght build a new IGCC
that gasifies coal . and turns announced a year ago it had mittmcnt of $250,000 for a clean-coal power plant.
it into fuel and other prod-, taken an option on the pri- · feasability study as an
Studies of the site when il
ucts is no longer consider· vately-owned land , is con- incentiv e for Rentech lo was considered for the
ing· 400 acres in Lebanon centrating its attention on a build . here. Varnadoe said FutureGen project included
Township for a plan!
plant under construction in Rentech never accessed work of a world-class engiOther companies are Mississippi , and is not those funds.
neering
firm.
Worley
interes!ed in the land for expected to build here . The
The site in question .was , Parsons. Those studies and
possible development, and plant would have cost near- also one of two in Ohio .con- their results make it easier
BRIAN

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

&gt; ~PageBl

to market the site .
"The site has abso lu tely
great potentiaL" Varnadoe
said. "We have severa l ·
firm s intereqed in it righl
now. including a project
similar
in
size
to
Rentech 's ."
More, than one land owner
has land available for purchase in 1ha1 area. Varnadoe
said. As much a&gt; 700 ac,res
&lt;:ould be developed .

Veterans
remember

POW/MIAs

River Valley High School's '
Phoen1x Show Choir enlertained the audience at the
.I 45th Emancipation
Proclamation celebration at
the Gall ia County
Fairgrounds on Salurday
morning. The two-day event
· wraps up this afternoon
with a church service, special speakers and music .

BY ELIZABETH RIGEL
EA IGEL@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Members of the Gallipolis
City Commission met with
members of the Vietnam
.Veterans of Ame ric~. Local
Chapter 709, in the City
Park on Friday to honor
National
POW/MIA
Recognition Day ·and present a proclamation.
,
Commissioners,
Jim
Cozza and Jon Lynch met
with Henry Myers, Mike
Plymale and Steven Betz, of
VVA Local Chapter 709, to
raise the POW/MIA flag in
the park.
The POW /MIA flag is the
· only flag that is flown over
- the U.S. Capitol "Rotunda
and
along
wilh
the
' American flag, is the only ·
other flag lo .fly 9ver the
White House.
In 1998, Congress mandated flying the, POW/MIA
flag on the third Friday in
September for National
POW/MIA
R,ecognition
Day as well as on Armed
Forces Day, Memorial Day,
Flag Day, Independence
Day. and Veteral)'s Day.
The idea for this honorary
flag was lhought up in 1971
by Mrs. Michael Hoff, an
MIA wife and member of
the N aiional League of
'Families. It was designed by
Norman Rivkees , vice pres·

QBOUARIES
- Page AS
• Alea Lynn Bailey.
· ~ Norma E. Rutherford
• Charles W. Freeman
• Isler R. Mowrey Sr.

INSIDE· ·
\

Fall Home Improvement

Page 16 •

Friday, September 19,2008

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'''
'
I

• Gordon achieves
national certificate.
· .SeePageA6
· • Active Aging Week
activities under way .
: SeePageA2
. • No need to put on airs,
· See Page A3 ·
:~ Medicare check-up
· days set for Meigs,
• Gallia. See'Page AS
-'
.

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Please see Veterans, ·Al

Candidates
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mailing.·

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INDEX

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•

BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

' 4 SECTIONS- 114 PAGES

~ &lt;.

'

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds .
Comics

A:3
C4
D Sectiun
insert

Editorials

A4

Movies

C6

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© aoo8 Ohio Valley Puhlis,h lng Co.

6151&lt; 6"X15" R19 49aqA-18.119
623K f'Y:/3" R19 7~.59

•
.,

ATHENS
The
Democratic candidale for
the 94th Ohio Hp use
Dislricl denies she had anything to do with a mailing
attacking her opponent's
use of sick leave as Athens
County audilor.
At Thursday night's opening of Meigs County
Democra!ic Headquarters ,
Debbie Phillips, an Athens
Cily Councilwoman and
second-time candidate for
state representalive, said the
mailing and Republican
Athens County Auditor Jill
Thompson's reaction to il
.are ua distraction."
The Campaign for
Moderate Majorily., an organization affiliated with the ·
Ohio Educat.ion Association
and Service Employees
Inte!T)atipnal Union, used
mass mail to criticize
Thompson's opposition to
the Ohio Healthy Families
Act while using sick leave
as county audilor.
·
Phillips said she knew
nothing about the mailing,
and said il would be a viola-

Kevin Kelly/photos

·

History, music come to life
at Emancipation celebration
Mary 'Lincoln and other
events."
Previously announced
GALLIPOLIS - 'Tve appearances by the ,Fifth
got a really good feeling Colored Troops reenac.tor
about it today;' Andrew brigade and by Michael
Gilmore said as he wel- Crutcher
Sr.
of
comed guesls and visitors Nicholasville , Ky .. who
to the firs! day of the re-creates the li fe. and
!45th
Emancipation times of early civi l rights
Rroclamation celebration activist
Frederick
Saturday.
Douglass. were canceled.
The two-day even! com- Both Crutcher and the
memorating !he signing of troop reenactors had other
the document that freed engagemenls thi s week slaves in the U.S. in 1862 end. although Crutcher did
is the longest-running present hi s program on
evehl of its kind in the Douglass at Washin gto n
country, There has been an Elementary · School on
Emancipalion celebration Friday.
in Gallia County every
Vocal selections by
year since 1863.
Mark Mill er. the River
Maintained today · by Valley
School
High
volunteers and a commit- Phoenix Show Choir
tee in which Gilmore is under the direclion of
the
president, David Co lvin, Virginia .
Emancipation also cele- Ha le and the Voices of
brales African · American Triumph from Columbus,
history, culture and mu sic Mark Mill er and Princess
with speakers and pre sen- Curtis opened the morning
tations at !he Gallia program on Saturday,
County Fairgroun&lt;;ls. ·
along with a performance
"It's a beautiful day and by !he Prai se Team
everything seems to be Dancers from Portsmouth.
working well," Gilmore . During the afterrnoo·n.
s~id. "We're looking · for·
special music was proyidward to reenactors such as . ed by the Burlington Male
Harriet Tubman, Abe and Chorus along · with a
BY KEVIN l(aty

KKELLYCMYDAI~YTRIOBUNE . COM

Enjoying the music at the !45th Emancipation
Proclamation celebralion Saturday were historical reenactors Joyce Browning of Charleston, W.Va ., left, who por·
trays Mary Todd Lincoln , and Jim Ruben of Beckley, W.Va. ,
who reenacts her husband, Presid11nt Abraham Lincoln,
who signed the Emancipation document freeing slaves In
the U.S.
recitation
of
the a.m., featuring music oy
Emancipation s1ory. "Free Brotha -, in Spirit from
at Last." Keynote speake r Columbus ami a message
was
Blain e Gilmore. from the Rev. Dr. Mi~.:hael
director of general ser- Pok e. pastor of St. Paul ·
vices fo( Hamilton County Baptist Church i.n St.
and soli of Andrew Albans. W.Va.
'Gilmore and Margueriite
Special remarks will be
· of offered 111 th e aflcrnoon by
(Bass)
Franklin
Sacramento. Calif. .
noted music educa·tor ·
Today 's activities ·begin
'
with a church service a! I0 Please see Celebration, Al

,

2008 royalty Queen ·crowned

a.

, Ple..e see Mllllln1- Al

'

Elizabeth RlgeVphoto

Chrissie Tirpak, center, is crowned the 2008 South Gallia
High School Homecoming Queen during pre-game ceremonies at Rebel Field on Friday. She is the daughter of
Frank and Josette Tirpack , was escorted by her father
Frank, . left, and crowned ,by the 2007 queen , Chelsea
Stowers, at right.

Kevin Kelly/pholo

Olivia Sniith was selected 2008 Homecoming Queen at
River Valley High School d ~, .ng halftime ceremonies of the
Raiders' contest with Watertord . She is joined in the photo
by her escort, Patrick Mulholand . Smith was crowned by the
2007 queen, Ambe r Cadle.
'

�REG

iunbap
~I me~ -ientind
.
.

PageA2

NAL

Sunday, September 21,

•
•

Local Briefs
Benefit dinner
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s Shrine Club will
host a spag hetti dinner on
Sat urd ay. Sept. 27 at 6:30
· p.m. for the be nefit of
Shriners
hospitals for
burn ed a11d hand ictipped
d 1ild re n.

Admission
is
$10 .
Entertainment will be by the
River City Players .

Founder's Day
scheduled
GALLIPOLIS
Founder's Dav will be
observed at the· Our House

Museum , 432 First Ave ., on
Saturday. Sept. 27 from II
a.m. unti l 2 p.m.
There will be free adm ission to the museum, along
with a free bean lunch. peri od music. apple butter and
family fun.
For information , contacr
the Our House at 446-05R6 .

•

•
••

·'·....
•
••

·•

and water aerobics at the establ ished in 1997 fr9111 a
KoLmtry Re sort . camp- small ceram ics room whe(e
ground at 5:45p.m.
a handful of people exerPOM EROY - As a part
On Wednesday, there will cised on a few pieces of
Df .'\c:t i' " A~u1~ w~ck. another group walk along equipment. has grown to
num c nJ u ~ acti\~itie~~ will be the riverside path beginning large nu mbers of people
tak ing p l ac~ this week at the at 9 a.m. That "Cill be fol - making 6,642 visits and
Meig s Well ness Center.
lowed by a comhole tourna- exercising tota L hours of
"Tile \ wi ll bi: both on-site ment to take place· at the 7 J65 in 2007 .
and ot'f. ,ite." 'a id Brya n Senior Center. at I p.m. The
That small room where
HolTman . director of the day will conclude with ce ram ics were made has
c cnt~r. '' hich i ~ a program
20120/20 (20 minutes of been expanded twice. the
o ffer~d
by the Meigs flexibility training, 20 min- most recent into the conferCount y Counci l on Aging.
utes of stre ngt h training. ence room to acco mmodate
··To· encourage pal1iciPa- and 20 minutes of . cardio- new equipment. There arc
tio n this week at the vascular) at 5:30p.m .
tread mills, rec umbent bicyWellness Center. we are
Water aerobics in th e cles. e lliptical trai ners. rowsuspe ndin g al l fees for new . Kountry Resort pool will be . ing machines, airdyne bicyexerci sers ."
Ho lTman offered at 10 a.m. Thursday, cles. and a weight rodm
added.
with Pilates ·at tl1e center at with
dumbe!l s,
hand
Acti vities wi ll kick ofT 6 p.m. On Friday. the group weights·, uni versal weight
Mondav at &lt;J a.m . with will return to the . walking machines, and abdominal
group ' walk ing on the path at 9 a.m. The obser- machines. The wellness
Porner\&gt;y walking path vance of Active Aging cente.r is open to anyone. 40
along the Ohi·o River. Week . will conclude with or over.
Com'nnmity re,idents of any another session of water
Hoffman , an exercise
age are in vited to join the aerobics at 10 a.m. on phy siologist. operates the
· sen ior anti baby boomer Saturday.
center with an ass istant ,
group for the walk . At I , HolTman
encourages Lindsay Matson:
. ' p.m .. Tai Chi wi ll be. offered th ose over 40 to participate
In addition to the eq uipat the Meigs Senior Center. in Wellness Center pro- ment available at the center,
and at 6 p~11.. there wi ll be grams notin g that opera- off-site acti vities have been
•
yoga.
tional fund s come from implemented to provide
Tuesday's sched ule wi ll local levy dollars, program ve rsa_tility in
exerc ise
: begin at 9:30 a.m. with fees . and grants from the opportunities. There have
bocci ba ll . foll owed by Sisters of St. Jose ph been hiking trips, grou
PACE (People with Arthritis Charitable Fund.
walks at parks and . canoe
Ca n Exerc ise) at 10:30 a. m.
Its success since being outings

; : Dtar Annie: At XI. I
; :th(lu t: ht I had my I ifc pr~ ll )
, ·we ll undei· c:on trnl . but '"'w
.; :1 have a real pro blem. One
•:o r my high-school acqu ain ; 'hm cc~ achi L' ,;ed consH.l er: :abk :-. ucce .. :-. a" an actor.

; : You would prohabl y rccog•v :nizc hi s name.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH ,

BY JAMES HANNAH
AS SOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Stun g by job· losses in
manu fac turin g.
Ohio's
unemployment rate jumped
: to 7.4 percent in August , up
: from 7.2 percent the month
· before and the highest rate
in 16 years, the state reponed Friday.
More people are out of
work in businesses that
make cars, refrigerators,
furniture and other durable
goods. Employment in the
construction industry was
al.so down.
The figures released by
the Ohio Department of Jab
and Family Services show
that tlie number of unemployed workers in August
was 445,000, up from
432 .000 in Jul y. The number of unemployed· people
: ·has increased by 106,000 in
the past 12 months. · ·
"The big thing driving the
losses statewide has been
manufacturing." · said
George Zeller, a Clevelandbased eco nomic research
analyst. "lt. would certainl y
help if we get a recovery in
the auto industry."
The Aug ust unemployment rate is up from the 5.7
percent nite. a year earlier,
topped' the national rate of

6.1 percent , and matched
the Ohio's 7.4 rate in
October 1992.
" It's not good news, but it
is consistent with what
we've see n earlier. thi s
year," said Cory Eckel,
regional vice president for
Adecco, a staffing agency.
"We're hearing from our
clients that the automotive
industry is slowing everything down."
Eckel said Adecco's customers are still looking to
hire workers, but fewer of
them.
" All of the companies are
still looking for top talent,"
he said. "One of the things
an individual could do is
upgrade their skills." .
Ohio has had a string of
bad econoni ic news.
Gov. Ted Strickland has
.ordered $540 million in cuts
and other budget adjustments because of revenue
shortfalls he blames on the
nation.'s sluggish economy.
The adjustment .comes on
top of $733 million in
reductions annqunced in
January. The total amounts
to $1.27 billion, or 2.4 percent, of Ohio's two-year,
$52 billio'n budget.
The state is also facing the
possiQility of losing 10,000
additional jobs at an air park

cabs to park closer to the stadium than previously permitted to pick people up after the
game against Troy. The city
says only city-licensi:d cabs
will be allowed in the pickup
' .
area.
Police ·say cabs trying to

The Republican told the
Athens News she believes
Ph ill ips knew about the
campaign literature attacking her and maintains
Phillips should have prevented its distribution .
Ph ill ips said Thompson "s
use of paid sick leave and
her attendance at work as
Athens County auditor have
n ev~r been a ·campaign
issue. ln fact, elected county
of'fic ials do not accumulate
sick leave, and may be
·absent fro m work with very
few written restrictions.

From left. Veterans Funeral Detail and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local Chapter 709
member Henry Myers, Vietnam Veterans of Ame rica Local Chapter 709 Director Steven
Betz, Gallipolis City Commission ,President and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local
Chapter 709 member Jim Cozza, Gallipolis City Commission and Vietnam Veterans of
America, Local Chapter 709 member J on Lyncl), and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local
Chapter 709 Director Mike Plymale acknowledge National POW/MIA Recognition Day in
the Gallipolis City Park on Friday morning . Following the reading of a proclamation , Myers
an.d Lynch raised POW/M lA flag

Veterans from Page AI

"I don •t understand her.
reaction. She mighi not Ue
the content of it , but that
dqes not mean I had anything to do with it ," Phillips
said .
Phillips supported the .
Ohio Healthy Families Act ,
and said she feels the campaigli mailing is acc urate .
with respe\' t to Thompson's
position .
Thompson
opposed the ac t because.
she has said, it would have a
negative impact on businesses and the regional
economy.

We offer the
best prices
and protection

Celebration from Page AI
support of the Obama candidacy and included stops
at the Jackson County
Apple Festival and a birth day
celebration
for
Strickland
111
Scioto
County. The Emancipation
celebration was not on the
tour 's itin~rary announced
late last week .
'·
Emancipatism did attract
a national speaker in 1998
when the · Rev. Jesse
Jack son made a stop to
voice suppo rt for voter
reg istration .

s ;~n

ind~p.cndc:nr

competi(ivt price.s. We.represent

only'the fintst Ill--'"'
in.~ur:lnce

companie~.

including
· Auto-Own er~

ln.,urancc
CPmpany,
which h&lt;l.~ truly t.uncd the

Pcoplefi A~k u~ ahonr rhe

·m;tny oth er . i d\'il.flt;&amp;!!c:s of doing
bus l ne~s

and all the Moore
family for purchasing

,111

independent

:~getH:y.

.;md our only income is
; ,Soc:ial Security. By .very
: care ful budgeting. we've
. :managed to stay afloat.
'How can we possibly host
these people in a way' that

114 Court
Pomeroy
992-6677

Rio Hopefuls

n ot e m harra ~ s

Monday, Sept. 22
RACINE
- Southern
ha rd to iinpress him. neither i.sh her con versation . If that
of yo u " ill have a good means parking the car.'do it . Local ·School Board. regular meeting, 8 p.m., high
lime. You mi l.!lli !.!ivc hi m a
D~ar Annie: Your answe r
school
media room.
brid al ert : "We're thrilled to It, "Driving Me Cruzy" wa·s
RUTLAND - Specia l
hcn e ) c•u . Cary. but I hope · oil the mark. The woman has
meeting
of board of
yo u' re not !.!xpectin g any- nosy in-Jaws who read her
l.,cading
Creek
thin g fanc v. The accommo- · calendar und check her mail.
Conservancy
Di
strict.
for
dati&lt;) ns arC 4ui tc modest.··
·· Dri ving" t.m ght to keep -a sales presentation. 5 p.m.
Otherwise . please treat them date book just for them and
as you II OUid &lt;Ill) uther write in fa ke appointments Regular board meeting re scheduled for 5 p .111 .
~ u e ~b . If vour m ~a l s won ' t
like "meet crack dealer" and Wednesday.
'
stretch far enough. perh aps .... mother-in-la w's brak e
- Meigs
. POMEROY
,you can a rran g ~: to ~ plit
lirics."
She
cmild
also
keep
County
Emergency
some hostin g duties with
other ho111clo wn friend s, her rnail envelopes and use Planning Committee regu whtch \v iii not only give you them to hold notes for the · lar mee ting. I I :30 a.m ..
sotne rei i,· r. but allow your snoops to find . like. " If you senior citizen s bu ild ing.
POMEROY
- Meig s
guc..,t:-, to ~ njuy a c han g~ of can rc&lt;td lhi s note you are
trespassing.
Now
beat
it."
C0 unt y Distri ct Pub! ic
~c e n ei·y. Ha vl.:' fun.
Library. regular board
You
ge
t
the
ide&lt;t.
My
perDear Annie: I have a
meeting ,
3:30
p.m ..
soncrl
favorite
wou
ld
be.
wonder ful fri end who ha'
Pomeroy
Library.
become a compkte ce ll '" Remember to buy poison
Thursday, Sepl. 25
phone addict. Last wee~ I IO· kill the in-laws." It may
SYRACUSE
- Meigs
ga ve l1er a riJt: to the air- not be so much fu n to snoop
MR /DD
Countv
Board
of
port . which I was happy to after a few such notes are
do. but it was d early a found. Brandon in regu lai· meeting. '4 :30p.m ..
Carleton School.
favor. All the wny there:shc Canada
ignored me and yakked on
Dear Brandon: Nor
·her cell phone to her·grown would· it he muc h run if the
.c !Jilctrcn.
in -Jaw' called the police ,
I was insulted. but figured and th ey seem like the type.
if I com plained. I woulcl Your idea f&lt;rll s under the
Thcsday, Sepl. 23
appear jealllt rs of her rela- . category of "wish(iJ I thinkCHESTER
Past
tionship wi th her ki ds, of ing" and is a lillie impractiwhich she is quite proud . cl\1. But we apprec iate the · Co un ci lors Club . 7:30
p.m.at the hall.
Don ' t cel l phone. add icts laugh.
Thursday, Sepl. 25
realize they make the peoA1111ie'.~ Mailbox is writPOMEROY
- Meigs
ple they arc with fee l like a
len
by
1\atily
Mitchell
and
Co unty Retired · teachers.
Jime w.: titing on a dollar?
What can I do'! - ·Cell Free Marcy Sugar. longtime edi- ·noon at Trini ty Church in
Dear Cell' Free: People tor.~ 'of tile Amr Landers Pomeroy. Speaker. Andrew
who · arc overly attached to column. Please e-mail your Tinkham of the Ohio
Cou nsel.
thei r phones d,, not realize que.,liOtrs to amriesmail- Cons umers·
.
box@comcast
.net,
or
write
Musical
program
too. Call
ho w rude they arc. and in
to:
·
Annie's
Mailbox,
P.O.
992 -32 14 for lunch re serthis in stance. your fr iend
may have been showing off Box 118/90, Chicago, IL vations by Tuesday. Guests
a hit. You can te ll her that it 60611. To find out nr.ore w e l c o m e
bothers you to be deliber- about An.n ie's Mailbox,
ately ignored and hope she and read features by other
will shape up. Or. you can Creators Syndicate writ.ers
simply ., top whatever yo u and cartoon.ist.•, visit the
are doing and poi ntedly but Creators Syndicate Web
THANK 'YOU
politely wait for her to fin - page at www.creators.com .

the m

(&lt;llld us)'! - Panick ed in
New England
. Ucar Panicked: If your
. fri end wan ted rou r-slar
accom r11odations. he wou ld
have l,o,&gt;kecl the Ritt.. He·~
looking to spend time wi th

Church events

an old fr iend in rda x.ing su r-

roundings. If yo u try too

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

Gallia County calendar

Sunday, Sepl. 21
RACINE
Homecoming . Mt. Mo riah
Church of God , Mile Hill
Road. Raci ne. Dinne r at
noon . Builders Quartet at I
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - The
New Southern Harmony. 7
Vict ory
Baptist
p.m..
Church. 525 North Second ,
Middl eport. 992-7111 .
MIDDL EPORT

'

SERVING YOU FOR OVER 60

Support groups

GALLIPOLIS -c- Grievin~
Parents Suppor1 Group meet~
Sunday, Sept. 21
7 p.m. second Monday or
GALLIPOLIS - Annual each month at Holzer Medical
Pete and Marjie Parsons Center. People attending
family reunion at 0 .0 . should meet in the general
Mcintyre Park She lterhou sc lobby. Fnr information . call
2 (GroLrsc ). Polt.uc k meal Jackie Keatlcv at 446-2700 or
~ start s at noon.
.
Nancy Child; at 446-544ti.
Monday, Sepl. 22
ATH EI\:S - Surv iya J or
' · GA LI.IPOI.IS - Knidus Suicide su pport group
- ·or Col umbus will holcl a 111cets 7 p.m .. . fo urth
dinner meeting. f1:30 p.m.. Thursday or each month at
at the Courhide Bar &amp; Grill. At hens Church ol' Clmst.
:108 Second Ave. Al l mem- 7H5 W. Union St .. Athens.
bers u'r e urged lo attend.
For in fo nnatinn·. ca ll 593 Tuesday, Sept. 2J
7414 .
EW INGTON
GA LLI POLIS - Look
Ame ric&lt;tn Legiop Post 16 1 Good Feel Beller cancer
monthl y meeting. 7:30p.m ., progr:rm . th ird Monday of
Ewington i\cndemy . All tile month at 6 p.m .. Hol zer
memhers ~ne url..!ed to Ce111er r&lt;l r Cancer Care.
atte nJ . Snacks will follow.
RIO GRANDE - Open
Gate Garden Cl1.1h wil l
'
:;:meet. 6 p.m .. at the Wild
DAYTON - Mrs . Jeff
: Horse (afc in Pomeroy for
tLori)
Leming is battling
•.:dinner and instJ!Iation of
•..;:ot'f'1ccrs .
cancer and would apprecinte card ~ of encou rai!cmcnt.
:
Saturday, Sept. 27
.:: . PATRIOT - Hog roast at espec ial ly fro m cancer " lr··.:Patriot Masonic Lodge. 5 to vivors and those with ca ncer. Curds can be sent to her
·:.:·7 p.m . All welcom e.~
at. 3157 Benl:hwood Road,
:•
Tuesday; Oct. 7
,; GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Dayton. Ohio 45414.
E-mail corr1munity cqlen~;Clinic Ketirces will meet for
dar
items to kke/ly@mydai::·.lunch at the Holiday Inn.
lytribu
ne .com.
Fax
:: :)10011 .·

'

2008

ye•11·s . Ent er an arti cle of
choice. Roger Watson . pastor.
POM EROY
Th e
Hemlock Grow Chri stian
Church. communit y/church
picnic. 12 :30 p.m: at the
home of Jack and Paula
Welker. 42772 Cook Road.
Pomewy. RSVP for food.
992- 72'11 . before Sept. 18.
Church service s Sunday
lJ :30 a.m. with Pastor Larry
Brown . Sund&lt;r y sc hoo l.
10:30 a.m .

' HomeL· oming at Hohson

Chri stian
- Fel low ship
Chu rch , I p.m. Dinner at
noon . Music lw Marshall
Bonecutter Far :ily.
T UPPERS PLAINS St. Paul Un ited Methodi st
Chu rch . " Blessing of the
Child ren." 10 a.m. In volves
all children . who attended
summer vacation Bible
schoo l. The ir parents.
grandparents and frie nd s
invited . Youth program .
LONG BOTTOM
Hazel Comm un ity Chut:ch
homecom in g. with Edsel
Hart speaking. Singe r
Shirl,e y Kay. Sunday sc
HARTFORD , W.Va .
Biker .Su nd ay . at the
Penteco stal
Lighthouse.
Regi stration. 9 a.m. wit h
coffee and donut s . Bike
jud gin g, trophies to be
awarded . Door prizes.
Refreshments . For more
information. call Pastor
Randy Parsons. 304-896364 1. home; or 304-8822443, cl)urch.
POMEROY
Zion
Church of Chri st. Ohio
143. homecoming wit h .
theme "Zion , United in
Love ." Program 10- 11: 30
a.m.. pot lu ck lunch at
noon. meat provided. A
time capsule will be prepared to be opened in I0

Reunions
Sunday. Sepl. 21
RACINE
- Gideon
Roush Reun ion. I p.m ..
Star Mill Park . bring cov ered dish .

Other events
Thursday, Sept. 25
RACINE
- Sou thern
Loca l Sc hool Distri ct's
Fi tness Center. open house.
-+-7 p.m.. Sc!ulhern High
Sc:hool. fre e health scr~ e n ­
Jng s.

Birthdays
Wednesday. Sept. 24
LONG BOTTOM
Ralph . Ballard wi ll ce lebrate his H5t h bi rthday on
Sept. 24. Cards ma y be. sent
to ·him HI .14665 B&lt;rshun
Road. Long Bottom. Ohio
45743 .

King Ace Hardware
for buying my
2008

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a/lnOIIIICemellt.~ to 4463008. Mail items to 815
Tlrird Ave., Gallipolis, 0/rio
4.5631. Announcements
may also be dropped off at
tire Tribune office.

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wi rh

imwf&lt;II\Ce

In Memory
of
jay Moore ·

· wnttld love to ha ve them .
The ~ulf between our sitLI&lt;tt ions' i., last. He's llmg
retired and ·wcl l-ro-do and
soda li 1.es wi th celeb'rit ies.
We Ji ve in a two-bedroom

will ·

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

of course . we

Community
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McCoy-Moore
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Sunday, September 21,

Rabbits

agency, we can tailor

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THANK YOU

Market Steer

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for you.

rcpUiarion .l.~ The "!\io ()robkm"

my2008

: mi sreprcscmcd my lifestyle .
" hut neither lw ve I ewr had
~,. any n.:w~on to .hring it up. so
•: my fri end knows noth ing
: :about our c ircllm ~tanc e~.
• After all these y ~a ~' · he and
.his wife wil l he IXI&gt;S ing
· .t hrough ou r tuwn un the ir
' .. \\ ,W IO· a \'aca ti on abroad .
: He . .writes that thcv wo uld
, ' love to spend a few days
·with us in the old homc-

hou ~c . We have no sav i ng:-. .

ident of Annin &amp; Co., to country, and of those ser- killed in the Vietnam War
represent our missing sol- vice personnel and civilians ha ve been returned and
diers.
still missing and unaccount- identi fied. though 1.757
According to the procla- ed for from the Vietnam American s still remain
mation read by Cozza, a · War.
The
National missi n!! in Southeast Asia.
national com memoration POW/MIA Flag is .flown as
On u local level, Albert
has been held yearly since a symbol of our nation 's ' Eugene Lee of Gallipolis
1979 to honor America's concern and commitment to served in the U.S. Navy
pri soners of war and those resolving as fully as poss i ~ during Vietnam and is listed
mi ssi ng in action. ·
ble the fates of Americans as killed in ac tion and body
ln. observing POW/MIA still prisoner, missing , and not recovered.
Recognition Day, citi zens un acco unted · for
in
are reminded of those Southeast Asia.
Americuns who have sacriSince 1973. the remains
fi ced so much .for their of more than 700 Americans

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pick up passengers in the past
have tied up traffic and made
it harder to limit post-game
congestion.
Police say if the experiment
is successful they ' ll consider
it for future home games.

Mailing from Page AI
tion of campaig n law if she ·
were to contact the group
about it, either before it was
printed and mailed or now.
Phillips had been work mg
door-to-door in Pomeroy
prior to the opening eelebra- ·
tion .
and
told
the
Democratic leaders she had
seen and discussed a letter
to the ed itor of The Daily
Sentinel printed that day.
The letter attacked Phillips
for the mailing and , erronemrsly, blamed the Ph!Jiips
campaign for its content and
distribution.

- .snn:d m;r tkr..-. ... r ve never

in Wilmington and an auto
plant in the Dayton area.
DHL plans to hire United Adrienne Freeman o f
Parcel Service to replace Columbus, followed by
ABX Air and ASTAR Air presentation
of
Cargo in transporting DHL Emanc ipatio n
scholarpackages . The proposal ships and an address by
. would mean much of the
State Sen. Eric Kearney of
work normally handled at Cincinnati.
who will. be
Wilmington Air Park would introduced 'by State Rep .
be transferred to a UPS
facility in Louisville , Ky .. at C lyde Evans of Rio
Grande.
a cost of 8,000 jobs.
Report s that Democratic
And General Motors
candidate
Cor:p. plansto close its SUV preside nti al
Obama
would
Burack
plant rn the Dayton suburb
at
Emancipation
on
appear
of Moraine by 20 I0 or
sooner because customers Saturday pro ved to be
are shifting to smaller vehi- false, as the nation 's first
cles. The factory currently African American nomiemploys abol)t 2,000 work- nated on a major party
ers. Half of those jobs will ticket for the White Hou se
be gone at the end of next spe nt Saturday campaignweek when the automaker' ing in Michigan.
A to ur of southern Ohio
eliminates the second prowas
held Saturday by Gov.
duction shift.
Lawmakers
Friday Ted St rickland and U.S.
announced a $187.500 fed- · Sen. Sherrod Brown in
eral gra nt to develop an economic-recovery strategy for.
'(HANK YOU
Moraine ,' and a $ 150 ,000
grant to hire a coordinator King Ace Hardware
.to develop a similar plan for
for buying my
Wilmington and the , surrounding area.
2008
U.S. Rep . .Mike Turner.
Rabbits
R-Ohio, said both sites have
assets with economic value ·
that could attract future
businesses.
Megan
'
Dyer

Police hail cab plan
as way to ease congestion
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
city hopes. an . experiment
allowing cabs into a previously' off-1imits area of Columbus
will help ease traffic congestion after Saturday's Ohio
State game.
Columbus police will allow

· events as op pos'Cd to per-

Elizabeth RlgeVphoto

WN

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"' · Ove r thl' ye ar~. we have
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· :;. dw av.. di ~c u ... -. irH.! idea;; m1t1

HOEFLICH &lt;I MYDAil \'SENTINEL.OOM

Ohio jobless rate up again in August

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

Meigs County calendar .

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PageA2

NAL

Sunday, September 21,

•
•

Local Briefs
Benefit dinner
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s Shrine Club will
host a spag hetti dinner on
Sat urd ay. Sept. 27 at 6:30
· p.m. for the be nefit of
Shriners
hospitals for
burn ed a11d hand ictipped
d 1ild re n.

Admission
is
$10 .
Entertainment will be by the
River City Players .

Founder's Day
scheduled
GALLIPOLIS
Founder's Dav will be
observed at the· Our House

Museum , 432 First Ave ., on
Saturday. Sept. 27 from II
a.m. unti l 2 p.m.
There will be free adm ission to the museum, along
with a free bean lunch. peri od music. apple butter and
family fun.
For information , contacr
the Our House at 446-05R6 .

•

•
••

·'·....
•
••

·•

and water aerobics at the establ ished in 1997 fr9111 a
KoLmtry Re sort . camp- small ceram ics room whe(e
ground at 5:45p.m.
a handful of people exerPOM EROY - As a part
On Wednesday, there will cised on a few pieces of
Df .'\c:t i' " A~u1~ w~ck. another group walk along equipment. has grown to
num c nJ u ~ acti\~itie~~ will be the riverside path beginning large nu mbers of people
tak ing p l ac~ this week at the at 9 a.m. That "Cill be fol - making 6,642 visits and
Meig s Well ness Center.
lowed by a comhole tourna- exercising tota L hours of
"Tile \ wi ll bi: both on-site ment to take place· at the 7 J65 in 2007 .
and ot'f. ,ite." 'a id Brya n Senior Center. at I p.m. The
That small room where
HolTman . director of the day will conclude with ce ram ics were made has
c cnt~r. '' hich i ~ a program
20120/20 (20 minutes of been expanded twice. the
o ffer~d
by the Meigs flexibility training, 20 min- most recent into the conferCount y Counci l on Aging.
utes of stre ngt h training. ence room to acco mmodate
··To· encourage pal1iciPa- and 20 minutes of . cardio- new equipment. There arc
tio n this week at the vascular) at 5:30p.m .
tread mills, rec umbent bicyWellness Center. we are
Water aerobics in th e cles. e lliptical trai ners. rowsuspe ndin g al l fees for new . Kountry Resort pool will be . ing machines, airdyne bicyexerci sers ."
Ho lTman offered at 10 a.m. Thursday, cles. and a weight rodm
added.
with Pilates ·at tl1e center at with
dumbe!l s,
hand
Acti vities wi ll kick ofT 6 p.m. On Friday. the group weights·, uni versal weight
Mondav at &lt;J a.m . with will return to the . walking machines, and abdominal
group ' walk ing on the path at 9 a.m. The obser- machines. The wellness
Porner\&gt;y walking path vance of Active Aging cente.r is open to anyone. 40
along the Ohi·o River. Week . will conclude with or over.
Com'nnmity re,idents of any another session of water
Hoffman , an exercise
age are in vited to join the aerobics at 10 a.m. on phy siologist. operates the
· sen ior anti baby boomer Saturday.
center with an ass istant ,
group for the walk . At I , HolTman
encourages Lindsay Matson:
. ' p.m .. Tai Chi wi ll be. offered th ose over 40 to participate
In addition to the eq uipat the Meigs Senior Center. in Wellness Center pro- ment available at the center,
and at 6 p~11.. there wi ll be grams notin g that opera- off-site acti vities have been
•
yoga.
tional fund s come from implemented to provide
Tuesday's sched ule wi ll local levy dollars, program ve rsa_tility in
exerc ise
: begin at 9:30 a.m. with fees . and grants from the opportunities. There have
bocci ba ll . foll owed by Sisters of St. Jose ph been hiking trips, grou
PACE (People with Arthritis Charitable Fund.
walks at parks and . canoe
Ca n Exerc ise) at 10:30 a. m.
Its success since being outings

; : Dtar Annie: At XI. I
; :th(lu t: ht I had my I ifc pr~ ll )
, ·we ll undei· c:on trnl . but '"'w
.; :1 have a real pro blem. One
•:o r my high-school acqu ain ; 'hm cc~ achi L' ,;ed consH.l er: :abk :-. ucce .. :-. a" an actor.

; : You would prohabl y rccog•v :nizc hi s name.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH ,

BY JAMES HANNAH
AS SOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Stun g by job· losses in
manu fac turin g.
Ohio's
unemployment rate jumped
: to 7.4 percent in August , up
: from 7.2 percent the month
· before and the highest rate
in 16 years, the state reponed Friday.
More people are out of
work in businesses that
make cars, refrigerators,
furniture and other durable
goods. Employment in the
construction industry was
al.so down.
The figures released by
the Ohio Department of Jab
and Family Services show
that tlie number of unemployed workers in August
was 445,000, up from
432 .000 in Jul y. The number of unemployed· people
: ·has increased by 106,000 in
the past 12 months. · ·
"The big thing driving the
losses statewide has been
manufacturing." · said
George Zeller, a Clevelandbased eco nomic research
analyst. "lt. would certainl y
help if we get a recovery in
the auto industry."
The Aug ust unemployment rate is up from the 5.7
percent nite. a year earlier,
topped' the national rate of

6.1 percent , and matched
the Ohio's 7.4 rate in
October 1992.
" It's not good news, but it
is consistent with what
we've see n earlier. thi s
year," said Cory Eckel,
regional vice president for
Adecco, a staffing agency.
"We're hearing from our
clients that the automotive
industry is slowing everything down."
Eckel said Adecco's customers are still looking to
hire workers, but fewer of
them.
" All of the companies are
still looking for top talent,"
he said. "One of the things
an individual could do is
upgrade their skills." .
Ohio has had a string of
bad econoni ic news.
Gov. Ted Strickland has
.ordered $540 million in cuts
and other budget adjustments because of revenue
shortfalls he blames on the
nation.'s sluggish economy.
The adjustment .comes on
top of $733 million in
reductions annqunced in
January. The total amounts
to $1.27 billion, or 2.4 percent, of Ohio's two-year,
$52 billio'n budget.
The state is also facing the
possiQility of losing 10,000
additional jobs at an air park

cabs to park closer to the stadium than previously permitted to pick people up after the
game against Troy. The city
says only city-licensi:d cabs
will be allowed in the pickup
' .
area.
Police ·say cabs trying to

The Republican told the
Athens News she believes
Ph ill ips knew about the
campaign literature attacking her and maintains
Phillips should have prevented its distribution .
Ph ill ips said Thompson "s
use of paid sick leave and
her attendance at work as
Athens County auditor have
n ev~r been a ·campaign
issue. ln fact, elected county
of'fic ials do not accumulate
sick leave, and may be
·absent fro m work with very
few written restrictions.

From left. Veterans Funeral Detail and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local Chapter 709
member Henry Myers, Vietnam Veterans of Ame rica Local Chapter 709 Director Steven
Betz, Gallipolis City Commission ,President and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local
Chapter 709 member Jim Cozza, Gallipolis City Commission and Vietnam Veterans of
America, Local Chapter 709 member J on Lyncl), and Vietnam Veterans of America, Local
Chapter 709 Director Mike Plymale acknowledge National POW/MIA Recognition Day in
the Gallipolis City Park on Friday morning . Following the reading of a proclamation , Myers
an.d Lynch raised POW/M lA flag

Veterans from Page AI

"I don •t understand her.
reaction. She mighi not Ue
the content of it , but that
dqes not mean I had anything to do with it ," Phillips
said .
Phillips supported the .
Ohio Healthy Families Act ,
and said she feels the campaigli mailing is acc urate .
with respe\' t to Thompson's
position .
Thompson
opposed the ac t because.
she has said, it would have a
negative impact on businesses and the regional
economy.

We offer the
best prices
and protection

Celebration from Page AI
support of the Obama candidacy and included stops
at the Jackson County
Apple Festival and a birth day
celebration
for
Strickland
111
Scioto
County. The Emancipation
celebration was not on the
tour 's itin~rary announced
late last week .
'·
Emancipatism did attract
a national speaker in 1998
when the · Rev. Jesse
Jack son made a stop to
voice suppo rt for voter
reg istration .

s ;~n

ind~p.cndc:nr

competi(ivt price.s. We.represent

only'the fintst Ill--'"'
in.~ur:lnce

companie~.

including
· Auto-Own er~

ln.,urancc
CPmpany,
which h&lt;l.~ truly t.uncd the

Pcoplefi A~k u~ ahonr rhe

·m;tny oth er . i d\'il.flt;&amp;!!c:s of doing
bus l ne~s

and all the Moore
family for purchasing

,111

independent

:~getH:y.

.;md our only income is
; ,Soc:ial Security. By .very
: care ful budgeting. we've
. :managed to stay afloat.
'How can we possibly host
these people in a way' that

114 Court
Pomeroy
992-6677

Rio Hopefuls

n ot e m harra ~ s

Monday, Sept. 22
RACINE
- Southern
ha rd to iinpress him. neither i.sh her con versation . If that
of yo u " ill have a good means parking the car.'do it . Local ·School Board. regular meeting, 8 p.m., high
lime. You mi l.!lli !.!ivc hi m a
D~ar Annie: Your answe r
school
media room.
brid al ert : "We're thrilled to It, "Driving Me Cruzy" wa·s
RUTLAND - Specia l
hcn e ) c•u . Cary. but I hope · oil the mark. The woman has
meeting
of board of
yo u' re not !.!xpectin g any- nosy in-Jaws who read her
l.,cading
Creek
thin g fanc v. The accommo- · calendar und check her mail.
Conservancy
Di
strict.
for
dati&lt;) ns arC 4ui tc modest.··
·· Dri ving" t.m ght to keep -a sales presentation. 5 p.m.
Otherwise . please treat them date book just for them and
as you II OUid &lt;Ill) uther write in fa ke appointments Regular board meeting re scheduled for 5 p .111 .
~ u e ~b . If vour m ~a l s won ' t
like "meet crack dealer" and Wednesday.
'
stretch far enough. perh aps .... mother-in-la w's brak e
- Meigs
. POMEROY
,you can a rran g ~: to ~ plit
lirics."
She
cmild
also
keep
County
Emergency
some hostin g duties with
other ho111clo wn friend s, her rnail envelopes and use Planning Committee regu whtch \v iii not only give you them to hold notes for the · lar mee ting. I I :30 a.m ..
sotne rei i,· r. but allow your snoops to find . like. " If you senior citizen s bu ild ing.
POMEROY
- Meig s
guc..,t:-, to ~ njuy a c han g~ of can rc&lt;td lhi s note you are
trespassing.
Now
beat
it."
C0 unt y Distri ct Pub! ic
~c e n ei·y. Ha vl.:' fun.
Library. regular board
You
ge
t
the
ide&lt;t.
My
perDear Annie: I have a
meeting ,
3:30
p.m ..
soncrl
favorite
wou
ld
be.
wonder ful fri end who ha'
Pomeroy
Library.
become a compkte ce ll '" Remember to buy poison
Thursday, Sepl. 25
phone addict. Last wee~ I IO· kill the in-laws." It may
SYRACUSE
- Meigs
ga ve l1er a riJt: to the air- not be so much fu n to snoop
MR /DD
Countv
Board
of
port . which I was happy to after a few such notes are
do. but it was d early a found. Brandon in regu lai· meeting. '4 :30p.m ..
Carleton School.
favor. All the wny there:shc Canada
ignored me and yakked on
Dear Brandon: Nor
·her cell phone to her·grown would· it he muc h run if the
.c !Jilctrcn.
in -Jaw' called the police ,
I was insulted. but figured and th ey seem like the type.
if I com plained. I woulcl Your idea f&lt;rll s under the
Thcsday, Sepl. 23
appear jealllt rs of her rela- . category of "wish(iJ I thinkCHESTER
Past
tionship wi th her ki ds, of ing" and is a lillie impractiwhich she is quite proud . cl\1. But we apprec iate the · Co un ci lors Club . 7:30
p.m.at the hall.
Don ' t cel l phone. add icts laugh.
Thursday, Sepl. 25
realize they make the peoA1111ie'.~ Mailbox is writPOMEROY
- Meigs
ple they arc with fee l like a
len
by
1\atily
Mitchell
and
Co unty Retired · teachers.
Jime w.: titing on a dollar?
What can I do'! - ·Cell Free Marcy Sugar. longtime edi- ·noon at Trini ty Church in
Dear Cell' Free: People tor.~ 'of tile Amr Landers Pomeroy. Speaker. Andrew
who · arc overly attached to column. Please e-mail your Tinkham of the Ohio
Cou nsel.
thei r phones d,, not realize que.,liOtrs to amriesmail- Cons umers·
.
box@comcast
.net,
or
write
Musical
program
too. Call
ho w rude they arc. and in
to:
·
Annie's
Mailbox,
P.O.
992 -32 14 for lunch re serthis in stance. your fr iend
may have been showing off Box 118/90, Chicago, IL vations by Tuesday. Guests
a hit. You can te ll her that it 60611. To find out nr.ore w e l c o m e
bothers you to be deliber- about An.n ie's Mailbox,
ately ignored and hope she and read features by other
will shape up. Or. you can Creators Syndicate writ.ers
simply ., top whatever yo u and cartoon.ist.•, visit the
are doing and poi ntedly but Creators Syndicate Web
THANK 'YOU
politely wait for her to fin - page at www.creators.com .

the m

(&lt;llld us)'! - Panick ed in
New England
. Ucar Panicked: If your
. fri end wan ted rou r-slar
accom r11odations. he wou ld
have l,o,&gt;kecl the Ritt.. He·~
looking to spend time wi th

Church events

an old fr iend in rda x.ing su r-

roundings. If yo u try too

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

Gallia County calendar

Sunday, Sepl. 21
RACINE
Homecoming . Mt. Mo riah
Church of God , Mile Hill
Road. Raci ne. Dinne r at
noon . Builders Quartet at I
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - The
New Southern Harmony. 7
Vict ory
Baptist
p.m..
Church. 525 North Second ,
Middl eport. 992-7111 .
MIDDL EPORT

'

SERVING YOU FOR OVER 60

Support groups

GALLIPOLIS -c- Grievin~
Parents Suppor1 Group meet~
Sunday, Sept. 21
7 p.m. second Monday or
GALLIPOLIS - Annual each month at Holzer Medical
Pete and Marjie Parsons Center. People attending
family reunion at 0 .0 . should meet in the general
Mcintyre Park She lterhou sc lobby. Fnr information . call
2 (GroLrsc ). Polt.uc k meal Jackie Keatlcv at 446-2700 or
~ start s at noon.
.
Nancy Child; at 446-544ti.
Monday, Sepl. 22
ATH EI\:S - Surv iya J or
' · GA LI.IPOI.IS - Knidus Suicide su pport group
- ·or Col umbus will holcl a 111cets 7 p.m .. . fo urth
dinner meeting. f1:30 p.m.. Thursday or each month at
at the Courhide Bar &amp; Grill. At hens Church ol' Clmst.
:108 Second Ave. Al l mem- 7H5 W. Union St .. Athens.
bers u'r e urged lo attend.
For in fo nnatinn·. ca ll 593 Tuesday, Sept. 2J
7414 .
EW INGTON
GA LLI POLIS - Look
Ame ric&lt;tn Legiop Post 16 1 Good Feel Beller cancer
monthl y meeting. 7:30p.m ., progr:rm . th ird Monday of
Ewington i\cndemy . All tile month at 6 p.m .. Hol zer
memhers ~ne url..!ed to Ce111er r&lt;l r Cancer Care.
atte nJ . Snacks will follow.
RIO GRANDE - Open
Gate Garden Cl1.1h wil l
'
:;:meet. 6 p.m .. at the Wild
DAYTON - Mrs . Jeff
: Horse (afc in Pomeroy for
tLori)
Leming is battling
•.:dinner and instJ!Iation of
•..;:ot'f'1ccrs .
cancer and would apprecinte card ~ of encou rai!cmcnt.
:
Saturday, Sept. 27
.:: . PATRIOT - Hog roast at espec ial ly fro m cancer " lr··.:Patriot Masonic Lodge. 5 to vivors and those with ca ncer. Curds can be sent to her
·:.:·7 p.m . All welcom e.~
at. 3157 Benl:hwood Road,
:•
Tuesday; Oct. 7
,; GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Dayton. Ohio 45414.
E-mail corr1munity cqlen~;Clinic Ketirces will meet for
dar
items to kke/ly@mydai::·.lunch at the Holiday Inn.
lytribu
ne .com.
Fax
:: :)10011 .·

'

2008

ye•11·s . Ent er an arti cle of
choice. Roger Watson . pastor.
POM EROY
Th e
Hemlock Grow Chri stian
Church. communit y/church
picnic. 12 :30 p.m: at the
home of Jack and Paula
Welker. 42772 Cook Road.
Pomewy. RSVP for food.
992- 72'11 . before Sept. 18.
Church service s Sunday
lJ :30 a.m. with Pastor Larry
Brown . Sund&lt;r y sc hoo l.
10:30 a.m .

' HomeL· oming at Hohson

Chri stian
- Fel low ship
Chu rch , I p.m. Dinner at
noon . Music lw Marshall
Bonecutter Far :ily.
T UPPERS PLAINS St. Paul Un ited Methodi st
Chu rch . " Blessing of the
Child ren." 10 a.m. In volves
all children . who attended
summer vacation Bible
schoo l. The ir parents.
grandparents and frie nd s
invited . Youth program .
LONG BOTTOM
Hazel Comm un ity Chut:ch
homecom in g. with Edsel
Hart speaking. Singe r
Shirl,e y Kay. Sunday sc
HARTFORD , W.Va .
Biker .Su nd ay . at the
Penteco stal
Lighthouse.
Regi stration. 9 a.m. wit h
coffee and donut s . Bike
jud gin g, trophies to be
awarded . Door prizes.
Refreshments . For more
information. call Pastor
Randy Parsons. 304-896364 1. home; or 304-8822443, cl)urch.
POMEROY
Zion
Church of Chri st. Ohio
143. homecoming wit h .
theme "Zion , United in
Love ." Program 10- 11: 30
a.m.. pot lu ck lunch at
noon. meat provided. A
time capsule will be prepared to be opened in I0

Reunions
Sunday. Sepl. 21
RACINE
- Gideon
Roush Reun ion. I p.m ..
Star Mill Park . bring cov ered dish .

Other events
Thursday, Sept. 25
RACINE
- Sou thern
Loca l Sc hool Distri ct's
Fi tness Center. open house.
-+-7 p.m.. Sc!ulhern High
Sc:hool. fre e health scr~ e n ­
Jng s.

Birthdays
Wednesday. Sept. 24
LONG BOTTOM
Ralph . Ballard wi ll ce lebrate his H5t h bi rthday on
Sept. 24. Cards ma y be. sent
to ·him HI .14665 B&lt;rshun
Road. Long Bottom. Ohio
45743 .

King Ace Hardware
for buying my
2008

• FREE 2•11 TecMieal Suppor1
• ,l n~ lan! ~ es,agrrog · keep your buddy hsl'
• 10 &amp;-marl addresses l'lrth We brnarll
• Custom Stan Page ·. ne~ s . weather a morpr

a/lnOIIIICemellt.~ to 4463008. Mail items to 815
Tlrird Ave., Gallipolis, 0/rio
4.5631. Announcements
may also be dropped off at
tire Tribune office.

~~

( Surf up 1o 6X faster!.J
,r ,~ r•J mo,m

Sign Up Online ! www.LoeaiNet.com

~~

Megan
Dyer

Loco/Net.

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Courtney Parsons

Redneck 4-H Club

wi rh

imwf&lt;II\Ce

In Memory
of
jay Moore ·

· wnttld love to ha ve them .
The ~ulf between our sitLI&lt;tt ions' i., last. He's llmg
retired and ·wcl l-ro-do and
soda li 1.es wi th celeb'rit ies.
We Ji ve in a two-bedroom

will ·

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

of course . we

Community
events

the: best insurance prmecrion at

McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home.

~IIH..l

Sunday, September 21,

Rabbits

agency, we can tailor

•

THANK YOU

Market Steer

' town .

for you.

rcpUiarion .l.~ The "!\io ()robkm"

my2008

: mi sreprcscmcd my lifestyle .
" hut neither lw ve I ewr had
~,. any n.:w~on to .hring it up. so
•: my fri end knows noth ing
: :about our c ircllm ~tanc e~.
• After all these y ~a ~' · he and
.his wife wil l he IXI&gt;S ing
· .t hrough ou r tuwn un the ir
' .. \\ ,W IO· a \'aca ti on abroad .
: He . .writes that thcv wo uld
, ' love to spend a few days
·with us in the old homc-

hou ~c . We have no sav i ng:-. .

ident of Annin &amp; Co., to country, and of those ser- killed in the Vietnam War
represent our missing sol- vice personnel and civilians ha ve been returned and
diers.
still missing and unaccount- identi fied. though 1.757
According to the procla- ed for from the Vietnam American s still remain
mation read by Cozza, a · War.
The
National missi n!! in Southeast Asia.
national com memoration POW/MIA Flag is .flown as
On u local level, Albert
has been held yearly since a symbol of our nation 's ' Eugene Lee of Gallipolis
1979 to honor America's concern and commitment to served in the U.S. Navy
pri soners of war and those resolving as fully as poss i ~ during Vietnam and is listed
mi ssi ng in action. ·
ble the fates of Americans as killed in ac tion and body
ln. observing POW/MIA still prisoner, missing , and not recovered.
Recognition Day, citi zens un acco unted · for
in
are reminded of those Southeast Asia.
Americuns who have sacriSince 1973. the remains
fi ced so much .for their of more than 700 Americans

Which could lead
to a greater return.

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pick up passengers in the past
have tied up traffic and made
it harder to limit post-game
congestion.
Police say if the experiment
is successful they ' ll consider
it for future home games.

Mailing from Page AI
tion of campaig n law if she ·
were to contact the group
about it, either before it was
printed and mailed or now.
Phillips had been work mg
door-to-door in Pomeroy
prior to the opening eelebra- ·
tion .
and
told
the
Democratic leaders she had
seen and discussed a letter
to the ed itor of The Daily
Sentinel printed that day.
The letter attacked Phillips
for the mailing and , erronemrsly, blamed the Ph!Jiips
campaign for its content and
distribution.

- .snn:d m;r tkr..-. ... r ve never

in Wilmington and an auto
plant in the Dayton area.
DHL plans to hire United Adrienne Freeman o f
Parcel Service to replace Columbus, followed by
ABX Air and ASTAR Air presentation
of
Cargo in transporting DHL Emanc ipatio n
scholarpackages . The proposal ships and an address by
. would mean much of the
State Sen. Eric Kearney of
work normally handled at Cincinnati.
who will. be
Wilmington Air Park would introduced 'by State Rep .
be transferred to a UPS
facility in Louisville , Ky .. at C lyde Evans of Rio
Grande.
a cost of 8,000 jobs.
Report s that Democratic
And General Motors
candidate
Cor:p. plansto close its SUV preside nti al
Obama
would
Burack
plant rn the Dayton suburb
at
Emancipation
on
appear
of Moraine by 20 I0 or
sooner because customers Saturday pro ved to be
are shifting to smaller vehi- false, as the nation 's first
cles. The factory currently African American nomiemploys abol)t 2,000 work- nated on a major party
ers. Half of those jobs will ticket for the White Hou se
be gone at the end of next spe nt Saturday campaignweek when the automaker' ing in Michigan.
A to ur of southern Ohio
eliminates the second prowas
held Saturday by Gov.
duction shift.
Lawmakers
Friday Ted St rickland and U.S.
announced a $187.500 fed- · Sen. Sherrod Brown in
eral gra nt to develop an economic-recovery strategy for.
'(HANK YOU
Moraine ,' and a $ 150 ,000
grant to hire a coordinator King Ace Hardware
.to develop a similar plan for
for buying my
Wilmington and the , surrounding area.
2008
U.S. Rep . .Mike Turner.
Rabbits
R-Ohio, said both sites have
assets with economic value ·
that could attract future
businesses.
Megan
'
Dyer

Police hail cab plan
as way to ease congestion
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
city hopes. an . experiment
allowing cabs into a previously' off-1imits area of Columbus
will help ease traffic congestion after Saturday's Ohio
State game.
Columbus police will allow

· events as op pos'Cd to per-

Elizabeth RlgeVphoto

WN

-

"' · Ove r thl' ye ar~. we have
: been in O(.'(.:a.. ional c onUrl'l .
· :;. dw av.. di ~c u ... -. irH.! idea;; m1t1

HOEFLICH &lt;I MYDAil \'SENTINEL.OOM

Ohio jobless rate up again in August

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

Meigs County calendar .

No need to put on airs

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2008

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�OPINION

,.iunbap It mel -6entinti

-

..&amp;unba~ ~I met: -i&gt;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
&lt;:;on troller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letters to the editor·w·e welcome. Thev should be less
than 3()() words. All/etters are .wbjert tv editing and must
be signed and includt' (Jddrt'.B' and teh•plume numher. Nu

unsigned letters will be published. Letrers should be in
addressin~ (nues, 1101 per.wnalities.

gaOl! taste,

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

.

. Today in History
By The Associated Press
. Today is Sunday, Sept. 21, the 265th day of 2(KJ8. There
are I0 I days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 21, 1938 , a hurricane struck parts of New York
and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming som·e'700 lives.
·
·· On this date:
In 1792, the Fren~h National Convention vote(! to abo!.ish the monarchy.
·
. In 1897. the New York Sun ran its famous editori~l that
declared, "Yes, Virginia. there is a Santa Claus."
. In 1937, "The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien. was first published.
.. In 1948, Milton Berle made his debut as permanent host
of"The Texaco Star Theater" on NBC. TV.
. In 1957, Norway's King Haakon VII died in Oslo at age
:85.
In 1970 , "NR Monday Night Football" made its debut
on ABC-TV as the Cleveland
. Browns defeated the visiting
.
New York Jets , 31-21.
·
.
· In 1982, Amin Gemayel, brother of Lebanon's assassinated president-elect , Bashir Gemayel. was himself elected
·president.
.
.
· · In 1982, National Football League players began a 57day strike, their first regular:season walkout ever.
· In 1987, NFL players went on a 24-day strike. mainly
over the issue of free agency.
Ten years ago: President Clinton's videotaped grand jury
. testimony was publicly broadcast; in it, Clinton tussled
. with prosecutors over "the truth of Jny relationship" with
Monica Lewinsky. Olympic gold medal track star Florence
Griffith Joyner was found dead at her home in Mission
Viejo, Calif.; 5he was 38. Hurricane Georges roared
through Puerto Rico and tlie northeast Caribbean.
Five years ago: Former Citigroup CEO Juhn S. Reed waS
named ,temporary head of the New York Stock exchange.
J&gt;aul Martin was elected by Canada's Liberal Party to suc.ceed Jean Cl!retien as prime minister. NASA's aging
.Galileo spacecraft deliberately plunged into Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere, bringing a fiery conclusion to a 14-year
. ~xploration of the solar system's largest planet and its
moons .
" cine year ago: One student was mortally wounded, another injured, at Delaware State University. (A suspected gunman has been indicted on a second·degrec murder ch.arge.)
.the · Rev. Rex Humbard, whose televangelism ministry
·once spanned the globe, died in Atlantis, Fla., at age 88.
'rony Award-winning actress Alice Ghostley died in Los
Angeles at age 81.
·
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Karl Slover ("The Wizard of
·oz") is 90. Actor 'Larry Hagman is 77 .. Poet-songwriter
.Leonard Cohen is 74. Actor-comedian Henry Gibson is 73.
Author-comedian Fannie Flagg is 64. Author Stephen King
is 61. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer .is 61 . Musician Don
Felder (The Eagles) is 61. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is
58. Rock musician Philthy Animal is 54. Movie producerwriter Ethan Coen is 51.
Thought for Today: ''We believe at once in evil, we only
believe in good upon reflection. Is this not sad?" ;Madame
Dorothee Deluzy.
French actress ( 1747- 1830).
;
.

.

·--------~--------------------

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Sunday, September 21,

Sunday, s ·e ptember 21, 2008

6bituaries

Call a trna? in the mommy wats
Get a grip , ladies 1 Don't
allow Sarah Palin's candidacy to reheat the "mommy
wars·," to pit working
moms against those who
stay at home . Here's whill
we find distressing: One set
of women telling reporters
th ey passionately agree
with Palin's decision that
she can raise children aod
serve as vice president:
another, equally passionate
set of women. decreeing
that she's bound to give
short shrift to her family or
her job. or both . It 's time to
put this fight to rest.
"Is it sex ist for people to
ask how ca11 somebody man,
age a fiunily of seven a11d the
vice presidency?" Cokie 's
colleague at ABC News ..
Charlie Gibson. carefully
asked the Alaska • governor.
Her response: "That question is kind of irrelevant
because it 's accepted of
&lt;:Ourse (that) you can be the
vice president and you can
raise u ftui1ily." As long as
you're u man.

When hi s questio11 was
posted on the ABC Web
site, Gibson revealed. it
drew 15.000 . responses:
"'Every woman with young
children struggles with this
question. Should I. how
can I. will I be able to'!''
Palin said she understands
that. She also said she
stayed home with her first
child: "I had that choice
then. and I've had choices,
of course. along the way." ·

Let's talk about the chil- 90 percent of working
dren who go to bed hungry women claim primary
every night in the richest responsibility for child
nation on earth. Let's talk care. Women also do more
Cokie
about the children who are than their share in caring
and
denied a decent education for the elderly. Do we want
Steven
· because of rotten public to start asking female canRoberts
schools . Let's talk about didates if they can do the
the children who are job and take care. of their
shoved from foster home to mothe(s?
foster home. Let's talk
We don't mean to belittle
But. the candidate elabo: about the children who are some women's genuine
rated. not an women have incarcerated . Let's talk struggles. as Gibson put it.
those choices. and she's about the children who are with the question of
whether and how much to
certainly right about that. used as pawns in divorce.
Those children need our work: we're just trying to
Let us be clear on this: The
question of whether a attention and the attention put them . in perspective.
And to remind those
mother ' hould work out- of public policymakers side the home or not is one not the children of upper- · women who have choices
that can on ly be asked by income women who are that there's no right answer
upper-income
women. making the decision about here . There's only the
Most women work for. the whether to spend a few answer that works for you.
same reason most men do years . of their lives in the right now. It might . not
- because they have to:· paid workforce. But you'd work next year or even next
never know that listening week, and it certainly might
they have no other option.
A mother who once might to the argument swirling • not work for your sisters.
have collected welfare now around Sarah Palin.
And Jhat's the point
It's
an
argument
any
must go to work. The welfare
Every woman who has the
refom1 touted by the Clinton mother who has ever run opportunity gets to make
administration
required for office is familiar with. this choice for herself niothers to gd jobs, not only Palin's answer when chal- whether she's running for
to relieve society from the lenged about having a baby vice president of the PTA or
burden of su pporting them while serving as governor·: vice president of the United
but also because mothers ''I'll do it the same way the States. And eyery other
.bringing in paychecks were other govern&lt;lrs have done woman should respect that
deemed bei1eticial for the it when they've either had a choice, even if it's not the
children. You don't hear the baby in office or raised a one she would make. It's
battlers in the mommy w&lt;trS family. Granted , they're time for a permanent truce
tal~in g about how terrible it
men, but (I'll) do it the ·in the mommy wars ..
is for t11ose women to go to same way that they do it."
(Cokie Robem'latest book
work and leave their chi!- ·
But it's different for a is "'Ladies of Liberty: The
dren.
·
woman , shout back the · Women Who Shaped Our
If this country · wants to warriors: women are the Nation" (William Morrow,
have a serious conversation ones who take care of the 2008). Steve and Cokie
about who's taking ·care of' children. True enough ... Robens can be reached at
· the children , let's do it. Poll s show that upward of stevecokie@grtUlil.com .)

ToFiNDOUT
W~AT Ttil$ ALL MEANS,
L~T$ I URI-I IT OVER

To OUR Flf.IANCtAL.
ANA!.Y&gt;:T••.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

Alea Lynn Bailey

Charles W. Freeman

Alea Lynn Bailey went to heaven on Thursday. Sept.
18, 2008. at the Holzer Medical Center.
. Surviving are her parents. Taylor R. Nunn and Robert
Marqui s-Lamar Bailey. both ofGallipolis: maternal
grandparents, Ruby Cumpton and Brett Leach of Point
Pleasant. W.Va.; paternal grandmother, Kendra Stock len
of California: aunts. Kennedy Nunn of Gallipolis,
Kristin Gantt , Brittany Wells. Kendra Holland and
Marchell Holland . all of California; maternal greatgrandparents. Haze l (James ) Cox, Guy Ferguson , Kathy
Meadows. Steven Elwood Nunn, all of Gallipolis:
maternal great-great -gra ndmother, Marvie Brewer of
Gallipolis; and paternal great-great-grandmother, R.A .
Stock len of Tenne&gt;See.
She was preceded in deat h by maternal grandfath er.
Chad Nunn . and paternal great-grandmother. Marva
Stocklen.
.
.
.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Monday. Sept. 22.
2008, at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Arrangements
are by the Willis Fun eral Home.
Plea se visi t www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e·
mail condolences.

Charles W. Freeman. 65 , Austin. Ark ., formerly of
Scottown. died Wednesday. Sept. 17 . 2008 at St. Vincent
North Hospital. Sherwood. Ark.
He is survived by hi; wife. Maudie &amp;aggs Freeman.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in the Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville. with Elder Richard t\ pier officiating. Burial
will be in the Docks Creek Cemetery , Kenova, W.Va.
Visitation was held in the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Sat'urday.
·
Condolences may be expressed to the family at
www.timeformemory .com/ hall.

Norma E. Rutherford

4 killed in SC plane crash;
drummer, DJ injured

lster R. Mowrey Sr.
Isler Richard Mowrey Sr .. 81, Point Pleasant. W.Va., died
Saturday. Sept. 20. 2008. in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Services will be I p.m . Tuesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. Point Pleasant. Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens. Friend.~ 'ln\IY call at the funeral home from 7. to 9
p.m. Monday.

Bv

PAGE IVEY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

VVhen does Main Street America get bailed out?
watched President
George Bush address the
nation 's fear that the financial tsunami that flattened
Wall Sheet last week will
. drown us all . Seeking
Donna
e~planation, assurance and
Brazile
comfort. I listened intently
·that Thursday afternoon to
what should have been a
bolstering and informed
fireside chat by the presi- Wall Street . investment
dent. A little more than a firms ruined by rampant ·
minute later, because a few greed and criminal irredozen seconds is how long sponsibility. And what do
Bush deigned · to spend · the American people get?
with the American people. A one -minute brush-off
I resisted the urge to place from an administration
a panicked call to my thai turns its back on hardbanker. .
working Americans facing
At an absolutely crucial bankruptcy ami homelesspoint in the direction of ness for the sin of wanting
our . nation's economy, to provide a home for their
when it is of the utmost family and a small nest
importance that we believe egg for their retirement.
that tear is indeed the on! y
This economic crisis is
thing we need to tear. we the perfect storm of conseinstead get one minute of quences ·rrom Republican
empty reassurances.
laissez-fa ire
economic
Heaven help us.
policies. And the tens of ·
With the collapse of thousands of m:iddle -class
Lehman Brothers , the families drowning as a
fed 's $85 billion bailout or result of these failed poliAIG and the shotgun sale cics is not even registering
. of Merrill LytKh to Bank a blip on the GOP's•radar
of America. it's dear to screen. Someone needs to
everyone, both here .and wake them up and fast. ·
abroad, that the Amerkan - In July. Congress and the
economy is broken. It was Bush administration took a
the president's job to modest first .step in the
ass ure everyone that bro- right direction by passing
ken does not mean busted. the Housing and Economic
In this , he fail ed.
Recovery Act , which
. If you're looking for a encourages lenders to vo) :
job right now, wear com- untarily refinance mortfortable shoes while stand- gages through the Federal
ing in line because you're Housing Administration.
goi ng .to . need them . If Proponents of the new law
you're looking at foredo- claim it will allow middlesure of the family home , class homeowners to get
schedule a mo ving van back on thei r feet. Experts,
now because there·, a however, openly question
nationwide demand for whether it offers enough
them by other good people help to enough people to
in your situation . But if make a difference.
you're looking for a. way
Record numbers of
out of thi s financ ial mess. home fnreclo,urcs ha ve
call a counse lor. This will rattled our economy for at
take longer than you know. least the past 12 months.
Uncle Sam is 4uick to providing the mortgage
offer a helping hand to industry with more than

..

enough time to voluntarily
clean up the mess it created. Yet the industry, freed
from regulations it ·so
obviously needed, did
nothing. Meanwhile, mortgage-industry experts predict 6.5 million more
homes will go into foreclosure over the next five
years. Translation: 6.5 million families in America
have every right to be terrified.
It is long past time for
Wakhington to show the
American people the same
fast response and financial
support it showed Wall
Street firms like Bear
Stearns and AIG. The fol lowing steps ·need to be
taken immediately. ·
First, pass legislation
introduced by Rep . Doris
Mat ~ ui ,
D-Calif. , that
would freeze foreclosures
on existing mortgages for
at least nine months. Like
a patient about to go into
surgery, the housing market needs to be conned ·
before we tackle systemic
long-term solutions.
Second, ban abusive
lending practices, starting
with the kickbacks for brokers who swindled families into buying overpriced
mortgages.
Third. let . bankruptcy
judges modify overpri'ced
home loans and return
them to market value.
Fourth ,' use the federal
lakeover of Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac to ·lower
mortgage s to affordable
leve ls. And yes, make
these loans to people who
can afford them and stop
the predatory lenders.
The economic experts in
our government tell us that
this financial crisis can be
solved only if we save the
banks. the lenders and the
investment firms. They,
claim that ''ordinary people" will automatically get
the help , they need after

corporate failures are cor·
rected.
These are the same
idiots who wanted to privatize Social Security.
The recent one-day 500"
point drop in the Dow is
proof that entrusting our
retirement savings to the
whims of the stock market
was a ridiculous idea.
Just a few years ago, the
Republicans in Congress
were willing to. follow
President George Bush's
lead in privatizing Social
Security. They thought it
would be a great idea to
risk middle-class families'
retirements in the stock
market.
Republicans
called on Congress to get .
out of the way and let the
market create wealth for us
all. It was clear that Wall
Street would benefit , and
the needs of Main Street
America would not enter
into the equation.
What breaks my heart is
that too many of our fellow citizens are being· left
behind to fend for themselves. This is . a tragic
moment for our country,
and it's time we stop pretending that 'it's just the
politicians' fault. Yes, they
made a mess out of things,
but this current mess is
also happening on our
watch.
Washington would do
well to realize that Main
Street America . needs the
·help a lot more than Wall
Street. Maybe'.it's time to
reassure the country that
someone is looking out for
us all.
(Donna Brazile is a
political commentator on
CNN, ABC and.NPR; contributing columnist ro Roll
Call, the newspaper Of
Capitol Hill; and form e;·
campaign manager for AI
Gore.)
·

the neighborhood near the
Uni vers ity · of
South
Ca rolina. Coble sa id .
Neither Ferrell
nor
DeGraw were in the plane,
their representatives told
AP on Saturday.
,
One concertgoer said
TRYSDJ -A M's
performance was unique and different.
·
" It was literally one of
the best shows I've ever
sce ne,"
sa id
Brett
Flashnick. a freelance
photographer who works
for The Associated Press
and attended the concert
·
for a local newspaper.
Barker. 32, was one of
the more· colorful mem·
bers of the multiplatinumselling punk rock band
Blink-182, whose biggest
album was 1999's CD
"Enema of the State."
which so ld more than five
million copies in the
United States alone.
· After · Blink - 182 disbanded in 2005, Barker
went ·on to form the rock
band (+44) - pronounced
"plus forty-four." He also
starred in the MTV reality
series ''Meet the Barkers"
with former Miss USA
Shanna Moakler, to whom
he was married at the
time. The show documented the former couple's lavish wedding and life.
Their later split, reconcilation and subsqequent
break-up
made
them
tabloid favorites.
Goldstein is a popular
DJ for hire who at one
time was engaged to
Nicole Richie . ·
Barker and Goldstein
performed as part of the
house band ar the MTV
Video Mu sic Awards earlier thi s mo11th .

COLUMBIA. S.C. Former Blink -182 - drummer Travis Barker and
celebrity oj AM were critically injured in a fiery
Learjet cra.sh in South
Carolina that killed four
people, authoriti es sa id
Saturday.
Federal
Aviation
Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen
said the plane carrying six
people was departin g
shortly before midni gh t
Friday when air traffi c
co.ntroll ers reporting seeing sparl\s . . The plane
headed for Van Nuys.
Calif., went off a runway,
through a fence and
crashed on a nearby road,
officials said.
Barker and OJ AM.
whose real name is Adam
Goldstein. were in critical
condition at a burn center
in Augusta, Ga .. about 75
miles
southwest
of
Columbia,
hospital
· Medicare coverage."
STAFF REPORT
spokeswoman
Beth
Frits
NEWS@ MYDAILY SENTI NEL .COM
At each Check-Up Day,
said.
the department's Ohio
Two other passengers
COLUMBUS
Senior Health Insurance
Medicare Check-up Days Information
Program and two crew members
have been scheduled in (OSHIIP) representative s died , said the National
Transportation
Safety
both Meigs and Gallia will provide information Board. Their identities
counties as a part of the on
recent
Medicare were not immediatel y
Ohio
Department of
Insurance's focus to assist changes, explain the dif- available.
At the crash
site
ferent coverage options ,
beneficiaries .
Saturday,
the
air
was
still
Personnel will be in run comparison reports on
Galli a County from 10 various plans and advise heavy with the odor of jet
a.m. to noon on Oct. 22 at beneficiaries if they can fueL A trail of black soot
Woodland Centers on coordinate other coverage led off a runway, across a
Ohio !60, and in Meigs such , as
Veterans five-lane road next to the
County from 10 it.m . . to Administration
(VA) ~irport and up an embankment. The nose of the atrnoon on Nov. 13 at the along with that of PartD.
craft was· gone and th e
· Meigs County Counci I on
For events Nov. 15 and roof was missing from
.
later, OSHllP can help two-thirds of the charred
Aging , Pomeroy.
The Check-Up Days beneficiaries enroll in plane.
complement Medicare 's · their Med.icare coverage
Barker and Goldstein
annual open enrollment or' of choice. Now in its 16th had performed together
"coordinated
e lection" year, OSHllP is the state's under the name TRVSDJ period , which starts Nov. lead program for Medicare A M at a free concert in
•••
15 and ends Dec. 3 1.
information and enroll· Columl)ia on Friday night.
AP
Music
Writer
Nekesa
The emphasis of check- ment assistance.'
· "It's absolutely terrible
up days is to inform peo.
Mumbi
Moody
in
New
pie on Medicare of their
Other topic s include sig· and tragic," Columbia York con tributed to this
Mayor Bob Coble s~id.
options under the program nificant savings on preThe show, which includ- report.
and determine whether scription drug costs for ed performances by for•••
with
limited mer Jane's Addiction
what they now subscribe those
On tire Net:
to meet s the ir needs or incomes; how to save singer Perry Ferrell and
ltttp:llwww.djam.com/
some other program would using retail discount drug singer Gavin DeGraw,
Itt rp :I /ww w.ga vi nde better meet their coverage plans; drug company drew 10,000 people into grawcnml
needs.
patient assistance pro- the streets ·o f Five Points .
lrrtp:l/www.blink 182 .cqm
"These events (which grams; Medicare 's preven are being offered in every tive benefits and manag- .
county in Ohio) provide a ing exP,enses during the
great opportunity for peo- Part D coverage "doughpie with Medicare to learn nut hole," or gap in cover.about their plan options age.
Sunday Times-Sentfnel
'and how to sec ure t he
Attendees are ·e ncourappropriate
coverage," aged to bring a list of their
Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342
s~id Mary Jo Hud son,
. drugs.
director of the Ohio prescriptions
Department of In surance. dosages and preferred
"I strongly encourage pco- pharmacy, as well as any
pie to attend one in their information on pen sion .
area or call our OSHIIP VA or other medical care
hotline at 1-800-686-1578 benefits they are recelvwith any questions about ing.

Medicare check-up days
set for Meigs, Gallia

...

-

Deaths

Norma E. Rutherford. g7 . of Patriot, passed away at
3:45' p.m. Thursday. Sept. 18 . 2008. in the Ho lzer
Medical Center.
She was born Jul y 9. 1921 , in Huntin gton, W.Va ..
daughter of the late Joh n and Olevia Norri s Overby.
She was a homemaker.
She ·is su rvived by her,son, Allen (Cindy) Rutherford
of Patriot : three gra ndchildren. Mike Rutherford of
Holly Ridge. N.C .. Mark Rutherford of Cherryville,
N.C .. and Andrea Rutherford of Bunn. N.C. ; six greatgrandchildren. Morgan. Chet, Mattie , ~ance, Shane and
Rick; and het: daughter-m-law, Sylvta Rutherford of
Lincolnton, N.C .
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death
by her husband. Harr~ Rutherford , on Ma:v. 15 . 2002;
her son, Mik e Rutherford , tn Aprtl 2003; hve ststers .
Virgie Grubb. E\lna Rutherford, Alma Flowers, Allah
Arrington and Jess Hoffman; and one brother, John
Overby.
Graveside services will be ll a.m. Monday , Sept. 22.
2008, at the Hillcrest Cemetery, West Virginia Route 75,
Kenova , W.Vf.l. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m .
Sunday , Sept. 21,2008, at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel
In Gallipolis.
·
.·
. .
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the famtly by
visittng www.c remeensfuneralho!lles.com.

i!Junba!' iltimts .gs,rntintl • Page As

Bush savs government role
essential to ease crisis
Bv DEs RtECHMANN

that because "the vast majority of assets the government i;
planning to purchase have
WASHINGTON
good value over time" he
President Bush on Friday expects the money to be paid
asked Congress to approve back to the federal governextensive federal intervention ment.
in financial markets that he
Even if it isn't, he said "the
said is both warranted .and risk of not acting would be far
essential to lialt the worst higher."
financial crisis in decades.
Bush spoke in unusually
"We must act now," he said. ·stark terms about the prob"America's econom'y is fac- lems facing the economy and
ing unprecedented chal- the dangers of not acti ng,
lenges. We're responding which he attempted to frame
with unprecedented measures," Bush declared, stand- in terms. relevant not just to
ing in the White House Rose Wall Street. but to ordinary
.
Garden
with
Treasury Americans. too.
He
said
"the
gears
of our
Secretary Henry Paulson,
Federal Reserve Chairman fitlancial system ... were at
Ben
Bemanke
and risk of grinding to a halt.'' If
Christopher Cox, chainnan of this were allowed to happen.
the Securities and Exchange the president predicted ·it
would "cause massive job
Commission.
Shortly after his remarks. losses, devastate retirement
Bush called congressional accounts and fu rther erode
leaders with whom the housing values, as well as dry
administration would be up loans for new homes and
nego1iating through the week- cars and college tuitions."
The president also appeared
end to devise a rescue package. He spoke to Senate to go out of his way to reasMajority Leader Harry Reid, sure Americans that money in
D-Nev.. House Speaker traditional checking account~.
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.; and · savings accounls and certiti·
Senate Republican leader cates of deposit is safe.
''Every Ameri~an should
Mitch
McConnell.
He
planned to reach House know that the federal governRepublican leader John ment continues to enforce
Boehner later in the day.
laws and regulations protectThe administration wants to ing your money," he said. ;
see a package emerge from
He noted that. through the
the weekend. to lend calm to Federal Deposit Insurance
Monday morning's market Corporation, "every savings
openings,
said
Keith account. checking acwunt
Hennessey, the director of the and certificate of deposit is
president's economic council. insured by the federal goven1The goal is to have something . ment tor up to $100 ,000. ~
passed by Congress by the FDIC has been 'in existence
end of next week. when law- for 75 years, and no one has
makers recess. for the elec- ever lost a penny oi1 an
tions.
insured deposit. and this '~ill
"This is a pivotal moment not change."
for America's economy,"
"We have a flexible and
Bush said in his most exten- resilient system that absorbs
sive remarks this week on the challenges and makes correc· ·
crisis. He said that a financial lions and bounces back~"
contagion that began with Bush said ...... Our economy
low-quality home mortgages has weathered every one of
had "spread throughout our these challenges and still
fmancial system" and frozen managed to grow. We will
many financial transactions.
weather this challenge, too,
The president said the fedand we must do so together.''
eral government. should interHe warned Democrati,c
fere in the marketplace "only
when necessary," and that this leaders against adding "coqis one of those times. "Given troversial provisions" to the
the precarious state of today's rescue package "that could
financial markets, and their delay action." White Hous,e
vital importance to the daily press secretary Dana Perino
lives of the American people, would not comment on what
government intervention is sorts of provisions would lie
not only warranted, it is considered unacceptable to
the president, and Hennessey
essential," he said.
Hennessey said fears that said there would be room for
there was.going to be a run on negotiation with lawmakers
money market funds was one on how . the package woukt
·
·
but not the only reason that look.
"This is not a time for parti·
drove the administration to
Bush said.
sanship,"
make the proposal to
He spoke after the admini~­
Congress.
Bush said the authorities tration said it would sategu3!U
the administration wants assets in money market mutual funds and temporaril:y
Congress to approve which Paulson said earlier banned short-selling of finanfriday could entail "hundreds cial company stocks, a tradirlg
of billions" of dollars - was technique that bets on stocks
not without risk. But he said declining in value.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

for buying my

THANK YOU
LJ Trenching
&amp; Excavating
!of buylng my
2008

2008

Market Hog

Farm Credit
Services of
Mid-America
Market Hog

R

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

COllE

t

r

,
'

Larry M. Bclz
Galli a County Auditor

River Valley All Slars

You've got to
admit it, we
love our teains.
W'hcrhcr rhcv hir home runs. ,o;corc
rnud1downs o.r slarn dunk the balL we
give them ~ur suppotl md loyohy.

AUDITOR'S REAL ESTATE DELINQUENT
DISPLAY NOTICE
There shall be a Ji.di114uent lomd list containing the description of the
property us it :.~prL!ars on ihe I&lt;~X list . the name of the pc rso ~ whose
name the property is list~d and the amount of taxes. assessment' and
penalties due and unpaid &lt;I~ of the Augusl. 2008 llCttlcmcnt. Said list
shall be publbhcd twice within the next may (60) duys in the Daily
Tribune. a uewspapcr of generul circulation in Galtia County, Ohio, in
accordance with section 572 1.01 of the Ohio Revised Code.
· Each person ~.-hargell with real prbperty taxes and assessments of
public utility property taxes on a tax duplicate in the hands of the Gallia
County Trea~urcr. Steve McGhee. may pay the full amount of taxes
before ~uch taxes are publi ~ hed as being delinquent in the newspaper
48 hours before the first publication may be removed from the
delinquent li st.
To avoid additiuna l interc~t charges on December 1, 2008, the
taxpayer muy enter into a Writt~n payri,ent plan agree~.ent with the
Galli• County Treasurer to p~y one-fifth (t/5) of the dclmqucnt tax es .
plus ull c~rre nt taxes prior to the day interest is to be charged.

All Stars

.

Jacob
Gilmore

There's a teitm m your homtto~\'11
that turn:-. ic :\round and givt.~ )1lU

AT

suppon and loyalty..... your local

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�OPINION

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gaOl! taste,

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

.

. Today in History
By The Associated Press
. Today is Sunday, Sept. 21, the 265th day of 2(KJ8. There
are I0 I days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 21, 1938 , a hurricane struck parts of New York
and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming som·e'700 lives.
·
·· On this date:
In 1792, the Fren~h National Convention vote(! to abo!.ish the monarchy.
·
. In 1897. the New York Sun ran its famous editori~l that
declared, "Yes, Virginia. there is a Santa Claus."
. In 1937, "The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien. was first published.
.. In 1948, Milton Berle made his debut as permanent host
of"The Texaco Star Theater" on NBC. TV.
. In 1957, Norway's King Haakon VII died in Oslo at age
:85.
In 1970 , "NR Monday Night Football" made its debut
on ABC-TV as the Cleveland
. Browns defeated the visiting
.
New York Jets , 31-21.
·
.
· In 1982, Amin Gemayel, brother of Lebanon's assassinated president-elect , Bashir Gemayel. was himself elected
·president.
.
.
· · In 1982, National Football League players began a 57day strike, their first regular:season walkout ever.
· In 1987, NFL players went on a 24-day strike. mainly
over the issue of free agency.
Ten years ago: President Clinton's videotaped grand jury
. testimony was publicly broadcast; in it, Clinton tussled
. with prosecutors over "the truth of Jny relationship" with
Monica Lewinsky. Olympic gold medal track star Florence
Griffith Joyner was found dead at her home in Mission
Viejo, Calif.; 5he was 38. Hurricane Georges roared
through Puerto Rico and tlie northeast Caribbean.
Five years ago: Former Citigroup CEO Juhn S. Reed waS
named ,temporary head of the New York Stock exchange.
J&gt;aul Martin was elected by Canada's Liberal Party to suc.ceed Jean Cl!retien as prime minister. NASA's aging
.Galileo spacecraft deliberately plunged into Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere, bringing a fiery conclusion to a 14-year
. ~xploration of the solar system's largest planet and its
moons .
" cine year ago: One student was mortally wounded, another injured, at Delaware State University. (A suspected gunman has been indicted on a second·degrec murder ch.arge.)
.the · Rev. Rex Humbard, whose televangelism ministry
·once spanned the globe, died in Atlantis, Fla., at age 88.
'rony Award-winning actress Alice Ghostley died in Los
Angeles at age 81.
·
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Karl Slover ("The Wizard of
·oz") is 90. Actor 'Larry Hagman is 77 .. Poet-songwriter
.Leonard Cohen is 74. Actor-comedian Henry Gibson is 73.
Author-comedian Fannie Flagg is 64. Author Stephen King
is 61. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer .is 61 . Musician Don
Felder (The Eagles) is 61. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is
58. Rock musician Philthy Animal is 54. Movie producerwriter Ethan Coen is 51.
Thought for Today: ''We believe at once in evil, we only
believe in good upon reflection. Is this not sad?" ;Madame
Dorothee Deluzy.
French actress ( 1747- 1830).
;
.

.

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Sunday, September 21,

Sunday, s ·e ptember 21, 2008

6bituaries

Call a trna? in the mommy wats
Get a grip , ladies 1 Don't
allow Sarah Palin's candidacy to reheat the "mommy
wars·," to pit working
moms against those who
stay at home . Here's whill
we find distressing: One set
of women telling reporters
th ey passionately agree
with Palin's decision that
she can raise children aod
serve as vice president:
another, equally passionate
set of women. decreeing
that she's bound to give
short shrift to her family or
her job. or both . It 's time to
put this fight to rest.
"Is it sex ist for people to
ask how ca11 somebody man,
age a fiunily of seven a11d the
vice presidency?" Cokie 's
colleague at ABC News ..
Charlie Gibson. carefully
asked the Alaska • governor.
Her response: "That question is kind of irrelevant
because it 's accepted of
&lt;:Ourse (that) you can be the
vice president and you can
raise u ftui1ily." As long as
you're u man.

When hi s questio11 was
posted on the ABC Web
site, Gibson revealed. it
drew 15.000 . responses:
"'Every woman with young
children struggles with this
question. Should I. how
can I. will I be able to'!''
Palin said she understands
that. She also said she
stayed home with her first
child: "I had that choice
then. and I've had choices,
of course. along the way." ·

Let's talk about the chil- 90 percent of working
dren who go to bed hungry women claim primary
every night in the richest responsibility for child
nation on earth. Let's talk care. Women also do more
Cokie
about the children who are than their share in caring
and
denied a decent education for the elderly. Do we want
Steven
· because of rotten public to start asking female canRoberts
schools . Let's talk about didates if they can do the
the children who are job and take care. of their
shoved from foster home to mothe(s?
foster home. Let's talk
We don't mean to belittle
But. the candidate elabo: about the children who are some women's genuine
rated. not an women have incarcerated . Let's talk struggles. as Gibson put it.
those choices. and she's about the children who are with the question of
whether and how much to
certainly right about that. used as pawns in divorce.
Those children need our work: we're just trying to
Let us be clear on this: The
question of whether a attention and the attention put them . in perspective.
And to remind those
mother ' hould work out- of public policymakers side the home or not is one not the children of upper- · women who have choices
that can on ly be asked by income women who are that there's no right answer
upper-income
women. making the decision about here . There's only the
Most women work for. the whether to spend a few answer that works for you.
same reason most men do years . of their lives in the right now. It might . not
- because they have to:· paid workforce. But you'd work next year or even next
never know that listening week, and it certainly might
they have no other option.
A mother who once might to the argument swirling • not work for your sisters.
have collected welfare now around Sarah Palin.
And Jhat's the point
It's
an
argument
any
must go to work. The welfare
Every woman who has the
refom1 touted by the Clinton mother who has ever run opportunity gets to make
administration
required for office is familiar with. this choice for herself niothers to gd jobs, not only Palin's answer when chal- whether she's running for
to relieve society from the lenged about having a baby vice president of the PTA or
burden of su pporting them while serving as governor·: vice president of the United
but also because mothers ''I'll do it the same way the States. And eyery other
.bringing in paychecks were other govern&lt;lrs have done woman should respect that
deemed bei1eticial for the it when they've either had a choice, even if it's not the
children. You don't hear the baby in office or raised a one she would make. It's
battlers in the mommy w&lt;trS family. Granted , they're time for a permanent truce
tal~in g about how terrible it
men, but (I'll) do it the ·in the mommy wars ..
is for t11ose women to go to same way that they do it."
(Cokie Robem'latest book
work and leave their chi!- ·
But it's different for a is "'Ladies of Liberty: The
dren.
·
woman , shout back the · Women Who Shaped Our
If this country · wants to warriors: women are the Nation" (William Morrow,
have a serious conversation ones who take care of the 2008). Steve and Cokie
about who's taking ·care of' children. True enough ... Robens can be reached at
· the children , let's do it. Poll s show that upward of stevecokie@grtUlil.com .)

ToFiNDOUT
W~AT Ttil$ ALL MEANS,
L~T$ I URI-I IT OVER

To OUR Flf.IANCtAL.
ANA!.Y&gt;:T••.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

Alea Lynn Bailey

Charles W. Freeman

Alea Lynn Bailey went to heaven on Thursday. Sept.
18, 2008. at the Holzer Medical Center.
. Surviving are her parents. Taylor R. Nunn and Robert
Marqui s-Lamar Bailey. both ofGallipolis: maternal
grandparents, Ruby Cumpton and Brett Leach of Point
Pleasant. W.Va.; paternal grandmother, Kendra Stock len
of California: aunts. Kennedy Nunn of Gallipolis,
Kristin Gantt , Brittany Wells. Kendra Holland and
Marchell Holland . all of California; maternal greatgrandparents. Haze l (James ) Cox, Guy Ferguson , Kathy
Meadows. Steven Elwood Nunn, all of Gallipolis:
maternal great-great -gra ndmother, Marvie Brewer of
Gallipolis; and paternal great-great-grandmother, R.A .
Stock len of Tenne&gt;See.
She was preceded in deat h by maternal grandfath er.
Chad Nunn . and paternal great-grandmother. Marva
Stocklen.
.
.
.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Monday. Sept. 22.
2008, at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Arrangements
are by the Willis Fun eral Home.
Plea se visi t www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e·
mail condolences.

Charles W. Freeman. 65 , Austin. Ark ., formerly of
Scottown. died Wednesday. Sept. 17 . 2008 at St. Vincent
North Hospital. Sherwood. Ark.
He is survived by hi; wife. Maudie &amp;aggs Freeman.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in the Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville. with Elder Richard t\ pier officiating. Burial
will be in the Docks Creek Cemetery , Kenova, W.Va.
Visitation was held in the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Sat'urday.
·
Condolences may be expressed to the family at
www.timeformemory .com/ hall.

Norma E. Rutherford

4 killed in SC plane crash;
drummer, DJ injured

lster R. Mowrey Sr.
Isler Richard Mowrey Sr .. 81, Point Pleasant. W.Va., died
Saturday. Sept. 20. 2008. in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Services will be I p.m . Tuesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. Point Pleasant. Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens. Friend.~ 'ln\IY call at the funeral home from 7. to 9
p.m. Monday.

Bv

PAGE IVEY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

VVhen does Main Street America get bailed out?
watched President
George Bush address the
nation 's fear that the financial tsunami that flattened
Wall Sheet last week will
. drown us all . Seeking
Donna
e~planation, assurance and
Brazile
comfort. I listened intently
·that Thursday afternoon to
what should have been a
bolstering and informed
fireside chat by the presi- Wall Street . investment
dent. A little more than a firms ruined by rampant ·
minute later, because a few greed and criminal irredozen seconds is how long sponsibility. And what do
Bush deigned · to spend · the American people get?
with the American people. A one -minute brush-off
I resisted the urge to place from an administration
a panicked call to my thai turns its back on hardbanker. .
working Americans facing
At an absolutely crucial bankruptcy ami homelesspoint in the direction of ness for the sin of wanting
our . nation's economy, to provide a home for their
when it is of the utmost family and a small nest
importance that we believe egg for their retirement.
that tear is indeed the on! y
This economic crisis is
thing we need to tear. we the perfect storm of conseinstead get one minute of quences ·rrom Republican
empty reassurances.
laissez-fa ire
economic
Heaven help us.
policies. And the tens of ·
With the collapse of thousands of m:iddle -class
Lehman Brothers , the families drowning as a
fed 's $85 billion bailout or result of these failed poliAIG and the shotgun sale cics is not even registering
. of Merrill LytKh to Bank a blip on the GOP's•radar
of America. it's dear to screen. Someone needs to
everyone, both here .and wake them up and fast. ·
abroad, that the Amerkan - In July. Congress and the
economy is broken. It was Bush administration took a
the president's job to modest first .step in the
ass ure everyone that bro- right direction by passing
ken does not mean busted. the Housing and Economic
In this , he fail ed.
Recovery Act , which
. If you're looking for a encourages lenders to vo) :
job right now, wear com- untarily refinance mortfortable shoes while stand- gages through the Federal
ing in line because you're Housing Administration.
goi ng .to . need them . If Proponents of the new law
you're looking at foredo- claim it will allow middlesure of the family home , class homeowners to get
schedule a mo ving van back on thei r feet. Experts,
now because there·, a however, openly question
nationwide demand for whether it offers enough
them by other good people help to enough people to
in your situation . But if make a difference.
you're looking for a. way
Record numbers of
out of thi s financ ial mess. home fnreclo,urcs ha ve
call a counse lor. This will rattled our economy for at
take longer than you know. least the past 12 months.
Uncle Sam is 4uick to providing the mortgage
offer a helping hand to industry with more than

..

enough time to voluntarily
clean up the mess it created. Yet the industry, freed
from regulations it ·so
obviously needed, did
nothing. Meanwhile, mortgage-industry experts predict 6.5 million more
homes will go into foreclosure over the next five
years. Translation: 6.5 million families in America
have every right to be terrified.
It is long past time for
Wakhington to show the
American people the same
fast response and financial
support it showed Wall
Street firms like Bear
Stearns and AIG. The fol lowing steps ·need to be
taken immediately. ·
First, pass legislation
introduced by Rep . Doris
Mat ~ ui ,
D-Calif. , that
would freeze foreclosures
on existing mortgages for
at least nine months. Like
a patient about to go into
surgery, the housing market needs to be conned ·
before we tackle systemic
long-term solutions.
Second, ban abusive
lending practices, starting
with the kickbacks for brokers who swindled families into buying overpriced
mortgages.
Third. let . bankruptcy
judges modify overpri'ced
home loans and return
them to market value.
Fourth ,' use the federal
lakeover of Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac to ·lower
mortgage s to affordable
leve ls. And yes, make
these loans to people who
can afford them and stop
the predatory lenders.
The economic experts in
our government tell us that
this financial crisis can be
solved only if we save the
banks. the lenders and the
investment firms. They,
claim that ''ordinary people" will automatically get
the help , they need after

corporate failures are cor·
rected.
These are the same
idiots who wanted to privatize Social Security.
The recent one-day 500"
point drop in the Dow is
proof that entrusting our
retirement savings to the
whims of the stock market
was a ridiculous idea.
Just a few years ago, the
Republicans in Congress
were willing to. follow
President George Bush's
lead in privatizing Social
Security. They thought it
would be a great idea to
risk middle-class families'
retirements in the stock
market.
Republicans
called on Congress to get .
out of the way and let the
market create wealth for us
all. It was clear that Wall
Street would benefit , and
the needs of Main Street
America would not enter
into the equation.
What breaks my heart is
that too many of our fellow citizens are being· left
behind to fend for themselves. This is . a tragic
moment for our country,
and it's time we stop pretending that 'it's just the
politicians' fault. Yes, they
made a mess out of things,
but this current mess is
also happening on our
watch.
Washington would do
well to realize that Main
Street America . needs the
·help a lot more than Wall
Street. Maybe'.it's time to
reassure the country that
someone is looking out for
us all.
(Donna Brazile is a
political commentator on
CNN, ABC and.NPR; contributing columnist ro Roll
Call, the newspaper Of
Capitol Hill; and form e;·
campaign manager for AI
Gore.)
·

the neighborhood near the
Uni vers ity · of
South
Ca rolina. Coble sa id .
Neither Ferrell
nor
DeGraw were in the plane,
their representatives told
AP on Saturday.
,
One concertgoer said
TRYSDJ -A M's
performance was unique and different.
·
" It was literally one of
the best shows I've ever
sce ne,"
sa id
Brett
Flashnick. a freelance
photographer who works
for The Associated Press
and attended the concert
·
for a local newspaper.
Barker. 32, was one of
the more· colorful mem·
bers of the multiplatinumselling punk rock band
Blink-182, whose biggest
album was 1999's CD
"Enema of the State."
which so ld more than five
million copies in the
United States alone.
· After · Blink - 182 disbanded in 2005, Barker
went ·on to form the rock
band (+44) - pronounced
"plus forty-four." He also
starred in the MTV reality
series ''Meet the Barkers"
with former Miss USA
Shanna Moakler, to whom
he was married at the
time. The show documented the former couple's lavish wedding and life.
Their later split, reconcilation and subsqequent
break-up
made
them
tabloid favorites.
Goldstein is a popular
DJ for hire who at one
time was engaged to
Nicole Richie . ·
Barker and Goldstein
performed as part of the
house band ar the MTV
Video Mu sic Awards earlier thi s mo11th .

COLUMBIA. S.C. Former Blink -182 - drummer Travis Barker and
celebrity oj AM were critically injured in a fiery
Learjet cra.sh in South
Carolina that killed four
people, authoriti es sa id
Saturday.
Federal
Aviation
Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen
said the plane carrying six
people was departin g
shortly before midni gh t
Friday when air traffi c
co.ntroll ers reporting seeing sparl\s . . The plane
headed for Van Nuys.
Calif., went off a runway,
through a fence and
crashed on a nearby road,
officials said.
Barker and OJ AM.
whose real name is Adam
Goldstein. were in critical
condition at a burn center
in Augusta, Ga .. about 75
miles
southwest
of
Columbia,
hospital
· Medicare coverage."
STAFF REPORT
spokeswoman
Beth
Frits
NEWS@ MYDAILY SENTI NEL .COM
At each Check-Up Day,
said.
the department's Ohio
Two other passengers
COLUMBUS
Senior Health Insurance
Medicare Check-up Days Information
Program and two crew members
have been scheduled in (OSHIIP) representative s died , said the National
Transportation
Safety
both Meigs and Gallia will provide information Board. Their identities
counties as a part of the on
recent
Medicare were not immediatel y
Ohio
Department of
Insurance's focus to assist changes, explain the dif- available.
At the crash
site
ferent coverage options ,
beneficiaries .
Saturday,
the
air
was
still
Personnel will be in run comparison reports on
Galli a County from 10 various plans and advise heavy with the odor of jet
a.m. to noon on Oct. 22 at beneficiaries if they can fueL A trail of black soot
Woodland Centers on coordinate other coverage led off a runway, across a
Ohio !60, and in Meigs such , as
Veterans five-lane road next to the
County from 10 it.m . . to Administration
(VA) ~irport and up an embankment. The nose of the atrnoon on Nov. 13 at the along with that of PartD.
craft was· gone and th e
· Meigs County Counci I on
For events Nov. 15 and roof was missing from
.
later, OSHllP can help two-thirds of the charred
Aging , Pomeroy.
The Check-Up Days beneficiaries enroll in plane.
complement Medicare 's · their Med.icare coverage
Barker and Goldstein
annual open enrollment or' of choice. Now in its 16th had performed together
"coordinated
e lection" year, OSHllP is the state's under the name TRVSDJ period , which starts Nov. lead program for Medicare A M at a free concert in
•••
15 and ends Dec. 3 1.
information and enroll· Columl)ia on Friday night.
AP
Music
Writer
Nekesa
The emphasis of check- ment assistance.'
· "It's absolutely terrible
up days is to inform peo.
Mumbi
Moody
in
New
pie on Medicare of their
Other topic s include sig· and tragic," Columbia York con tributed to this
Mayor Bob Coble s~id.
options under the program nificant savings on preThe show, which includ- report.
and determine whether scription drug costs for ed performances by for•••
with
limited mer Jane's Addiction
what they now subscribe those
On tire Net:
to meet s the ir needs or incomes; how to save singer Perry Ferrell and
ltttp:llwww.djam.com/
some other program would using retail discount drug singer Gavin DeGraw,
Itt rp :I /ww w.ga vi nde better meet their coverage plans; drug company drew 10,000 people into grawcnml
needs.
patient assistance pro- the streets ·o f Five Points .
lrrtp:l/www.blink 182 .cqm
"These events (which grams; Medicare 's preven are being offered in every tive benefits and manag- .
county in Ohio) provide a ing exP,enses during the
great opportunity for peo- Part D coverage "doughpie with Medicare to learn nut hole," or gap in cover.about their plan options age.
Sunday Times-Sentfnel
'and how to sec ure t he
Attendees are ·e ncourappropriate
coverage," aged to bring a list of their
Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342
s~id Mary Jo Hud son,
. drugs.
director of the Ohio prescriptions
Department of In surance. dosages and preferred
"I strongly encourage pco- pharmacy, as well as any
pie to attend one in their information on pen sion .
area or call our OSHIIP VA or other medical care
hotline at 1-800-686-1578 benefits they are recelvwith any questions about ing.

Medicare check-up days
set for Meigs, Gallia

...

-

Deaths

Norma E. Rutherford. g7 . of Patriot, passed away at
3:45' p.m. Thursday. Sept. 18 . 2008. in the Ho lzer
Medical Center.
She was born Jul y 9. 1921 , in Huntin gton, W.Va ..
daughter of the late Joh n and Olevia Norri s Overby.
She was a homemaker.
She ·is su rvived by her,son, Allen (Cindy) Rutherford
of Patriot : three gra ndchildren. Mike Rutherford of
Holly Ridge. N.C .. Mark Rutherford of Cherryville,
N.C .. and Andrea Rutherford of Bunn. N.C. ; six greatgrandchildren. Morgan. Chet, Mattie , ~ance, Shane and
Rick; and het: daughter-m-law, Sylvta Rutherford of
Lincolnton, N.C .
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death
by her husband. Harr~ Rutherford , on Ma:v. 15 . 2002;
her son, Mik e Rutherford , tn Aprtl 2003; hve ststers .
Virgie Grubb. E\lna Rutherford, Alma Flowers, Allah
Arrington and Jess Hoffman; and one brother, John
Overby.
Graveside services will be ll a.m. Monday , Sept. 22.
2008, at the Hillcrest Cemetery, West Virginia Route 75,
Kenova , W.Vf.l. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m .
Sunday , Sept. 21,2008, at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel
In Gallipolis.
·
.·
. .
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the famtly by
visittng www.c remeensfuneralho!lles.com.

i!Junba!' iltimts .gs,rntintl • Page As

Bush savs government role
essential to ease crisis
Bv DEs RtECHMANN

that because "the vast majority of assets the government i;
planning to purchase have
WASHINGTON
good value over time" he
President Bush on Friday expects the money to be paid
asked Congress to approve back to the federal governextensive federal intervention ment.
in financial markets that he
Even if it isn't, he said "the
said is both warranted .and risk of not acting would be far
essential to lialt the worst higher."
financial crisis in decades.
Bush spoke in unusually
"We must act now," he said. ·stark terms about the prob"America's econom'y is fac- lems facing the economy and
ing unprecedented chal- the dangers of not acti ng,
lenges. We're responding which he attempted to frame
with unprecedented measures," Bush declared, stand- in terms. relevant not just to
ing in the White House Rose Wall Street. but to ordinary
.
Garden
with
Treasury Americans. too.
He
said
"the
gears
of our
Secretary Henry Paulson,
Federal Reserve Chairman fitlancial system ... were at
Ben
Bemanke
and risk of grinding to a halt.'' If
Christopher Cox, chainnan of this were allowed to happen.
the Securities and Exchange the president predicted ·it
would "cause massive job
Commission.
Shortly after his remarks. losses, devastate retirement
Bush called congressional accounts and fu rther erode
leaders with whom the housing values, as well as dry
administration would be up loans for new homes and
nego1iating through the week- cars and college tuitions."
The president also appeared
end to devise a rescue package. He spoke to Senate to go out of his way to reasMajority Leader Harry Reid, sure Americans that money in
D-Nev.. House Speaker traditional checking account~.
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.; and · savings accounls and certiti·
Senate Republican leader cates of deposit is safe.
''Every Ameri~an should
Mitch
McConnell.
He
planned to reach House know that the federal governRepublican leader John ment continues to enforce
Boehner later in the day.
laws and regulations protectThe administration wants to ing your money," he said. ;
see a package emerge from
He noted that. through the
the weekend. to lend calm to Federal Deposit Insurance
Monday morning's market Corporation, "every savings
openings,
said
Keith account. checking acwunt
Hennessey, the director of the and certificate of deposit is
president's economic council. insured by the federal goven1The goal is to have something . ment tor up to $100 ,000. ~
passed by Congress by the FDIC has been 'in existence
end of next week. when law- for 75 years, and no one has
makers recess. for the elec- ever lost a penny oi1 an
tions.
insured deposit. and this '~ill
"This is a pivotal moment not change."
for America's economy,"
"We have a flexible and
Bush said in his most exten- resilient system that absorbs
sive remarks this week on the challenges and makes correc· ·
crisis. He said that a financial lions and bounces back~"
contagion that began with Bush said ...... Our economy
low-quality home mortgages has weathered every one of
had "spread throughout our these challenges and still
fmancial system" and frozen managed to grow. We will
many financial transactions.
weather this challenge, too,
The president said the fedand we must do so together.''
eral government. should interHe warned Democrati,c
fere in the marketplace "only
when necessary," and that this leaders against adding "coqis one of those times. "Given troversial provisions" to the
the precarious state of today's rescue package "that could
financial markets, and their delay action." White Hous,e
vital importance to the daily press secretary Dana Perino
lives of the American people, would not comment on what
government intervention is sorts of provisions would lie
not only warranted, it is considered unacceptable to
the president, and Hennessey
essential," he said.
Hennessey said fears that said there would be room for
there was.going to be a run on negotiation with lawmakers
money market funds was one on how . the package woukt
·
·
but not the only reason that look.
"This is not a time for parti·
drove the administration to
Bush said.
sanship,"
make the proposal to
He spoke after the admini~­
Congress.
Bush said the authorities tration said it would sategu3!U
the administration wants assets in money market mutual funds and temporaril:y
Congress to approve which Paulson said earlier banned short-selling of finanfriday could entail "hundreds cial company stocks, a tradirlg
of billions" of dollars - was technique that bets on stocks
not without risk. But he said declining in value.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

for buying my

THANK YOU
LJ Trenching
&amp; Excavating
!of buylng my
2008

2008

Market Hog

Farm Credit
Services of
Mid-America
Market Hog

R

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

COllE

t

r

,
'

Larry M. Bclz
Galli a County Auditor

River Valley All Slars

You've got to
admit it, we
love our teains.
W'hcrhcr rhcv hir home runs. ,o;corc
rnud1downs o.r slarn dunk the balL we
give them ~ur suppotl md loyohy.

AUDITOR'S REAL ESTATE DELINQUENT
DISPLAY NOTICE
There shall be a Ji.di114uent lomd list containing the description of the
property us it :.~prL!ars on ihe I&lt;~X list . the name of the pc rso ~ whose
name the property is list~d and the amount of taxes. assessment' and
penalties due and unpaid &lt;I~ of the Augusl. 2008 llCttlcmcnt. Said list
shall be publbhcd twice within the next may (60) duys in the Daily
Tribune. a uewspapcr of generul circulation in Galtia County, Ohio, in
accordance with section 572 1.01 of the Ohio Revised Code.
· Each person ~.-hargell with real prbperty taxes and assessments of
public utility property taxes on a tax duplicate in the hands of the Gallia
County Trea~urcr. Steve McGhee. may pay the full amount of taxes
before ~uch taxes are publi ~ hed as being delinquent in the newspaper
48 hours before the first publication may be removed from the
delinquent li st.
To avoid additiuna l interc~t charges on December 1, 2008, the
taxpayer muy enter into a Writt~n payri,ent plan agree~.ent with the
Galli• County Treasurer to p~y one-fifth (t/5) of the dclmqucnt tax es .
plus ull c~rre nt taxes prior to the day interest is to be charged.

All Stars

.

Jacob
Gilmore

There's a teitm m your homtto~\'11
that turn:-. ic :\round and givt.~ )1lU

AT

suppon and loyalty..... your local

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
3615 .JACKSON PIKE
HALF-WAY BETWEEN
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
ANDTHEBOBEVANSFARM
THIS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
10:45 am -6:00pm
· MONDAY, SEPT. .22
THROUGH WED. SEPT. 24
7:00 lJm NIGHTLY

EVANGELIST DAVID. FRAZIE
QUESTIONS? CALL 740-446-2607

indt:.pcndent agent and
.A.uto·Owncrs' l n~urancc Cnmpa,ny.
A~ a neighborhood agcnl we work ·
op your !cam 1t1 provide the bc•il
""/IJ,• llomt' J(am "
.lm• \1tlll lt &amp; Sarah E'illl~ Muorr

A~k

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rovl'ragc ;u rhc right prkc.

about Saft. Sound: Stcurr.' cowragc .from
Auto~Owncrs lmurancc Compan)'.

.Auto-Otmen lnsurtmce
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Real Estate and lnsul'anrc
514 Sc('ttnd Aw. Gallipolis, OH • 7-'0·441-1111

�PageA6

OHIO

iunba~ it me~ -itnttntl

Sunday, September

21, 2008 ·

Gordon achieves Thousands in Ohio still without power
national cerlificate

COLUMBUS (AP) Almost a quarter million
• customers remained without power Saturday, one
STAFF REPORT
week after a wind storm
NEWS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE COM
left big swaths of the state
in the dark.
GALLIPOLIS - Robert
The
remnants
of
of
Gallipolis
Gordon
Hurri
cane
Ike
.
batt~red
received a certificate from
Ohio last Sunday, leaving
the state of Ohio and the
2.6 million customers
National Certified Public
without electricty at the
Manager .
(CPM)
outage
's peak. Residents
Consortium during a graduspent the week cleanil1'g
ation ceremonv held on
up yards riddled with trees
Sept. 10 in Cotu'mbus .
and navigating streets
Gordon was a member of
clogged with darkened
the 27th Ohio Cohort
traffic signals.
t)lroughout the two-year
I
Cincinnati-area Duke
· long course. Cohort 27
Energy
officials insisted
graduated seven students
workers
'would restore
along with four other
power by weekend 's end
cohorts from across Ohio
Robert Gordon
to customers in the southfor a total of 54 graduates.
west corner of the state.
Graduate ~ of the OCPM
University.
About 85 ,000 of their cusProgram have experienced
He is a member of the tomers remained without
extensive training across
four foundational areas; Ohio Certified Public power on Saturday.
Manager Society. and a fel" We have entered a very
~:eneral administration and
of
the
American
low
organization;
iechnical,
quantitative and qualitative ; Academy of Certified
an.alytical and conceptual; Public · Managers . The
National Certified Public
and human relations .
Manager
Consortium curThe CPM Program in
rently
includes
27 states .
Ohio has been administered
by the Department of · Gordon also attended the
Administrative
Services 20th annual American
(DAS) since t 997. DAS Academy of Certified
Managers
Director Hugh Quill pre· Public
Conference
in
Columbus
sented certificates to the
graduates during the cere- leading up to the graduation
mony . .Gordon serves as the ceremony. This. was the
SE regional site manager first time the national confo r the Ohio Certified ference had been held in
'
Public Manager Program Ohio.
The event was widely
through the Voinov ich
School of Leadership and attended by CPM s from
Public Affairs at Ohio across the country.

tedious phase of the
restoration process," Duke
Ohio
and
Energy
Kentucky
President
Sandra Meyer said in a
statement . "Much of the .
outage work is now
focused
on restori ng
power to smaller pockets
of customers ."
Columbus-based
American Electric Power
on Saturday reported
about 77,000 customers
remained without power.
Some residents . watched
with ·frustration as their
neighbors' lights started,
but not their own. Betty
Pence, 85, watched anxiously as · AEP trucks
pulled
through
her
Columbus neighborhood .
"I'd see them leaving
and think , 'Oh , no, it's not
on yet. Don't go,"' she
said.
Chuck
Woolsey

approached one Columbus
crew : "I'm not complaining ," he said, " but do you
have any idea when our
power will be back?"
In
northeast
Ohio ,
FirstEnergy Corp. reported hundreds still without
power. Dayton Power and
Light said about 59,000
customers were without
electricity Saturday. with
plan s to have serv ice
·restored to 90 percent of
the 300,000 households
that lost power Sept. 14.
As Ohio .prepared for
Day 7 wi\hout electricity,
patience worn thin . One
man was accused of
threatening a utility worker and 'charged with inducing panic; he later said he
·was joking. Elsewhere,
administrative
centers
were flooded with complaints ,.both by phone and
in person.

Winds reaching 78 mph
swept through on Sunday,
and at least seven of the
56 deaths blamed on the
hurricane were in Ohio.
Trees were uprooted,
falling on homes , blocking
roads and bringing down
power lines and poles.
Long lines formed at the
gas stations, groceries and
hardware store s that didn't
lose power. Schools and
businesses were forced to
close for days..
" You don ' t want to mention Duke." sa id Neil
Leist, superintendent of
the Clermont Northeastern
School District. which
was closed all week. "I ·
know they have a hard job,
but the people are beyond
frustrated. No one wants
to be last."

class in June and all 50
seniors were accepted to
college. The school is part
of the national network of
Cristo Rey schools, which
requires students to hold
part-time jobs to help pay
for their tuition .
The two suspects were
suspended. Principal· Mary
Ann Vogel told WOIO-TV
that the school is safe and
its small enrollment makes
it comfortable for students
to come forward wiih concerns.
The 1999 Columbine
school massacre at a .
Colorado high school was
carried out by two students who killed 12 classmates and a teacher and
then committed suicide.
In separate cases, a
Cleyeland man was arrested in April on charges of
. plotting a school attack
with a 16-year-old near
South Bend , Ind., and last
October a student gunman
shot and wounded two
high school teachers and
two students before . he
killed
himself
at
Cleveland's SuccessTech
Academy.

Monday night through
Thursday .. .Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Thursday night and
Friday ...Partly
· i:loudy.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the upper 70s.

Rebels fall to Titans, Page 83

Wahama survives Buckeye 'Irail, Page B4
ln the Open, Page BS

Sunday, September 21,2008

LocAL SOIEDUI.E
~ GAllJPQli S - A SChedule ol ~ing h!Qh
~ ...ars~ !&gt;pOrting eloWlts involving learns
!rm1 Galia Bnd Me.gs COI.ll'lties

.

Raiders tame Wildcats on Homecoming
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Monday $eplembttr_Z2

VOlleyball

Eastern at Nels-York , 6 p.m.
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
South Gallia at ~ock Hill, 5:30p.m:

Vin_ton County at Southern. 6 p.m.
ov.c s at Fairland . 5:30p.m.

Tuyda"t September 23
SOccer
Chillicothe at Gania Academy, 5 p.m .
,
Volleyball
Gania Academy at Fairland . 5:30p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs , 6 p.m.
Eastern at-River Valley, 5:30p.m.
O~C at South G~llia, 5:30p.m.
Eastern at Aiver Valley, 5:30p.m.

.

GoH

River Valley at Sectional, TBA ·
G!lltia Academy at Sectional , TBA '
Wednnday September 24

Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rive r Valley. 5 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.

•Soccer
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30p.m.

VOlleyball
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
t;iallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15

p.m.
C~esapeake. at River Valley,
Trimble at South~rn. 6 p.m.

WEEK

5:30p.m.

5 RESULTS

:· Gallla·Aoademy 36, Jackson 28
River Valley 27. Waterford 7

N~tre

,f'Ofts:

.,
...,

Dame 35, S. Gallia

JJ

CH£SHIRE - There's no
place like Homecom ing,
especially when it involves a
winning streak for the first
time in six years.
,The River Valley football
team won its second straight
decision in as many weeks
Friday night - in convincDeel
Curnutte
ing fashion no less - during
a 27-7 Homecoming thump- of offense with the passing
ing of visiting Waterford in a game. Quarterback Clayton
Week 5 non-conference · Curnutte hooked up with
gridiron' matchup at Raider Jordan Dee! on three sepaField .
rate scoring strikes of 69 , 5
The Raider~ (2-3) picked and g yards _ · which
up their first two-game win- accounted for three-quarters
ning streak since weeks four of the hosts points.
and five of the 2003 season,
Curnutte finished the
when
they
shutout evening 17-of-24 passing
(40-0)
and for 227 yards, throwmg zero
Alexander
defeated Southern (48-6). interceptions and three scarThe Silver and Black - ing passes. Dee! ended the
who never trailed in the con- night \\'ith nine catches for
test - also ended a three- 136 yards.
game losing skid at home as
The first of that tandem's
well in the process.
hook-ups started the scoring
RVHS went to the air in the first, when Dee!
early and 'often, accumulat- hauled in a 69-yard bomb to
ing 227 of its 314 to(al yards make it a 7-0 contest at the

5:36 mark of the first period.
Running back Zach Baird
extended that lead t&lt;i t 4-0 in
the second quarter, thanks to
two-yard run at the 6:05
mark.
Curnutte's second strike to
Dee! came with 2:04 left in
the first half. as Dee I hauled
in a five-yard TD to make it
a comfortable 2 l -0 ad vantaj~~t before the ha.lf ended.
Waterford (2·3) was able to
ge t on the board thanks to a
20-yard scoring run by Cody
Strahler - making it a 2 t -7
deficit at halftime.
Neither team scored in the
third period. but Dee! and
Curnutte both pulled off the
TD hat trick with 10: 16 left
in regulation . Dee! hauled in
an e1ght-yard pass to conelude the scoring at its 20point outcome .
The Raiders allowed only
220 total yards ·defensively,
limiting the Wildcats to just
83 passing yards. The guests
also amassed · 137 rushing
. yards on 39 carries in the

Please see Ralden. 84

Kevin Kelly/photo

River Valley nrst-year head coach Jared McClelland, left.
sends a play in with running back Tyler Smith during the
first half of Friday's non-league football contest with
Waterford at Raider Field in Cheshire.

• _Eastern 49, Hannan 8
Southern 3~, Gillen 14 ·

Tornadoes
breeze past
Green, 31-14

'· Nolionvllltl·York 30, Melgo 28
, Point Pl..ta!)t 41, Tug Valley 6
•.. Wohamrl 28,

Buck8yo·Tr81127

LOgmn 3!5, Ironton ~0
Chllllcollle 34, Por18moU1h 14
Zanesville 49, warren 3"
AthAns 25, Vinton County 7;

••

Wellston 28, Belpre 13

·

Marlena·.t2, Parkersburg South 2~
Alexander 27, Fldtral lioctclnll·~

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
'

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Grovt CHy ChrlaUan 39, MIJior,o •.·

Trimb)jl 4~·. Fort Loramie 30

..

RACINE
The
Southern
Tornadoes
notched
their
second
straight win of the 2008 sea.
son
by
defea ting
the Green
Bobcat s
·31-14
at
Roger Lee

Coil! Grove·29, Newp·o rt 14

South Point 28, Valley 7 ·
. Wheelereb~(0· 52. Ro~ Hill 7 ..,
··• Ports. woet 49, Cheslll)oa'"' .20 , ·
•

ChQp'manvllle ;!8; Poca 12 · ".·

Herbert Hoover 2~ , Logan 1 -.•
Sl98onvllle 2Q, Clay County 13
Wayne ~9. Vllnlfeld 27 '·

..

Meigs drops·
heartbreaker to
BuckeyeS, 30-28

.'

BY DAVE HARRIS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

•

+'. ,

,

.'

F R EE S H I P P IN G

Local Stocks·
70.36
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 22
BBT (NYSE) - 41.14
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 27.50
28.93
Pepsico (NYSE) - 73.19
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 38.20 Premier (NASDAQ) - 10
Century Aluminum (NAS- Rockwell (NYSE) ~ 39.15
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
DAQ) - 40.23 ·
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.52 4.40
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - 62.43
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -5.43
City Holding (NASDAQ)
101.48
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 59.70
47.28
Collins (NYSE) - 50.10
Wendy's (NYSE) - 22.19
DuPont (NYSE) - 48.04
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 29.83
Worthington (NYSE) - 18.99
US Bank (NYSE) - 37.99
Dally stoCk reports are the 4
Gannett (NYSE) - 18.56
Qaneral Electric (NYSE)
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions
for Sept. 19,
28.62
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
2008, provided by Edward '
·Jones financial advleora
42.80
Isaac Mills In Galllpolla at
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 47.05
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.04
(740) 441-9441 and Leeley
Limited Brands (NYSE) - Marrero in Point Pleaaant at
(304) 674.()174. Member
19.45
Morfolk So.uthern (NYSE)
SIPC.

fhe Scoreboard, Page 82

Cogan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.

Local Weather
Sunday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 80. East
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.
Monday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 80.

Bl

Inside

Tbyrectay September 25

2 teens arrested in
Cleveland school threat
CLEVELAND (AP) Two 16-year-old students
were arrested Friday in an
alleged threat to carry out
a Columbine-style assault,
.
police said'
Nothing came of the
alleged threat at St. Martin
de Porres High School,
where ·a student tipp~d off
parents.
Police
Lt.
Thomas
Stac ho said the two were
charged with inducing
P.anic charges ·and· one also
was charged with posses·
sian of criminal tools , bot·
tles with wicks which
might have been the start
of crude born bs ..
The tv.:o claimed the
threat made Monday was a
prank, Stacho sai(l.
Police questioned the
suspects and got parental
permission to search their
homes. About two dozen
bottles with cloth wicks
were found in the home of
one suspect, according to
Stacho, who described the
items as "possible crude
bottle bombs."
St. Martin de Porres. a
Catholic school founded
in 2003, graduated its first

..

-

AEP (NYSE)..:. 38.18
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 57.54
Ashland fnc. (NYSE) - 31.39
Slg Lots (NYSE) - 31.59
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

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Conned ion

131 LMo;n St .. li•. 6.17&lt;01 lB8·11!)8
+n., Zone, 7J EH""'n St.. (7&lt;01 l ill&gt;·%98

Midlleplrt lngt!k Eleclmnio. 106 N !nrlA\1'.
1740~ C)ql-2825

*Open Sunday
+HigA .Speed lnlpmer S.)ld Here

BUCHTEL
Derek
Arnold scored on a 17 yard
screen pass with 52 seconds
left in the contest, and
chipped in
with
the
extra points
to power
the Nelsonville- York
Buckeyes
to a 30-28
win over
Meigs in
TVC footWell
ball action
Frida .y
evening at
D a v e
Boston
Field.
T h e
Buckeyes
had to survive
the
Marauders
comeback
Clay Bolln
attempt
however, as
Meigs drove to the Buckeye
24-yard line with tO seconds left. But a controversial interception by Mark
(jampbell of a Jacob Well
pass ended the hopes for
t-leigs . It appeared · that
Campbell was out of the
back of the end zone, but
~fter a moment of indeci~ion ; the officiiii signaled a
touchback setting off a wild
celebration on the Buckeye
. ioide of the field.
.:: It didn't take long for the
fireworks to start, as Amold
iook the opening kickoff 85
¥ards for the score. Arnold
~dded the extra points and

.. · Plellse see ~•1•• 85

,.to

'A"T lisa ........ ioatotltlr• tltgulalooy Cool,h.....,CIIIIp ..
SU5toholpdeldy cosblnalrle4i ln..,.plying wllll Slllolftd fedtrollllocam
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Tllulm noiiiiHor...,.ro•llllt·'"'!lll,.......,...

Standard lel1ing rates Oilllly. Early Ttnlllnatl a I FM: Noilt MGYIC&lt;lled ~ d1eliBilll ilai50 thtrl!ililef up to 1171.Some agents inpole ad&lt;!! lees. Oir!r availablt on selert
phone.~irlftt.OIIIercOildlllons&amp;,.,.,_..appiy. Seo&lt;OICiaclllllfptanbrachurerCIIdelahSU!salberi!IU$1li¥e&amp;ill'feamaililgi!ddr. wlti~Al&amp;fsownod

wlre4ess n.._k """'¥ ""'" up to 136 - ·foe applies. EQUlllrnO!n! price &amp;Mil may vary bj mtk &amp;may not bt avalable ~om indepefldent r.W"' RoNit Dttlll Clnb:
Pante&lt;hDuo prke before lfllit.lnrebaedebll lilfd.unllinllod mossoglng plan, and With l·jfalwlfeless l'tll&lt;tagrotmenc ~ 1219.99.Minimum llOJJO onllmlled me;saglng plan
requie4 Bla&lt;klerry" CURVE" BllO priCe belor.mllll.fn- debt wd. unllmlled lllfSII!IIrMJ plan, and with l-yw wireless lfiVI&lt;f
~ 1119.99. Mlrwmum 110.00
unllrnllod messag;ng plan lfQmd. SONV ElKSSON wl50.priu belore maiHo 'rft&gt;ale dellll call\ Mldla"/rn&lt;ssaglng,....,. )liK(hase. and with l"'eJJr wiffless !OMit
agreerntr1b 199.99 Milintl1l SIIIOOM!dlo"/""'sagingleailff pur&lt;Mie required. Allow !Odaysb lulfl~ Card may be uwd on~ olhoUi and lll'alld lor ll1l days aftrr
lssuanc:e dote but b not rtdeemable hlr c:ashand &lt;111no1 beli!H 101 cash Wltlclrawatal AlMs oraulor!laiOd ga!ol~ pump!. Card request mUll be po!lmatked by 10/l0/2008;
you muotbe a- l o r lll...,..,.doysto rm11o aotSIIoltacalcrmt"' bawd on price ollldlvi!IOdt!&lt;[lllpm&lt;nt 011ntt U~: II your min$ of ""'(lnduclilg untbl
Mil on other carntrs' -lis raflnet usogt1 dllllng arty ~COII!«UIIft months .UtH)'OUI oflntl usogt allowanct AT&amp;T may at its option terminate your S'IC deny your
coOOI""'III other ""tors'
dtan&lt;je your plan to one Imposing usogt chargrs fol usago. Vour Ottnet usq allowatl&lt;e is equal to d1e ~sser ol/10 mlns or 4()%
~the Anytime mlns Md with your plan (data ollnet usogt allowance is iho !esse( of &amp;Ill or 20% of the liB lnd·d with your pion).UnUrnlltd llokt Hrwlm: Unbd VOice svcs
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ComAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
FaX - 1-740..446-3008
~~mell

- sportsOmydailysentinel.com

Sporii.Slall

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwat1ers 0 mydailytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Ierum 0 mydaltyreglstE!r.com

•

Ad u m s

Memorial
field
on
Friday during bo.ys'
non-league
footba.ll
action.
Southern
(2-3) tallied
404 vards
of ofi'ense
while holding Green
Bryan Walters/photo
(2-2)to 146
Gallia Academy head football coach Matt Bokovitz, center, .raises his arms in celebration while talking to his team ill a
yards. The
postgame huddle following Friday night's come-from-behind 36-28 victory over previously unbeaten Jackson at Memorial
Tornadoes
Field in Gallipolis.
· ·
.
. .
are averag ~
S, Copplck . ing
over '
350 yards a game in their
last three contests.
Once again . one of the
snapping a two-game !\)sing
Many of those historic keys in the Southern victory
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
streak in the process. The matchups over the years was the Torn.adoes' ability
hosts also extended their have been memorable, with to create many . stars.
GALLIPOLIS
It's
home winning streak against this ranking right up there Southern .shined offensivenever over until it 's over,
thelronmen(4-t,l-l)to six instantly
particularly ly, especially during the secespecially When it comes to
straight, dating . back to since Gallia Academy ond half. After the game , an
a rivalry.
l 998.
outscored JHS by a · 22-7 elated Sollthern head coach
Dennis Teaford praised his
. Gallia Academy football
It was the 79th SEOAL margin in the fourth quarter kids.
gave a classic example of
contest between these two for the triumph.
"Our offen sive line was
this on Friday night, rallying
storied programs, which is
Afterward GAHS' coach tremendous tonight. They .
from a 15-point first half
now 40-34-5 in the Blue and Matt Bokovitz was eccstatic controlled the game from
Allison
Moore
deficit against unbeaten
White's favor - including · about the outcome, particu- the opening snap. And we
Jackson to stage an incredieight of the last nine overall. tarly in the way his team go1 big yards .tonil'ht out of
ble 36-28 come-from-behind League gridiron contest.
GAHS has· also won nine of stepped up after some pretty Manuel and Copp1ck. Those
victory at Memorial Field
The Blue Devils (3-2, 1-t the last tO in this series with trying times over the last two were dutch. Everyone
during
a
Week
5 SEOAL) picked up their the addition of a playoff vicPleasa see Southern. 84 ·
Please see Devils. 84
. Southeastern Ohio Athletic first league win of the year, tory. in 1999.

Blue Devils rally late to burn Jackson, 36-28

Eastern hammers Hannan, 49-8
·Bv LARRY CRuM ·
LCRUMOMYDAILYAEGISTEA.COM

ASHTON, W.Va. - One
man's ttash is another man's
treasure.
That old saying proved
very true Friday night as
Hannan threw the football
away seven times and
Eastern was right there to
claim the freebies leading. to
a commanding 49-8 Eagle
victory Friday night in
Ashton.
. Hannan (0-4) had four
turnovers in its first five possessions leading· to a quick
28-0 Eastern (2-3) lead after
t 2 minutes of play and from
there the Eagles set it on
cruise control. The Eagles
scored once more in the first
half and added two more
scores in the third quarter to
take a 49-0 lead with 3:4 t
remaining in the frame.
Hannan then tacked on its

.
Kl. Connery

Aora

only score of the night with
10 minutes left in the fourth
quarter, but two more
turnovers prevented the
Wildcats from adding to
their totals as Eastern held
on to claim its biggest margin of victory since. a 49-0
beatdown of Southern back
in 2003 .
Overall Eastern enjoyed a
comfortable
night
on
offense, racking up 314
yards and five touchdowns
on the ground with a ·dozen

different players toting the
ball . Thanks to the quick
lead, Eastern . only went to
the air three times . ~ith
Brayden Pratt completing
two passes for 40 yards and
a touchdown .
On the ground Eastern
was paced by Kyle Connery
who had 89 y&amp;rds and two
touchdowns on seven carries
while Klint Connery carried
the ball eight times for 7 t
yards and a score. Kelly
Winebrenner also had two
rushing touchdowns and finished the night with 55 yards
on seven carries.
·Winebrenner also had a
60-yard punt return fdr a
touchdown to cap the
Eagles' scoring .
Hannan , on the other
hand. struggled to move the
ball until late when a few big
the
passes , ba !loaned
Wildcats over I00 yards of

Please see hiles. 85

Larry Crum/photo

Hannan's Joe Kelly tries to break lree of the grasp of
Eastern's Ayah Amos during the . third quarter of a high school
football game Friday in Ashton, W.Va. Eastern won 49-B.

'.

�PageA6

OHIO

iunba~ it me~ -itnttntl

Sunday, September

21, 2008 ·

Gordon achieves Thousands in Ohio still without power
national cerlificate

COLUMBUS (AP) Almost a quarter million
• customers remained without power Saturday, one
STAFF REPORT
week after a wind storm
NEWS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE COM
left big swaths of the state
in the dark.
GALLIPOLIS - Robert
The
remnants
of
of
Gallipolis
Gordon
Hurri
cane
Ike
.
batt~red
received a certificate from
Ohio last Sunday, leaving
the state of Ohio and the
2.6 million customers
National Certified Public
without electricty at the
Manager .
(CPM)
outage
's peak. Residents
Consortium during a graduspent the week cleanil1'g
ation ceremonv held on
up yards riddled with trees
Sept. 10 in Cotu'mbus .
and navigating streets
Gordon was a member of
clogged with darkened
the 27th Ohio Cohort
traffic signals.
t)lroughout the two-year
I
Cincinnati-area Duke
· long course. Cohort 27
Energy
officials insisted
graduated seven students
workers
'would restore
along with four other
power by weekend 's end
cohorts from across Ohio
Robert Gordon
to customers in the southfor a total of 54 graduates.
west corner of the state.
Graduate ~ of the OCPM
University.
About 85 ,000 of their cusProgram have experienced
He is a member of the tomers remained without
extensive training across
four foundational areas; Ohio Certified Public power on Saturday.
Manager Society. and a fel" We have entered a very
~:eneral administration and
of
the
American
low
organization;
iechnical,
quantitative and qualitative ; Academy of Certified
an.alytical and conceptual; Public · Managers . The
National Certified Public
and human relations .
Manager
Consortium curThe CPM Program in
rently
includes
27 states .
Ohio has been administered
by the Department of · Gordon also attended the
Administrative
Services 20th annual American
(DAS) since t 997. DAS Academy of Certified
Managers
Director Hugh Quill pre· Public
Conference
in
Columbus
sented certificates to the
graduates during the cere- leading up to the graduation
mony . .Gordon serves as the ceremony. This. was the
SE regional site manager first time the national confo r the Ohio Certified ference had been held in
'
Public Manager Program Ohio.
The event was widely
through the Voinov ich
School of Leadership and attended by CPM s from
Public Affairs at Ohio across the country.

tedious phase of the
restoration process," Duke
Ohio
and
Energy
Kentucky
President
Sandra Meyer said in a
statement . "Much of the .
outage work is now
focused
on restori ng
power to smaller pockets
of customers ."
Columbus-based
American Electric Power
on Saturday reported
about 77,000 customers
remained without power.
Some residents . watched
with ·frustration as their
neighbors' lights started,
but not their own. Betty
Pence, 85, watched anxiously as · AEP trucks
pulled
through
her
Columbus neighborhood .
"I'd see them leaving
and think , 'Oh , no, it's not
on yet. Don't go,"' she
said.
Chuck
Woolsey

approached one Columbus
crew : "I'm not complaining ," he said, " but do you
have any idea when our
power will be back?"
In
northeast
Ohio ,
FirstEnergy Corp. reported hundreds still without
power. Dayton Power and
Light said about 59,000
customers were without
electricity Saturday. with
plan s to have serv ice
·restored to 90 percent of
the 300,000 households
that lost power Sept. 14.
As Ohio .prepared for
Day 7 wi\hout electricity,
patience worn thin . One
man was accused of
threatening a utility worker and 'charged with inducing panic; he later said he
·was joking. Elsewhere,
administrative
centers
were flooded with complaints ,.both by phone and
in person.

Winds reaching 78 mph
swept through on Sunday,
and at least seven of the
56 deaths blamed on the
hurricane were in Ohio.
Trees were uprooted,
falling on homes , blocking
roads and bringing down
power lines and poles.
Long lines formed at the
gas stations, groceries and
hardware store s that didn't
lose power. Schools and
businesses were forced to
close for days..
" You don ' t want to mention Duke." sa id Neil
Leist, superintendent of
the Clermont Northeastern
School District. which
was closed all week. "I ·
know they have a hard job,
but the people are beyond
frustrated. No one wants
to be last."

class in June and all 50
seniors were accepted to
college. The school is part
of the national network of
Cristo Rey schools, which
requires students to hold
part-time jobs to help pay
for their tuition .
The two suspects were
suspended. Principal· Mary
Ann Vogel told WOIO-TV
that the school is safe and
its small enrollment makes
it comfortable for students
to come forward wiih concerns.
The 1999 Columbine
school massacre at a .
Colorado high school was
carried out by two students who killed 12 classmates and a teacher and
then committed suicide.
In separate cases, a
Cleyeland man was arrested in April on charges of
. plotting a school attack
with a 16-year-old near
South Bend , Ind., and last
October a student gunman
shot and wounded two
high school teachers and
two students before . he
killed
himself
at
Cleveland's SuccessTech
Academy.

Monday night through
Thursday .. .Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Thursday night and
Friday ...Partly
· i:loudy.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the upper 70s.

Rebels fall to Titans, Page 83

Wahama survives Buckeye 'Irail, Page B4
ln the Open, Page BS

Sunday, September 21,2008

LocAL SOIEDUI.E
~ GAllJPQli S - A SChedule ol ~ing h!Qh
~ ...ars~ !&gt;pOrting eloWlts involving learns
!rm1 Galia Bnd Me.gs COI.ll'lties

.

Raiders tame Wildcats on Homecoming
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Monday $eplembttr_Z2

VOlleyball

Eastern at Nels-York , 6 p.m.
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
South Gallia at ~ock Hill, 5:30p.m:

Vin_ton County at Southern. 6 p.m.
ov.c s at Fairland . 5:30p.m.

Tuyda"t September 23
SOccer
Chillicothe at Gania Academy, 5 p.m .
,
Volleyball
Gania Academy at Fairland . 5:30p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs , 6 p.m.
Eastern at-River Valley, 5:30p.m.
O~C at South G~llia, 5:30p.m.
Eastern at Aiver Valley, 5:30p.m.

.

GoH

River Valley at Sectional, TBA ·
G!lltia Academy at Sectional , TBA '
Wednnday September 24

Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rive r Valley. 5 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.

•Soccer
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30p.m.

VOlleyball
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
t;iallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15

p.m.
C~esapeake. at River Valley,
Trimble at South~rn. 6 p.m.

WEEK

5:30p.m.

5 RESULTS

:· Gallla·Aoademy 36, Jackson 28
River Valley 27. Waterford 7

N~tre

,f'Ofts:

.,
...,

Dame 35, S. Gallia

JJ

CH£SHIRE - There's no
place like Homecom ing,
especially when it involves a
winning streak for the first
time in six years.
,The River Valley football
team won its second straight
decision in as many weeks
Friday night - in convincDeel
Curnutte
ing fashion no less - during
a 27-7 Homecoming thump- of offense with the passing
ing of visiting Waterford in a game. Quarterback Clayton
Week 5 non-conference · Curnutte hooked up with
gridiron' matchup at Raider Jordan Dee! on three sepaField .
rate scoring strikes of 69 , 5
The Raider~ (2-3) picked and g yards _ · which
up their first two-game win- accounted for three-quarters
ning streak since weeks four of the hosts points.
and five of the 2003 season,
Curnutte finished the
when
they
shutout evening 17-of-24 passing
(40-0)
and for 227 yards, throwmg zero
Alexander
defeated Southern (48-6). interceptions and three scarThe Silver and Black - ing passes. Dee! ended the
who never trailed in the con- night \\'ith nine catches for
test - also ended a three- 136 yards.
game losing skid at home as
The first of that tandem's
well in the process.
hook-ups started the scoring
RVHS went to the air in the first, when Dee!
early and 'often, accumulat- hauled in a 69-yard bomb to
ing 227 of its 314 to(al yards make it a 7-0 contest at the

5:36 mark of the first period.
Running back Zach Baird
extended that lead t&lt;i t 4-0 in
the second quarter, thanks to
two-yard run at the 6:05
mark.
Curnutte's second strike to
Dee! came with 2:04 left in
the first half. as Dee I hauled
in a five-yard TD to make it
a comfortable 2 l -0 ad vantaj~~t before the ha.lf ended.
Waterford (2·3) was able to
ge t on the board thanks to a
20-yard scoring run by Cody
Strahler - making it a 2 t -7
deficit at halftime.
Neither team scored in the
third period. but Dee! and
Curnutte both pulled off the
TD hat trick with 10: 16 left
in regulation . Dee! hauled in
an e1ght-yard pass to conelude the scoring at its 20point outcome .
The Raiders allowed only
220 total yards ·defensively,
limiting the Wildcats to just
83 passing yards. The guests
also amassed · 137 rushing
. yards on 39 carries in the

Please see Ralden. 84

Kevin Kelly/photo

River Valley nrst-year head coach Jared McClelland, left.
sends a play in with running back Tyler Smith during the
first half of Friday's non-league football contest with
Waterford at Raider Field in Cheshire.

• _Eastern 49, Hannan 8
Southern 3~, Gillen 14 ·

Tornadoes
breeze past
Green, 31-14

'· Nolionvllltl·York 30, Melgo 28
, Point Pl..ta!)t 41, Tug Valley 6
•.. Wohamrl 28,

Buck8yo·Tr81127

LOgmn 3!5, Ironton ~0
Chllllcollle 34, Por18moU1h 14
Zanesville 49, warren 3"
AthAns 25, Vinton County 7;

••

Wellston 28, Belpre 13

·

Marlena·.t2, Parkersburg South 2~
Alexander 27, Fldtral lioctclnll·~

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
'

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Grovt CHy ChrlaUan 39, MIJior,o •.·

Trimb)jl 4~·. Fort Loramie 30

..

RACINE
The
Southern
Tornadoes
notched
their
second
straight win of the 2008 sea.
son
by
defea ting
the Green
Bobcat s
·31-14
at
Roger Lee

Coil! Grove·29, Newp·o rt 14

South Point 28, Valley 7 ·
. Wheelereb~(0· 52. Ro~ Hill 7 ..,
··• Ports. woet 49, Cheslll)oa'"' .20 , ·
•

ChQp'manvllle ;!8; Poca 12 · ".·

Herbert Hoover 2~ , Logan 1 -.•
Sl98onvllle 2Q, Clay County 13
Wayne ~9. Vllnlfeld 27 '·

..

Meigs drops·
heartbreaker to
BuckeyeS, 30-28

.'

BY DAVE HARRIS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

•

+'. ,

,

.'

F R EE S H I P P IN G

Local Stocks·
70.36
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 22
BBT (NYSE) - 41.14
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 27.50
28.93
Pepsico (NYSE) - 73.19
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 38.20 Premier (NASDAQ) - 10
Century Aluminum (NAS- Rockwell (NYSE) ~ 39.15
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
DAQ) - 40.23 ·
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.52 4.40
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - 62.43
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -5.43
City Holding (NASDAQ)
101.48
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Collins (NYSE) - 50.10
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US Bank (NYSE) - 37.99
Dally stoCk reports are the 4
Gannett (NYSE) - 18.56
Qaneral Electric (NYSE)
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions
for Sept. 19,
28.62
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
2008, provided by Edward '
·Jones financial advleora
42.80
Isaac Mills In Galllpolla at
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 47.05
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.04
(740) 441-9441 and Leeley
Limited Brands (NYSE) - Marrero in Point Pleaaant at
(304) 674.()174. Member
19.45
Morfolk So.uthern (NYSE)
SIPC.

fhe Scoreboard, Page 82

Cogan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.

Local Weather
Sunday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 80. East
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.
Monday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 80.

Bl

Inside

Tbyrectay September 25

2 teens arrested in
Cleveland school threat
CLEVELAND (AP) Two 16-year-old students
were arrested Friday in an
alleged threat to carry out
a Columbine-style assault,
.
police said'
Nothing came of the
alleged threat at St. Martin
de Porres High School,
where ·a student tipp~d off
parents.
Police
Lt.
Thomas
Stac ho said the two were
charged with inducing
P.anic charges ·and· one also
was charged with posses·
sian of criminal tools , bot·
tles with wicks which
might have been the start
of crude born bs ..
The tv.:o claimed the
threat made Monday was a
prank, Stacho sai(l.
Police questioned the
suspects and got parental
permission to search their
homes. About two dozen
bottles with cloth wicks
were found in the home of
one suspect, according to
Stacho, who described the
items as "possible crude
bottle bombs."
St. Martin de Porres. a
Catholic school founded
in 2003, graduated its first

..

-

AEP (NYSE)..:. 38.18
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 57.54
Ashland fnc. (NYSE) - 31.39
Slg Lots (NYSE) - 31.59
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

•f.kbon (ommYflicatloos

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.
Conned ion

131 LMo;n St .. li•. 6.17&lt;01 lB8·11!)8
+n., Zone, 7J EH""'n St.. (7&lt;01 l ill&gt;·%98

Midlleplrt lngt!k Eleclmnio. 106 N !nrlA\1'.
1740~ C)ql-2825

*Open Sunday
+HigA .Speed lnlpmer S.)ld Here

BUCHTEL
Derek
Arnold scored on a 17 yard
screen pass with 52 seconds
left in the contest, and
chipped in
with
the
extra points
to power
the Nelsonville- York
Buckeyes
to a 30-28
win over
Meigs in
TVC footWell
ball action
Frida .y
evening at
D a v e
Boston
Field.
T h e
Buckeyes
had to survive
the
Marauders
comeback
Clay Bolln
attempt
however, as
Meigs drove to the Buckeye
24-yard line with tO seconds left. But a controversial interception by Mark
(jampbell of a Jacob Well
pass ended the hopes for
t-leigs . It appeared · that
Campbell was out of the
back of the end zone, but
~fter a moment of indeci~ion ; the officiiii signaled a
touchback setting off a wild
celebration on the Buckeye
. ioide of the field.
.:: It didn't take long for the
fireworks to start, as Amold
iook the opening kickoff 85
¥ards for the score. Arnold
~dded the extra points and

.. · Plellse see ~•1•• 85

,.to

'A"T lisa ........ ioatotltlr• tltgulalooy Cool,h.....,CIIIIp ..
SU5toholpdeldy cosblnalrle4i ln..,.plying wllll Slllolftd fedtrollllocam
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Tllulm noiiiiHor...,.ro•llllt·'"'!lll,.......,...

Standard lel1ing rates Oilllly. Early Ttnlllnatl a I FM: Noilt MGYIC&lt;lled ~ d1eliBilll ilai50 thtrl!ililef up to 1171.Some agents inpole ad&lt;!! lees. Oir!r availablt on selert
phone.~irlftt.OIIIercOildlllons&amp;,.,.,_..appiy. Seo&lt;OICiaclllllfptanbrachurerCIIdelahSU!salberi!IU$1li¥e&amp;ill'feamaililgi!ddr. wlti~Al&amp;fsownod

wlre4ess n.._k """'¥ ""'" up to 136 - ·foe applies. EQUlllrnO!n! price &amp;Mil may vary bj mtk &amp;may not bt avalable ~om indepefldent r.W"' RoNit Dttlll Clnb:
Pante&lt;hDuo prke before lfllit.lnrebaedebll lilfd.unllinllod mossoglng plan, and With l·jfalwlfeless l'tll&lt;tagrotmenc ~ 1219.99.Minimum llOJJO onllmlled me;saglng plan
requie4 Bla&lt;klerry" CURVE" BllO priCe belor.mllll.fn- debt wd. unllmlled lllfSII!IIrMJ plan, and with l-yw wireless lfiVI&lt;f
~ 1119.99. Mlrwmum 110.00
unllrnllod messag;ng plan lfQmd. SONV ElKSSON wl50.priu belore maiHo 'rft&gt;ale dellll call\ Mldla"/rn&lt;ssaglng,....,. )liK(hase. and with l"'eJJr wiffless !OMit
agreerntr1b 199.99 Milintl1l SIIIOOM!dlo"/""'sagingleailff pur&lt;Mie required. Allow !Odaysb lulfl~ Card may be uwd on~ olhoUi and lll'alld lor ll1l days aftrr
lssuanc:e dote but b not rtdeemable hlr c:ashand &lt;111no1 beli!H 101 cash Wltlclrawatal AlMs oraulor!laiOd ga!ol~ pump!. Card request mUll be po!lmatked by 10/l0/2008;
you muotbe a- l o r lll...,..,.doysto rm11o aotSIIoltacalcrmt"' bawd on price ollldlvi!IOdt!&lt;[lllpm&lt;nt 011ntt U~: II your min$ of ""'(lnduclilg untbl
Mil on other carntrs' -lis raflnet usogt1 dllllng arty ~COII!«UIIft months .UtH)'OUI oflntl usogt allowanct AT&amp;T may at its option terminate your S'IC deny your
coOOI""'III other ""tors'
dtan&lt;je your plan to one Imposing usogt chargrs fol usago. Vour Ottnet usq allowatl&lt;e is equal to d1e ~sser ol/10 mlns or 4()%
~the Anytime mlns Md with your plan (data ollnet usogt allowance is iho !esse( of &amp;Ill or 20% of the liB lnd·d with your pion).UnUrnlltd llokt Hrwlm: Unbd VOice svcs
""'provided !Oioly hr 1M! dialog b&lt;twoen two~ No~ discounts are avalabl&lt;! wlh untlmlled plan.SCreen hnagfl s-e4 Trademarks of Ihe Ohio Stfe
Untverlly are IIRdwlth ptrml&lt;!;on Service prMied by AT&amp;T Mollfllty. Ol008AT&amp;T lnlflle&lt;t,.l Pr0fl'111. All rlghtsreser..cl.AT&amp;T.d1e AI&amp;T !o9o.and ollodler marks conloline&lt;l
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"!!'"'"""'

.--age."

ComAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
FaX - 1-740..446-3008
~~mell

- sportsOmydailysentinel.com

Sporii.Slall

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwat1ers 0 mydailytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Ierum 0 mydaltyreglstE!r.com

•

Ad u m s

Memorial
field
on
Friday during bo.ys'
non-league
footba.ll
action.
Southern
(2-3) tallied
404 vards
of ofi'ense
while holding Green
Bryan Walters/photo
(2-2)to 146
Gallia Academy head football coach Matt Bokovitz, center, .raises his arms in celebration while talking to his team ill a
yards. The
postgame huddle following Friday night's come-from-behind 36-28 victory over previously unbeaten Jackson at Memorial
Tornadoes
Field in Gallipolis.
· ·
.
. .
are averag ~
S, Copplck . ing
over '
350 yards a game in their
last three contests.
Once again . one of the
snapping a two-game !\)sing
Many of those historic keys in the Southern victory
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
streak in the process. The matchups over the years was the Torn.adoes' ability
hosts also extended their have been memorable, with to create many . stars.
GALLIPOLIS
It's
home winning streak against this ranking right up there Southern .shined offensivenever over until it 's over,
thelronmen(4-t,l-l)to six instantly
particularly ly, especially during the secespecially When it comes to
straight, dating . back to since Gallia Academy ond half. After the game , an
a rivalry.
l 998.
outscored JHS by a · 22-7 elated Sollthern head coach
Dennis Teaford praised his
. Gallia Academy football
It was the 79th SEOAL margin in the fourth quarter kids.
gave a classic example of
contest between these two for the triumph.
"Our offen sive line was
this on Friday night, rallying
storied programs, which is
Afterward GAHS' coach tremendous tonight. They .
from a 15-point first half
now 40-34-5 in the Blue and Matt Bokovitz was eccstatic controlled the game from
Allison
Moore
deficit against unbeaten
White's favor - including · about the outcome, particu- the opening snap. And we
Jackson to stage an incredieight of the last nine overall. tarly in the way his team go1 big yards .tonil'ht out of
ble 36-28 come-from-behind League gridiron contest.
GAHS has· also won nine of stepped up after some pretty Manuel and Copp1ck. Those
victory at Memorial Field
The Blue Devils (3-2, 1-t the last tO in this series with trying times over the last two were dutch. Everyone
during
a
Week
5 SEOAL) picked up their the addition of a playoff vicPleasa see Southern. 84 ·
Please see Devils. 84
. Southeastern Ohio Athletic first league win of the year, tory. in 1999.

Blue Devils rally late to burn Jackson, 36-28

Eastern hammers Hannan, 49-8
·Bv LARRY CRuM ·
LCRUMOMYDAILYAEGISTEA.COM

ASHTON, W.Va. - One
man's ttash is another man's
treasure.
That old saying proved
very true Friday night as
Hannan threw the football
away seven times and
Eastern was right there to
claim the freebies leading. to
a commanding 49-8 Eagle
victory Friday night in
Ashton.
. Hannan (0-4) had four
turnovers in its first five possessions leading· to a quick
28-0 Eastern (2-3) lead after
t 2 minutes of play and from
there the Eagles set it on
cruise control. The Eagles
scored once more in the first
half and added two more
scores in the third quarter to
take a 49-0 lead with 3:4 t
remaining in the frame.
Hannan then tacked on its

.
Kl. Connery

Aora

only score of the night with
10 minutes left in the fourth
quarter, but two more
turnovers prevented the
Wildcats from adding to
their totals as Eastern held
on to claim its biggest margin of victory since. a 49-0
beatdown of Southern back
in 2003 .
Overall Eastern enjoyed a
comfortable
night
on
offense, racking up 314
yards and five touchdowns
on the ground with a ·dozen

different players toting the
ball . Thanks to the quick
lead, Eastern . only went to
the air three times . ~ith
Brayden Pratt completing
two passes for 40 yards and
a touchdown .
On the ground Eastern
was paced by Kyle Connery
who had 89 y&amp;rds and two
touchdowns on seven carries
while Klint Connery carried
the ball eight times for 7 t
yards and a score. Kelly
Winebrenner also had two
rushing touchdowns and finished the night with 55 yards
on seven carries.
·Winebrenner also had a
60-yard punt return fdr a
touchdown to cap the
Eagles' scoring .
Hannan , on the other
hand. struggled to move the
ball until late when a few big
the
passes , ba !loaned
Wildcats over I00 yards of

Please see hiles. 85

Larry Crum/photo

Hannan's Joe Kelly tries to break lree of the grasp of
Eastern's Ayah Amos during the . third quarter of a high school
football game Friday in Ashton, W.Va. Eastern won 49-B.

'.

�•

SCOREBOARD

iunbap Qrtmes ·ienttntl
PREP

fOOTBALL

Fnday s Box scores

Eastern 49, Hannan 8
Eastern

28

Hannan

0

7 14

0

0 -

49

0 8 -

8

Sconng summary
First Quarter
E-KIInt Connery 5 run (Zach
Hendn&gt; krck) 10 40
E-Hendnx 31 pass from Brayden
Pratt (Hendrrx krck) 6 16
E-KeHy Winebrenner 25 run
(Hendnx krck) 2 41
E-Wrnebrenner 11 run (Hendnx
krck) 27
Second Quarter
E-Kyle Connery 16 run (Hendnx
krck) 10 38
Third Quarte&lt;
E-Connery 13 run (Hendnx kick}
4 52
E-Wrnebrenner 60 punt return
(Hendnx krck) 3·41
Fourth Quartet
H-Jared Cobb 9 pass from Joe
Kelly (Andy Sowards run) 1008

E
Frrs1 Downs
Rushes-yards
Passrng yards
Total ya,rds
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-los!
Penalties-yards

12
54-314
40
354
2·3-0
3-2
8-80

H
8
27-53
86
139
7-22-4
5-3
8-60

Individual Statistics
Rushing: E-Kyle Connery 7-89 ,
Klrnl
Connery
8-71
Kelly
Wrnebrenner 7-55, Cody Rrdgeway
3-27 . Ryan Shook 10-26. Brad
Slone 3·20 Mrke Johnson 3-11 ,
Fretldre Hernandez 3-6, Brayden
Pratt 4-5 Zach Hendrrx 1-4, Actron
Facemyer 4·3, Seth Guthene 1-(-3).
H-Joe Kelly 8-24 , Patnck Flora 2·
17, Robert Wor trl 5-10 , Jacob Taylor

10·2. Andy Sowards 2·0
Passing: E-Brayden Pratt 2-3-0
40
H-Jacob Taylor 5·17 ·3 60. Joe
Kelly 2-5 1 26
Receiving: E-Zach Hendnx 1-3 1.
Mtke Johnson 1-9
H- Palr1ck Flora 5 78 Jared Cobb
1·9, Joe Kelly 1-( -1)
Gallia' Academy 36,
Jackson 28
Jackson
14 7 0 7 Galhpohs
6 8 0 22 -

28
36

Scoring summary
First Quarter
J-Cody Huff 66 run (Ryan Mullrns
krck) 11 ·43
J-Kiay Arthur 9 run (Mulhns ktck)
7 24
GA- Nate Allrson 6 run (krck farled)
2 55
Second Quarter
J-Huff 89 INT relurn (Mullins krck)
6 11
GA-Eihan Moore 1 run (Moore
run) 1 38
Fourth Quarter

J-Huff 5 run (Mullrns krck) 10 53
GA- Beau Whaley 80 pass from
Moore (Corey Mason krck) 10 42
GA-AIIrson 12 run {AIIrson run)
2 31
GA-Jared Gravely 30 run (Mason

kiCk) 1 31

: Comp-atHnt

J
14
34-226
38
264
5-13-1

·: Fumbles-lost
. Penalties-yards

7·66

F1rst Downs
Rushes-ya rds
Passtng yards
• Total yards

2-2

GA
21
40-205
218
423
14·17·2
1-1
7·64

Individual Statistics
Rushing: J-Cody Huff 22· 179,
Klay Arthur 7-35, Nathanrel Hailer
1-5, Brandon Trace 1-4, Tyl er Boggs

3·3
GA- Nate Allrson 15·93, Jared
Gravely 12-62 , Ethan Moore 10-39,
: Austtn Wtlson .3-11
' Passing: J-Tyler Boggs 5·13·1 38
: GA- Eihan Moore 14-17-2 218
Receiving : J-Josh arown 3-27,
Kevrn Speakman 2·11
GA- Beau Whaley 6 -120, Austtn

Johnson krck) 6 05
AV-Deel 5 pass from Curnutte
(Johnson krck) 2 04
W-Cody Slranler 20 run (Cody
Hall krck) 0 Ot
Fourth Quarter
RV- -Dee! 8 pass from Curnutte
(Johnson krck) 10 16
F1rst Downs
Rushes·yards
Pass1ng yards
Total yards
Comp-an-1nt
Fumbles-losl
·Penalties-yards

.w

11
39-137
83
220
6-15·2
2·1
3-30

RV
12
30-87
227
314
17·24·0
4·1
4-25

Individual Statistics
Rushing: W-Cody Strahler 14-72,
Jarrod E1chhorn 15-49, Michael
Fullen 8· 17. De~n Mrller 2·10,
Jacob Kelley 2-6
RV-Zach Barrd 13-64 , Claylon
Curnutte 7-14, Tyler Smrth 3· 11 ,
Cody McAvena 2·8, James Frelder
4-1 , Elr Krmble 1-0
Passing: W-Cody Strahler 5·14·2
· 73, Trevor Lang 1-1-0 10
RV-Ciayton Curnutte 17-24-0 227
Receiving: W-Cody Hall 2·47,
Levr McCutcheon 1-17, Dean Mrller
t -10 #84 2·9
RV-Jordan Deel 9·136 , Cody
McAvena 2-9 Kody Johnson 3-14 ,
Zach Ba1rd 1·51 , Jacob Brown 2-17
Southern 31, Green 14
Green
7 0 14 10 - 31
Southern
0 14 0 8 - 14
Scaring summary
Flrs1 Quarter
S-Mrchael Manuel6 run (Ash
kick)
Second Quarter
G-Chff Bonner 22 run (Bonner
pass from Sayre)
G-lan Harns 1 run (krck larled)
Third Quarter
S-Jusl1ce 20 pas.s from Manuel
(Copprck run)
5-Greg Jehkrns 3 run (Ash krck)
Fourth Quarter
S-Ash freld goal
5- Duslrn Salser 2 run (Ash krck)

G
F1rst Downs
Rushes-yards
Passrng yards
Tala! yerds
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

9
31-131
15
146
1-3-0
2·0
4-30

s

16
53-384
20
404

I ·5· I
5·0
6·80

Individual Statlattca
Rushing : G-Bonner 11·80, Sayre
8-38, Justus 3-8; Harris 9-5
S-Manoel 20· 121 ,' Copprck 20117, Jenkms 8·38. Salser 4·7,
Just1ce 1· 1
Passing: G-sayre 1-3-0 15
&amp;--Manuel 1·2·1 20, Salser 0·3·0

0

'

Receiving: G-Bonner 1·15
S-Justoce 1-1 o
Ports. Notre Dame 35,
South Gallla 6
ND
6 6 8 15 - 35
S Galha
6 0 0 0 6
Scoring summary
First Quarter
NO-Thad Bowman 3 run (krck
farled) 5 22
SG- Bryce Clary 27 run (run larled)
1'48
Second Quarter
NO-Bowman 1 run (kick fatled)
1'10
Third Quarter
NO-Bowman 70 k1ckoff retum
(Kevrn Delabar pass from Brock
Hannah) 11.48
Fourth Quarter
NO-Bowman 11 run (Jarred Lewts
pass from Hannah) 8 3?
NO -Bowman 4 run (Paul Wise
kiCk) 6 37

Rush yards
Passrng yards
Total yards
Comp-aU·rnt
Fumbles lost

Page B2

NO
245
39
284 •
1-9-1

0

SG
114

5
119

1·5-0
3

Individual Statistics
NO-Thad Bowman 29·
Rushing:
Evan Wood 2· 19
178, Jeffery Emnell 5·41
SG-Bryce Clary 17-87 , Austm
Nelsonville-York 30,
Phrflrps 6·19, Caleb McClanahan 5·
Meigs 28
Mergs
6 6 10 6 - 28 12, ,Corey Haner 1-1, Jeff Clyburn
N-Y
8 0 6 16 - 30 1·(-t) , Jeff Combs 5-(-4)
Passing : NO-Brock Hannah t -9-1
39
Scoring summary
SG-Jeff Combs 1· 5·0 5
First Quarter
:- NY-Derek Arnold 85 krckoH return , Receiving: ND-Kevrn Delabar 1·
39
(Arnold run) 11 49
SG- Danny Matney 1-5
· M- Cameron Bolin 36 pass from
Jacob Well (pass larled) 11 ·00
Wahama 28,
Second Quarter
Buckeye Trail 27
, M-Clay Bolin 31 pass from Well
Wahama
6 7 15 o - 28
• (run !ailed) 7 58
B Trarl
6 7 6 8 - 27
Third Quarter
: M- Mason Metts 27 held goal 6 40
Scoring summary
·. M-Jeremy Smrth 18 run (Mens
First Quarter
· krck) 2 31
BT -Adam Ktern 2 run (run failed)
: NY -Arnold 94 krckoff reiUrn (run
4{)4
. farled) 2 04
W -Mrcarah Branch 6 run (krck
Fourth Quarter
farled) 2 42
NY -Justin Cunnmgham 44 run
Second Quarter
(Arnold run) 7 58
BT -Issac Snyder 43 pass from
M-Smrth 3 run (krck larled) 5 02
Ethan Snyder (Brandon Sealodk
NY -Arnold 17 pass from Mrchael
krck) 2 44
Barnck (Arnold run) 52
W- Wrflram Zuspan 9 run (Kyle
Zerkle krck) 26
M
NY
Third Quarter
, F1rst Downs
14
12
Rushes-yards
32·11 0 44·210 W-Zerkte 18 run (Zerkle krck)
958
Passing yards
213
33
BT -Kiern 3 run (pass farled) 7.19
243
Total yards
281
W-Zerkle 55 run (Ma« Dangerlield
Comp-att-rnt
14·24·1 3-9·1
pass from Zuspan) 8:32
Penalties-yards
4-32
4-50
Fourth Quarter
BT -Sealock 11 pass from Ethan
Individual Statlatica
. Ruahlng: M-Jeremy Smrth 23-89, Snyder (Billy Fisher pass lrom
Snyder) 3 33
Cory Hutton 3·13, Jacob ,Well6·8
. NY-Oerek Arnold 30·166, Justin
Cunningham 5-57, Michael Barrick
BT
First Downs
14
18
4·14, Mark Campbellf-(·25).
39-359 42·281
Pa11lng: M-Jacob Well 14-24·1 Rushes-yards
Passing yards
35
140
213
Total yards
394
421
NY-Micnaet Barrick 3·9·1 33
4-12-Q .9-18-3
Receiving: M-Clay Bolin 4·111, Comp-att~nt
0·0
3·3
Cameron Bolin 4·64, Jeremy Smith Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards 4·33
2-15
• 5·27.
· NY- Derek Arnold 2·24 , Mark
Individual Statlotico
· Campbell 1·9.
Ftuohlng: W-Micalah Branch 19·
174, Kyle Zerkle 11 · 149, Jacob
River V$11ey 27,
Roach
5-20, Wrllram Zuspan :3·1 0,
Waterford
7
•
Waterlord
0 .7 0 0 7 Ryan Lee 1·6.
Rrver Valley
7 14 • 0 6 - 27 BT-Adam Klern 13·127, Ethan
Snyder 17-94, Brandon Sealock 10·
48, Issac Snyder 1· 7, Cliff Wrlson 1·
Scoring summary
Firat Quarter
5
Paaalng : W- Wrlllam Zuspan 4-12: RV-Jordan Deel69 pass from
, Clayton Curnutte (Tyler Smrth kick)
a 35
5.38
BT-Ethan Snyder 9·17·3 140,
Second
Quarter
Brandon Sealock' 0·1-D 0.
•
RV -Zach Barrd 2 run (Kody
Receiving : W- M1caiah Branch 2·
Wtlson 4 -55, Outnton Ntbert 2-24,

w

E Can 47, Rootstown 25
Eden 14, Tal Ottawa Hrlls 10
Euclid 13, Eastlake N. 0
Findlay Liberty-Benton 69, Arcadia

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
Cardinal Conference
CARD
W-1.
PF PA
3-Q
93 .. 31
Chapmanvrlle
1·0 . 51
24
Wrrtne
Polnl Pfeasanl. .. . _..
1·0
42
10
Q-1
12
28
Poca
.. " .. .
Herbert Hoover .... .. .. ..... ... . Q-2 ' · 24 . 75
G-2
29
93
Slss&lt;invH"
Independents
ALL
W·L
PF
4-0
175
1-4 ... 54 ..
.. .. . " .. •.. ' .. .D-4 " .. 38 .

Wahama
South Galba

Hannan

AU.

PF
Pt.
109 . 38 '
160 . 82
130 78
70
121
64
.122
71 . 130

W·L
4-0
4·0 "
2·2
.. 0·4 .
.. 1·3
1-3

•,

PA
52
152
210

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

Chflhcolhe
Y&gt;gan
Marietta
Jackson
Ironton
Gallla Academy
Zanesv1lle
Warren
Portsmoulh

' I ' ' ' • ' '

SEOAL '
PF
PA
W·L
58 . •35
" . .. . 2-Q .
10
1-Q ... 35
26
21
1·0
1·1
49
56
' I -1
52
41
1-1
42
70
I -t
70
27
24
D-2
75 .,
0-2
55
34

Ohio Valley Conference
OVC
W·L
PF
PA
o-o
0
0
0.
.0·0
0
.. .o-o .. 0
0
.. o-o . 0
0
.. o-o .
0
.0
o-o .. 0
0

Ches~ake

Arver alley
Coal Grove
Soulll Pornl
Farrtand
Aodk Hoi! .

Tri·Valley Conference
Ohio Olvlllon
TVC
W·L
PF
PA
Nelsonvifle·Yorl&lt; . ........
56
. 2·0 " 64
Mergs ...
.. .. ..... .. .. . . 1-1 . ' .54 43
. ."
42
BelPre ..
1-1 . 39
Athens .
1-1. 38
33
Wellston
...... ..
1-1 . 56
47
Alexander
14
26.
0·1
Vonton County :
7
25
0·1

.. ...

..

W-L
3-2 .
. s-o .
2·3
4-1
3-2
3-2
2-3. 2-3
1-4

W-L
2-3
2-3
2-3
2·3
' 0·4
D-5

ALL
PF
102
176
129
144
146
lOS
120
55

sa

PA
. 103
..41
175

90

76
. 153
. 102
112
132

ALL
PF
PA
119 132
..67 ... 135
" .80 . ..66
. 104 .117
" 65 " .97
203
" 51

ALL
PA
W·L· PF
' 4·1 . .139 ..11 I
' 4·1 . .. 151 ..93
2·3. .76 . ' .91
1-4 " ..73 ' 107
1-4 . .104 ..144
139 ..73
3·2
1-4 ..61
.145

Hocking Division
ALL
TVC
W-L
PF PA
W·L
PF . PA
Federal Hocking
84 . 87
.. o-o 0 0
3·2
Trimble .
3-2
107 107
o-o 0 0
.117 . 125
Easlem
0
0
2-3
- 0-0
Southern
0-0
0. 0
.91 ..122
2·3
Watsrford
. 0-0
0. 0
2·3 .. .79 ..114
Mrller
0. . 0
1-4. .. 54 . 167
. 0·0
'
16, Jacob Roach 1-14, Colin P1erce Bucyrus Wynford 40, N Robmson
1-5
Col Crawford 7
BT--lssac Snyder 2·51, Brlly Frsher Cadrz Hamson Cenl 43, Rrchmond
2-29, Ben Ogden 1-20, Donald Edrson 13
Davrs 2·19, Brandon Sealock 1-11 , Cambridge 58 , Warsaw A1ver V1ew
Enc Roberson 1·9.
21
Can Cent Cath 19, Bedford
Chanel9
Point Pleasant 41,
Can . Gte nOak 27
Youngs.
Tug Valley 6
Pt. Pleasant 14 14 13 0 - 41 Aust1ntown -F1ICh 0
Tug Valley
0 0 6 0 6 Can McKrnley 37. Massollon
Jackson 13
Canal Fulton Northwest 17, Can
Scoring summary
Soulh 14
First Quarter
Canal Winchester 24, Crrclevrlle 0
PP-Derek Mrtchell42 run (Justrn
Canfield 31 , Struthers 0
Weaver krck) 9 16
Cardrnglon·Lrncoln 13, Manon Elgrn
PP-Mrlchell 57 run (Weaver krck)
512
'
6
.
Carey 42, Fostona $1 Wendelln 0
Second Quarter
Carlisle 75 Day Norlhndge 22
PP- Allen Wasonga 37 run
Casstown Mlam1 E 48, Lewisburg
(Weaver krck) 11 52
Tn-County N 19
PP-Wasonga 17 run (Weaver
Cenlervrlle 54, Mramrsburg 0
krck) 1·39
Chagnn Falls 42, Orange 13
Third Quarter
Chesh1re R1ver Valley 27, Watertord
TV-Mrchael Evans 13 pass lrom
7
Bra&gt;&lt;ton Hinkle (run failed)
Chesterland W Geauga 31,
PP-Wasonga 8 run (Weaver k.1ck)
Chagnn Falls Kenston 6
PP-Moke Musgrave 54 fumble
Chrlllcolhe 34. Portsmouth 14
return (krck failed)
Chillicothe
Zane
Trace
48,
Chrlhcothe Huntrngton 0
pp
TV
C1n Anderson 65, 'Batavia Ameha 0
F1rst Downs
13
10
C1n Coleram 35, Cm Sycamore 14
Rushes-yards
36-318 40-47
Crn Counlry Day 51, Crn . Chnstran
Passtng yards
·1
63
27
Total yards
317
110
C1n Deer Park 37, N Bend Taylor
Comp-att-1nt
1-6-1
7-13·1
20
Fumbles lost
2
2
Crn
Glen Esle 38, Crn NW 7
Penaltres-yards
9·85
3·20
C1n Hills Chnst1an Academy 35,
Day Chnst1an 7
Individual Statistics
Cln
lnd1an Hill 35 , Read1ng 17
Rushing: PP-AIIen Wasonga 1B·
153, Derek Mrlchell 5·1 16, Caleb C1n La Salle 15 Lex Henry Clay,
.
Wasonga 2-35 . Chns Blankenship Ky 14
4-25, JaWann Wrllrams 1-18 B.J C1n Made1ra 20, Ctn Manemont 14
Lloyd 3-2, Tyler Auslrn 2-0, Cody Crn Pnnceton 27, Crn Oak Hrlls 21
Crn. Shrader 39, Day Jefferson 6
Greathouse1 ·(·33)
TV-Chns Estep 13·44, Grdeon C1n Turp.n 42 , Ham~lton Ross 14
C1n. Wrnton Woods 55, Krngs Mrlls
Jarvis 8-31. Austin Vance 7-13
Passing: PP- BJ Lloyd 1-5-1 (- 1), Krn gs 21
C1n W1throw 42 , C1n Hughes 6
Errc Roberts 0-1-0 o.
Crn
Woodward 44 , Crn. Western
TV-Braxton Hrnkle 7-13·1 63
Hrlls
0
Receiving: PP- Derek Motchelf1·(·
C1n Wyom1ng 21, Cm F1nneytown 0
1).
TV-Austrn Vance 4-45, Mrchael Crrclevrlle Logan Elm 21, Amanda·
Evans 1-13, Nathan Brewer 1-B, Clearcreek 7
Clarksville Clmton-Mass1e 34,
Chrrs Estep 1·(·3)
Washrngton C H Mramr Trace 6
Claylon Northmont 48, Faorborn 7
Cle Glenvrlle 40, Cle. Lrncotn W 0
Cle His 19, Youngs East 16
Cle JFK 33 , Cle E Tech 7
QHIQ
Cle John Adams 34. Cle. Anodes 6
Cle John Marshall 32, Cle East 12
Ada 44, Bluffton 7
Cle S 30, Cle Collrnwood 20
Akr Buchtel 49, Akr. Eifel 27
Clyde 63, Port Chnton 6
Akr East 38, Akr Frrestone 21
Akr Hoban 63, Painesv1Ue Harvey 0 Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 29,
Akr Manchester 57, Navarre Newport, Ky 14
Coldwater 23. Anna 0
Farrless 15
Collins Western Reserve 35,
Akr SVSM 20, Napoleon 3
Albany Alexander 27, Stewarl Plymouth 27
Cols Bexley 20, Whrtehaii-Yearlrng
Federal Hockrng 0
10
Alliance 24, Carrolllon 10
Cols DeSales 38, Frndlay 7
Amherst Steele 15, N Olmsted 12
Andover Pymalunong Valley 34 , Cols Franklin Hts 49, WavQrly 27
Cols Hamrlton Twp 26, BloomThompson Ledgemonl 6
Ansoma
40 ,
Umon
C1ty Carroll1 0
Cols Harvesl Prep 69, Mrllersport 0
MISSISSmawa Valley 28
Apple Creek Waynedale 49 Cots Sl Charles 38, Sandusky 0
Cots.
Upper
Arlington
34,
Rrttman 13
Worthrngton Krlbowne 9
Arcanum 54, aradford 21
Cols
Watterson
28,
Cle
Archbold 41, Swanton 21
BenediCtine 7
Ashtabula Lakeside 31, Geneva 9
Athens 25, McArthur Vonton County Co lumb•a StatiOn Columbia 14,
Sheffield Brooksrde 7
7
Columb1ana 14, Hanoverton United
Alwater Waterloo 27. Wondham 19
3
Aurora 46, Beachwood 12
Columbrana Crestvrew 34, E.
Avon 41 , Rocky R1ver 16
Barnbndge Paint Valley
34 Palestine 28
Conneaut 12, Cte Cent Cath . to
Frankfort Adena 25
Baltrmore Loberly Unron 37, Cots Cory-Rawson 53, Vanlue t 4
Comglon 32,. W Alexandria Twrn
Grandview Hts 0
Batavra 15, Cln. Clark Monlesson ValleyS 26
Creuton Norwayne I 4, W. Salem
13
Bay VIllage Bay 35 , Oberlrn NW'
Firelands 20
Cuyahoga Falls 28 , N Royalton 20
Beallsville 50 , New Matamoras Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 35 , Wooster
Tri way 12 ,
Frontier 20
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 14,
Beavercreek 35 , Xen1a 7
Parma Padua 10
Bedford 29, Chardon NDCL 28
Bellarre St John 27 , Brshop Cuyahoga His 55, Newbury 14
Donahue , W.Va. 26
Day. Carroll 24, Crn . Purcell Marian
12
Bellevue 48, Upper Sandusky 7
Bellville Clear Fork 34, Mansf1eld Day
Cham1nade-Jullenne 21 ,
Sr 13
Middletown Fenwick 20
Day Oakwood 35, Ealon 31
Berea 14, Weslfake t 3
.
Berlin Cenler Western Reserve 27. Defrance 35, Van Wer118
Wellsvrlle 24
Oef1ance Ayersv1lle 28 Edgerton 7
Bethel-Tale 23, Blanchester 6
Def1ance Tmora 56 , Antwerp 10
Bloorndale ElmWQpd 28, Kansas Delaware Buckeye Valley 48,
Lakota 27, OT
Caledon1a R1ver Valley 0
Bowling Green 26.
Holland Delaware Hayes 28, Mt Vernon 7
Spnngfreld 24
Delphos St John's 14, Versarlles 8
BreckSVIIIE·Broad~IBW
Hts 34 , Dover 53, Coshocton 14
Moddleburg His. Mrdpark 7
Dresden Trr-Valley 27 , Phrlo 7
Brrdgeport 40, Paden Crty, W Va 16 Dublin Coffman 55, Galloway
Brookville 34, NeVI Lebanon DrKie o Weslfand 0
'
Bryan 48 Montpelier 8
Dublin
Jerome
14,
Powell
Bucyrus 31, lucas 6
Olenlang~ Lrberty' 10

..

Friday scores

Sunday, September

7

Fostorra 45, Galron 22
Frankhn 27, Bellbrook 8
Fredencktown 21, Danvtlle 7
Fremont Ross 41 , Lora1n Southview
7

Ft Recovery 26. Rockford Parkway
12
Gahanna Lrnooln 26, Lancasler 18
Gallipolis Gallra 36, Jackson 28
Gates
M1lls
Gilmour
41
Warrensville Hts 6
Gales Mrlls Hawken 49 , Orwell
Grand Valley 14
Genoa Area 63. Elmore Woodmere
12
Germantown Valley V1ew 44 , Milton·
Um6n0
G1bsoilburg 43, Millbury Lake 7
Grrard 42 , Warren Champron 13
Glousler Tnmble 41 , Fl Loramre 30
Granville 38 , Gahanna Gals
Acade my 6
Greenville 24 Day Marshall 6
Greenw1ch S Cent 54, Ashland
Mapleton 32
Grove C1ty 14, Groveport-Mad1son

7 .

Grove Crly Chnstran 39, Cornrng
M1ller 0
Hamrllon 32 Mason 7
Hamler Patnck Henry 48,-Metamora
Evergreen t4
Hann rbal Rrver 1(' Caldwell7
Hamson 42 , Trenton Edgewood 28
H1cksv1lle 60, Havtland Wayne Trace
13
H1lliard Darby 45 , Grove C1ty Cent
Cross1ng 7
H1ll1ard Dav1dson 35, Thoma s
Worthrngton 7
Howar~Knox 46, Centerbu rg 19
Hubbard 23, Cortland Lakev1ew 21
Huber His. Wayne 35, Troy 16
Huron 41, Milan Ed1son 14
Independence 37, Burton Berkshire
13
Jamestown Greenev1ew 28 S
Charleslon SE 22
Jeromesville
Hillsdale
39,
Doylestown Ch1ppewa 32
Johnstown-Monroe 32, Loudonville

0
Kent Roosevel141, Akr Coventry 6
Kenton 40, Lrma Bath 8
Kettering Fairmont 20 , Vandalia
Butler 0
Krrtland 33, Rrchmond His 6
Lafayette Allen E . t 4, Convoy
Crestvrew 10
.
Lakewood 7, Garlreld Hts 0
Lancaster Faufteld Un1on 34,
Ashville Teays Valley 32
Leavrttsburg LaBrae 42, Campbell
Memorial 0 .
Lees Creek E. Chnlon 47, Goshen
24
Leetonia 32, Salonevrlle Southern

26
Lew1s Center Olentangy 24,
Marysville 21
Lewistown
lnd1an
Lake
14,
Bellefontame 7
Lexington 34, Orrville 20
Liberty Center 41, Wauseon 21
Loma Shawnee 41, Celrna 6
Lockland 34, Crn. Summrt Country
Day 9
Lodr Cloverleaf 25, Copley 7
Logan 35, Ironton 10
London Mad1son Pla1ns
28,
Greenfield McClain 0
Lorain Admiral Kmg 41, Mar1on
Hardrng 7
Loraon Clearvrew 34, Sullovan Black
A1ver 6
Lou Trinoty, Ky. 17, Cin St. Xavoer 6
LoursVIIIe 45, Befort W Branch 28
LouiSVIlle Aqurnas 17 Elyna Cath
13
Loveland 35, Wrlmrngton 14
Lowellvrlle 34 Sebnng McKrnley 8
Macedonia Nordonra 17, Twinsburg
13
Madrson 34, Ashtabula-Edgewood 3
Malvern 55, Newcomerstown 7
Maple His 34 E Lrverpool 3
Mana Stern Marron Local 17, St.
Henry 10
Manetta 42, Parkersburg South ,
wva. 21
Manon Pleasant 28, Sparta
Hrghland 7
Martrns Ferry 60, Belmont Umon
Local18
Massillon Tuslaw 42. Zoarvrlle
Tuscarawas Valley 6
Massillon Washington 34, Akr
Garlreld o
Maumee 28, Perrysburg 21
Maylreld 16, Lyndhurst Brush 0
McComb 30, Arlington 28
McDonald 61 , N Jctckson JacksonMilton 30
McGuffey Upper Scooto Valley 43,
Manon Calh. 0
Mechanrcsburg 48, Sprrng. NE 21
Medrna 31, Stow-Munroe Falls 28,
OT
Medrna B~ckeye 34, Rocky Rrver
Lutheran W 18
Medona Hrghland 34, Rrchlreld
Revere 7
Middlefield Cardmal 24, Fa1rport
Harbor Hardrng 6
Mrddletown 46, Lrberty Twp Lakota
E 24
Mrlford 32, Crn Mt Healthy 14
M11ford Center Fatrbanks 35, L1ma
Perry 14
Mrllersburg W
Holmes
33,
Mansfield Mad1son 22
Mrneral Rodge 13, New Mrddtetown
Spnng. 7
Mmerva 18, Alliance Marllngton 14
Minford~~ - Oak Hrll o
Mmster 21 , New Bremen 13
Mogadore 34, Garrettsvrlle Garlreld
6
Mogadore Freid 44,, Mantua
Crestwood 13
Monroe 3~. Middletown Mad1son 14
Morrow LIHie Mra'mr 24, Norwood 21
Mt Blanchard Riverdale 17, Ontano

6
Mt Grlead 27 , Morral Ridgedale 21 ,
30T
Mt Orab Western Brown 61,
Williamsburg 14
N. Can Hoover 27, Uniontown Lake

7.
N. Lima S Range 53, Lisbon David
Anderson 7
N. Rldg,vllle 33, Farrvrew 14
Nelsonville· York 30, Pomeroy Meigs
28
New Albany 20, Pataskala Watkrns
M~mona\6

New Carlisle Tecumseh 28, St. Pans
Graham 6 "
New Concord John Glenn 28.
Zanes\/llle W Musk1ngum 21
New Le&gt;rnglon 35, Zanesvrlle
Maysville 0
New London 20, Monroev1lle 13
New Rrchmond 63, Batavra
Clermont NE 0
New Washington Buckeye Cent 16,
Crestlrne 6
Newark
Cath
21,
Hebron
Lakewood 6
Newark Llckrng Valley 45, Heath 17

Sunday, September 21,

ii&gt;unba!' \[tml'!l -~rnnnr! • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

21, 2008

Point blasts Thg Valley, 41-6

Northwood 52 Troy Chns!lan 13
Norian 24 , Akr Spnngfleld 14
O&amp;k Glen . W Va 53. Toronlo 29
Oberlrn 20 . LaGrange Keystone 17
Oregon Str1tch 48 , Lakes1de
Danbury 20
Ottawa-Giandorl 42. Elida 0
Oxford Talawanda 42 , Cm Walnut
Hrlls2B
Pamesv1lle R1vers1de 41 Jefferson
Area 21
•
Pandora-Gilboa 24, Le1ps1c 21
Parma Hts Holy Name 28 Gart1eld
Hts Tnmty, 14
Pataskala
Lrckrng
His. 38,
Lancaster F1sher Cath 7
Pauldrng 41 , Della 21
76
Perhbervdle
Eastwood
Tontogany Otsego 0
Perry 55 Wrckliffe 14
P1ckenngton Cent 38, P1ckenngton
N 7
P1keton 46 , Chillicothe Un1oto 10
Prqua 26 Lebanon 21
Plarn Clly Jonalhan Alder 31 ,
London 6
Poland
Sem1nary
36
Nites
McKrnley 8
Portsmouth Notre Dame 35 , Crown
Crly S Gallla 6
Portsmou th
Sc1otoville
72
Manchester 38
Porlsmouth W 49, Chesapeake 20
Racme Southern 31 , Frankhn
Furnace Green 14
Raven na 52 , Ravenna SE 34
Rayland Buckeye 46, Wrntersvrlle
lnd1an Creek 15
Reedsv 1ll e Eastern 49, Hannan
wva 8
Reynoldsburg I 0, Newark 3
Richwood N U01on 41 Gahan
North mar 0
S Po1nt 28 Lucasville Valley 7
Sandusky Perkrns 41, Oak Harbor
13
Sarahsv1lle
Shenandoah
27 ,
Barnesv111e 6
Snelby 42, Norwalk 14
Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 62, Holgate 8
S1dney Lehman Q:6, W Carrollton 6
Smrthvrlle 21. Dallon 20
Solon 38, Hudso n 13
Spencerville 24, Columbus Grove
21
Spnng Kent on Rrdge 32 Spnng
NW 14
Spnng
Shawnee 12 , Sprmg
Greenan 11
Spnngboro 26, Srdney 7
Spnnglreld 18, Trolwood-Madrson
12
St Bernard Roger Bacon 13, C1n
McNrcholas 3
St Clarrsvrlle 35, Werr. W Va 11
St
Marys
Memonal
46 ,
Wapakoneta 23
Steubenville 42, L1sbon Beaver 7
Streetsboro
35,
Pemnsula
Woodndge 6
,
Strongsville 45 , Parma Hts Valley
Forge 12
Sugarcreek
Garaway
69 ,
Bowerston Conotton Valley 7
Sunbury Brg Walnul 28, LeVI'S
Cenler Olenlangy Orange 7
Sycamore Mohawk 33, AUrea
Seneca E 27
Sylvan1a Southv1ew 73, Rossford 6
Tallmadge 21, Barberton 14
Thornvrlle Shendan 42, Crooksvrlle
10
T1ff1n Columbian 3S, W1llard 7
Trpp Crly Bethel 24 New Parrs
Nat1onal Tra1l 21
Trpp
Crt y
Trppecanoe
42
Bellefo ntaine Ben1am1n Logan 14
Tot Cenl Calh 42 , Oregon Clay 7
Tal Scott 44. Tal Woodward 6
Tot St John's 41 Tal Rogers 6
Tal Start 29, Tal Bowsher 10
Tol Whrtmer 14, Tal Sl. Francrs 7
Tuscarawas Cent
Cath . 35 ,
Strasburg-Frar:1khn 12
Uhnchsv1lle Claymont 32 , Byesville
Meadowbroo k 13
Urbana 60, Rrversrde Stebbrns 6
Utrca 41 , Johnstown Northrrdge 0
Van Buren 2 t , Dola Hardm
Northern 14
Vermrlion 42 Grafton Mrdvrew 34
W Chester Lakota W 45, Faorlreld 0
W Jefferson 41 , Sugar Grove Berne
Un1on 7
W. Lafayeu~ Rrdgewood 47,
Magnolia Sandy Valley 26
W Lrberty-Salem 14, N Lewrsburg
Tnad 6
W. Unlly Hrlllop 40, Tal. Chnstran 17
Wadsworth 17, Green 14
Wahama , W Va 28, Lore Crty
Buckeye Trail 27
Warren Hardmg 35 Lima Sr 0
Warren Howland 35 , Youngs
Chaney 7
Warren JF K 62, Newlon Falls 6
Washrngton C H 7, Hrllsboro 6
Waynesfrefd·Goshen 55 DeGralf
Roversode 0
Waynesvrlle 4 I , Camden Preble
Shawnee 13
Welhnglon 55, Brooklyn 14
Wellslon 28. Belpre 13
Weslervrlle N 21, Westerville Cent
17
Westerville S 24, Dubhn Sctoto 20
Wheelersburg 52, Ironton Rock Hr ll
7
Wheeling Ce ntral, W Va
43,
McConnelsville Moi'gan 13
Whrtehouse Anthony Wayne 59 ,
Sylvan1a Northv1ew 17
W1lharn.spo rt
Westfall
56,
Southeastern o
Wrllow Wood Symmes Valley 28,
McDermolt Scrota NW 6
Woodsf1eld Mon roe Cent. 45,
Beverly Ft Frye 7
Woosler 21 Ashland 14
Yellow Sprrngs 23
Rrdgeway
Rrdgemont 22
Youngs Boardman ~:. o , Massillon
Perry 21
Youngs Chnst1an 17, V1enna
Mathews o
Youngs Lrberly 42 , Salem 7
Youngs Mooney 35 , Menlor Lake
Calh. 14
Youngs Ursulrne 41 , Chardon 0
Zanesville 49, Vincent Warren 3

Bv

NAUGATUCK. W .Va .
Allen Wasonga anu Derek
Muc hell both rushed for over
I 00 yards and the l?oo nt
Pleasant defense limited the
Tug Valley Panthers to JU St
over two yards per offe nsive
play as the Big Black s got
back to the .500 mark wtth a
convincing 41-6 wm m a'
non -co nferen ce ' matchup
Fnday on the Tug Valley
campus.

Elizabeth RlgeVphoto
Membe rs of lhe South Gall1a foolball team get ti red up 111 a pregame huddle dunng Fnday
, night's Homecomong foolball game aga1nst Portsmouth Notre Dame on Mercervtlle

Bowman, Titans get past Rebels
STAFF REPORT

p I a y s

SPORTS @MYOAlLY TRIBUN E COM

capped wtth
a
Bryce
Cl&lt;~ry
27 ·
y:u d touch down run to
lle lhe game
6 -6 atte1 a
f,uled twopo ont con-

MERCERVILLE It 1s
sa fe to , ,\y th dt Port smout h
Noire Dan1c otonning back
Thad Bowm&lt;ln WOll't be
on v 1teu back to humccommg

nex t yem
BownMn put a dd mpet on
So ulh Gallia's ( 1-4) home -

ve rsion.

l'O mm g Ce ichrati011S Pnday

Clary

no g ht Wi th a 17S yard. live
louchuo" n pet formancc 111
le ad1n g the Titans (J - 2 ) to a
35-6 v ictory over the R ebe ls
Fnd,ty 111 M erce rvill e.
Bowman h ad scores o l 3.
I . 70. II &lt;l nd 4 on the m g ht

m ,,

g~une

fou ght

111

the

11enches as n e ith e r t e am
"em to the aor. In stead . th e
tw o l emm po unded 1t out on
the ground With Bowman
and the T otan offense man -

agmg to ga m the .td va nldge.
Bowman sco red l;lis forst
touchdow n o l the m g ht at
the 5:22 mark of the ftrst
quao1er when he capped a 10
play . 6 0 yard dnw with a 3-·

yard touchdown run to give
: the vrsuors .a 6-0 btd alter a
failed ktck.
Behond the mome n1111n ol
the home crowd. South
, Ga llta an sl\'ered nght back
momclll s
later
wllh
a
l e n g thy dnve of ot s uwn
.spannin g 66 ya tds on eight

Clary led
1h e Rebe l s
on the 111 g ht with 87 yaods
on 17 c.on ics and sco1ed I h e
only touchd ow n tor the Red
and Gold
The t wo
te,t m s th en
played to sta le nhlte until
Notre D a m e hroke free 1n
the second qu&lt;~rter highli ghted b y lhe one ol only
two comp letoo ns on lhe
eve nin g Facong a third and
19 .
T1t .1 11
quarterback
Brock Hannah co mpl eied
Iu s ouly p ass of the ga me to
Kevin D e labar who took ot
] 9 yards and onto R e hel te r ntory.
Bowman the l) capped the
dnve wtlh a 1-y ard sconn g
stnke to put hi s tea m up 126 ,11 the half
Commg o ut of the locke r
room South Galloa was st oll
\CI) much 111 the game, t11at
IS , unttl lhe openmg kickoff.
Bowm,m took the open -

ong ko ck 70 yaods fm the
score and. after a two - point
convcrston, th e VISitors
ftmnu the m se l ves up 20-6.
Woth it s f1rst comfortable
le ad of th e n1ght. Noire
Dame w enl to work With
long dnves capped off w1th
&lt;~ paor of Bowman scores 111
the fou tlh qu,u'ler. Bowman
scored on an 11 - yard run at
the H:37 mark to mak e it
28-6 and fint shcd the mght
with&lt;~ 4 -yard TD run tu cap
the sconng at ]5-6
Alon g woth the big night
t rom
Bowman .
Jeffery
E mnett added 41 vards on
fove cames lor t h e.Tttans.
South Ga lh a was paced
by Clnry . while Austin
Phillips added 19 yards on
"x
carnes
and
Ca l eb
McCiandhan toled lhe ba ll
f1v e time s foo a doze n
yards.
Je t! Combs lino shed the
mght 1-for-5 passmg l or
five yatd s wtth Danny
Matney haulin g m the only
completion for five yards
Danny Matn ey also had
10 tackles on the even1ng
along wtth Dalton Matney.
Cl.try added seven tackle s
and M cC lanahan had s ix.
South Gallia will now
prepare for its second consecutt ve home game whe·n
it ho sh Buffalo next Fnday

The local s' vaunted ru shmg attack once agam provideu t he offenstve spark as
W asonga cao ried the ball 18
ttmes for 15 3 yards. whi le
Mtlchell anMssed 116 yards
on JUst 5 carries. Wasong a
totaled th ree touchdowns o n
the nog ht . sconng ftom 37. 17
and g yard s Mitche ll tallied
the first two touchdowns of

the evemng . scormg on runs
of 42
and
57
yards
Sophomore lin eback er Mike
Musgrave lacked on the tonal
touchdown lor the B1g
Bl:1cks when he scooped up a
· Tug Valley fumble and raced
54 vards for the Black s' final
score of the even mg .
" I thought we were a lmle
sl u ggtsh out there". satd
PPHS head coach Dave
Darst after the game. ''I'm
pleased wo th our execution ,
and we dtd the thmgs w e had
to do to wm lhe game. but we
lacked a lottie intenstty. Bul.
v,e spent nearly three hours
on the bus and maybe that
had somethmg to' do with 11."
added the second-year head
coach.
It dtd not take long for the
Big Bl&lt;lcks to establ i sh thetr
superionty on the Panthers '
home turf After forcing a
three and out on the first possesston of the game. I he
Point offense took just two
play s and 51 seconds to put
the game's lirst pomt on the
scoreboard. Wasonga picked
up II yards on the locals'
first offensive play, and then
Mitchell broke several tackles en rouie to his first TD of
the noght - a mfty 42·yurd
run nght through the heart of
the Panther defense . Juston
Weaver added the extra point
and the Big Blacks never
looked back
Poinl's defense
forced

a noth e r
three
and
out on the
Panth e r s'
next possesand
sion
then the two
teams traded
fumbles o n
the next two
possesSions.
Wasonga
with Kenn y
Lon gwe ll
recovenng Tug Vallcls mts·
cue at I he Bi g Black s· 36
yard ltne. It took only two
plays for the locals to hnd
paydirt agam as WlOther twoplay drive culmmatcd With
Mitchell's 57 yard Jaunt It
was the sam e play thai he
scored o n earher in the quarter and after Weaver ' s PAT,
the B1g Blacks leu 14-0.
Tug Valley the11 put togeth er a nice dnve that reached
the Big Blac ks ' 35 yard !me •
but a holding penalty moved
the ball back to the Panthers·
49 and on the nexl p l ay. Enc
Veith sacked the Tug Valley
4uarterback . that resulted m
another fumble whtch was
recovered by' Musgtave at
the Tug Valley 37. It took, the
local s o nly one play to capttah ze on the turnover, as
Wasonga scooted 37 yards on
tlrsl down to extend the lelld
to three touchdowns - and ot
was JUSt I 0 seconds into the
second quarter.
There would be no more
sconng, however. untrl the
I 39 mark of the second
4uarter. when the Big Blacks
agam took aqvantage of good
fteld position and scored
the or fourth touchdown of the
evem ng on _wasonga 's I Ryard run. Weaver 's fourth
PAT k1ck made it 28-0 at lhe
halt.
"We were very pleased
with our defense tonight:·
satd Darst. " It was the kmd
of effort that we expect from
our defen se every week . I
was
espectally
pleased
becau se we gave up way too
many yards last week and
lhese guys know that. I think
they came m here tonight and
wanted to prove someth mg.
Look at the stats , we allowed
110 yards of total oll'ense. I'll
take that every week." added
Darsl
Tug Valley sc ored thm
only touchdown of the night
on their first possessiOn of

the seco nd half a score
that was aoded by one of
three
Pomt
Pleasant
turno ver s. Forced to punt on
thetr mitml possesston of the
half. the Blacks loned up. but
the snap was high and punter
Cody Greathouse had to
chase rt down and full on 11 at
!he Poont 10 yaod lone Three
play s later. Panther quarterback Bruxton Hmkle found
Mtchael Evans 1n the end
zone for a touchdov.n to g tve
the ho m e te,tm a lottie hope
That hope. thoug h . was
squashecL ~y the Btg Blacks
who effctttvel y put th~ game
away With ,1 9 - pla). 65 yaod
dnve c apped b y Wasong" ·,
8-yard TD run. Weaver's
ex tra pomt made it 35-6 .
Two
mmutes
l at er
Mu s~oav e dosed out the
scon~1g when h e pocked up &lt;~
loose ball and rambled 54
v ards for the final scorm e
play of the even mg.
' 'I'm happy wuh thr s wm.''
commented
Darst '·W e
playeu good delense. put up

some good offensive numbers dncl were able to get a lot
of ktds m the game- I was
vet y pleased wnh the effo rt
of ouo younger players.
They came in and played
hard . But. we have to get to
work because tt's a -sh ort
week. We play on Thursday
night o n the att1tic ial turf on
Charl eston ,md I think th e
boy s are loo kmg forward 10
that.'' added Darst
In addttton to the aforementiOned Wasonga and
Mttchell. Cal eb Wason g .t
rushed twice for 35 yards.
while Chns Blanke n ship
pi cked up 25 yards on four
carrres . Jawann Wtlliams ran
once • f01
18
ya t d s
Defensovely. the B1g Black s
had many.many good perfot mances. Dere k Pmso n was
credited wtth 13 tackle s.
whtle Kenny Longwell h.od
10 tackles and fumbl e re cov ery. Mu sgrave had three
tackles to go along Wtlh ht s
two fumble recove11es. E n c
Vetth had seven tackl es .
Casey Hogg had nine tackles .
Nathan Robert s h,td I 0 tack·
les.
Point " nnw 2-2 on the
season and hope to get above
the .500 mao k w hen they take
on M1dlanu Ttad at Lmlley
F1eld next Thursday m ght.

'233
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·

'

Cots Mrfflrn vs Cots Beechcroh,
ppd IO Sep 22
Cols L1 nden McKmley vs Gals
Brookhaven, ppd to Sep 22.
Cots
Northland
vs
Cols
Centenmal, ppd to Sep 22
Cols South vs Cols. Eastmoo~.
ppd . Ia Sep 22
Cots
Bnggs
vs
Cots
Independence, ppd to Sep 22
Cols Afncentr1c vs Cols Manon·
Franklin, ppd . Ia Sep 22
Cots Easl vs. Cots Whetstone, ppd
to Sep 22
•
Cots Walnul Rrdge vs. Cots. West,
ppd Ia Sep 22

VB 61110 ~w!IMIS l::roQiild P &amp;f8111~ tllku, 1111 AAml ®II Mall

'

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--

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i)rlii.IJt!

'

ppd .

1996 FORD F1150 XL 11St03,

P &amp;llll:ll'111g

t11l6i

POSTPONEMENTS
Crn N College Hill vs. Harnllton
New Mramr. ppd to Sep 20
Brookfield vs Soulhmgton Chalker,

•

RICK SIMPKINS

SPORTS CORR ESPONDENT

'

.

55

I

•

1

f'tj

SEl.~I Pll«t

PWPl M oua AM.f'-1 00

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�•

SCOREBOARD

iunbap Qrtmes ·ienttntl
PREP

fOOTBALL

Fnday s Box scores

Eastern 49, Hannan 8
Eastern

28

Hannan

0

7 14

0

0 -

49

0 8 -

8

Sconng summary
First Quarter
E-KIInt Connery 5 run (Zach
Hendn&gt; krck) 10 40
E-Hendnx 31 pass from Brayden
Pratt (Hendrrx krck) 6 16
E-KeHy Winebrenner 25 run
(Hendnx krck) 2 41
E-Wrnebrenner 11 run (Hendnx
krck) 27
Second Quarter
E-Kyle Connery 16 run (Hendnx
krck) 10 38
Third Quarte&lt;
E-Connery 13 run (Hendnx kick}
4 52
E-Wrnebrenner 60 punt return
(Hendnx krck) 3·41
Fourth Quartet
H-Jared Cobb 9 pass from Joe
Kelly (Andy Sowards run) 1008

E
Frrs1 Downs
Rushes-yards
Passrng yards
Total ya,rds
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-los!
Penalties-yards

12
54-314
40
354
2·3-0
3-2
8-80

H
8
27-53
86
139
7-22-4
5-3
8-60

Individual Statistics
Rushing: E-Kyle Connery 7-89 ,
Klrnl
Connery
8-71
Kelly
Wrnebrenner 7-55, Cody Rrdgeway
3-27 . Ryan Shook 10-26. Brad
Slone 3·20 Mrke Johnson 3-11 ,
Fretldre Hernandez 3-6, Brayden
Pratt 4-5 Zach Hendrrx 1-4, Actron
Facemyer 4·3, Seth Guthene 1-(-3).
H-Joe Kelly 8-24 , Patnck Flora 2·
17, Robert Wor trl 5-10 , Jacob Taylor

10·2. Andy Sowards 2·0
Passing: E-Brayden Pratt 2-3-0
40
H-Jacob Taylor 5·17 ·3 60. Joe
Kelly 2-5 1 26
Receiving: E-Zach Hendnx 1-3 1.
Mtke Johnson 1-9
H- Palr1ck Flora 5 78 Jared Cobb
1·9, Joe Kelly 1-( -1)
Gallia' Academy 36,
Jackson 28
Jackson
14 7 0 7 Galhpohs
6 8 0 22 -

28
36

Scoring summary
First Quarter
J-Cody Huff 66 run (Ryan Mullrns
krck) 11 ·43
J-Kiay Arthur 9 run (Mulhns ktck)
7 24
GA- Nate Allrson 6 run (krck farled)
2 55
Second Quarter
J-Huff 89 INT relurn (Mullins krck)
6 11
GA-Eihan Moore 1 run (Moore
run) 1 38
Fourth Quarter

J-Huff 5 run (Mullrns krck) 10 53
GA- Beau Whaley 80 pass from
Moore (Corey Mason krck) 10 42
GA-AIIrson 12 run {AIIrson run)
2 31
GA-Jared Gravely 30 run (Mason

kiCk) 1 31

: Comp-atHnt

J
14
34-226
38
264
5-13-1

·: Fumbles-lost
. Penalties-yards

7·66

F1rst Downs
Rushes-ya rds
Passtng yards
• Total yards

2-2

GA
21
40-205
218
423
14·17·2
1-1
7·64

Individual Statistics
Rushing: J-Cody Huff 22· 179,
Klay Arthur 7-35, Nathanrel Hailer
1-5, Brandon Trace 1-4, Tyl er Boggs

3·3
GA- Nate Allrson 15·93, Jared
Gravely 12-62 , Ethan Moore 10-39,
: Austtn Wtlson .3-11
' Passing: J-Tyler Boggs 5·13·1 38
: GA- Eihan Moore 14-17-2 218
Receiving : J-Josh arown 3-27,
Kevrn Speakman 2·11
GA- Beau Whaley 6 -120, Austtn

Johnson krck) 6 05
AV-Deel 5 pass from Curnutte
(Johnson krck) 2 04
W-Cody Slranler 20 run (Cody
Hall krck) 0 Ot
Fourth Quarter
RV- -Dee! 8 pass from Curnutte
(Johnson krck) 10 16
F1rst Downs
Rushes·yards
Pass1ng yards
Total yards
Comp-an-1nt
Fumbles-losl
·Penalties-yards

.w

11
39-137
83
220
6-15·2
2·1
3-30

RV
12
30-87
227
314
17·24·0
4·1
4-25

Individual Statistics
Rushing: W-Cody Strahler 14-72,
Jarrod E1chhorn 15-49, Michael
Fullen 8· 17. De~n Mrller 2·10,
Jacob Kelley 2-6
RV-Zach Barrd 13-64 , Claylon
Curnutte 7-14, Tyler Smrth 3· 11 ,
Cody McAvena 2·8, James Frelder
4-1 , Elr Krmble 1-0
Passing: W-Cody Strahler 5·14·2
· 73, Trevor Lang 1-1-0 10
RV-Ciayton Curnutte 17-24-0 227
Receiving: W-Cody Hall 2·47,
Levr McCutcheon 1-17, Dean Mrller
t -10 #84 2·9
RV-Jordan Deel 9·136 , Cody
McAvena 2-9 Kody Johnson 3-14 ,
Zach Ba1rd 1·51 , Jacob Brown 2-17
Southern 31, Green 14
Green
7 0 14 10 - 31
Southern
0 14 0 8 - 14
Scaring summary
Flrs1 Quarter
S-Mrchael Manuel6 run (Ash
kick)
Second Quarter
G-Chff Bonner 22 run (Bonner
pass from Sayre)
G-lan Harns 1 run (krck larled)
Third Quarter
S-Jusl1ce 20 pas.s from Manuel
(Copprck run)
5-Greg Jehkrns 3 run (Ash krck)
Fourth Quarter
S-Ash freld goal
5- Duslrn Salser 2 run (Ash krck)

G
F1rst Downs
Rushes-yards
Passrng yards
Tala! yerds
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

9
31-131
15
146
1-3-0
2·0
4-30

s

16
53-384
20
404

I ·5· I
5·0
6·80

Individual Statlattca
Rushing : G-Bonner 11·80, Sayre
8-38, Justus 3-8; Harris 9-5
S-Manoel 20· 121 ,' Copprck 20117, Jenkms 8·38. Salser 4·7,
Just1ce 1· 1
Passing: G-sayre 1-3-0 15
&amp;--Manuel 1·2·1 20, Salser 0·3·0

0

'

Receiving: G-Bonner 1·15
S-Justoce 1-1 o
Ports. Notre Dame 35,
South Gallla 6
ND
6 6 8 15 - 35
S Galha
6 0 0 0 6
Scoring summary
First Quarter
NO-Thad Bowman 3 run (krck
farled) 5 22
SG- Bryce Clary 27 run (run larled)
1'48
Second Quarter
NO-Bowman 1 run (kick fatled)
1'10
Third Quarter
NO-Bowman 70 k1ckoff retum
(Kevrn Delabar pass from Brock
Hannah) 11.48
Fourth Quarter
NO-Bowman 11 run (Jarred Lewts
pass from Hannah) 8 3?
NO -Bowman 4 run (Paul Wise
kiCk) 6 37

Rush yards
Passrng yards
Total yards
Comp-aU·rnt
Fumbles lost

Page B2

NO
245
39
284 •
1-9-1

0

SG
114

5
119

1·5-0
3

Individual Statistics
NO-Thad Bowman 29·
Rushing:
Evan Wood 2· 19
178, Jeffery Emnell 5·41
SG-Bryce Clary 17-87 , Austm
Nelsonville-York 30,
Phrflrps 6·19, Caleb McClanahan 5·
Meigs 28
Mergs
6 6 10 6 - 28 12, ,Corey Haner 1-1, Jeff Clyburn
N-Y
8 0 6 16 - 30 1·(-t) , Jeff Combs 5-(-4)
Passing : NO-Brock Hannah t -9-1
39
Scoring summary
SG-Jeff Combs 1· 5·0 5
First Quarter
:- NY-Derek Arnold 85 krckoH return , Receiving: ND-Kevrn Delabar 1·
39
(Arnold run) 11 49
SG- Danny Matney 1-5
· M- Cameron Bolin 36 pass from
Jacob Well (pass larled) 11 ·00
Wahama 28,
Second Quarter
Buckeye Trail 27
, M-Clay Bolin 31 pass from Well
Wahama
6 7 15 o - 28
• (run !ailed) 7 58
B Trarl
6 7 6 8 - 27
Third Quarter
: M- Mason Metts 27 held goal 6 40
Scoring summary
·. M-Jeremy Smrth 18 run (Mens
First Quarter
· krck) 2 31
BT -Adam Ktern 2 run (run failed)
: NY -Arnold 94 krckoff reiUrn (run
4{)4
. farled) 2 04
W -Mrcarah Branch 6 run (krck
Fourth Quarter
farled) 2 42
NY -Justin Cunnmgham 44 run
Second Quarter
(Arnold run) 7 58
BT -Issac Snyder 43 pass from
M-Smrth 3 run (krck larled) 5 02
Ethan Snyder (Brandon Sealodk
NY -Arnold 17 pass from Mrchael
krck) 2 44
Barnck (Arnold run) 52
W- Wrflram Zuspan 9 run (Kyle
Zerkle krck) 26
M
NY
Third Quarter
, F1rst Downs
14
12
Rushes-yards
32·11 0 44·210 W-Zerkte 18 run (Zerkle krck)
958
Passing yards
213
33
BT -Kiern 3 run (pass farled) 7.19
243
Total yards
281
W-Zerkle 55 run (Ma« Dangerlield
Comp-att-rnt
14·24·1 3-9·1
pass from Zuspan) 8:32
Penalties-yards
4-32
4-50
Fourth Quarter
BT -Sealock 11 pass from Ethan
Individual Statlatica
. Ruahlng: M-Jeremy Smrth 23-89, Snyder (Billy Fisher pass lrom
Snyder) 3 33
Cory Hutton 3·13, Jacob ,Well6·8
. NY-Oerek Arnold 30·166, Justin
Cunningham 5-57, Michael Barrick
BT
First Downs
14
18
4·14, Mark Campbellf-(·25).
39-359 42·281
Pa11lng: M-Jacob Well 14-24·1 Rushes-yards
Passing yards
35
140
213
Total yards
394
421
NY-Micnaet Barrick 3·9·1 33
4-12-Q .9-18-3
Receiving: M-Clay Bolin 4·111, Comp-att~nt
0·0
3·3
Cameron Bolin 4·64, Jeremy Smith Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards 4·33
2-15
• 5·27.
· NY- Derek Arnold 2·24 , Mark
Individual Statlotico
· Campbell 1·9.
Ftuohlng: W-Micalah Branch 19·
174, Kyle Zerkle 11 · 149, Jacob
River V$11ey 27,
Roach
5-20, Wrllram Zuspan :3·1 0,
Waterford
7
•
Waterlord
0 .7 0 0 7 Ryan Lee 1·6.
Rrver Valley
7 14 • 0 6 - 27 BT-Adam Klern 13·127, Ethan
Snyder 17-94, Brandon Sealock 10·
48, Issac Snyder 1· 7, Cliff Wrlson 1·
Scoring summary
Firat Quarter
5
Paaalng : W- Wrlllam Zuspan 4-12: RV-Jordan Deel69 pass from
, Clayton Curnutte (Tyler Smrth kick)
a 35
5.38
BT-Ethan Snyder 9·17·3 140,
Second
Quarter
Brandon Sealock' 0·1-D 0.
•
RV -Zach Barrd 2 run (Kody
Receiving : W- M1caiah Branch 2·
Wtlson 4 -55, Outnton Ntbert 2-24,

w

E Can 47, Rootstown 25
Eden 14, Tal Ottawa Hrlls 10
Euclid 13, Eastlake N. 0
Findlay Liberty-Benton 69, Arcadia

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
Cardinal Conference
CARD
W-1.
PF PA
3-Q
93 .. 31
Chapmanvrlle
1·0 . 51
24
Wrrtne
Polnl Pfeasanl. .. . _..
1·0
42
10
Q-1
12
28
Poca
.. " .. .
Herbert Hoover .... .. .. ..... ... . Q-2 ' · 24 . 75
G-2
29
93
Slss&lt;invH"
Independents
ALL
W·L
PF
4-0
175
1-4 ... 54 ..
.. .. . " .. •.. ' .. .D-4 " .. 38 .

Wahama
South Galba

Hannan

AU.

PF
Pt.
109 . 38 '
160 . 82
130 78
70
121
64
.122
71 . 130

W·L
4-0
4·0 "
2·2
.. 0·4 .
.. 1·3
1-3

•,

PA
52
152
210

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

Chflhcolhe
Y&gt;gan
Marietta
Jackson
Ironton
Gallla Academy
Zanesv1lle
Warren
Portsmoulh

' I ' ' ' • ' '

SEOAL '
PF
PA
W·L
58 . •35
" . .. . 2-Q .
10
1-Q ... 35
26
21
1·0
1·1
49
56
' I -1
52
41
1-1
42
70
I -t
70
27
24
D-2
75 .,
0-2
55
34

Ohio Valley Conference
OVC
W·L
PF
PA
o-o
0
0
0.
.0·0
0
.. .o-o .. 0
0
.. o-o . 0
0
.. o-o .
0
.0
o-o .. 0
0

Ches~ake

Arver alley
Coal Grove
Soulll Pornl
Farrtand
Aodk Hoi! .

Tri·Valley Conference
Ohio Olvlllon
TVC
W·L
PF
PA
Nelsonvifle·Yorl&lt; . ........
56
. 2·0 " 64
Mergs ...
.. .. ..... .. .. . . 1-1 . ' .54 43
. ."
42
BelPre ..
1-1 . 39
Athens .
1-1. 38
33
Wellston
...... ..
1-1 . 56
47
Alexander
14
26.
0·1
Vonton County :
7
25
0·1

.. ...

..

W-L
3-2 .
. s-o .
2·3
4-1
3-2
3-2
2-3. 2-3
1-4

W-L
2-3
2-3
2-3
2·3
' 0·4
D-5

ALL
PF
102
176
129
144
146
lOS
120
55

sa

PA
. 103
..41
175

90

76
. 153
. 102
112
132

ALL
PF
PA
119 132
..67 ... 135
" .80 . ..66
. 104 .117
" 65 " .97
203
" 51

ALL
PA
W·L· PF
' 4·1 . .139 ..11 I
' 4·1 . .. 151 ..93
2·3. .76 . ' .91
1-4 " ..73 ' 107
1-4 . .104 ..144
139 ..73
3·2
1-4 ..61
.145

Hocking Division
ALL
TVC
W-L
PF PA
W·L
PF . PA
Federal Hocking
84 . 87
.. o-o 0 0
3·2
Trimble .
3-2
107 107
o-o 0 0
.117 . 125
Easlem
0
0
2-3
- 0-0
Southern
0-0
0. 0
.91 ..122
2·3
Watsrford
. 0-0
0. 0
2·3 .. .79 ..114
Mrller
0. . 0
1-4. .. 54 . 167
. 0·0
'
16, Jacob Roach 1-14, Colin P1erce Bucyrus Wynford 40, N Robmson
1-5
Col Crawford 7
BT--lssac Snyder 2·51, Brlly Frsher Cadrz Hamson Cenl 43, Rrchmond
2-29, Ben Ogden 1-20, Donald Edrson 13
Davrs 2·19, Brandon Sealock 1-11 , Cambridge 58 , Warsaw A1ver V1ew
Enc Roberson 1·9.
21
Can Cent Cath 19, Bedford
Chanel9
Point Pleasant 41,
Can . Gte nOak 27
Youngs.
Tug Valley 6
Pt. Pleasant 14 14 13 0 - 41 Aust1ntown -F1ICh 0
Tug Valley
0 0 6 0 6 Can McKrnley 37. Massollon
Jackson 13
Canal Fulton Northwest 17, Can
Scoring summary
Soulh 14
First Quarter
Canal Winchester 24, Crrclevrlle 0
PP-Derek Mrtchell42 run (Justrn
Canfield 31 , Struthers 0
Weaver krck) 9 16
Cardrnglon·Lrncoln 13, Manon Elgrn
PP-Mrlchell 57 run (Weaver krck)
512
'
6
.
Carey 42, Fostona $1 Wendelln 0
Second Quarter
Carlisle 75 Day Norlhndge 22
PP- Allen Wasonga 37 run
Casstown Mlam1 E 48, Lewisburg
(Weaver krck) 11 52
Tn-County N 19
PP-Wasonga 17 run (Weaver
Cenlervrlle 54, Mramrsburg 0
krck) 1·39
Chagnn Falls 42, Orange 13
Third Quarter
Chesh1re R1ver Valley 27, Watertord
TV-Mrchael Evans 13 pass lrom
7
Bra&gt;&lt;ton Hinkle (run failed)
Chesterland W Geauga 31,
PP-Wasonga 8 run (Weaver k.1ck)
Chagnn Falls Kenston 6
PP-Moke Musgrave 54 fumble
Chrlllcolhe 34. Portsmouth 14
return (krck failed)
Chillicothe
Zane
Trace
48,
Chrlhcothe Huntrngton 0
pp
TV
C1n Anderson 65, 'Batavia Ameha 0
F1rst Downs
13
10
C1n Coleram 35, Cm Sycamore 14
Rushes-yards
36-318 40-47
Crn Counlry Day 51, Crn . Chnstran
Passtng yards
·1
63
27
Total yards
317
110
C1n Deer Park 37, N Bend Taylor
Comp-att-1nt
1-6-1
7-13·1
20
Fumbles lost
2
2
Crn
Glen Esle 38, Crn NW 7
Penaltres-yards
9·85
3·20
C1n Hills Chnst1an Academy 35,
Day Chnst1an 7
Individual Statistics
Cln
lnd1an Hill 35 , Read1ng 17
Rushing: PP-AIIen Wasonga 1B·
153, Derek Mrlchell 5·1 16, Caleb C1n La Salle 15 Lex Henry Clay,
.
Wasonga 2-35 . Chns Blankenship Ky 14
4-25, JaWann Wrllrams 1-18 B.J C1n Made1ra 20, Ctn Manemont 14
Lloyd 3-2, Tyler Auslrn 2-0, Cody Crn Pnnceton 27, Crn Oak Hrlls 21
Crn. Shrader 39, Day Jefferson 6
Greathouse1 ·(·33)
TV-Chns Estep 13·44, Grdeon C1n Turp.n 42 , Ham~lton Ross 14
C1n. Wrnton Woods 55, Krngs Mrlls
Jarvis 8-31. Austin Vance 7-13
Passing: PP- BJ Lloyd 1-5-1 (- 1), Krn gs 21
C1n W1throw 42 , C1n Hughes 6
Errc Roberts 0-1-0 o.
Crn
Woodward 44 , Crn. Western
TV-Braxton Hrnkle 7-13·1 63
Hrlls
0
Receiving: PP- Derek Motchelf1·(·
C1n Wyom1ng 21, Cm F1nneytown 0
1).
TV-Austrn Vance 4-45, Mrchael Crrclevrlle Logan Elm 21, Amanda·
Evans 1-13, Nathan Brewer 1-B, Clearcreek 7
Clarksville Clmton-Mass1e 34,
Chrrs Estep 1·(·3)
Washrngton C H Mramr Trace 6
Claylon Northmont 48, Faorborn 7
Cle Glenvrlle 40, Cle. Lrncotn W 0
Cle His 19, Youngs East 16
Cle JFK 33 , Cle E Tech 7
QHIQ
Cle John Adams 34. Cle. Anodes 6
Cle John Marshall 32, Cle East 12
Ada 44, Bluffton 7
Cle S 30, Cle Collrnwood 20
Akr Buchtel 49, Akr. Eifel 27
Clyde 63, Port Chnton 6
Akr East 38, Akr Frrestone 21
Akr Hoban 63, Painesv1Ue Harvey 0 Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 29,
Akr Manchester 57, Navarre Newport, Ky 14
Coldwater 23. Anna 0
Farrless 15
Collins Western Reserve 35,
Akr SVSM 20, Napoleon 3
Albany Alexander 27, Stewarl Plymouth 27
Cols Bexley 20, Whrtehaii-Yearlrng
Federal Hockrng 0
10
Alliance 24, Carrolllon 10
Cols DeSales 38, Frndlay 7
Amherst Steele 15, N Olmsted 12
Andover Pymalunong Valley 34 , Cols Franklin Hts 49, WavQrly 27
Cols Hamrlton Twp 26, BloomThompson Ledgemonl 6
Ansoma
40 ,
Umon
C1ty Carroll1 0
Cols Harvesl Prep 69, Mrllersport 0
MISSISSmawa Valley 28
Apple Creek Waynedale 49 Cots Sl Charles 38, Sandusky 0
Cots.
Upper
Arlington
34,
Rrttman 13
Worthrngton Krlbowne 9
Arcanum 54, aradford 21
Cols
Watterson
28,
Cle
Archbold 41, Swanton 21
BenediCtine 7
Ashtabula Lakeside 31, Geneva 9
Athens 25, McArthur Vonton County Co lumb•a StatiOn Columbia 14,
Sheffield Brooksrde 7
7
Columb1ana 14, Hanoverton United
Alwater Waterloo 27. Wondham 19
3
Aurora 46, Beachwood 12
Columbrana Crestvrew 34, E.
Avon 41 , Rocky R1ver 16
Barnbndge Paint Valley
34 Palestine 28
Conneaut 12, Cte Cent Cath . to
Frankfort Adena 25
Baltrmore Loberly Unron 37, Cots Cory-Rawson 53, Vanlue t 4
Comglon 32,. W Alexandria Twrn
Grandview Hts 0
Batavra 15, Cln. Clark Monlesson ValleyS 26
Creuton Norwayne I 4, W. Salem
13
Bay VIllage Bay 35 , Oberlrn NW'
Firelands 20
Cuyahoga Falls 28 , N Royalton 20
Beallsville 50 , New Matamoras Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 35 , Wooster
Tri way 12 ,
Frontier 20
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 14,
Beavercreek 35 , Xen1a 7
Parma Padua 10
Bedford 29, Chardon NDCL 28
Bellarre St John 27 , Brshop Cuyahoga His 55, Newbury 14
Donahue , W.Va. 26
Day. Carroll 24, Crn . Purcell Marian
12
Bellevue 48, Upper Sandusky 7
Bellville Clear Fork 34, Mansf1eld Day
Cham1nade-Jullenne 21 ,
Sr 13
Middletown Fenwick 20
Day Oakwood 35, Ealon 31
Berea 14, Weslfake t 3
.
Berlin Cenler Western Reserve 27. Defrance 35, Van Wer118
Wellsvrlle 24
Oef1ance Ayersv1lle 28 Edgerton 7
Bethel-Tale 23, Blanchester 6
Def1ance Tmora 56 , Antwerp 10
Bloorndale ElmWQpd 28, Kansas Delaware Buckeye Valley 48,
Lakota 27, OT
Caledon1a R1ver Valley 0
Bowling Green 26.
Holland Delaware Hayes 28, Mt Vernon 7
Spnngfreld 24
Delphos St John's 14, Versarlles 8
BreckSVIIIE·Broad~IBW
Hts 34 , Dover 53, Coshocton 14
Moddleburg His. Mrdpark 7
Dresden Trr-Valley 27 , Phrlo 7
Brrdgeport 40, Paden Crty, W Va 16 Dublin Coffman 55, Galloway
Brookville 34, NeVI Lebanon DrKie o Weslfand 0
'
Bryan 48 Montpelier 8
Dublin
Jerome
14,
Powell
Bucyrus 31, lucas 6
Olenlang~ Lrberty' 10

..

Friday scores

Sunday, September

7

Fostorra 45, Galron 22
Frankhn 27, Bellbrook 8
Fredencktown 21, Danvtlle 7
Fremont Ross 41 , Lora1n Southview
7

Ft Recovery 26. Rockford Parkway
12
Gahanna Lrnooln 26, Lancasler 18
Gallipolis Gallra 36, Jackson 28
Gates
M1lls
Gilmour
41
Warrensville Hts 6
Gales Mrlls Hawken 49 , Orwell
Grand Valley 14
Genoa Area 63. Elmore Woodmere
12
Germantown Valley V1ew 44 , Milton·
Um6n0
G1bsoilburg 43, Millbury Lake 7
Grrard 42 , Warren Champron 13
Glousler Tnmble 41 , Fl Loramre 30
Granville 38 , Gahanna Gals
Acade my 6
Greenville 24 Day Marshall 6
Greenw1ch S Cent 54, Ashland
Mapleton 32
Grove C1ty 14, Groveport-Mad1son

7 .

Grove Crly Chnstran 39, Cornrng
M1ller 0
Hamrllon 32 Mason 7
Hamler Patnck Henry 48,-Metamora
Evergreen t4
Hann rbal Rrver 1(' Caldwell7
Hamson 42 , Trenton Edgewood 28
H1cksv1lle 60, Havtland Wayne Trace
13
H1lliard Darby 45 , Grove C1ty Cent
Cross1ng 7
H1ll1ard Dav1dson 35, Thoma s
Worthrngton 7
Howar~Knox 46, Centerbu rg 19
Hubbard 23, Cortland Lakev1ew 21
Huber His. Wayne 35, Troy 16
Huron 41, Milan Ed1son 14
Independence 37, Burton Berkshire
13
Jamestown Greenev1ew 28 S
Charleslon SE 22
Jeromesville
Hillsdale
39,
Doylestown Ch1ppewa 32
Johnstown-Monroe 32, Loudonville

0
Kent Roosevel141, Akr Coventry 6
Kenton 40, Lrma Bath 8
Kettering Fairmont 20 , Vandalia
Butler 0
Krrtland 33, Rrchmond His 6
Lafayette Allen E . t 4, Convoy
Crestvrew 10
.
Lakewood 7, Garlreld Hts 0
Lancaster Faufteld Un1on 34,
Ashville Teays Valley 32
Leavrttsburg LaBrae 42, Campbell
Memorial 0 .
Lees Creek E. Chnlon 47, Goshen
24
Leetonia 32, Salonevrlle Southern

26
Lew1s Center Olentangy 24,
Marysville 21
Lewistown
lnd1an
Lake
14,
Bellefontame 7
Lexington 34, Orrville 20
Liberty Center 41, Wauseon 21
Loma Shawnee 41, Celrna 6
Lockland 34, Crn. Summrt Country
Day 9
Lodr Cloverleaf 25, Copley 7
Logan 35, Ironton 10
London Mad1son Pla1ns
28,
Greenfield McClain 0
Lorain Admiral Kmg 41, Mar1on
Hardrng 7
Loraon Clearvrew 34, Sullovan Black
A1ver 6
Lou Trinoty, Ky. 17, Cin St. Xavoer 6
LoursVIIIe 45, Befort W Branch 28
LouiSVIlle Aqurnas 17 Elyna Cath
13
Loveland 35, Wrlmrngton 14
Lowellvrlle 34 Sebnng McKrnley 8
Macedonia Nordonra 17, Twinsburg
13
Madrson 34, Ashtabula-Edgewood 3
Malvern 55, Newcomerstown 7
Maple His 34 E Lrverpool 3
Mana Stern Marron Local 17, St.
Henry 10
Manetta 42, Parkersburg South ,
wva. 21
Manon Pleasant 28, Sparta
Hrghland 7
Martrns Ferry 60, Belmont Umon
Local18
Massillon Tuslaw 42. Zoarvrlle
Tuscarawas Valley 6
Massillon Washington 34, Akr
Garlreld o
Maumee 28, Perrysburg 21
Maylreld 16, Lyndhurst Brush 0
McComb 30, Arlington 28
McDonald 61 , N Jctckson JacksonMilton 30
McGuffey Upper Scooto Valley 43,
Manon Calh. 0
Mechanrcsburg 48, Sprrng. NE 21
Medrna 31, Stow-Munroe Falls 28,
OT
Medrna B~ckeye 34, Rocky Rrver
Lutheran W 18
Medona Hrghland 34, Rrchlreld
Revere 7
Middlefield Cardmal 24, Fa1rport
Harbor Hardrng 6
Mrddletown 46, Lrberty Twp Lakota
E 24
Mrlford 32, Crn Mt Healthy 14
M11ford Center Fatrbanks 35, L1ma
Perry 14
Mrllersburg W
Holmes
33,
Mansfield Mad1son 22
Mrneral Rodge 13, New Mrddtetown
Spnng. 7
Mmerva 18, Alliance Marllngton 14
Minford~~ - Oak Hrll o
Mmster 21 , New Bremen 13
Mogadore 34, Garrettsvrlle Garlreld
6
Mogadore Freid 44,, Mantua
Crestwood 13
Monroe 3~. Middletown Mad1son 14
Morrow LIHie Mra'mr 24, Norwood 21
Mt Blanchard Riverdale 17, Ontano

6
Mt Grlead 27 , Morral Ridgedale 21 ,
30T
Mt Orab Western Brown 61,
Williamsburg 14
N. Can Hoover 27, Uniontown Lake

7.
N. Lima S Range 53, Lisbon David
Anderson 7
N. Rldg,vllle 33, Farrvrew 14
Nelsonville· York 30, Pomeroy Meigs
28
New Albany 20, Pataskala Watkrns
M~mona\6

New Carlisle Tecumseh 28, St. Pans
Graham 6 "
New Concord John Glenn 28.
Zanes\/llle W Musk1ngum 21
New Le&gt;rnglon 35, Zanesvrlle
Maysville 0
New London 20, Monroev1lle 13
New Rrchmond 63, Batavra
Clermont NE 0
New Washington Buckeye Cent 16,
Crestlrne 6
Newark
Cath
21,
Hebron
Lakewood 6
Newark Llckrng Valley 45, Heath 17

Sunday, September 21,

ii&gt;unba!' \[tml'!l -~rnnnr! • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

21, 2008

Point blasts Thg Valley, 41-6

Northwood 52 Troy Chns!lan 13
Norian 24 , Akr Spnngfleld 14
O&amp;k Glen . W Va 53. Toronlo 29
Oberlrn 20 . LaGrange Keystone 17
Oregon Str1tch 48 , Lakes1de
Danbury 20
Ottawa-Giandorl 42. Elida 0
Oxford Talawanda 42 , Cm Walnut
Hrlls2B
Pamesv1lle R1vers1de 41 Jefferson
Area 21
•
Pandora-Gilboa 24, Le1ps1c 21
Parma Hts Holy Name 28 Gart1eld
Hts Tnmty, 14
Pataskala
Lrckrng
His. 38,
Lancaster F1sher Cath 7
Pauldrng 41 , Della 21
76
Perhbervdle
Eastwood
Tontogany Otsego 0
Perry 55 Wrckliffe 14
P1ckenngton Cent 38, P1ckenngton
N 7
P1keton 46 , Chillicothe Un1oto 10
Prqua 26 Lebanon 21
Plarn Clly Jonalhan Alder 31 ,
London 6
Poland
Sem1nary
36
Nites
McKrnley 8
Portsmouth Notre Dame 35 , Crown
Crly S Gallla 6
Portsmou th
Sc1otoville
72
Manchester 38
Porlsmouth W 49, Chesapeake 20
Racme Southern 31 , Frankhn
Furnace Green 14
Raven na 52 , Ravenna SE 34
Rayland Buckeye 46, Wrntersvrlle
lnd1an Creek 15
Reedsv 1ll e Eastern 49, Hannan
wva 8
Reynoldsburg I 0, Newark 3
Richwood N U01on 41 Gahan
North mar 0
S Po1nt 28 Lucasville Valley 7
Sandusky Perkrns 41, Oak Harbor
13
Sarahsv1lle
Shenandoah
27 ,
Barnesv111e 6
Snelby 42, Norwalk 14
Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 62, Holgate 8
S1dney Lehman Q:6, W Carrollton 6
Smrthvrlle 21. Dallon 20
Solon 38, Hudso n 13
Spencerville 24, Columbus Grove
21
Spnng Kent on Rrdge 32 Spnng
NW 14
Spnng
Shawnee 12 , Sprmg
Greenan 11
Spnngboro 26, Srdney 7
Spnnglreld 18, Trolwood-Madrson
12
St Bernard Roger Bacon 13, C1n
McNrcholas 3
St Clarrsvrlle 35, Werr. W Va 11
St
Marys
Memonal
46 ,
Wapakoneta 23
Steubenville 42, L1sbon Beaver 7
Streetsboro
35,
Pemnsula
Woodndge 6
,
Strongsville 45 , Parma Hts Valley
Forge 12
Sugarcreek
Garaway
69 ,
Bowerston Conotton Valley 7
Sunbury Brg Walnul 28, LeVI'S
Cenler Olenlangy Orange 7
Sycamore Mohawk 33, AUrea
Seneca E 27
Sylvan1a Southv1ew 73, Rossford 6
Tallmadge 21, Barberton 14
Thornvrlle Shendan 42, Crooksvrlle
10
T1ff1n Columbian 3S, W1llard 7
Trpp Crly Bethel 24 New Parrs
Nat1onal Tra1l 21
Trpp
Crt y
Trppecanoe
42
Bellefo ntaine Ben1am1n Logan 14
Tot Cenl Calh 42 , Oregon Clay 7
Tal Scott 44. Tal Woodward 6
Tot St John's 41 Tal Rogers 6
Tal Start 29, Tal Bowsher 10
Tol Whrtmer 14, Tal Sl. Francrs 7
Tuscarawas Cent
Cath . 35 ,
Strasburg-Frar:1khn 12
Uhnchsv1lle Claymont 32 , Byesville
Meadowbroo k 13
Urbana 60, Rrversrde Stebbrns 6
Utrca 41 , Johnstown Northrrdge 0
Van Buren 2 t , Dola Hardm
Northern 14
Vermrlion 42 Grafton Mrdvrew 34
W Chester Lakota W 45, Faorlreld 0
W Jefferson 41 , Sugar Grove Berne
Un1on 7
W. Lafayeu~ Rrdgewood 47,
Magnolia Sandy Valley 26
W Lrberty-Salem 14, N Lewrsburg
Tnad 6
W. Unlly Hrlllop 40, Tal. Chnstran 17
Wadsworth 17, Green 14
Wahama , W Va 28, Lore Crty
Buckeye Trail 27
Warren Hardmg 35 Lima Sr 0
Warren Howland 35 , Youngs
Chaney 7
Warren JF K 62, Newlon Falls 6
Washrngton C H 7, Hrllsboro 6
Waynesfrefd·Goshen 55 DeGralf
Roversode 0
Waynesvrlle 4 I , Camden Preble
Shawnee 13
Welhnglon 55, Brooklyn 14
Wellslon 28. Belpre 13
Weslervrlle N 21, Westerville Cent
17
Westerville S 24, Dubhn Sctoto 20
Wheelersburg 52, Ironton Rock Hr ll
7
Wheeling Ce ntral, W Va
43,
McConnelsville Moi'gan 13
Whrtehouse Anthony Wayne 59 ,
Sylvan1a Northv1ew 17
W1lharn.spo rt
Westfall
56,
Southeastern o
Wrllow Wood Symmes Valley 28,
McDermolt Scrota NW 6
Woodsf1eld Mon roe Cent. 45,
Beverly Ft Frye 7
Woosler 21 Ashland 14
Yellow Sprrngs 23
Rrdgeway
Rrdgemont 22
Youngs Boardman ~:. o , Massillon
Perry 21
Youngs Chnst1an 17, V1enna
Mathews o
Youngs Lrberly 42 , Salem 7
Youngs Mooney 35 , Menlor Lake
Calh. 14
Youngs Ursulrne 41 , Chardon 0
Zanesville 49, Vincent Warren 3

Bv

NAUGATUCK. W .Va .
Allen Wasonga anu Derek
Muc hell both rushed for over
I 00 yards and the l?oo nt
Pleasant defense limited the
Tug Valley Panthers to JU St
over two yards per offe nsive
play as the Big Black s got
back to the .500 mark wtth a
convincing 41-6 wm m a'
non -co nferen ce ' matchup
Fnday on the Tug Valley
campus.

Elizabeth RlgeVphoto
Membe rs of lhe South Gall1a foolball team get ti red up 111 a pregame huddle dunng Fnday
, night's Homecomong foolball game aga1nst Portsmouth Notre Dame on Mercervtlle

Bowman, Titans get past Rebels
STAFF REPORT

p I a y s

SPORTS @MYOAlLY TRIBUN E COM

capped wtth
a
Bryce
Cl&lt;~ry
27 ·
y:u d touch down run to
lle lhe game
6 -6 atte1 a
f,uled twopo ont con-

MERCERVILLE It 1s
sa fe to , ,\y th dt Port smout h
Noire Dan1c otonning back
Thad Bowm&lt;ln WOll't be
on v 1teu back to humccommg

nex t yem
BownMn put a dd mpet on
So ulh Gallia's ( 1-4) home -

ve rsion.

l'O mm g Ce ichrati011S Pnday

Clary

no g ht Wi th a 17S yard. live
louchuo" n pet formancc 111
le ad1n g the Titans (J - 2 ) to a
35-6 v ictory over the R ebe ls
Fnd,ty 111 M erce rvill e.
Bowman h ad scores o l 3.
I . 70. II &lt;l nd 4 on the m g ht

m ,,

g~une

fou ght

111

the

11enches as n e ith e r t e am
"em to the aor. In stead . th e
tw o l emm po unded 1t out on
the ground With Bowman
and the T otan offense man -

agmg to ga m the .td va nldge.
Bowman sco red l;lis forst
touchdow n o l the m g ht at
the 5:22 mark of the ftrst
quao1er when he capped a 10
play . 6 0 yard dnw with a 3-·

yard touchdown run to give
: the vrsuors .a 6-0 btd alter a
failed ktck.
Behond the mome n1111n ol
the home crowd. South
, Ga llta an sl\'ered nght back
momclll s
later
wllh
a
l e n g thy dnve of ot s uwn
.spannin g 66 ya tds on eight

Clary led
1h e Rebe l s
on the 111 g ht with 87 yaods
on 17 c.on ics and sco1ed I h e
only touchd ow n tor the Red
and Gold
The t wo
te,t m s th en
played to sta le nhlte until
Notre D a m e hroke free 1n
the second qu&lt;~rter highli ghted b y lhe one ol only
two comp letoo ns on lhe
eve nin g Facong a third and
19 .
T1t .1 11
quarterback
Brock Hannah co mpl eied
Iu s ouly p ass of the ga me to
Kevin D e labar who took ot
] 9 yards and onto R e hel te r ntory.
Bowman the l) capped the
dnve wtlh a 1-y ard sconn g
stnke to put hi s tea m up 126 ,11 the half
Commg o ut of the locke r
room South Galloa was st oll
\CI) much 111 the game, t11at
IS , unttl lhe openmg kickoff.
Bowm,m took the open -

ong ko ck 70 yaods fm the
score and. after a two - point
convcrston, th e VISitors
ftmnu the m se l ves up 20-6.
Woth it s f1rst comfortable
le ad of th e n1ght. Noire
Dame w enl to work With
long dnves capped off w1th
&lt;~ paor of Bowman scores 111
the fou tlh qu,u'ler. Bowman
scored on an 11 - yard run at
the H:37 mark to mak e it
28-6 and fint shcd the mght
with&lt;~ 4 -yard TD run tu cap
the sconng at ]5-6
Alon g woth the big night
t rom
Bowman .
Jeffery
E mnett added 41 vards on
fove cames lor t h e.Tttans.
South Ga lh a was paced
by Clnry . while Austin
Phillips added 19 yards on
"x
carnes
and
Ca l eb
McCiandhan toled lhe ba ll
f1v e time s foo a doze n
yards.
Je t! Combs lino shed the
mght 1-for-5 passmg l or
five yatd s wtth Danny
Matney haulin g m the only
completion for five yards
Danny Matn ey also had
10 tackles on the even1ng
along wtth Dalton Matney.
Cl.try added seven tackle s
and M cC lanahan had s ix.
South Gallia will now
prepare for its second consecutt ve home game whe·n
it ho sh Buffalo next Fnday

The local s' vaunted ru shmg attack once agam provideu t he offenstve spark as
W asonga cao ried the ball 18
ttmes for 15 3 yards. whi le
Mtlchell anMssed 116 yards
on JUst 5 carries. Wasong a
totaled th ree touchdowns o n
the nog ht . sconng ftom 37. 17
and g yard s Mitche ll tallied
the first two touchdowns of

the evemng . scormg on runs
of 42
and
57
yards
Sophomore lin eback er Mike
Musgrave lacked on the tonal
touchdown lor the B1g
Bl:1cks when he scooped up a
· Tug Valley fumble and raced
54 vards for the Black s' final
score of the even mg .
" I thought we were a lmle
sl u ggtsh out there". satd
PPHS head coach Dave
Darst after the game. ''I'm
pleased wo th our execution ,
and we dtd the thmgs w e had
to do to wm lhe game. but we
lacked a lottie intenstty. Bul.
v,e spent nearly three hours
on the bus and maybe that
had somethmg to' do with 11."
added the second-year head
coach.
It dtd not take long for the
Big Bl&lt;lcks to establ i sh thetr
superionty on the Panthers '
home turf After forcing a
three and out on the first possesston of the game. I he
Point offense took just two
play s and 51 seconds to put
the game's lirst pomt on the
scoreboard. Wasonga picked
up II yards on the locals'
first offensive play, and then
Mitchell broke several tackles en rouie to his first TD of
the noght - a mfty 42·yurd
run nght through the heart of
the Panther defense . Juston
Weaver added the extra point
and the Big Blacks never
looked back
Poinl's defense
forced

a noth e r
three
and
out on the
Panth e r s'
next possesand
sion
then the two
teams traded
fumbles o n
the next two
possesSions.
Wasonga
with Kenn y
Lon gwe ll
recovenng Tug Vallcls mts·
cue at I he Bi g Black s· 36
yard ltne. It took only two
plays for the locals to hnd
paydirt agam as WlOther twoplay drive culmmatcd With
Mitchell's 57 yard Jaunt It
was the sam e play thai he
scored o n earher in the quarter and after Weaver ' s PAT,
the B1g Blacks leu 14-0.
Tug Valley the11 put togeth er a nice dnve that reached
the Big Blac ks ' 35 yard !me •
but a holding penalty moved
the ball back to the Panthers·
49 and on the nexl p l ay. Enc
Veith sacked the Tug Valley
4uarterback . that resulted m
another fumble whtch was
recovered by' Musgtave at
the Tug Valley 37. It took, the
local s o nly one play to capttah ze on the turnover, as
Wasonga scooted 37 yards on
tlrsl down to extend the lelld
to three touchdowns - and ot
was JUSt I 0 seconds into the
second quarter.
There would be no more
sconng, however. untrl the
I 39 mark of the second
4uarter. when the Big Blacks
agam took aqvantage of good
fteld position and scored
the or fourth touchdown of the
evem ng on _wasonga 's I Ryard run. Weaver 's fourth
PAT k1ck made it 28-0 at lhe
halt.
"We were very pleased
with our defense tonight:·
satd Darst. " It was the kmd
of effort that we expect from
our defen se every week . I
was
espectally
pleased
becau se we gave up way too
many yards last week and
lhese guys know that. I think
they came m here tonight and
wanted to prove someth mg.
Look at the stats , we allowed
110 yards of total oll'ense. I'll
take that every week." added
Darsl
Tug Valley sc ored thm
only touchdown of the night
on their first possessiOn of

the seco nd half a score
that was aoded by one of
three
Pomt
Pleasant
turno ver s. Forced to punt on
thetr mitml possesston of the
half. the Blacks loned up. but
the snap was high and punter
Cody Greathouse had to
chase rt down and full on 11 at
!he Poont 10 yaod lone Three
play s later. Panther quarterback Bruxton Hmkle found
Mtchael Evans 1n the end
zone for a touchdov.n to g tve
the ho m e te,tm a lottie hope
That hope. thoug h . was
squashecL ~y the Btg Blacks
who effctttvel y put th~ game
away With ,1 9 - pla). 65 yaod
dnve c apped b y Wasong" ·,
8-yard TD run. Weaver's
ex tra pomt made it 35-6 .
Two
mmutes
l at er
Mu s~oav e dosed out the
scon~1g when h e pocked up &lt;~
loose ball and rambled 54
v ards for the final scorm e
play of the even mg.
' 'I'm happy wuh thr s wm.''
commented
Darst '·W e
playeu good delense. put up

some good offensive numbers dncl were able to get a lot
of ktds m the game- I was
vet y pleased wnh the effo rt
of ouo younger players.
They came in and played
hard . But. we have to get to
work because tt's a -sh ort
week. We play on Thursday
night o n the att1tic ial turf on
Charl eston ,md I think th e
boy s are loo kmg forward 10
that.'' added Darst
In addttton to the aforementiOned Wasonga and
Mttchell. Cal eb Wason g .t
rushed twice for 35 yards.
while Chns Blanke n ship
pi cked up 25 yards on four
carrres . Jawann Wtlliams ran
once • f01
18
ya t d s
Defensovely. the B1g Black s
had many.many good perfot mances. Dere k Pmso n was
credited wtth 13 tackle s.
whtle Kenny Longwell h.od
10 tackles and fumbl e re cov ery. Mu sgrave had three
tackles to go along Wtlh ht s
two fumble recove11es. E n c
Vetth had seven tackl es .
Casey Hogg had nine tackles .
Nathan Robert s h,td I 0 tack·
les.
Point " nnw 2-2 on the
season and hope to get above
the .500 mao k w hen they take
on M1dlanu Ttad at Lmlley
F1eld next Thursday m ght.

'233
'
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·

'

Cots Mrfflrn vs Cots Beechcroh,
ppd IO Sep 22
Cols L1 nden McKmley vs Gals
Brookhaven, ppd to Sep 22.
Cots
Northland
vs
Cols
Centenmal, ppd to Sep 22
Cols South vs Cols. Eastmoo~.
ppd . Ia Sep 22
Cots
Bnggs
vs
Cots
Independence, ppd to Sep 22
Cols Afncentr1c vs Cols Manon·
Franklin, ppd . Ia Sep 22
Cots Easl vs. Cots Whetstone, ppd
to Sep 22
•
Cots Walnul Rrdge vs. Cots. West,
ppd Ia Sep 22

VB 61110 ~w!IMIS l::roQiild P &amp;f8111~ tllku, 1111 AAml ®II Mall

'

'9i:5

Vii llfll•. l' 1-.q P tn15."""'nl.d ~!WI~~ ~ loniiiM t* i P' Illlltd lg MPG

--

201)7 FORD FUSION SE, t1SC87,

rWtd 17 liFO

Stft,lll10

~ c,1 PYf Pl., aJo, 'lh!llllli N1R11 Ct M.,crua. PS r~~r . _ . R 11rt1i 1J1H. EfA ~l\ M_fi

i)rlii.IJt!

'

ppd .

1996 FORD F1150 XL 11St03,

P &amp;llll:ll'111g

t11l6i

POSTPONEMENTS
Crn N College Hill vs. Harnllton
New Mramr. ppd to Sep 20
Brookfield vs Soulhmgton Chalker,

•

RICK SIMPKINS

SPORTS CORR ESPONDENT

'

.

55

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their own end .zone •. but the
Bobcats seemed to respond
to the adversity. Green got
runs of 15 yards and 8 yards
from PageBl
from Cliff Bonner to ~et out
of the shadow of thetr own
played their role well, very goal. The drive stalled and
well."
Green punted to Southern's
Michael Manuel and Eric Buzzard . Buzzard
Dustin Salser took turns returned the kick IS yards
under center. When Manuel to set Southern up at mid·went to the backfield Salser field.
handled the snaps. running
The. Southern offense ·
.the point· for the likes of went to work. With 9:56 to
Sean Coppick, Manuel and go in the . game, the
Greg Jenkins. ·
Tornadoes throttled ahead
After holding Green to a by two scores when Zach
three and out, S·outhern Ash connected on a 30 yard
opened the scoring by field goal, pushing the tally
marching 65 yards on II to
24- 14.
Southern's
plays. The drive was capped defense
flexed
its
muscles
of( by a six-yard touchdown
and
forced
Green
to
up
run by Manuel. A Zach Ash the ball on downs at ~ive
tts own
extra point gave Southern a 35 yard .line.
7-0 lead with 4:36 to go in
Southern
made
the
the first quarter. Green Bobcats
pay
for
the
good
would again go three and
out. but was able to pin the field position. The hosts got
great blocking on two .key
Tornadoes inside their own 4th
· down runs . from
five yard line .
Michael
Manuel. SHS then
Southern's situation worsened when Green 's Cliff put the game out of reach on
Banner picked off a Manuel a 2-yil,rd run from Dustin
pass that gave Green a first Salser. The Salser run and
Ash extra point put
and goal. The Southern Southern
up 31-14 with
Defense stood strong to
to
go
in the game.
2:46
keep the Bobcats off th~ Green succumbed
on four
board, That stand may have
plays.
thus
allowing
been the difference in the Tornadoes to take a kneethe
as
game; or perhaps.the differ- time ran out.
ence in the season. After the
'coach Teaford called
staunch stand Southern
attention
to a 4th and 3 play
played with renewed confiin the fourth quarter as the
dence .
deciding
moment of the
On the next possession . game.
Southern again turned the
"We needed this play bad
hall over on downs, Green
drove down the field to and I wasn't sure what to
strike on a 22-yard touch- call" said Teaford. "Newly
down run by
Banner. converted offensive tackle
Banner also ran in the 2 Taylor Lemley came to me
point conversion . giving and said .'run behind me and
Green an 8-7 lead with 7:57 we will get ihe first down.'
The next play was a 5-yard
to go in the first half.
Michael Manuel run off
Green would capitalize tackle
for a first down ."
once again on two costly
The
third-year coach
Southern · penalties, taking
added,
"That
confiover inside the Tornado 40 .. dence for a kid takes
to say some- ,
Five plays later Ian Harris
thing
like
that.
Confidence
had a one yard touchdown
like
that
is
one
reason
run to give Green a 14-7 we have won two in a why
lead at the halL Green and are playing well. row
We
would not get into Southern
beat
a
quality
Green
team
territory the rest of the by showing heart and havnight .
ing some much needed
Southern must have Grit."
received a tune-up at the
For Green Ian Harris had
half, compliments of the
nine
carries for five yards
coaching staff. The required
and a touchdown, while
maintenance transformed Clint
Sayre added 38 yards
the first .half clunker into a
on
eight
totes. Green also
streamlined Cadillac.
got three carries for eight
The Tornadoes scored on yards from Xavier Justis
their opening drive of the and II carries for 80 yards
second half when Manuel from Cliff Banner. Banner
hit Jerry Justice with a 20- also added one catch for 15
yard .touchdown pass. yards
Southern fullback Sean
Southern saw 121 yards
Coppick ran in the 2 point
conversion to give Southern and a touchdown came from
a 15-14 lead with· 9:48 to go Michael Manuel's 20 carin the 3rd quarter. Coppick .ries. Sean Coppick added'
had ·set up the touchdown 117 yards on 20 carries and
with a 30-yard kick return. Greg Jenkins had eight carSouthern's spirit
was ries for 38 yards. Dustin
renewed, and the ever- Salser added seven yards
important
variable of. and a touchdown while
momentum echoed loudly Jerry Justis also had a 20from the Tornado sideline.
yard touchdown reception .
On the next drive,
The Southern Defensive
Southern -drove methodical- ~ffo,rt w.as anchonid by
ly down the field and hit JUnt&lt;ir lmebackers Greg
paydirt when Greg Jenkins Jenkins and Taylor Lemley.
took the Dustin Salser hand- Jenkins tallied 10 tackles
off 3 yards around the end while Lemley added 8 tackto put Southern up 21-14 les and a saek.
with 4:17 to go in the 3rd.
Southern will begin ·
A massive Taylor Lemley league play on Friday when
kick pinned Green deep in they host Federal Hocking.

Wahama survives Buckeye Trail, 28-27 Southern
Bv GARY CLARK

west coa&gt;l run-and-shoot Snyder for the TD . Brandon
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
offense which compliment- SealQI'k booted the PAT to
ed its speedy quarterback give Buckeye Trail a 13-6
LORE CITY - Micaiah
Ethan Snyder ami &gt;lrong lead with 2:44 left in the
Branch and Kyle Zerkle
running ·back Adam Klein . half. Once again Wahama
enjoyed spec I ac u l a r
Klein scored a pair of answered the Warrior score
evenings in leading the
Warrior touchdowns while after marchi.ng 62 yards in
Wahama White Falcon footSnyder tossed a pair of scor- nine plays for the game
ball. II past host Buckeye
ing passes for the Warriors. tying
s~ore. William
Buckeye Trail riddled the Zuspan went the final nine
Trail by a narrow 28-27
WHS defense to the tune of yards for the touchdown
score Friday night, but it was
a fumbled snap on an extra
Branch
Zerkle
421 total yards with 281 with Zerkle knocking down
poinJ attempt that proved to
yards on grmmd and another the point after kick with :26
be .the winning 1~mrgin for !3 edge midway through the 140 through ~he air.
. left in the half to even tlte
the unbeaten White Falcons. third period. WHS lined up
Klem ran for 127 yards m count at 13-13.
Branch proved to be a one 10 boot the point after kick. · 13 tnes before ex1t 1hg the
WHS added touchdowns
man wrecking crew for but the snap was low and an contest .~m a stretcher early on its first two possessions
coach Ed Cromley's Bend alert zuspan scoo)JI!d up the 111 the ltnal quarter. Snyder of the second half to seemArea team after the junior loose pigskin off the turf and added another 94 yards on ingly take control of the conrunning back ran for a tossed
a
strike
10 the. ground m 17 attempts t~st , but Buckeye Trail
touchdown while ru shing Dangerfield 10 complete the ":hiie throwmg for 140 wouldn' t throw in the towel.
for 174 yards ,in 19 carries . two-po int conversion and yards and _two touchdown Zerkle went 18 yards at the
Hold on, the WHS grid stars extend the Falcons lead to on mne ot 17 tosses. The 9:58 mark of the third quarimpressive list of slats does- 28 -13 . Buckeye Trail wo uld Wurriors cqmmit_ted six ter to give Wahama its first
n't end there.as Branch also later rally 10 score a pair 'o f turnovers on the n1ght wtth lead of the night before the
caught two passes for anoth- second half touchdowns, but Snyder being picked off senior running back raced 55
er 16 yards in addition to was unsuccessful on one of three tunes m addition to yards lor another score just
being involved in no less its PAT attempts . giving Buckeye l'rail coughi!'g the . 90 seconds later. Zerkle
than an incredible 20 tack- Wahama the one point. 28- ball up another th ree limes. booted one point after with
les on the night for the White 27 vil"lory.
The hosts scored a first Zuspan connec ting with
Falcon defense .
The hard-fought win quarter louchdqwn at the Dangerfield to extend the
Zerkle also racked up moved the ninth rated 4:04 mark of the first penod Falcons lead to 28- 13.
some outstanding sta!s with Mason County teams sea- when Klein capped off a 12 · Buckeye. Trail" ~arne roara pair of second half touch- son record to 4:0 on year play, 77 yard dn~e with a ing back with a three yard
downs, 149 yards on the . with the local gridders three yard run.The co~~er- Klein run in the third and an
ground in ·II carries, two scheduled to enjoy an open ston run fatled g1vmg 11 -yard pass from Snyder to
PAT point after kicks, a pair date on its fall card next Buckeye Trail a 6-0 advan- Sealock with 3:33 to play,
of interceptions and seven week before returning for a tage,
.
but Wahama drove from its
tackles as . the duo led grueling second half of the
Wahama_ answered qm~k - own six to the Trail. one yard
Wahama to its fourth con- season. Wahama will host ly followmg the ensumg line to run out the remaining
secutive win in as many out- lith ranked , Class AA. kickoff as Branch ripped off time and preserve the nar-·
ings on the young 2008 high Liberty Raleigh on Octobt:r a 57-yard run to the Warrior row one-point victory.
$Chool football season.
3rd for its annual homecom- SIX before takmg 11 111 two ·In addition to Branch and
· Through all the nail-biting ing tilt prior to em harking on plays later to conclude the Zerkle defensively for
drama throughout the entire a four game road swing that 65 yard four play series. Wahama Matt Dangerfield
48 minute contest the one- includes stops at Wirt . WHS was unsuccessful on ·quietly had yet another out{!Oint margin of vict.ory County,
Williamstown , its point after attempt as the standing outing with the
came on a botched snap Athens and Parkersburg potential go-ahead kick was junior corner collecting a·
from the center and a heads Catholic.
blocked leaving the score career high lO tackles in
Up play by holder Wil.liam
The hard-luck Buckeye deadlocked at 6-6.
addition to picking . off a
Each team added another Snyder pass and recovering
Zuspan
and
Matt Trail Warriors dropped fts
Dangerfield following the tifth straight contest on the score late in the second a Warrior fumble. Trey
Bend Area teams final year with its last three sl!t-· canto in much the same Anderson , Luke Ingels.
touchdown of the night . backs coming by margins of ·fashion with Trail scoring Colin Pierce and Elijah
After . a 55-yard run by four, five and now one point. on an Ethan Snyder 43-yard Honaker also had impressive
?erkle gave Wahama .a 26Buckeye Trail employed a pass to twin brother Isaac games defensivCiy for WHS.

Devils
fromPageBl
two weeks.
"We told our kids all week
that we had played some peoP.le that they hadn't played
yet, and that they were undefeated and we were 2-2. The
one thing they (Jackson) had
going for them coming in
.was that they had confidence
.in one another, .and that's
.what we needed - to get
confidence in each other,"
Bokovitz commented. "We
needed to get that early in the
"!lame, but ob~iously we didn 't start real well. But every
lime something went wrong
for us, we just turned up th~
volume a little bit to work
that much harder. The kids
bought into it, continued to
play their hearts out and were
11ble to get the job done at the
·end of the night.
· · "I really think we turned
the comer tonight, and we
definitely needed this win.
This is a very big win for this
program."
· Early on, howeyer, victory
1ooked to· be a long way from
reality.
·
Jacksqn stormed out to a
14-0 lead after its first five
9ffensive plays of the game,
-which lasted less than five
. ~nutes into the first quarter.
l::octy Huff took the opening
·;play from scrimmage 66
~ards to the house, giving the
guests a 7-0 lead just 17 sec~nds into the game.
: · GAHS went six plays on
lts ensuing drive, but
jackson's Derrick Meredith
picked off a deflected pass
:!lfld gave JHS possession at
the · hosts 24 with 9:04
remammg.
: Four plays later, fullback
-Klay Arthur marched into the
~nd zone from nine yards out
:_giving Jackson a two-posl!ession lead with 7:24
remaining.
Gallia Academy responded
:With a score late in the first to
:inake it 14-6, as Nate Allison
l;apped an eight-play, 76-yard
lbive with a six-yard run at
the 2:55 mark.
· Jackson fumbled on its
:next possession at the hosts'
~. with Jared Gravely recovering the turnover with 17
left in the opening
~uarter. The Blae and White
lnarclled all the way down to
lHS 13, but Huff pi~ ked off a
pass and went 89 yards to
paydirt - thwarting a solid
.drive and making it a 21-6
J:Ontest with 6:) I remaining
_jn the half.
'
• Just when things looked to

mnds

tried to strip the ball away.
The Iron men didn 't succeed,
and Gmvely rolled 30 yards
to paydirt with 1:31 left in the
contest to make it a 36-28
contest.
Ja~kson managed one last
scoring threat , getting down
to the GAHS 16 with less
than a minute lett. Back-tobuck penalties - including
an unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty - moved toem back
to 35 with around I0 seconds
left.
'
The guests tried a Hail
Mary at the end, but the ball
was picked · off - securing
the Devils' latest victory over
the Red and White.
Gallia Academy posted a
season-high 423 total yards
of offense, ·including a sea- ·
· son-best 205 rushing yards.
The hosts also managed 21
first downs and 218 passing
yards in the win . Jackson
rushed ·for 226 yards on the
.
Bryan Walterw/photo ground, but managed only 38
Gallia Academy senior wideout Beau Whaley runs through passing yards for a total of
a Jackson defender after a catch during Friday night's 264 total yards of offense.
SEOAL contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
Both teams had three
turnovers
and both were also
· be at their worst for . the
On the opening play of the
whistled
for
seven penalties
Devils, that's when things next drive, Gallia Academy
started getting a whole lot needed only one play and II apiece. Jackson was penalbetter. The hosts went on a seconds to go 80 yards to i7.ed 66 yards and Gallia
I0-play, 54-yard scoring make it 28-21. Beau Whaley Academy was penalized for
drive on its next possession, ran a stop-and-go pattern on 64 yards. The ·guests also had
capped with a fourth-and- the outside, and quarterba~k 14 first downs in the setba~k,
Individually. it Wl)S a
· goal one-yard touchdown nm Ethan Moore found him wide
by Ethan Moore - making it open downfield to make it a breakout night for many of
the Blue Devil s - most
a 21-14 contest with I :38 left one-possession ball game.
in the half.
The GAHS defense forced notably Moore. The sophoAt the break, Jackson had another three-and-out, with more was injured two weeks
just first downs in compari- the ensuing punt pinning the ago against Ironton. and was·
son to the Blue Devils' II. hosts deep into their OW!) ter- a late edition to practice this
JHS also had 142 yards of ritory at the four with 8:27 week. In his emergency start
at quarterback, Moore went
total offense, while GAHS remaining .
,
accumulated 192 yard~ total.
Gallia Academy needed II 14-o f-17 passing for 218
Jackson scored on both first plays -.,- and ~me huge late hit yards, throwing two intercephalf turnovers by Gallia penalty on the lronmen - to tions and touchdown. Moore
Academy and were plus-one cover % yards in 6:02, as also mshed for 39 yards on
at halftime.
Allison took an option pitch 10 carries, including a touch·
· Both teams went scoreless from Moore -and went 12 down .
Allison
led
the
rushing
in the third, but not without yards lor paydirt to make it a
some controversy.
one-point game with 2:31 attack with 93 yards on 15 .
carries, followed by Gravely
After the Devils' opening remaining.
drive of the second half · In what (:an only be with 62 yards on a dozen
stalled, a punt pinned the described as a gutsy call, the totes. Beau Whaley hauled
Ironmen deep inside their Blue Devils decided to go for . in six catches for 1.20 yards,
own five-yard line with 7:05 two - and the win - on the · while Austin Wilson had
remaining. The hosts forced a extra point. But the gutsy call four grabs for 55 yards. ·
Huff led the lronmen with
three-and-out punt, which paid off big,.hs Moore again
was fielded and returned. to optioned to Allison to com- 179 rushing yards on 22 carnear midfield. Under a mas- plete the run conver~ion, giv- ries, followed by Arthur
sive pile, it was ruled that ing the hosts their first lead of with 35 yard's on seven
attempts. Tyler Boggs was
there was a fumble on the ' the night at 29-28.
5-of13 passin g for 38
play - which Jackson recovThen, momentum iook
yards,
throwing one inter- ·
another favorable bounce .for
ered at its own 45.
The guests proceeded to the Blue and White as ception. Josh Brown led the
use its ground game, running Jackson fumbled their open- guests with three catches for
·
out the rest of the quarter ing snap of the next drive . 27 yards.
while maintaining a substan- Shaun Pethtel recovered for . Gallia A&lt;:adcmy - which
tial drive. That drive lasted 13 the Blue Devils at the JHS 36 is 2-0 at home this season will host Portsmouth · this
plays.and covered 54 yards in with 2:22 remaining.
6:02 , capped when Huff
The hosts needed four coming Friday in another
added his third s~ore of the plays and 49 seconds to score SEOAL gridiron matchup .
evening on a five-yard run again, · as Gravely carried Jackson travels to Marietta.
with I0:53 left in regulation numerous Jackson defenders Both games will kickoff at
:- making it a 28-14 contest. toward the -end zone a~ they 7:30p.m .

Sunday, September

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Raiders

also had three catches for 14
yards.
. Strahler led WHS with 72
fromPageBl
rushing yards on 14 tries,
followed
~y
Jartod
Eichhorn
with
49
yards
on
setback. RVHS had just 87
15
carries.
Strahler
was
also
rushing yards on 30 carries.
The hosts had a dozen 5-of-14 for 73 passing yards
with two interceptions .
first downs, one more then Cody Hall led the . guests
Waterford's I I. RVHS also with two catches for 4 7
finished the night plus-two yards.
.
in the turnover category and
River Valley - which has
had just fo.ur penalties for . taken down some historic
25 yards. The Green and barriers over the last two
White were penalized three weeks - will now set its
times for 30 yards.
sights on breaking . a 17Baird led the victors on game losing streak in Ohio
ihe ground with 64 yards on Valley Conference play
I 3 · carries, (allowed by · (2004) this Friday when tl
Curnutte with 14 yards on hosts South Point. Kickoff
seven totes. Kody Johnson is scheduled for 7:30p.m.

2:1,2008

Meigs basketball golf scramble
MASON ; W.Va . - The food, beverages and mulligans
Meigs High School boys bas- included in the entry fee .The
ketballteam wiU be holding a $5 skins game and optional
golf scramble on Saturday. cash pol are not included in
October II, at Riverside Golf the entry fee.
. .
Club.
The top three teams will
The event will be a four- win awards, and there will be
man . team format. with one other contests such as cli&gt;sest
player from each team to the pin , longest drive and
required to have an under-! 0 longest putt. The contest will
handicap. The event is I 8 have a shotgun start at 8:30
holes and rules will be a.m.
.
explained the day of the tour- · For more information, connament.
tact MHS head basketball
The cost is $320 ,per team coach Ben Ewing at740-416- $80 per person - with 0824.
.

Meigs

with Arnold adding the
extra points at the 7:58
mark of the contest to tie the
game at 22-all.
from Page Bl
But Gabe Hill fielded the
just 11 seconds into the con- Buckeye kickoff at his own
test the Buckeye held a 6-0 25 yard line, Hill took it up
lead.
the sideline and .then broke
But it didn't take the to the middle of the field
Marauders long 10 answer before the last Buckeye
with a score of their owri. with a chance tripped him
With junior quarterback up at the Buckeye 10 yard
Ja~ob Well comp leting line. Fours plays later Smith
three of four passes. the last scored from three yards out ·
being a beautiful 36 yard on and fourth and three. The
scoring toss to Cameron kick for the extra points by
Bolin for the score. The Metts hit the right up right.
passes for the extra points but Meigs was on top 28-22
were no good, and with just with 5:52 left in the game.
one minute gone in the conThe Buckeyes came right
test the Buckeyes were up back however, . driving 65
yards in 12 lays to take the
8_6 _
Arnold
Caught
The Marauders took a 12- lead .ck's
·
screen pass broke
Bam
·'
'
s lead l"nto the lock··e1· room
at the half, when Well a lac kl e an d went 17 yards
·n ·
hooked up with Clay Bolin for the Score . Once
. agal I1
tacked On
from 31 yards out. the kick Was· Arnold Who
and the
.nts
the
extra
Pol
was
no
good
with
7:58
left
· h
d
·
T
Buckeyes went back on top
m t e secon penQ(1. he 30-28 with just 52 ticks left
Marauders received the
h
k
kick off to start the ser:ond on t e c1oc ·
The Buckeye kl.ckoff
half, and on first down, Well went
out of bound s gr·v,·ng
scrambled
out
of
the
pocket
. Cl
Meigs the ball at the
an d h It ay Bolin for 43 Nelsonville- York 49. Aided
yards to the Buckeye 22. b
· rf
· 11
But the drive stalled and
y a pass mte erence ca
on Nelsonville-York , the
Well's fourth down pass · Marauders had the ball at
was ilkomplete giving the the Buckeye 24 with a first
Buckeyes the ball at their down and 16 _3 seconds left.
own 24 yard line.
Well was flushed out of the
k
d h"
· h
Meigs held them to a four
and out, Campbell went poe et an
ts pass m 1 e
end zone was picked off by
bac k to punt , and the snap Campbell as hell fell out of
went over his head. the end zone. After a
Campbell picked it up by moment of indecision, the
fell at his own three-yard 0 ff- · 1 1 d B k
b II
line giving Meigs excellent
tcta ru e
uc eye a
the game
Was all but
field position. But the and
·
•
over
Buckeye defense held , and
A · ld 1 d II
h
senior Mason Metts kicked
rno
e a rus ers
.th 166 yards t'n 30 carrr·es
'
a 27 yard field goal at the Wl
6 40
k f h
·
to go along with his two
0
: mar
t e third peri - kickotT returns for scores.
od to put the maroon and
gold on top , 5_g.'
Cunningham added 57 in
six tries, Barrick was three
Once again the Marauder of seven 1·n the· aJ·r for 33
defense held and a short
punt by Campbell. gave yards and a touchdown .
Meigs the ball at there own Arnold had two receptions
47. Six plays later, added by for 24 yards.
Well was 14 of 24
a Buc keye facemask
penalthrough the aJ·r for 213
h
k
·
·
·
Smtt 100 It '" yards and · a pa,·r of scores.
ty; Jeremy
from
_18 yard
out. Metts
added the extra points and Clay Bolin caught four ·
the Marauders held a 22 _8 passes for II
yards: ·
lead with 2:21 left in the Cameron Bolin added four
for 64 and Jeremy Smith
period.
five for 27. Smith carried
But once again, Arnold ..the ball23 times for a hard
came up with the big play. fought 89 yards; Cory
The Marauder kickoff went Hutton added three for 13.
over his head, after he
Unoffc"ally
on defens
11
chased it down at the six he Ernie
·
·
e·
Welch had 15 tackles
was off the race s breaking for Meigs , Gabe Hill nine
ta~kled and taking it 94 with a.n interception and
yards for the . score. The Mason Metts added nine.
Marauder line on the extra
Meigs drops to 4-1 overpoints
snowed
·under all and 1-1 in the TVC.
Arnold, but the Buckeyes Meigs will travel to Warren
had p"ulled to within 22- 14 , Local next Saturday night
with 2:04 remaining in the for a non-conference game
period.
with the Warriors. The
Justin
·Cunn"ingham Buckeyes now 4-1 and 2-0
scored from 43 yards out, will travel to Belpre.

. Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

§S&gt;unbap arti1U'5 -§S&gt;rniilltl • Page '85

Have you ever. heard of the Eastern Spadifoot Toad 1
Me neither. at least not
until AMP-Ohio chose to
build a power plant in
Meigs County's Letart
Township.
It turns out the Eastern
Spadefoot is the only Ohio
fro g or toad that is listed
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources as an
endangered species. The
spadefoot is only known
from some of Ohio's larger
river valleys including the
Ohio , Muskingum . Scioto
and Hocking rivers.
Since the proposed site
of the new AMP-Ohio
Generating Plant is located
in Eastern Spadefoot Toad
habitat. the utility had to
devise a mitigation plan to
offset any impact to the
toad population, The most
visible result of the plan is
a large wetland along East
Letart Road .
In North America as a
.whole, however, the spade-

Eagles
from PageBl
ff
h . h M
o ense on 1 e n1g 1. ost
of that yardage was produced by quarterback Jacob
Ta)·lor who was 5-for- 17 for
60 yards with three interceplions. Most of those
passes found Patrick Flora
who hauled in live passes
for 78 yards.
Joe K_elly added 26 yards
on 2-for-5 passing and
scored Hannan's only
touchdown on a nine-yard
scoring strike to Jared,Cobb
early in the fourth quarter.
Kelly also led the Wildcats
on the ground with 24 yards
on eight carries.
But Hannan 's offensive
breakthrough in the final
frame couldn ' t erase a dead- ·
ly first quarter.
.
.
Hannan 's first three passessions resulted in interceptions and Eastern managed to capitalize on all
three giveaways.
Ryan Amo. s claimed the
first i,nterception on.the firsi
offensive play from s&gt;rimmage of the night giving
Eastern a short field and
Klint Connery took advan•
f
t""
1age, sconng
rom Jve
yards out to give the Green
and White a 7-0 lead.
Mike Johnson grabbed
the second pick and , after a
I sma II gams,
·
th e
coupe
Eag Ies agam
· h"t
d. I
1 pay 1r
when Pratt found Zach
Hendrix for a 31-yardscoring strike and Hendrix
kicked through the extra
point for a 14-0 lead .
Hendrix finished the night
a perfect 6-for-6 on point
after kicks.
.
Jordan KI·mes then hauled
in Hannan 's third interception with 4:36 left in the
first fram e and again
Eastern turned it into points.
Kyle Connery helped set up
the score with a big 17-yard
run and Kelly Winebrenner
finished the drive with a 25yard touchdown run with
2:41 remaining in the quarter.
After Hannan's first sus-

The Eastern Spadefoot ing heavy rains that occur
Toad is relatively small, during warm months of the
about one-and-three-quar- year. Eggs hatch in two to
ters to two-and-a-quarter three days . Population s
inches long. The back is may go several years with,usually brown with two out breeding if heavy rain~
yellow lines forming an .
do not occur during th~
hourglass pattern .
This toad's skin is rela- breeding season.
tively smooth with some ' The . male 's advertise '
· small warts . A single. hard. mcnt call is a harsh "whar."
black, sick le-shaped spade, Chorusing . on ly occurs
which g ives the toad its after torrential rainstorms :
root is found from south - name, is found ·on the bot If you have never see~
ern New England to south tom of ,each hind foot. one before. don't' fee.!
Florida including some of Unlike any other Ohio alone . Thi s species' burthe keys: west to southeast. frog , thi s spec ies ' pupils rowi ng habits. limited
Mi ssouri. eastern Arkansas are vertically elliptical. ·. activity. and restricted
and eastern Louisiana.
Adults subsist on insects, habitat make them d.ifficu~t
In Ohio, this species .is earthworms and snai ls to find .
limited to soft. sandy soils while tadpoles feed on
in riverine flood plains , microscopic plants before
Jim Freeman is· wild/iff
like those found in "the becoming carnivorous or
specialist
for the Meigs So,(/
in
Letart "even cannibalistic.
bottoms"
Township. This is a burThey are considered and W"ter Comervatiotl
rowmg
species
that "explosive 1
breeders, District. He can be contacted
wee/ala.\'.\" at 740-992-4282
appears at the surface on appearing suddenly
warm. humid nights from sometimes in great num- or ar jim,[reeman@oh.nacd·
April through October.
bers - after dark follow- ''et.net ·

In the
Open

. Jim Freeman

1

Hannan's Jared Taylor
recovered an Eastern fum~
ble on the Eaglfs next pos ~
session to set up the
Wildcats only score of the
night. Starting on its own .
28-yard line, Flora gave
Hannan a little breathing ·
room on a reverse spanning
17 yards to move the baU
into Eastern territo.ry.
Three plays later Kelly
converted a third and eight
with a 13 yard run followed
by another big play from
Flora when he. hauled in a
16-yard pass from Jacob
Taylor to set Hannan up
inside the 10-yard line, On
. the next llay Taylor pitched
the bal to Kelly who
dropped back and found .a
wide open Cobb for a 9yard touchdown and, after a
two-point conversion cm:ried by Sowards, put the
score at 49-8.
With
the newfound
offense. Hannan went to
work in the fourth quarter
converting a few big pass
Larry Crum/photo
plays. but another fumble
Eastern .running back Kyle Connery (36) runs past a and the fomth interceptiop
Hannan defender during Friday night's non-league football of the night sealed the 41point Eastern victory-.
contest in Ashton, W.Va.
After jull\ping out ·to the
tained drive of the game
While the score occurred big lead , Ryan Shook arid
tailed to produce any yards, early in the quarter, both Cody Ridgeway took over
the Wi Ideals punted the pall teams played to a stalemate the main rushing duties in
away :l,nd Winebrenner over the final I0 minutes as place . of the leading trio ,
made them pay, taking the Eastern took a comfortable Shook finished the night
ball nearly 40 yards to set 35-0 lead into the half .
with 26 yards on 10 carries
his team up at the 11 -yard
The stalemate continued ahd Ridgeway had 27 yarcfs
line. Winebrenner then fin- in the second half as the on three carries. Brad Stone
ished what he started with two teams traded fumbles, added 20 yards on three
an 11 -yard touchdown run but failed to capitalize on carries:
·
to give the Eagles a 28-0 the opportunities.
Other than Kelly no rushlead .
It wasn't until the 4:52 er had more than 20 yard);
But the turnovers weren't mark of tlie third quarter for the Wildcats as Flora ·
done dropping just yet.
that, Eastern managed to carried the ball twice for l:]
After a nice return by break out of its offensive yards and Robert Worth
Cobb put Hannan near mid- slump when Klint Connery carried the ball five times
field for the first time in the broke free for a 13-yard for 10 yards.
game,the Wildcats gave the run, . setting up Kyle
Both teams also strugglep
ball right back with a fum- Connery for a 13-yard with an above averag,e
ble giving Eastern four score.
number of penalties as the
takeaways in the first quarWinebrenner then capped · Wi Ideals suffered eight
ter.
the scoring for the Eagles a penalties for 60 yards and
With the ball back in their little over .a minute later the Eagles had eight flags
hands to start the second when he took a Hannan for 80 yards. ,
,
frame, th'e Eagles again punt 60 yards for a score to
With two. wins already
went tq work converting a give the visitors a 49-0 locked up; Eastern will go
couple third downs before lead.
looking for win number
Kyle Connery broke free
With their backs against · three next Friday when the
for a 16-yard scoring strike the wall, Hannan left it all Eagles host Trimble whilj!
to give, the Green and White out on the field in the fourth Hannan hits the road for a
quarter and it paid off.
a 35-0 lead.
trip to Burch.
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·· Page B4 • ~unba!' QI:tntt1i -il&gt;rntinrl

their own end .zone •. but the
Bobcats seemed to respond
to the adversity. Green got
runs of 15 yards and 8 yards
from PageBl
from Cliff Bonner to ~et out
of the shadow of thetr own
played their role well, very goal. The drive stalled and
well."
Green punted to Southern's
Michael Manuel and Eric Buzzard . Buzzard
Dustin Salser took turns returned the kick IS yards
under center. When Manuel to set Southern up at mid·went to the backfield Salser field.
handled the snaps. running
The. Southern offense ·
.the point· for the likes of went to work. With 9:56 to
Sean Coppick, Manuel and go in the . game, the
Greg Jenkins. ·
Tornadoes throttled ahead
After holding Green to a by two scores when Zach
three and out, S·outhern Ash connected on a 30 yard
opened the scoring by field goal, pushing the tally
marching 65 yards on II to
24- 14.
Southern's
plays. The drive was capped defense
flexed
its
muscles
of( by a six-yard touchdown
and
forced
Green
to
up
run by Manuel. A Zach Ash the ball on downs at ~ive
tts own
extra point gave Southern a 35 yard .line.
7-0 lead with 4:36 to go in
Southern
made
the
the first quarter. Green Bobcats
pay
for
the
good
would again go three and
out. but was able to pin the field position. The hosts got
great blocking on two .key
Tornadoes inside their own 4th
· down runs . from
five yard line .
Michael
Manuel. SHS then
Southern's situation worsened when Green 's Cliff put the game out of reach on
Banner picked off a Manuel a 2-yil,rd run from Dustin
pass that gave Green a first Salser. The Salser run and
Ash extra point put
and goal. The Southern Southern
up 31-14 with
Defense stood strong to
to
go
in the game.
2:46
keep the Bobcats off th~ Green succumbed
on four
board, That stand may have
plays.
thus
allowing
been the difference in the Tornadoes to take a kneethe
as
game; or perhaps.the differ- time ran out.
ence in the season. After the
'coach Teaford called
staunch stand Southern
attention
to a 4th and 3 play
played with renewed confiin the fourth quarter as the
dence .
deciding
moment of the
On the next possession . game.
Southern again turned the
"We needed this play bad
hall over on downs, Green
drove down the field to and I wasn't sure what to
strike on a 22-yard touch- call" said Teaford. "Newly
down run by
Banner. converted offensive tackle
Banner also ran in the 2 Taylor Lemley came to me
point conversion . giving and said .'run behind me and
Green an 8-7 lead with 7:57 we will get ihe first down.'
The next play was a 5-yard
to go in the first half.
Michael Manuel run off
Green would capitalize tackle
for a first down ."
once again on two costly
The
third-year coach
Southern · penalties, taking
added,
"That
confiover inside the Tornado 40 .. dence for a kid takes
to say some- ,
Five plays later Ian Harris
thing
like
that.
Confidence
had a one yard touchdown
like
that
is
one
reason
run to give Green a 14-7 we have won two in a why
lead at the halL Green and are playing well. row
We
would not get into Southern
beat
a
quality
Green
team
territory the rest of the by showing heart and havnight .
ing some much needed
Southern must have Grit."
received a tune-up at the
For Green Ian Harris had
half, compliments of the
nine
carries for five yards
coaching staff. The required
and a touchdown, while
maintenance transformed Clint
Sayre added 38 yards
the first .half clunker into a
on
eight
totes. Green also
streamlined Cadillac.
got three carries for eight
The Tornadoes scored on yards from Xavier Justis
their opening drive of the and II carries for 80 yards
second half when Manuel from Cliff Banner. Banner
hit Jerry Justice with a 20- also added one catch for 15
yard .touchdown pass. yards
Southern fullback Sean
Southern saw 121 yards
Coppick ran in the 2 point
conversion to give Southern and a touchdown came from
a 15-14 lead with· 9:48 to go Michael Manuel's 20 carin the 3rd quarter. Coppick .ries. Sean Coppick added'
had ·set up the touchdown 117 yards on 20 carries and
with a 30-yard kick return. Greg Jenkins had eight carSouthern's spirit
was ries for 38 yards. Dustin
renewed, and the ever- Salser added seven yards
important
variable of. and a touchdown while
momentum echoed loudly Jerry Justis also had a 20from the Tornado sideline.
yard touchdown reception .
On the next drive,
The Southern Defensive
Southern -drove methodical- ~ffo,rt w.as anchonid by
ly down the field and hit JUnt&lt;ir lmebackers Greg
paydirt when Greg Jenkins Jenkins and Taylor Lemley.
took the Dustin Salser hand- Jenkins tallied 10 tackles
off 3 yards around the end while Lemley added 8 tackto put Southern up 21-14 les and a saek.
with 4:17 to go in the 3rd.
Southern will begin ·
A massive Taylor Lemley league play on Friday when
kick pinned Green deep in they host Federal Hocking.

Wahama survives Buckeye Trail, 28-27 Southern
Bv GARY CLARK

west coa&gt;l run-and-shoot Snyder for the TD . Brandon
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
offense which compliment- SealQI'k booted the PAT to
ed its speedy quarterback give Buckeye Trail a 13-6
LORE CITY - Micaiah
Ethan Snyder ami &gt;lrong lead with 2:44 left in the
Branch and Kyle Zerkle
running ·back Adam Klein . half. Once again Wahama
enjoyed spec I ac u l a r
Klein scored a pair of answered the Warrior score
evenings in leading the
Warrior touchdowns while after marchi.ng 62 yards in
Wahama White Falcon footSnyder tossed a pair of scor- nine plays for the game
ball. II past host Buckeye
ing passes for the Warriors. tying
s~ore. William
Buckeye Trail riddled the Zuspan went the final nine
Trail by a narrow 28-27
WHS defense to the tune of yards for the touchdown
score Friday night, but it was
a fumbled snap on an extra
Branch
Zerkle
421 total yards with 281 with Zerkle knocking down
poinJ attempt that proved to
yards on grmmd and another the point after kick with :26
be .the winning 1~mrgin for !3 edge midway through the 140 through ~he air.
. left in the half to even tlte
the unbeaten White Falcons. third period. WHS lined up
Klem ran for 127 yards m count at 13-13.
Branch proved to be a one 10 boot the point after kick. · 13 tnes before ex1t 1hg the
WHS added touchdowns
man wrecking crew for but the snap was low and an contest .~m a stretcher early on its first two possessions
coach Ed Cromley's Bend alert zuspan scoo)JI!d up the 111 the ltnal quarter. Snyder of the second half to seemArea team after the junior loose pigskin off the turf and added another 94 yards on ingly take control of the conrunning back ran for a tossed
a
strike
10 the. ground m 17 attempts t~st , but Buckeye Trail
touchdown while ru shing Dangerfield 10 complete the ":hiie throwmg for 140 wouldn' t throw in the towel.
for 174 yards ,in 19 carries . two-po int conversion and yards and _two touchdown Zerkle went 18 yards at the
Hold on, the WHS grid stars extend the Falcons lead to on mne ot 17 tosses. The 9:58 mark of the third quarimpressive list of slats does- 28 -13 . Buckeye Trail wo uld Wurriors cqmmit_ted six ter to give Wahama its first
n't end there.as Branch also later rally 10 score a pair 'o f turnovers on the n1ght wtth lead of the night before the
caught two passes for anoth- second half touchdowns, but Snyder being picked off senior running back raced 55
er 16 yards in addition to was unsuccessful on one of three tunes m addition to yards lor another score just
being involved in no less its PAT attempts . giving Buckeye l'rail coughi!'g the . 90 seconds later. Zerkle
than an incredible 20 tack- Wahama the one point. 28- ball up another th ree limes. booted one point after with
les on the night for the White 27 vil"lory.
The hosts scored a first Zuspan connec ting with
Falcon defense .
The hard-fought win quarter louchdqwn at the Dangerfield to extend the
Zerkle also racked up moved the ninth rated 4:04 mark of the first penod Falcons lead to 28- 13.
some outstanding sta!s with Mason County teams sea- when Klein capped off a 12 · Buckeye. Trail" ~arne roara pair of second half touch- son record to 4:0 on year play, 77 yard dn~e with a ing back with a three yard
downs, 149 yards on the . with the local gridders three yard run.The co~~er- Klein run in the third and an
ground in ·II carries, two scheduled to enjoy an open ston run fatled g1vmg 11 -yard pass from Snyder to
PAT point after kicks, a pair date on its fall card next Buckeye Trail a 6-0 advan- Sealock with 3:33 to play,
of interceptions and seven week before returning for a tage,
.
but Wahama drove from its
tackles as . the duo led grueling second half of the
Wahama_ answered qm~k - own six to the Trail. one yard
Wahama to its fourth con- season. Wahama will host ly followmg the ensumg line to run out the remaining
secutive win in as many out- lith ranked , Class AA. kickoff as Branch ripped off time and preserve the nar-·
ings on the young 2008 high Liberty Raleigh on Octobt:r a 57-yard run to the Warrior row one-point victory.
$Chool football season.
3rd for its annual homecom- SIX before takmg 11 111 two ·In addition to Branch and
· Through all the nail-biting ing tilt prior to em harking on plays later to conclude the Zerkle defensively for
drama throughout the entire a four game road swing that 65 yard four play series. Wahama Matt Dangerfield
48 minute contest the one- includes stops at Wirt . WHS was unsuccessful on ·quietly had yet another out{!Oint margin of vict.ory County,
Williamstown , its point after attempt as the standing outing with the
came on a botched snap Athens and Parkersburg potential go-ahead kick was junior corner collecting a·
from the center and a heads Catholic.
blocked leaving the score career high lO tackles in
Up play by holder Wil.liam
The hard-luck Buckeye deadlocked at 6-6.
addition to picking . off a
Each team added another Snyder pass and recovering
Zuspan
and
Matt Trail Warriors dropped fts
Dangerfield following the tifth straight contest on the score late in the second a Warrior fumble. Trey
Bend Area teams final year with its last three sl!t-· canto in much the same Anderson , Luke Ingels.
touchdown of the night . backs coming by margins of ·fashion with Trail scoring Colin Pierce and Elijah
After . a 55-yard run by four, five and now one point. on an Ethan Snyder 43-yard Honaker also had impressive
?erkle gave Wahama .a 26Buckeye Trail employed a pass to twin brother Isaac games defensivCiy for WHS.

Devils
fromPageBl
two weeks.
"We told our kids all week
that we had played some peoP.le that they hadn't played
yet, and that they were undefeated and we were 2-2. The
one thing they (Jackson) had
going for them coming in
.was that they had confidence
.in one another, .and that's
.what we needed - to get
confidence in each other,"
Bokovitz commented. "We
needed to get that early in the
"!lame, but ob~iously we didn 't start real well. But every
lime something went wrong
for us, we just turned up th~
volume a little bit to work
that much harder. The kids
bought into it, continued to
play their hearts out and were
11ble to get the job done at the
·end of the night.
· · "I really think we turned
the comer tonight, and we
definitely needed this win.
This is a very big win for this
program."
· Early on, howeyer, victory
1ooked to· be a long way from
reality.
·
Jacksqn stormed out to a
14-0 lead after its first five
9ffensive plays of the game,
-which lasted less than five
. ~nutes into the first quarter.
l::octy Huff took the opening
·;play from scrimmage 66
~ards to the house, giving the
guests a 7-0 lead just 17 sec~nds into the game.
: · GAHS went six plays on
lts ensuing drive, but
jackson's Derrick Meredith
picked off a deflected pass
:!lfld gave JHS possession at
the · hosts 24 with 9:04
remammg.
: Four plays later, fullback
-Klay Arthur marched into the
~nd zone from nine yards out
:_giving Jackson a two-posl!ession lead with 7:24
remaining.
Gallia Academy responded
:With a score late in the first to
:inake it 14-6, as Nate Allison
l;apped an eight-play, 76-yard
lbive with a six-yard run at
the 2:55 mark.
· Jackson fumbled on its
:next possession at the hosts'
~. with Jared Gravely recovering the turnover with 17
left in the opening
~uarter. The Blae and White
lnarclled all the way down to
lHS 13, but Huff pi~ ked off a
pass and went 89 yards to
paydirt - thwarting a solid
.drive and making it a 21-6
J:Ontest with 6:) I remaining
_jn the half.
'
• Just when things looked to

mnds

tried to strip the ball away.
The Iron men didn 't succeed,
and Gmvely rolled 30 yards
to paydirt with 1:31 left in the
contest to make it a 36-28
contest.
Ja~kson managed one last
scoring threat , getting down
to the GAHS 16 with less
than a minute lett. Back-tobuck penalties - including
an unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty - moved toem back
to 35 with around I0 seconds
left.
'
The guests tried a Hail
Mary at the end, but the ball
was picked · off - securing
the Devils' latest victory over
the Red and White.
Gallia Academy posted a
season-high 423 total yards
of offense, ·including a sea- ·
· son-best 205 rushing yards.
The hosts also managed 21
first downs and 218 passing
yards in the win . Jackson
rushed ·for 226 yards on the
.
Bryan Walterw/photo ground, but managed only 38
Gallia Academy senior wideout Beau Whaley runs through passing yards for a total of
a Jackson defender after a catch during Friday night's 264 total yards of offense.
SEOAL contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
Both teams had three
turnovers
and both were also
· be at their worst for . the
On the opening play of the
whistled
for
seven penalties
Devils, that's when things next drive, Gallia Academy
started getting a whole lot needed only one play and II apiece. Jackson was penalbetter. The hosts went on a seconds to go 80 yards to i7.ed 66 yards and Gallia
I0-play, 54-yard scoring make it 28-21. Beau Whaley Academy was penalized for
drive on its next possession, ran a stop-and-go pattern on 64 yards. The ·guests also had
capped with a fourth-and- the outside, and quarterba~k 14 first downs in the setba~k,
Individually. it Wl)S a
· goal one-yard touchdown nm Ethan Moore found him wide
by Ethan Moore - making it open downfield to make it a breakout night for many of
the Blue Devil s - most
a 21-14 contest with I :38 left one-possession ball game.
in the half.
The GAHS defense forced notably Moore. The sophoAt the break, Jackson had another three-and-out, with more was injured two weeks
just first downs in compari- the ensuing punt pinning the ago against Ironton. and was·
son to the Blue Devils' II. hosts deep into their OW!) ter- a late edition to practice this
JHS also had 142 yards of ritory at the four with 8:27 week. In his emergency start
at quarterback, Moore went
total offense, while GAHS remaining .
,
accumulated 192 yard~ total.
Gallia Academy needed II 14-o f-17 passing for 218
Jackson scored on both first plays -.,- and ~me huge late hit yards, throwing two intercephalf turnovers by Gallia penalty on the lronmen - to tions and touchdown. Moore
Academy and were plus-one cover % yards in 6:02, as also mshed for 39 yards on
at halftime.
Allison took an option pitch 10 carries, including a touch·
· Both teams went scoreless from Moore -and went 12 down .
Allison
led
the
rushing
in the third, but not without yards lor paydirt to make it a
some controversy.
one-point game with 2:31 attack with 93 yards on 15 .
carries, followed by Gravely
After the Devils' opening remaining.
drive of the second half · In what (:an only be with 62 yards on a dozen
stalled, a punt pinned the described as a gutsy call, the totes. Beau Whaley hauled
Ironmen deep inside their Blue Devils decided to go for . in six catches for 1.20 yards,
own five-yard line with 7:05 two - and the win - on the · while Austin Wilson had
remaining. The hosts forced a extra point. But the gutsy call four grabs for 55 yards. ·
Huff led the lronmen with
three-and-out punt, which paid off big,.hs Moore again
was fielded and returned. to optioned to Allison to com- 179 rushing yards on 22 carnear midfield. Under a mas- plete the run conver~ion, giv- ries, followed by Arthur
sive pile, it was ruled that ing the hosts their first lead of with 35 yard's on seven
attempts. Tyler Boggs was
there was a fumble on the ' the night at 29-28.
5-of13 passin g for 38
play - which Jackson recovThen, momentum iook
yards,
throwing one inter- ·
another favorable bounce .for
ered at its own 45.
The guests proceeded to the Blue and White as ception. Josh Brown led the
use its ground game, running Jackson fumbled their open- guests with three catches for
·
out the rest of the quarter ing snap of the next drive . 27 yards.
while maintaining a substan- Shaun Pethtel recovered for . Gallia A&lt;:adcmy - which
tial drive. That drive lasted 13 the Blue Devils at the JHS 36 is 2-0 at home this season will host Portsmouth · this
plays.and covered 54 yards in with 2:22 remaining.
6:02 , capped when Huff
The hosts needed four coming Friday in another
added his third s~ore of the plays and 49 seconds to score SEOAL gridiron matchup .
evening on a five-yard run again, · as Gravely carried Jackson travels to Marietta.
with I0:53 left in regulation numerous Jackson defenders Both games will kickoff at
:- making it a 28-14 contest. toward the -end zone a~ they 7:30p.m .

Sunday, September

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Raiders

also had three catches for 14
yards.
. Strahler led WHS with 72
fromPageBl
rushing yards on 14 tries,
followed
~y
Jartod
Eichhorn
with
49
yards
on
setback. RVHS had just 87
15
carries.
Strahler
was
also
rushing yards on 30 carries.
The hosts had a dozen 5-of-14 for 73 passing yards
with two interceptions .
first downs, one more then Cody Hall led the . guests
Waterford's I I. RVHS also with two catches for 4 7
finished the night plus-two yards.
.
in the turnover category and
River Valley - which has
had just fo.ur penalties for . taken down some historic
25 yards. The Green and barriers over the last two
White were penalized three weeks - will now set its
times for 30 yards.
sights on breaking . a 17Baird led the victors on game losing streak in Ohio
ihe ground with 64 yards on Valley Conference play
I 3 · carries, (allowed by · (2004) this Friday when tl
Curnutte with 14 yards on hosts South Point. Kickoff
seven totes. Kody Johnson is scheduled for 7:30p.m.

2:1,2008

Meigs basketball golf scramble
MASON ; W.Va . - The food, beverages and mulligans
Meigs High School boys bas- included in the entry fee .The
ketballteam wiU be holding a $5 skins game and optional
golf scramble on Saturday. cash pol are not included in
October II, at Riverside Golf the entry fee.
. .
Club.
The top three teams will
The event will be a four- win awards, and there will be
man . team format. with one other contests such as cli&gt;sest
player from each team to the pin , longest drive and
required to have an under-! 0 longest putt. The contest will
handicap. The event is I 8 have a shotgun start at 8:30
holes and rules will be a.m.
.
explained the day of the tour- · For more information, connament.
tact MHS head basketball
The cost is $320 ,per team coach Ben Ewing at740-416- $80 per person - with 0824.
.

Meigs

with Arnold adding the
extra points at the 7:58
mark of the contest to tie the
game at 22-all.
from Page Bl
But Gabe Hill fielded the
just 11 seconds into the con- Buckeye kickoff at his own
test the Buckeye held a 6-0 25 yard line, Hill took it up
lead.
the sideline and .then broke
But it didn't take the to the middle of the field
Marauders long 10 answer before the last Buckeye
with a score of their owri. with a chance tripped him
With junior quarterback up at the Buckeye 10 yard
Ja~ob Well comp leting line. Fours plays later Smith
three of four passes. the last scored from three yards out ·
being a beautiful 36 yard on and fourth and three. The
scoring toss to Cameron kick for the extra points by
Bolin for the score. The Metts hit the right up right.
passes for the extra points but Meigs was on top 28-22
were no good, and with just with 5:52 left in the game.
one minute gone in the conThe Buckeyes came right
test the Buckeyes were up back however, . driving 65
yards in 12 lays to take the
8_6 _
Arnold
Caught
The Marauders took a 12- lead .ck's
·
screen pass broke
Bam
·'
'
s lead l"nto the lock··e1· room
at the half, when Well a lac kl e an d went 17 yards
·n ·
hooked up with Clay Bolin for the Score . Once
. agal I1
tacked On
from 31 yards out. the kick Was· Arnold Who
and the
.nts
the
extra
Pol
was
no
good
with
7:58
left
· h
d
·
T
Buckeyes went back on top
m t e secon penQ(1. he 30-28 with just 52 ticks left
Marauders received the
h
k
kick off to start the ser:ond on t e c1oc ·
The Buckeye kl.ckoff
half, and on first down, Well went
out of bound s gr·v,·ng
scrambled
out
of
the
pocket
. Cl
Meigs the ball at the
an d h It ay Bolin for 43 Nelsonville- York 49. Aided
yards to the Buckeye 22. b
· rf
· 11
But the drive stalled and
y a pass mte erence ca
on Nelsonville-York , the
Well's fourth down pass · Marauders had the ball at
was ilkomplete giving the the Buckeye 24 with a first
Buckeyes the ball at their down and 16 _3 seconds left.
own 24 yard line.
Well was flushed out of the
k
d h"
· h
Meigs held them to a four
and out, Campbell went poe et an
ts pass m 1 e
end zone was picked off by
bac k to punt , and the snap Campbell as hell fell out of
went over his head. the end zone. After a
Campbell picked it up by moment of indecision, the
fell at his own three-yard 0 ff- · 1 1 d B k
b II
line giving Meigs excellent
tcta ru e
uc eye a
the game
Was all but
field position. But the and
·
•
over
Buckeye defense held , and
A · ld 1 d II
h
senior Mason Metts kicked
rno
e a rus ers
.th 166 yards t'n 30 carrr·es
'
a 27 yard field goal at the Wl
6 40
k f h
·
to go along with his two
0
: mar
t e third peri - kickotT returns for scores.
od to put the maroon and
gold on top , 5_g.'
Cunningham added 57 in
six tries, Barrick was three
Once again the Marauder of seven 1·n the· aJ·r for 33
defense held and a short
punt by Campbell. gave yards and a touchdown .
Meigs the ball at there own Arnold had two receptions
47. Six plays later, added by for 24 yards.
Well was 14 of 24
a Buc keye facemask
penalthrough the aJ·r for 213
h
k
·
·
·
Smtt 100 It '" yards and · a pa,·r of scores.
ty; Jeremy
from
_18 yard
out. Metts
added the extra points and Clay Bolin caught four ·
the Marauders held a 22 _8 passes for II
yards: ·
lead with 2:21 left in the Cameron Bolin added four
for 64 and Jeremy Smith
period.
five for 27. Smith carried
But once again, Arnold ..the ball23 times for a hard
came up with the big play. fought 89 yards; Cory
The Marauder kickoff went Hutton added three for 13.
over his head, after he
Unoffc"ally
on defens
11
chased it down at the six he Ernie
·
·
e·
Welch had 15 tackles
was off the race s breaking for Meigs , Gabe Hill nine
ta~kled and taking it 94 with a.n interception and
yards for the . score. The Mason Metts added nine.
Marauder line on the extra
Meigs drops to 4-1 overpoints
snowed
·under all and 1-1 in the TVC.
Arnold, but the Buckeyes Meigs will travel to Warren
had p"ulled to within 22- 14 , Local next Saturday night
with 2:04 remaining in the for a non-conference game
period.
with the Warriors. The
Justin
·Cunn"ingham Buckeyes now 4-1 and 2-0
scored from 43 yards out, will travel to Belpre.

. Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

§S&gt;unbap arti1U'5 -§S&gt;rniilltl • Page '85

Have you ever. heard of the Eastern Spadifoot Toad 1
Me neither. at least not
until AMP-Ohio chose to
build a power plant in
Meigs County's Letart
Township.
It turns out the Eastern
Spadefoot is the only Ohio
fro g or toad that is listed
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources as an
endangered species. The
spadefoot is only known
from some of Ohio's larger
river valleys including the
Ohio , Muskingum . Scioto
and Hocking rivers.
Since the proposed site
of the new AMP-Ohio
Generating Plant is located
in Eastern Spadefoot Toad
habitat. the utility had to
devise a mitigation plan to
offset any impact to the
toad population, The most
visible result of the plan is
a large wetland along East
Letart Road .
In North America as a
.whole, however, the spade-

Eagles
from PageBl
ff
h . h M
o ense on 1 e n1g 1. ost
of that yardage was produced by quarterback Jacob
Ta)·lor who was 5-for- 17 for
60 yards with three interceplions. Most of those
passes found Patrick Flora
who hauled in live passes
for 78 yards.
Joe K_elly added 26 yards
on 2-for-5 passing and
scored Hannan's only
touchdown on a nine-yard
scoring strike to Jared,Cobb
early in the fourth quarter.
Kelly also led the Wildcats
on the ground with 24 yards
on eight carries.
But Hannan 's offensive
breakthrough in the final
frame couldn ' t erase a dead- ·
ly first quarter.
.
.
Hannan 's first three passessions resulted in interceptions and Eastern managed to capitalize on all
three giveaways.
Ryan Amo. s claimed the
first i,nterception on.the firsi
offensive play from s&gt;rimmage of the night giving
Eastern a short field and
Klint Connery took advan•
f
t""
1age, sconng
rom Jve
yards out to give the Green
and White a 7-0 lead.
Mike Johnson grabbed
the second pick and , after a
I sma II gams,
·
th e
coupe
Eag Ies agam
· h"t
d. I
1 pay 1r
when Pratt found Zach
Hendrix for a 31-yardscoring strike and Hendrix
kicked through the extra
point for a 14-0 lead .
Hendrix finished the night
a perfect 6-for-6 on point
after kicks.
.
Jordan KI·mes then hauled
in Hannan 's third interception with 4:36 left in the
first fram e and again
Eastern turned it into points.
Kyle Connery helped set up
the score with a big 17-yard
run and Kelly Winebrenner
finished the drive with a 25yard touchdown run with
2:41 remaining in the quarter.
After Hannan's first sus-

The Eastern Spadefoot ing heavy rains that occur
Toad is relatively small, during warm months of the
about one-and-three-quar- year. Eggs hatch in two to
ters to two-and-a-quarter three days . Population s
inches long. The back is may go several years with,usually brown with two out breeding if heavy rain~
yellow lines forming an .
do not occur during th~
hourglass pattern .
This toad's skin is rela- breeding season.
tively smooth with some ' The . male 's advertise '
· small warts . A single. hard. mcnt call is a harsh "whar."
black, sick le-shaped spade, Chorusing . on ly occurs
which g ives the toad its after torrential rainstorms :
root is found from south - name, is found ·on the bot If you have never see~
ern New England to south tom of ,each hind foot. one before. don't' fee.!
Florida including some of Unlike any other Ohio alone . Thi s species' burthe keys: west to southeast. frog , thi s spec ies ' pupils rowi ng habits. limited
Mi ssouri. eastern Arkansas are vertically elliptical. ·. activity. and restricted
and eastern Louisiana.
Adults subsist on insects, habitat make them d.ifficu~t
In Ohio, this species .is earthworms and snai ls to find .
limited to soft. sandy soils while tadpoles feed on
in riverine flood plains , microscopic plants before
Jim Freeman is· wild/iff
like those found in "the becoming carnivorous or
specialist
for the Meigs So,(/
in
Letart "even cannibalistic.
bottoms"
Township. This is a burThey are considered and W"ter Comervatiotl
rowmg
species
that "explosive 1
breeders, District. He can be contacted
wee/ala.\'.\" at 740-992-4282
appears at the surface on appearing suddenly
warm. humid nights from sometimes in great num- or ar jim,[reeman@oh.nacd·
April through October.
bers - after dark follow- ''et.net ·

In the
Open

. Jim Freeman

1

Hannan's Jared Taylor
recovered an Eastern fum~
ble on the Eaglfs next pos ~
session to set up the
Wildcats only score of the
night. Starting on its own .
28-yard line, Flora gave
Hannan a little breathing ·
room on a reverse spanning
17 yards to move the baU
into Eastern territo.ry.
Three plays later Kelly
converted a third and eight
with a 13 yard run followed
by another big play from
Flora when he. hauled in a
16-yard pass from Jacob
Taylor to set Hannan up
inside the 10-yard line, On
. the next llay Taylor pitched
the bal to Kelly who
dropped back and found .a
wide open Cobb for a 9yard touchdown and, after a
two-point conversion cm:ried by Sowards, put the
score at 49-8.
With
the newfound
offense. Hannan went to
work in the fourth quarter
converting a few big pass
Larry Crum/photo
plays. but another fumble
Eastern .running back Kyle Connery (36) runs past a and the fomth interceptiop
Hannan defender during Friday night's non-league football of the night sealed the 41point Eastern victory-.
contest in Ashton, W.Va.
After jull\ping out ·to the
tained drive of the game
While the score occurred big lead , Ryan Shook arid
tailed to produce any yards, early in the quarter, both Cody Ridgeway took over
the Wi Ideals punted the pall teams played to a stalemate the main rushing duties in
away :l,nd Winebrenner over the final I0 minutes as place . of the leading trio ,
made them pay, taking the Eastern took a comfortable Shook finished the night
ball nearly 40 yards to set 35-0 lead into the half .
with 26 yards on 10 carries
his team up at the 11 -yard
The stalemate continued ahd Ridgeway had 27 yarcfs
line. Winebrenner then fin- in the second half as the on three carries. Brad Stone
ished what he started with two teams traded fumbles, added 20 yards on three
an 11 -yard touchdown run but failed to capitalize on carries:
·
to give the Eagles a 28-0 the opportunities.
Other than Kelly no rushlead .
It wasn't until the 4:52 er had more than 20 yard);
But the turnovers weren't mark of tlie third quarter for the Wildcats as Flora ·
done dropping just yet.
that, Eastern managed to carried the ball twice for l:]
After a nice return by break out of its offensive yards and Robert Worth
Cobb put Hannan near mid- slump when Klint Connery carried the ball five times
field for the first time in the broke free for a 13-yard for 10 yards.
game,the Wildcats gave the run, . setting up Kyle
Both teams also strugglep
ball right back with a fum- Connery for a 13-yard with an above averag,e
ble giving Eastern four score.
number of penalties as the
takeaways in the first quarWinebrenner then capped · Wi Ideals suffered eight
ter.
the scoring for the Eagles a penalties for 60 yards and
With the ball back in their little over .a minute later the Eagles had eight flags
hands to start the second when he took a Hannan for 80 yards. ,
,
frame, th'e Eagles again punt 60 yards for a score to
With two. wins already
went tq work converting a give the visitors a 49-0 locked up; Eastern will go
couple third downs before lead.
looking for win number
Kyle Connery broke free
With their backs against · three next Friday when the
for a 16-yard scoring strike the wall, Hannan left it all Eagles host Trimble whilj!
to give, the Green and White out on the field in the fourth Hannan hits the road for a
quarter and it paid off.
a 35-0 lead.
trip to Burch.
' • &gt;~

KARR

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Sat: By appointment
Sun: B,y appointme"t

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�Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Cl

Sunday, Septem!X:r 21, 2008

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

Sunday, September 21, 2008

KN 0

KS

Beth Sergent/photo

A busy riverfront scene from this year's Stermvheel Riverfest shows downtown Pomeroy
full of activity that results in consumers spending their money in Meigs County. Sternwheel
Riverfest is one of three major festivals held along the Ohio River in downtown and
includes the -Big Bend Blues Bash and Gold Wings and Ribs.

Beacon of hope:
Meigs' economy rolls with the changes
says something about the ity is dependent on receivcomplexities
and difficul - ing the permit.
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM
ties in siting such a large · The Gatling spokesperson
added that between the two
POMEROY - Despite a project.
"They plan to begin con- coal mines, it 's possible
national economy that's
struggling and high unem- .struction next year," he between 350-400 jobs could
ployment in Meigs County, added. "In these difficult be created (around 200 at
there are some economic times, we are very fortunate the Meigs' operation) as
development projects pro- to have a prqject with this ·well as 2,000 total "supviding hope that at least the kind of economic impact port" jobs, citing coal industry figures that show six to
local economy can arid will plannedin the county.
"Studies have told us that seven support jobs are cremake a turnaround. .
Meigs County Economic during the construction ated by every one job in the
Development
Director phase the project will pump coal industry.
Perry Varnadoe said the about $400 million into the · Bernard V. Fultz Center
county has in excess of local economy," Varnadoe for Higher Education I Rio
.
Photo courtesy of B.ob Greham
$150 million of economic said. "When it is finished Meigs Center, Salisbury
This month, construction workers made the last structural pour on the new $60-plus milinvestment when examining and operating, the plant will Township
Late last month, the lion Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. The bridge will likely open to traffic late this year or early
both the private and public add about $100 million in
.
Rio 2009.
of
investment currently under- direct and indirect revenues University
Grande/Rio
Grande
way · or announced in the into the community on an
College's
annual basis. The communi- Community
county.
.
Bernard
Fultz
Center
. for
ty
support
for
the
project
This $150 million is withfiled
welHigher
Learning
out the American Municipal during the long permit
:.
Power-Ohio project fac- process has been . ~jtal . to comed its first semester .and
tofea·.m which iiSi~lf'is' cur- m&lt;iving the project for- first students into a brand
new facility.
rently estimated to cost $2.9 ward."
Enrollment at the center is
Gatling Ohio's coal mine,
billion. All of that investat around 80 students,
ment, if it comes to fruition, SUtton Township
Two years ago, Gatling, which is actually an
will find a home in a county
with a current population Ohiq began the process of incr~ase of 20 compared to
securing an un.derground the spring semester at the
under 24,000.
High profile economic room-andcpillar coal mining previous location of the
development
highlights permit to extract coal from Meigs Rio Center in
Students
AMP-Ohio's the Pittsburgh 8A Seam run- Middleport.
include:
attending
the
facility
can
American Municipal Power ning through Sutton and
Generating Station, Gatling Letart townships. This past obtain their associate
Ohio's coal mine, the May, Gatling received its degrees in a variety·of fields
Bernard V. Fultz Center for permit from the Ohio and never leave Meigs
of
Mineral County. These same. stuHigher
Education/Rio Division
Resources
anQ
began
con- dents take those degrees and
Meigs Center, American
Hydrogen Corp., the grow- struction on the site,central- use them as a springboard to
ing tourism industry includ- ly located on Yellowbush move into a bachelor's program at Rio Grande or other
ing a new $2 million boat Road.
schools,
all of which assists
Though the permit has
'amp
by
the
Ohio
thetn
in
finding better-payDepartment of Resources been . legally challenged
the
Ohio ing jobs.
and growing infrastructure .before
Beth Sergent/photo
"The facility will provide
Reclamation
Commission
which includes the new
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge due by opponents, construction degree programs, training The Bernard V. F-ultz Center for Higher Education/Rio Meigs Center opened for its lirst fall
to open to traffic late this continues.Gatling currently for business and industry, semester last month offering associate degrees in a variety of fields .
operates the Big River Mine and will serve as a vital tool
year or early next.
Here is a current break- in New Haven, W.Va. , in prel'aring our citizens for
down on major economic which mines the same the jobs . of the . future,"
Varnadoe
commented.
development projects in the Pittsburgh 8A Seam.
"This
facility,
along with
"The Gatling Coal procounty:
our
local
tech.
prep pro• American Municipal jects on both sides of the
Power Generating Station, river are major job creation grams and our local school
drivers that combined districts, will be more
Letart Township
Nearly three years ago, should add over 350 new important than ever for our
AMP-Ohio
announced jobs when both are in full workforce as technologies
plans to build a coal-fired operation ," Varnadoe said. change in the workplace."
American
Hydrogen
power plant along the Ohio "'The company has done a
Corp.,
Orange
Township
River m Letart Falls. The good job of buying locally
In February. American
proposed plant remains the when possible and expects
Hydrogen
Corp. announced
to
be
h1ring
locally
for
oper.
~iggest capital investment
it
planned
to be a tenant· at
in Meigs County's history, ations.around the first of the
the
East
Meigs
Industrial
an investment dependent on year. These new jobs are a
built
by
the
the maze of the permitting big boost in the current eco- Park
Community
Improvement
nomic
climate
as
they
pay
process. This year AMPOhio received both its per- well above the average Corporation. AHC holds the .
licensing for the ammonia
mit for public need and wages in the region."
In March,_ a Gatling catalytic electrolyzer (ACE)
environmental compatibly
spokesperson
also con- developed by Dr. Gerardine
from the Ohio Power Siting
!loard and its air permit-to- famed the company put- Batte of Ohio Uni,versity.
install from the Ohio · chased the former Good The ACE splits hydrogen
Beth Sergenliphoto
Environmental Protection Times bar on County Road from nitrogen in the ammonia
molecule
.
Dev~;lopment
agency, the later of which is 7 A outside Pomeroy and
Residents have consistently turned out for the many informational meetings and public
currently under appeal by has leased "significant coal of this process into fuel hearings on the $2.9 billion pulverized coal power plant proposed by American Municipal
reserves ...mineral rights" in cells could result in a future; Power-Ohio lor Letart Falls.
opponents.
alternative power .source.
Though th~re are some the surrounding area.
AHC had said it planned
A. spokesperson
for
opponents to the project in
to
create around I00 jobs in
Meigs County, the county GatlingOhio said on Friday
This project is not the explained it's important. to important to support our
the
area
over
a
period
of
that
construction
of
the
and local government have
only to be pushed back, at remember and support' existing business base.
all shown consistent support Meigs' Yellow bush Road three years but the project least . momentarily with existing businesses in the
"While we can't do much
. for the project and accord- operation is ahead of sched- 'has been delayed . Attempts American Electric Power County.
with Wall Street, we can
ing to Varnadoe, so has ule and plans remain on to contact ACE for an indicating it won't make a . "It's no secret that this is impact Main Street in our
track to go into rroduction update on the project were decision as to whether to . a very tough economic communities," he said. "It is
AMP-Ohio. ·
• "AMP-Ohio has stuck after the first o the year: unsuccessful.
with all the turmoil on espe.cially important right
"American Hydrogen has builc:j their two lnteg~ated time
~ith us thr\)ugh the lengthy The permit on the river
Gasification
Combined Wall Street, which filters now to do everything we
permit process to locate load-out aspect of the oper- pushed.their plans to begin Cycle power plants, one in down to local communi- can to shop locally and suptheir $2.9 billion facility in ation,. named Meigs £!oint operations in Tuppers Plains Meigs County ·and one in ties ," Varnadoe said. "In port our local stores and
Letart Township," Varnadoe Dock, has not yet been , back until th.e end of the Mason County, until next times ·like these when busi- producers . Everyone can
said. "It will be three years approved by the Ohio year as they continue to pur- year.
nesses are hesitant to make a difference by choossue
the
commercialization
.
Division
of
Mineral
riext month since they
Despite a delay on some expand and make new ing to spend their dollars
announced our county as Resources . Construction of of their fuel cell product," projects,
Varnadoe inv~stments, it is very locally."
t)leir preferred site, which the Meigs Point Dock facil- Varnadoe explained.
.

BY BETH SERGENT

.... •!fJ \ ' .')OV. . . , , .

..

'-·

..• . . . ..

.

-··

:

....

~'

• • ..... •

' '

,.

•

' .

-

~

.

�Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Cl

Sunday, Septem!X:r 21, 2008

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

Sunday, September 21, 2008

KN 0

KS

Beth Sergent/photo

A busy riverfront scene from this year's Stermvheel Riverfest shows downtown Pomeroy
full of activity that results in consumers spending their money in Meigs County. Sternwheel
Riverfest is one of three major festivals held along the Ohio River in downtown and
includes the -Big Bend Blues Bash and Gold Wings and Ribs.

Beacon of hope:
Meigs' economy rolls with the changes
says something about the ity is dependent on receivcomplexities
and difficul - ing the permit.
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM
ties in siting such a large · The Gatling spokesperson
added that between the two
POMEROY - Despite a project.
"They plan to begin con- coal mines, it 's possible
national economy that's
struggling and high unem- .struction next year," he between 350-400 jobs could
ployment in Meigs County, added. "In these difficult be created (around 200 at
there are some economic times, we are very fortunate the Meigs' operation) as
development projects pro- to have a prqject with this ·well as 2,000 total "supviding hope that at least the kind of economic impact port" jobs, citing coal industry figures that show six to
local economy can arid will plannedin the county.
"Studies have told us that seven support jobs are cremake a turnaround. .
Meigs County Economic during the construction ated by every one job in the
Development
Director phase the project will pump coal industry.
Perry Varnadoe said the about $400 million into the · Bernard V. Fultz Center
county has in excess of local economy," Varnadoe for Higher Education I Rio
.
Photo courtesy of B.ob Greham
$150 million of economic said. "When it is finished Meigs Center, Salisbury
This month, construction workers made the last structural pour on the new $60-plus milinvestment when examining and operating, the plant will Township
Late last month, the lion Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. The bridge will likely open to traffic late this year or early
both the private and public add about $100 million in
.
Rio 2009.
of
investment currently under- direct and indirect revenues University
Grande/Rio
Grande
way · or announced in the into the community on an
College's
annual basis. The communi- Community
county.
.
Bernard
Fultz
Center
. for
ty
support
for
the
project
This $150 million is withfiled
welHigher
Learning
out the American Municipal during the long permit
:.
Power-Ohio project fac- process has been . ~jtal . to comed its first semester .and
tofea·.m which iiSi~lf'is' cur- m&lt;iving the project for- first students into a brand
new facility.
rently estimated to cost $2.9 ward."
Enrollment at the center is
Gatling Ohio's coal mine,
billion. All of that investat around 80 students,
ment, if it comes to fruition, SUtton Township
Two years ago, Gatling, which is actually an
will find a home in a county
with a current population Ohiq began the process of incr~ase of 20 compared to
securing an un.derground the spring semester at the
under 24,000.
High profile economic room-andcpillar coal mining previous location of the
development
highlights permit to extract coal from Meigs Rio Center in
Students
AMP-Ohio's the Pittsburgh 8A Seam run- Middleport.
include:
attending
the
facility
can
American Municipal Power ning through Sutton and
Generating Station, Gatling Letart townships. This past obtain their associate
Ohio's coal mine, the May, Gatling received its degrees in a variety·of fields
Bernard V. Fultz Center for permit from the Ohio and never leave Meigs
of
Mineral County. These same. stuHigher
Education/Rio Division
Resources
anQ
began
con- dents take those degrees and
Meigs Center, American
Hydrogen Corp., the grow- struction on the site,central- use them as a springboard to
ing tourism industry includ- ly located on Yellowbush move into a bachelor's program at Rio Grande or other
ing a new $2 million boat Road.
schools,
all of which assists
Though the permit has
'amp
by
the
Ohio
thetn
in
finding better-payDepartment of Resources been . legally challenged
the
Ohio ing jobs.
and growing infrastructure .before
Beth Sergent/photo
"The facility will provide
Reclamation
Commission
which includes the new
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge due by opponents, construction degree programs, training The Bernard V. F-ultz Center for Higher Education/Rio Meigs Center opened for its lirst fall
to open to traffic late this continues.Gatling currently for business and industry, semester last month offering associate degrees in a variety of fields .
operates the Big River Mine and will serve as a vital tool
year or early next.
Here is a current break- in New Haven, W.Va. , in prel'aring our citizens for
down on major economic which mines the same the jobs . of the . future,"
Varnadoe
commented.
development projects in the Pittsburgh 8A Seam.
"This
facility,
along with
"The Gatling Coal procounty:
our
local
tech.
prep pro• American Municipal jects on both sides of the
Power Generating Station, river are major job creation grams and our local school
drivers that combined districts, will be more
Letart Township
Nearly three years ago, should add over 350 new important than ever for our
AMP-Ohio
announced jobs when both are in full workforce as technologies
plans to build a coal-fired operation ," Varnadoe said. change in the workplace."
American
Hydrogen
power plant along the Ohio "'The company has done a
Corp.,
Orange
Township
River m Letart Falls. The good job of buying locally
In February. American
proposed plant remains the when possible and expects
Hydrogen
Corp. announced
to
be
h1ring
locally
for
oper.
~iggest capital investment
it
planned
to be a tenant· at
in Meigs County's history, ations.around the first of the
the
East
Meigs
Industrial
an investment dependent on year. These new jobs are a
built
by
the
the maze of the permitting big boost in the current eco- Park
Community
Improvement
nomic
climate
as
they
pay
process. This year AMPOhio received both its per- well above the average Corporation. AHC holds the .
licensing for the ammonia
mit for public need and wages in the region."
In March,_ a Gatling catalytic electrolyzer (ACE)
environmental compatibly
spokesperson
also con- developed by Dr. Gerardine
from the Ohio Power Siting
!loard and its air permit-to- famed the company put- Batte of Ohio Uni,versity.
install from the Ohio · chased the former Good The ACE splits hydrogen
Beth Sergenliphoto
Environmental Protection Times bar on County Road from nitrogen in the ammonia
molecule
.
Dev~;lopment
agency, the later of which is 7 A outside Pomeroy and
Residents have consistently turned out for the many informational meetings and public
currently under appeal by has leased "significant coal of this process into fuel hearings on the $2.9 billion pulverized coal power plant proposed by American Municipal
reserves ...mineral rights" in cells could result in a future; Power-Ohio lor Letart Falls.
opponents.
alternative power .source.
Though th~re are some the surrounding area.
AHC had said it planned
A. spokesperson
for
opponents to the project in
to
create around I00 jobs in
Meigs County, the county GatlingOhio said on Friday
This project is not the explained it's important. to important to support our
the
area
over
a
period
of
that
construction
of
the
and local government have
only to be pushed back, at remember and support' existing business base.
all shown consistent support Meigs' Yellow bush Road three years but the project least . momentarily with existing businesses in the
"While we can't do much
. for the project and accord- operation is ahead of sched- 'has been delayed . Attempts American Electric Power County.
with Wall Street, we can
ing to Varnadoe, so has ule and plans remain on to contact ACE for an indicating it won't make a . "It's no secret that this is impact Main Street in our
track to go into rroduction update on the project were decision as to whether to . a very tough economic communities," he said. "It is
AMP-Ohio. ·
• "AMP-Ohio has stuck after the first o the year: unsuccessful.
with all the turmoil on espe.cially important right
"American Hydrogen has builc:j their two lnteg~ated time
~ith us thr\)ugh the lengthy The permit on the river
Gasification
Combined Wall Street, which filters now to do everything we
permit process to locate load-out aspect of the oper- pushed.their plans to begin Cycle power plants, one in down to local communi- can to shop locally and suptheir $2.9 billion facility in ation,. named Meigs £!oint operations in Tuppers Plains Meigs County ·and one in ties ," Varnadoe said. "In port our local stores and
Letart Township," Varnadoe Dock, has not yet been , back until th.e end of the Mason County, until next times ·like these when busi- producers . Everyone can
said. "It will be three years approved by the Ohio year as they continue to pur- year.
nesses are hesitant to make a difference by choossue
the
commercialization
.
Division
of
Mineral
riext month since they
Despite a delay on some expand and make new ing to spend their dollars
announced our county as Resources . Construction of of their fuel cell product," projects,
Varnadoe inv~stments, it is very locally."
t)leir preferred site, which the Meigs Point Dock facil- Varnadoe explained.
.

BY BETH SERGENT

.... •!fJ \ ' .')OV. . . , , .

..

'-·

..• . . . ..

.

-··

:

....

~'

• • ..... •

' '

,.

•

' .

-

~

.

�YOUR
Time nears for flu ·shot season

TOWN

iunbap \Etmes -ientinel

BY JANET JOHNSON,

RN

GALLIA COU NTY HEALTH

DEPARTMENT

FootbalL falling telllJ)eratll res. and fall fol ia."c can
"'
only mean one thing - it's
time for llu shots.
· I•flucnza (t he. flur is a
contagious respiratory ill ness caused by influenza
vi ruses. The best way to
prevent the llu i., t(l get the
flu vaccination each yea r.
Every year in the United
States. on avcra~e 5 to 20
-percent of the 'populat ion
·wil l get the llu: more than
.200.000 are hospitalized
and approximate ly 36.000
will di e.
In fluenza v1ruses are
. spread from person to per·son b)' w.·t\'. of ··droplets''
from a cough or sriceze of
an inkctcd .person . These
"d.roplct&gt; " are propelled
throu~h th e air and then
land (;n the mo uth or nose 0f
th ose nearby. Flu viru ses
can al&gt;o he spread by touch· in ~ anot her person or an
obJect that' has come in contact wi th these "dropfets."
This is precisely why Mom
· told you to cover your nose
:and . mouth with a ti~sue
:when you cough or sneeze.
. and then throw the tissue
away. Frequent hand wash.ing is important all the time
and espec i&lt;tlly during the llu
season.
Long before the last tlu
:shot was given in 2007.lab-

d

Jack Hanna recounts TV.life in new book
BY DoUG WHITEMAN

COLUMBUS - David
.producers Ii.ke it
when Jack Hanna's zoo animals run amok on the . show
because it's good for laughs.
. What viewers don't see is
:the behino-thc-sccncs prcpa: ration that has gone into 25
years of television appearances. recounted in Hanna's
:new &lt;tutobiogmphy. "Jungle
Jack: My Wild Life."
: There was the time Hann a,
·director emeritus of the
Columbus Zoo , took two
camels on Lettennan 's old
:NBC show. The dromedaries'. humps destroyed
lights and ceiling tiles in a
corridor leading to · the
Rockefeller Center studio
l~nennan 's

because Hanna neglected to
measure how high the ani mals stood.
"Are you kidding me? I
never would have thought of
that in a ·million years.
Measure a camel?" asked
Hanna during a .recent interview at Columbus Zoo.
Then, he added: "I guess I
should have thought of it
though .''
The building mahager
threatened to bill Hanna
$5,000 for the damage, but
the show's head producer said
not to worry about it.
Hanna, 61 , said his appearances with TV hosts. from
Larry King to
Ellen
DeGeneres , have allowed
him to spread a message of
conservation to a huge audience.

In his book , Hanna writes
that not everything goes as
planned .
A beaver once bit Hanna on
his left hand during a
"Letterntan" taping in New
York . He got through the segment with the hand wrapped
in paper IO\"els and stuffed
into a flesh-colored glove. He
then walked several blocks to
a hospital.
·
·"Once
there.
people
thought I was a shooting victim with blood spa1(ered all
over my clothes," Hanna
recount~ in the book.
He and Letterman didn't · ·
talk about the incident - the
two have only known each
other onstage.
"I've never talked to him
before or after the show in 23
years," Hanna said.

1 Sudden wild fear
6 Exchange
tOSalty drops
15 Malodorous
20 CaiiiMh
21 Large meeting room
22 Wheel spokes
23 Colombia·s ca~tal
24 Copier ink
25 Ship of Greek myth
. 26 Passion
27 Went ou1
28 Sheep
29 - the tables
31 Smallest amount
33 Trial
35 A few, nat all
36 Yelp
37 Place for
working metal
39 Manner
41 Largespon tish

44 Discussion

(Crackerjack' team challenged Reds
Bv JAMES SANDS
·o ne hundred years ago . in
. 1908, the hest-known pitcher in Gallipolis was Ross
Pennybacker. He played for
a "crackerjack" unit from
the Old French City that
included a batting order of:
Ashworth ,
Hennessy.
Gibbs. Jaspar lngells . Clyde
. Inge ll s.
Gilmore·,
Rattemaier. Hamilton and
Penn ybacker. This group
won a number of games
agains t southern Ohio
tea ms. including several
, victories over Athens.
which boasted two players
· who would later play in the
: major leagues.
Gallipoli s was so good
that th e Cincinnati Reds
agreed to play in Gallipolis
in October of 1908 and
: Penny backer was the pitch. er in that game . Behind the ..
: plate ,was Bob Williams of
Nelsonville , formerly with
Athens. Williams later was
a catcher for the New York.
: Highlanders (n.ame changed
: to Yankees eventually).
· Ezra Midkiff of the
· Gallipolis team would &amp;lso
play for New York .
Gallipoli s lost that game
to the Reds I0-2 at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds .
. The Daily Tribune stated
: th at "the performan ce of
: Huggins. Kane and Lobert
. in yesterday's game justi fi ed all newspaper reports .
:as to their ability as. ball
'piayers. Huggins and Lobert
. are exce ptionally fast ball
•' pi ayers. ..
: Ironically, both Huggins
· and Lobert would go on to
··become "big league" managers . Hu gg ins was the
manager of perhaps the
. gre atest team ever. the Babe
: Ruth Yankee teams ol the
: 1920s, and Lobert manag~d
·probably the worst team m
: Major League history, the
Phillies of 1938-42. Yes. the

'

Phillies were even worse
than the Mets of the 1960s
over a five-year span.
Pennybacker, a resident of
Gallipolis in this era, also
pitched for other teams in
southern Ohio and West
Virginia . . He would be the
star
pitcher for
the
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
Cornstalks in 19 10, when
for one year Gallipolis had a
Minor League baseball
team in the Virginia Valley ,
Leagu·e (Class D) .
But there was one memorable
game
in
Pennybacker's career that
was a classic and that came
the day he was pitching for
Nelsonville. Businessmen
in Nelsonville had sponsored a three-game series
with Murray City to decide
the mythical championship
of southern Ohio .
The series was tied at one
game apiece . People had
walked·, come by horseback
and · wagon for miles
around. There were 2 ,000
spectators there in Murray
City that day.
According to one historian: "fnning after ·inning.
pitchers Ross Pennybacker
of Nelsonville and Clarence
Green of Murray City
mowed the batters down .
The regulation nine innings
came and went --: no mns,
no hits. True, a few batters
managed to get on first on
walks , but not one of them
ever reached second base."
Pennybacker struck out
the first seven men he faced
in the game . The lOth
inning was a repetition of
the first nine and so was the
lith inning. At the start of
the
12th
inning ,
Pennybacker went to manager Albert Storer and said .
"Get a relief pitcher ready.
rm
tired."
But
the
Nelsonville manager said,
"See that little feller out
there (G reen) ? He ai n't

tired."
But Penliybacker was tiring as Murray City nicked
him for a hit in the 13th
inning. Both pitchers were
really tired and hits flowed
in the 14th, 15th and 16th
innings, but still no one had
crossed home plate .
The fans were tiring too .
In the early part of the
game, they were loud ·and
boi sterous. By the 16th
inning , they sat like they
were petrified in their seats.
The 17th inning came and
went with both teams mi ssing an opportunity to score.
Both starting pitchers were
still out there , arms a-drag- ·
ging . It was the bottom of ·
the 18th inning and the
home team Murray City
came to bat .
The first Murra y City
batter grounded out. but
the second batter, Coburn,
belted one over the fence.
However. the ground rules .
in the park at that time
declared such a hit as a
ground rule ·double. The
third man hit a long fly,
which allowed Coburn to
tag up and go to· third
·
base.
Up came pitcher Green,
who hit a slow grounder
between the pitcher and first
base . Pennybacker picked
up the ball and could easily
have tagged out Green . But
insteljd ,
Pennybacker
wheeled around and deliberately threw the ball over
the center field fence .
allowing Coburn to score
run .
the
winning
Nelsonville's manager ran
out on the field as if to throttle Pennyb~cker, who said
in his defense. " I told you I
was tired."
(James Sands is a specia l
the
correspondent
for
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to Box 92. Norwich , Ohio
43767.)

Sunday, September 21, 2008

along slopes (geomorphic
gradie nts). large ly related
to the movement of soil ,
water and di ssoh ,•d materials (solu tes). On a sloping si te , rapid changes in
soil, air and water properties can occur, reflecting
past and current drainage
and soil transport conditions. parent material , and
vegetation differences .
Slope grade itself may
infl.uence suitabilit y and
design. Assessments . of a
site should include observation s of slope gradie nt ,
shape , aspect and slo pe
position , particularly as
they affect drainage .Water
not only moves . over and
into the soi l, but on sloping s ites, water moves
through · the soil. It is
important to understand
the dyn amic s of water
movement at the slope
scale to understand where
and how wastewater will
move. and how the seasonal water table and
ground water table. as
well as surface water , will
interact with it.
Observation
of the
topography around the site
will help provide an
understanding of the locations of water accumulation and dispersion zones
in and on the landscape .
·Water collecting areas
(o ften
with
concave
shape s) may have more
poorly drained soils. while

45
48
53
54
55
57
58
59
60
61
63

All (prefix)
Yellow color
Once more
Before very long
Stay behind
Ripple pa"ern
Excursion
Cheeky
Pla0ng card
Means justifier
Island near Java
64 Sunbather's goal
65 Pall1d
·
66 ~ and spice
68 Singing voice
70 UppeJCtassman
(abbr.)

71 Apportion (wnh "oun
72 Edible clam
74 Lawman Wyatt76 Apple drink
79 Play unfairly
81 Command
for a pooct1
83 Pungent edible bulb
87 Mature
88 Lean
89 Notion
91 Gli"ering headband
92 Uke someone
on the lam •
94 And
96 Unbroken horse

97 Force
98 Freshly
100 Rich bread containing
fruit
102 Hoof sound
104 Selloot Sign
107 Field cover. forshon .
109 Inventor- Howe
t 10 Connect
, 1t 1 The Concorde

PO INT
PLEASANT.
"Demand for mammogram
W.Va.
Pleasant Valley screenings ha&gt; increased dra.Hospi tal has bec·n awarded a matically.'· explained Connie
three-year term of accrcditll- Davis. director ·of PVI-l
tio n in mammography as the Rad iology Service.
· 'result of a recent survey hy ,-·· "Th is
has
occurred
the · 1\mcr.icmt Collc~c of because h1:cast ca nce r is the
Radiology (ACR). acc~lrcling most common cancer in
t(&gt; Sanel y Wood . vice presi - women and sec\llld on ly to
dent of patienr services .
lu11g cancer as a cause of
·· The ACR . headquartered . death
fr om
cancer.
in Res t()n . Va .. · awards · Additionally. mammograms
accreditation to facilities fur can deled breast cancer carthe ac hi eve ment of hi gh lier which helps in red uci ng
practic~ standard s aft er a
the monalit v rate from th is
peer-review eva!Ltatio n of the disease . The· early diagnosis
practice . Eva luations are offers wome n breast con,
conducted by board-certified serv ing treatment options:·
.physicians and the medical she added.
physicists who are ex pens in
"Earlier detecti on of breast
the field. They assess the cam·e rs require s J ed icated
·qua lificat ions of the person - equipment. careful pos itio nnel and thq adequacy of facir- ing, adequate compression ,
it y cyuipment. The 't~rveyors optimal technical factors.
rep011 their fint.li ngs to the careful p roce~~ ing and acc u·ACR\
'Co mmittee
on rate intcqxetat ion." said Dr.
Accreditation , whic h subse- Suresh Agrawal. chief radiol 4ucntl y provides the practice o~ i st.
wit h a comprehensive report.
....The Na tio naL Cancer.

water-spreading
areas
(convex) may ha ve better
drained so il s.
The best soil s for a
hou seh old
wa stewater
treatment sys tem are deep
so il s, and topography can
provide information to
help locate them . More
soil development may
occur where water and soil
accumulate. Hence deeper
so il s may be present in
lower slope positions
where eros ion moves
material removed from
higher
po stllons
and
where ·weathering . may
have ex tended to greater
depths. How ever,, these
sites may have poor
'drainage and shallow seasonal or permanent water
tables. High, convex si tes
tend to shed water and to
be better drained . but may
have been subject to more
·erosion and less soil ·
deve lopment , and hence
have limiting conditions
such as bedro ck at shallow
depths.
For more information
regarding · this arricle,
contact th e Gal/ia County
· Health Department at
441 -2018or
Source: Ohio Stale
University,
OSU
Exrensio_n-Bullerin 905,
ohioline . ag .o hiostate..edtl.

was one
1f4 Boys
116 Navigation hazard
118 Frequently, poetically
119 Clio 01 Erato. e.g.
120 Wanton look
121 Esohew
123 Containing salt
125 Gone by
126 Freight
127 Not at all wordy
128 Mine wagoo
129 Dismounte~
130 Rough-and·lumble
gill
131 -·de-sac
133 Customer
136 Mentally heaRhy
137 strong wnd .
141 Eye pan
144 Bard
145 False co1n
146 Spot on a card
149 Source
151 Searle" of "Gone
Wrth the Wind'
153 Seize
155 Composition for piano
157 Tropical trun
158 Bette or Jefferson
159 Western Indian
160 Buenos151 Winter vehicles
162 Silvery fish
163 Row
164 Fewest

DOWN
1 "For - 's sake!'
2 Declare
3 Not any
4 DOE's nickname
5 Sure
6 "Jaws' creature
7 CaLJtion
8 Math branch (abbr. )
9 Farm laborer
10 Characteristic
tt Dirt
12 Say further
13 Wild public
disturbance
14 Beget .
15 Cunning one
16 Sponsorship
H Dorothy's dOg
18 PartiCular
19 County in Aorid a
23 Phi - Kappa
30 Samovar
32 Big success
34 De~aud
36 Radar screen image
37 Gun pellets
38 - Kippur
40 Sweet potato
41 LeBlanc or Damon
42 City in India
43 Drizzle
44 Apple remnant
46 West of old movies
47 Ship o11492
49 Crim1nal group
50 Prejudioo
51 - Stanley Gardner
52 Means of restraint
54 Choose
55 Latvian P.Ort
56 School events
59 Chum
60 Fat
62 For men only
65 891 ot v.hal'sIll oorre
66 Law
67 Goes to bed
69 Flowery speech
71 Greek le"er
72 Vends
73 Radioactive gas
75 Preen
76 Crow·s cry
77 Mountain on Crete
78 Demand payment
from

PageC3
Sunday, September 21,

2008

Mammography service_at PVH earns
three-year accreditation
Institute (NCI) recommends
that women age 40 and older
have mammograms every
one to two years. Women
who arc at higher than aver&lt;~ge risk of breast cancer
shou ld talk with their health
care providers about whether
to have mammograms before
age 40 and how often to have
them.
The ACR is a national
organizaiion serving more
than 32.000 diagnostic and
interventional radiologists ,
radiation oncologist s. and
nuclear medicine and medic-a \ physicists wi th programs
focusing on the practice of
medical imltging· and radiation oncology and the delivery of comprehensive health
cure servi ces .

SubmitteC.: photo

For mort: it~f(Jnna tion
about nuun11w~nuns t ,,. other

Pleasant Va lley Hospital has been awarded a three -yea r te rm ol accreditation in mammography as the resu lt of a recent survey by the Am encan College of Radiology (ACR).
Radiologr Sen ·ices at PVH. ,
Shown above; at right, Jenny Jenkins, RT; a cerlilied radiology tech nician, assists Janet
call (./04) 675-4340. ntenHartley, at left, a patient having her annual mammogram.
simr 1283.

•Is your money safe with insurance?.
BY JAMES HENRY

This has been a very
bu "y wee k for tho se
invol ved in the insurance
busin e" as a resu lt of the
backla sh over the fa ll from
· gra t:c of insuram;c giant
AIG
(American
httcrnational Group) . For
anyone who holds an
annuit y or other po li·cy
with AIG or oth er insur; ~m ce compani e~,. this pa st
:week has hrou ght with it
: L(ucstions ·colll..:crlling the
· ~ornpanic s' abilit y to pay
out on the obligations due
io co lt s umer~ on polic ies
·nnd an nuities.
:: Though many I:Oik s cur: rently feel that the an swer
: to ha vi ng a "guaranteed
invol ves
· investment"
thro win g your money . into
· a deep hol e in the back
yard. you may not want to
turn w yo ur shovel ye t.
Though lite jury is still out
on how AIG will ultimatefy far e. th e good news for
consumer s is that each
·s tate ha s an intricate se t of
reg ul ation s and a guaranty
association designed to
prot ect them in the event
of an in surer 1S fa ilure. So
if AIG-Oi' any other ins ure r - . race s insolvency,
~ t u t e guaranty associations
ex ist tn protect consumers.
For life in suran ce polici es .
.every state runs a guaranty
assoc~ation thut recfuire s
i11 suranc e co mpani es to
esse ntia ll y cover for th eir
competitors in the event of
an anti cipated lo ss by con-

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

MMUN

iunbap \Eimes -ienttnel

Soil, site evaluation for onsite
household wastewater treatment

oratories working closely may compromise breathing
with the CDC had deter- or increase risks for aspiramined the virus strains that tions.
BY GREGG SPEAR
SANITARIAN-liN-TRAINING
are most likely to cause an
5. 1\ny who are receiving
outbreak of. t·nfluenza ·tn the long -term aspmn
· · therapy,
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
2008 '009 tlu season The
· ·
and therefore may be a risk
ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH
'CIP (Advt·sory Commt'ttee
·"
for
developing
Reye
on Immunization Practices) Syndrome al·ter 1·11 tlttenz·a
Making
landscape
thl b ·
meets on a mon y as ts virus infection.
observations:
throughout the year to
Soil s are highly variable .
review new st udies, evalu6. Adolescents/c hildren
the landscape. An
across
ate previous guidelines. and who are residents of chronic
's ite and its soil
individual
consider changes.
long-care faci lities.
Begi nning the 2008-09
7. · Adolescents who may profile is on ly part of 1-he
story of water movement
·inlluenza season. all chi\- become pregnant during the
in a landscape . The
dren aged 5-18 should ·Jl u season.Annual guideproce sses
at
broader
r~ce iv e the flu vacc,in e. lines for adults have not scales are very important
Children 6 monthss thrqugh changed for the 2008,09 in deci ding on the suitabil 4 years (59 months) remain intluenza season.
it y of an on-s ite wastea primary . locus. because
Any ad ult who wants to water treatment system
children younger t,han .5 reduce his or her chances of and adequately siting and
vears are at higher "isks fdr
,.
.contrac ting the inflt1enza desi gnin g
it.
Subtle
. 'mtluenza
com,plications
in
slope
and
envichanges
th an old er ch.ld
'(flu)
t ren.
. h or hof transmitting
ld d r . 1 it to ronmental conditions freChildren and aqolcscents : ot ers s ou
e tnlte Y get
qu entl y provide a variety
at higher risks for complica- thetr llu _shot. ,
.
of
so il forming conditions ,
tions from the flJ are:
Your ttrst opportumty for
and
arc associated· with
1. Aged 6 month s to 4 a llu shot this year will . be
&gt;oi
ls
wi th contrasting
years.
'•
Saturday. Oct. 25 from 8:30
· 2. Children/adolescents a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the propert ie s.
Site-specific ' observawith chronic ·pulmonary Gal\ia
County
Health
tions made by a quali fied ,
(including asthrpa), !)cart Departmen, 49,9 Jack son exper ienced practitioner
di sease , kidn ey disease. Pike. Gallipolis. Following are necessary for· underhver or other metabolic dts- the Saturday "kick-off" standing the fine-scale
eases (mcludmg dtabetes).
campaign, flu shots will be varia bilit y of soil proper. 3. Those wh~ are available Mon~ay thru ties and local site condiImmunosuppressed {mclud- Priday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. arid tions.
tng
tmmunosuppresston .
' 'd d f
lr
Topography is an imporcaused by medicattons or by are provt ~ ree to a ta
tant
feature of the site and
. .
any other immunosupressed County restd ents.
surrqundings.
viruses) ,
If you have any &lt;tuestwns · it s
Topography
is itself an
4'. Children/ adolescents or .comments. please call
nt
soi
l- forming
impo
rta
who have spinal c'ord 441-2950 Monday through
fa ctor, and has a strong
injuries, seizure disorders , Friday, 8 a:m. to 4 p.m.
intluence on surface· and
or any other disorders that
Resources: CDC.
subsurfac e water flow
(hydro logy). Sequences of
co ntrasti.ng so il s exist

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageC2

80 "W1th·ir'
82 Hankering
84 Once around a tra,ck
85 Wrath
86 Neighbor of Nev.
90 Approach
and speak to
93 Costly
95 Wise lawgiver
96 Raucous noise
99 Grapple
101 Kind of jacket
103 Tell a late
104 Louver
105 Rant aoo106 Smell
108 Pome fruit
110 Equitaote ·
111 Eastern European
112 Kind of lily•
113 "Iliad' setting
115 Family member,
f01 shan
117 A southern state
(abbr.)
119 Cnief
120 Crippled
122 Calendar abbr.
124 Oevilkin
125 Cons~ ring qne
t 26 Coagulate
129 Have being
130 Greek le"er
132 Arm bone
134 Time of year
135 Browned bread
136 Lustrous
137 Lots and lots
138 Inland sea
139 Wrinkle
140 Mild oath
142 Gives silent assent
143 Counterteit
145 Peot
146 Aqua 147 Fateful date in March
148 Nuisance
150 - and outs
152 Rd
154 Macaw genus
156 Cravat

s umer~ .

In other words. the firms
each pay a fee based on
the amount of business
they conduct in the state to
hel p ensure any fail ed
insti tutions ' customers are
protected . If the company
does not pay the fee , it
risks losin g it~ license to
conduct business in that
state. Li fe in surance poli cyholders are protected
for at lea st $ 100 ,000 in
cash surrender or with :ctrawal val ue on th ei r poli );y and at least $300.000 in
death benefits , according
. to a statement iss ued by
. Peter Ga\lanis. pre si dent
· ~Jf
th e
Nat ional
· 'Oro•ani za tion of Life and
:He~ lth
Insurance
·Guhranty Associations .
': The states of Ohio and
: West Virgini a both hav e
Assoc iation s
: Guaranty
:that protect consumers in
··an amoun t up to $300 ,000 .
Though the -pund its on

...

,.

.

Keeping
GaUia, Meigs
&amp;Mason
• informed
Sunday
Ti,mes-Sentinel

Wall s ·treet are co nce rn ed becomes un abl e to pay
over. ~w.;h i ~s ucs as !'ecov- claims. the gua ranty fum.l
erin g sha re holde r losses. will prov ide coverage.
th ose of us on Main Street subject to. that state's limi·are more co ncerned over lations. sim ilar to the
our abilit y to recoup an y FDIC coverage for bank
un earned premiums from acco unts. Consumers will
th e com pany or. in the also be protected by the
event of an ac tual loss. in guaranty fund if they have
our abil ity to be com pen- prepaid
a sub sta ntial
sated pursuant to the poli - amou nt of premium and a
. cy term s. State in surance company becomes inso\ reg ulat ors ha ve num erous ve nt.
wenpnns in th ei r arsenal
Annuity policy owners
desi g ned tci combat an should also realize that
in surer from failing. First. their inves tme·nts will be
it 's imp ort ant ro rea lize treated differentl y dependthat ratin g dow ngrad es ing on whether th ey are
and drops in share price do· fix ed or vari .1ble annunot chan ge an insurer' s iti es. Con stnners should
ability tn pay cla ims . reali ze that variable annuFrom
con sc rvati ve itie s are investmet1t prodaccounting rules and ucts subject lo the ups and
· mandatory ailtwa l CPA downs of a tumultuous
audits to in vest ment rcgu- sto~ k market.. and will
and ·henc e not be covered by
lations/limitation s
minimum cap ital /s ur.plu s state insuran ce . guaranty
requireme nts ,
a state fund s (though the portion
regulator's of an annuitv contract that
insurance
"weapon s'' allows insurers promi ses -a guarantee
to handl e greater losses might be covered in some
than other parts of the states) covered in a numfi nancial sector in down- ber of ways . Elderly cott mark·et cycles.
sumers should also be
Additional reg ulat ory wary of variable annuities
tools in clude performin g for a host of other reasons .
reg ular, periodic fi nancial th e number of which is too
analys is of insurers. and great for me to produce in
mandator y on-s it e exami - thi s limited space .
nations through financial
· !'or some of the reasons
records. This .combination why you should stee r clear
o f regu latory to ols, as we ll from variable annuities,
as the fact that th e insur- feel free to co ntact me at
ance industry is one of the the number li sted below.
most
regulated
and How eve r. for fixed annu watchcd industries, mak es · ities, which are insurance
the likelihood of an in sur- produ cts g uaranteed by
ancc compan y's t:ai\ure the state guaranty . fund.
extremely low. In the co nsumers are protected
unlikely even t that an . and ca n beco me more proinsurer does fail. there are tected by takin g appropri '
still protecti ons available ate steps .
For instance, if you have
for policyholders. In han Clling creditor cl aim s, I0 annu ities for $2 million
claims from individual with one company. yo u
policyho lders are g ive n the would only be insured up
utmo st priority over other to one limit. However. if
creditors in the se matter. If you were to split th~
an in surance companYs amounl
of
coverage
as ., ets are insufficient to among several companies,
cove r c'laims , rhere is still limiting th e investments in
another safety net in place each to &lt;tn amount equal to
to prot ect consumers : ·the th e guarant y fund limit ,
state guara nty fund. If an the n yo u will be prote cted
in surance
co mpany ht tw o ways. First, yo u

Gynecology Services
Available In Meigs County ·
.• Wcll·woman exams
.

•llirth Crintrollnduding
•Jmplanun (t'irst &amp; Onl)·
3-ycar implantable
birth l'Ontrol
• Gardasil Vaccine
• STD dctl'l:tion &amp; treatmmt
• Minimally-invasive
~nccologic surgical rare
; Pregnancy Cure
i.i4i.l!:::;;.i • Es.~tirc (Scarlcss p,,rmancnt
.June 0. Broecker, Mil Rirth Control Sterilb.ationl

· 113 E~ast Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH • 992 -9150
Castn~p Center 75 Hospital Dr
Suite 260 .
Athens, 10H • 594-8819

Alln,mu'._."'"ftbt

}

Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2155

Mason • 675-1333 .

.·

~

O'BLENESS ~~
H f" LTH

~VSTE~

www.riverroseobgyn.com

wi)l have the pmtec tioii of
the guaranty fund for c a~ h
annuity. and second. it's
unlikely th&lt;tl ten companie s will gO Lin de.,-.
For th ose of ym1 who
still feel th at y our dollars
are best protected Ltnder
the ol 'E lm tree 111 th e back
ya rd . I can tel l you that· a
cl ient of mine whu is u
lady in her 7tb told me
this wee k that the hcsl Wa)
to bury money is in plasti c·
pipin g .used by plumbers.
Boy. the things they didn't
tea ~,.; h me in law s..: hool .. .
flames Henry is au
attorney and i11sura11ce
·agent in the states of Ohio
and West Virginia. He i .,
the founder of French
City Estate Planning
Solutions LLC , with
offices in Gallipo/i,, and
Columbus. He can be
contacted at allyjame.,llenry@lwtmuil.com, or
www.O hioE stateP lan11i 11g
Solufions .com.)

Your sight is
·our focus.
Drs. Thomas and Susan.Quinn and Dr. Robyn Sargent
ore pler:;1sed to announce the addition of Dr. Shane
Foster to the practice.

Dr. Foster is a Cum Laude graduate of th e Oh io State
Universjty College o f Optometry.
• Doctor Foster is now accepting new patients
• Most majo r vision and medical plans accepted
• Specialty vision services. as well as treatment of
eye diseas(;l and injury

�YOUR
Time nears for flu ·shot season

TOWN

iunbap \Etmes -ientinel

BY JANET JOHNSON,

RN

GALLIA COU NTY HEALTH

DEPARTMENT

FootbalL falling telllJ)eratll res. and fall fol ia."c can
"'
only mean one thing - it's
time for llu shots.
· I•flucnza (t he. flur is a
contagious respiratory ill ness caused by influenza
vi ruses. The best way to
prevent the llu i., t(l get the
flu vaccination each yea r.
Every year in the United
States. on avcra~e 5 to 20
-percent of the 'populat ion
·wil l get the llu: more than
.200.000 are hospitalized
and approximate ly 36.000
will di e.
In fluenza v1ruses are
. spread from person to per·son b)' w.·t\'. of ··droplets''
from a cough or sriceze of
an inkctcd .person . These
"d.roplct&gt; " are propelled
throu~h th e air and then
land (;n the mo uth or nose 0f
th ose nearby. Flu viru ses
can al&gt;o he spread by touch· in ~ anot her person or an
obJect that' has come in contact wi th these "dropfets."
This is precisely why Mom
· told you to cover your nose
:and . mouth with a ti~sue
:when you cough or sneeze.
. and then throw the tissue
away. Frequent hand wash.ing is important all the time
and espec i&lt;tlly during the llu
season.
Long before the last tlu
:shot was given in 2007.lab-

d

Jack Hanna recounts TV.life in new book
BY DoUG WHITEMAN

COLUMBUS - David
.producers Ii.ke it
when Jack Hanna's zoo animals run amok on the . show
because it's good for laughs.
. What viewers don't see is
:the behino-thc-sccncs prcpa: ration that has gone into 25
years of television appearances. recounted in Hanna's
:new &lt;tutobiogmphy. "Jungle
Jack: My Wild Life."
: There was the time Hann a,
·director emeritus of the
Columbus Zoo , took two
camels on Lettennan 's old
:NBC show. The dromedaries'. humps destroyed
lights and ceiling tiles in a
corridor leading to · the
Rockefeller Center studio
l~nennan 's

because Hanna neglected to
measure how high the ani mals stood.
"Are you kidding me? I
never would have thought of
that in a ·million years.
Measure a camel?" asked
Hanna during a .recent interview at Columbus Zoo.
Then, he added: "I guess I
should have thought of it
though .''
The building mahager
threatened to bill Hanna
$5,000 for the damage, but
the show's head producer said
not to worry about it.
Hanna, 61 , said his appearances with TV hosts. from
Larry King to
Ellen
DeGeneres , have allowed
him to spread a message of
conservation to a huge audience.

In his book , Hanna writes
that not everything goes as
planned .
A beaver once bit Hanna on
his left hand during a
"Letterntan" taping in New
York . He got through the segment with the hand wrapped
in paper IO\"els and stuffed
into a flesh-colored glove. He
then walked several blocks to
a hospital.
·
·"Once
there.
people
thought I was a shooting victim with blood spa1(ered all
over my clothes," Hanna
recount~ in the book.
He and Letterman didn't · ·
talk about the incident - the
two have only known each
other onstage.
"I've never talked to him
before or after the show in 23
years," Hanna said.

1 Sudden wild fear
6 Exchange
tOSalty drops
15 Malodorous
20 CaiiiMh
21 Large meeting room
22 Wheel spokes
23 Colombia·s ca~tal
24 Copier ink
25 Ship of Greek myth
. 26 Passion
27 Went ou1
28 Sheep
29 - the tables
31 Smallest amount
33 Trial
35 A few, nat all
36 Yelp
37 Place for
working metal
39 Manner
41 Largespon tish

44 Discussion

(Crackerjack' team challenged Reds
Bv JAMES SANDS
·o ne hundred years ago . in
. 1908, the hest-known pitcher in Gallipolis was Ross
Pennybacker. He played for
a "crackerjack" unit from
the Old French City that
included a batting order of:
Ashworth ,
Hennessy.
Gibbs. Jaspar lngells . Clyde
. Inge ll s.
Gilmore·,
Rattemaier. Hamilton and
Penn ybacker. This group
won a number of games
agains t southern Ohio
tea ms. including several
, victories over Athens.
which boasted two players
· who would later play in the
: major leagues.
Gallipoli s was so good
that th e Cincinnati Reds
agreed to play in Gallipolis
in October of 1908 and
: Penny backer was the pitch. er in that game . Behind the ..
: plate ,was Bob Williams of
Nelsonville , formerly with
Athens. Williams later was
a catcher for the New York.
: Highlanders (n.ame changed
: to Yankees eventually).
· Ezra Midkiff of the
· Gallipolis team would &amp;lso
play for New York .
Gallipoli s lost that game
to the Reds I0-2 at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds .
. The Daily Tribune stated
: th at "the performan ce of
: Huggins. Kane and Lobert
. in yesterday's game justi fi ed all newspaper reports .
:as to their ability as. ball
'piayers. Huggins and Lobert
. are exce ptionally fast ball
•' pi ayers. ..
: Ironically, both Huggins
· and Lobert would go on to
··become "big league" managers . Hu gg ins was the
manager of perhaps the
. gre atest team ever. the Babe
: Ruth Yankee teams ol the
: 1920s, and Lobert manag~d
·probably the worst team m
: Major League history, the
Phillies of 1938-42. Yes. the

'

Phillies were even worse
than the Mets of the 1960s
over a five-year span.
Pennybacker, a resident of
Gallipolis in this era, also
pitched for other teams in
southern Ohio and West
Virginia . . He would be the
star
pitcher for
the
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
Cornstalks in 19 10, when
for one year Gallipolis had a
Minor League baseball
team in the Virginia Valley ,
Leagu·e (Class D) .
But there was one memorable
game
in
Pennybacker's career that
was a classic and that came
the day he was pitching for
Nelsonville. Businessmen
in Nelsonville had sponsored a three-game series
with Murray City to decide
the mythical championship
of southern Ohio .
The series was tied at one
game apiece . People had
walked·, come by horseback
and · wagon for miles
around. There were 2 ,000
spectators there in Murray
City that day.
According to one historian: "fnning after ·inning.
pitchers Ross Pennybacker
of Nelsonville and Clarence
Green of Murray City
mowed the batters down .
The regulation nine innings
came and went --: no mns,
no hits. True, a few batters
managed to get on first on
walks , but not one of them
ever reached second base."
Pennybacker struck out
the first seven men he faced
in the game . The lOth
inning was a repetition of
the first nine and so was the
lith inning. At the start of
the
12th
inning ,
Pennybacker went to manager Albert Storer and said .
"Get a relief pitcher ready.
rm
tired."
But
the
Nelsonville manager said,
"See that little feller out
there (G reen) ? He ai n't

tired."
But Penliybacker was tiring as Murray City nicked
him for a hit in the 13th
inning. Both pitchers were
really tired and hits flowed
in the 14th, 15th and 16th
innings, but still no one had
crossed home plate .
The fans were tiring too .
In the early part of the
game, they were loud ·and
boi sterous. By the 16th
inning , they sat like they
were petrified in their seats.
The 17th inning came and
went with both teams mi ssing an opportunity to score.
Both starting pitchers were
still out there , arms a-drag- ·
ging . It was the bottom of ·
the 18th inning and the
home team Murray City
came to bat .
The first Murra y City
batter grounded out. but
the second batter, Coburn,
belted one over the fence.
However. the ground rules .
in the park at that time
declared such a hit as a
ground rule ·double. The
third man hit a long fly,
which allowed Coburn to
tag up and go to· third
·
base.
Up came pitcher Green,
who hit a slow grounder
between the pitcher and first
base . Pennybacker picked
up the ball and could easily
have tagged out Green . But
insteljd ,
Pennybacker
wheeled around and deliberately threw the ball over
the center field fence .
allowing Coburn to score
run .
the
winning
Nelsonville's manager ran
out on the field as if to throttle Pennyb~cker, who said
in his defense. " I told you I
was tired."
(James Sands is a specia l
the
correspondent
for
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to Box 92. Norwich , Ohio
43767.)

Sunday, September 21, 2008

along slopes (geomorphic
gradie nts). large ly related
to the movement of soil ,
water and di ssoh ,•d materials (solu tes). On a sloping si te , rapid changes in
soil, air and water properties can occur, reflecting
past and current drainage
and soil transport conditions. parent material , and
vegetation differences .
Slope grade itself may
infl.uence suitabilit y and
design. Assessments . of a
site should include observation s of slope gradie nt ,
shape , aspect and slo pe
position , particularly as
they affect drainage .Water
not only moves . over and
into the soi l, but on sloping s ites, water moves
through · the soil. It is
important to understand
the dyn amic s of water
movement at the slope
scale to understand where
and how wastewater will
move. and how the seasonal water table and
ground water table. as
well as surface water , will
interact with it.
Observation
of the
topography around the site
will help provide an
understanding of the locations of water accumulation and dispersion zones
in and on the landscape .
·Water collecting areas
(o ften
with
concave
shape s) may have more
poorly drained soils. while

45
48
53
54
55
57
58
59
60
61
63

All (prefix)
Yellow color
Once more
Before very long
Stay behind
Ripple pa"ern
Excursion
Cheeky
Pla0ng card
Means justifier
Island near Java
64 Sunbather's goal
65 Pall1d
·
66 ~ and spice
68 Singing voice
70 UppeJCtassman
(abbr.)

71 Apportion (wnh "oun
72 Edible clam
74 Lawman Wyatt76 Apple drink
79 Play unfairly
81 Command
for a pooct1
83 Pungent edible bulb
87 Mature
88 Lean
89 Notion
91 Gli"ering headband
92 Uke someone
on the lam •
94 And
96 Unbroken horse

97 Force
98 Freshly
100 Rich bread containing
fruit
102 Hoof sound
104 Selloot Sign
107 Field cover. forshon .
109 Inventor- Howe
t 10 Connect
, 1t 1 The Concorde

PO INT
PLEASANT.
"Demand for mammogram
W.Va.
Pleasant Valley screenings ha&gt; increased dra.Hospi tal has bec·n awarded a matically.'· explained Connie
three-year term of accrcditll- Davis. director ·of PVI-l
tio n in mammography as the Rad iology Service.
· 'result of a recent survey hy ,-·· "Th is
has
occurred
the · 1\mcr.icmt Collc~c of because h1:cast ca nce r is the
Radiology (ACR). acc~lrcling most common cancer in
t(&gt; Sanel y Wood . vice presi - women and sec\llld on ly to
dent of patienr services .
lu11g cancer as a cause of
·· The ACR . headquartered . death
fr om
cancer.
in Res t()n . Va .. · awards · Additionally. mammograms
accreditation to facilities fur can deled breast cancer carthe ac hi eve ment of hi gh lier which helps in red uci ng
practic~ standard s aft er a
the monalit v rate from th is
peer-review eva!Ltatio n of the disease . The· early diagnosis
practice . Eva luations are offers wome n breast con,
conducted by board-certified serv ing treatment options:·
.physicians and the medical she added.
physicists who are ex pens in
"Earlier detecti on of breast
the field. They assess the cam·e rs require s J ed icated
·qua lificat ions of the person - equipment. careful pos itio nnel and thq adequacy of facir- ing, adequate compression ,
it y cyuipment. The 't~rveyors optimal technical factors.
rep011 their fint.li ngs to the careful p roce~~ ing and acc u·ACR\
'Co mmittee
on rate intcqxetat ion." said Dr.
Accreditation , whic h subse- Suresh Agrawal. chief radiol 4ucntl y provides the practice o~ i st.
wit h a comprehensive report.
....The Na tio naL Cancer.

water-spreading
areas
(convex) may ha ve better
drained so il s.
The best soil s for a
hou seh old
wa stewater
treatment sys tem are deep
so il s, and topography can
provide information to
help locate them . More
soil development may
occur where water and soil
accumulate. Hence deeper
so il s may be present in
lower slope positions
where eros ion moves
material removed from
higher
po stllons
and
where ·weathering . may
have ex tended to greater
depths. How ever,, these
sites may have poor
'drainage and shallow seasonal or permanent water
tables. High, convex si tes
tend to shed water and to
be better drained . but may
have been subject to more
·erosion and less soil ·
deve lopment , and hence
have limiting conditions
such as bedro ck at shallow
depths.
For more information
regarding · this arricle,
contact th e Gal/ia County
· Health Department at
441 -2018or
Source: Ohio Stale
University,
OSU
Exrensio_n-Bullerin 905,
ohioline . ag .o hiostate..edtl.

was one
1f4 Boys
116 Navigation hazard
118 Frequently, poetically
119 Clio 01 Erato. e.g.
120 Wanton look
121 Esohew
123 Containing salt
125 Gone by
126 Freight
127 Not at all wordy
128 Mine wagoo
129 Dismounte~
130 Rough-and·lumble
gill
131 -·de-sac
133 Customer
136 Mentally heaRhy
137 strong wnd .
141 Eye pan
144 Bard
145 False co1n
146 Spot on a card
149 Source
151 Searle" of "Gone
Wrth the Wind'
153 Seize
155 Composition for piano
157 Tropical trun
158 Bette or Jefferson
159 Western Indian
160 Buenos151 Winter vehicles
162 Silvery fish
163 Row
164 Fewest

DOWN
1 "For - 's sake!'
2 Declare
3 Not any
4 DOE's nickname
5 Sure
6 "Jaws' creature
7 CaLJtion
8 Math branch (abbr. )
9 Farm laborer
10 Characteristic
tt Dirt
12 Say further
13 Wild public
disturbance
14 Beget .
15 Cunning one
16 Sponsorship
H Dorothy's dOg
18 PartiCular
19 County in Aorid a
23 Phi - Kappa
30 Samovar
32 Big success
34 De~aud
36 Radar screen image
37 Gun pellets
38 - Kippur
40 Sweet potato
41 LeBlanc or Damon
42 City in India
43 Drizzle
44 Apple remnant
46 West of old movies
47 Ship o11492
49 Crim1nal group
50 Prejudioo
51 - Stanley Gardner
52 Means of restraint
54 Choose
55 Latvian P.Ort
56 School events
59 Chum
60 Fat
62 For men only
65 891 ot v.hal'sIll oorre
66 Law
67 Goes to bed
69 Flowery speech
71 Greek le"er
72 Vends
73 Radioactive gas
75 Preen
76 Crow·s cry
77 Mountain on Crete
78 Demand payment
from

PageC3
Sunday, September 21,

2008

Mammography service_at PVH earns
three-year accreditation
Institute (NCI) recommends
that women age 40 and older
have mammograms every
one to two years. Women
who arc at higher than aver&lt;~ge risk of breast cancer
shou ld talk with their health
care providers about whether
to have mammograms before
age 40 and how often to have
them.
The ACR is a national
organizaiion serving more
than 32.000 diagnostic and
interventional radiologists ,
radiation oncologist s. and
nuclear medicine and medic-a \ physicists wi th programs
focusing on the practice of
medical imltging· and radiation oncology and the delivery of comprehensive health
cure servi ces .

SubmitteC.: photo

For mort: it~f(Jnna tion
about nuun11w~nuns t ,,. other

Pleasant Va lley Hospital has been awarded a three -yea r te rm ol accreditation in mammography as the resu lt of a recent survey by the Am encan College of Radiology (ACR).
Radiologr Sen ·ices at PVH. ,
Shown above; at right, Jenny Jenkins, RT; a cerlilied radiology tech nician, assists Janet
call (./04) 675-4340. ntenHartley, at left, a patient having her annual mammogram.
simr 1283.

•Is your money safe with insurance?.
BY JAMES HENRY

This has been a very
bu "y wee k for tho se
invol ved in the insurance
busin e" as a resu lt of the
backla sh over the fa ll from
· gra t:c of insuram;c giant
AIG
(American
httcrnational Group) . For
anyone who holds an
annuit y or other po li·cy
with AIG or oth er insur; ~m ce compani e~,. this pa st
:week has hrou ght with it
: L(ucstions ·colll..:crlling the
· ~ornpanic s' abilit y to pay
out on the obligations due
io co lt s umer~ on polic ies
·nnd an nuities.
:: Though many I:Oik s cur: rently feel that the an swer
: to ha vi ng a "guaranteed
invol ves
· investment"
thro win g your money . into
· a deep hol e in the back
yard. you may not want to
turn w yo ur shovel ye t.
Though lite jury is still out
on how AIG will ultimatefy far e. th e good news for
consumer s is that each
·s tate ha s an intricate se t of
reg ul ation s and a guaranty
association designed to
prot ect them in the event
of an in surer 1S fa ilure. So
if AIG-Oi' any other ins ure r - . race s insolvency,
~ t u t e guaranty associations
ex ist tn protect consumers.
For life in suran ce polici es .
.every state runs a guaranty
assoc~ation thut recfuire s
i11 suranc e co mpani es to
esse ntia ll y cover for th eir
competitors in the event of
an anti cipated lo ss by con-

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

MMUN

iunbap \Eimes -ienttnel

Soil, site evaluation for onsite
household wastewater treatment

oratories working closely may compromise breathing
with the CDC had deter- or increase risks for aspiramined the virus strains that tions.
BY GREGG SPEAR
SANITARIAN-liN-TRAINING
are most likely to cause an
5. 1\ny who are receiving
outbreak of. t·nfluenza ·tn the long -term aspmn
· · therapy,
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
2008 '009 tlu season The
· ·
and therefore may be a risk
ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH
'CIP (Advt·sory Commt'ttee
·"
for
developing
Reye
on Immunization Practices) Syndrome al·ter 1·11 tlttenz·a
Making
landscape
thl b ·
meets on a mon y as ts virus infection.
observations:
throughout the year to
Soil s are highly variable .
review new st udies, evalu6. Adolescents/c hildren
the landscape. An
across
ate previous guidelines. and who are residents of chronic
's ite and its soil
individual
consider changes.
long-care faci lities.
Begi nning the 2008-09
7. · Adolescents who may profile is on ly part of 1-he
story of water movement
·inlluenza season. all chi\- become pregnant during the
in a landscape . The
dren aged 5-18 should ·Jl u season.Annual guideproce sses
at
broader
r~ce iv e the flu vacc,in e. lines for adults have not scales are very important
Children 6 monthss thrqugh changed for the 2008,09 in deci ding on the suitabil 4 years (59 months) remain intluenza season.
it y of an on-s ite wastea primary . locus. because
Any ad ult who wants to water treatment system
children younger t,han .5 reduce his or her chances of and adequately siting and
vears are at higher "isks fdr
,.
.contrac ting the inflt1enza desi gnin g
it.
Subtle
. 'mtluenza
com,plications
in
slope
and
envichanges
th an old er ch.ld
'(flu)
t ren.
. h or hof transmitting
ld d r . 1 it to ronmental conditions freChildren and aqolcscents : ot ers s ou
e tnlte Y get
qu entl y provide a variety
at higher risks for complica- thetr llu _shot. ,
.
of
so il forming conditions ,
tions from the flJ are:
Your ttrst opportumty for
and
arc associated· with
1. Aged 6 month s to 4 a llu shot this year will . be
&gt;oi
ls
wi th contrasting
years.
'•
Saturday. Oct. 25 from 8:30
· 2. Children/adolescents a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the propert ie s.
Site-specific ' observawith chronic ·pulmonary Gal\ia
County
Health
tions made by a quali fied ,
(including asthrpa), !)cart Departmen, 49,9 Jack son exper ienced practitioner
di sease , kidn ey disease. Pike. Gallipolis. Following are necessary for· underhver or other metabolic dts- the Saturday "kick-off" standing the fine-scale
eases (mcludmg dtabetes).
campaign, flu shots will be varia bilit y of soil proper. 3. Those wh~ are available Mon~ay thru ties and local site condiImmunosuppressed {mclud- Priday 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. arid tions.
tng
tmmunosuppresston .
' 'd d f
lr
Topography is an imporcaused by medicattons or by are provt ~ ree to a ta
tant
feature of the site and
. .
any other immunosupressed County restd ents.
surrqundings.
viruses) ,
If you have any &lt;tuestwns · it s
Topography
is itself an
4'. Children/ adolescents or .comments. please call
nt
soi
l- forming
impo
rta
who have spinal c'ord 441-2950 Monday through
fa ctor, and has a strong
injuries, seizure disorders , Friday, 8 a:m. to 4 p.m.
intluence on surface· and
or any other disorders that
Resources: CDC.
subsurfac e water flow
(hydro logy). Sequences of
co ntrasti.ng so il s exist

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageC2

80 "W1th·ir'
82 Hankering
84 Once around a tra,ck
85 Wrath
86 Neighbor of Nev.
90 Approach
and speak to
93 Costly
95 Wise lawgiver
96 Raucous noise
99 Grapple
101 Kind of jacket
103 Tell a late
104 Louver
105 Rant aoo106 Smell
108 Pome fruit
110 Equitaote ·
111 Eastern European
112 Kind of lily•
113 "Iliad' setting
115 Family member,
f01 shan
117 A southern state
(abbr.)
119 Cnief
120 Crippled
122 Calendar abbr.
124 Oevilkin
125 Cons~ ring qne
t 26 Coagulate
129 Have being
130 Greek le"er
132 Arm bone
134 Time of year
135 Browned bread
136 Lustrous
137 Lots and lots
138 Inland sea
139 Wrinkle
140 Mild oath
142 Gives silent assent
143 Counterteit
145 Peot
146 Aqua 147 Fateful date in March
148 Nuisance
150 - and outs
152 Rd
154 Macaw genus
156 Cravat

s umer~ .

In other words. the firms
each pay a fee based on
the amount of business
they conduct in the state to
hel p ensure any fail ed
insti tutions ' customers are
protected . If the company
does not pay the fee , it
risks losin g it~ license to
conduct business in that
state. Li fe in surance poli cyholders are protected
for at lea st $ 100 ,000 in
cash surrender or with :ctrawal val ue on th ei r poli );y and at least $300.000 in
death benefits , according
. to a statement iss ued by
. Peter Ga\lanis. pre si dent
· ~Jf
th e
Nat ional
· 'Oro•ani za tion of Life and
:He~ lth
Insurance
·Guhranty Associations .
': The states of Ohio and
: West Virgini a both hav e
Assoc iation s
: Guaranty
:that protect consumers in
··an amoun t up to $300 ,000 .
Though the -pund its on

...

,.

.

Keeping
GaUia, Meigs
&amp;Mason
• informed
Sunday
Ti,mes-Sentinel

Wall s ·treet are co nce rn ed becomes un abl e to pay
over. ~w.;h i ~s ucs as !'ecov- claims. the gua ranty fum.l
erin g sha re holde r losses. will prov ide coverage.
th ose of us on Main Street subject to. that state's limi·are more co ncerned over lations. sim ilar to the
our abilit y to recoup an y FDIC coverage for bank
un earned premiums from acco unts. Consumers will
th e com pany or. in the also be protected by the
event of an ac tual loss. in guaranty fund if they have
our abil ity to be com pen- prepaid
a sub sta ntial
sated pursuant to the poli - amou nt of premium and a
. cy term s. State in surance company becomes inso\ reg ulat ors ha ve num erous ve nt.
wenpnns in th ei r arsenal
Annuity policy owners
desi g ned tci combat an should also realize that
in surer from failing. First. their inves tme·nts will be
it 's imp ort ant ro rea lize treated differentl y dependthat ratin g dow ngrad es ing on whether th ey are
and drops in share price do· fix ed or vari .1ble annunot chan ge an insurer' s iti es. Con stnners should
ability tn pay cla ims . reali ze that variable annuFrom
con sc rvati ve itie s are investmet1t prodaccounting rules and ucts subject lo the ups and
· mandatory ailtwa l CPA downs of a tumultuous
audits to in vest ment rcgu- sto~ k market.. and will
and ·henc e not be covered by
lations/limitation s
minimum cap ital /s ur.plu s state insuran ce . guaranty
requireme nts ,
a state fund s (though the portion
regulator's of an annuitv contract that
insurance
"weapon s'' allows insurers promi ses -a guarantee
to handl e greater losses might be covered in some
than other parts of the states) covered in a numfi nancial sector in down- ber of ways . Elderly cott mark·et cycles.
sumers should also be
Additional reg ulat ory wary of variable annuities
tools in clude performin g for a host of other reasons .
reg ular, periodic fi nancial th e number of which is too
analys is of insurers. and great for me to produce in
mandator y on-s it e exami - thi s limited space .
nations through financial
· !'or some of the reasons
records. This .combination why you should stee r clear
o f regu latory to ols, as we ll from variable annuities,
as the fact that th e insur- feel free to co ntact me at
ance industry is one of the the number li sted below.
most
regulated
and How eve r. for fixed annu watchcd industries, mak es · ities, which are insurance
the likelihood of an in sur- produ cts g uaranteed by
ancc compan y's t:ai\ure the state guaranty . fund.
extremely low. In the co nsumers are protected
unlikely even t that an . and ca n beco me more proinsurer does fail. there are tected by takin g appropri '
still protecti ons available ate steps .
For instance, if you have
for policyholders. In han Clling creditor cl aim s, I0 annu ities for $2 million
claims from individual with one company. yo u
policyho lders are g ive n the would only be insured up
utmo st priority over other to one limit. However. if
creditors in the se matter. If you were to split th~
an in surance companYs amounl
of
coverage
as ., ets are insufficient to among several companies,
cove r c'laims , rhere is still limiting th e investments in
another safety net in place each to &lt;tn amount equal to
to prot ect consumers : ·the th e guarant y fund limit ,
state guara nty fund. If an the n yo u will be prote cted
in surance
co mpany ht tw o ways. First, yo u

Gynecology Services
Available In Meigs County ·
.• Wcll·woman exams
.

•llirth Crintrollnduding
•Jmplanun (t'irst &amp; Onl)·
3-ycar implantable
birth l'Ontrol
• Gardasil Vaccine
• STD dctl'l:tion &amp; treatmmt
• Minimally-invasive
~nccologic surgical rare
; Pregnancy Cure
i.i4i.l!:::;;.i • Es.~tirc (Scarlcss p,,rmancnt
.June 0. Broecker, Mil Rirth Control Sterilb.ationl

· 113 E~ast Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH • 992 -9150
Castn~p Center 75 Hospital Dr
Suite 260 .
Athens, 10H • 594-8819

Alln,mu'._."'"ftbt

}

Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2155

Mason • 675-1333 .

.·

~

O'BLENESS ~~
H f" LTH

~VSTE~

www.riverroseobgyn.com

wi)l have the pmtec tioii of
the guaranty fund for c a~ h
annuity. and second. it's
unlikely th&lt;tl ten companie s will gO Lin de.,-.
For th ose of ym1 who
still feel th at y our dollars
are best protected Ltnder
the ol 'E lm tree 111 th e back
ya rd . I can tel l you that· a
cl ient of mine whu is u
lady in her 7tb told me
this wee k that the hcsl Wa)
to bury money is in plasti c·
pipin g .used by plumbers.
Boy. the things they didn't
tea ~,.; h me in law s..: hool .. .
flames Henry is au
attorney and i11sura11ce
·agent in the states of Ohio
and West Virginia. He i .,
the founder of French
City Estate Planning
Solutions LLC , with
offices in Gallipo/i,, and
Columbus. He can be
contacted at allyjame.,llenry@lwtmuil.com, or
www.O hioE stateP lan11i 11g
Solufions .com.)

Your sight is
·our focus.
Drs. Thomas and Susan.Quinn and Dr. Robyn Sargent
ore pler:;1sed to announce the addition of Dr. Shane
Foster to the practice.

Dr. Foster is a Cum Laude graduate of th e Oh io State
Universjty College o f Optometry.
• Doctor Foster is now accepting new patients
• Most majo r vision and medical plans accepted
• Specialty vision services. as well as treatment of
eye diseas(;l and injury

�•

NS

iunbap iime~ ·ientintl

PageC4
Sunday, September 21, 2008

iunbap Qttmes -ientind

Myers-Lucas wedding

I am frequently reminded
that our preferences in books
are as varied as our preferences in music, art and food .
In our book club where we all
read the same books, this is
even more apparent. Some of
us like mysteries, some happy
family stories; some love
Dean Koontz, some love Jan
Karon.
I stand rightly accused of
loving "gloomy" books . books which don't assure a
happy ending , sometimes
filled with violence and abuse
and tragedy. I prefer "edgy"
stories, unpredictable stories,
stories that probably won't
tum out "happily ever after."
I love the work of Annie
Proulx (The Wyoming Stories
which contains "Brokeback
Mountain"} and Cormac ,
· McCarthy (No · Country for
Old Men and The Road).
Many of our greatest writers
&lt;lon't . pen pleasant stories:
·Steinbeck in The Grapes of
Wrath, Hemingway in A
Fare,well to Arms, and
Fitzgerald in The · Great
Gatsby.
Joyce Carol Oates , prolilic
novelist and professor of
humanities at Princeton,
wrote The Gravedigger s
Daughter, partially based on '
the story of her own grandmother and great-grandfather.
Rebecca Schwart, the main
character. is the child of
Gennan Jewish · immigrant~.
bam in the filthy hold of a
ship sitting in New York harbor in 1936. Her father, Jacob.
is an embittered fanner printer and math · teacher. Her
mother, Anna, is a silent, broken woman.
Rebecca has two older
brothers, and her father gets a
job as a cemetery caretaker
and gravedigger in upstate
New York. He is constantly
ridiculed and humiliated by
this menial work. He tells his
daughter, "In animal life the
weak are quickly disposed of.
You must learn to hide your
weakness."
The family lives in a small,
dark, cramped cottage at the
edge of the graveyard. The
father buys a radio, on which
he listens to the news, and
does not allow the rest of the
family access to it. The family anticipates the anival of
Anna's sister and her family,
fleeing the Nazis, but the ship

,,

Submilted Photo

Amy Young and Rand Clark

Young-Clark engagement ·
GALLIPOLIS _.: Amy Young ami R&lt;rnd Clark. along
with their children. Caiden and Culton YOLmg and Morgyn
Clark . would like to announce their engagement .
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Carl and Regina
Hi vely of Gallipolis. and John and Denise Damron of
Napoleon.. Ohio . She is the granddaughter of Grace ;md the
late Lawr~nce Shafer of Crown City. and Verona irnd the
late Ira Damron of Napoleon .
She is a 2002 graduate of River Valley High School and
is employed by Monumental Life lnsman~e .
The groom is the son of Kimberly Clark-.folmsorJ of Point
Ple&lt;rsanl. W.Va .. and Johnny Johnson ·Of Gallipolis . He is
the grandson of Betty Clark-Condee of Gallipolis. and
George and Jenny Clark of Point Pleasant.
He is a 1'!'!6 graduate of Gallia Academy High School
and is employed by Gudcnkauf Corp . of Columbus .
The open church wedding will be Satmday. Oct. 25.
2008'. at .5:30 p.m. at Faith Valley Community Chmch . A
receptioh will follow at the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
The .couple will reside in their home in Gallipoli s.
Charles Hollenbaugh and Megan Delaney

Delaney-Hollanbaugh
engagement
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. Troy (Lora) Delaney of
Crown City are proud to announce the engagement and
upcoming m&lt;miage of their daughter, Megan Ren,ee, to
Chmlcs Phillip Hollanbm1gh of Bidwell, son of Beth
Hullanbaugh.
. Megan gradU&lt;IIed from South Gallia High School in 2007
and is curremly employed at Fruth Pharmacy in Gallipolis.
Charles graduated from River Valley High School in·
20tl:1 &lt;\nd from Rio Grum.le Community College in May
2008 . He is currently employed at Triple "B" Vaults in
Bidwell.
The wedding will be held at. Mercerville Missionary
Baptis\ Church on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2008 . The music will
begin at I p.m. All friends and family are invited to attend.

..I!

Cancer Center names
.
Nurse Navigator
.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Tammv
~llison , RN , was recently
named the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care's Oncology
Nurse Navigator for Breast
Cance·r patients.
In this position, Ellison will
help guide patients through ·
the healthcarc system to better
provide continuity of care for
tl1c ce1ilcr's patients. In addition. she pmvide" suppor1 and
cduurtion l(lr .the patients and
their farnilv members.
Ellison j'oins Diane Young.
RN. another Nurse Navigator ·
for the Holzer Center for '------'.:..:.:&gt;
turJCer Care . Ell1son focu ses
Tammy l;lllson
im breast care patients. where
Young provides assistance for UniveL,ity of Rio Grande/Rio
patients with all other types of Grande Community College
cancers found in our area.
in 2007. Previously. she has
: ''Once an individtial is diag- been ~ part of the Holzer
posed with breast. cancer, it Health·Systems family as the
pU1 become a very scary and mcdi~al education coordinaoverwhelming time," Ellison tor from 1998 to 200 I.
said . "My job is to help make
Ellison· and her husband,
those moments less scary and . Dr. John Ellison. a physician
provide more education for with Holzer Clinic, reside in
fhe patient and their loved Gallipolis. They have two
(Jnes su they know what they cpildren, Sarah Beth, who
nre facing, and most impor- recently graduated from Ohio
tantly, that they are not facing State University with a degree
this disease alone."
in anthropology. and Daniel,
. Ellison is also recently cer- who is a student studying
tified through Educare's journalism at Bowling Green
Breast Health Navigator State University.
!raining . During this training,
In her spare time. she
!Ollison learned ways to better enjoys knitting, volunteering
~ducate patients about breast
for local agencies such as
health issues and how to American . Cancer Society.
implement a . complete pro- · American Red Cross, and the
gr~m of education and sup- Gallipolis Rotary, and is very
port for women dragnosed active in her church; St. Louis
Catholic Church . In addition,
with breast cancer.
: Training specialist Judy C. Ellison is a 12-year breast
f&lt;neece, RN , OCN, provided cancer survivor.
The Holzer Center for
comprehensive instruction on
all aspects of brea~t health Cancer Care is expanding its
management, from
the breast health services of eduMammaCare(r)
Clinical cation and support for the
13reast Exam to community women in the region .
For more i11[ormation, call
!lUtreach programs.
: Ellison received her regis- (740) 446-5474 Qr toll :free .at
tered nursing degree from the (800) 821-3860.
,

.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Will this one call for Prozac? Rio president, student view production of Welsh play

!.

David J. Lucas and Lisa A. Myers-Lucas were un ited in
marriage on Sept. 9 , 2008, in a ceremony at Gallia County
Common Pleas Court . Usa , second from left, is holding her
·new baby, Mason Lucas, while David is to her left and son
Brendan Lucas is in' front. Flanking them are Lisa's mother,
Kathy Wayan , and David's mother, Jenny Thiviner.

ON THE B OOKSHELF

PageCs

Matthew Flock and Erin Frazee

Frazee-Flock engagement
GALLIPOLIS - Kirk and Jan Frazee of Gallipolis and
Norm and Donna Flock of New Stanton. Pa .. are pleased to.
announce the engagement and upcoming wedding of their
(hildren, Erin Marie Frazee and Matthew Reed Flock , both
·
of St. Petersburg. Fla.
Erin. the granddaughter of Bill and Suzanne Frazee and
Ken and Garnet Dillon. is a 2000 graduate of Galli a
Acadeniy High School and a 2004 graduate of Marshall
University with aBBA in business management/marketing.
She is currently a commercial lender with BB&amp;T Bank in
Sarasota. Fla.
Matthew is a 1999 gradlHrte of Hempfield Area Higt{
School and a 2003 graduate of Robert Morris University
with a BS in business administration/management. He is
currently employed by Ferguson Enterprises in Tampa ~
Fla .. as a building sales consultant.
•
The wedding will be an outdoor ceremony at the Frenctt
Art Colony on July 18, 2009.

Earaches: A painful problem for many childre!l.
tion s caused by viruses). It's talk with your doctor if eardrum (which is alsd.
very important to follow the · your child has repeate.d ear called the . tympanic mem-·
directions for giving your infections. Your child's brane) during surgery and
child the medicine. Pain hearing may he affected if stay in place for an average
relievers
like
a~etafluid stays in the middle ear of 6 to 9 months. Ear tubes
an infection . This is may also decrease the numafter
Morc than 3 out of 4 chi I- minophen (Tylenol) and
dren will. have at least one ibuprofen can help make call ed otiti s media with ber of ear infections your
your child feel better and effusion (Effusi on is anothear infection by their third reduce fever. Don't give er word for fluid buildup). child gets.
The tubes are usually left
birthday. Earaches are niost your child aspirin unle ss Usually the fluid ~oes away
common in young children your doctor says it's okay. A in two to three months , and in place until they fall out
and result in millions of warm, not hot. heating pad . hearing returns to normal. on their own or yotrr doctor
off~ce visits and antibiotic held over the ear can also Your doctor n;~ay want .to decides your child no
them:
needs
pres(riptions annually. This heiJJ relieve the earache. {:heck your child again at longer
Sometimes,
another
set
of
·may be bc(ause children's
eustachian tubes are shorter Ear drops to relieve pain are this time to see if fluid is tubes may . be needed.
still present. ·
.
sometimes prescribed.
and narrower than those of
If your child has had
II' the fluid stays for more Placing tubes in the ears is
adults . . The eustachian · three ear infections in six than a few months , your an operation and has some
(you-sray-slrwr) tube is the months or fom in one year. doctor may want to check risks . Your child will need
tube thar ·connects the mid- your doctor may suggest your child's hearing . Your general anesthesia when the
die ear with the back of the that your child rake a low doctor may recomn]enu ear tube is inserted . Your doctor
nose. Normally this tube dos'c of antibiotic. every tubes (also called tympa- "'ill talk with you about the
lets fluid drain out of the day. Lrsually dirring the win - nostomy tubes) to drain the risks if he or she .thinks
middle ear.
ter. when these infections fluid if your child's hearing your child needs tubes.
If yo11 hal'e q11esrions calk
Earaches can be caused are most common . Your is decreased a lot. Eai' tubes
by ba~leria .or viruses. that doctor may want to sec are tiny plastic tube's that .witll yo11r child's pediatriinfect the lining of your your child a few times help balance the pressure in cian or coli/act the Gallia
child's eustachian tube . .the when he or she is taking the - ·your child's ears. They County Health Department
ti1be gets swollen and fill s antibiotic to make sure allow air into the middle ear at441 -2950.
Resources: . American
with thick muc·us. Thi s another ear infection does so that fluid can drain out
keeps fluid in the ear from not happen .
down the eustachian tube . Academy of Pediatrics:
Children may be at higher They're . put into the http: //www.aap .org .
draining normally. Bacteria
can grow in the tluid. risk for ear infections if
increasing pressure behind · they:
the eardrum and causing
• Are around people who
ain.
The
eustachian
tubes
P
smo kc.
can
become
blocked
• Have had previous ear
because of allergies, a enid, infections.
or other infection. Rarely
• Have a fumily history-of
the adenoids (glands near ear infections.
• Attend clay . care
the ear) be~ome enlarged
and block the eustachian (because they are exposed
tubes which can also leads to more germs and viruses).
to ear infection s.
• Were born preniaturely .
Acute ear infections usu- · 'o r with" low birth weight . .
Subscribe today • 446-2342 or 992"2155
ally cle;rr up within I or 2
• Have frequent colds or
weeks. Sometimes , e;rr other infection s.
,•
infections last longer and
•If a bottle or "sippy" cup
become chronic . After an are taken to bed and or nap
infection . fluid may stay' in time.
the middle ear. This may
• Use a pacifier.
.
• Arc male (boys tend to
lead to more infections and
hearing loss. The most get nHlrc .car infections than
common symptoms of an girls) .
acute ear infection are ear
• Have nasal speech
Annuity from Midland National
pain and f~ver. If your child (caused by large aden&lt;)ids
is too young to tell you that block the eustachian
5- YEAR ANNUITY RATES ARE QUITE A SIGHTI'
what hurts, he or she may tube).
cry or pull at his or her ear.
Middle ear infections and
Your child may also be irri- fluid in the em are the most
table or listless , have trou- common causes of ternpoble hearing, or not feel like rary hearing loss in chil eating or sleeping.
dren. Children who have
5-Year Surrender Charge Period
If your doctor thinks the on going problems with
• Get Guaranteed Rates with lhe • Syslematic lntere$1 Withdrawals
infection i~ caused by hac- hearing may have trouble
teria, he or she may pre, developing their speech and
Power ol Tax DeferraP
Available After 30 Days'
scribe an antibiotic (antibi- · lunguage skills. For this
otics don't work for infcc- 'reason . it is important to
BY JOANNE ELLIOTT,

RN

GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
BUREAU FOR CHILDREN WI TH
MEDICAL HANDICAPS

Beverly
Gettles

RIO
·GRANDE
University of Rio Grande
President Dr. Greg Sojka and
Rio Grande student Nath&lt;Ul
Wood both traveled to Wales
over the summer for the production of a play that was
recently staged here in southem Ohio .
During the 2007 -{)8 school
year. 10 students from Trinity
College spent the spring
semester at Rio Grdllde taking
classes and living on campliS.
Rio Grande has an exchange
program with Trinity College
that allows students from each
institution to spend a semester
visiting the other. The Madog
·Center for Welsh Studies at
Rio Grande helps to coordinate the exchange progta~1.
In the spring, the 10 Trinity
College students Staged their
original play, "New Worlds ,"
at the Rip Gnmde campus.
The play, which wa' based on
the Welsh migration to southem Ohio in the 1800s. told the
story of two lovers who were
separated by an ocean but
remained as one within their
hearts. The play is based on
actual historic figures; including several who lived in '
southern Ohio.
The play was performed on
the Rio Grande campus ,
around the region and at a
Welsh festival in New York
City. Wood was chosen to act

is turned back at the harbor.
and the family is returned to
Germany to die in the camps.
Jacob seems full of selfhatred and abuses his family
in his frustration . There is a
horrid climax to his instability. and Rebecca is left an
orphan . Her two brothers had
both fled earlier. Little
Rebecca is taken in by a kind
teacher, and she begins reinventing herself. Throughout
her life she tries to forget who
she was, who her parents
were , what her heritage
meant.
Rebecca enters a marriage
with an abusive husband. She
ha' a son. After a severe beating (the most graphic depiction of a beating l have ever
read in fiction) , she takes her
son and flees. Once again, she
reinvents herself to escape
being found. ·
It seems we can never run
from who we truly are what we WERE is always
part of who we BECOME.
No matter how others perceive you. inside, you remain
who you really are. Rebecca's
CHARLESTON, W.Va. attempt~ to hide her real iden.The
West Virginia State
tity gnaw at her soul. She has
many secrets; but she Archives of the West Virginia
remains, to . the end, the Division of Culture and
History .will present a panel
gravedigger's daughter.
discussion
on Civil War
This is a lengthy book.
Oates is a talented and research and · writing on
desqiptive writer, good at Monday, Sept. 29, from 6 to 8
portraying the inner being of p.m. in the Norman L. Fagan
her characters. The dust jack- West Virginia State Theater in
et calls this book "emotional- the Cultural Center, State
Complex
in
ly engaging and intellectually Capitol
Charleston.
provocative ... testimony to
The program serves as the
the resilience of the individstate's
kick-off program for
ual."
National
Archives Month ,
Not all of you will like this
takes
place in October.
which
book. I anxiously await my
book club's discussing it in The Civil War panel discusOctober. l can almost predict sion is free and the public is
who will love it and who will invited to attend.
Panelists will include West
· not. It's wonderful how well
Virginia
Civil War authors
we get to know one another
and
historians
Richard Andre
through books. Just as I know
and
Steve
Cunningham
, both
Dottie loves peach cobbler, I
think Amy may find this one
calls for Prozac!

in the play along with the
Trinity College students, and
did an excellent job.
When the Trinity College
students ' staged the play in
Wales th is summer, Wood
was •Is ked to go along to lake
par1 in the prod uction.
Jeanne Jindra, director of
t~ Madog Center ·for Welsh
Studies. was not able to attend
the play bui said that the people in Wales who saw the production were very impressed .
Kevin Matherick, head faculty of arts and social sciences
at Trinity College, explained
in an e-.mail to Jindra how
much he enjoyed the play, as
well as the showing of the
documentary lilm a group of
the Trinity College smdents
did on their semester at Rio
Grande.
"I particularly enjoyed 'the
film of the Rio experience
which was made by Carys
and others - it really gave an
indication of the wonderful
opportunity. they had in visiting Rio," Matherick said in
the e-mail. '" New Worlds'
was then performed and I
really thought that it was the
best perfonnance I have seen
ofthe play - breathtaking they had the audience so emotionally involved and Nathan
was superb!"
Sojka was able to travel. to
Wales for the production. and

' aid the trip served several
purposes. First of all. nc wanted to support Wood and all of
the students in the production.
The play was very well .
received and Sojka said the
people in Wales were pleased
with the work that Wood and
the Trinity College students
did in putting the production
together.
Sojka also had the opportu. nity to meel with Trinity
College offi cials . such as
Principal Dr. Medwin Hughes
to discuss how the exchange
. program between the two universities c.m be enhanced and
expanded.
Trinity College will continue to send large groups of students as it did in the spring
semester. and these students
will continue to work on special projects. just as the students pur together the production of "New Worlds" during .
the spring semester, Sojka
said.
He &lt;md other Rio Grande
officials have also been discussing the potential for different projects the Rio Grande.
students wuld work on while
at Trinity College.
Rio Grande and Trinity
College officials are also
looking into expanding the
faculty exchange program
and searching for additional
ways to work together. Sojka

said .
Scveml things impressed ,
him. during his visit to Wales.:
incl uding the strong culture
and heritage. the work the
offici als at Trinity College are
doing. and how welcoming
and hospitable everyone was.
"We live in a global society :
today." Sojka said, explaining :
how impo11anr it is for Rio:
Grande to have this relationship with Trinity College .
Whether the Rio Grande
students are taking part in
exchange programs in Wales ;
China or India. it provides
numerous benefits for the students as they receive their'
educations and prepare forthe
job market. Sojka said.
Rio Grande is continuing to
increase ih study abroad programs. while also bringing
more intemarional students to
campus . Last year. for exam- ·
pic, students from nearly 20
different countries lived and
studied at Rio Grande.
SoJka also noted how simi-·
Jar· the countryside in Wales:
looks to southern Ohio, and:
said he is proud to have Rio:
Grande and Trinity College·
connected in so many ways.
For more

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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W.Va. State Archives offer Civil War panel discussion
of Charleston , Joe Geiger or
Huntington and Terry Lowry
of South Charleston. The
group will provide a brief
overview of their wol'k and
the Civil War research .they
conducted at the West
Virginia State Archives
Library.
A question-and-answer session with the audience will
follow the discussion . The
evening will conclude with a
book signing by the. authors.
Andre has co-authored
numerous books on West
Virginia history, including
Bullets and Steel: Fight for
the Great Kanawha Valley,
1861-1865; Kwunvha Cowrry
/maReS: Volumes I and 2;
Roar Lions .(?oar; Capitols of
West
Virginia;
and
Sternwheelers on the Great

Kanall'!ra . Cunningham has
authored several articles on
the Civil War and is the former president of the Kanawha
Valley Civil War Roundtable.
an organization which promotes the study of Civil War
history in West Virginia and
its lasting effects on society
and supports the preservation
of Civil War sites and artifacts.
Cunningham also maintains the award-winning West
Virginia in the Civil War website at www.wvcivilwar.com.
Geiger is the acting director
of archives and history for the
division. where he ha' been
employed for 10 years serving as historiar1, webmaster
Ulld assistlmt director. He also
is an adjunct profes~or in the
history
department
at

Marshall University.
Geiger has published a;
number of artides .. and a·
book'. Ch•il War in Cabell
CmmtY. Wes1 Virginia. 18611865. Lowry. archives a.nd
history 's military records specialist . has penned numerous
·Civil War books including
September Bloud: The Bmtle
oJCamifex Ferl)'; La.tt Sleep:
The Battle of Droop
Mo11illain; The Bailie ofScary
Creek ; Images of the Civil
· War; and histories of the 22nd
Virginia Infantry and . 26th
Battalion Virginia Infantry.

RIO GRANDE - The Archon Alumni Association
. University of Rio Grande/Rio was presented with the
Grande. Community College Alumni
of
Citation
Alumhi Association handed Appreciation in recognition
out its annual awards for out- of the time, effort and service
standing alumni during the the members of the organizar~ent 2008 Rio Grande tion put forth on behalf of Rio
reunion.
. Grdllde and the Lighting The
The Rio Grande reunion Way Capital Ciunpaign.
invited all alumni back to
Annette Ward. director of
campus, and included several alumni relations at Rio
activities such as a picnic at
the President's House, tours Grande, said the alumni assopf campus, the awards pre- ciation was proud to present
sentation and the dedication the awards to all of the
of the new Dean S. Brown deserving winners. The alumStudent Activities Room ni association was also happy
inside the newly renovated to see alumni from all around
and
expanded
Davis the state arid the region attend
the reunion event.
University Center. ·
Four alumni and one alumAI umni came from as far
ni group all received awards away as South Carolina to
at the reunion.
attend.
Tony Daniels, a graduate of
Rio Grande has had to
. the class of 19'!5, was pre- move the dlite for the reunion
sented the Rio Grande .event in recent years, and
Faculty Citation in recogni- Ward is hoping that the event
tion of his energy and dedica- will continue to grow in poption to the students, athletes, ularity so that more and more
faculty and staff at Rio alumni will come back to
Grande. Daniels currently campus for the event each
serves as director of campus
sports and recreation and also year.
Rio Grande students Jason
wotts as an assistant coach
for the men's soccer team at Kellison, Sara Stiffler, Levi
Rice and Josh Sherwood all .
Rio Grande.
Roy Moses, a graduate of assisted with the event, taking
the class of 1955, was pre- · the alumni on tours and talksented the Rio Grande ing with them about current
Alumni Award in honor of his events on campus.
"It was good to see so many
loyal and continued efforts to
suppo.rt Rio Grande in numer- alumni and get a chance to.
ous ways.
talk to them," Stiffler said.
Stacie Vaughn Hutton, a
She enjoyed talking with
graduate of the class of I'!94, the alumni about their experi'{l'as presented with the ences at Rio Grande, showing
Atwood Achievement Award them some of the new buildrecognition of her profes- ings and facilities on campus,
sional and civic achievements and talking with them about
reflecting credit to and fur- some of the new programs.
thering the ideals_and objecAll alumni are invited to
tives of Rio Grande.
visit
· campus at any time
Mark Coe, a graduate of the
class of 1971 , was presented throughout the year, and Ward
the Distinguished Alumnus is pleased so many were able
Award in honor of his out- to attend the Rio Grande
itanding achievements in pro- reunion.
. Fonrwre infm;matioll, calf
. fessional endeavors.
The Fmtemal Order of the Wani at (800) 282-7201.

For

more

injhrmation

abolll the Cil'i! Wai- panel discussimr. contact Bnw1 IV&lt;rrd,
cu.;tim~ assistcmt (hreclOr
archi\·e1· and lriston-. at (3o4!
558-0230 or e-1111iil him at
bryan.n•ard@nvculiure .org .

Facing &amp; Fighting
Cancer.
••

We work as a team with our patients, their families,
healthcare professionals and specialists. By offering the
latest advances in cancer prevention, detection, diagnosis
a tid treatment, we make it possible for patienrs to receive
quality cancer care right here in our community.

m

2973 Piedmont Rd. • Huntington • 429-4788
t,'l.f • 9:30-2:00 Sat.

'·-..;'I ·

:t

on

tile exchan}ie pro}iram. the:
pmduction ()("New Worlds":
or tire Madog Center for
Welsh Studies, mil Jindra at'
(li00)282-7201 .

Rio association hails
outstanding alumni

Celebrtding_ special·
·· days with you!

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iunbap iime~ ·ientintl

PageC4
Sunday, September 21, 2008

iunbap Qttmes -ientind

Myers-Lucas wedding

I am frequently reminded
that our preferences in books
are as varied as our preferences in music, art and food .
In our book club where we all
read the same books, this is
even more apparent. Some of
us like mysteries, some happy
family stories; some love
Dean Koontz, some love Jan
Karon.
I stand rightly accused of
loving "gloomy" books . books which don't assure a
happy ending , sometimes
filled with violence and abuse
and tragedy. I prefer "edgy"
stories, unpredictable stories,
stories that probably won't
tum out "happily ever after."
I love the work of Annie
Proulx (The Wyoming Stories
which contains "Brokeback
Mountain"} and Cormac ,
· McCarthy (No · Country for
Old Men and The Road).
Many of our greatest writers
&lt;lon't . pen pleasant stories:
·Steinbeck in The Grapes of
Wrath, Hemingway in A
Fare,well to Arms, and
Fitzgerald in The · Great
Gatsby.
Joyce Carol Oates , prolilic
novelist and professor of
humanities at Princeton,
wrote The Gravedigger s
Daughter, partially based on '
the story of her own grandmother and great-grandfather.
Rebecca Schwart, the main
character. is the child of
Gennan Jewish · immigrant~.
bam in the filthy hold of a
ship sitting in New York harbor in 1936. Her father, Jacob.
is an embittered fanner printer and math · teacher. Her
mother, Anna, is a silent, broken woman.
Rebecca has two older
brothers, and her father gets a
job as a cemetery caretaker
and gravedigger in upstate
New York. He is constantly
ridiculed and humiliated by
this menial work. He tells his
daughter, "In animal life the
weak are quickly disposed of.
You must learn to hide your
weakness."
The family lives in a small,
dark, cramped cottage at the
edge of the graveyard. The
father buys a radio, on which
he listens to the news, and
does not allow the rest of the
family access to it. The family anticipates the anival of
Anna's sister and her family,
fleeing the Nazis, but the ship

,,

Submilted Photo

Amy Young and Rand Clark

Young-Clark engagement ·
GALLIPOLIS _.: Amy Young ami R&lt;rnd Clark. along
with their children. Caiden and Culton YOLmg and Morgyn
Clark . would like to announce their engagement .
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Carl and Regina
Hi vely of Gallipolis. and John and Denise Damron of
Napoleon.. Ohio . She is the granddaughter of Grace ;md the
late Lawr~nce Shafer of Crown City. and Verona irnd the
late Ira Damron of Napoleon .
She is a 2002 graduate of River Valley High School and
is employed by Monumental Life lnsman~e .
The groom is the son of Kimberly Clark-.folmsorJ of Point
Ple&lt;rsanl. W.Va .. and Johnny Johnson ·Of Gallipolis . He is
the grandson of Betty Clark-Condee of Gallipolis. and
George and Jenny Clark of Point Pleasant.
He is a 1'!'!6 graduate of Gallia Academy High School
and is employed by Gudcnkauf Corp . of Columbus .
The open church wedding will be Satmday. Oct. 25.
2008'. at .5:30 p.m. at Faith Valley Community Chmch . A
receptioh will follow at the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
The .couple will reside in their home in Gallipoli s.
Charles Hollenbaugh and Megan Delaney

Delaney-Hollanbaugh
engagement
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. Troy (Lora) Delaney of
Crown City are proud to announce the engagement and
upcoming m&lt;miage of their daughter, Megan Ren,ee, to
Chmlcs Phillip Hollanbm1gh of Bidwell, son of Beth
Hullanbaugh.
. Megan gradU&lt;IIed from South Gallia High School in 2007
and is curremly employed at Fruth Pharmacy in Gallipolis.
Charles graduated from River Valley High School in·
20tl:1 &lt;\nd from Rio Grum.le Community College in May
2008 . He is currently employed at Triple "B" Vaults in
Bidwell.
The wedding will be held at. Mercerville Missionary
Baptis\ Church on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2008 . The music will
begin at I p.m. All friends and family are invited to attend.

..I!

Cancer Center names
.
Nurse Navigator
.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Tammv
~llison , RN , was recently
named the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care's Oncology
Nurse Navigator for Breast
Cance·r patients.
In this position, Ellison will
help guide patients through ·
the healthcarc system to better
provide continuity of care for
tl1c ce1ilcr's patients. In addition. she pmvide" suppor1 and
cduurtion l(lr .the patients and
their farnilv members.
Ellison j'oins Diane Young.
RN. another Nurse Navigator ·
for the Holzer Center for '------'.:..:.:&gt;
turJCer Care . Ell1son focu ses
Tammy l;lllson
im breast care patients. where
Young provides assistance for UniveL,ity of Rio Grande/Rio
patients with all other types of Grande Community College
cancers found in our area.
in 2007. Previously. she has
: ''Once an individtial is diag- been ~ part of the Holzer
posed with breast. cancer, it Health·Systems family as the
pU1 become a very scary and mcdi~al education coordinaoverwhelming time," Ellison tor from 1998 to 200 I.
said . "My job is to help make
Ellison· and her husband,
those moments less scary and . Dr. John Ellison. a physician
provide more education for with Holzer Clinic, reside in
fhe patient and their loved Gallipolis. They have two
(Jnes su they know what they cpildren, Sarah Beth, who
nre facing, and most impor- recently graduated from Ohio
tantly, that they are not facing State University with a degree
this disease alone."
in anthropology. and Daniel,
. Ellison is also recently cer- who is a student studying
tified through Educare's journalism at Bowling Green
Breast Health Navigator State University.
!raining . During this training,
In her spare time. she
!Ollison learned ways to better enjoys knitting, volunteering
~ducate patients about breast
for local agencies such as
health issues and how to American . Cancer Society.
implement a . complete pro- · American Red Cross, and the
gr~m of education and sup- Gallipolis Rotary, and is very
port for women dragnosed active in her church; St. Louis
Catholic Church . In addition,
with breast cancer.
: Training specialist Judy C. Ellison is a 12-year breast
f&lt;neece, RN , OCN, provided cancer survivor.
The Holzer Center for
comprehensive instruction on
all aspects of brea~t health Cancer Care is expanding its
management, from
the breast health services of eduMammaCare(r)
Clinical cation and support for the
13reast Exam to community women in the region .
For more i11[ormation, call
!lUtreach programs.
: Ellison received her regis- (740) 446-5474 Qr toll :free .at
tered nursing degree from the (800) 821-3860.
,

.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Will this one call for Prozac? Rio president, student view production of Welsh play

!.

David J. Lucas and Lisa A. Myers-Lucas were un ited in
marriage on Sept. 9 , 2008, in a ceremony at Gallia County
Common Pleas Court . Usa , second from left, is holding her
·new baby, Mason Lucas, while David is to her left and son
Brendan Lucas is in' front. Flanking them are Lisa's mother,
Kathy Wayan , and David's mother, Jenny Thiviner.

ON THE B OOKSHELF

PageCs

Matthew Flock and Erin Frazee

Frazee-Flock engagement
GALLIPOLIS - Kirk and Jan Frazee of Gallipolis and
Norm and Donna Flock of New Stanton. Pa .. are pleased to.
announce the engagement and upcoming wedding of their
(hildren, Erin Marie Frazee and Matthew Reed Flock , both
·
of St. Petersburg. Fla.
Erin. the granddaughter of Bill and Suzanne Frazee and
Ken and Garnet Dillon. is a 2000 graduate of Galli a
Acadeniy High School and a 2004 graduate of Marshall
University with aBBA in business management/marketing.
She is currently a commercial lender with BB&amp;T Bank in
Sarasota. Fla.
Matthew is a 1999 gradlHrte of Hempfield Area Higt{
School and a 2003 graduate of Robert Morris University
with a BS in business administration/management. He is
currently employed by Ferguson Enterprises in Tampa ~
Fla .. as a building sales consultant.
•
The wedding will be an outdoor ceremony at the Frenctt
Art Colony on July 18, 2009.

Earaches: A painful problem for many childre!l.
tion s caused by viruses). It's talk with your doctor if eardrum (which is alsd.
very important to follow the · your child has repeate.d ear called the . tympanic mem-·
directions for giving your infections. Your child's brane) during surgery and
child the medicine. Pain hearing may he affected if stay in place for an average
relievers
like
a~etafluid stays in the middle ear of 6 to 9 months. Ear tubes
an infection . This is may also decrease the numafter
Morc than 3 out of 4 chi I- minophen (Tylenol) and
dren will. have at least one ibuprofen can help make call ed otiti s media with ber of ear infections your
your child feel better and effusion (Effusi on is anothear infection by their third reduce fever. Don't give er word for fluid buildup). child gets.
The tubes are usually left
birthday. Earaches are niost your child aspirin unle ss Usually the fluid ~oes away
common in young children your doctor says it's okay. A in two to three months , and in place until they fall out
and result in millions of warm, not hot. heating pad . hearing returns to normal. on their own or yotrr doctor
off~ce visits and antibiotic held over the ear can also Your doctor n;~ay want .to decides your child no
them:
needs
pres(riptions annually. This heiJJ relieve the earache. {:heck your child again at longer
Sometimes,
another
set
of
·may be bc(ause children's
eustachian tubes are shorter Ear drops to relieve pain are this time to see if fluid is tubes may . be needed.
still present. ·
.
sometimes prescribed.
and narrower than those of
If your child has had
II' the fluid stays for more Placing tubes in the ears is
adults . . The eustachian · three ear infections in six than a few months , your an operation and has some
(you-sray-slrwr) tube is the months or fom in one year. doctor may want to check risks . Your child will need
tube thar ·connects the mid- your doctor may suggest your child's hearing . Your general anesthesia when the
die ear with the back of the that your child rake a low doctor may recomn]enu ear tube is inserted . Your doctor
nose. Normally this tube dos'c of antibiotic. every tubes (also called tympa- "'ill talk with you about the
lets fluid drain out of the day. Lrsually dirring the win - nostomy tubes) to drain the risks if he or she .thinks
middle ear.
ter. when these infections fluid if your child's hearing your child needs tubes.
If yo11 hal'e q11esrions calk
Earaches can be caused are most common . Your is decreased a lot. Eai' tubes
by ba~leria .or viruses. that doctor may want to sec are tiny plastic tube's that .witll yo11r child's pediatriinfect the lining of your your child a few times help balance the pressure in cian or coli/act the Gallia
child's eustachian tube . .the when he or she is taking the - ·your child's ears. They County Health Department
ti1be gets swollen and fill s antibiotic to make sure allow air into the middle ear at441 -2950.
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BY JOANNE ELLIOTT,

RN

GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
BUREAU FOR CHILDREN WI TH
MEDICAL HANDICAPS

Beverly
Gettles

RIO
·GRANDE
University of Rio Grande
President Dr. Greg Sojka and
Rio Grande student Nath&lt;Ul
Wood both traveled to Wales
over the summer for the production of a play that was
recently staged here in southem Ohio .
During the 2007 -{)8 school
year. 10 students from Trinity
College spent the spring
semester at Rio Grdllde taking
classes and living on campliS.
Rio Grande has an exchange
program with Trinity College
that allows students from each
institution to spend a semester
visiting the other. The Madog
·Center for Welsh Studies at
Rio Grande helps to coordinate the exchange progta~1.
In the spring, the 10 Trinity
College students Staged their
original play, "New Worlds ,"
at the Rip Gnmde campus.
The play, which wa' based on
the Welsh migration to southem Ohio in the 1800s. told the
story of two lovers who were
separated by an ocean but
remained as one within their
hearts. The play is based on
actual historic figures; including several who lived in '
southern Ohio.
The play was performed on
the Rio Grande campus ,
around the region and at a
Welsh festival in New York
City. Wood was chosen to act

is turned back at the harbor.
and the family is returned to
Germany to die in the camps.
Jacob seems full of selfhatred and abuses his family
in his frustration . There is a
horrid climax to his instability. and Rebecca is left an
orphan . Her two brothers had
both fled earlier. Little
Rebecca is taken in by a kind
teacher, and she begins reinventing herself. Throughout
her life she tries to forget who
she was, who her parents
were , what her heritage
meant.
Rebecca enters a marriage
with an abusive husband. She
ha' a son. After a severe beating (the most graphic depiction of a beating l have ever
read in fiction) , she takes her
son and flees. Once again, she
reinvents herself to escape
being found. ·
It seems we can never run
from who we truly are what we WERE is always
part of who we BECOME.
No matter how others perceive you. inside, you remain
who you really are. Rebecca's
CHARLESTON, W.Va. attempt~ to hide her real iden.The
West Virginia State
tity gnaw at her soul. She has
many secrets; but she Archives of the West Virginia
remains, to . the end, the Division of Culture and
History .will present a panel
gravedigger's daughter.
discussion
on Civil War
This is a lengthy book.
Oates is a talented and research and · writing on
desqiptive writer, good at Monday, Sept. 29, from 6 to 8
portraying the inner being of p.m. in the Norman L. Fagan
her characters. The dust jack- West Virginia State Theater in
et calls this book "emotional- the Cultural Center, State
Complex
in
ly engaging and intellectually Capitol
Charleston.
provocative ... testimony to
The program serves as the
the resilience of the individstate's
kick-off program for
ual."
National
Archives Month ,
Not all of you will like this
takes
place in October.
which
book. I anxiously await my
book club's discussing it in The Civil War panel discusOctober. l can almost predict sion is free and the public is
who will love it and who will invited to attend.
Panelists will include West
· not. It's wonderful how well
Virginia
Civil War authors
we get to know one another
and
historians
Richard Andre
through books. Just as I know
and
Steve
Cunningham
, both
Dottie loves peach cobbler, I
think Amy may find this one
calls for Prozac!

in the play along with the
Trinity College students, and
did an excellent job.
When the Trinity College
students ' staged the play in
Wales th is summer, Wood
was •Is ked to go along to lake
par1 in the prod uction.
Jeanne Jindra, director of
t~ Madog Center ·for Welsh
Studies. was not able to attend
the play bui said that the people in Wales who saw the production were very impressed .
Kevin Matherick, head faculty of arts and social sciences
at Trinity College, explained
in an e-.mail to Jindra how
much he enjoyed the play, as
well as the showing of the
documentary lilm a group of
the Trinity College smdents
did on their semester at Rio
Grande.
"I particularly enjoyed 'the
film of the Rio experience
which was made by Carys
and others - it really gave an
indication of the wonderful
opportunity. they had in visiting Rio," Matherick said in
the e-mail. '" New Worlds'
was then performed and I
really thought that it was the
best perfonnance I have seen
ofthe play - breathtaking they had the audience so emotionally involved and Nathan
was superb!"
Sojka was able to travel. to
Wales for the production. and

' aid the trip served several
purposes. First of all. nc wanted to support Wood and all of
the students in the production.
The play was very well .
received and Sojka said the
people in Wales were pleased
with the work that Wood and
the Trinity College students
did in putting the production
together.
Sojka also had the opportu. nity to meel with Trinity
College offi cials . such as
Principal Dr. Medwin Hughes
to discuss how the exchange
. program between the two universities c.m be enhanced and
expanded.
Trinity College will continue to send large groups of students as it did in the spring
semester. and these students
will continue to work on special projects. just as the students pur together the production of "New Worlds" during .
the spring semester, Sojka
said.
He &lt;md other Rio Grande
officials have also been discussing the potential for different projects the Rio Grande.
students wuld work on while
at Trinity College.
Rio Grande and Trinity
College officials are also
looking into expanding the
faculty exchange program
and searching for additional
ways to work together. Sojka

said .
Scveml things impressed ,
him. during his visit to Wales.:
incl uding the strong culture
and heritage. the work the
offici als at Trinity College are
doing. and how welcoming
and hospitable everyone was.
"We live in a global society :
today." Sojka said, explaining :
how impo11anr it is for Rio:
Grande to have this relationship with Trinity College .
Whether the Rio Grande
students are taking part in
exchange programs in Wales ;
China or India. it provides
numerous benefits for the students as they receive their'
educations and prepare forthe
job market. Sojka said.
Rio Grande is continuing to
increase ih study abroad programs. while also bringing
more intemarional students to
campus . Last year. for exam- ·
pic, students from nearly 20
different countries lived and
studied at Rio Grande.
SoJka also noted how simi-·
Jar· the countryside in Wales:
looks to southern Ohio, and:
said he is proud to have Rio:
Grande and Trinity College·
connected in so many ways.
For more

Sunday Times-Sentinel

ThMNL Guarantee Plus®

5.05%

W.Va. State Archives offer Civil War panel discussion
of Charleston , Joe Geiger or
Huntington and Terry Lowry
of South Charleston. The
group will provide a brief
overview of their wol'k and
the Civil War research .they
conducted at the West
Virginia State Archives
Library.
A question-and-answer session with the audience will
follow the discussion . The
evening will conclude with a
book signing by the. authors.
Andre has co-authored
numerous books on West
Virginia history, including
Bullets and Steel: Fight for
the Great Kanawha Valley,
1861-1865; Kwunvha Cowrry
/maReS: Volumes I and 2;
Roar Lions .(?oar; Capitols of
West
Virginia;
and
Sternwheelers on the Great

Kanall'!ra . Cunningham has
authored several articles on
the Civil War and is the former president of the Kanawha
Valley Civil War Roundtable.
an organization which promotes the study of Civil War
history in West Virginia and
its lasting effects on society
and supports the preservation
of Civil War sites and artifacts.
Cunningham also maintains the award-winning West
Virginia in the Civil War website at www.wvcivilwar.com.
Geiger is the acting director
of archives and history for the
division. where he ha' been
employed for 10 years serving as historiar1, webmaster
Ulld assistlmt director. He also
is an adjunct profes~or in the
history
department
at

Marshall University.
Geiger has published a;
number of artides .. and a·
book'. Ch•il War in Cabell
CmmtY. Wes1 Virginia. 18611865. Lowry. archives a.nd
history 's military records specialist . has penned numerous
·Civil War books including
September Bloud: The Bmtle
oJCamifex Ferl)'; La.tt Sleep:
The Battle of Droop
Mo11illain; The Bailie ofScary
Creek ; Images of the Civil
· War; and histories of the 22nd
Virginia Infantry and . 26th
Battalion Virginia Infantry.

RIO GRANDE - The Archon Alumni Association
. University of Rio Grande/Rio was presented with the
Grande. Community College Alumni
of
Citation
Alumhi Association handed Appreciation in recognition
out its annual awards for out- of the time, effort and service
standing alumni during the the members of the organizar~ent 2008 Rio Grande tion put forth on behalf of Rio
reunion.
. Grdllde and the Lighting The
The Rio Grande reunion Way Capital Ciunpaign.
invited all alumni back to
Annette Ward. director of
campus, and included several alumni relations at Rio
activities such as a picnic at
the President's House, tours Grande, said the alumni assopf campus, the awards pre- ciation was proud to present
sentation and the dedication the awards to all of the
of the new Dean S. Brown deserving winners. The alumStudent Activities Room ni association was also happy
inside the newly renovated to see alumni from all around
and
expanded
Davis the state arid the region attend
the reunion event.
University Center. ·
Four alumni and one alumAI umni came from as far
ni group all received awards away as South Carolina to
at the reunion.
attend.
Tony Daniels, a graduate of
Rio Grande has had to
. the class of 19'!5, was pre- move the dlite for the reunion
sented the Rio Grande .event in recent years, and
Faculty Citation in recogni- Ward is hoping that the event
tion of his energy and dedica- will continue to grow in poption to the students, athletes, ularity so that more and more
faculty and staff at Rio alumni will come back to
Grande. Daniels currently campus for the event each
serves as director of campus
sports and recreation and also year.
Rio Grande students Jason
wotts as an assistant coach
for the men's soccer team at Kellison, Sara Stiffler, Levi
Rice and Josh Sherwood all .
Rio Grande.
Roy Moses, a graduate of assisted with the event, taking
the class of 1955, was pre- · the alumni on tours and talksented the Rio Grande ing with them about current
Alumni Award in honor of his events on campus.
"It was good to see so many
loyal and continued efforts to
suppo.rt Rio Grande in numer- alumni and get a chance to.
ous ways.
talk to them," Stiffler said.
Stacie Vaughn Hutton, a
She enjoyed talking with
graduate of the class of I'!94, the alumni about their experi'{l'as presented with the ences at Rio Grande, showing
Atwood Achievement Award them some of the new buildrecognition of her profes- ings and facilities on campus,
sional and civic achievements and talking with them about
reflecting credit to and fur- some of the new programs.
thering the ideals_and objecAll alumni are invited to
tives of Rio Grande.
visit
· campus at any time
Mark Coe, a graduate of the
class of 1971 , was presented throughout the year, and Ward
the Distinguished Alumnus is pleased so many were able
Award in honor of his out- to attend the Rio Grande
itanding achievements in pro- reunion.
. Fonrwre infm;matioll, calf
. fessional endeavors.
The Fmtemal Order of the Wani at (800) 282-7201.

For

more

injhrmation

abolll the Cil'i! Wai- panel discussimr. contact Bnw1 IV&lt;rrd,
cu.;tim~ assistcmt (hreclOr
archi\·e1· and lriston-. at (3o4!
558-0230 or e-1111iil him at
bryan.n•ard@nvculiure .org .

Facing &amp; Fighting
Cancer.
••

We work as a team with our patients, their families,
healthcare professionals and specialists. By offering the
latest advances in cancer prevention, detection, diagnosis
a tid treatment, we make it possible for patienrs to receive
quality cancer care right here in our community.

m

2973 Piedmont Rd. • Huntington • 429-4788
t,'l.f • 9:30-2:00 Sat.

'·-..;'I ·

:t

on

tile exchan}ie pro}iram. the:
pmduction ()("New Worlds":
or tire Madog Center for
Welsh Studies, mil Jindra at'
(li00)282-7201 .

Rio association hails
outstanding alumni

Celebrtding_ special·
·· days with you!

·SAFETY COVERS
CHEMICAL KITS
PIPEUNE ANTI·FAEEZE

il~j'ormation

.'

r"

CANCitR.

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lNG :CANCER.
EVERVD,AY.

or

�,,

iunbap mime~ -&amp;entinel

PageC6

COMMUNI1Y

Sunday, September 21, 2008

From left are Kim, David
and Madison Johnson,
owners of Diamond J.
Ranch and Rodeo Co., Ken
Moore, executive director of ·
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, and Linda JeffersLester, fund development
manager, Holzer
Foundation. .

Dl

INSIDE
~wn on

the Farm, Page .02

Sunday, September 21, 2008

·Flavors of the "Week

-------

Submitted photo

A stew that stans·on the
stove' ends in the-oven.

Welcome to_ ~nk· ~i~\

Bv J.M. HIRSCH · AP FOOD EDITOR

Cancer Center, rodeo company
partnering to combat cancer
li ALLIPOLIS .
Diamo nd J. Ranch and
Rodeo Co. and Holzer
Center for Cancer Care
1 f!CCCJ have partnered to
ri.1i:-,e awareness about breast
. ._·:lJH:cr.

l) uring the rodeo, to be
held on Friday. Sept. 26and
'i at urday, Sept. 27, Saturday
-:vening has been designat- ·
cd a; ''Pink Night at the
Rndeo ·· to raise awareness
about breast cancer. The
mdeo begins at 8 p.m. and
"il l be held in the
Henderson Indoor Arena in
.lad. sun .
To kick off breast cancer
awa reness month during
-October, $1 from each
adm ission ticket sold will
be donitted to Holzer Center
lor Cancer Care.
K itil ·Johnson, her hush,llld, David, and 4-year-old
dau ghter, · Madison, own
Dia;nond · J . Ranch and
Rodeo Co. "Pink Night"
became a reality after Kim
l o ~ued onto Holzer Medical
C~llte r's website and read
about the Appearance
Center at the Holzer Center
lor Cancer Care.
Wigs and special services
for any woman who has suffe red breast or other forms
of cancer are available at the
Appearance Center. Kim
said, " A friend e~perienced
a recent cancer scare and I
wanted to do S\)mething to
raise awareness about breast
cancer."

--we are delighted to have
" ' pport and involvement
!'rom local bu ;inesses in the
community we serve . We
have numerous activities

The smoked paprika in
this beef stew adds no real
heat , just deep , smoky
notes that go well with the
beef and potatoes . The
cider and ginger add sub.tle sweet notes.

planned for' Breast Cancer call (740) 446-5474 or tollAwareness Month that free at I -800-82 I -3860.
include a health fair at For more information, visit
Holzer Cepter ·for Cancer hendersonarena .com or call
Care," said Ken Moore, (740) 988-297 Iexecutive director, Holzer
Center for Cancer Care .
"This is certainly one of
the more unique fund-raisers we have been involved
in and we are so pleased that
the Johnson family remelllbered the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care," added Linda
Jeffers-Lester, fund development manager for the
Holzer Foundation.
. The HCCC is a joint ventiue of Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic
and opened its doors for
patients in March 2005. The
comprehensive cancer cenr
ter offers both radiation
oncology and medical
oncology services. The
chemotherapy suite overlooks the Center's Healing
Garden that includes a
walking labyrinth , reflecting pool and benches for
resting and meditation.
The center also houses an
American Cancer Society
Cancer Resource Center
and an American Cancer
Society Patient Navigator.
In May 2006, the center
announced its affiliation with
Ohio ' State
University
' •Quant/tl•sl ·
Comprehensive
Cancer
Center-Arthur G. James
1!1. SAlE
Cancer Hospital and Richard
Twin ... '799 .•••••'1229
J. Solove Research Institute.
· ·
FuA...:.'I79 ...... '1279
·The Holzer Center for
5
· Cancer Care is expanding
yousave
SbQO!
Klng ... '1~99 .... 599
its breast health services of
education ·and support for
the women in the region .
For 'more information,

9

Fish fry fund-raiser
slated at Wilkesville
WILKESVILLE - A fish lions towardS the Wilkesville
fry dinner will be held at the Township Volunteer Fire ·
· · Wi)kesville
Community Department's new frre truck,
Center, Saturday, Oct. 4, from which arrived at the
noon to 4 p.m . All proceeds Department in January 2007.
from the dinner will go · The Wilkesville Township
towards a payment on the Volunteer
·Fireman's
new tire truck.
Association Inc. is an organinle menu will consist of zation formed by the frrefightfish dinners. which include · ers and their wives, til help
two pieces of fish, cole slaw, provide services to the
potato salad, baked beans, a Wilkesville Volunteer Fife
slice of bread andl~;&gt;ur choice Department. It is a 50l(c_)3
or coffee, tea , an lemonade.
do
·nterc will also be hot dogs, organization, so any nallon
made is tax deductible.
sloppy joes, fish sandwiches,
To make a donation, make .
deS&gt;ens, pop. and water.
h k
bl t
paya e o:
The public is encouraged to your c ec
~ome out and support the Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Wilkesville
Township Fireman's Association , Inc .
Vol unteer
Fireman's P.O. Box 180, Wilkesville,
As,ociation Inc. The associa- Ohio 45695, c/o Don
tion will be accepting dona- Newsom, treasurer.

·Reading program allows kids
,.to dream, earn circus tickets
GALLIPOLIS - Kids, are
you interested in reading soe
cool I ibrary books? Are you
interested in earning a free
circus ticket at the same time?
Ringling .Bros. and ~am~m
&amp; Bailey and area libranes
wi II be hosting some serious
fun with "Reading w1th
Ringling Bros.,'' including
Bo~sard Memorial Library, .
located at 7 Spruce St.
.
The reading program ts
easy and fun for kids to participate . The best parus that
kids can earn a free Ringling
-Bros. circus ticket by simply
doing their library reading.
Children from ages 2-12 simply need to enroll with the

librarian , who will give kids
everything to start their
library reading. Kids will
even receive cool bookmarks,
clown noses and coloring
sheets, too.
This unique library reading
program encourages children
not oniy to read, but also to
discover, dream and learn.
For more information, visit
www.ReadingwithRingling.c
om .
Ringling Bros. and Barnum
&amp; Bailey presents Boom A
Ring will perform in
Hunti . .,.un, W.Va ., at the Big
Sandy Superstore Arena, Oct.
17-19.

Queen~s S l

Smoky Cider Beef Stew
_

Start to finish: 1 h6ur • Servings: 6

2 large carrots, cut into thin rounds
3 SIOOII potatoes. cut into small chunks
14 1!2-ounce can diced to100toes. with
juice
14-ounce can beef broth
l/4.cup cool water
I I12 tablespoons cornstarch
Salt and ground black pepper, to taste
der, about 20 minutes. ·
In a small glass, mix together the water
and cornstarch, then add tb.e mix.ture to the
stew. Simmer for several minutes, or until
the stew begins to.. thicken ..,Season with
salt and pepper. .
.
··
Arrange the fl!unds of bis&lt;.;uit dough
over the \01) of the stew._-Place the ·pot in
the oven and bake for 15' minutes. or until
the biscuits have risen ·an'd browned lightly.
·
· ·
.
Alternatively, the ,stew can be ladled
into 6 large oven-safe ramekins . Arrange
the ramekins on 'a rimmed baking sheet,
. then top each with a .biscuitand bake. the
biscuits may bake faster with this method .

AP photo
~moky

Cider Beef !')tew is seen in this Sunday, Sept. 7 photo. The smoked paprika in this
beef stew adds no real heat, just deep, smoky notes that go so well with the beef and potatoes.

.'

.
I

There.are a lot of great school fundraisers in Ohio.
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· 2 tabltspoons olive oil
I large y~llow onion, .diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 sprigs fresh thyme
I teaspoon smoked paprika
1/4 teaspoon powdered ?inger
2 pounds bottom sirloin or skirt s{eak.
cut into bite-size chunks
. I
112 cup apple cider
· Prepared biscuit dough or puff pastry,
cut into six 2- to 3-incli rounds
Heat the oven to 350 F.
In a large Dutch oven over medium-.
high, ~ombine the oil, onion, garlic,
thyme, smoked paprika and ginger. Saute
until the onion is tender, ~bout 5 min~tes.
Add the steak and brown on all s1de~.
about 5 minutes . Discard the thyme
sprigs.
.
Add the cider to deglaze the. pot, then
use a wooden spoon to scrape the_bottom
to release any stuck bits.
·Add the carrots, potatoes, di.ced tomatpes and beef broth. Stir well, then bring to
a simmer. Cook until the potatoes are ten-

w-.

Q99

you save

Most stews call for
The stew can be eaten as
tougher cuts of meat, is at the end of the stovewhlch tenderize during top simmer. But thi s
long simmers. This ver- recipe takes it' another step
sian saves time by using a by topping it with round s
better. more tender cut of of biscuit dough (use prebeef. If you'd rather let it · pared dough from the grosimmer for a while , switch cer) and baking it just
to a more traditional stew until the biscuits are lightmeat.
ly browned.

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,.

�,,

iunbap mime~ -&amp;entinel

PageC6

COMMUNI1Y

Sunday, September 21, 2008

From left are Kim, David
and Madison Johnson,
owners of Diamond J.
Ranch and Rodeo Co., Ken
Moore, executive director of ·
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, and Linda JeffersLester, fund development
manager, Holzer
Foundation. .

Dl

INSIDE
~wn on

the Farm, Page .02

Sunday, September 21, 2008

·Flavors of the "Week

-------

Submitted photo

A stew that stans·on the
stove' ends in the-oven.

Welcome to_ ~nk· ~i~\

Bv J.M. HIRSCH · AP FOOD EDITOR

Cancer Center, rodeo company
partnering to combat cancer
li ALLIPOLIS .
Diamo nd J. Ranch and
Rodeo Co. and Holzer
Center for Cancer Care
1 f!CCCJ have partnered to
ri.1i:-,e awareness about breast
. ._·:lJH:cr.

l) uring the rodeo, to be
held on Friday. Sept. 26and
'i at urday, Sept. 27, Saturday
-:vening has been designat- ·
cd a; ''Pink Night at the
Rndeo ·· to raise awareness
about breast cancer. The
mdeo begins at 8 p.m. and
"il l be held in the
Henderson Indoor Arena in
.lad. sun .
To kick off breast cancer
awa reness month during
-October, $1 from each
adm ission ticket sold will
be donitted to Holzer Center
lor Cancer Care.
K itil ·Johnson, her hush,llld, David, and 4-year-old
dau ghter, · Madison, own
Dia;nond · J . Ranch and
Rodeo Co. "Pink Night"
became a reality after Kim
l o ~ued onto Holzer Medical
C~llte r's website and read
about the Appearance
Center at the Holzer Center
lor Cancer Care.
Wigs and special services
for any woman who has suffe red breast or other forms
of cancer are available at the
Appearance Center. Kim
said, " A friend e~perienced
a recent cancer scare and I
wanted to do S\)mething to
raise awareness about breast
cancer."

--we are delighted to have
" ' pport and involvement
!'rom local bu ;inesses in the
community we serve . We
have numerous activities

The smoked paprika in
this beef stew adds no real
heat , just deep , smoky
notes that go well with the
beef and potatoes . The
cider and ginger add sub.tle sweet notes.

planned for' Breast Cancer call (740) 446-5474 or tollAwareness Month that free at I -800-82 I -3860.
include a health fair at For more information, visit
Holzer Cepter ·for Cancer hendersonarena .com or call
Care," said Ken Moore, (740) 988-297 Iexecutive director, Holzer
Center for Cancer Care .
"This is certainly one of
the more unique fund-raisers we have been involved
in and we are so pleased that
the Johnson family remelllbered the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care," added Linda
Jeffers-Lester, fund development manager for the
Holzer Foundation.
. The HCCC is a joint ventiue of Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic
and opened its doors for
patients in March 2005. The
comprehensive cancer cenr
ter offers both radiation
oncology and medical
oncology services. The
chemotherapy suite overlooks the Center's Healing
Garden that includes a
walking labyrinth , reflecting pool and benches for
resting and meditation.
The center also houses an
American Cancer Society
Cancer Resource Center
and an American Cancer
Society Patient Navigator.
In May 2006, the center
announced its affiliation with
Ohio ' State
University
' •Quant/tl•sl ·
Comprehensive
Cancer
Center-Arthur G. James
1!1. SAlE
Cancer Hospital and Richard
Twin ... '799 .•••••'1229
J. Solove Research Institute.
· ·
FuA...:.'I79 ...... '1279
·The Holzer Center for
5
· Cancer Care is expanding
yousave
SbQO!
Klng ... '1~99 .... 599
its breast health services of
education ·and support for
the women in the region .
For 'more information,

9

Fish fry fund-raiser
slated at Wilkesville
WILKESVILLE - A fish lions towardS the Wilkesville
fry dinner will be held at the Township Volunteer Fire ·
· · Wi)kesville
Community Department's new frre truck,
Center, Saturday, Oct. 4, from which arrived at the
noon to 4 p.m . All proceeds Department in January 2007.
from the dinner will go · The Wilkesville Township
towards a payment on the Volunteer
·Fireman's
new tire truck.
Association Inc. is an organinle menu will consist of zation formed by the frrefightfish dinners. which include · ers and their wives, til help
two pieces of fish, cole slaw, provide services to the
potato salad, baked beans, a Wilkesville Volunteer Fife
slice of bread andl~;&gt;ur choice Department. It is a 50l(c_)3
or coffee, tea , an lemonade.
do
·nterc will also be hot dogs, organization, so any nallon
made is tax deductible.
sloppy joes, fish sandwiches,
To make a donation, make .
deS&gt;ens, pop. and water.
h k
bl t
paya e o:
The public is encouraged to your c ec
~ome out and support the Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Wilkesville
Township Fireman's Association , Inc .
Vol unteer
Fireman's P.O. Box 180, Wilkesville,
As,ociation Inc. The associa- Ohio 45695, c/o Don
tion will be accepting dona- Newsom, treasurer.

·Reading program allows kids
,.to dream, earn circus tickets
GALLIPOLIS - Kids, are
you interested in reading soe
cool I ibrary books? Are you
interested in earning a free
circus ticket at the same time?
Ringling .Bros. and ~am~m
&amp; Bailey and area libranes
wi II be hosting some serious
fun with "Reading w1th
Ringling Bros.,'' including
Bo~sard Memorial Library, .
located at 7 Spruce St.
.
The reading program ts
easy and fun for kids to participate . The best parus that
kids can earn a free Ringling
-Bros. circus ticket by simply
doing their library reading.
Children from ages 2-12 simply need to enroll with the

librarian , who will give kids
everything to start their
library reading. Kids will
even receive cool bookmarks,
clown noses and coloring
sheets, too.
This unique library reading
program encourages children
not oniy to read, but also to
discover, dream and learn.
For more information, visit
www.ReadingwithRingling.c
om .
Ringling Bros. and Barnum
&amp; Bailey presents Boom A
Ring will perform in
Hunti . .,.un, W.Va ., at the Big
Sandy Superstore Arena, Oct.
17-19.

Queen~s S l

Smoky Cider Beef Stew
_

Start to finish: 1 h6ur • Servings: 6

2 large carrots, cut into thin rounds
3 SIOOII potatoes. cut into small chunks
14 1!2-ounce can diced to100toes. with
juice
14-ounce can beef broth
l/4.cup cool water
I I12 tablespoons cornstarch
Salt and ground black pepper, to taste
der, about 20 minutes. ·
In a small glass, mix together the water
and cornstarch, then add tb.e mix.ture to the
stew. Simmer for several minutes, or until
the stew begins to.. thicken ..,Season with
salt and pepper. .
.
··
Arrange the fl!unds of bis&lt;.;uit dough
over the \01) of the stew._-Place the ·pot in
the oven and bake for 15' minutes. or until
the biscuits have risen ·an'd browned lightly.
·
· ·
.
Alternatively, the ,stew can be ladled
into 6 large oven-safe ramekins . Arrange
the ramekins on 'a rimmed baking sheet,
. then top each with a .biscuitand bake. the
biscuits may bake faster with this method .

AP photo
~moky

Cider Beef !')tew is seen in this Sunday, Sept. 7 photo. The smoked paprika in this
beef stew adds no real heat, just deep, smoky notes that go so well with the beef and potatoes.

.'

.
I

There.are a lot of great school fundraisers in Ohio.
STEARNS &amp; FO

Luxury Cushion Firm
· with memorv loam I. cammere

Limited

only9 gQ·::::i::.

soows
.

SSQOI

•,

-~S2350 Save 60%!
only

SALE

Twin ... 1949 ......144 9
Full ..... '1079 .... ' 579
Klng ... '1499 ..}999

S'40

Sot Silo 119.

· SALE

Twln ... 'll71.... '751

FuH ..... •:nu.. ..'697

King ... '~1~ .... '1367

yousave$14101

.· =~$1599 . . JetSb:~

$1ft99
U
1

S

'IOU ..... 5()(),1

....".:.SS3205

.·

· 2 tabltspoons olive oil
I large y~llow onion, .diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 sprigs fresh thyme
I teaspoon smoked paprika
1/4 teaspoon powdered ?inger
2 pounds bottom sirloin or skirt s{eak.
cut into bite-size chunks
. I
112 cup apple cider
· Prepared biscuit dough or puff pastry,
cut into six 2- to 3-incli rounds
Heat the oven to 350 F.
In a large Dutch oven over medium-.
high, ~ombine the oil, onion, garlic,
thyme, smoked paprika and ginger. Saute
until the onion is tender, ~bout 5 min~tes.
Add the steak and brown on all s1de~.
about 5 minutes . Discard the thyme
sprigs.
.
Add the cider to deglaze the. pot, then
use a wooden spoon to scrape the_bottom
to release any stuck bits.
·Add the carrots, potatoes, di.ced tomatpes and beef broth. Stir well, then bring to
a simmer. Cook until the potatoes are ten-

w-.

Q99

you save

Most stews call for
The stew can be eaten as
tougher cuts of meat, is at the end of the stovewhlch tenderize during top simmer. But thi s
long simmers. This ver- recipe takes it' another step
sian saves time by using a by topping it with round s
better. more tender cut of of biscuit dough (use prebeef. If you'd rather let it · pared dough from the grosimmer for a while , switch cer) and baking it just
to a more traditional stew until the biscuits are lightmeat.
ly browned.

108.

SALE

Twtn ... 11449 .... ' 949
Fun ..... '1579 ... .'1079
Kfng ... '1899 .... 1 1399

Save 60%!

51}82

kt!Stn 1119.

SALE

TWin ... '2733 .... ' 1093
full ..... '3098 .... 11239
King ... 1,4273._
...' 1 709

ki!Sin

loa. SALE

Twin ... 'I 949 .... 51549
full ..... '2079 .... 516 79
Ktng ... '2399.... ' 199?

The Ohio Lottery is still the biggest.
Last year, Ohio Lottery players provided over 672 million dollars to Ohio's
schools. So play a few games, because the biggest winners are the kids.
Take a chance for education. Odds are, you'll have fun.

OVER S15.5 BILLION FOR EDUCATION.

LOTTERY..
Toll Free: 1·800· 766·4 163
www . m att ressware house .co m

Gallipolis 7 40-441-9730
Silver Bridge Plaza, Nextto Big Lots.

,.

�&amp;unba~ QI:imes-ientinel DO'WN' ON THE FARM

PageD2

&amp;unbap lttmn-&amp;mtlntl • Page 03

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Meigs County, OH

Annual meeting held Officer training
.In One Week With usREACH OVER 28 000 PROSPECTS
y

E-mail
classified@ myda lly1 ribune.com

I

.
._,

To Place
\!tribune
· Your Ad,
Call Today••• (740) 446..:2342
,
'

'

www.rnydailysentinel com
www .myda llyregister.com

Sentinel

~egl~ter

(740) 992-2156

(304) 675-1333

Or Fax To

992- 2157

675-5234

Otftfee #oa.-..s"

,;.f

l,

'1_/yJ__J;J_~,

www mydaJiytribune co m

'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
.........,.
o~ded to your classified ads
,......_ ~

Monday t h r u Friday
8 : 0 0 a.IT'I. t o 5 : 0 0 p.IT'I.

20 0

=;;;~L~o;;;st;;;&amp;=F"""~;;;d;;;;;;=

:lost: 4·5 mos. old black
kitten. Has a white spot
&amp; a he'rma on her belly.
Child's pel . Reward 1f
. found. Call 446-8142 or
645-6012 any1ime

.
.
Submitted photo
Galha County Farm Bureau held its annual meeting on Aug . 25 at the Bob Evans Farm
Shelterhouse . The meat. was provided_and cooked by Farm Bureau members and every
ta,m1 ly brought a covered d1sh to share. About BO people attended the meeting this year.·
Music by Bub Williams of Black Shirt Entertainment was enjoyed. After enjoying a delicious
meal, a business meeting and election was held , and recognition of outstanding county
leaders. Before the meeting was ad.i ourned, door prizes were given away. In this photo,
Jess1ca Miller Caughlan of the Farm Bureau presents Gallia Farm Bureau President Bob
Powell w1th a recognition certificate.

River Valley FFA hoosts 'Farm Day'
GALLIPOLIS - Before
the c lose of the 2007-08
sc hoo l year, several members of the River Valley
Hi gh School FFA Chapter
spent the day with stude.nts
from Guiding Hand.
Tliis was the second year
for the eve nt. Members
brought va (i o us a nimal s,
, in c ludin g
donkeys,
a
horse. ca lves. goats, a ferret and rabb its from the ir
homes and farms for the
stud en ts
to
enjoy.
Me mbe rs a lso se t up activities suc h as fac e painting,

volleyball, football toss,
cornhole, a hay ride , coloring station and planting
station for students to
enjoy throughout the day.
Local entertainer Bub
Williams put on a concert
for everyone to enjoy. The
event was again a huge success for in every aspect.
Both group~ of students
benefited
from
their
inyolvement in the day's
activities.
FFA me mbers who were
on hand for the eve nt
included David Holliday,

Alisha Green, Tabby Oiler. Veith. Kaitlyn Robe rts ,
Jere my
Sides,
Loren Bridget
Suver,
Jacob
Baldwin , Kyl e Bryant , Grubbs, Trent Hol comb ,
Josh
Staley,
C hri s Aaron Mulholand , Tyler
Diamond , Matt Workman , Wo o ldrid ge,
Jenni fe r
Allison
Porter, Te ssie Grubbs, Trevor Baker,
Richard s, Levi Stumbo, Bryce Darst , Ryan Manley ,
Patrick Mulholand , . Ryan Lisa Cox. Travis Roush,
Egg leton , Adam Lewi s, Jord a n Miller, Je'remy
Jame s Fielder, . Clayton Grace , Jere m y Brumfield,
Curnutte, Molly Ruff, Will Smith, Zane Carroll
Devin
Gibbs,
C hri s and Eric CaldwelL
Misner. Austin Casto, Alan
Members and · advi sors
Shillington, M ait Muiford , would like to thank Guid'ing
Ben
Schrock,
Austi·n Hand staff and students for
Ju s tu s,
Kaylee
Ro se, allowing them to once again
Megan Clonch, Sarah • spend the day with them .

Com may overtake
wheat in the heartland LivESTOCK REPORT
Bv BLAKE

NICHOLSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

i.'

BISMARCK.

N.D.

Corn is takinl.! over wheat

that of the state's corn crop.
But even wheat farmers
agree that corn is becoming
a mamslay of eastern North

acres in much ~lf the nation's Dakota agriculture as worldheat11und .
wide demand for the crop
Not1h Da~ota farmers are grows, pushed in part by the
expected to produce more ethanol industry.
· "In the eastern part of the
bushels Df com than spring
wheat for the second straight state, corn is probably going
year, and for only the second to become even more of a
time 111 state history . Kansas . thing," said Jim Burbidge-,
farmers also could harvest who fanns near the .north ·•.
more corn than wheat, the · central town of Mohall.
·
federal
Agriculture
Still , h!l said that in North
·
Dakota; wheat will ·a lways
Depart ment says.
US DA has projected the be king . '"That 's our specialstate's com-for-grain crop at .ty," he said. "And the weath269 million bushe ls, down I er is going to be key to com
percent from last year's production.';
Nissen agreed, say ing the
record high. ' Last month ,.
USDA pegged the state's crop in the field has th~
sp.n ng " heat crop at 224 potential to meet the USDA
mtllt on bushels, down 4 per- numbers but that in many
cent from a year ago.
areas, farmers need a late
Belore last year, _corn growing season to · get the.
bushels had never. surpassed crop in.
· " We need to go past the
spnrig wheat 10 North
Dakota. accord mg to USDA
k 'l l.
f
"
"
data. Th is year. the estimated ;tverage 1 mg rost ,at:s,
corn productit;m would out- partt~ularly 10 the northeast ,
pace both spring wheat and he sa td:
.
.
durum· wheat . bushe ls . .The ... ~ut n ght now, Nt ssen satd,
durum whea.t crop. which is
It s,the best crop we ever
i.tsed for pasta. is pegged at ha&lt;;l .
just over 41 million bushels.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M .
" I bel,ieve th is is a trend
that's going to continue in - New Mexico's congre s-.
com ,s favor:· said Larimore sional delegation has sent a
farn1er Jay Nissen . president letter as king the U.S.
of the North Dakota Corn Department of Agriculture to
Growers Association. " I expedite approva l of the
think producers ar.e seei ng state's application for splitthe financial viab ility of com state status for bovine tuberversus other crops. especial- culosis.
ly young producer&gt;."
The USDA decided last
production
has week to end New Mexico 's
Corn
increased tenfold in North status as a bovine tuberculoDakota in the past 20 years •. sis-free s tate because two
but no one be lieves corn will infected herds had been
supplant s pring wheat as found in New Mexico's
North Dakota's staple crop. accredited free-zone and the
North Dakota leads the
state no longer met federal
nation in spring wheat prorequirements.
duction every year. and
The delegation said the
fanners plant nearly th ree
times as many whcll.t acres USDA decision was excessive and could cost ranching
as corn . .
There are other factors to and dairy operations unneccons iuer. as well . A bushe l of essary tests. Split-state stacorn weighs about 4 pounds tus. they ;ay, would cover
less than a bushel of wheat. the small areas w here the
· And the va lue of the spring infected herds were found
wheat crop is hundreds of while the rest of the state
millions of dollars more than would be a TB- free zone.

...

j

Lost·Grey and white female Pers1an cat on Aug.
1i from
Minersville.
·Syracuse , area. li seen.
please call. Reward $100
for
safe
return.
740·992-0383.

Submitted photo
Four officers from the Gallipolis FFA Chapter, from left, Kody Roberts, Megan Foster, Kaci
Shoemaker and Jered Shaffer, recently attended the 2008 Chapter Officer Training
Conference. The FFA members spent the morning leaming valuable leadership skills from
,Andrew McCrea, a former national FFA officer and an Oscar-winning broadcaster and host
of "T~e American Courtryside." Andrew's presentation demonstrated leadership skills that
the FFA officers can utilize in directing their own FFA chapters.

GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc.
·market report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008.

Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415 lbs. , Steers, $85-$115, Heifers, $80$107 .50; 425-525 lbs., Steers, $85-$112,
Heifers, $80-$ 105 ; 550-625 lbs., Steers, $.85$108, Heifers , $80-$95; 650-725 lbs. , Steers,
$85-$105, Heifers , $80-$ 102.5.0; 750-850 lbs. ,
Steers, $85-$95, Heifers, $80-$102.
~!
·

Cows-Steady ·
Well-Muscled/Fleshed , $55-$65.25.
Medium/ Lean, $45-$5 4.
Thin / Light , $30-$44.
Bulls , $50-$73.

5

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Cillf Pairs , $585-$785; Bred Cows,
$280-$835; Baby Calves, $80-$2 15; Goats ,
$13-$100; Lambs, $70-$122.50 .

Upcoming specials:
Replacem e nt brood cow sa le, Wednesday,

Sept. 24, 12:30 p.m.
For more info rmation , call DeWayne at
(740) 339-0241 or Stacy ar ( 304) 634-0224.
Visit the website at www.uprodacers .com.

lost &amp; Found

Announcements

Profeuional Service•

'

MISSing
Black male dog. med1um
s1ze. sh0rt·ha1r gray on
lace. brown collar. Last
seen Oshel Rd. Rt. 2
side
Rewa"rd
304_675_4027
Notket
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO recommends !hal you do
bus1ness With people you
kn.ow, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have 1nvest1gatmg the offering.
Skaggs Appliances has
moved
Call
740·379·9034
300

Servtces

Home lmpr~vements

EXTENSION CORNER

Basement

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local references turnished Established 1975. ~a!l 2 4 Hrs
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Ple-ase be careful at
. harvest season
.

Bv

HAL KNEEN

Have you been watching
each morning as the sun
rises a bit later each day?
Tomorrow, Sept. 22, will
be the first day of autumn.
Each following day has a
little less daylight than the
previou s day until winter
begins on Dec. 21, the
shortest day of the year. So
enjoy the days to come with
their wartn sunny . days and
cool nights .
Tree foliage will soon be
changing color and nuts will
fall for squirrels to hide for
winter food. Please remember the fanners workin.g late
hours harvesting their crops
and bringing them into stprage. Their safety depends on
you.
The harvest wagdns and
tractors have reflectors and
slow moving vehicle si~ns
for a reason. When haultng
loaded wagons, the tractors
start up slow and are slow
to stop. Don' t become too
impattent and put off the
f-arm tractor, it ·inay not be
able to stop in time to
avoitl an accident. If passing, wait until you can ~ee
around them and watch out
for them turning across
traffic . !Wmember yo11r
Jood comes from the
efforts of our farmers. ·

•••
Are your peony plant
leaves .partially black? Take
a walk to the flower bed
are.a arid take a look at your
peony pl!l!lt's foliage .
ThiS ·.'s~riilg blooming
perennial lias not thrived as
well due to lhe'wet spring followed by a summer of high
humidity. This ty~ of weather has created tdeal conditions for leaf blotch and
botrytis (fungus diseases) to
grow and spread along .the
plant leaves. Spring and summer sprays of fungicides like
chlorothalonil (Daconil) and

.

Triflorine (Funginex) may
help in reducing the spread of
this disease if proper manage. ment practices are followed. ·
Make sure the plants have
10 to 12 hours of sunlight.
Space the plants four feet
apart with few other perennials or annuals crowding each
plant. This increases the
humidity around the plants.
Cut off spent blooms in May
to prevent botrytis (grey
· mold) from growing. Clean
up the infected plants now
by cutting off the diseased
foliage to within a couple of
inches of the soil line. Burn
infected foliage to minimize
spreading disease spores
throughout the garden or
bury several inches. If properly cared for, the double or
single anemone type blooms
will reach four to eight inches in diameter. These are
long-lived plants with many
surviving 20 or more years
in the same spot:
A bouquet of peonies can
create memories of grandma's house when times
were slower and gardens
were the pride and joy of. the
family.
·. •'"

Lawn Service
Lawn care mowing weed eating hedge
trimming , tall clean up
and leaf removal. Day
740·853·1702 or N1ght
740·379·2599
0 &amp; R

Poll

2 fema le cats to give
away ~ gi"ay and one
black. 446-3732
AKC Yorl{le puppieS, 10
MoeoyTo lend
wks old, Females $600.
NOTICE Borrow Smar1 Males
$ 450
Contacl the Oh10 D1vi- 304_895 _3926
slon of Financial tnstitulions Office of Consumer Cocker' Spaniel pupp1es,
Affairs BEFORE you ref1- full blooded, Buff color.
narlee yciur home or ob- 51.25. 388·040 1
tain 1l loan BEWARE ol For sale AKC Reg Pornrequests for any large
advance payments of eranran puppieS. Vet
fees or insurance. Call checked and up to date
the Off1ce ol Consumer shotstwormed.
Call
A!fiars toll free at 740"379"2886
leave
_
_ _
learn . msg. Will retum call asap
1 866 278 0003 10
1f the mortgage broker or Free Indoor K1ttens!
lender IS properly li- 740-336·0663.
censed (ThiS is a public
·n
serv1ce
announcement FREE KI ens 1-ma1e or·
1
h'l
1-emae
f
1
from the Ohio Valley angew 1e.
graylwh .11e call Kelly
Pubhsh1ng Company)
304·593·3822
500
Educat1on . FREE Kittens 2 orange 1
black &amp; 1 calico? 7 wks
old wormed &amp; de-ll.eed
.675.8154
Instruction &amp; Training 304
:---~~-~1-rl'l' 111 g•)O(I ho1mc Al ack
WV BOhr, Underground Lab pup~ ·7 1\l'ck,. wnrnll'd
Miners Class. starting .104-r.75-~ 1 51l .
Sept
22nd.
Minl!ure
Dachshund
Whit-.Co-Tra1ning
CKC
registered.
shots.
304-37:2-8346
wormed. Mates &amp; Females.
longhair · &amp;
~
shortha1r. red &amp; black/tan
600
An1mals S300 each 304-593·3820
400

Fmenml

"=====---

Neuter Scooter
is com1ng to Athens Co.,
UVettock
Mooday Sept 29th, Cat
Other Servicet
-..=;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;_;.;;;;;;;;== 01)1~ Spay/Neuter Clinic,
--==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;= $ 4 0/cat &amp; Free shots,
Charolais &amp; Reel Angus pay on , line. $SO/cat pay
breed cows, 3 Angus. at
cliniC,
Go
To
Pet CrematiOns. Call "•e 1·ters• 3 Ang us bu11 www.neuterscooter.com
740-446-3745
teeders 304-675-2274
or call Toll
Free
- - - - - - - - 1-866-662-5838
======~
_ _H_a.:..p.:..p:..y_A_d:.__
70°
Agr1cultu·e
Form.Equipmenf
Ford 4000 . nigh clearance 1ractor w1th Freemans ·loader frame · no
bucket, $3800 446·280 1
Ha\le you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed' Check out our
used
inventory
at
www.CAAEO.com. Carmichael ·
Equ1pment
740-446·241 2

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legals ......................... ,............. ,......... ,......... 100
Announcements.:........................................ 200
Birthday/Annlversary ................................. :205
Happy Ads ..................................... :..............210
Lost &amp; Found., ............................................. 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nalices ........................................ ................. 225
Personals .................. ................................ ... 230'
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services .. :......................................... :.......... 300
·Appliance Service .................. 1........... , ..... . . . 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ..................................... ................. 308
Catering .............................................. :......... 31 0
Child/Elderly Care ........................1 ........... . .. 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ...,......... ,, ...................................316
Domes tlcs/J anllorlal ............. ,., ............... .... 318
Electrical ........................ ,......................... ,...320
Financlal ........................................... 1..... . ..... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coallng ................................ :...... 328
Heme Improvements 330
Insurance .............................................. :...... 332
Lawn Servlce ............ ................................... 334
Music!Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces........ .....................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces .................................342

......

Remember to attend the
se minar, ·~Fall Bugs: What's
a Homeowner to do?'' on
Sept 22 at 7 p .m . at the
Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy branch located
216 W. Main St.
·
This extension program is
to assist ·homeowners in
identifying bugs, their life.
cycles and control · measures . Cost is $5 per family
or bring iii a pest for us to
identify to cover the fee .
Give a call, 992-6696, if
possible to help in making •
sufficient handouts .

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County
Agriculture,
Natural Resources and
Community Development
Educator, Ohio State
Ur~iver.sity Extension.)

~~~;i~~:·.·.·.:::::::::·.:::::::·.::::::::: :::·.:::::::::::::·. ·.::·.:: ::~::

Security ....... J........... ... ..................... . .... ... .... . 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travet/E,ntertainment ....... ...........................352
Flnanclal ............ :.......................................... 400
Financial Servlces .............................. ,...... :.405
Insurance .................................. .. ................ 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... soo
Buslnes&amp; &amp; Trade Schoot ........................... sos
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ............................................... ......... S1~
Personal ................................ .......................520
Anlmals ................... ,.................................... soo
Anima l Supplies .......................................... 60S
Horses, ....................................' ..................... 610
Livestock ....................:.... ,............................615
Pets ............................................................... 620
Want to buy ............................................. ,,,.,625
Agriculture ............................................... ,.,, 700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 70S
Garden &amp; Produce....................................... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hun'tlng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ................... .-.............................. 725
Merchandlse ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ,., .................................................... 915
Bargain Basement ....................................... 920
Collectlble8 .................................................. 925
cOmputers ................................................... 930
Equlpment1Supplles .................................... 935
Flea Markets ........................................- ...... 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Fumlture .................................... :................. 950
Hobby/H""' &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid 's Comer .......................................... ,...... 960
Mlecellaneous ...................... ,......•................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Fish For Pond Stocking
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, Oct. 1
~ Bidwell· Bidwell Hardware ..._

·.~ 12:00·1 :00 PM· 304·446-8828 ~.·
Pomeroy- Shade River Ag Service ·
2:00 ·3:00P.M. Phone (740) 985·3831
Gallipolis • The Feed Stop
4:00 ·5:00p.m., (740) 446·3333
•www.fa(lcysfishfarm.com

To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call: 1-800-247-2615

FARLEY &amp; FARLEY FISH FARM.
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421
· -4- -

Graphics 50¢ for small
$ 1 . 00 for large

TURNEC COWN ON
6 week old fluffy kittens
SOCIAL SECURITY SSt some are ca11cO some
No Fee Unless We WinI
are yellow 446-0585 call
1·800·582·3345
betwee~ 4PM &amp; 6PM
'

-+

i!_:e

Borders $3.00/ pcr ad

Jr"'1",

Recreational Vehicles ................... :........... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles ...................................................... 1010
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers .................. :.......... 1020
Motorcycles ......................... :..................... 1025
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ..................................: ............ 1035
. Automotive ..... ,,,., ...................................... 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
AutOs ............................ ,,., .......................... 201 o
Classlc/Antlques ....................................... 2015
CommerclaiJ1nduatrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ...................... .'...........2025
Sports Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucks .............................. ,, ..... ,,., ................ 2035
Vtlllty Trollers ............................................ 2040
Vans .......................................:.................... 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerciai ................................................JOl D
Condomlniums .......................................... 3915
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale .............................. ,,, ........ 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................:.................. 3030
lots ................................ ,, .......................... 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Aeal Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ,....... ,................ 3505
Commerclal ................................................ 351 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ....... ,................................. 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ................... .................................... 3535
Want lo Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufaclured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers ............................................. ,..........4010
Rentals ..........•.....................:...................... 4015
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ..... ,.....................:.............5000
Resort Property for sale .................... :...... S025 ·
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ...................................... ......... 6000
Accountlng/Financlal................................ 6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professi0nal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk ........... :........................... ,,, ... 6006
Child/Elderly Care .....................................6008
Clerlcal ..... ,................................................. 6010
Construetlon ..................... ......................... 6012
Drivers &amp; DeliverY .....................................6014
E~ucatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .... ,.........................6020 '
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted-General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Malntenance/Domeatlc ............................. 6032
Mana!:jement!Supervlsory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs ...... ............................................ 6036
Medical ........................... :..........................6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part· Tlm•Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restauranta ......................................... .'..... 6044
Sales .................................................... ,.. ,... 6048
Techni cal Tradea ....................................... &amp;oso
Textllet/Factory ......................................... 6052

fann Equipment

WantTo Buy

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY - HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD MAX EQUIP·
MENT
TRAilERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/({ONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER IN VENTORY AT
WWWCAAMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740·446-3825
,...------6ft. f1ntsh mower with 61\tra belts &amp; blades. $750
obo. 379-2706
~-.,...--....,--

One eighty Allis Charmers
tractor,
diesel,
$4 500
080,
(740 )985·4291
or
740-416-9995

"""'""'""'""'""'""'~

Gordon &amp; Produce
p•c"c your own cann1ng
t
7
omatoes
peppers
(Bell. Sweet, Banana &amp;
Hot, ' Red , Yellow or
Green) $4 a bucket
Bring your own containers or buy ours for $I
each Troyers Produce.
171 Lak1n Rd. Gall1pohs.
Oh 9' miles West ol Gall1poHs ot1 St Rt 141
Watch for cann1ng tomatoes signs, Closed Sun·
clays.
~~--~~-Pumpkins and Fall decorations for sale at the
Melan Patch on SR 141 ,
9 miles from Gallipolis
~O!!;;pe;;n;,T.,h;;,u;,r·.;S;;;a;,l""'""'""'
;;::
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

10 acres of good Hay
ready
to cut in
Leon
304 _458 _1601
Squa!e bales ol Hay &amp;
.-;irewood
for
Sale
304-882-2537
or
304-88 2-27 21
---'------

Miscellaneous

Now buymg
740-274-0326

Vans

G1nseng Berber Carpet S6.95 yd.
1987 Chevy 1r'2 1on Van.
cc.Hpel remnants $40 00
auto. V·6 good mes,
~~:----""!"-~- &amp; up·. Mollohan ·carpet
ATVs
runs good good work
Wan1ed to Buy- Paw 2212 Eastern A\'e Galli- ::--~"":'=;;;;;;==- van. ·
$675.
~::;4o.:~~:050 Walnuts. pot1s, OhiO740-446-7444 Par-Mar Golf Carl. camo- {740)992·0255
flaoe pa1nt. knoOb)' trres
51 500 31).:1-882·3237 or
Want To Buy
Dish Network. system
qoo
Merchandtse please call between 9AM :3==::0;;;4;,·5,;,9;3;;·,;24;;;4;;3""'""'""'"" Want tp buy Junk Cars,
to
6PM Man· -Sat
Campen/ RVs &amp;
call 740·388·0884
740·446·6604
Trail en
AnHquos
Real Estate
3000
Sales
5th
W~Hiel
lrame
new
w1re coke ta bles &amp; Jet Aeration Motors m·
111
l1
reS
and
t1rn$
5400
Slh
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
chairs. sho•" cases paired, new &amp; rebuilt
"
Call_ Ron E\'ans. wheet nllc11. S 100 call' ~
_
trunks. 01t tamps.
cups' stock.
_
1 800 537 9528
Ccmmircial
304·882·3237
or
and saucers
Mickey
~=iiio;;;;;;;;~
304
593·2443
Mouse 1tems. Childs '~------F01
sale or lease
=s
wicker
rocker.
old abystuff
lor
sale RV Serv1ce at
off1celwarehouse/storage
Can'nl·
pressed glass ware. Far- Strott€r
and
mfant
locatiOJl m Galllpo:
Trailers great'
ber Ware. coke sign, carseat, playpen and lots chael
l1s
1800
sq
tt'
clock:s, scales. etectnc more. Call Jodi at 740-446·3825
S400Jmonth Call Wayne
parno. military folding or- 740- 446 -7473
404-456-3802
Motorcycle•
gan. l1re place grate, ~.,...----~- --===-'-==Delta Queen posters &amp; Black
GitlSOn Houses For Sale
03 Kawasak1 KX 65 low ~"::"":':'"':=~==~
patnlingS,
MISSISSippi LeSPaui?WIItl
Queen
Commeraiive case-$700.00
Baseball hours hf..e new StSOO 2·3 Bedroom l1ouse. Sinabo
740·446·6665 or
Champargn bottle. a &amp; cards-Rook1es.rnemo·
qte car detached garage.
740·&amp;45-51'36
16 mm pro1cctors car- rabtlla.1nserts 740-416·
out butld1ng on app 1
toon t1tms. miscellane- 0382
acre At 112 North.
2001
g;u;;s,:..l~74~0~19;;:9~2·;•,:,;19;,;7,.,""" :~-----~~~~
ha 3500
R6. 304 895 3129
;: :;bi1Jetwh1tc.Yama
apprcx.
Coleman
70 OOOBTU
Fuel/ Oil 1 Coal/
miles. Yosh p1pe · ta11 lo;rl. 3 Bed: HUD Homes'
natural
CaII Only $15.300 ror hst1ngs
Wood I Gas
h d gas furnace
d pur- 54500.
~~#~~~~~ c ase new-use only 5 740·645-7471
800-620-4946 ex R019
~
m
onths.
S500
Kenny
'".,..~----Seasoned F~rewood. all w,·ggens,
"rlllflersvl 11e. 05
~ Hayabusa tow miles 2 BR 2 bath BncK •,orne
hardwood
$55 load (740)992·5002
ong_ owner. many extras. 1n A10 Grande 2 car ga304·882·2567 ·
rton't try to lit 1n. stand mge CIA bu1 II 1r1 2006
furniture
Complete electnc temp out S7 .900446·2254
call tor more ' mlo.
~':":=~~~-:::~ serv1ce on 20' 6x6 06 H 1
D
.74_0-;:·-3;:8-8':"·9":66":8~-:-:'--:'..,..
Used kitchen table with 2 lreated post. new used Night Trarn
ar ey 7400avldson
miles ::;3 BR 1 ba"1• •.. ouse 1n
chatrs · dar"~'- wood · grea1 one
lrme.
$275 · $13.000 740-709-6337
· vm1on S1tl1119 on 1 acte
conditiOn , hardly ever (740)992-0255
full basement CIA call tor
used
$75
Call ,.,.,---------more 1nlo. 740·388·9968
740-645-8403
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar
3- 4 BR 2 bath lam1ly
.
II
1
c
A
room bonus room over
MISCt oneout
or
oncrete
ngte.
garage approx. 3 acres
C.." anne1. Fl a1 Bar.. Slee 1
Autos
12xl4 carpet med1um Gtallng for Drams. Dnve- ===;;;~=== rarllalty wooded Cherry
brown $150.00
6x7 ways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l 02 Chrysler Sebring LXI. Ridge Rd.· RIO Grande
area
rug
$5000 Scrap Metals Open Mon. blk w/ grey leather mi.. area 740- 245-5416 or
Call
after
6pm Tue.
Wed &amp; Fn. all power options 4 diSC 740·645·2226
Leave
740-446-1423
Sam-4 30pm.
Closed CD changer. sunroot. message
Thurs. Sat &amp; Sun 104.000 mr K1ong 18' 0 a"•· HI11 area 3 BR 2 full
2000 Hond a 400 4 740-446-7300
Wheeler
Commercial
wheels &amp; new tires. bat t1 country 11v1ng new
tanning bed Couch (Tan) -.,
$5000 740-645·2487
cond1t1on 1 5 acres value
5TEEL ARCH
-~,.,.....,..-,.,...., S7s ooo now S59 goo
1 yr. old 304-895·3129
BUILDINGS
iii Honda c"" LX 5 Call 800·95!·2060
Pole Barn 30x40xl0 only Three Cancelled Or de"" spd 98.000 miles over 38R 2BA 2
$6,995, other s1zes. Fmo 20x20. 25x40 Great for
'"
gar
5.000 n extras LaiT'bO pa,10· OR 'FR Re1ca1
Delivery 877 . 773 •8356
ocat1
ng
,
Workshops!Garage.
Doors
$ 7,700
080 S11 5,000
740-446-081 7
_____.:.....____ Easy Payments Avail- 740-709- 1398
leave msg

==,...,,.=-

;=:H:e:l~p:W:a:n:t:e:d==-==H:e:lp=W:a:n:t:ed:::::;

Today
for Delay!
Savmgs
able. Don'l
Call 2006 Dodge Stratus 4
cyl auto 68 000 miles
866 _352_0469
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' $4,500 OBO 256-9031 or
WantTo Buy
256- 1233

lnfoclslon ll lookingfor a high energy Entry-Level Manager
· to work at ourGallipolis, OH office.
Voled

Recreal1onal
Veh•cles

1000

as one ol the Top 1CBest large Employers In Ohio for

Absolute Top Dolla r . sitverrg old
COins, any
10KI14K!18K gold JElW·
elry, denta l gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
proof!m 1nt sets. dra·
monds, MTS Coin Shop.
15t 2nd Avenue Gallipol1s 446-2842

the third consecutive year!
Reapon'slbllltles:

•Supe!'VIse motivate and coech team of 8-15 call cen,ter
employees
• Mondor calls and provide feedbackto call center staff
• Motivate team members Ia work together to ach1eve goals
• Orgame team meetings and des1gn and e ~ ecute contests
• Monitor and de~elop methOOs to 1mprove callcenter
performance
•~ate , analyze and recommend :::cript re'IISions
Benefits:
. •Full-lime fOUl day Mrk week
•Competitive salary plus quarterly performance bonuses
•Medk:al, dental, 401 K free lite and disab1l1ty 1nsurance
· Persol'lal growthopJ)ortunrt1es by promoting from W1!h1n
•TI.Jtionreimbursement
•Ooe week paid vacation after three momhs another week
after s1x months
•Paid holida~·s
•One work week of paid srck t1ms
•On-S1te Phys1c1an
• Paid orientation and trainmg
Requ,irements:

•Bachelors Degree
•bcellentcommuniC&amp;tion skills
•Ability to wOO in a h1gh energy en~lronment
EOEIMIF/ON
Please applyat 01.1r website : http.l/c:areers.infocisiol'l .eom
Help Wanted

George's Portable S.itwm1ll, don't haul you r Logs
to the Mill JUSt ca ll
304·675-1957
Yard Sale
B1g Yard Sale Thursday.
Fnday. Saturday &amp; Sun·
day 9am-8pm 86 Burdtte
Addtion. Pt Pleasant

2007 Honda VTX l300R.
1800
m1les,
blar;k.
$7800 388·6380
,2_0_0_7-H-o-nd_a_V-TX_1_3-00-R
1800 miles black $7800

~38::;8;,:8::;3;;,80;;,""'""'""'""'"
::
Trucks

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~===

2006 Chevy S1lverado
low miles
4 WD
304·593·0876
or
304·593-0959
-------1988 L350 Box Truck'
runs but needs work.
339·088 ;

~::-:-~--::---:::-

Foreclosure 4br. 2ba.
only 529,9001 Pr1ces tq
Sell!
For list1ngs
800-620-4,646 ex T462
Must sell. 3 bd .. 2 blh.
home in Syracuse can
(740)949·2513

Announcements

Announcements

· Yard Sale Sept 20-21
8-? Last house on nght
Sandhill
Rd. · Letart.
watch for signs. a1r compressoer.
generator,
tractor !Ires front. much
more

Gallia County Department of
Joh and. Family- Services
Work Opportunity Center

· Help Wanted

September 24, 2008
/0:00am to 2:00pm

Help' Wanted

~

3rd Allmwl.]ob l11(omwtinu Fair

Nazarene Clrurclr Family Life Center
Ill IJ First Averw e

Gallipolii ; Olrio -1563 1

Scenic Hills

-

Br1ck horne 2 112 bath.
6BR FR. LR 4 firepl8.ces huge detached
garaye . 4+ acres and
pond
fenced VERY
NICE• Call 740-379·9887
~-~~---For sale by owner. 3/2
home on 112 acre level
lot Located at 3089 Bu~
Iaville P1ke. Attached garage
Appraised
St 10.000
Ask1ng
S98,500
Carl
740·446-49 10

Skilled Nurs,ng &amp; Rehab Center·
.... ......... ·-

E1111tlu~ l!l's ~IIl li

~--

A Vrable ~eah:h,are Company
''

.luh St•l'kcrs " dt·tHilt'

Fot· mbn infurnmtion C:1ll :

RN's,
LPN's
S1NA's
, • (All Shifts, Ftf &amp; PlT)

7 ~11-~4~-.122 2

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

'

(2

J~o :S~!ry~d~~~~~o oxpl
Die~~rJech

&lt;~1

( l;dl qmll-..

.

Apply in person: Sceni&lt; Hills, Diana Harless, DON
311 Budt Ridge Road, Bidwell, OH 45614
Or fmai/ vhcjobs@vrablehealthcare.com Or Online at:

www.vrablehealthcare.com

c1 10 ~

AP l' il•tk

Rctt u1rr: 1111..' nh ·
• ~:.car .. lrnn

hl'll .. ~likd

•• ppli c.l ttn n~

''\\:l'pti ll).!

I'

R C L'~j)ll llo lo ..,l

ln1Bviewtimes: Monday-Friday from lOa to4p

(qual Oppcrrumry Employer

Arhp1·.-.
~·en ter.

•Competitive wages •Great patient Nurse ratio
• F~ Benefits package •hnntive and Bonus package
• PilldVacations•401K

Receptionist/AP Clerk
'hl'.lith
fnr

a

P''"il ll\11

nfllet''l'\jll'tll' IH"t'

• ( \ lt1lpllll"l'l lll'r :Ky

• E\n·lh:- ntl'U .,IIll lll'l' .....:n tu:- . nrpnltt.tlltmal.
l.'ill lllllllll1 L'i1 111m .uullllll'rpi.' r:-.o n .!l.., t..J !I..,

• A htl1t~

1\ l

k .1rn alid IJ&gt;.t" n... ,,

To " !Jill~ .
lh fa\ :

7..j.(l . ..j. ..lf,;7 1l ~.
A tr e nt i\ lll ' ~

D:1\ t~

~P fl\l.,ll't'

�&amp;unba~ QI:imes-ientinel DO'WN' ON THE FARM

PageD2

&amp;unbap lttmn-&amp;mtlntl • Page 03

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Meigs County, OH

Annual meeting held Officer training
.In One Week With usREACH OVER 28 000 PROSPECTS
y

E-mail
classified@ myda lly1 ribune.com

I

.
._,

To Place
\!tribune
· Your Ad,
Call Today••• (740) 446..:2342
,
'

'

www.rnydailysentinel com
www .myda llyregister.com

Sentinel

~egl~ter

(740) 992-2156

(304) 675-1333

Or Fax To

992- 2157

675-5234

Otftfee #oa.-..s"

,;.f

l,

'1_/yJ__J;J_~,

www mydaJiytribune co m

'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
.........,.
o~ded to your classified ads
,......_ ~

Monday t h r u Friday
8 : 0 0 a.IT'I. t o 5 : 0 0 p.IT'I.

20 0

=;;;~L~o;;;st;;;&amp;=F"""~;;;d;;;;;;=

:lost: 4·5 mos. old black
kitten. Has a white spot
&amp; a he'rma on her belly.
Child's pel . Reward 1f
. found. Call 446-8142 or
645-6012 any1ime

.
.
Submitted photo
Galha County Farm Bureau held its annual meeting on Aug . 25 at the Bob Evans Farm
Shelterhouse . The meat. was provided_and cooked by Farm Bureau members and every
ta,m1 ly brought a covered d1sh to share. About BO people attended the meeting this year.·
Music by Bub Williams of Black Shirt Entertainment was enjoyed. After enjoying a delicious
meal, a business meeting and election was held , and recognition of outstanding county
leaders. Before the meeting was ad.i ourned, door prizes were given away. In this photo,
Jess1ca Miller Caughlan of the Farm Bureau presents Gallia Farm Bureau President Bob
Powell w1th a recognition certificate.

River Valley FFA hoosts 'Farm Day'
GALLIPOLIS - Before
the c lose of the 2007-08
sc hoo l year, several members of the River Valley
Hi gh School FFA Chapter
spent the day with stude.nts
from Guiding Hand.
Tliis was the second year
for the eve nt. Members
brought va (i o us a nimal s,
, in c ludin g
donkeys,
a
horse. ca lves. goats, a ferret and rabb its from the ir
homes and farms for the
stud en ts
to
enjoy.
Me mbe rs a lso se t up activities suc h as fac e painting,

volleyball, football toss,
cornhole, a hay ride , coloring station and planting
station for students to
enjoy throughout the day.
Local entertainer Bub
Williams put on a concert
for everyone to enjoy. The
event was again a huge success for in every aspect.
Both group~ of students
benefited
from
their
inyolvement in the day's
activities.
FFA me mbers who were
on hand for the eve nt
included David Holliday,

Alisha Green, Tabby Oiler. Veith. Kaitlyn Robe rts ,
Jere my
Sides,
Loren Bridget
Suver,
Jacob
Baldwin , Kyl e Bryant , Grubbs, Trent Hol comb ,
Josh
Staley,
C hri s Aaron Mulholand , Tyler
Diamond , Matt Workman , Wo o ldrid ge,
Jenni fe r
Allison
Porter, Te ssie Grubbs, Trevor Baker,
Richard s, Levi Stumbo, Bryce Darst , Ryan Manley ,
Patrick Mulholand , . Ryan Lisa Cox. Travis Roush,
Egg leton , Adam Lewi s, Jord a n Miller, Je'remy
Jame s Fielder, . Clayton Grace , Jere m y Brumfield,
Curnutte, Molly Ruff, Will Smith, Zane Carroll
Devin
Gibbs,
C hri s and Eric CaldwelL
Misner. Austin Casto, Alan
Members and · advi sors
Shillington, M ait Muiford , would like to thank Guid'ing
Ben
Schrock,
Austi·n Hand staff and students for
Ju s tu s,
Kaylee
Ro se, allowing them to once again
Megan Clonch, Sarah • spend the day with them .

Com may overtake
wheat in the heartland LivESTOCK REPORT
Bv BLAKE

NICHOLSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

i.'

BISMARCK.

N.D.

Corn is takinl.! over wheat

that of the state's corn crop.
But even wheat farmers
agree that corn is becoming
a mamslay of eastern North

acres in much ~lf the nation's Dakota agriculture as worldheat11und .
wide demand for the crop
Not1h Da~ota farmers are grows, pushed in part by the
expected to produce more ethanol industry.
· "In the eastern part of the
bushels Df com than spring
wheat for the second straight state, corn is probably going
year, and for only the second to become even more of a
time 111 state history . Kansas . thing," said Jim Burbidge-,
farmers also could harvest who fanns near the .north ·•.
more corn than wheat, the · central town of Mohall.
·
federal
Agriculture
Still , h!l said that in North
·
Dakota; wheat will ·a lways
Depart ment says.
US DA has projected the be king . '"That 's our specialstate's com-for-grain crop at .ty," he said. "And the weath269 million bushe ls, down I er is going to be key to com
percent from last year's production.';
Nissen agreed, say ing the
record high. ' Last month ,.
USDA pegged the state's crop in the field has th~
sp.n ng " heat crop at 224 potential to meet the USDA
mtllt on bushels, down 4 per- numbers but that in many
cent from a year ago.
areas, farmers need a late
Belore last year, _corn growing season to · get the.
bushels had never. surpassed crop in.
· " We need to go past the
spnrig wheat 10 North
Dakota. accord mg to USDA
k 'l l.
f
"
"
data. Th is year. the estimated ;tverage 1 mg rost ,at:s,
corn productit;m would out- partt~ularly 10 the northeast ,
pace both spring wheat and he sa td:
.
.
durum· wheat . bushe ls . .The ... ~ut n ght now, Nt ssen satd,
durum whea.t crop. which is
It s,the best crop we ever
i.tsed for pasta. is pegged at ha&lt;;l .
just over 41 million bushels.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M .
" I bel,ieve th is is a trend
that's going to continue in - New Mexico's congre s-.
com ,s favor:· said Larimore sional delegation has sent a
farn1er Jay Nissen . president letter as king the U.S.
of the North Dakota Corn Department of Agriculture to
Growers Association. " I expedite approva l of the
think producers ar.e seei ng state's application for splitthe financial viab ility of com state status for bovine tuberversus other crops. especial- culosis.
ly young producer&gt;."
The USDA decided last
production
has week to end New Mexico 's
Corn
increased tenfold in North status as a bovine tuberculoDakota in the past 20 years •. sis-free s tate because two
but no one be lieves corn will infected herds had been
supplant s pring wheat as found in New Mexico's
North Dakota's staple crop. accredited free-zone and the
North Dakota leads the
state no longer met federal
nation in spring wheat prorequirements.
duction every year. and
The delegation said the
fanners plant nearly th ree
times as many whcll.t acres USDA decision was excessive and could cost ranching
as corn . .
There are other factors to and dairy operations unneccons iuer. as well . A bushe l of essary tests. Split-state stacorn weighs about 4 pounds tus. they ;ay, would cover
less than a bushel of wheat. the small areas w here the
· And the va lue of the spring infected herds were found
wheat crop is hundreds of while the rest of the state
millions of dollars more than would be a TB- free zone.

...

j

Lost·Grey and white female Pers1an cat on Aug.
1i from
Minersville.
·Syracuse , area. li seen.
please call. Reward $100
for
safe
return.
740·992-0383.

Submitted photo
Four officers from the Gallipolis FFA Chapter, from left, Kody Roberts, Megan Foster, Kaci
Shoemaker and Jered Shaffer, recently attended the 2008 Chapter Officer Training
Conference. The FFA members spent the morning leaming valuable leadership skills from
,Andrew McCrea, a former national FFA officer and an Oscar-winning broadcaster and host
of "T~e American Courtryside." Andrew's presentation demonstrated leadership skills that
the FFA officers can utilize in directing their own FFA chapters.

GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc.
·market report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008.

Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415 lbs. , Steers, $85-$115, Heifers, $80$107 .50; 425-525 lbs., Steers, $85-$112,
Heifers, $80-$ 105 ; 550-625 lbs., Steers, $.85$108, Heifers , $80-$95; 650-725 lbs. , Steers,
$85-$105, Heifers , $80-$ 102.5.0; 750-850 lbs. ,
Steers, $85-$95, Heifers, $80-$102.
~!
·

Cows-Steady ·
Well-Muscled/Fleshed , $55-$65.25.
Medium/ Lean, $45-$5 4.
Thin / Light , $30-$44.
Bulls , $50-$73.

5

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Cillf Pairs , $585-$785; Bred Cows,
$280-$835; Baby Calves, $80-$2 15; Goats ,
$13-$100; Lambs, $70-$122.50 .

Upcoming specials:
Replacem e nt brood cow sa le, Wednesday,

Sept. 24, 12:30 p.m.
For more info rmation , call DeWayne at
(740) 339-0241 or Stacy ar ( 304) 634-0224.
Visit the website at www.uprodacers .com.

lost &amp; Found

Announcements

Profeuional Service•

'

MISSing
Black male dog. med1um
s1ze. sh0rt·ha1r gray on
lace. brown collar. Last
seen Oshel Rd. Rt. 2
side
Rewa"rd
304_675_4027
Notket
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO recommends !hal you do
bus1ness With people you
kn.ow, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have 1nvest1gatmg the offering.
Skaggs Appliances has
moved
Call
740·379·9034
300

Servtces

Home lmpr~vements

EXTENSION CORNER

Basement

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local references turnished Established 1975. ~a!l 2 4 Hrs
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Ple-ase be careful at
. harvest season
.

Bv

HAL KNEEN

Have you been watching
each morning as the sun
rises a bit later each day?
Tomorrow, Sept. 22, will
be the first day of autumn.
Each following day has a
little less daylight than the
previou s day until winter
begins on Dec. 21, the
shortest day of the year. So
enjoy the days to come with
their wartn sunny . days and
cool nights .
Tree foliage will soon be
changing color and nuts will
fall for squirrels to hide for
winter food. Please remember the fanners workin.g late
hours harvesting their crops
and bringing them into stprage. Their safety depends on
you.
The harvest wagdns and
tractors have reflectors and
slow moving vehicle si~ns
for a reason. When haultng
loaded wagons, the tractors
start up slow and are slow
to stop. Don' t become too
impattent and put off the
f-arm tractor, it ·inay not be
able to stop in time to
avoitl an accident. If passing, wait until you can ~ee
around them and watch out
for them turning across
traffic . !Wmember yo11r
Jood comes from the
efforts of our farmers. ·

•••
Are your peony plant
leaves .partially black? Take
a walk to the flower bed
are.a arid take a look at your
peony pl!l!lt's foliage .
ThiS ·.'s~riilg blooming
perennial lias not thrived as
well due to lhe'wet spring followed by a summer of high
humidity. This ty~ of weather has created tdeal conditions for leaf blotch and
botrytis (fungus diseases) to
grow and spread along .the
plant leaves. Spring and summer sprays of fungicides like
chlorothalonil (Daconil) and

.

Triflorine (Funginex) may
help in reducing the spread of
this disease if proper manage. ment practices are followed. ·
Make sure the plants have
10 to 12 hours of sunlight.
Space the plants four feet
apart with few other perennials or annuals crowding each
plant. This increases the
humidity around the plants.
Cut off spent blooms in May
to prevent botrytis (grey
· mold) from growing. Clean
up the infected plants now
by cutting off the diseased
foliage to within a couple of
inches of the soil line. Burn
infected foliage to minimize
spreading disease spores
throughout the garden or
bury several inches. If properly cared for, the double or
single anemone type blooms
will reach four to eight inches in diameter. These are
long-lived plants with many
surviving 20 or more years
in the same spot:
A bouquet of peonies can
create memories of grandma's house when times
were slower and gardens
were the pride and joy of. the
family.
·. •'"

Lawn Service
Lawn care mowing weed eating hedge
trimming , tall clean up
and leaf removal. Day
740·853·1702 or N1ght
740·379·2599
0 &amp; R

Poll

2 fema le cats to give
away ~ gi"ay and one
black. 446-3732
AKC Yorl{le puppieS, 10
MoeoyTo lend
wks old, Females $600.
NOTICE Borrow Smar1 Males
$ 450
Contacl the Oh10 D1vi- 304_895 _3926
slon of Financial tnstitulions Office of Consumer Cocker' Spaniel pupp1es,
Affairs BEFORE you ref1- full blooded, Buff color.
narlee yciur home or ob- 51.25. 388·040 1
tain 1l loan BEWARE ol For sale AKC Reg Pornrequests for any large
advance payments of eranran puppieS. Vet
fees or insurance. Call checked and up to date
the Off1ce ol Consumer shotstwormed.
Call
A!fiars toll free at 740"379"2886
leave
_
_ _
learn . msg. Will retum call asap
1 866 278 0003 10
1f the mortgage broker or Free Indoor K1ttens!
lender IS properly li- 740-336·0663.
censed (ThiS is a public
·n
serv1ce
announcement FREE KI ens 1-ma1e or·
1
h'l
1-emae
f
1
from the Ohio Valley angew 1e.
graylwh .11e call Kelly
Pubhsh1ng Company)
304·593·3822
500
Educat1on . FREE Kittens 2 orange 1
black &amp; 1 calico? 7 wks
old wormed &amp; de-ll.eed
.675.8154
Instruction &amp; Training 304
:---~~-~1-rl'l' 111 g•)O(I ho1mc Al ack
WV BOhr, Underground Lab pup~ ·7 1\l'ck,. wnrnll'd
Miners Class. starting .104-r.75-~ 1 51l .
Sept
22nd.
Minl!ure
Dachshund
Whit-.Co-Tra1ning
CKC
registered.
shots.
304-37:2-8346
wormed. Mates &amp; Females.
longhair · &amp;
~
shortha1r. red &amp; black/tan
600
An1mals S300 each 304-593·3820
400

Fmenml

"=====---

Neuter Scooter
is com1ng to Athens Co.,
UVettock
Mooday Sept 29th, Cat
Other Servicet
-..=;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;_;.;;;;;;;;== 01)1~ Spay/Neuter Clinic,
--==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;= $ 4 0/cat &amp; Free shots,
Charolais &amp; Reel Angus pay on , line. $SO/cat pay
breed cows, 3 Angus. at
cliniC,
Go
To
Pet CrematiOns. Call "•e 1·ters• 3 Ang us bu11 www.neuterscooter.com
740-446-3745
teeders 304-675-2274
or call Toll
Free
- - - - - - - - 1-866-662-5838
======~
_ _H_a.:..p.:..p:..y_A_d:.__
70°
Agr1cultu·e
Form.Equipmenf
Ford 4000 . nigh clearance 1ractor w1th Freemans ·loader frame · no
bucket, $3800 446·280 1
Ha\le you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed' Check out our
used
inventory
at
www.CAAEO.com. Carmichael ·
Equ1pment
740-446·241 2

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legals ......................... ,............. ,......... ,......... 100
Announcements.:........................................ 200
Birthday/Annlversary ................................. :205
Happy Ads ..................................... :..............210
Lost &amp; Found., ............................................. 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nalices ........................................ ................. 225
Personals .................. ................................ ... 230'
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services .. :......................................... :.......... 300
·Appliance Service .................. 1........... , ..... . . . 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ..................................... ................. 308
Catering .............................................. :......... 31 0
Child/Elderly Care ........................1 ........... . .. 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ...,......... ,, ...................................316
Domes tlcs/J anllorlal ............. ,., ............... .... 318
Electrical ........................ ,......................... ,...320
Financlal ........................................... 1..... . ..... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coallng ................................ :...... 328
Heme Improvements 330
Insurance .............................................. :...... 332
Lawn Servlce ............ ................................... 334
Music!Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces........ .....................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces .................................342

......

Remember to attend the
se minar, ·~Fall Bugs: What's
a Homeowner to do?'' on
Sept 22 at 7 p .m . at the
Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy branch located
216 W. Main St.
·
This extension program is
to assist ·homeowners in
identifying bugs, their life.
cycles and control · measures . Cost is $5 per family
or bring iii a pest for us to
identify to cover the fee .
Give a call, 992-6696, if
possible to help in making •
sufficient handouts .

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County
Agriculture,
Natural Resources and
Community Development
Educator, Ohio State
Ur~iver.sity Extension.)

~~~;i~~:·.·.·.:::::::::·.:::::::·.::::::::: :::·.:::::::::::::·. ·.::·.:: ::~::

Security ....... J........... ... ..................... . .... ... .... . 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travet/E,ntertainment ....... ...........................352
Flnanclal ............ :.......................................... 400
Financial Servlces .............................. ,...... :.405
Insurance .................................. .. ................ 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... soo
Buslnes&amp; &amp; Trade Schoot ........................... sos
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ............................................... ......... S1~
Personal ................................ .......................520
Anlmals ................... ,.................................... soo
Anima l Supplies .......................................... 60S
Horses, ....................................' ..................... 610
Livestock ....................:.... ,............................615
Pets ............................................................... 620
Want to buy ............................................. ,,,.,625
Agriculture ............................................... ,.,, 700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 70S
Garden &amp; Produce....................................... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hun'tlng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ................... .-.............................. 725
Merchandlse ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ,., .................................................... 915
Bargain Basement ....................................... 920
Collectlble8 .................................................. 925
cOmputers ................................................... 930
Equlpment1Supplles .................................... 935
Flea Markets ........................................- ...... 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Fumlture .................................... :................. 950
Hobby/H""' &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid 's Comer .......................................... ,...... 960
Mlecellaneous ...................... ,......•................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Fish For Pond Stocking
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, Oct. 1
~ Bidwell· Bidwell Hardware ..._

·.~ 12:00·1 :00 PM· 304·446-8828 ~.·
Pomeroy- Shade River Ag Service ·
2:00 ·3:00P.M. Phone (740) 985·3831
Gallipolis • The Feed Stop
4:00 ·5:00p.m., (740) 446·3333
•www.fa(lcysfishfarm.com

To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call: 1-800-247-2615

FARLEY &amp; FARLEY FISH FARM.
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421
· -4- -

Graphics 50¢ for small
$ 1 . 00 for large

TURNEC COWN ON
6 week old fluffy kittens
SOCIAL SECURITY SSt some are ca11cO some
No Fee Unless We WinI
are yellow 446-0585 call
1·800·582·3345
betwee~ 4PM &amp; 6PM
'

-+

i!_:e

Borders $3.00/ pcr ad

Jr"'1",

Recreational Vehicles ................... :........... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles ...................................................... 1010
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers .................. :.......... 1020
Motorcycles ......................... :..................... 1025
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ..................................: ............ 1035
. Automotive ..... ,,,., ...................................... 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
AutOs ............................ ,,., .......................... 201 o
Classlc/Antlques ....................................... 2015
CommerclaiJ1nduatrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ...................... .'...........2025
Sports Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucks .............................. ,, ..... ,,., ................ 2035
Vtlllty Trollers ............................................ 2040
Vans .......................................:.................... 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerciai ................................................JOl D
Condomlniums .......................................... 3915
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale .............................. ,,, ........ 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................:.................. 3030
lots ................................ ,, .......................... 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Aeal Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ,....... ,................ 3505
Commerclal ................................................ 351 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ....... ,................................. 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ................... .................................... 3535
Want lo Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufaclured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers ............................................. ,..........4010
Rentals ..........•.....................:...................... 4015
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ..... ,.....................:.............5000
Resort Property for sale .................... :...... S025 ·
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ...................................... ......... 6000
Accountlng/Financlal................................ 6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professi0nal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk ........... :........................... ,,, ... 6006
Child/Elderly Care .....................................6008
Clerlcal ..... ,................................................. 6010
Construetlon ..................... ......................... 6012
Drivers &amp; DeliverY .....................................6014
E~ucatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .... ,.........................6020 '
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted-General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Malntenance/Domeatlc ............................. 6032
Mana!:jement!Supervlsory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs ...... ............................................ 6036
Medical ........................... :..........................6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part· Tlm•Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restauranta ......................................... .'..... 6044
Sales .................................................... ,.. ,... 6048
Techni cal Tradea ....................................... &amp;oso
Textllet/Factory ......................................... 6052

fann Equipment

WantTo Buy

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY - HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD MAX EQUIP·
MENT
TRAilERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/({ONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER IN VENTORY AT
WWWCAAMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740·446-3825
,...------6ft. f1ntsh mower with 61\tra belts &amp; blades. $750
obo. 379-2706
~-.,...--....,--

One eighty Allis Charmers
tractor,
diesel,
$4 500
080,
(740 )985·4291
or
740-416-9995

"""'""'""'""'""'""'~

Gordon &amp; Produce
p•c"c your own cann1ng
t
7
omatoes
peppers
(Bell. Sweet, Banana &amp;
Hot, ' Red , Yellow or
Green) $4 a bucket
Bring your own containers or buy ours for $I
each Troyers Produce.
171 Lak1n Rd. Gall1pohs.
Oh 9' miles West ol Gall1poHs ot1 St Rt 141
Watch for cann1ng tomatoes signs, Closed Sun·
clays.
~~--~~-Pumpkins and Fall decorations for sale at the
Melan Patch on SR 141 ,
9 miles from Gallipolis
~O!!;;pe;;n;,T.,h;;,u;,r·.;S;;;a;,l""'""'""'
;;::
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

10 acres of good Hay
ready
to cut in
Leon
304 _458 _1601
Squa!e bales ol Hay &amp;
.-;irewood
for
Sale
304-882-2537
or
304-88 2-27 21
---'------

Miscellaneous

Now buymg
740-274-0326

Vans

G1nseng Berber Carpet S6.95 yd.
1987 Chevy 1r'2 1on Van.
cc.Hpel remnants $40 00
auto. V·6 good mes,
~~:----""!"-~- &amp; up·. Mollohan ·carpet
ATVs
runs good good work
Wan1ed to Buy- Paw 2212 Eastern A\'e Galli- ::--~"":'=;;;;;;==- van. ·
$675.
~::;4o.:~~:050 Walnuts. pot1s, OhiO740-446-7444 Par-Mar Golf Carl. camo- {740)992·0255
flaoe pa1nt. knoOb)' trres
51 500 31).:1-882·3237 or
Want To Buy
Dish Network. system
qoo
Merchandtse please call between 9AM :3==::0;;;4;,·5,;,9;3;;·,;24;;;4;;3""'""'""'"" Want tp buy Junk Cars,
to
6PM Man· -Sat
Campen/ RVs &amp;
call 740·388·0884
740·446·6604
Trail en
AnHquos
Real Estate
3000
Sales
5th
W~Hiel
lrame
new
w1re coke ta bles &amp; Jet Aeration Motors m·
111
l1
reS
and
t1rn$
5400
Slh
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
chairs. sho•" cases paired, new &amp; rebuilt
"
Call_ Ron E\'ans. wheet nllc11. S 100 call' ~
_
trunks. 01t tamps.
cups' stock.
_
1 800 537 9528
Ccmmircial
304·882·3237
or
and saucers
Mickey
~=iiio;;;;;;;;~
304
593·2443
Mouse 1tems. Childs '~------F01
sale or lease
=s
wicker
rocker.
old abystuff
lor
sale RV Serv1ce at
off1celwarehouse/storage
Can'nl·
pressed glass ware. Far- Strott€r
and
mfant
locatiOJl m Galllpo:
Trailers great'
ber Ware. coke sign, carseat, playpen and lots chael
l1s
1800
sq
tt'
clock:s, scales. etectnc more. Call Jodi at 740-446·3825
S400Jmonth Call Wayne
parno. military folding or- 740- 446 -7473
404-456-3802
Motorcycle•
gan. l1re place grate, ~.,...----~- --===-'-==Delta Queen posters &amp; Black
GitlSOn Houses For Sale
03 Kawasak1 KX 65 low ~"::"":':'"':=~==~
patnlingS,
MISSISSippi LeSPaui?WIItl
Queen
Commeraiive case-$700.00
Baseball hours hf..e new StSOO 2·3 Bedroom l1ouse. Sinabo
740·446·6665 or
Champargn bottle. a &amp; cards-Rook1es.rnemo·
qte car detached garage.
740·&amp;45-51'36
16 mm pro1cctors car- rabtlla.1nserts 740-416·
out butld1ng on app 1
toon t1tms. miscellane- 0382
acre At 112 North.
2001
g;u;;s,:..l~74~0~19;;:9~2·;•,:,;19;,;7,.,""" :~-----~~~~
ha 3500
R6. 304 895 3129
;: :;bi1Jetwh1tc.Yama
apprcx.
Coleman
70 OOOBTU
Fuel/ Oil 1 Coal/
miles. Yosh p1pe · ta11 lo;rl. 3 Bed: HUD Homes'
natural
CaII Only $15.300 ror hst1ngs
Wood I Gas
h d gas furnace
d pur- 54500.
~~#~~~~~ c ase new-use only 5 740·645-7471
800-620-4946 ex R019
~
m
onths.
S500
Kenny
'".,..~----Seasoned F~rewood. all w,·ggens,
"rlllflersvl 11e. 05
~ Hayabusa tow miles 2 BR 2 bath BncK •,orne
hardwood
$55 load (740)992·5002
ong_ owner. many extras. 1n A10 Grande 2 car ga304·882·2567 ·
rton't try to lit 1n. stand mge CIA bu1 II 1r1 2006
furniture
Complete electnc temp out S7 .900446·2254
call tor more ' mlo.
~':":=~~~-:::~ serv1ce on 20' 6x6 06 H 1
D
.74_0-;:·-3;:8-8':"·9":66":8~-:-:'--:'..,..
Used kitchen table with 2 lreated post. new used Night Trarn
ar ey 7400avldson
miles ::;3 BR 1 ba"1• •.. ouse 1n
chatrs · dar"~'- wood · grea1 one
lrme.
$275 · $13.000 740-709-6337
· vm1on S1tl1119 on 1 acte
conditiOn , hardly ever (740)992-0255
full basement CIA call tor
used
$75
Call ,.,.,---------more 1nlo. 740·388·9968
740-645-8403
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar
3- 4 BR 2 bath lam1ly
.
II
1
c
A
room bonus room over
MISCt oneout
or
oncrete
ngte.
garage approx. 3 acres
C.." anne1. Fl a1 Bar.. Slee 1
Autos
12xl4 carpet med1um Gtallng for Drams. Dnve- ===;;;~=== rarllalty wooded Cherry
brown $150.00
6x7 ways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l 02 Chrysler Sebring LXI. Ridge Rd.· RIO Grande
area
rug
$5000 Scrap Metals Open Mon. blk w/ grey leather mi.. area 740- 245-5416 or
Call
after
6pm Tue.
Wed &amp; Fn. all power options 4 diSC 740·645·2226
Leave
740-446-1423
Sam-4 30pm.
Closed CD changer. sunroot. message
Thurs. Sat &amp; Sun 104.000 mr K1ong 18' 0 a"•· HI11 area 3 BR 2 full
2000 Hond a 400 4 740-446-7300
Wheeler
Commercial
wheels &amp; new tires. bat t1 country 11v1ng new
tanning bed Couch (Tan) -.,
$5000 740-645·2487
cond1t1on 1 5 acres value
5TEEL ARCH
-~,.,.....,..-,.,...., S7s ooo now S59 goo
1 yr. old 304-895·3129
BUILDINGS
iii Honda c"" LX 5 Call 800·95!·2060
Pole Barn 30x40xl0 only Three Cancelled Or de"" spd 98.000 miles over 38R 2BA 2
$6,995, other s1zes. Fmo 20x20. 25x40 Great for
'"
gar
5.000 n extras LaiT'bO pa,10· OR 'FR Re1ca1
Delivery 877 . 773 •8356
ocat1
ng
,
Workshops!Garage.
Doors
$ 7,700
080 S11 5,000
740-446-081 7
_____.:.....____ Easy Payments Avail- 740-709- 1398
leave msg

==,...,,.=-

;=:H:e:l~p:W:a:n:t:e:d==-==H:e:lp=W:a:n:t:ed:::::;

Today
for Delay!
Savmgs
able. Don'l
Call 2006 Dodge Stratus 4
cyl auto 68 000 miles
866 _352_0469
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' $4,500 OBO 256-9031 or
WantTo Buy
256- 1233

lnfoclslon ll lookingfor a high energy Entry-Level Manager
· to work at ourGallipolis, OH office.
Voled

Recreal1onal
Veh•cles

1000

as one ol the Top 1CBest large Employers In Ohio for

Absolute Top Dolla r . sitverrg old
COins, any
10KI14K!18K gold JElW·
elry, denta l gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
proof!m 1nt sets. dra·
monds, MTS Coin Shop.
15t 2nd Avenue Gallipol1s 446-2842

the third consecutive year!
Reapon'slbllltles:

•Supe!'VIse motivate and coech team of 8-15 call cen,ter
employees
• Mondor calls and provide feedbackto call center staff
• Motivate team members Ia work together to ach1eve goals
• Orgame team meetings and des1gn and e ~ ecute contests
• Monitor and de~elop methOOs to 1mprove callcenter
performance
•~ate , analyze and recommend :::cript re'IISions
Benefits:
. •Full-lime fOUl day Mrk week
•Competitive salary plus quarterly performance bonuses
•Medk:al, dental, 401 K free lite and disab1l1ty 1nsurance
· Persol'lal growthopJ)ortunrt1es by promoting from W1!h1n
•TI.Jtionreimbursement
•Ooe week paid vacation after three momhs another week
after s1x months
•Paid holida~·s
•One work week of paid srck t1ms
•On-S1te Phys1c1an
• Paid orientation and trainmg
Requ,irements:

•Bachelors Degree
•bcellentcommuniC&amp;tion skills
•Ability to wOO in a h1gh energy en~lronment
EOEIMIF/ON
Please applyat 01.1r website : http.l/c:areers.infocisiol'l .eom
Help Wanted

George's Portable S.itwm1ll, don't haul you r Logs
to the Mill JUSt ca ll
304·675-1957
Yard Sale
B1g Yard Sale Thursday.
Fnday. Saturday &amp; Sun·
day 9am-8pm 86 Burdtte
Addtion. Pt Pleasant

2007 Honda VTX l300R.
1800
m1les,
blar;k.
$7800 388·6380
,2_0_0_7-H-o-nd_a_V-TX_1_3-00-R
1800 miles black $7800

~38::;8;,:8::;3;;,80;;,""'""'""'""'"
::
Trucks

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~===

2006 Chevy S1lverado
low miles
4 WD
304·593·0876
or
304·593-0959
-------1988 L350 Box Truck'
runs but needs work.
339·088 ;

~::-:-~--::---:::-

Foreclosure 4br. 2ba.
only 529,9001 Pr1ces tq
Sell!
For list1ngs
800-620-4,646 ex T462
Must sell. 3 bd .. 2 blh.
home in Syracuse can
(740)949·2513

Announcements

Announcements

· Yard Sale Sept 20-21
8-? Last house on nght
Sandhill
Rd. · Letart.
watch for signs. a1r compressoer.
generator,
tractor !Ires front. much
more

Gallia County Department of
Joh and. Family- Services
Work Opportunity Center

· Help Wanted

September 24, 2008
/0:00am to 2:00pm

Help' Wanted

~

3rd Allmwl.]ob l11(omwtinu Fair

Nazarene Clrurclr Family Life Center
Ill IJ First Averw e

Gallipolii ; Olrio -1563 1

Scenic Hills

-

Br1ck horne 2 112 bath.
6BR FR. LR 4 firepl8.ces huge detached
garaye . 4+ acres and
pond
fenced VERY
NICE• Call 740-379·9887
~-~~---For sale by owner. 3/2
home on 112 acre level
lot Located at 3089 Bu~
Iaville P1ke. Attached garage
Appraised
St 10.000
Ask1ng
S98,500
Carl
740·446-49 10

Skilled Nurs,ng &amp; Rehab Center·
.... ......... ·-

E1111tlu~ l!l's ~IIl li

~--

A Vrable ~eah:h,are Company
''

.luh St•l'kcrs " dt·tHilt'

Fot· mbn infurnmtion C:1ll :

RN's,
LPN's
S1NA's
, • (All Shifts, Ftf &amp; PlT)

7 ~11-~4~-.122 2

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

'

(2

J~o :S~!ry~d~~~~~o oxpl
Die~~rJech

&lt;~1

( l;dl qmll-..

.

Apply in person: Sceni&lt; Hills, Diana Harless, DON
311 Budt Ridge Road, Bidwell, OH 45614
Or fmai/ vhcjobs@vrablehealthcare.com Or Online at:

www.vrablehealthcare.com

c1 10 ~

AP l' il•tk

Rctt u1rr: 1111..' nh ·
• ~:.car .. lrnn

hl'll .. ~likd

•• ppli c.l ttn n~

''\\:l'pti ll).!

I'

R C L'~j)ll llo lo ..,l

ln1Bviewtimes: Monday-Friday from lOa to4p

(qual Oppcrrumry Employer

Arhp1·.-.
~·en ter.

•Competitive wages •Great patient Nurse ratio
• F~ Benefits package •hnntive and Bonus package
• PilldVacations•401K

Receptionist/AP Clerk
'hl'.lith
fnr

a

P''"il ll\11

nfllet''l'\jll'tll' IH"t'

• ( \ lt1lpllll"l'l lll'r :Ky

• E\n·lh:- ntl'U .,IIll lll'l' .....:n tu:- . nrpnltt.tlltmal.
l.'ill lllllllll1 L'i1 111m .uullllll'rpi.' r:-.o n .!l.., t..J !I..,

• A htl1t~

1\ l

k .1rn alid IJ&gt;.t" n... ,,

To " !Jill~ .
lh fa\ :

7..j.(l . ..j. ..lf,;7 1l ~.
A tr e nt i\ lll ' ~

D:1\ t~

~P fl\l.,ll't'

�Page 04 • 6unbap ttimn: -•mttntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH

'
•

Sunday, September 21 , 2008

Pt. Pleasant, WV

t!Crtbune - Sentinel - i\egtster

I

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH •

•

Pt: Pleasant, WV

.. ~entinel - l\egtsttr

•

CLASS IF I E,D_.
House• For Sale

land (Acreogol

House w1lh 2 acres 1n SR 10

160

Will

contract
379-2923

I

cons1der

Aportmonh/

Acres/garage/camper

or shroese@yahoo com
740·24S·901S

Ntce 4 br 2 ba home on
K1neon Or tn G&lt;1lhpohs
OUite netghborhoocl on
dead end street large 2
aar garage and hmshed
basement 740-256-1 109
Tn-level bnck/cedar on
98 acres Rutl and Oh
pnvate
sethng
eal tn
ktlchen, 3 br
2 lull
baths lg lt'.'tngroom lg
family room out of flooO
platn (740)742 2404 or
740-949-2930

or

10 acres $12 5001 Meigs

Clip th1s AD and take tl
wrth you when you vtSif
oUr community to get
lhts spectal discount
Mov e-1n 1n Oct and get

Co. 5 acres on Cook 01

$100.00 your 2BR Apt.

Landaker Ads $19,900
Reedsvtlle 12 wooded
acres. $2 1 901)1 Salem
Ctr n•ce 18+ acre lteld
NOW $50 500• Dan'.'tlle
8 acres $21 900 Gall
740-441 -1492 for maps
or
'.'ISit
www brunerlancl com
We f1nance 1
-------Real Estale
3500
Rentals

off Nov rent Currently
renhng 1 &amp; 2 BR untts
Spacious floor j)lans '
ranch &amp; town home style
hv1ng playground &amp;
basketball court on -s11e
laundry lac1hty 24 hr
emergency malnte
nance qutet country location close to mator
med1cal
facilities ,
pharmactes grot;ery
store JUS! minutes
away from other maJOr
shoppmg 1n the area

Gallla Co wooded 8 or

land (Acroogo)
200ac
+I
on
Apartmonb/
GathaJMetgs o OH bar
' Townhou1e1
der Great hunting land
S2 10 000
neg 2BR APT CIA (740)
441 0194
304 593·S260

Honeysuckle Htll s

Apartments
266 Coloma! Onve lr11 3
Btdwell, OhiO 45614
740-446 3344
Off1ce Hours M, W ~
9AM · 5PM

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Quali\y Improvement I
Joint Commission Director
Pleasant Valley Hospital IS currently
acce pting resumes for a full·ttme Qualtty
lmprovemeni/Jomt Co mmission Director.
Must have cu rrent WV RN license. BSN or

eqwvalent requtred Experience m acute
care setttn g tn a Jotnt Commisston
accre d1ted hosp1tal preferred Prev1ous
management/Supervtsory
expenence

Prevtous expenence

the

1n

Performance Improvement field preferred.

Prev1ous expenence m Jotnt Commiss1on
Surveys p refe rred.
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
Or fax 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvalley.orc
AA/EOE
Help Wan!ed

FREE RENT SPECIAL
Jord an Land1ng 2br. 3lJr
&amp; 4br Avatlabte No Pets,
Tenant Responstble for
Rent
&amp;
Electn c
304-67 4-0023
or
304 610-0776
Free
Rent
Specta llll
2&amp;3BA and up, Cen tral
Atr W/D hookup tenant
pays electrtc EHO Elm
V1ew
Apt s
(304)882·3017
Twtn Rwers Tower 1s ac·
cepttng applications lor
wa1hllg hst for HUD substdiZed 1 BR apartment
for tile elderly/disabled
call 675 6679
Beautiful Apts at Jackson Estates 52 West·
wood Or !rom $365 to
$560
740-446·2568
Equal HouSing Opportu
ntly. ThiS tnSti!Utlon IS an
Equal Opportumty Pro·
vtder and Employer
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage
Manor
and
Atverstele
Apls 1n Mtddleport, from
$327
to
$592
Equal
740-992-5064
Housmg Opportumty

1BR Apt. WID hookups
satellite TV tncl w/rent
close to hospttat Call New' Be til e ftrst to lwe
tn a new log duplex 740 339 0362
2BR
1 bath HA/CA
Porter
area
No pels De1br Apar1ment for rent 1n
Pt Pleasant all uttlllles post! &amp; ref S550 per
tncluded $500 montll month Call 446-2801
Call304 S93 5169
Now acceptmg
2 bedroom apartment tn
appltcaiiOns at
Centenary
all utilities Valley Vtew Apartments
patd · e)(cepl electnc 800 State Route 325
$350 a month Call l' 40
Thurman Oh1o 45685
256- ~ 135 leave
mes740·245·9170
sage
1-2 BedroomApartments
Apartment avatlable now wttll appliances lurntshed
On s1te laundry lacthty
Rtverbend Apts
New
Cull
lor delatls or ptck up
Haven WV Now acceptappllca
tmn at rental
tng
apphcattons
lor
office
HUD-subsldlzed
one
Posstb tlity of rental
Bedroom Apts Ultltltes
asststance
Included Based on 30%
Equal
Houstng
of adJusted 1ncome Call
Opponumty
304-882-3121,
avatlable
TOO# 419·526-0466
for Sen1or and Dtsablecl
"This
lns11turton ts an
people
Equal Oppor1umty
Provtder and Employer"

Help Wanted

H®LZER

HOSPICE

II ) OU dl t: lllll'Jeslt:ll m provu.Jmg quahty c.tre
\\~ 11.1 ~~ &lt;~hill Ttme openmg 111 1-/osptcc for
Pe rson&lt;~ I Care

TownhouMs

land contact

441 5062

preferred

Apartmonb/
Townhouses

Assistant.

M~igs

County

CONVENIENTLY
LO·
&amp;
AFFORD·
CATED
ABLE• Townhouse apar1·
ments,
and/or
small
!louses for rent Cal l = = = = = = =
740-441 -111 1 for applt
Commtrcial
cat1pn &amp; tnformatton
Commertcal Space for
Ntce
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, Rent Matn St PI Pleas
$400/mo
2000
sq/fl
Reference s!DepostVNo
703·501·4808
Pets 304-675-5162
Help Wanted

We also offer pajd mileage
1kt.ttb plc.tse ;pvc Barb Peterson, Dtrcctor
nt llum.m Rt:soun:cs tor out Long Term Cate
d1\ l~ t nn .t L,tl l dl 740-44 \-'40 1 or enuul me ,u
pl' tcr,.,un ((/ hoi Le t mg 01 v1s11 us on the web .11
1.1. 1.1. \~ holll'l org

Help Wanted

r111

l:::qu,\1Opportu ntty Employer

Help Wanted

•

l (......

Help Wanted

-.,

J •
.,,I
' ....t.. . .. ·- ·"'"- _, .... .

I '-

long Term Core I Home Coro
Division

Do you want to make n dtll ercnce&lt;J If you
compassionate and commll1ed to

.tre

ptov 1d1ng Qual II ) Car~ come and be

a part

ol our Long Term Care/Home Care team .
We have the lol lo"tng position&lt; available :

Holzer Extra Care;

* Per~o n ,d Ctrt: A tde~- Pet Dtem
Hnurl} rdtL' .tnd putd mileage
l - G.!llt.t ( mtnty I 1-tt:kson Counly
1-G.tllt,l/Me tgs

Holzer HospjC£;
~ PL'rs011.1l
~ Pe t ~l llt.ll

llo!~rr

C.trL' Ass istant - FT (Mctgs )
( 'arc Ass tsl.ml PT

Home Carei

" I h ~; 1 ,1p1 st
• S peed~- (per dJ CIIl )

• J'T. M ·l E
• LPl A· 6 f·TE

· or. n
• 1'1 Fr
·Holzl'r Senior Care Center;
"MIJS Nur se- Fl Exempt
' LPN · PT

* STN,\

Ff(l N1ght Sl11h. I Day Shi ll)

' Sf.~A- 1'1
1

~

1\ppltL.IIlh lor Nursmg A :-;~J s t. mt C!,tsscs
Dtl't.t rv A td Pl

Holzer 1\ssjsted Livjnw- Galliooljsj
* R ~s tdenl

Asstsl,mt- (C'ltn Tratn) 1- PT

Holzer t\ssjstcd Li\·jng- Jackson;
' I.PN - f'T 112h" h' ll 'i
For Jew !I s please !,!1\e B.1rb Peterson. Dtrcc tor
ol Hurn ,111 ResourLc'i fur our Long Term Carel
Home C.m: dlVI'\ tnn a c.t ll at 740-~4 1 - 140 1 or
cm;ul me :.lt pett-rsu n ~' h o l tcr org or V!S ll u~ on
the web

at"'"""' hol zcr on;
Eyua l Oppotluntl)' l:.mplnyer

®

supervisory experience. Must possess 5
years expertence tn phlebotomy. Must
have current WV/Dhio LPN license. CPR
instructor preferred. Expenence with
public speaking and development of
policies and procedures, as well as
educational
tnserving
for
outreach
facilit1es.
·
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvaller.o!J
·
AA/EDE

So leo

Soloo

5000

Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + -half acre tn pt
Pleasant
OWNE A Fl
NANCE
AVAILABLE
(740)446 3570
_ _ _ _ _ _....,_
Mobtle Home for Sale
1988
Fleming
14lC60
2br 1ba 304 675 3656
after 5 30pm
-------New 3 Bedroom homes
S21g/u•ut 4 ht'J ~ b.ull
from $214 36 per month
1:\,tn~ Rl'po 1 1 ~' t !1 1,1..,. 1 20 ~~~~~~-.., mcludes many upgrades
\' m w API-I I l•1r lt,ltnJ!' 2004 Doublew1de 1n delivery
&amp;
se t up
f!OII f&gt;:!O ~YJ(• \' I.W~ 7
new condtlton 4 bed
740-385-2434
room 2 bath , a app I1':':"""':':-'-~":':"-~
1br House tn New Ha
Sandp1pe1 mobtle llome
ances
Included
ven WV total etectnc
14X70 1990 wlappltlocatecl
al
everythtng tn walkmg diS- $37.000
ances 2 car metal car176
Zuspan
Lane
Malance $300 month $300
pon,
excellent shape
deposit
No
Pets son City 304 675 211 7
must
moved
be
304_882_3652
513 500 740 992 6849

Downtown
Mtddlepoort .
across street from New
Famtly Healthcare 1600
SCI tt (retatllshowroom
off1ce
backroom
restroom) 700+ car count
per bustness hm.u. tree
on
street
park1ng
(740)992· 1900 days
,.======"""
Houses for Rent

2 2006 161(80 Clayton 3
bed 2 bath. 200 16l&lt;70
Fleetwood 2 beet 1 bath
1999 Fortune 3 bed 2
bath We deltver block
le'.'el and anchor We
can do the tooters .also
Dayttme
740-388 0000
or 740-388-85 13 Evemngs 740 388-8017 or
740 -245 -9213

1br. $375/month m Syracuse Depostt HUD ap·
proved
No
Pets
30 4 675-5332 weekends
740-591-0265

ANTIQUE &amp; COl.LECTIBLE AUCTION

~
2 ~B
~R~hou_s_
e~1n ~G~a~lh~
po-t1 s.

OLD GLORY AUCTION HOUSE

WID
conn
$4 15/mo
$150/dep , You pay all
ultliltes No secltOn 8 or
HUD
Call
Wayne
404-456-3802
,;;;,;...;.;;.;;.;;;;.;;;;__ __
Taktng appltcattons on
ntce home on SR 160,
12 mo tease at $650 per
mo plus sec dep No
pets
44 1-5062
Qr

_
37"9,·2"9"2"3= = = = =
:::
land (Acroogol
Wanted Tp Lease Bow
hunttng
land'
need
enough lor 3 people
{828)-380-0594
Manufactured
Housmg

4000

Auction

FRIDAY, SEPT. 26th at

6:00

PM

Ronlalo

pictures and co mple t e li st go to
wvloca tor.com

Jtm Taylor. AuctiOn ee r

&amp;

favm of

Bonded in

State of Ohto

&amp; WV- #00 14

FARM MACHINERY. TRACTORS, LAWN &amp;
GAR liEN. HAY, TOOLS, Etc.

IF [QLl HAY.E S,Ql!JL.l.tl.lri!i l!l. ~~'~'·
THI(i_J(i "[ll.f:," PLA(t;; I

p ost ca td s, papet m e motabtli a.
jewelry. costume j ewe lry, nulruad

sa le!

Great food availubl e. Come o ut and
e n)uy a fun fill ed evemng .

Federal Funds JUSt released lor Land Owners
Auction
No clostng cost ar.1d
ZERO • DOWN I Will do - - - - - - - land
ltnprovements

''Qr:J.~'£Q.fi.MEij.lfi.{

~llU~dOV fQ~~I~i~~l&gt; II~M51~~1.l ll!tli
Ncu Holland H ~\ Bun:
N~.,., C~&gt;rr.tt Panels
Nc-'.1 Holland Tob 1uo Sclti.'r Round ll01le Fce dt! r ~
I &lt;I fill G.tk' All Stl.:\
Rud.: r eeders
Lune SpreaJL·r
Oltver '\ Botlom Plow
1- 1-l Ft H,l) W.l!!t111 ~
LtX U'&gt; I Pos 1 ~
211 F1 1-l a ~ Elc\ ,1 1u1
l lll ~h Pms
42-llntcrnattnn.tl l r•...:lor

Glassware. furniture. tool s,

a lon g

.

Will Be Taken:

Friday; Sept. 2~ • 8a-7p
Saturday, Sept. 27 • 7a-9a

hou sewar es, antique m e di c al t ools,

Thi s will b e

AB,E TAKJ.Nfl. dl.-1~

Consignment•

740-992-9553

2BR at Johnsons Mobtle
Home
Park
Call
or
740·64S·0506
740 446 2003

Saturday. Sept 27 @ 9·30am
Vall ey Vol F1re Dept . Apple Grove. WV
12M tlesSouthofPt Pl eas,mt onRt 2

lf~-

abQut everythin g at tillS o n e. For

Liw1scd

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

Come Ea li y &amp; Bnn£ a Friend!

There IS ~ la rge se lectt on ot JUSt

or

Auction

Auction

2 Auct ton Rmgs!

659 Pearl Street• Middleport, Of/

A u c t 10n z ip .com

Drivon &amp; o.lvory

Resort Property

Deltvery Onvers needed
for Commum fy Program
cash patd weekly,' must
6000
Emptoynent
be neat tn appearance
Rettres Welcome
Contact
· Da'.'e
at
Drivers &amp; Delivery
~==~==~;;;; 304-67S-4693
Expe nenced
driVer = = =
needed
Must be 24
years olcl ancl have 2
years expenence Apply
tn person at 2204 Jackson Ptke

Auction

1tems

I ERMS OF SALE C tsh 01 Appn.1vcU ~,; hcd by
,lliCtton Lnmp.Ul)'. 11 unknown' to ,lUctton company
must be appr&lt;w cd pnor to ~a le
loe Arrmgtun • W'V l-l.fi2 • 576-·'f)C l9 • 8 12-8 114
Frtt.:k Conrnd • WV 179fl • :'i7fi-2010 • 675-0947 •
Mt ke Adkins • h11-2 110
ANNOUNCFMENTS SAL E DAY TA KE
PRECEDENCE OV ER PRINTED MATERIAL
AUCTION COMPANY &amp; FIR E DBf'T NOT
RESPONS IB LE FOR ACC ID ENTS THEFT OR
DAMAGES

Auction

Auction

Auction

r----------:--.:---:-------.;..________.;...,

8ankruplcy &amp; Bad Cred1t
OK 2. 3, 4 and 5 bedrooms
a'.'a tlable
740-446'3384
3 BA wid hookup mobtle home, no pets $450
month
+depostt
call
446-73 11

Double wtde 3 BA 2 batll
$575 deposit $575 rent
per mth plus utls Ready
1722 B Chatham Ave
""'======"""
Saloo
~~~~~~=

1980 14&lt;70. 1 112 bath
2br wttll small lot Apple
Tree
Dr
S12,000
304-576 2096
or
304-67 4-55 13

For Sale

ASSISTANT CLINICAL COORDINATOR OF
OUTREACH OPERATIONS
Pleasant Valley Hospital ts currently
accepttng resumes for a full -time Asst.
Clinical
Coordinator
of
Outreach
Operattons. Must
possess • 5 years
experience in long term care wtth 3 years

Auction

Com meretaI

HUGE

2009 "Montana"

4Bad·2Bath
Over

2,000

Sq Ft!

$59,925
1St Time
HOMIBUYIRS
Now Avatlable!

FHA'&amp; 3_
%Dowa
lli
~~~~-

Midwest
mymldwesthome com

740.828.2150

Auction

Auction

AUCTION

Sept. 27,200810:00 A.M.
Loc,tllon Mctgs Cou nt y F,nr grou nds lntcr~ec h on of State rou le 7 ,uuJ 11
2 hours south of Columbu s 2 lwurs nurth oJ Charl c~tu n WV
,md 1 hours c,tst ol CtnmHHlt t
We wtll be ~c lhn g 1hc pcNm,ll propo.:: rty ol Mrs Mary Bo w~n , Mr J11hn
Weeks admumtr,llor HciO\\ .~rc ,1 Jew uf I he ttems tim ts d sm.tll ".1111ple
oJ 1tcm ~ we wtll hnvc to olf cr for ~, 1le to the htt; hcst btddcr
Furnjture; Wtll ett table ,tnd b rose Q,u;k l'iKllf~ wttll I extra lc;,tl stlllm
the lx1x . Wtllell enrn·er cahmel Willett butfct (~otdcboard ) Two whttc twm
beds , Wtllett slant top desk. Two lull stze bt:d~. dressers. \:hcsl of druwcr...
ntght stand s eutlcc t;.~bb . Kttdtcn t.tblc 4 dmrs Y..!lh lc.tL Pnn.:h glt~Jc r
mcc porch ch.urs {l.twn funmun.· ), swtvcl rocke rs com:h cham••mU more
Note I m pretl} sure all the furm turc ts sohd wood no vc ncc t ready tm
your home or shop.
Household Mtcro v. ,tvc, Ot ~hcs. Hand towels. May1ag wa~hcr nnd dryer
hkc new. v,Kuum cle,mer, S h ~.!ets. blanke t~ p1llow~. qud ts, d othmg.
shoes . corral lh shc~o. wftccput!&lt;., c1nck 1&gt;ots "'Bat screen TV (all TV \ ,m'
RCA).Tuppcrwarc .md mot e
Collerljhles; Longabcrgcr haskct!-1, Fcntnn g l &lt;~ss Egg: hand pmntcd .
N1ppon ncam ,md s u g.~r J.tpun Tc.tpot ~. H,1ggcr pottery. Rctro lamp~ ,md
shades. M.trbl c J c~ ntp~ . L,tm: ccd.tr chc~l. Old Ch tkb h1gh ch:.t lr (no tf.ty 1.
C11n bon om Chatrs. pfahzcralf dtshcs, Cookbooks. Many Mctgs Cou,nty
Ite m ~ Books. pl,tt Cs. Pot holders, old kntlltng needles. Sti ver ware _
Fl.tlwar:e. sm,tll amount ~.:uslu mc Jewelry. etmk books . NYC otll:,lll ,
Pomeroy year book . and more

Auctioneer: Billy R. Goble Jr.
Ph: 740-416·1164- Email: captbi1165@yahoo.com

PUBLIC AUCTION
Stewart Community Park
Saturday, September 27, 10:00 a.m.

DIRECTIONS: Rl 50·8 m1les easl of Athens ex1t on Rt 329 through Guysv1lle to Slewarl ,
turn nght on Rt 144 , aucl1on w1ll be held at the Vill age Park, near the Ftre Statton, watch tor
s1gns Check out photos on our web stte All11ems have been moved to an undtsctosed
locatton lor secunty Two auctton nngs all day except Noon when selling vehtcles, etc
VEHICLES &amp; EQUIPMENT - Sold at NOON Bobcat 22005 4x4 dtesel lntelltTrak dual
seats w/dump bed all alummum frame (2007-566 ~ours sold wtowner's consent), 1999
Dodge Laramte SLT 4x4 Truck extended cab (Cummtns d tesel w/chtp-1 49,766 m1tes sold
w/owner s consent) pony wagon, John Deere Frontier RBI060L blade
GUNS: Winchester Athens County Centenmal Model30/30-45 cal 1 of 10 (sold w/owner's
consent). Wmcheste r Athen s County Centenntal 41 0· 10 shot lever action 1 of 10 (sold
w/owner s consent) Rem1ngton Ath ens County Centenmal Model 1t 00-12 gauge 1of 1
(sold w/owner's consent), Winchester Model 42-410 pump s1lver 1nlay engraved 1 ol 66
(sold w/owner"s consent), Wtnchester Model 42 Book by Ned Schw1ng, W tnchester Model
1903·22 cal-1st automattc made (sold w/owner's consent), Wtn che~te r Model53-32 WCF
(sold w/owner's consenl). W1nch ester Modell 890-22 pump octagon barrel, Winchester
Model 1894 22 gauge , Winchester Model1906·22 gauge, 2-lull sets of Wmcheste r Model
37 red letter (youlh-12-16-20·28·41 0) , Wtnchester Model 37 • t 2 gauge 3" magnum ,
Wtnchester Model 24-20 gauge double barrel , Wtn chester Model12·1 2 gauge tully
engraved, 5·Winchesler Model 12- 12 gauge , Wmchester Model 12· t 6 gauge. 2-Wmchester
Model12 ·20 gauge . 3-Wtnchester Model97· 12 gauge Wtnchester Model97-16 gauge,
Wtnchester Model1300-20 gauge. Wtnchester Model 370-12 gauge, Wtnchester Buffalo
B1ll 30/30 cal , Browmng Magnum 20 w/extra slug barrel. 2-Browmng Sweet 16 automattc
Browntng A5-16 gauge automa tic , Brown1ng A5·20 gauge. 3-Browmng AS l1ght 12
automat1c Brownmg Ranger 12 gauge automatiC , Browmng 22 automatic , Browmng Model
308 Bar II automattc extra Browntng 20 gauge &amp; 12 gauge barrels. Remtngton Model2520 cal , Rem1ngton Model 760·30/06 pump , Remtngton Model 24·22 cal., Spnngfteld M1
R1fle w/bayo net. Spnngfteld 22 pump , Ithaca 12 gauge double barrel, Savage Model1895308 cal Lever action new 1n ortgtnal box, Henry Repeattng Ftrearms 22 lever action , Henry
Repea t1n g F1rearms Golden Boy 22 mag, J. Stevens 22 smgle shot, Marlin Model 1892
octagon barrel. Hopktn s 50 cal Muzzle loader, Rem1ngton Dale Earnhart Model 700·30/06
bolt actton lmted edtt1on new tn ong1nat bo&lt; , Date Earnhart hfe stze cardboard poster, Dale
Earnhart Budwe1ser model car, gun cases/bags Winchester wood advert1ser boxes, large
heavy duty Hentage Safe Company-44 gun sate,
CURRENCY &amp; COINS Paper Currency 1928 (1000/500/100/50/20/to/5/2/1 dollar b1lls),
1934 (100/50/10 dollar bill S), 1914 &amp; 1922 ($10) Confederate $50 &amp; $20 , 170+ S1lver
Certtflcates 1935 &amp; 1957, Two Dollar B1lls (some red letter). and lots ol miscellaneous
currency, tore1gn b1lls, several bank notes and recetpts, 50+ Proof Sets. Some book sets of
Co1ns , 380+ S1 lve r Dollars 1878·2006 (Morgan, Carson C1ty), 200+ Halt Dolla rs 1958-1995,
8-Half D1mes 1830·1860. 500+ D1mes 1853· 1996
Stlver/Mercury/Liberty/Barber/Roosevelt!Eisenhower, 500+Nickels 1867 ·2005
Jefferson/Buffalo/Shield/Liberty 1000+ Penn1es Wheat!Ltncoln/l ndtan Head, 1934 Halt
Cent . 25-0ne Cent 1794- 1904, 13·\wo Cent 1864- 1867, 9-Three Cent 1851-1865, tOO+
Mtscellaneous Coms/Currency. Mtne Token, 1776 Shtp Wreck Cotn, 1893 Columbian Expo
cotns, and lots more Co1ns are st1ll be1ng ca taloged Call or ema11for complete hst of

NOTICE OF PUBLIC tng bids for lhe Instal- tGTDCt4Z7RZ547024,
SALE
latlon of a ttuonde lab 171118
In obedience to the at their treatment plant 1994,
GMC,
Meigs County Common facility. The bid will in- 1GTDC14ZORZ546796,
Pleas courfo '"ORDER etude Installation of 178373
DIRECTING
PUBLIC prefabricated building, 1996,
FORD,
SALE " ot the parties tab equipment, electrl· 1FALP57U4TG270235,
real property, as or· cal, water, and waste 76829, Tag
dared In the ca.., water storage.
1996,
CHEVY,
styled James K. Oatley A complete set ot plans 2G1 WL52M5T1186067,
v. Richard L. Dailey, Is available at Leading 160392, Lumina
The DDMR&amp;DD Galllpo·,
Case No. 07-CV-109, Creek
Conservancy 1996,
FORD,
Meigs County Court ot District's oHtce located 1FALP5225TG309372,
Its Oe'.'elopmental Center
Common Pleas, on the at 34481 Corn Hollow 152863, Taurus
IS
currently
seektn g
30th day of September, Road, Rutland, OH 1999,
FORD,
therapeutiC
Prog ram
2008, at 10:00 a.m. I, 45775 . Call 740-742· 2FAFP71W2XX224924,
Workers You must have
E. 2411 tor an appoint· 161533, Crown Vtc
Christopher
-==~~~=- at least 6 months patd
Tenoglla,
Attorney
at mont to review the 1999,
FORD,
expenence
tn
dtrect
care.
FEDERAL
2FAFP71W7XX224921 ,
Law, 2QO East Second plans.
school
a
htgh
POSTAL JOBS
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio" Blda will be accepted t91130, Crown VIc
Drivers/OWner
d1ploma/GED and a vahd
$17
89-$28
27/HR
,
now
45769, {Ph. (740) 992· untll4 ·00 p m an Sep· 1999,
FORO,
dnver's
ltcense
Operators
6368), shall oHer the tember 23, 2008. LCCD 2FAFP71 W9-)(J(224922,
hmng 'Fo; appllcalton Apphcaltons may be suband Leue Purcl1ase
following real property reserves the right Ia t68949, Crown VIc
online ·
at
Call us today and let us and free government JOb mmed
for sale on the steps ot accept or relect any or 2000,
FORD
tn
fo,
call
Amencan
Ascareers ohiO gov or m
tell you abOut our
the
Meigs
County all bids.
2FAFP71 W5YX174084
soc
of
Labor person at the Galhpohs
opportunittesl We offer
Courthouse, Court and BY Board of Leading 180220, Crown Vic
1·913·599·8226
2411'irs Developmental
Center
Owner Operators No
Maintenance /
Second
Street, Creek
Conservancy 2001,
FORD,
emp
serv
lease on Cost plus tlley
Admtmstrahon BU1Id1ng
Domestic
Pomeroy, Ohio , Ia lhe Dlstrlc~ President, Fen· 2FAFP7tW5tXI60370,
AppltcaiiOilS
may
be
can make up to
e.. ' .....
203142, Crown Vic
hlghesl bidder. The ton Taylor.
mailed or faxed to
$200,000.00 Per Year
FEDERAL
minimum
bfd
tor
the
(9)7,
14,
21
MISCELLANEOUS
with an avg current Total
ODMR&amp;DO
Galhpohs ~=~=:-:---subjecl property shall
EQUIPMENT
MAINTENANCE
POSTAL JOBS
Developmental Center
PRODUCTION
Revenue Mtle
be
$26,640.00.
Said
Public
Notice
OTY, ITEM, DESCRIP·
Care
Health
ABODE
MECHANIC
loaded or empty of
S17 89·$28 27/HR . now 2SOO Oh1o Avenue. Galh· OPERATORS
property
is
being
sold
TION , MODEL#, SEAA
lull
ttme
employment
Servtces
Inc
Hmng
Full lime employment op$1 861
hmng
For appllcatton pohs Oll1o 4563 1 '
In "" AS IS'" condition Notice to Engineering tAL#
opportuntty
for
a
matnte
Homemakers
for
Mason
portunities
for
entry
te
...
el
Phone
(740)
446·1642
Out and back freight
and free government JOb
with no warranty, either Firms:
1, Dell , Computer, MMP,
273 Fax
(740) chemtcal operators are nance mechamc IS be1ng County 304 586-944 1 or
100% fuel surcharge
tnfo call Amencan As- eX1
expressed
or
Implied,
Leading
Creek
ConserBFR3V01
offered
by
M&amp;G
Poly
toll
free
1-666-327-7262
betng offered by M&amp;G
ad1usted weekly to
soc
of
Labor 446·134 1
as ta suitability of the vancy District Is seek· 1, Monitor, 07031 LD,
Polymers
tn
Mason
The
Galllpols
Developprotect the contractors\
mars tn Mason County NEEDED IMMEOIATELY property tor any pur- lng an Engineering firm 08MLC0030059
1·913·S99·8226.
24111rs
mental Center 1s an County WV Candidates WV
Plus Mucll Morel
Candidates must IN
THE
TRI-STATE pose nor as to mar· to evaluate their water 1, Rlcoh - Aficlo, color
ernp serv
Equal Opportumty Em- must have a lltgh sclloot posses a htgh school dt- A.REA
Occupational ketablllty of title to said system, to make rec· laser pnnter
Also we offer a LEASE
PURCHASE program
POST OFFICE
NOW ployer
dtploma or equtvalenl ploma or equt'.'alent GED MediCine Nurses AN's property. The property ommendatlons on low- 1, Lexmark, Copter,
~-=-....,~--:-- GED and be Willing and and tJe wttlmg anct avatl and
LPN s Compelthve to be sold Is legally de- erlng
With $0 Dollar Down
system Fax , Scanner., X5t50
HIRING avg Pay $20/hr An Excellent way to eam avatlable to work rotaltng
able to work rotal1ng salary and Dene{tts de- scribed as follows :
w1th approved credit'
pressures,
while
sttll 1, HP, Printer-Color
or
%57Kiyr,
Includes money The New AVon 12 hour shiftS Demon- Shifts
Need COL A with
The preferred !erm ined by expenence Situated In the Counly maintaining adequate LaserJel
2550L,
Fed
Ben,
OT
Place
by
Call
Manlyn
strated
expenence
tn
an
candidates shall possess and quahhcatlons Please of Meigs In the State of pressure to I heir cus· Q3702A, CNDDBOt794
Tanker/Hazmat
adSource not afft1tated 304-882-2645
tndustnal
en'.'lronment and be able 10 demon· call at 740-574- 1770 or
Call today and let us see
t, HP, Printer-Color
Ohio and In the Town- tomers.
w1lh USPS who hires '::'::::':~~-:-~-~
what we can do for yout
1-866-403 2sa2
AVONI All Areas1
To and pnor cllemtcal plant strate mechantcat sktlls 877 552 1883
ship of Chester ;
Before September 23, Laserlet
2550L,
Buy or Sett Shtr1ey expenence IS preferred tncludmg bu t not hmtted ~~~~~~~~ Being In Fractions 7 2006 Interested firms 03702A, CNDDG00584
t -888-351-6586
weld1ng ability to
Serv1ce 1 Bus
Spears 304-675 1429
lndt'.'lduals
meettng to
Miller Transporters
and 13, T4 North , Rt2 should call 740-742· 1, HP, Printer -Desklet,
troubleshoot
ancl repatr 9000
::---":"'~:"""--~":'"' these requ~rements must
Dtrecto ry West ot the Ohio Com- 2411 for datela review C6427B, MY020t5002
www.mllfert.com
Bossard Memonal L1- submtt a resume postpumps and the knowl ==~==:;::::::; pany's Purchase and Leading Creek Conser- 1 LexMark. Printer.
'A Place to Call HOME" brary seeks applicants
kd
T d
edge and abtlity 1o use r
d
being described as tal- vancy District's sys- 4126·003. 7330795979
~=;;;E~u-'coti""'"a;;;n=~- Foster Parents Neededtll for tile posttton of Ltbrary ~:;,:mber b~o. ~~ at~ all forms of prec1ston
1, Micro, Keyboard,
tows: Beginning at a lem.
The Athens-Metgs Edu- $30-$48 8 day with pd Page/Shelver Up to 16 the address below, pro- measuremen1 loots lnd1
point South 57.5 feet By Board of Leadmg KB565BL, 15120130957
catlonal Service Center respite Tratnmg begtns hours per week Mlm vidtng contact tnforma- vtduals meeltng these reand South .87' 37' East Creek
Conservancy 1, Sam sung, Keyboard,
has a postt1on opemng tn September Call Oasts mum
wage
tncludes tton, employment h1story qwremems must subm1 t
216 teet from the North· District, President, Fen- SEMCI9V2, 9005686
as
Regional
Literacy 10 help a child hnd a evening and weekend and descnphons o1 any a resume postmarked by
west comer of Fraction ton Taylor.
1,
HP,
Keyboard,
Consultant tor Region 16 place 10 ca tt home sllifts Must be a mtm- certtftcal\ons
training, Tuesday September 30
13, said patnt of begin· (9) 7, 4, 21
KB0133 ., B68BAOM877
325
1558
State
Support,
Team 1·
- "
mum of s1xteen (16) courses or relevant pro· 2008 to the address· be
GAPK08A
nfng being marked by a
This ts a Full Time Post- ~~~:--~-- years of age and pass grams completed Candl- low provtdmg contact mconcrete marker and
Public Notice
1,
HP,
Keyboard ,
employment
tion. Quahftealtons
At $250 Sign on Bonul background clleck Job dates ol tnterest wtll be lormatton.
S D M 4 7 0 0 P ,
being on the Northerly
teast five years of sue- Ten poSIIlOns need filled
descrtpiiOn and appllca- contacted
for pre-em- h1story and descnptlons
RIW line ol Ohio State The VIllage ot Rio B68BAOHLPPEL5C
any
certtftcal1ons.
cessful readtng mstrucby next weeki
lion a'.'a~able at library ployment
assessments/ of
Rt. 7; thence South 82' Grande Finance Com- 1, 1ntalllmouse, Mouse
tratntng cou rses or reletton In a classroom; Mas- No expenence requtredl Circulation desk Appltca- mterv1ews
45' 16" East 232.7 teet mlttae will meet on 1, HP, Mouse
Polymers vanl
programs
comNo Salesl
lton must be ma1led to
M&amp;G
tat's degree tn educat1on
along the Northerly Tuesday, September 1, HP, Compaq CamHuman Resources pleted Candidates of tn
(Readtng, Spectal EduNo Co11ecttons1
Bossard Library
Atln
RIW line ol Ohio State 23, 2008, at 5:00 PM In puter,
cl530,
cation or concentratiOn tn
7 SpruceSt
- Productton Operator terest wtll be contacted
Rt. 7 to a concrete tha Municipal Building. USU42400F4
marker; thence North Clerk Beth Brabham t , KDS, Monltor-19'",
Literacy),
appropnate
Recrul1 volunteers for
Gallipolis, Ohto 4563 1
P.O Box e
Apple tor pre-employment assessments/ mtervtews
o• 17' 28" East 335.9 announced.
VS195e, 1092049090
Ohto certtftcatton or 11non-proft1organtzaiiOns
AHn ; Debb1e Saunders, Grove, WV 25502
teet to a concrele September 21 , 2008
VCDTS21554censure. tecllnology exsuch as St Jude
ltbrary Otrector
---=-~-~-- Reply IO M&amp;G Polymers
Attn
Human Resources
marker; thence South
t , Optiquast, Manftor,
penence
(l e , on-line
Clltldren's Research
Apphcat•ons
must
be
Sportswriter
management
system
~ospltal
postmarKed by Sept 27, Tile Oh1o Valley Publish- - Ma1nlenance MechaniC
82' 05' 45" West 297.4
Public Notice
t M, 9L03869380
teet to a concrete
1, Polk Audio, Speak·
Ap
email, electronic presenGet patd to make a
2008 EOE
tn'J CO. ts seektng moh- POBoxB
marker on the Easterly PUBLIC NOTICE
ers
tanon), and access to
dlfforoncet
vated people-onented
pte Grove. WV 25502
Custodian
for
local
technology after school
mdtvtdual 11!Ill a vacancy
line of 2.093 acre lot A public auction tar the 1, Labtec, Speakers
church
Mon-Frl 8 30am
surveyed by Homes Gallta County CommlsInk Cartridges- Black
hours
Additional Pre·
-t Full and Part-lime
to 2pm $10/hour Send
tn lhe news dept as a
Hysell In June , 1964; stoners will be held at 2,
HP,
LaserJet,
ferred Previous expenPositi ons
Sportswnter
The
sue·
reume to Mlmster, PO
thence South 13' 08' 6·00 PM an Thursday. 03960A
enoe as a SlAt tnstructor
.;- Day and Even1ng
cessfuf
candtdate
wtll
Bol&lt; 228 Pomt Pleasant,
1
East 272.8 teet along October 2, 2008, at the 3, HP, Ink Cartridgesor participant, and adult
Shtfts
WV 25550
cover lllgh scllool ath etsaid
Easterly line to the Shawnee Lane fm· #44 Magenta
tnstructtonal
expenence
..r Profess1onal Work
1cs m tile area for the
point ot beginning , pound Lot on State 2, HP, Ink CartridgesExpectations
Participate
Envtronmentl
Hair Dresser Wanted at da1ly edthon of tile newscontaining 1.818 acres, Route 160 near the Gal· #44 Yellow
tn all state sponsored
-1 MediCal, Dental, EAP,
Shae·s Beauty
Salon
paper as well as asstsl
more
or tess, with 0.428 Ita County Animal Shel- 1, HP, Ink Cartridgestrainings, participate 1n
o1KI
contact
Kame
wtlh
tile
produclton
of
4
acres, more or less, In ter. The following wtll #23 Tricolor
e·leamlng
tramtngs
..r On-s tte Doctor
304-675-2828
sports pages ExCellent
Fraction 13, and 1.390 be sold:
This Information Is also
onhne,
-1 Weekly Pay and
(race -to-face,
House parents(2)wanted writing and English sktlts,
acre,
more
or
less,
In
VEHICLES
located on our websha
digital), comm11 to ma1nBonus tncenttvesl
photography sktlls and
for boys group home loFraction 7.
• YEAR , MAKE, VIN , www.galllanet.net. All
talmng f1del1ly to lhe OhiO
knowledge of desktop
ca ted. tn southern Ohto
Reference Deed: Vol- MILEAGE
purchases over $1 ,000
ltteracy lntllaltves destgn,
Calf TODAY!
27-7 care for 2 weeks on
publtshtng are sougllt
ume
56,
Page
383,
1981,
International
pa1d
by personal check
content, tex 1s and ttme
Interview
The postltOn 1s tuUtt me
-2 weeks off. Expenence
Meigs County OHiclal 1HTAR1885BHB18545, must be accompanied
•voodland Drive
commttment
web-based
TOMORROW II
40
hours
a
week,
wittl
ra1slng teens or fo ster
76097, 182
by a Letter of Credit
Records.
FtrcpiHcc Central AC C&lt;trpctcd floors wooU fioor s.
session checkltst. correWork NEXT WEEK III
benehts Interested parcare prelerred We proAudltar "s Parcel Num- t 98B ,CHEVROLET. from a Banklng lnstltupd l to, &lt;. pa!J,K un t b~aut1ful &lt;.:athcdral~:cJh ng s tn LR
spond
dally
through
ttes can send resumes to
vide tra1n1ng Interested?
ber: 03-00342.000 and 1GCDC14H7 JZ153020, lion, no exceptions. All
.1nd MB All oak tn m .md o,\k 6 panel tnten or doors
email
commumcatton
1-888-IMC·PAYU
Call
OaSIS
Kevm Kelly Managtng
158127, GC1
Items are sold as Ia,
03-00343.000.
Stone
wood
hurnt ng fucplncc With m ~ crt c u~tum
and hold VIrtual offtce
Ext 1901
1-877-325-1588 for more
Edttor, Ohto Valley Pub
Cammon
Address 1989,
CHEVROLET, and all sales are llnal :
buth
wa]k+
UI
dn~ct 111 m-1~tcr h&lt;tthroom and g trden
hours Langill of contract httP:IIJobs.lnfoctalon.c mformatiOn
hshmg Co , 825 Th1rd
38313 State Route 7, 1G1AW51W4K6252300, Items
must be re•
tub K1tchen Js\,md w/bn:.lkl,t ~ l nook dtn tn g room
and salary wtll be deterom
Ave , Ga l 1 potls Ohto
Longbottom.
Ohio
89063,
Celebrity
moved
from
the prop,md
pantr~
Stm
Hlo
m
&lt;~
n&lt;l
h.tLk
deck
with
bu!lt
m
hot
mined upon employment
Servtce Manager &amp; Serv45631 or kkelly@my(9)
14,
21,28
1989,
GMC,
erty
within
24
hours
tub
BmJU~
toom
~:ould
.:1thcr
be
used
a~
family
room
Submlt letter of 1nterest
tee Techmctan postttons
datlytnbune com No
1GTDC14Z1KZ512405, The Gallla County
or 4tl1 bedroom wnh ~kyltghts Fl~.mnng ts \:eram tc
OPHTHALMIC
OFFICE available Heallh care &amp;
pho e calls please
resume, references and
n
Public Notice"
182006
Commissioners
reAND MEDICAL ASSIS· Rel~remenl plans avail· _,.;.,~-~~--­ 11le, hardwood and c .trp~iltng g.1lcbo !lnd beautiful
1991, GMC , 2GDHG3t serve the rlghttoreject
ccples of all current OhiO TANT Great
Deneflts, able Please send re- WV 80hr Underground landscapmg. fenl:ed b.td:.y.trd All bnck extenor
Certlflcateslllcenses
to wages and woril;\ng con- , sume
to Miners Class, stanmg Add 1t1onalland Hi also avatlable for purchase 2 92 ae
Notice to Contractors: K9M4506477, 150119, any bid.
Leading Creek Coneor- Bus
September 21 , 2008
John D Constanzo, Su· ditiOns.
888-763-2393 LLCCCAREO COM
or soon
Whlt-Co-Tratning
Michele Mitis- 304-532-0312
vancy Dlatrfct Is seek- 1994,
GMC,
perintendenl,
F;ax 740-n3-9093
fax to 740·446-9104
304·372-8346

• Dnver's EducatJOn posttiof'l open 1n tile Gallipolis
and Metgs area Flextble
hours. Must be able to
wor1c
eventngs
and
weekends
Job enta1ls
classroom and Oehtnd
the wheeL tnstrucliOn tor
new dnvers
Qualified
candtdates must llave a
high
school
dtploma,
valki
dnvers
hcense,
pass
background
checks, exp prelerred tn
~afflc safely, law en·
forcement, or teachtng,
or we w1lllra1n. EDE

Shop the

Classifieds!

L

$259

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
.·

tn Ohio

&amp; WV -

MilWAY TAVERN

www .auctionzip.com - My # is 5548

Ematl. HYPERLINK "mailto .ShamrockAuctton@aol.com

Note: 1D REQUIRED TO REGIS'I'EH.: Bn ng ,, fn~:nd , a cl\.t~r. and .li!ond
appcttte as the Meigs County Senior Citizens w1ll he servmg grc,tt food G11J
blc"s you all and COJOY the auc tmn
. Tcm1 s cash or cllcck wttll )X)SIItvc I D Auct toneer ~ ~
not re spon'itblc for a c~;: tdc nt Announcements made at ,tuetl on t ,J~~ p rcn~dt:ucc
uvcr all pnntcd malcna t

Matllo:ShamrockAuction@ aol.com" ShamrockAuctton@ aol.com

PH : 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

1996 Mobile Home
16

Stove

Asian beetles .

&amp;·

&amp;

COACHES NEEDED
The

800·44 7-8235 .

PRE·HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

3 Bdrms, 2 baths

CALL

YOUTH SOCCER

446-8235

Refrigerator

I·

SATURDAY,

Must be moved

10 am-

3 pm

446-2801

(behind Jackson Hewetl)

10¢ off Gas or Diesel , with
thts ad 9/21/08 Only!

.

446-6752
1-800-,942-9577

or

I

lntroducmg

Tess Simon, MD
Pysictan spectaltzing 111
Internal Medicine

6

p.m.

Located at 788 North

(740) 992-6434

and

three

coaches for the kindergarten
All games

at Ra ccoon

County

Park on
and

Creek

Saturday
Tuesday/

Information please con tact
Mark Danner at 446- 4612

Tupperware

extension 255 as soon a s
possible .

\

p . m. to

Middleport , OH

divtston

Pampered Chef

DOOR PRIZES .
Shop now fo r Chnstmas &amp; SAVE!!

4

grade

Body Shop At Home

Jewelry

September 24, 2008

coaches for the ftfth and sixth

Thu rsday evenings . For more

Nutrit tonal Supplements

serves victims of domestic

Park

'

Baskets
· Serenity House

at The Mtdd leport Cltntc

Second Avenue

morntngs

Tastefully Simple

G~llipolis

HOURS

Dtstnct is looktng for two

played

21 Cenlral Ave . Gal ltpolts
FEATURING:

Mcintyre

Soccer League

Pest Control
MOLLOHAN CARPET
"Quality at Low Pnce"
LAMINATE S~LE •
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis
(Next to KFC)
7 40-446-7 444

0 .0

division for the Fall Youth

SEPTEMBER 27TH

Call 446-0560

violence call

.,

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh 1o

X 80

BUSINESS AFTER

Wednesday,

New heat pump

lor cnckets, spiders and

87 Vine St.

WEB .http.//www.shamrock-auctfons .com

The Lynch
Agency

Public welcome

Now is the time to spray

Sunday Only!

Auctioneer's Asso~iatto ns

Call for a quote

2·12 x 20 porches

Robbie's BP

PHOTOS A MUST SEE AT: .

Personal SeiV)Ce

5 p .m .

Lunch served at noon

St Rt. 7 &amp;St. Rt. 124
Tue. Corn Hole Tourn 7 pm
Thur· Pool Tourn 7:30 pm
Fri. Karaoke
•
Sat., AMIX 9·1

'

Great Rates

Sunday, Sept. 21st

--;

&amp; Brent Ktng
Member of Ohio &amp; National

www s hamrock-auct to n s.co m

Band

'

TERMS: Cash or check w/pos1t1ve I. D. No Credtt Cards Checks over $1000 must have
bank authonzat1on of funds avatlable. All sales are ftnal Food w1ll be ava1 lable Not
responstble for loss or acctdents

&amp; Bonded

Higb Country Bluegrass

from 1 to

Courts ide
Bar &amp; Grill
presents
"Big Wiggle"
Fri., Sept 26th

MEDICARE .
SUPPLEMENT

American Legion Post 27

O'Dell True Value Lumber
SPRINGS! Over 100 types in stock
from 1" to over 12" Porch Sw1ngs &amp;
Garages Door Spnngs Check our
setect1on/Haavy &amp; Light Ouly
61 V1ne St M·F 7-6, Sat 8-S. Sun 10·4

Exte r mital Termite

Kerry Shendan-Boyd, Mtke Boyd

.

'

•

AUCTIONEERS: John Palrick " Pat" Sheridan ,

House For Sale

FOR SALE BY OWNER

oth er mtscellaneous

SHAMROCK AUCTION SEBVICE

·~"'"

A
Gelebra110n
of
Lt fe Overbrook Center.
located at 333 Page
Str eet. Mtddlepor1 Ollto
1s pleased to announce
that due to
tnternal
changes 1n our factbty,
we are accepung appllcaltons lor lull ltme
7P-7A LPN'S part ttme
7A ·7P LPN's and full
ttme and part bme
STNA's to
JOin our
fnendly and dedtcated
slaff
Appltca.n t's must
be
dependable
team
players witll poSIItve aNttudes
Interested appllcants can ptck up an applicatiOn
M-F
830
AM-4 30 PM All ehg1bte
applicants w111 then be
contacted by Hollte Bumgarner LPN Staff Oevel
opment
Coordtnator@740-99264 72
EOE &amp; A Parttctpanl of the Drug-Free
wol1c;place program

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

TOOLS: Bobcat auger system (12/16/24 • b1ts). Pressure Wave PWH 3635 3600 ps1
pressure washer. DeWalt Saws All , Craftsman Tool set (Saws All, C~rcular Saw Drills) , 2DeWalt 18v Dnlls, DeWall s1de gnnder Milwaukee &amp; St1hl hammer dnlls, leaf blower,
staplers, concrete hand tools . hand floats, trowels, bull float. alum1num concrete shoot, and

OWNER : Te rie Stover

Tra1ner Postllons
Are you tn1eres!ed m a
rewardtng posttton? PAIS
ts
currently
seekmg
fu tVpart ttme staff for
Jackson
County.
WV
provtdtng
reS!,denttall
commuruty sktll tratnmg
wtlh
tndllllduals
w1th
MR/DD High school d1·
ploma or GED requtred
No expenel"'ce necessary
Crtmmat
background clleck reqwred
Must have reliable transportatton and valid auto
msurance Pa1d tra1n1ng
Hourly rate starling at
$7-$8 00/llour
Please
call 1 304-'373-101 1 or
free
at
toll
1-877-373-1011

ResCat'e Home Care ts
accepttng
applications
for Support Assoctates,
CNA &amp; STNA MAIDD
exp preterred Apply at
8204 Carla Dnve, Gaihpohs, Mon - Fn, 8-4
Emad resume to rhamson@rescare com

'~

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS: box full of st,.mp collectiOn lrom US &amp; fore1gn
counlnes. Califorma Pottery turtle cook1e Jar. 2-cas t ~ron stnng holders, cow bells, school
bells , doll house turmture , 2-mllk cans, ox yoke, horse collar, 3- RR racks, and other ttems .

Ltcensed

Athens-Metgs
Educat100al Servtce Center,
507 RIChland Avenue,
Suite M108. Athens OH
45701
Responses
should be recetved by
September 30,
2008,
4 30 p m However the
posbng wtll rematn open
unttt hlled The AMESC
1s an equal opportunity
Employer/Provider
":';,.;,,.,;,;,=,.
Govamment &amp; Federal
Jabo

liliiP.1!!!!I

spectflc coms or currency
~ Check oult1mes fo r p1ck up of coins wtll only be at Noon. 2 00, 4 00 or end of
auclton

Public Notice

Public Nottce

Public Notice

Modica!

Education

Hosted by Pleasant Valley
Hospital

&amp; Me igs

County

Chamber of Commerce
Specta l gtfts appettzers and
a grand prize draw ing
PUBLIC IS INVITED

�Page 04 • 6unbap ttimn: -•mttntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH

'
•

Sunday, September 21 , 2008

Pt. Pleasant, WV

t!Crtbune - Sentinel - i\egtster

I

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH •

•

Pt: Pleasant, WV

.. ~entinel - l\egtsttr

•

CLASS IF I E,D_.
House• For Sale

land (Acreogol

House w1lh 2 acres 1n SR 10

160

Will

contract
379-2923

I

cons1der

Aportmonh/

Acres/garage/camper

or shroese@yahoo com
740·24S·901S

Ntce 4 br 2 ba home on
K1neon Or tn G&lt;1lhpohs
OUite netghborhoocl on
dead end street large 2
aar garage and hmshed
basement 740-256-1 109
Tn-level bnck/cedar on
98 acres Rutl and Oh
pnvate
sethng
eal tn
ktlchen, 3 br
2 lull
baths lg lt'.'tngroom lg
family room out of flooO
platn (740)742 2404 or
740-949-2930

or

10 acres $12 5001 Meigs

Clip th1s AD and take tl
wrth you when you vtSif
oUr community to get
lhts spectal discount
Mov e-1n 1n Oct and get

Co. 5 acres on Cook 01

$100.00 your 2BR Apt.

Landaker Ads $19,900
Reedsvtlle 12 wooded
acres. $2 1 901)1 Salem
Ctr n•ce 18+ acre lteld
NOW $50 500• Dan'.'tlle
8 acres $21 900 Gall
740-441 -1492 for maps
or
'.'ISit
www brunerlancl com
We f1nance 1
-------Real Estale
3500
Rentals

off Nov rent Currently
renhng 1 &amp; 2 BR untts
Spacious floor j)lans '
ranch &amp; town home style
hv1ng playground &amp;
basketball court on -s11e
laundry lac1hty 24 hr
emergency malnte
nance qutet country location close to mator
med1cal
facilities ,
pharmactes grot;ery
store JUS! minutes
away from other maJOr
shoppmg 1n the area

Gallla Co wooded 8 or

land (Acroogo)
200ac
+I
on
Apartmonb/
GathaJMetgs o OH bar
' Townhou1e1
der Great hunting land
S2 10 000
neg 2BR APT CIA (740)
441 0194
304 593·S260

Honeysuckle Htll s

Apartments
266 Coloma! Onve lr11 3
Btdwell, OhiO 45614
740-446 3344
Off1ce Hours M, W ~
9AM · 5PM

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Quali\y Improvement I
Joint Commission Director
Pleasant Valley Hospital IS currently
acce pting resumes for a full·ttme Qualtty
lmprovemeni/Jomt Co mmission Director.
Must have cu rrent WV RN license. BSN or

eqwvalent requtred Experience m acute
care setttn g tn a Jotnt Commisston
accre d1ted hosp1tal preferred Prev1ous
management/Supervtsory
expenence

Prevtous expenence

the

1n

Performance Improvement field preferred.

Prev1ous expenence m Jotnt Commiss1on
Surveys p refe rred.
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
Or fax 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvalley.orc
AA/EOE
Help Wan!ed

FREE RENT SPECIAL
Jord an Land1ng 2br. 3lJr
&amp; 4br Avatlabte No Pets,
Tenant Responstble for
Rent
&amp;
Electn c
304-67 4-0023
or
304 610-0776
Free
Rent
Specta llll
2&amp;3BA and up, Cen tral
Atr W/D hookup tenant
pays electrtc EHO Elm
V1ew
Apt s
(304)882·3017
Twtn Rwers Tower 1s ac·
cepttng applications lor
wa1hllg hst for HUD substdiZed 1 BR apartment
for tile elderly/disabled
call 675 6679
Beautiful Apts at Jackson Estates 52 West·
wood Or !rom $365 to
$560
740-446·2568
Equal HouSing Opportu
ntly. ThiS tnSti!Utlon IS an
Equal Opportumty Pro·
vtder and Employer
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage
Manor
and
Atverstele
Apls 1n Mtddleport, from
$327
to
$592
Equal
740-992-5064
Housmg Opportumty

1BR Apt. WID hookups
satellite TV tncl w/rent
close to hospttat Call New' Be til e ftrst to lwe
tn a new log duplex 740 339 0362
2BR
1 bath HA/CA
Porter
area
No pels De1br Apar1ment for rent 1n
Pt Pleasant all uttlllles post! &amp; ref S550 per
tncluded $500 montll month Call 446-2801
Call304 S93 5169
Now acceptmg
2 bedroom apartment tn
appltcaiiOns at
Centenary
all utilities Valley Vtew Apartments
patd · e)(cepl electnc 800 State Route 325
$350 a month Call l' 40
Thurman Oh1o 45685
256- ~ 135 leave
mes740·245·9170
sage
1-2 BedroomApartments
Apartment avatlable now wttll appliances lurntshed
On s1te laundry lacthty
Rtverbend Apts
New
Cull
lor delatls or ptck up
Haven WV Now acceptappllca
tmn at rental
tng
apphcattons
lor
office
HUD-subsldlzed
one
Posstb tlity of rental
Bedroom Apts Ultltltes
asststance
Included Based on 30%
Equal
Houstng
of adJusted 1ncome Call
Opponumty
304-882-3121,
avatlable
TOO# 419·526-0466
for Sen1or and Dtsablecl
"This
lns11turton ts an
people
Equal Oppor1umty
Provtder and Employer"

Help Wanted

H®LZER

HOSPICE

II ) OU dl t: lllll'Jeslt:ll m provu.Jmg quahty c.tre
\\~ 11.1 ~~ &lt;~hill Ttme openmg 111 1-/osptcc for
Pe rson&lt;~ I Care

TownhouMs

land contact

441 5062

preferred

Apartmonb/
Townhouses

Assistant.

M~igs

County

CONVENIENTLY
LO·
&amp;
AFFORD·
CATED
ABLE• Townhouse apar1·
ments,
and/or
small
!louses for rent Cal l = = = = = = =
740-441 -111 1 for applt
Commtrcial
cat1pn &amp; tnformatton
Commertcal Space for
Ntce
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, Rent Matn St PI Pleas
$400/mo
2000
sq/fl
Reference s!DepostVNo
703·501·4808
Pets 304-675-5162
Help Wanted

We also offer pajd mileage
1kt.ttb plc.tse ;pvc Barb Peterson, Dtrcctor
nt llum.m Rt:soun:cs tor out Long Term Cate
d1\ l~ t nn .t L,tl l dl 740-44 \-'40 1 or enuul me ,u
pl' tcr,.,un ((/ hoi Le t mg 01 v1s11 us on the web .11
1.1. 1.1. \~ holll'l org

Help Wanted

r111

l:::qu,\1Opportu ntty Employer

Help Wanted

•

l (......

Help Wanted

-.,

J •
.,,I
' ....t.. . .. ·- ·"'"- _, .... .

I '-

long Term Core I Home Coro
Division

Do you want to make n dtll ercnce&lt;J If you
compassionate and commll1ed to

.tre

ptov 1d1ng Qual II ) Car~ come and be

a part

ol our Long Term Care/Home Care team .
We have the lol lo"tng position&lt; available :

Holzer Extra Care;

* Per~o n ,d Ctrt: A tde~- Pet Dtem
Hnurl} rdtL' .tnd putd mileage
l - G.!llt.t ( mtnty I 1-tt:kson Counly
1-G.tllt,l/Me tgs

Holzer HospjC£;
~ PL'rs011.1l
~ Pe t ~l llt.ll

llo!~rr

C.trL' Ass istant - FT (Mctgs )
( 'arc Ass tsl.ml PT

Home Carei

" I h ~; 1 ,1p1 st
• S peed~- (per dJ CIIl )

• J'T. M ·l E
• LPl A· 6 f·TE

· or. n
• 1'1 Fr
·Holzl'r Senior Care Center;
"MIJS Nur se- Fl Exempt
' LPN · PT

* STN,\

Ff(l N1ght Sl11h. I Day Shi ll)

' Sf.~A- 1'1
1

~

1\ppltL.IIlh lor Nursmg A :-;~J s t. mt C!,tsscs
Dtl't.t rv A td Pl

Holzer 1\ssjsted Livjnw- Galliooljsj
* R ~s tdenl

Asstsl,mt- (C'ltn Tratn) 1- PT

Holzer t\ssjstcd Li\·jng- Jackson;
' I.PN - f'T 112h" h' ll 'i
For Jew !I s please !,!1\e B.1rb Peterson. Dtrcc tor
ol Hurn ,111 ResourLc'i fur our Long Term Carel
Home C.m: dlVI'\ tnn a c.t ll at 740-~4 1 - 140 1 or
cm;ul me :.lt pett-rsu n ~' h o l tcr org or V!S ll u~ on
the web

at"'"""' hol zcr on;
Eyua l Oppotluntl)' l:.mplnyer

®

supervisory experience. Must possess 5
years expertence tn phlebotomy. Must
have current WV/Dhio LPN license. CPR
instructor preferred. Expenence with
public speaking and development of
policies and procedures, as well as
educational
tnserving
for
outreach
facilit1es.
·
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvaller.o!J
·
AA/EDE

So leo

Soloo

5000

Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + -half acre tn pt
Pleasant
OWNE A Fl
NANCE
AVAILABLE
(740)446 3570
_ _ _ _ _ _....,_
Mobtle Home for Sale
1988
Fleming
14lC60
2br 1ba 304 675 3656
after 5 30pm
-------New 3 Bedroom homes
S21g/u•ut 4 ht'J ~ b.ull
from $214 36 per month
1:\,tn~ Rl'po 1 1 ~' t !1 1,1..,. 1 20 ~~~~~~-.., mcludes many upgrades
\' m w API-I I l•1r lt,ltnJ!' 2004 Doublew1de 1n delivery
&amp;
se t up
f!OII f&gt;:!O ~YJ(• \' I.W~ 7
new condtlton 4 bed
740-385-2434
room 2 bath , a app I1':':"""':':-'-~":':"-~
1br House tn New Ha
Sandp1pe1 mobtle llome
ances
Included
ven WV total etectnc
14X70 1990 wlappltlocatecl
al
everythtng tn walkmg diS- $37.000
ances 2 car metal car176
Zuspan
Lane
Malance $300 month $300
pon,
excellent shape
deposit
No
Pets son City 304 675 211 7
must
moved
be
304_882_3652
513 500 740 992 6849

Downtown
Mtddlepoort .
across street from New
Famtly Healthcare 1600
SCI tt (retatllshowroom
off1ce
backroom
restroom) 700+ car count
per bustness hm.u. tree
on
street
park1ng
(740)992· 1900 days
,.======"""
Houses for Rent

2 2006 161(80 Clayton 3
bed 2 bath. 200 16l&lt;70
Fleetwood 2 beet 1 bath
1999 Fortune 3 bed 2
bath We deltver block
le'.'el and anchor We
can do the tooters .also
Dayttme
740-388 0000
or 740-388-85 13 Evemngs 740 388-8017 or
740 -245 -9213

1br. $375/month m Syracuse Depostt HUD ap·
proved
No
Pets
30 4 675-5332 weekends
740-591-0265

ANTIQUE &amp; COl.LECTIBLE AUCTION

~
2 ~B
~R~hou_s_
e~1n ~G~a~lh~
po-t1 s.

OLD GLORY AUCTION HOUSE

WID
conn
$4 15/mo
$150/dep , You pay all
ultliltes No secltOn 8 or
HUD
Call
Wayne
404-456-3802
,;;;,;...;.;;.;;.;;;;.;;;;__ __
Taktng appltcattons on
ntce home on SR 160,
12 mo tease at $650 per
mo plus sec dep No
pets
44 1-5062
Qr

_
37"9,·2"9"2"3= = = = =
:::
land (Acroogol
Wanted Tp Lease Bow
hunttng
land'
need
enough lor 3 people
{828)-380-0594
Manufactured
Housmg

4000

Auction

FRIDAY, SEPT. 26th at

6:00

PM

Ronlalo

pictures and co mple t e li st go to
wvloca tor.com

Jtm Taylor. AuctiOn ee r

&amp;

favm of

Bonded in

State of Ohto

&amp; WV- #00 14

FARM MACHINERY. TRACTORS, LAWN &amp;
GAR liEN. HAY, TOOLS, Etc.

IF [QLl HAY.E S,Ql!JL.l.tl.lri!i l!l. ~~'~'·
THI(i_J(i "[ll.f:," PLA(t;; I

p ost ca td s, papet m e motabtli a.
jewelry. costume j ewe lry, nulruad

sa le!

Great food availubl e. Come o ut and
e n)uy a fun fill ed evemng .

Federal Funds JUSt released lor Land Owners
Auction
No clostng cost ar.1d
ZERO • DOWN I Will do - - - - - - - land
ltnprovements

''Qr:J.~'£Q.fi.MEij.lfi.{

~llU~dOV fQ~~I~i~~l&gt; II~M51~~1.l ll!tli
Ncu Holland H ~\ Bun:
N~.,., C~&gt;rr.tt Panels
Nc-'.1 Holland Tob 1uo Sclti.'r Round ll01le Fce dt! r ~
I &lt;I fill G.tk' All Stl.:\
Rud.: r eeders
Lune SpreaJL·r
Oltver '\ Botlom Plow
1- 1-l Ft H,l) W.l!!t111 ~
LtX U'&gt; I Pos 1 ~
211 F1 1-l a ~ Elc\ ,1 1u1
l lll ~h Pms
42-llntcrnattnn.tl l r•...:lor

Glassware. furniture. tool s,

a lon g

.

Will Be Taken:

Friday; Sept. 2~ • 8a-7p
Saturday, Sept. 27 • 7a-9a

hou sewar es, antique m e di c al t ools,

Thi s will b e

AB,E TAKJ.Nfl. dl.-1~

Consignment•

740-992-9553

2BR at Johnsons Mobtle
Home
Park
Call
or
740·64S·0506
740 446 2003

Saturday. Sept 27 @ 9·30am
Vall ey Vol F1re Dept . Apple Grove. WV
12M tlesSouthofPt Pl eas,mt onRt 2

lf~-

abQut everythin g at tillS o n e. For

Liw1scd

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

Come Ea li y &amp; Bnn£ a Friend!

There IS ~ la rge se lectt on ot JUSt

or

Auction

Auction

2 Auct ton Rmgs!

659 Pearl Street• Middleport, Of/

A u c t 10n z ip .com

Drivon &amp; o.lvory

Resort Property

Deltvery Onvers needed
for Commum fy Program
cash patd weekly,' must
6000
Emptoynent
be neat tn appearance
Rettres Welcome
Contact
· Da'.'e
at
Drivers &amp; Delivery
~==~==~;;;; 304-67S-4693
Expe nenced
driVer = = =
needed
Must be 24
years olcl ancl have 2
years expenence Apply
tn person at 2204 Jackson Ptke

Auction

1tems

I ERMS OF SALE C tsh 01 Appn.1vcU ~,; hcd by
,lliCtton Lnmp.Ul)'. 11 unknown' to ,lUctton company
must be appr&lt;w cd pnor to ~a le
loe Arrmgtun • W'V l-l.fi2 • 576-·'f)C l9 • 8 12-8 114
Frtt.:k Conrnd • WV 179fl • :'i7fi-2010 • 675-0947 •
Mt ke Adkins • h11-2 110
ANNOUNCFMENTS SAL E DAY TA KE
PRECEDENCE OV ER PRINTED MATERIAL
AUCTION COMPANY &amp; FIR E DBf'T NOT
RESPONS IB LE FOR ACC ID ENTS THEFT OR
DAMAGES

Auction

Auction

Auction

r----------:--.:---:-------.;..________.;...,

8ankruplcy &amp; Bad Cred1t
OK 2. 3, 4 and 5 bedrooms
a'.'a tlable
740-446'3384
3 BA wid hookup mobtle home, no pets $450
month
+depostt
call
446-73 11

Double wtde 3 BA 2 batll
$575 deposit $575 rent
per mth plus utls Ready
1722 B Chatham Ave
""'======"""
Saloo
~~~~~~=

1980 14&lt;70. 1 112 bath
2br wttll small lot Apple
Tree
Dr
S12,000
304-576 2096
or
304-67 4-55 13

For Sale

ASSISTANT CLINICAL COORDINATOR OF
OUTREACH OPERATIONS
Pleasant Valley Hospital ts currently
accepttng resumes for a full -time Asst.
Clinical
Coordinator
of
Outreach
Operattons. Must
possess • 5 years
experience in long term care wtth 3 years

Auction

Com meretaI

HUGE

2009 "Montana"

4Bad·2Bath
Over

2,000

Sq Ft!

$59,925
1St Time
HOMIBUYIRS
Now Avatlable!

FHA'&amp; 3_
%Dowa
lli
~~~~-

Midwest
mymldwesthome com

740.828.2150

Auction

Auction

AUCTION

Sept. 27,200810:00 A.M.
Loc,tllon Mctgs Cou nt y F,nr grou nds lntcr~ec h on of State rou le 7 ,uuJ 11
2 hours south of Columbu s 2 lwurs nurth oJ Charl c~tu n WV
,md 1 hours c,tst ol CtnmHHlt t
We wtll be ~c lhn g 1hc pcNm,ll propo.:: rty ol Mrs Mary Bo w~n , Mr J11hn
Weeks admumtr,llor HciO\\ .~rc ,1 Jew uf I he ttems tim ts d sm.tll ".1111ple
oJ 1tcm ~ we wtll hnvc to olf cr for ~, 1le to the htt; hcst btddcr
Furnjture; Wtll ett table ,tnd b rose Q,u;k l'iKllf~ wttll I extra lc;,tl stlllm
the lx1x . Wtllell enrn·er cahmel Willett butfct (~otdcboard ) Two whttc twm
beds , Wtllett slant top desk. Two lull stze bt:d~. dressers. \:hcsl of druwcr...
ntght stand s eutlcc t;.~bb . Kttdtcn t.tblc 4 dmrs Y..!lh lc.tL Pnn.:h glt~Jc r
mcc porch ch.urs {l.twn funmun.· ), swtvcl rocke rs com:h cham••mU more
Note I m pretl} sure all the furm turc ts sohd wood no vc ncc t ready tm
your home or shop.
Household Mtcro v. ,tvc, Ot ~hcs. Hand towels. May1ag wa~hcr nnd dryer
hkc new. v,Kuum cle,mer, S h ~.!ets. blanke t~ p1llow~. qud ts, d othmg.
shoes . corral lh shc~o. wftccput!&lt;., c1nck 1&gt;ots "'Bat screen TV (all TV \ ,m'
RCA).Tuppcrwarc .md mot e
Collerljhles; Longabcrgcr haskct!-1, Fcntnn g l &lt;~ss Egg: hand pmntcd .
N1ppon ncam ,md s u g.~r J.tpun Tc.tpot ~. H,1ggcr pottery. Rctro lamp~ ,md
shades. M.trbl c J c~ ntp~ . L,tm: ccd.tr chc~l. Old Ch tkb h1gh ch:.t lr (no tf.ty 1.
C11n bon om Chatrs. pfahzcralf dtshcs, Cookbooks. Many Mctgs Cou,nty
Ite m ~ Books. pl,tt Cs. Pot holders, old kntlltng needles. Sti ver ware _
Fl.tlwar:e. sm,tll amount ~.:uslu mc Jewelry. etmk books . NYC otll:,lll ,
Pomeroy year book . and more

Auctioneer: Billy R. Goble Jr.
Ph: 740-416·1164- Email: captbi1165@yahoo.com

PUBLIC AUCTION
Stewart Community Park
Saturday, September 27, 10:00 a.m.

DIRECTIONS: Rl 50·8 m1les easl of Athens ex1t on Rt 329 through Guysv1lle to Slewarl ,
turn nght on Rt 144 , aucl1on w1ll be held at the Vill age Park, near the Ftre Statton, watch tor
s1gns Check out photos on our web stte All11ems have been moved to an undtsctosed
locatton lor secunty Two auctton nngs all day except Noon when selling vehtcles, etc
VEHICLES &amp; EQUIPMENT - Sold at NOON Bobcat 22005 4x4 dtesel lntelltTrak dual
seats w/dump bed all alummum frame (2007-566 ~ours sold wtowner's consent), 1999
Dodge Laramte SLT 4x4 Truck extended cab (Cummtns d tesel w/chtp-1 49,766 m1tes sold
w/owner s consent) pony wagon, John Deere Frontier RBI060L blade
GUNS: Winchester Athens County Centenmal Model30/30-45 cal 1 of 10 (sold w/owner's
consent). Wmcheste r Athen s County Centenntal 41 0· 10 shot lever action 1 of 10 (sold
w/owner s consent) Rem1ngton Ath ens County Centenmal Model 1t 00-12 gauge 1of 1
(sold w/owner's consent), Winchester Model 42-410 pump s1lver 1nlay engraved 1 ol 66
(sold w/owner"s consent), Wtnchester Model 42 Book by Ned Schw1ng, W tnchester Model
1903·22 cal-1st automattc made (sold w/owner's consent), Wtn che~te r Model53-32 WCF
(sold w/owner's consenl). W1nch ester Modell 890-22 pump octagon barrel, Winchester
Model 1894 22 gauge , Winchester Model1906·22 gauge, 2-lull sets of Wmcheste r Model
37 red letter (youlh-12-16-20·28·41 0) , Wtnchester Model 37 • t 2 gauge 3" magnum ,
Wtnchester Model 24-20 gauge double barrel , Wtn chester Model12·1 2 gauge tully
engraved, 5·Winchesler Model 12- 12 gauge , Wmchester Model 12· t 6 gauge. 2-Wmchester
Model12 ·20 gauge . 3-Wtnchester Model97· 12 gauge Wtnchester Model97-16 gauge,
Wtnchester Model1300-20 gauge. Wtnchester Model 370-12 gauge, Wtnchester Buffalo
B1ll 30/30 cal , Browmng Magnum 20 w/extra slug barrel. 2-Browmng Sweet 16 automattc
Browntng A5-16 gauge automa tic , Brown1ng A5·20 gauge. 3-Browmng AS l1ght 12
automat1c Brownmg Ranger 12 gauge automatiC , Browmng 22 automatic , Browmng Model
308 Bar II automattc extra Browntng 20 gauge &amp; 12 gauge barrels. Remtngton Model2520 cal , Rem1ngton Model 760·30/06 pump , Remtngton Model 24·22 cal., Spnngfteld M1
R1fle w/bayo net. Spnngfteld 22 pump , Ithaca 12 gauge double barrel, Savage Model1895308 cal Lever action new 1n ortgtnal box, Henry Repeattng Ftrearms 22 lever action , Henry
Repea t1n g F1rearms Golden Boy 22 mag, J. Stevens 22 smgle shot, Marlin Model 1892
octagon barrel. Hopktn s 50 cal Muzzle loader, Rem1ngton Dale Earnhart Model 700·30/06
bolt actton lmted edtt1on new tn ong1nat bo&lt; , Date Earnhart hfe stze cardboard poster, Dale
Earnhart Budwe1ser model car, gun cases/bags Winchester wood advert1ser boxes, large
heavy duty Hentage Safe Company-44 gun sate,
CURRENCY &amp; COINS Paper Currency 1928 (1000/500/100/50/20/to/5/2/1 dollar b1lls),
1934 (100/50/10 dollar bill S), 1914 &amp; 1922 ($10) Confederate $50 &amp; $20 , 170+ S1lver
Certtflcates 1935 &amp; 1957, Two Dollar B1lls (some red letter). and lots ol miscellaneous
currency, tore1gn b1lls, several bank notes and recetpts, 50+ Proof Sets. Some book sets of
Co1ns , 380+ S1 lve r Dollars 1878·2006 (Morgan, Carson C1ty), 200+ Halt Dolla rs 1958-1995,
8-Half D1mes 1830·1860. 500+ D1mes 1853· 1996
Stlver/Mercury/Liberty/Barber/Roosevelt!Eisenhower, 500+Nickels 1867 ·2005
Jefferson/Buffalo/Shield/Liberty 1000+ Penn1es Wheat!Ltncoln/l ndtan Head, 1934 Halt
Cent . 25-0ne Cent 1794- 1904, 13·\wo Cent 1864- 1867, 9-Three Cent 1851-1865, tOO+
Mtscellaneous Coms/Currency. Mtne Token, 1776 Shtp Wreck Cotn, 1893 Columbian Expo
cotns, and lots more Co1ns are st1ll be1ng ca taloged Call or ema11for complete hst of

NOTICE OF PUBLIC tng bids for lhe Instal- tGTDCt4Z7RZ547024,
SALE
latlon of a ttuonde lab 171118
In obedience to the at their treatment plant 1994,
GMC,
Meigs County Common facility. The bid will in- 1GTDC14ZORZ546796,
Pleas courfo '"ORDER etude Installation of 178373
DIRECTING
PUBLIC prefabricated building, 1996,
FORD,
SALE " ot the parties tab equipment, electrl· 1FALP57U4TG270235,
real property, as or· cal, water, and waste 76829, Tag
dared In the ca.., water storage.
1996,
CHEVY,
styled James K. Oatley A complete set ot plans 2G1 WL52M5T1186067,
v. Richard L. Dailey, Is available at Leading 160392, Lumina
The DDMR&amp;DD Galllpo·,
Case No. 07-CV-109, Creek
Conservancy 1996,
FORD,
Meigs County Court ot District's oHtce located 1FALP5225TG309372,
Its Oe'.'elopmental Center
Common Pleas, on the at 34481 Corn Hollow 152863, Taurus
IS
currently
seektn g
30th day of September, Road, Rutland, OH 1999,
FORD,
therapeutiC
Prog ram
2008, at 10:00 a.m. I, 45775 . Call 740-742· 2FAFP71W2XX224924,
Workers You must have
E. 2411 tor an appoint· 161533, Crown Vtc
Christopher
-==~~~=- at least 6 months patd
Tenoglla,
Attorney
at mont to review the 1999,
FORD,
expenence
tn
dtrect
care.
FEDERAL
2FAFP71W7XX224921 ,
Law, 2QO East Second plans.
school
a
htgh
POSTAL JOBS
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio" Blda will be accepted t91130, Crown VIc
Drivers/OWner
d1ploma/GED and a vahd
$17
89-$28
27/HR
,
now
45769, {Ph. (740) 992· untll4 ·00 p m an Sep· 1999,
FORO,
dnver's
ltcense
Operators
6368), shall oHer the tember 23, 2008. LCCD 2FAFP71 W9-)(J(224922,
hmng 'Fo; appllcalton Apphcaltons may be suband Leue Purcl1ase
following real property reserves the right Ia t68949, Crown VIc
online ·
at
Call us today and let us and free government JOb mmed
for sale on the steps ot accept or relect any or 2000,
FORD
tn
fo,
call
Amencan
Ascareers ohiO gov or m
tell you abOut our
the
Meigs
County all bids.
2FAFP71 W5YX174084
soc
of
Labor person at the Galhpohs
opportunittesl We offer
Courthouse, Court and BY Board of Leading 180220, Crown Vic
1·913·599·8226
2411'irs Developmental
Center
Owner Operators No
Maintenance /
Second
Street, Creek
Conservancy 2001,
FORD,
emp
serv
lease on Cost plus tlley
Admtmstrahon BU1Id1ng
Domestic
Pomeroy, Ohio , Ia lhe Dlstrlc~ President, Fen· 2FAFP7tW5tXI60370,
AppltcaiiOilS
may
be
can make up to
e.. ' .....
203142, Crown Vic
hlghesl bidder. The ton Taylor.
mailed or faxed to
$200,000.00 Per Year
FEDERAL
minimum
bfd
tor
the
(9)7,
14,
21
MISCELLANEOUS
with an avg current Total
ODMR&amp;DO
Galhpohs ~=~=:-:---subjecl property shall
EQUIPMENT
MAINTENANCE
POSTAL JOBS
Developmental Center
PRODUCTION
Revenue Mtle
be
$26,640.00.
Said
Public
Notice
OTY, ITEM, DESCRIP·
Care
Health
ABODE
MECHANIC
loaded or empty of
S17 89·$28 27/HR . now 2SOO Oh1o Avenue. Galh· OPERATORS
property
is
being
sold
TION , MODEL#, SEAA
lull
ttme
employment
Servtces
Inc
Hmng
Full lime employment op$1 861
hmng
For appllcatton pohs Oll1o 4563 1 '
In "" AS IS'" condition Notice to Engineering tAL#
opportuntty
for
a
matnte
Homemakers
for
Mason
portunities
for
entry
te
...
el
Phone
(740)
446·1642
Out and back freight
and free government JOb
with no warranty, either Firms:
1, Dell , Computer, MMP,
273 Fax
(740) chemtcal operators are nance mechamc IS be1ng County 304 586-944 1 or
100% fuel surcharge
tnfo call Amencan As- eX1
expressed
or
Implied,
Leading
Creek
ConserBFR3V01
offered
by
M&amp;G
Poly
toll
free
1-666-327-7262
betng offered by M&amp;G
ad1usted weekly to
soc
of
Labor 446·134 1
as ta suitability of the vancy District Is seek· 1, Monitor, 07031 LD,
Polymers
tn
Mason
The
Galllpols
Developprotect the contractors\
mars tn Mason County NEEDED IMMEOIATELY property tor any pur- lng an Engineering firm 08MLC0030059
1·913·S99·8226.
24111rs
mental Center 1s an County WV Candidates WV
Plus Mucll Morel
Candidates must IN
THE
TRI-STATE pose nor as to mar· to evaluate their water 1, Rlcoh - Aficlo, color
ernp serv
Equal Opportumty Em- must have a lltgh sclloot posses a htgh school dt- A.REA
Occupational ketablllty of title to said system, to make rec· laser pnnter
Also we offer a LEASE
PURCHASE program
POST OFFICE
NOW ployer
dtploma or equtvalenl ploma or equt'.'alent GED MediCine Nurses AN's property. The property ommendatlons on low- 1, Lexmark, Copter,
~-=-....,~--:-- GED and be Willing and and tJe wttlmg anct avatl and
LPN s Compelthve to be sold Is legally de- erlng
With $0 Dollar Down
system Fax , Scanner., X5t50
HIRING avg Pay $20/hr An Excellent way to eam avatlable to work rotaltng
able to work rotal1ng salary and Dene{tts de- scribed as follows :
w1th approved credit'
pressures,
while
sttll 1, HP, Printer-Color
or
%57Kiyr,
Includes money The New AVon 12 hour shiftS Demon- Shifts
Need COL A with
The preferred !erm ined by expenence Situated In the Counly maintaining adequate LaserJel
2550L,
Fed
Ben,
OT
Place
by
Call
Manlyn
strated
expenence
tn
an
candidates shall possess and quahhcatlons Please of Meigs In the State of pressure to I heir cus· Q3702A, CNDDBOt794
Tanker/Hazmat
adSource not afft1tated 304-882-2645
tndustnal
en'.'lronment and be able 10 demon· call at 740-574- 1770 or
Call today and let us see
t, HP, Printer-Color
Ohio and In the Town- tomers.
w1lh USPS who hires '::'::::':~~-:-~-~
what we can do for yout
1-866-403 2sa2
AVONI All Areas1
To and pnor cllemtcal plant strate mechantcat sktlls 877 552 1883
ship of Chester ;
Before September 23, Laserlet
2550L,
Buy or Sett Shtr1ey expenence IS preferred tncludmg bu t not hmtted ~~~~~~~~ Being In Fractions 7 2006 Interested firms 03702A, CNDDG00584
t -888-351-6586
weld1ng ability to
Serv1ce 1 Bus
Spears 304-675 1429
lndt'.'lduals
meettng to
Miller Transporters
and 13, T4 North , Rt2 should call 740-742· 1, HP, Printer -Desklet,
troubleshoot
ancl repatr 9000
::---":"'~:"""--~":'"' these requ~rements must
Dtrecto ry West ot the Ohio Com- 2411 for datela review C6427B, MY020t5002
www.mllfert.com
Bossard Memonal L1- submtt a resume postpumps and the knowl ==~==:;::::::; pany's Purchase and Leading Creek Conser- 1 LexMark. Printer.
'A Place to Call HOME" brary seeks applicants
kd
T d
edge and abtlity 1o use r
d
being described as tal- vancy District's sys- 4126·003. 7330795979
~=;;;E~u-'coti""'"a;;;n=~- Foster Parents Neededtll for tile posttton of Ltbrary ~:;,:mber b~o. ~~ at~ all forms of prec1ston
1, Micro, Keyboard,
tows: Beginning at a lem.
The Athens-Metgs Edu- $30-$48 8 day with pd Page/Shelver Up to 16 the address below, pro- measuremen1 loots lnd1
point South 57.5 feet By Board of Leadmg KB565BL, 15120130957
catlonal Service Center respite Tratnmg begtns hours per week Mlm vidtng contact tnforma- vtduals meeltng these reand South .87' 37' East Creek
Conservancy 1, Sam sung, Keyboard,
has a postt1on opemng tn September Call Oasts mum
wage
tncludes tton, employment h1story qwremems must subm1 t
216 teet from the North· District, President, Fen- SEMCI9V2, 9005686
as
Regional
Literacy 10 help a child hnd a evening and weekend and descnphons o1 any a resume postmarked by
west comer of Fraction ton Taylor.
1,
HP,
Keyboard,
Consultant tor Region 16 place 10 ca tt home sllifts Must be a mtm- certtftcal\ons
training, Tuesday September 30
13, said patnt of begin· (9) 7, 4, 21
KB0133 ., B68BAOM877
325
1558
State
Support,
Team 1·
- "
mum of s1xteen (16) courses or relevant pro· 2008 to the address· be
GAPK08A
nfng being marked by a
This ts a Full Time Post- ~~~:--~-- years of age and pass grams completed Candl- low provtdmg contact mconcrete marker and
Public Notice
1,
HP,
Keyboard ,
employment
tion. Quahftealtons
At $250 Sign on Bonul background clleck Job dates ol tnterest wtll be lormatton.
S D M 4 7 0 0 P ,
being on the Northerly
teast five years of sue- Ten poSIIlOns need filled
descrtpiiOn and appllca- contacted
for pre-em- h1story and descnptlons
RIW line ol Ohio State The VIllage ot Rio B68BAOHLPPEL5C
any
certtftcal1ons.
cessful readtng mstrucby next weeki
lion a'.'a~able at library ployment
assessments/ of
Rt. 7; thence South 82' Grande Finance Com- 1, 1ntalllmouse, Mouse
tratntng cou rses or reletton In a classroom; Mas- No expenence requtredl Circulation desk Appltca- mterv1ews
45' 16" East 232.7 teet mlttae will meet on 1, HP, Mouse
Polymers vanl
programs
comNo Salesl
lton must be ma1led to
M&amp;G
tat's degree tn educat1on
along the Northerly Tuesday, September 1, HP, Compaq CamHuman Resources pleted Candidates of tn
(Readtng, Spectal EduNo Co11ecttons1
Bossard Library
Atln
RIW line ol Ohio State 23, 2008, at 5:00 PM In puter,
cl530,
cation or concentratiOn tn
7 SpruceSt
- Productton Operator terest wtll be contacted
Rt. 7 to a concrete tha Municipal Building. USU42400F4
marker; thence North Clerk Beth Brabham t , KDS, Monltor-19'",
Literacy),
appropnate
Recrul1 volunteers for
Gallipolis, Ohto 4563 1
P.O Box e
Apple tor pre-employment assessments/ mtervtews
o• 17' 28" East 335.9 announced.
VS195e, 1092049090
Ohto certtftcatton or 11non-proft1organtzaiiOns
AHn ; Debb1e Saunders, Grove, WV 25502
teet to a concrele September 21 , 2008
VCDTS21554censure. tecllnology exsuch as St Jude
ltbrary Otrector
---=-~-~-- Reply IO M&amp;G Polymers
Attn
Human Resources
marker; thence South
t , Optiquast, Manftor,
penence
(l e , on-line
Clltldren's Research
Apphcat•ons
must
be
Sportswriter
management
system
~ospltal
postmarKed by Sept 27, Tile Oh1o Valley Publish- - Ma1nlenance MechaniC
82' 05' 45" West 297.4
Public Notice
t M, 9L03869380
teet to a concrete
1, Polk Audio, Speak·
Ap
email, electronic presenGet patd to make a
2008 EOE
tn'J CO. ts seektng moh- POBoxB
marker on the Easterly PUBLIC NOTICE
ers
tanon), and access to
dlfforoncet
vated people-onented
pte Grove. WV 25502
Custodian
for
local
technology after school
mdtvtdual 11!Ill a vacancy
line of 2.093 acre lot A public auction tar the 1, Labtec, Speakers
church
Mon-Frl 8 30am
surveyed by Homes Gallta County CommlsInk Cartridges- Black
hours
Additional Pre·
-t Full and Part-lime
to 2pm $10/hour Send
tn lhe news dept as a
Hysell In June , 1964; stoners will be held at 2,
HP,
LaserJet,
ferred Previous expenPositi ons
Sportswnter
The
sue·
reume to Mlmster, PO
thence South 13' 08' 6·00 PM an Thursday. 03960A
enoe as a SlAt tnstructor
.;- Day and Even1ng
cessfuf
candtdate
wtll
Bol&lt; 228 Pomt Pleasant,
1
East 272.8 teet along October 2, 2008, at the 3, HP, Ink Cartridgesor participant, and adult
Shtfts
WV 25550
cover lllgh scllool ath etsaid
Easterly line to the Shawnee Lane fm· #44 Magenta
tnstructtonal
expenence
..r Profess1onal Work
1cs m tile area for the
point ot beginning , pound Lot on State 2, HP, Ink CartridgesExpectations
Participate
Envtronmentl
Hair Dresser Wanted at da1ly edthon of tile newscontaining 1.818 acres, Route 160 near the Gal· #44 Yellow
tn all state sponsored
-1 MediCal, Dental, EAP,
Shae·s Beauty
Salon
paper as well as asstsl
more
or tess, with 0.428 Ita County Animal Shel- 1, HP, Ink Cartridgestrainings, participate 1n
o1KI
contact
Kame
wtlh
tile
produclton
of
4
acres, more or less, In ter. The following wtll #23 Tricolor
e·leamlng
tramtngs
..r On-s tte Doctor
304-675-2828
sports pages ExCellent
Fraction 13, and 1.390 be sold:
This Information Is also
onhne,
-1 Weekly Pay and
(race -to-face,
House parents(2)wanted writing and English sktlts,
acre,
more
or
less,
In
VEHICLES
located on our websha
digital), comm11 to ma1nBonus tncenttvesl
photography sktlls and
for boys group home loFraction 7.
• YEAR , MAKE, VIN , www.galllanet.net. All
talmng f1del1ly to lhe OhiO
knowledge of desktop
ca ted. tn southern Ohto
Reference Deed: Vol- MILEAGE
purchases over $1 ,000
ltteracy lntllaltves destgn,
Calf TODAY!
27-7 care for 2 weeks on
publtshtng are sougllt
ume
56,
Page
383,
1981,
International
pa1d
by personal check
content, tex 1s and ttme
Interview
The postltOn 1s tuUtt me
-2 weeks off. Expenence
Meigs County OHiclal 1HTAR1885BHB18545, must be accompanied
•voodland Drive
commttment
web-based
TOMORROW II
40
hours
a
week,
wittl
ra1slng teens or fo ster
76097, 182
by a Letter of Credit
Records.
FtrcpiHcc Central AC C&lt;trpctcd floors wooU fioor s.
session checkltst. correWork NEXT WEEK III
benehts Interested parcare prelerred We proAudltar "s Parcel Num- t 98B ,CHEVROLET. from a Banklng lnstltupd l to, &lt;. pa!J,K un t b~aut1ful &lt;.:athcdral~:cJh ng s tn LR
spond
dally
through
ttes can send resumes to
vide tra1n1ng Interested?
ber: 03-00342.000 and 1GCDC14H7 JZ153020, lion, no exceptions. All
.1nd MB All oak tn m .md o,\k 6 panel tnten or doors
email
commumcatton
1-888-IMC·PAYU
Call
OaSIS
Kevm Kelly Managtng
158127, GC1
Items are sold as Ia,
03-00343.000.
Stone
wood
hurnt ng fucplncc With m ~ crt c u~tum
and hold VIrtual offtce
Ext 1901
1-877-325-1588 for more
Edttor, Ohto Valley Pub
Cammon
Address 1989,
CHEVROLET, and all sales are llnal :
buth
wa]k+
UI
dn~ct 111 m-1~tcr h&lt;tthroom and g trden
hours Langill of contract httP:IIJobs.lnfoctalon.c mformatiOn
hshmg Co , 825 Th1rd
38313 State Route 7, 1G1AW51W4K6252300, Items
must be re•
tub K1tchen Js\,md w/bn:.lkl,t ~ l nook dtn tn g room
and salary wtll be deterom
Ave , Ga l 1 potls Ohto
Longbottom.
Ohio
89063,
Celebrity
moved
from
the prop,md
pantr~
Stm
Hlo
m
&lt;~
n&lt;l
h.tLk
deck
with
bu!lt
m
hot
mined upon employment
Servtce Manager &amp; Serv45631 or kkelly@my(9)
14,
21,28
1989,
GMC,
erty
within
24
hours
tub
BmJU~
toom
~:ould
.:1thcr
be
used
a~
family
room
Submlt letter of 1nterest
tee Techmctan postttons
datlytnbune com No
1GTDC14Z1KZ512405, The Gallla County
or 4tl1 bedroom wnh ~kyltghts Fl~.mnng ts \:eram tc
OPHTHALMIC
OFFICE available Heallh care &amp;
pho e calls please
resume, references and
n
Public Notice"
182006
Commissioners
reAND MEDICAL ASSIS· Rel~remenl plans avail· _,.;.,~-~~--­ 11le, hardwood and c .trp~iltng g.1lcbo !lnd beautiful
1991, GMC , 2GDHG3t serve the rlghttoreject
ccples of all current OhiO TANT Great
Deneflts, able Please send re- WV 80hr Underground landscapmg. fenl:ed b.td:.y.trd All bnck extenor
Certlflcateslllcenses
to wages and woril;\ng con- , sume
to Miners Class, stanmg Add 1t1onalland Hi also avatlable for purchase 2 92 ae
Notice to Contractors: K9M4506477, 150119, any bid.
Leading Creek Coneor- Bus
September 21 , 2008
John D Constanzo, Su· ditiOns.
888-763-2393 LLCCCAREO COM
or soon
Whlt-Co-Tratning
Michele Mitis- 304-532-0312
vancy Dlatrfct Is seek- 1994,
GMC,
perintendenl,
F;ax 740-n3-9093
fax to 740·446-9104
304·372-8346

• Dnver's EducatJOn posttiof'l open 1n tile Gallipolis
and Metgs area Flextble
hours. Must be able to
wor1c
eventngs
and
weekends
Job enta1ls
classroom and Oehtnd
the wheeL tnstrucliOn tor
new dnvers
Qualified
candtdates must llave a
high
school
dtploma,
valki
dnvers
hcense,
pass
background
checks, exp prelerred tn
~afflc safely, law en·
forcement, or teachtng,
or we w1lllra1n. EDE

Shop the

Classifieds!

L

$259

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
.·

tn Ohio

&amp; WV -

MilWAY TAVERN

www .auctionzip.com - My # is 5548

Ematl. HYPERLINK "mailto .ShamrockAuctton@aol.com

Note: 1D REQUIRED TO REGIS'I'EH.: Bn ng ,, fn~:nd , a cl\.t~r. and .li!ond
appcttte as the Meigs County Senior Citizens w1ll he servmg grc,tt food G11J
blc"s you all and COJOY the auc tmn
. Tcm1 s cash or cllcck wttll )X)SIItvc I D Auct toneer ~ ~
not re spon'itblc for a c~;: tdc nt Announcements made at ,tuetl on t ,J~~ p rcn~dt:ucc
uvcr all pnntcd malcna t

Matllo:ShamrockAuction@ aol.com" ShamrockAuctton@ aol.com

PH : 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

1996 Mobile Home
16

Stove

Asian beetles .

&amp;·

&amp;

COACHES NEEDED
The

800·44 7-8235 .

PRE·HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

3 Bdrms, 2 baths

CALL

YOUTH SOCCER

446-8235

Refrigerator

I·

SATURDAY,

Must be moved

10 am-

3 pm

446-2801

(behind Jackson Hewetl)

10¢ off Gas or Diesel , with
thts ad 9/21/08 Only!

.

446-6752
1-800-,942-9577

or

I

lntroducmg

Tess Simon, MD
Pysictan spectaltzing 111
Internal Medicine

6

p.m.

Located at 788 North

(740) 992-6434

and

three

coaches for the kindergarten
All games

at Ra ccoon

County

Park on
and

Creek

Saturday
Tuesday/

Information please con tact
Mark Danner at 446- 4612

Tupperware

extension 255 as soon a s
possible .

\

p . m. to

Middleport , OH

divtston

Pampered Chef

DOOR PRIZES .
Shop now fo r Chnstmas &amp; SAVE!!

4

grade

Body Shop At Home

Jewelry

September 24, 2008

coaches for the ftfth and sixth

Thu rsday evenings . For more

Nutrit tonal Supplements

serves victims of domestic

Park

'

Baskets
· Serenity House

at The Mtdd leport Cltntc

Second Avenue

morntngs

Tastefully Simple

G~llipolis

HOURS

Dtstnct is looktng for two

played

21 Cenlral Ave . Gal ltpolts
FEATURING:

Mcintyre

Soccer League

Pest Control
MOLLOHAN CARPET
"Quality at Low Pnce"
LAMINATE S~LE •
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis
(Next to KFC)
7 40-446-7 444

0 .0

division for the Fall Youth

SEPTEMBER 27TH

Call 446-0560

violence call

.,

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh 1o

X 80

BUSINESS AFTER

Wednesday,

New heat pump

lor cnckets, spiders and

87 Vine St.

WEB .http.//www.shamrock-auctfons .com

The Lynch
Agency

Public welcome

Now is the time to spray

Sunday Only!

Auctioneer's Asso~iatto ns

Call for a quote

2·12 x 20 porches

Robbie's BP

PHOTOS A MUST SEE AT: .

Personal SeiV)Ce

5 p .m .

Lunch served at noon

St Rt. 7 &amp;St. Rt. 124
Tue. Corn Hole Tourn 7 pm
Thur· Pool Tourn 7:30 pm
Fri. Karaoke
•
Sat., AMIX 9·1

'

Great Rates

Sunday, Sept. 21st

--;

&amp; Brent Ktng
Member of Ohio &amp; National

www s hamrock-auct to n s.co m

Band

'

TERMS: Cash or check w/pos1t1ve I. D. No Credtt Cards Checks over $1000 must have
bank authonzat1on of funds avatlable. All sales are ftnal Food w1ll be ava1 lable Not
responstble for loss or acctdents

&amp; Bonded

Higb Country Bluegrass

from 1 to

Courts ide
Bar &amp; Grill
presents
"Big Wiggle"
Fri., Sept 26th

MEDICARE .
SUPPLEMENT

American Legion Post 27

O'Dell True Value Lumber
SPRINGS! Over 100 types in stock
from 1" to over 12" Porch Sw1ngs &amp;
Garages Door Spnngs Check our
setect1on/Haavy &amp; Light Ouly
61 V1ne St M·F 7-6, Sat 8-S. Sun 10·4

Exte r mital Termite

Kerry Shendan-Boyd, Mtke Boyd

.

'

•

AUCTIONEERS: John Palrick " Pat" Sheridan ,

House For Sale

FOR SALE BY OWNER

oth er mtscellaneous

SHAMROCK AUCTION SEBVICE

·~"'"

A
Gelebra110n
of
Lt fe Overbrook Center.
located at 333 Page
Str eet. Mtddlepor1 Ollto
1s pleased to announce
that due to
tnternal
changes 1n our factbty,
we are accepung appllcaltons lor lull ltme
7P-7A LPN'S part ttme
7A ·7P LPN's and full
ttme and part bme
STNA's to
JOin our
fnendly and dedtcated
slaff
Appltca.n t's must
be
dependable
team
players witll poSIItve aNttudes
Interested appllcants can ptck up an applicatiOn
M-F
830
AM-4 30 PM All ehg1bte
applicants w111 then be
contacted by Hollte Bumgarner LPN Staff Oevel
opment
Coordtnator@740-99264 72
EOE &amp; A Parttctpanl of the Drug-Free
wol1c;place program

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

TOOLS: Bobcat auger system (12/16/24 • b1ts). Pressure Wave PWH 3635 3600 ps1
pressure washer. DeWalt Saws All , Craftsman Tool set (Saws All, C~rcular Saw Drills) , 2DeWalt 18v Dnlls, DeWall s1de gnnder Milwaukee &amp; St1hl hammer dnlls, leaf blower,
staplers, concrete hand tools . hand floats, trowels, bull float. alum1num concrete shoot, and

OWNER : Te rie Stover

Tra1ner Postllons
Are you tn1eres!ed m a
rewardtng posttton? PAIS
ts
currently
seekmg
fu tVpart ttme staff for
Jackson
County.
WV
provtdtng
reS!,denttall
commuruty sktll tratnmg
wtlh
tndllllduals
w1th
MR/DD High school d1·
ploma or GED requtred
No expenel"'ce necessary
Crtmmat
background clleck reqwred
Must have reliable transportatton and valid auto
msurance Pa1d tra1n1ng
Hourly rate starling at
$7-$8 00/llour
Please
call 1 304-'373-101 1 or
free
at
toll
1-877-373-1011

ResCat'e Home Care ts
accepttng
applications
for Support Assoctates,
CNA &amp; STNA MAIDD
exp preterred Apply at
8204 Carla Dnve, Gaihpohs, Mon - Fn, 8-4
Emad resume to rhamson@rescare com

'~

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS: box full of st,.mp collectiOn lrom US &amp; fore1gn
counlnes. Califorma Pottery turtle cook1e Jar. 2-cas t ~ron stnng holders, cow bells, school
bells , doll house turmture , 2-mllk cans, ox yoke, horse collar, 3- RR racks, and other ttems .

Ltcensed

Athens-Metgs
Educat100al Servtce Center,
507 RIChland Avenue,
Suite M108. Athens OH
45701
Responses
should be recetved by
September 30,
2008,
4 30 p m However the
posbng wtll rematn open
unttt hlled The AMESC
1s an equal opportunity
Employer/Provider
":';,.;,,.,;,;,=,.
Govamment &amp; Federal
Jabo

liliiP.1!!!!I

spectflc coms or currency
~ Check oult1mes fo r p1ck up of coins wtll only be at Noon. 2 00, 4 00 or end of
auclton

Public Notice

Public Nottce

Public Notice

Modica!

Education

Hosted by Pleasant Valley
Hospital

&amp; Me igs

County

Chamber of Commerce
Specta l gtfts appettzers and
a grand prize draw ing
PUBLIC IS INVITED

�Page D6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, oH· • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Holzer Hospice•
announces expansion

Garden giants, A2

•

Unteclunology,~

\..

Employee

Discount
for
Everyone

' ·l'rinted on 10d 9,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS

··Vul. 58, No~. .51

SPORTS
• Gi~:~rits beat Bengals
.in overtime. See Page Bl

06 SIDIN

2009 PONIIIC

25

33

INSmCKI

lrl

08

10
INSTOCKI

MPBI

. -'·. '· .. . ,MONDAY,
:!2, zooS
.. SEPTE:\IBER
'·
.
~

'

MSRP ................... 518,210
GM ~PlOni DISCOUNT .....51,424

'

·

..,.

.

-t1&gt;

"'"'-m" laih&gt;&lt;·•llin l'l.&lt;·um

Work continuing at coal mine site
Bv BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDIIILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Work continues at the site of Gatling,
Ohio's coal .mine centrally
located along Yellowbu sh
Road ·outside of Racine
·with production slated for
early ne 0t year.
On Friday a Gatling , Ohio
spokesperson said the construction was "ahe ad of
schedule" and the company
was pleased with the way
the project was progressing.

PlOYEE PRICING • GREAT REBATES
!009 PONIIiC

'. .

Rt:e~·cled ~ewsprint

The steel for the coal
preparation plant, a six story structure , is ready with
the foundation already
poured and the steel for the
first story already in place.
Drilling of one of the two .
mine shafts was set to wrap
up this past weekend. There
will be two mine shafts, one
250 feet in total depth , the
other 325 feet in total depth.
The first 250-foot mine shaft
should be completed by mid
to late October after which
the 325-foot mine shati will

begi n to take shape by North the excavation lor the coal yet been approved for ·the
American Drillers. The preparation facility's foun- mine&gt; barge load-out facilmin,: shafts will be lined dation was done by Pullin s it y along ~th e 01\io Ri ver
with steel to ensure the air Excavation and all concrete ca lled Meigs Point Dol·k,
shafts stay open.
,
used on the job has been sup- Roses ' Excava tinu and
Gatling personnel are plied by Forest Run Ready Pullins Excavation '~ere the
constructing the mine 's Mix, all of Meigs County.
low bidders for jobs at the
slope which will be I ,400
'The Gatling management site and both will share
feet in total length. At this is personally delighted with earthwork responsibilities.
point the slope has been dri- the results from these three Design work has al so been
ven about 400 feet and the local organizations in the completed on 1he site bu t no
company anticipates fini sh- construction .. we 're slightly field constru ctio n ca n begin
ing it early next year.
ahead of where we thought until the permit is approved.
The excavating prepara- we'd be, a lot of credit goes
Gatling estimates around
tion for the mine shafts was to the local contractors."
200 peop le will work at the
done by Roses' Excavatin g.
Though the permit has not Meigs· operation .

OEPA
liiiiH BUICK

lACROSSE ca

2008 BUICK

lUCERNE

employee
responds
to e-mail
controversy

CK

25

28

MPOI

MPOI .

MSRP ...................52~290
· GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT .....• St,l39
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH · . .. .5500
GM PURCHASE BONUS CASH ...51,250

MSRP .... .... ........... 525,600
GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT .. . ..52}32
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH .•.. )500
GM PURCHASE BONUSCASH .. .S1,250

BY BETH SERGENT
. BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

'

2008 GMC

SIIRRA 1~00 4X4 RIG CAB

10119 PtiNliAC

4X4

VIDE

...
·51
..;
-c
......
..

-

28

va

MPBI

MSRP ....... •...• •.. .... 518,135
GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT . •. . •5~369
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH ...• )500

s
!UU9 BUICl

•

ENClAVE Cl

MSRP . . . .. . . . ......... 531,301
GM EMMIU DISCOUNT .....13,1 81

1001 iNC

'

CANYON 414 Ill CAB

' lOOiGMC

MIIP .. .. ...... .........522,420
GM EMPLOYU OtiCODNI .....11,830
6M lll~L COMliiMU CAIH ...II 000
GM PIIROIAII BONUS CASH ... .!11111

!OOIIMC SIERRA I~GHD
CIIW CU DDIIIU DIISH

MIIP .. ... .. ... .........534,310
GM EMPLOYE! DISCOUNT .... .13,748
GM iHijl (ONIIJMIR (ISH .. 52,11110
GM PURCIIASIIONUI CASH ...13,000

MSRP ............... .'.. .$47,«1
GM IMPIOIU DISCOUNT .. ... S6,015
GM IETAIL CONlUMIR CAlli .. .11,000
GM PURCHASE BONUS CASH .. ,54,000.

!i
•ca ~~~~~~

• Youth hunt.
See Page AS ·
• Talk about
your prescriptions.
See Page AS
·, Roush family
. announces new history
volume. See Page A3
• Ohio Genealogical
Society officer visits.
See Page A2

SIERRhoomm

MIRP .. ,... .'............134,055
GM IMPLOYU DIICOONT .....13,853
~M IIT~l CONIIJ.IliHAIH : .12,000
GM PIIRCIIAIIIONUS CAlli ...13,000

11)1)8&amp;MCSIERRA I~OUIICIIW

INSIDE

WEATHER

1008 GMCYUKON 414

MSRP ..... ........... ... $47,!71
GM EMPlOYE! DISCOUNT .... .11,841
GM IHIII CONIIJMII (ISH ..12,0011
GM PURCHASIIOIIUS CAlli .. .13,000

. Details on Page A3

INDEX '

Hamilton, ·Crane.best
at Art in the Park
BY BRIAN
;

3RD&amp;ANN ST.
.1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

304-485-4418

WWW.MATHENVMOTORS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON·FRI9AM-7:30PM • SAT 9AM·6:30PM • SUN IPM·SPM

o:-· --·-·-

-.·-·-··---- --~--

W£ A~E PROFESSION.\[ GRACE'

0.

Drive Beautiful.

· erator art. and other projects.
Storyteller Donna Wil son led ·
in telling an unfolding story.
Patty Sykes ·of Canal
Winchester was the featured
artist for the show and art sale.
The Huntington. W.Va . na.tive
grew up in southern Ohio, .and
her love of nature was evident
'in the work she displayed .
Sykes works from her own
studio , The Ridge Art Studio.
and is also an art instructor.
Judging results, by class . were:
Oil
painting:
Bobbi e
DeLong , Pomeroy, "Goodie ,
Goodie Gumdrops ;" Lula
Toban, Pomeroy, "Gathering
Eggs ;" and Julia ProctorHouston, "After Renoir."
Acrylic painting: Rhojean
McClure, Pomeroy, "Gray;"
Harold Bumgarner, New Haven ,
W.Va., "Desert Horses;" Linda
Riggs, Reedsville, "Ocean ."
Watercolor pai;,ting: Robert

Please see Art. A5

· A3

Thinking pink

Calendars

A3

Raising funds for free cancer services

Classifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

IIMC:

REED

MIDDLEPORT
Elizabeth
Hamilton
of
Gallipolis took best of show at
the Riverbend Arts Council's
Art in the Park Saturday, for
her painting , "Indian."
Peggy Crane's photograph ,
"Two . for Tea ," was reserve
best of show . Crane is from
·Middleport.
A beautiful autumn-like day
and the beautifui.Ohio River in
the background made for a perfect art show. The event, held in
Dave Diles Park, was considered a success in terms of both
participation and public interest.
Paintings and photographs
lined the park's riverfront
walkway, and free activities
were organized for young
arti sts and older ones, as well.
A community canvas was
painted, and children could create sidewalk drawings, refrig-

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS .

•

J.

BREED @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

Bs

A4

Editorials
Sports

B-Section

A:3

Weather

' Publishing Co.
© 2008 Ohio Valley

.

Bv

COLUMBUS
..,. The
Ohio
Env ironmental
Protection Agency employee who wrote wh at has
become a much ·talked
about inter- office e-mail
about a permit regarding
Amencan
Municipal
Power-Ohio\
proposed
power plant ha s spoken to
The Daily Senti nel.
On April
10. Mike
Yandrich of the Ohio EPA
who w01led on the draft
wastewater perm it for
.. AMP-Ohi o's r~d ve ri zedcoal powe r plant wrote to
supervisor Bruc e Goff:
"Don't have I he · SEJ
(social/economic justification report) do ne. I am ·
strug gling personall y ·and
professionall y with this. as I
cannot in goqd faith provide
any type of positive social .
or economic justifi cation."
Last month the Ohio EPA
mainl\t ined th e e-mail.
which was referenced · at a
public hearing llli the permit
by Nach y Kanfcr of the
Sierra Club. ha' been mi s·
cons1rued and misu nderstood . Kanfer fe lt the e-mail
showed " that Mike was
confused ahout hnw to subvert hi s own judgment."
Yandrich. who .has been
with the agency for 13 years
but only with the Division
of Surface Water for four.
told The Dail y Sentinel on
Fridav his e- mail was "definitely taken out of context
by the Sierra Club ... no one
(from the Sierra Club) contacted or asked me what the
e-mai l was aboul. I th ink it
was taken out or contex t to
. serve their purposes."
Yandrich maintained what
the Ohio EPA had previou s
said. that when it cam~ to ·
fillin g out the SE.I report
(his first at the agency) he
did'n't fee l qualified or
Patty Sykes of Canal Winchester was lhe featured trained to the point where
artist at Saturday's Art in the Park event. She grew up · he felt comfortable signing .
in sou1h flrn Ohio, and has won many awards for her off on the document.
"I'm an engineer. I'm not
work, mostly in oils.
trained in e·c onom ics or
soCioeconomics or any of

for $5 and can be purchased
at Clark's Jewelry Story in
Pomeroy. The drawing will
POMEROY
The take place on Oct. 29 with
Meig s County Cancer - the w1nner notified by
lmttat!ve offers a vanety of phone. MCCI member
tree cancer screenmg s.er- Norma Torres said all
vices to women and in money raised from the tickorder· to keep those serv1 ces ets go to support MCCIfunded, the group is selling. sponsored cancer awareness
t1ckets for a. chance at a activities and programs.
homemade afghan..
.
For the .last few years
The afghan ts pmk With MCCI has been the recipiptnk ~tbbons crocheted 1~to ent of a Susan G. Komen
the fabnc to ·symbolize Breast Cancer Foundation
breast cancer awareness.
·
Tickets are $1 each or six
Pleese see Pink. A5
BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENmiELCOM

'

~~ ·

'

/I; ...

••
'
..
J,l

' I '

•'

Both Sergent/photo

Please see Responds, A5

- - - - - - - - ·-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - f

'•

.."'.' '

Norma Torres
of the Meigs
County Cancer
Initiative shows
off a handmade
afghan donated
to MCCI which
is holding a
drawing on lhe
afghan tb benefit their free cancer screening
programs.
Tickets a're $1
and are avail ·
able at Clark's
Jewelry Siore.

that ," he said . ..
Even after he was instruct ed by supervisors on how to
fill out the SEJ report. when
asked if he then felt more
comfortable with fillin g out
the SEJ. Y&lt;mdrich simply
said "no, I didn't."
Yandrich clarified his
comment by .saying he had
problems with the actual
SEJ reports and that there'd
been " internal di " ussions"
on perhaps "re' titl in g" the
report "rather than imply it
is truly an SEJ.''
Yandrich also maintained
the SEJ is just one component in the wastewater permit as did hi s supervisor ..

'

'

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