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                  <text>ALONG T:-IE RivER

. LIVING

Scenes from Bob

Creating the
perfect guest room, D2

Evan's Farm Festival, Cl

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Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
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EStimate sought for.911 c~nter work

SPORTS
• High school football
action. See Page 82

'· -

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J.

BY BRIAN

REED

BAEED@MYDAILY.SENTINELCOM

POMEROY ·
Preparing · the Meigs
Emergency
Medical
Services buUding for
installaiion of 9ll equipment will take about two
weeks, Commissioner Jim
.Sheets said.
Sheets said $350,000 is
available · to complete
those renovations and purchase and install the
equipment necessary to
implement the 911 service
come next year. .
Sheets confirmed that

"

ihe installation of the 911
computer and dispatch
equipment has been called
off for . now. Earlier this
week, EMS Director Doug
Lavender said the installation was delayed because
the site is not prepared. It.
was to have begun Oct.
20.
Commissioners
have
approved the purchase of
the dispatching equipment
from EmergiTech. the
same company that provided equipment to Gallia
County. A contract has not
yet been signed, but it is
expected to cost around

$337,000.
Commissioners and the
county ' s 911 committee
considered several loca' ·
tions for the new agenct
before deciding to locate tt
at the existing EMS building. Sheriff Robert Beegle
had volunteered use of his
office for the service. but
it was determined to be an
impractical
· location
because dispatchers there
also serve as jailers.
'The emergency room
wing . of the Veterans
Memorial •Hospital building was also considered 'as
a potential site. · but the ·

costs of renovating the building
has· settled:
area to suit a 911 dispatch requiring some structural
center were cost-prohibi- repairs. The layout the
tive. Not only would building will need to be
repairs be necessary in modified to allow EMS ·
order to make tllat part of and 911 to operate indethe hospital building pendent of one another. :
·Sheets said commission sound, but utilities would
have to be separated from ers have asked a local con·
the rest of the building, tracting firm to provide an
and a new heating and air estimate for the work nee·
conditioning ·
system essary, and said cost will
would have been required · not be an overriding issue.
in ·order to protect the The county has access to
$94 .000 accumulated to
equipment.
There .are some structur- date from a SO •cent teleal issues at the. EMS build- phone
line
charge
ing, located "just behind
.
·
. .
the old hospital. The
Please see 911, Al

Local actor looks to .launch career with gig in (Miracle'
BY

Joy

KOCMOUD

·JKOCMOUDOMYDAilYTRIBUNE.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

.. · 0BITIJARIFS .

BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Racine, like
most small tow'ns, has its
gathering spots - the post
.Page AS
,. office. the gas station, the
• Robert M. Hall
restaurant - and at those
• Clarice L. Longstretch ·. • gathering spots people talk
and ·these days the talk is
·Carpenter
about
the rash of recent bur• Shannon Phipps
glaries.
· At some point early Friday,
a person or persons broke into

GALLIPOLIS - Local
actor Wesley Jackson will
take h,is talent .to the big
· time when he makes his
professional aeting debut
in a musical version of "A
Miracle on 34th Street," to
be performed near Dayton
this fall.
Wesley, 20, i.s the son of
Arnold and Kim Jackson
of Bidwell. He is a 2006
graduate _of River Valley
High School, and has been
interested in acting ever ,
since he can remember. He

~~~~~~;;\ln~~*¥onl

• Don't blame Wives for
hostility. See Page Al
·• Tax rebate, food statnp
. money possible in aid
plan. SeePage AS
• Railr~d crossing to
close for repairs.
~PageA6 '
• Parent-teacher
conferences set.
SeePageA6

WEAmER .
•

•,

his drea~
becoming an
taking co01e charige
videos. according to the actor even though it may
not seem like a prac!ical
Meigs . County
Office, which is investigating idea .
"I'.ve always known that
several of the incidents.
On Wednesday, beiween · this is what I wanted to
the hours of noon and 4 p.m., do," said Jackson.'' Acting
the home of Danny and Linda has · broadened my horiMcTurner on Walnut Street zons. It · o.pens up your
was entered · while Mrs. mind to a lot of things, and
McTurner was at work. The some lessons can only be .
thieves apparently gained learned on the stage.
forced entry through a back There's a certain energy
door and made off with a col- · you get from the audience
that you can't get anylectible coin.
These were just the latest in where .else. Every role is
reporte.d burglaries and thefts special, it just depends on
involving items from homes .what you make of it.
"I love the feelinf of
and vehicles in the Racine
being
on stage. There s no ·
area.
other
option
for me ."
At last week's meeting of
Jackson has appeared in
Racine Village ·Council,
over
20 productions, both
Racine Police Marshal Curtis
at
RHVS
and at the hisJones gave ,a two-week notice
.
Joy Kocmoudlphoto
of resignation as marshal toric Ariel Theatre in
including Local actor Wesley Jackson is headed to the Dayton aisa, where he has landed a role iri
thou¥h he wi Uremain a com- Gallipolis,
missiOned officer on the "Arsenic and Old Lace." . a musical production of "A Miracle on 34th Street." Jackson is known for his enthusiastic
"Seven Brides for Seven performances and has taken part in several community plays at the Ariel Theatre .
Racine Police Department.
".Jnto the
Officials from Racine Brothers."
Woods"
and
"The LaComedia
Village maintain the village
Dinner Ohio, from Oct. 30 launch his· career.
Molly Theatre's musical produc- through Dec. 31. While in · '.'My dream is Broadway
has "24n police protection" Unsinkabl,e
despite the recent notification Brown.''
. tion of "A Miracle on 34th the Dayton area, Jackson itself, and this is a good
He is very excited about Street," scheduled to be ·plans on auditioning for .
. of Jones' pending resignation.
being selected as part of
Please see Ador; Al
!»lease see Burglaries, A2 the ensemble cast in the performed in Springboro, . other roles · and hopes to
.

'·

10 II Vtand Street
·
Point Pleasant, WV 25.550

,I
'

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!

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(304) 675-7400
(740) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)
(304) 372-2022 (Ripley)

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1011 Viand.Street
· Point Pleasant, WV 25550 · ·
. (304}675-7400
. .
(740) 992 ..6916 (Po~~roy) -. ·.

.ser,•lng Mtlstm. .Jad,wm. Putnt.~m. Galliu &amp;: Meigs counties

. • "PL~ASANT VALLEY PRIVATE DUTY
I 0 II Vtand Street

i

i

·
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
'(304) 675-,7404
(740) 992-6916·(Pomeroy)
(304) 3~2-2022 {Ripley)

· .

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PLEASANT
VALLEY .
HOSPITAL
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24 PAGES

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds

Serving MtJSon, Gal/iu &amp;" Meigs
. COUlfties
,.

4 SECilONS -

"

• •PLEASANT VALLEY BOSPICE

· · .

.

"

·INDEX

• •PLE.ASANT VALlEY HOME HEALTk

'

Bob Evan's :F aJ'flt
Festival Activities · ·

Detall1 on Page A6

"' ·

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D Section

·;

Co'mics

insert

l,&lt;:ditorials

A4

Movies

cs

Obituaries

As

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Sports

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)Veather

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B Section

A6

· ~ 2008 Ohio V.Uey Pubu.ltina Co.

.

"

. Joy. Kcicmoudlphotoa

. The Joe Freeman Band lets loose on the Homestead stage with .Its unique combination of
bluegrass and comedy,
·
'

oL

· Brian J. Reod/photo
Morgan Burt, escorted by Derek Griffin, was named
Homecoming Queen at Eastern High School Friday night.
~~

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PageA2

REGIONAL

· iunbap li--·irntinel

Local Briefs

Sunday, October 12, 2008

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia G:ounty Veterans Service
Commission's next regular meeting is Monday, Oct. 20 at
4 p.m. in the Veterans Service Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.
.
.
This will be the 'last meeting for October.

·Banquet slated
RIO GRANf'E - Southeastern Ohio Branch of the
NAACP will host its 16th annual Freedom Fund Banquet
on Saturday. Oct. I 8 at 7 p.m. at the University of Rio
·Grande/Rio Grapde Community College.
For tickets, which are $20 per person. contact Jessie
Payne or John Howard at (740) 245-5216.

CINCINNATI (APJ Police still haven't found
the driver of a car that
struck and slightly injured a
congresswoman out for an
ea~ly melrning jog.
lJ .S. Rep. Jean Schmidt
was
running
t'arly
Wednesday morning near
her home in suburban
Cincinnati when a car
struck her on the right hip
.and threw her Into' a ditch .
Schmidt, who has completed dozens of marathons,
said in a statement to police

Bv KATHY ""tTCHELL

the hospital, and · they
absolutely
refuse to take
A'ND MARCY SUGAR
her anywhere , Because of
Dear Annie: My sister. her driving record, the
"Julie.'' has been married bOys decided Julie shouldfour times and none of her n't have- a car and wouldmarriages lasted long. She n't help her get one.
is now single again and
y&lt;e siblings have our
living in an apartment for own problems getting
. seniors.
around and cannot help
Julie has three sons , all Julie , 'so my brother-inof whom married control- law bought her a used car
ling women who hate their that she is paying off. Her
mother-in -law . They go sons are now mad at their
,out of their way to exclude ' aunts and uncles becnuse
•her from their plans. we "interfered." How do
:Meanwhile. Julie spends we handle the problem
:every cent of her extra with the car? And what
· money buying birthday can we do about these
and Christmas gifts for her boys whose controlling
:children and their fami- wives
are
provoking
'lies . She receives nothing hatred for my sister? in return. Her oldest son Worried in N.C.
had a heart attack a · few
Dear Worried: Unless
years back and didn't want .Julie's driving is so dan anyone to tell Julie gerous 'that she shouldn't
because "it was none of be on the road. her children
her business" and she ' s have no say in whether or
not welcome iR his home . not she owns a car. And it's
· · That's the situation . . unfair to blame the wives .
, Here ' s the problem: Julie for aU the hostility. No
· is not the best drive'!' and matter how nasty, their
has had several minor · husbands are allowing
' accidents. the last of them to treat Mom that
which totaled her very old way. It may not be possible
·car. She really .needs a car to improve those relation' to get t~ medical appoiot- ships unless Julie's sons
; ments and the grocery shape up. All you can do is
. store. Her sons never visit, be supportive of your sister
not even when she was in .. and encourage her to be

Experts diffor on
Ohio big.cat sightings

AKRON(AP) - Experts Eastern Puma Research
are divided over the possibili- · Network says it's quite possity that wild mountain lions ble wild n)ountain lions are
are living in parts of Ohio.
living in eastern Ohio.
The debate is coming after
The group calls the animals
some people reported seeing the most adaptable land mambig cats in the Akron are.a in mal on Earth.
August and September.
But another group the
The state DIVISIOn of
' .
Wi Jdlife says any mountain · Eastern Cougar FoundatiOn,
lions sighted in Ohio are most says there_ have only Jx:en
likely escaped pets that' liave mne confirmed mountam lion
' •.•
·been declawed and are s1ghtmgs m the eastern lJmted
unlikely to survive in , the States outside ofRorida since·
1990.
VINTON - Huntington/Morgan Crime Watch will meet wild.
at 6 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 16 in the Vint~n Village Hall.
The West Virginia-based · None of those was in Ohio.

Crime Watch meeting

Actor from Page At

•

:first step for getting Lord, along with the ·entire I can count on one hand
the number t&gt;f those peo: there," said Jackson. "I'm team at the Ariel.
"He's so easy to work ple who have that 'it' fac. so excited to have been
:chosen for this unique with, and he has so inuch tor," said Ariel volunteer
said
Ariel Cathy Lord, who has
:opportunity. Now I'm talent,"
;going to have my chance Executive and Artistic directed Jackson in sever;to see how well I fare ip Director Joseph · Wright. al plays.
"I saw that in Wes the
· the world of professional "He's a very enthusiastic,
·acting."
multi-faceted performer. first time I saw him pracHe's
spontaneously cre- ticing for a show at .the
.: Jackson has no ·sh~rtage
·of local supporters. and ative with a very kind per- Ariel,"· · she added. " I
;plaus on returning to sonality and he works well have been very fortunate
:Gallia County between with everyone. It's great to since that time to work
:acting jobs. He is extreme- see doors opening for such with him closely and have
:Iy thankful for those who . a hard . working local tal- . watched him grow and
improve .a-s a performer.
:-have helped him along the ent."
"I have worked with Even more fortunately, we
way. especially his parents
: and his mentor, Cathy many talented people, but have become good friends

....

m the process. I am so

proud of him and 1'111
thrilled that . he is getting
this opportunity to pursue
his dreain!. I can't wait to
~ee where the future takes
him!·"
"I ' m going to miss
everyone
here ,"
said
Jackson. "It 's hard to
leave. If I'm going to
make my dreams come
true , I'll have to go for a
little while, but I'll be
back." ·
~ ·•'

Matthew Smith
and Maggie
Good~ln
.
.

Goodwin-Smith engagement
'

RACINE - Maggie Goodwin and Matthew Smith have
announced their engagement and upcoming marriage.
. Maggie is the daughter of Roger and Jamie Crum of
Racine and the late Michael Goodwin of Ravenswood, ·
W.Va . She is also the . granddaughter of Twyla Boyle of ·
Ironton an'd sister to Pfc. James Neal of the United States
Marine .Corps. Maggie is a ·zoos graduate of Ravenswood
·
High School.
Matthew is the son of Larry and Lisa Smith of Racine. He
is the grandson of Delbert .and Ruth Smith and Arthur ~nd
Janet Warner of Racine. Matt . is a 2004. graduate of
Southern High School and is employed by Team
Environmental' of Cottageville , W.Va.
·
The wedding will take place at 3 p.m. ,Oct. 18,2008, at
the Second Baptist Church in Ravenswood, W.Va. The custom of an open church will be observed. A reception will
follow at Greenhills Country Club.

lonnie Lou Gabrielli will be
the co-hostess with the program
on wreaths to be pre;
sented by Debbie Beegle.
.Please call the hostess if
Monday, Oct. 13
, GALLIPOLIS - Bossard you cannot attend.
: Memorial Library closed in
VINTON
·observance of Columbus Huntington/Morgan Crime
: Day.
Watch will meet at 6 p.m. in
:
Thesday, Oct.l4
the Vinton Village Hall.
: GALLIPOLIS The
Saturday. Oct. 18
:Gallipolis
Christian
RIO
GRANDE
..Women's . Connection will Southeastem Ohio Branch
m(i'et at Dave's American of the NAACP's 16th annu.Grill at 323 Upper River al Freedom Fund Banquet, 7
Road behind the Super 8 p.m., University of Rio
Motel. Wal)da Willis will be Grande/Rio
Grande
the special feature and will
Community College. For
share about her book, The information, call Jessie
!Beveled Mirror. Arlene .
•Kinnell
will be
the Payne or John How.ard at
245-5216:
:speaker. Bring a friend and
Monday, Oct. 20
!join us for fun and fellowGALLIPOLIS
- Gallia
:ship. Please call Linda at
County
Animal
Welfare
•446-4319 or Judy at 245.5181 to make reservations .' League will meet at · 6:30
: GALLIPOLIS - Gallia · p.m. at 91 Garfield Ave. to·
County District Library discuss league activities. ·
Board of Trustees . regular Interested area residents are
meeting, 5 p.m., Bossard invited to attend.
Memorial Library.
.
GALLIPOLIS Frey
seminar on estate planning
)VIemoiral
at
Bossard
THURMAN Laura
Library, 10 a.m. For in for- Crews will celebrate her
. mation, .call (740) 339- 97th birthday on Oct. 12.
9447.
Cards can be sent to her at
GALLIPOLIS
Box 31, Thurman, Ohio
Riverside Study Club will
45685 .
·· meet at the Holiday Inn at
THURMAN - · Freda
noon.
Tope Thome will celebrate
Wednesday, Oct. lS
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia her 94th birthday on Oct.
County Board of Health 18. Cards can be sent to 1\er
. · will meet 'at 9 a.m. in the at 794 Cherry Ridge Road .
conference room of the Thurman, Ohio 45685.
E-mail community calen·
Gallia County Service
. dar items to klcelly@mydai·
·Center, 499 Jackson Pike.
lytribune.com.
Fax
Thursday, Oct. 16
announcements
to
446·
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipohs Garden Club wi II 3008. Mail items to 825
meet, 7:30 p.m ., at the Third APe., Gallipolis, Ohio
Presbyterian
Church 45631. Anno'ficements
Fellowship Hall. Becky may al.~o be drof!llled off at .
Stump will be the hostess, the Tribune office.

Davison's Landscaping, Inc.

7 .256.1253

an

Card shower

.Basket Games
Community Center

•

911
fromPageAl
· :approved by voters for the
:purcbase and maintenance
·of the 911 equipment.
Commissioners
have
.also
been
promised
:$100,000
from
the
:Appalachian
Regional
-commission for equip:ment, and· will borrow
:money from the Farmers
·Bank and Savings co. for
equipment
additional
• installation costs.
: Sheets has said county
. :general fund~ might also
·•be necessary to complete
:the work. · He said the
: building repairs necessary
, will take only about two
-weeks to complete. He
· : said the county must also
:purchase a generator sys:tem and security equip·menr in order to accomo:date the 911 equipment
·and the operation of the
service .

TO

ID
YOUR
'·

Gall.ia Co •.
Commission
ulf!vesting in Our Comm·
for Our·Community"
•

• Dry l:leenlng
• Plrl 8 ....
Ralarallan

THANK YOU

TrhriatCOnsaucdon

• l:eJtllled ..... '

fot purchasing my

Remllllallon
• Furuce 8 dlict
•rll cleenlng ·
•l:erpet 8
Dpllalalry Clenla.

2008 Grand Chclmplon
MarketHog .

like underneath all tho"~
ph y,ical comfort ' and I
would put on some mu sk
and tough it out.
Please tell '·Ju st Sad''
that those longin gs will
pass as ' he di scovers her
life is so much better ·on
the other side of her current struggle. After 14
years. I am alone but still
happier than I eve r could
have been had I gone
back. - N.H. ·
Dear N.H.: Thank you for
encourJging our readers not
to stay in an abusive marriage for financial reasons.

OJMaRees
Triangle

4-HOub

Call

Joe Bro\vning is dedicated to making
Gallia County sare and secure.
• Juc i; \:&lt;unmilled 10 makmg !he Shcritl's

oflicc more cffidcm "ith !he most advanced
technology.
•Jce will continue In tx· inllllrcd inlhl' da1 t0
day \&gt;pcration llf the Sht·rifl" s pfficc moniing.
r~rx-m

and ni ght.

; Joe is c'pcrienccd "i th '"'cr 20 yea,-,;
employment at Jhe Sheriff'' office hm ing
ll'orked in cnrrcclions. r' ~'d JXIlrol and
:1dministration.
·
• Joe is dedicalt'tllo Uallia Cmum fmm the
Senior Cilizcn i l.i1" l:ni(M
·c•·mem
partnership (TRAD, SAI .TI ltl lt&gt;&lt;:al rrimc
watch JXIrliciJXItion . .l ot.' will C\pund t.·um·nt
programs It&gt; i ndudc farm watch and Deputies
against drugs and DARE Programs.

Paid for by the Candidate Joe Browning, 560 Evergreen Road, Bidwell, OH 45614

Cookin' Up A Cure
Pie, Cookie &amp; Cake Baking Challenge 2008
t Friday, October 17,2008 ·OPEN TO THE PUBUC!
t Judging begins at Noon - PVH Main Lobby
t $5 for fl!St entry (pre-registration)
$3 for each additional entry (pre-registration)
t Same-day registration is available at :in additional $2 per en tty
t Pre-registration deadline isTuesday, October 14, 2008
t Entries should be brought to the PVH Main Lobby two hours prior to judging
t Winners receive aWlltds for top six places in each category
't For more information please call PVH Communi~' Relations, (304) 675-4340, E~t. 1326

Special Note:
Comjletitors in the cookie
division are asked to provide a
baker's dozen. Please attach a
~ipe with each entry so they
may be inlcuded in a cookbook
that will J;e created after the
competition. Participants are
allowed to enter as many sweet
treats as they wish. Several fonns
can be used, if needed. All entries
in the competition become the
property of Pleasant Valley ·
Hospital and will' be sold at the
end of the challenge. All the
proc~ds from this very special
event will go to a.Ssist women
who are battling breast cancer in
our local area.

r-----------------------,

II Cookin'
Up A ~ore:
. .
·
I
I
I
1 • Address:-------:----I
I
~ •Telephone: - - - - - - - - I
Cookie
Cake
I
Pie
. •' Entry #l (Please .cirCle):
.
Nameofentry: ~-~---,--------- 1.
I • Name:-----'------1

Cake
Cookie
Pie
• Entry #2.(Please circle):
Naine of entry: .......- . , . . . - - - - - - - - - - Please complete form, detach and return with payl)lent to

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL COOKIN' UPA CURE,
Attn: Community Relations, 2520 Valley Drive~ Point Pleasant,
WV 25550.Ail.checks should be made-out to PVH Foundation .
For Bdditiooal entries please pick-up a complete form at the
PVH WeDness Center or call, (3'04) 675-4340, Exl. 1326. -~

.

L--------------------~--~
Proudly sponsored by:
PLEASANT VAJJ.EY HOSPITAL
&amp; PVH Auxiliary

u, For Any Insurance Repair Needs
West Virginia Licensed .

•

Annie's Mailbox is ~· rit·
ten by Kathy Mite/lei/ attd
Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of tlte Ann
Landers column . Please
e-mail yuar questio11s tu
an 11 ie s ma if box @com·
cast .net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O .
Box 118/90, Chicag11, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read featu~es by
ollter Creaton Syndicate
writers and cartoonisl.f,
visit
tlte
Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.cr.eators .com.

""""""-brownin_g 4sheriff.corn

.

•

•

life she had . I divorced my
abusive 'husband after 28
years. I, too. walked away
from a lovely home.
friends, trips. etc. , and
ended up living in a
mobile home. park with
one-quarter of the income
I had previously enjoyed .
My "friends" were suddenly very few. On long.
cold nights. I yearned for
the. comforts of my previous life - a hot tub and
fireplace and no money
worries. Then I would
make myself remember
what my life was really

Community
events

Autumn is a great time of year to have your
landscaping projects become a reality.
Whether it involves maintaining or having
new plantings instaHed, give us a call.
We're here for your landscape, hardscape,
·or waterscape needs.
·

.

involved in acttvtttes that
make her happy and bolster her confidence . She
needs you.
Dear Annie: A friend of
mine has an aunt who
hoard'S cats. There arc
dozens of animals that urinate and defecate all over.
My friend says no one will
visit 'a nymore because her
house smells so bad and
some of the children have
allergies and can ' t breathe
there.
What causes this behavior? Is there any advice I
can pass along to my
friend? - Love Cats, But
Really
Dear
Love
Cats:
Hoarding of any kind is
often linked to obsessivecompulsive disorder and·
mental illness. The aunt
may not recognize that she
is endangering the cats,
but anyone who keeps
large numbers of animals
and cannot properly care·
for them is guilty ofabuse
and neglect. Your friend
should call· the local
Humane Society chapter
and have them investigate . .
Dear Annie: This is for
"Just Sad," who finally
. divorced her abusive husband, but now misses the ·

·Gallia County calendar

Burglaries rrom Page At
:citing the sheriff's office and of a burglar. Does it look like garages, and strategically
a roster of commission~d offieasy target? Does it have placed floodlights (particulatsecw:iiy weaknesses?
: cers.
ly those with motion detec: Still, officials do not wish to
· Ups include:
tors) will make your home
:he without a police marshal • Shrubbery should not less inviting to a burglar.
:wtd the subJect of hmng a , obscure doors and windows.
• Windows and doors
.new one w1ll. be expl?red at Trim the growth so that a bur- shoUld be securely 'locked.
· the next council meetmg set
.
. for 7 p.m. Monday. Oct. 20 at glar can_not work unde~ted. Inadequate locks shemld be
. village hall. The village has
• ~t ntght,leave a few lights replaced or. supplemented.
• Make your home look
· :been attempting to hire more burnmg outstde your home.
•officers for more localized Ltghts over doorways and occupied at all times.
:protection but has met a stum·
:bling block because of the
·rate of pay offered.
Currently, the vi ll&lt;1ge pays
$8.75 per hour for the mar:shal's position and $8.50 for
:the police officer's position,
·which leaves Racine near the
:bottom of the pay scale and
· unable to attract candidates. ·
mrsday, October.l6, 2008
Although nothing has been
·decided, officials are considat' the Syracuse Community Center
: ering raising the pay sc~le to
(doors open at 5:00pm)
:attract can~idates, including a
Food will be available
. :new marshal and possible
Advance Ticket drawing, 20 gan'les, 3 special games,
:police officer.
cover all, 2 rai'Des and door prizes
· According
to
. the
Neighborhood
Watch ·
OVER $4,000 IN BASKETS!
Program web site, some basic
· For tickets, please caD: 992c3804 or 985-3818
tips to keep your home safe
:are to begin by surveying
:your home through the eyes

2008

Don't blame wives or hostility

that the car was driving very
close to the edge of the road
and ne&gt;Jer slowed down.
Schmidt, a Republican
from &gt;OUthwest Ohio, was
wearin~ a reflective vest
with a hgllt and a white cap.
She flagged a passing car
down whose dri ver took
Schmidt to the hospital. . ·
Schmidt was back in the
office Wednesday and left
for a trip to the Middle East
Friday. Chief of St~ff Barry
Bennett said she was sore
but otherwise all right.

Committees to meet
RIO GRANDE
Gallia-Jackson-\\'inton Joint
. Vocational School District will hold its annual Advisory
.Committee meeting on Thursday, Nov. 6. Dinner will begin
.at 6:30 p.m. in the cafeteria on the Buckeye Hills Career
Center campus . .
Currently, 37 advisory committees serve as a communication channel between the school and occupational groups
:in the community. Each committee consists of six mem'
;bers, and advises on the type of skills, knowledge, and atti·tudes that are needed to prepare secondary and adult stu·
:denls to enter into a specific occupation.
· Members serve a three-year term and represent some 200
businesses. industries, and government agencies in Gallia,
-Jackson and Vinton counties.
·
: Additional information may be obtained by phoning the
:Gal/ia-Jack&gt;un- Vinton JVSD at (740) 245-5334.

Sunday, October 12,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Jogging Ohio congresswoman
injured in hit-skip

VSC to meet

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REGIONAL

· iunbap li--·irntinel

Local Briefs

Sunday, October 12, 2008

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia G:ounty Veterans Service
Commission's next regular meeting is Monday, Oct. 20 at
4 p.m. in the Veterans Service Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.
.
.
This will be the 'last meeting for October.

·Banquet slated
RIO GRANf'E - Southeastern Ohio Branch of the
NAACP will host its 16th annual Freedom Fund Banquet
on Saturday. Oct. I 8 at 7 p.m. at the University of Rio
·Grande/Rio Grapde Community College.
For tickets, which are $20 per person. contact Jessie
Payne or John Howard at (740) 245-5216.

CINCINNATI (APJ Police still haven't found
the driver of a car that
struck and slightly injured a
congresswoman out for an
ea~ly melrning jog.
lJ .S. Rep. Jean Schmidt
was
running
t'arly
Wednesday morning near
her home in suburban
Cincinnati when a car
struck her on the right hip
.and threw her Into' a ditch .
Schmidt, who has completed dozens of marathons,
said in a statement to police

Bv KATHY ""tTCHELL

the hospital, and · they
absolutely
refuse to take
A'ND MARCY SUGAR
her anywhere , Because of
Dear Annie: My sister. her driving record, the
"Julie.'' has been married bOys decided Julie shouldfour times and none of her n't have- a car and wouldmarriages lasted long. She n't help her get one.
is now single again and
y&lt;e siblings have our
living in an apartment for own problems getting
. seniors.
around and cannot help
Julie has three sons , all Julie , 'so my brother-inof whom married control- law bought her a used car
ling women who hate their that she is paying off. Her
mother-in -law . They go sons are now mad at their
,out of their way to exclude ' aunts and uncles becnuse
•her from their plans. we "interfered." How do
:Meanwhile. Julie spends we handle the problem
:every cent of her extra with the car? And what
· money buying birthday can we do about these
and Christmas gifts for her boys whose controlling
:children and their fami- wives
are
provoking
'lies . She receives nothing hatred for my sister? in return. Her oldest son Worried in N.C.
had a heart attack a · few
Dear Worried: Unless
years back and didn't want .Julie's driving is so dan anyone to tell Julie gerous 'that she shouldn't
because "it was none of be on the road. her children
her business" and she ' s have no say in whether or
not welcome iR his home . not she owns a car. And it's
· · That's the situation . . unfair to blame the wives .
, Here ' s the problem: Julie for aU the hostility. No
· is not the best drive'!' and matter how nasty, their
has had several minor · husbands are allowing
' accidents. the last of them to treat Mom that
which totaled her very old way. It may not be possible
·car. She really .needs a car to improve those relation' to get t~ medical appoiot- ships unless Julie's sons
; ments and the grocery shape up. All you can do is
. store. Her sons never visit, be supportive of your sister
not even when she was in .. and encourage her to be

Experts diffor on
Ohio big.cat sightings

AKRON(AP) - Experts Eastern Puma Research
are divided over the possibili- · Network says it's quite possity that wild mountain lions ble wild n)ountain lions are
are living in parts of Ohio.
living in eastern Ohio.
The debate is coming after
The group calls the animals
some people reported seeing the most adaptable land mambig cats in the Akron are.a in mal on Earth.
August and September.
But another group the
The state DIVISIOn of
' .
Wi Jdlife says any mountain · Eastern Cougar FoundatiOn,
lions sighted in Ohio are most says there_ have only Jx:en
likely escaped pets that' liave mne confirmed mountam lion
' •.•
·been declawed and are s1ghtmgs m the eastern lJmted
unlikely to survive in , the States outside ofRorida since·
1990.
VINTON - Huntington/Morgan Crime Watch will meet wild.
at 6 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 16 in the Vint~n Village Hall.
The West Virginia-based · None of those was in Ohio.

Crime Watch meeting

Actor from Page At

•

:first step for getting Lord, along with the ·entire I can count on one hand
the number t&gt;f those peo: there," said Jackson. "I'm team at the Ariel.
"He's so easy to work ple who have that 'it' fac. so excited to have been
:chosen for this unique with, and he has so inuch tor," said Ariel volunteer
said
Ariel Cathy Lord, who has
:opportunity. Now I'm talent,"
;going to have my chance Executive and Artistic directed Jackson in sever;to see how well I fare ip Director Joseph · Wright. al plays.
"I saw that in Wes the
· the world of professional "He's a very enthusiastic,
·acting."
multi-faceted performer. first time I saw him pracHe's
spontaneously cre- ticing for a show at .the
.: Jackson has no ·sh~rtage
·of local supporters. and ative with a very kind per- Ariel,"· · she added. " I
;plaus on returning to sonality and he works well have been very fortunate
:Gallia County between with everyone. It's great to since that time to work
:acting jobs. He is extreme- see doors opening for such with him closely and have
:Iy thankful for those who . a hard . working local tal- . watched him grow and
improve .a-s a performer.
:-have helped him along the ent."
"I have worked with Even more fortunately, we
way. especially his parents
: and his mentor, Cathy many talented people, but have become good friends

....

m the process. I am so

proud of him and 1'111
thrilled that . he is getting
this opportunity to pursue
his dreain!. I can't wait to
~ee where the future takes
him!·"
"I ' m going to miss
everyone
here ,"
said
Jackson. "It 's hard to
leave. If I'm going to
make my dreams come
true , I'll have to go for a
little while, but I'll be
back." ·
~ ·•'

Matthew Smith
and Maggie
Good~ln
.
.

Goodwin-Smith engagement
'

RACINE - Maggie Goodwin and Matthew Smith have
announced their engagement and upcoming marriage.
. Maggie is the daughter of Roger and Jamie Crum of
Racine and the late Michael Goodwin of Ravenswood, ·
W.Va . She is also the . granddaughter of Twyla Boyle of ·
Ironton an'd sister to Pfc. James Neal of the United States
Marine .Corps. Maggie is a ·zoos graduate of Ravenswood
·
High School.
Matthew is the son of Larry and Lisa Smith of Racine. He
is the grandson of Delbert .and Ruth Smith and Arthur ~nd
Janet Warner of Racine. Matt . is a 2004. graduate of
Southern High School and is employed by Team
Environmental' of Cottageville , W.Va.
·
The wedding will take place at 3 p.m. ,Oct. 18,2008, at
the Second Baptist Church in Ravenswood, W.Va. The custom of an open church will be observed. A reception will
follow at Greenhills Country Club.

lonnie Lou Gabrielli will be
the co-hostess with the program
on wreaths to be pre;
sented by Debbie Beegle.
.Please call the hostess if
Monday, Oct. 13
, GALLIPOLIS - Bossard you cannot attend.
: Memorial Library closed in
VINTON
·observance of Columbus Huntington/Morgan Crime
: Day.
Watch will meet at 6 p.m. in
:
Thesday, Oct.l4
the Vinton Village Hall.
: GALLIPOLIS The
Saturday. Oct. 18
:Gallipolis
Christian
RIO
GRANDE
..Women's . Connection will Southeastem Ohio Branch
m(i'et at Dave's American of the NAACP's 16th annu.Grill at 323 Upper River al Freedom Fund Banquet, 7
Road behind the Super 8 p.m., University of Rio
Motel. Wal)da Willis will be Grande/Rio
Grande
the special feature and will
Community College. For
share about her book, The information, call Jessie
!Beveled Mirror. Arlene .
•Kinnell
will be
the Payne or John How.ard at
245-5216:
:speaker. Bring a friend and
Monday, Oct. 20
!join us for fun and fellowGALLIPOLIS
- Gallia
:ship. Please call Linda at
County
Animal
Welfare
•446-4319 or Judy at 245.5181 to make reservations .' League will meet at · 6:30
: GALLIPOLIS - Gallia · p.m. at 91 Garfield Ave. to·
County District Library discuss league activities. ·
Board of Trustees . regular Interested area residents are
meeting, 5 p.m., Bossard invited to attend.
Memorial Library.
.
GALLIPOLIS Frey
seminar on estate planning
)VIemoiral
at
Bossard
THURMAN Laura
Library, 10 a.m. For in for- Crews will celebrate her
. mation, .call (740) 339- 97th birthday on Oct. 12.
9447.
Cards can be sent to her at
GALLIPOLIS
Box 31, Thurman, Ohio
Riverside Study Club will
45685 .
·· meet at the Holiday Inn at
THURMAN - · Freda
noon.
Tope Thome will celebrate
Wednesday, Oct. lS
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia her 94th birthday on Oct.
County Board of Health 18. Cards can be sent to 1\er
. · will meet 'at 9 a.m. in the at 794 Cherry Ridge Road .
conference room of the Thurman, Ohio 45685.
E-mail community calen·
Gallia County Service
. dar items to klcelly@mydai·
·Center, 499 Jackson Pike.
lytribune.com.
Fax
Thursday, Oct. 16
announcements
to
446·
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipohs Garden Club wi II 3008. Mail items to 825
meet, 7:30 p.m ., at the Third APe., Gallipolis, Ohio
Presbyterian
Church 45631. Anno'ficements
Fellowship Hall. Becky may al.~o be drof!llled off at .
Stump will be the hostess, the Tribune office.

Davison's Landscaping, Inc.

7 .256.1253

an

Card shower

.Basket Games
Community Center

•

911
fromPageAl
· :approved by voters for the
:purcbase and maintenance
·of the 911 equipment.
Commissioners
have
.also
been
promised
:$100,000
from
the
:Appalachian
Regional
-commission for equip:ment, and· will borrow
:money from the Farmers
·Bank and Savings co. for
equipment
additional
• installation costs.
: Sheets has said county
. :general fund~ might also
·•be necessary to complete
:the work. · He said the
: building repairs necessary
, will take only about two
-weeks to complete. He
· : said the county must also
:purchase a generator sys:tem and security equip·menr in order to accomo:date the 911 equipment
·and the operation of the
service .

TO

ID
YOUR
'·

Gall.ia Co •.
Commission
ulf!vesting in Our Comm·
for Our·Community"
•

• Dry l:leenlng
• Plrl 8 ....
Ralarallan

THANK YOU

TrhriatCOnsaucdon

• l:eJtllled ..... '

fot purchasing my

Remllllallon
• Furuce 8 dlict
•rll cleenlng ·
•l:erpet 8
Dpllalalry Clenla.

2008 Grand Chclmplon
MarketHog .

like underneath all tho"~
ph y,ical comfort ' and I
would put on some mu sk
and tough it out.
Please tell '·Ju st Sad''
that those longin gs will
pass as ' he di scovers her
life is so much better ·on
the other side of her current struggle. After 14
years. I am alone but still
happier than I eve r could
have been had I gone
back. - N.H. ·
Dear N.H.: Thank you for
encourJging our readers not
to stay in an abusive marriage for financial reasons.

OJMaRees
Triangle

4-HOub

Call

Joe Bro\vning is dedicated to making
Gallia County sare and secure.
• Juc i; \:&lt;unmilled 10 makmg !he Shcritl's

oflicc more cffidcm "ith !he most advanced
technology.
•Jce will continue In tx· inllllrcd inlhl' da1 t0
day \&gt;pcration llf the Sht·rifl" s pfficc moniing.
r~rx-m

and ni ght.

; Joe is c'pcrienccd "i th '"'cr 20 yea,-,;
employment at Jhe Sheriff'' office hm ing
ll'orked in cnrrcclions. r' ~'d JXIlrol and
:1dministration.
·
• Joe is dedicalt'tllo Uallia Cmum fmm the
Senior Cilizcn i l.i1" l:ni(M
·c•·mem
partnership (TRAD, SAI .TI ltl lt&gt;&lt;:al rrimc
watch JXIrliciJXItion . .l ot.' will C\pund t.·um·nt
programs It&gt; i ndudc farm watch and Deputies
against drugs and DARE Programs.

Paid for by the Candidate Joe Browning, 560 Evergreen Road, Bidwell, OH 45614

Cookin' Up A Cure
Pie, Cookie &amp; Cake Baking Challenge 2008
t Friday, October 17,2008 ·OPEN TO THE PUBUC!
t Judging begins at Noon - PVH Main Lobby
t $5 for fl!St entry (pre-registration)
$3 for each additional entry (pre-registration)
t Same-day registration is available at :in additional $2 per en tty
t Pre-registration deadline isTuesday, October 14, 2008
t Entries should be brought to the PVH Main Lobby two hours prior to judging
t Winners receive aWlltds for top six places in each category
't For more information please call PVH Communi~' Relations, (304) 675-4340, E~t. 1326

Special Note:
Comjletitors in the cookie
division are asked to provide a
baker's dozen. Please attach a
~ipe with each entry so they
may be inlcuded in a cookbook
that will J;e created after the
competition. Participants are
allowed to enter as many sweet
treats as they wish. Several fonns
can be used, if needed. All entries
in the competition become the
property of Pleasant Valley ·
Hospital and will' be sold at the
end of the challenge. All the
proc~ds from this very special
event will go to a.Ssist women
who are battling breast cancer in
our local area.

r-----------------------,

II Cookin'
Up A ~ore:
. .
·
I
I
I
1 • Address:-------:----I
I
~ •Telephone: - - - - - - - - I
Cookie
Cake
I
Pie
. •' Entry #l (Please .cirCle):
.
Nameofentry: ~-~---,--------- 1.
I • Name:-----'------1

Cake
Cookie
Pie
• Entry #2.(Please circle):
Naine of entry: .......- . , . . . - - - - - - - - - - Please complete form, detach and return with payl)lent to

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL COOKIN' UPA CURE,
Attn: Community Relations, 2520 Valley Drive~ Point Pleasant,
WV 25550.Ail.checks should be made-out to PVH Foundation .
For Bdditiooal entries please pick-up a complete form at the
PVH WeDness Center or call, (3'04) 675-4340, Exl. 1326. -~

.

L--------------------~--~
Proudly sponsored by:
PLEASANT VAJJ.EY HOSPITAL
&amp; PVH Auxiliary

u, For Any Insurance Repair Needs
West Virginia Licensed .

•

Annie's Mailbox is ~· rit·
ten by Kathy Mite/lei/ attd
Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of tlte Ann
Landers column . Please
e-mail yuar questio11s tu
an 11 ie s ma if box @com·
cast .net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O .
Box 118/90, Chicag11, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read featu~es by
ollter Creaton Syndicate
writers and cartoonisl.f,
visit
tlte
Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.cr.eators .com.

""""""-brownin_g 4sheriff.corn

.

•

•

life she had . I divorced my
abusive 'husband after 28
years. I, too. walked away
from a lovely home.
friends, trips. etc. , and
ended up living in a
mobile home. park with
one-quarter of the income
I had previously enjoyed .
My "friends" were suddenly very few. On long.
cold nights. I yearned for
the. comforts of my previous life - a hot tub and
fireplace and no money
worries. Then I would
make myself remember
what my life was really

Community
events

Autumn is a great time of year to have your
landscaping projects become a reality.
Whether it involves maintaining or having
new plantings instaHed, give us a call.
We're here for your landscape, hardscape,
·or waterscape needs.
·

.

involved in acttvtttes that
make her happy and bolster her confidence . She
needs you.
Dear Annie: A friend of
mine has an aunt who
hoard'S cats. There arc
dozens of animals that urinate and defecate all over.
My friend says no one will
visit 'a nymore because her
house smells so bad and
some of the children have
allergies and can ' t breathe
there.
What causes this behavior? Is there any advice I
can pass along to my
friend? - Love Cats, But
Really
Dear
Love
Cats:
Hoarding of any kind is
often linked to obsessivecompulsive disorder and·
mental illness. The aunt
may not recognize that she
is endangering the cats,
but anyone who keeps
large numbers of animals
and cannot properly care·
for them is guilty ofabuse
and neglect. Your friend
should call· the local
Humane Society chapter
and have them investigate . .
Dear Annie: This is for
"Just Sad," who finally
. divorced her abusive husband, but now misses the ·

·Gallia County calendar

Burglaries rrom Page At
:citing the sheriff's office and of a burglar. Does it look like garages, and strategically
a roster of commission~d offieasy target? Does it have placed floodlights (particulatsecw:iiy weaknesses?
: cers.
ly those with motion detec: Still, officials do not wish to
· Ups include:
tors) will make your home
:he without a police marshal • Shrubbery should not less inviting to a burglar.
:wtd the subJect of hmng a , obscure doors and windows.
• Windows and doors
.new one w1ll. be expl?red at Trim the growth so that a bur- shoUld be securely 'locked.
· the next council meetmg set
.
. for 7 p.m. Monday. Oct. 20 at glar can_not work unde~ted. Inadequate locks shemld be
. village hall. The village has
• ~t ntght,leave a few lights replaced or. supplemented.
• Make your home look
· :been attempting to hire more burnmg outstde your home.
•officers for more localized Ltghts over doorways and occupied at all times.
:protection but has met a stum·
:bling block because of the
·rate of pay offered.
Currently, the vi ll&lt;1ge pays
$8.75 per hour for the mar:shal's position and $8.50 for
:the police officer's position,
·which leaves Racine near the
:bottom of the pay scale and
· unable to attract candidates. ·
mrsday, October.l6, 2008
Although nothing has been
·decided, officials are considat' the Syracuse Community Center
: ering raising the pay sc~le to
(doors open at 5:00pm)
:attract can~idates, including a
Food will be available
. :new marshal and possible
Advance Ticket drawing, 20 gan'les, 3 special games,
:police officer.
cover all, 2 rai'Des and door prizes
· According
to
. the
Neighborhood
Watch ·
OVER $4,000 IN BASKETS!
Program web site, some basic
· For tickets, please caD: 992c3804 or 985-3818
tips to keep your home safe
:are to begin by surveying
:your home through the eyes

2008

Don't blame wives or hostility

that the car was driving very
close to the edge of the road
and ne&gt;Jer slowed down.
Schmidt, a Republican
from &gt;OUthwest Ohio, was
wearin~ a reflective vest
with a hgllt and a white cap.
She flagged a passing car
down whose dri ver took
Schmidt to the hospital. . ·
Schmidt was back in the
office Wednesday and left
for a trip to the Middle East
Friday. Chief of St~ff Barry
Bennett said she was sore
but otherwise all right.

Committees to meet
RIO GRANDE
Gallia-Jackson-\\'inton Joint
. Vocational School District will hold its annual Advisory
.Committee meeting on Thursday, Nov. 6. Dinner will begin
.at 6:30 p.m. in the cafeteria on the Buckeye Hills Career
Center campus . .
Currently, 37 advisory committees serve as a communication channel between the school and occupational groups
:in the community. Each committee consists of six mem'
;bers, and advises on the type of skills, knowledge, and atti·tudes that are needed to prepare secondary and adult stu·
:denls to enter into a specific occupation.
· Members serve a three-year term and represent some 200
businesses. industries, and government agencies in Gallia,
-Jackson and Vinton counties.
·
: Additional information may be obtained by phoning the
:Gal/ia-Jack&gt;un- Vinton JVSD at (740) 245-5334.

Sunday, October 12,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Jogging Ohio congresswoman
injured in hit-skip

VSC to meet

ARoUND To"WN

iunbap limtf ·fltnttntl

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OPINION
•

6unbap lim~ ·6tnttntl
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

••

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
~•

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller
"
"

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome . Thev should he less
than 300 words. AU letters are subject to ;ifiring and must
be signed and include addre&gt;·s and telephone. number. No
unsigned lerters will be published. Leuers should be in
good taste. addres.sing issues , not penonalities.

.TODAY. IN HISTORY
· · TOday is Sunday, Oct 12, tl)e 286th day of 2008. There
are 80 days left in the year.
.
· Todafs Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; Oct. 21 New
Style), Christopher Columb~s arrived with his expedition
jn the present-day Bahamas.
·
On this date:
·
;. In 1870, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee died in
;l-exington, Va., at age 63.
. In 1908, the Detroit Tigers beat the Chicago Cubs.S-3 in
;Ganie 3 of the World Series, played in Chicago.
· In 1915, English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the
'Germans in occupied Belgium during World War I.
· In 1918, the Cloquet Fire erupted in Minnesota, claiming
)lome 450 lives.
.
•
~ In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail
in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of his gang. who killed
the sheriff, Jess Sarber.
· In 1960, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev disrupted a
'U.N. General Assembly session by pounding his desk with
a shoe when a speaker criticized his country.
In 1968, the Summer Games of the 19th Olympiad offi'tially opened in Mexico City.
' In 1968, Equatorial .Gumea became· independent of
Spain.
'
· In 2000, 17 sailors were killed ·in a suicide bomb attack
un the destroyer USS Cole in Yeinen.
· • In 2002, a bomb blamed on Islamic militants destroyed a .
:Oightclub on the Indonesian island of Bali, killing 202 people, man~ of them foreign tourists. ·
. Ten years ago: Matthew"Shepard, a gay University of
Wyoming student, died five days after being beaten and
lashed to a fence; two men were charged with his murder.
(Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney are serving life
.sentences.) Three Americans, Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J.
lgnarro and Dr. Ferid Murad, won the Nobel Prize in phys_iology or medicine for blood vessel research. · ·
Five years ago: A suicide attack outside a Baghdad hotel
'full of Americans killed six bystanders. Doctors in Dallas ·
succeeded in separating 2-year-old conjoined twins from
Egypt. Germany won the Women's Soccer World Cup 2- I
over Sweden in .the eighth minute of overtime. Hall of
Fame jock~y Bill Shoemaker died in San ty~arino, Calif., at
.age 72. Ph1lanthrop1st Joan B. Kroc d1ed m Rancho Santa
Fe, Calif., at age 75. British wartime hero Patnck DalzelJob, whose exploits made him a model for James Bond.
died in Plockton, Scotland, at age 90.
One year ago: Former Vice President AI Gore and the
:U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change won
the Nobel Peace Prize for sounding the alarm over global
warming. A fiery, 34-vehicle pileup at a freeway tunnel in
Santa Clanta, Calif., left three people ·dead. A jury in
Panama City, Fla., acquitted seven former juvenile boot
camp guards and a nurse in a black teena¥er's death.
Today's Birthdays: · Actress Antoma Rey is 81.
Comed1an-activist Dick Gregory is 76. Former Sen. Jake .
Gam, R-Utah, is 76. Singer Sam Moore (formerly .of Sam
and Dave) is 73. Sportscaster Tony Kubek is 72. TV
reporter Chris Wallace is 61. Actress-singer Susan Anton is
58. Rock singer-musician Pat DiNizio is 53. Actor Carlos
Bernard is 46. Jazz musician Chris Botti is 46.
l'hought for Today: "Some people always sigh in thank-'
ing God." - Elizabeth Barrett Browning, English poet
(1806-1861).
.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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less thnn 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing.
must be signed, and include addresl· and telephone
number. No urtSigned letters will be published. Letters
slwuld be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be 'accepted for publication .

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•

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sunday, October 12, 2008

-·
.1:!'::.
~--

a lot of butter."
Another glaring example
is California, where a governor and a state legislature
- aJI facing strict limits on
their tenure - failed for
months to compromise on a
budget. As columnist Joe
Altschule wrote in the
Visalia Times-Delta, those
rules "ensured that we get a
new crop oflegislators who
have no institutional memory, no on-the-ground
savvy and experience, and
most important, none of the
personal relationships that
are necessary in order to
govern smoothly and effectively."
Experience is also playing a major rple i.n the presidential contest, and the
Republican ticket is sending out very mixed messages. Sarah Palin clearly ·
mirrors the mindset that
produced the term-limit fad
m the first place. l.n her
v1ew, Washmgton IS an
inherently
corrupting
place, Gomorrah-on-thePotomac, where all those
doggone "insiders" - lawmakers, lobbyists, media
elites - conspire to undermine the interests of ordinary Americans. And only
an "outsider" like herself
can clean up the mess by
applying the ·lessons she
learned back home in
Wasilla, Ala. (Barack
Obama also criticizes the
capital but doesn't share
the visceral animus of Palin
and 'the term-limits team.)
Common sense is always
welcome, and all too rare,
in the capital, and Palin's
message - like term limits .

• Page As

Obama fundraiser, convicted of fraud, spills beans
BY MIKE ROBINSON

Robert M. Hall

in general - has a superficial appeal. But is a newcomer
really
bette•
equipped to solve the complex financial crisis than
the legislators from both
parties who have spent
!"any year_s studying these
ISSues?
Of course not.
, John McCain li)Ouths his
talking
points
about
"change
is
coming"
because he has to distance
himself from a Republican
president with a dismal
approval rating. But he
knows in his heart that his
own running mate is
wrong, that experience
does matter. That's why. in
his ·two debates wit I)
Obama, he kept referring to
his 26 years in the Senate.
to the places he's traveled.
the leaders he''s met, the
problems he's confronted.
He ·even bragged about a
35-year friendship with
Henry Kissinger, hardly an
outsider/termlimit/change-ligen! message.
McCain is right, the best
reason to elect him president is his long record and his opponent's ·short
one. That's also the. besl
reason to abOlish term lim•
its and let voters, in New
York City and everywhere
else, decide which leaders
they want to keep in office.
(Cokie Roberts' latest
book is "lAdies of Liberty:
The Wo11fen Who Sha~d
Our Nation" (Willraln
Mo"ow, 2008). Steve and
Cokie Roberts can be
reached
m

~SSOCI~TED

.._
Robert M. "Bob" Hall,
53, of Patriot, former
•
.(ronville resident, passed
away Friday, October 10,
2008 at his home.
•
'-y ,.
Mr. Hall was born _,
. •'
January 22, 1955, in
~
Ashland, Ky., a son o1 the
.,.;.::;
~·~!!
late James Mitchell and
:. '·
··~
Hazel Williams Hall. He
attended Guiding Hand and
·~
Galco Schools, where he
was a long distance runner, '
played basketball, softball
and bowled. Robert enthusiastically participated in the
I I
special Olympics for 12
Robert M. Hall
years, and was a member of
·the Straight Creek Nazarene
Church. The things he enjoyed most were singing in
. church, riding with Terence on his motorcycle, and playing
with his dog, Yona, who was by his side at the time of his
de~.
.
.
.
Surviving are two sisters, Glel)na Hopkins, her husband
Terence, with whom he made his home, of Patriot, Ohio,
Shirley Frasher; of Gallipolis, Ohio; four brothers, Keith B.
Hall, !tis wife Nancy, James Hall, his wife Debra, John C.
Smith, his wife Donna, all of Ashland, Ky., .Charles E.
Smith, his wife Jennifer, of Lancaster, Ohio; brother-inlaw, James Colt; and several nieces and nephews. . ·
Preceding him in death is a sister, Marilyn Colt.
A funeral service for Mr. Hall will be held at II a.m.
Monday, October 13, 2008 at the Kilgore &amp; Collier Funeral
Home on Panola Street in Catlett~burg. A ~e~sage of .comfort will be offered by Bro. Carl Ross. Committal serv1ce to
follow at Rose Hill Burial Park Chapel in Ashland, Ky.
Those wishing to call on the Hall fa~ily may· do so 6:00
p.m. to 8:00p.m. on Sunday at the funeral home. .

'".. t
),

/

....

,,,

·il

v

Oarice L Longsbetch carpenter

PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO
Jailed
political fundraiser Antoin
'Tony" Rezko, the Chicago
real estate developer who
helped launch Barack
Obama on his political
career, is whispering secrets
to federal prosecutors about
corruption in Illinois and
the political fallout could be
explOSIVe.
Democratic Gov. Rod
Blagojevich, whose administration faces multiple federal investigations over h~w
it handed out jobs and
money with advice from
Rezko, is considered the
most vulnerable.
Rezko also was friendly
with Obama - offering
'him a job when he finished
Jaw school ; funding his earliest political campaigns
. and purchasing a lot next to
his house. But based on the
known facts, charges so far
and testimony at Rezko's
.trial, there's no indication
there' II be a so-called
"October surprise" that
could hurt the Democratic
presidential nominee even though Rezko says
·prosecutors are pressing
him for dirt about Obama.
"l think this strikes fea.
\nto the Blagojevich administration' and the Statehouse
Democrats but not into the
Obama campaign," says
state Sen. Kirk Dillard, RWestmont, a John McCain
dele¥ate to the GOP convention but an old friend of
Obama.
Rezko, 53, a real estate
developer, was convicted in
June of scheming to use .his
clout with the Blagojevich
administration to squeeze
$7 million in kickbacks out
of a contractor and seven ·

money management fi~s times, twice in connection
seekin·g to do business with with an obscure legislative
the state:
memo. as a guest at a Rezko
Within two months , party and when defense
Rezko was seen in U.S. attorney · Joseph Duffy told
J. jurors his client was a friend
Attorney
Patrick
Fitzgerald's office, along of the senator.
with his attorneys.
None of the witnesses
There has been no official accused the Democratic
coniu ... ~Lion that Rezko is . nominee for president of
talking but his sentencing 'doing anything irnptoper. In
has been postponed indefi- June, Duffy told the
nitely and both sides say Chicago Tribune that prose·
they are going to "engage in cutors had not asked him a
discussions that could affect single question about
Obama.
their sentencing postures."
'They never would have ' But questions concerning
delayed the sentencing if he Ol:i.ama's relationship with
weren't talking - it's proof Rezko liQger, particularly
positive," said Jay Stewart, over Rezko's role in the
executive director of the purchase of the Obamas'
.·
.
Better
Government home.
Association of Chicago.
·
The two have known e.ach
In addition, attorneys say other for years, start.mg.when
federal investigators have Rezko offered Obama .II. )Ob
been
questioning lifter he graduated fro!"
Blagojevich co.litribuiions Harvard La~ . S~hool ~n
around the state using infor- 1991. Obama d1dn t take 1!,
mation ·that only Rezk() but a fnendsh1p developed:
could
have
supplied.
The men talked j)Ohl1cs
Finally, courthouse person- frequently and occas10nally
nel requesting anonymity dmed together wtth the1r
because grand jury probes w1ves.
are seer~! said Rezko has
In 2005, the Obamas paid
been . repeatedly l&gt;rought $1.65 million for their home
from his cell to the U.S. near the University of
attorney's office to talk to .Chicago. The sellers wanted
prosecutors..
.
·a parcel they owned next
Rezko could have a lot to door to sell on the.same day,
tell. He has raised millions and Rezko's wife, Rita, was
of dollars in campaign the buyer. At the request of
money for many Illinois the Obamas, Mrs. Rezko
politicians and according to later sold them a 10-foot
federal prosecutors used his strip of land to enlarge their
clout to control appoint- lot. They paid $.104,500.
ments to state boards.
The deal took place while
Obama has sent to charity Rezko was under investiga$159,000 that Rezko raised , tion and when details of the
for his campaigns for the cozy relationship surfaced,
state legislature, the House Obama said it was a "boneand the Senate. Rezko head" error to have asked
raised nothing for Obama's for the additional land
because it looked like he
White House run : ·
Obama's name came up was getting a favor.
in testimony at the trial four
"I regret it," Obama said

Clarice L. 'Longstretch Carpenter, 89, of Rutland, passed
away Friday, October 10, 2008 at Overbrook Center,
Middleport, Ohio.
..
Born October 12, 1918 at Kyger, Ohto, daughter of the
·tate Worthy and Evelyn Marie Darst Tate. . .
In addition to her parents, she was preceded m death by
her first husb.and, Kenneth Floyd "Curt" Longstretch,
. daughter Let.a Fetty, granddaughter Cindy Jones, three.
brothers, two sisters, and two stepsons. .
.
Clarice is survived by her husband, Lawrence (Smitty)
Carpenter; son, Kenneth (Betty) Longstretch; stepson, Bob
"
· (Joyce) Carpenter; grandsons, Lanny (Rena) Longstretch,
John (Kelly) Longstretch, Mike (Gayla) Fetty; granddaughters., Teresa (Bob) Varian, Missy (Bill) Myers; 13
great-grandchildren, two great-great grandchil&lt;Jren. .
Services will be Monday, October 13,2008 at II a.m. at .
lame-duck
sess10n
of
BY DAVID EsPO
·the First Southern Baptist Church, Pomeroy, with Pastor
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONOENT
Congress two weeks later
Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow at the Miles
would allow them to start.
Cemetery, Rutland.
·
·
.
WASHINGTON - After work ·on a response to the
Family will receive friends from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, consulting with Barack .credit crunch that has sent
October 12,2008 at the Birchfield .Funeral Home, Rutland. Obama, Democratic leaders stock prices plummeting
are likely to call Congress . and also threatens to trigger
backtoworkaftertheelectioo a deep recession. It often
in hopes of passing legislation takes two or three months
that would include extended for a new Congress to begin
jobless benefits, money for turning out legislation, par. food stamps and possibly a ticularly when a new presitax rebate, officials said dent is settling into the
Saturday.
White House.
Shannon Phipps, 37, of Pomeroy, passed away at
Tbe bill's total cost could
On the other hand, by
Pleasant Valley .Hospital October 10, 2008. Arrangements reach $150 billion, these offi- attempting to pass legislation
next month, Democrats
are incomplete and will be announced by the Anderson cials said. ·
The officials stressed that would have to negotiate with
.
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
no final decisions have been President Bush, whose term
made. They .spoke on condi, runs until Jan. 20, 2009.
tion of anonymity, saying Additionally,
Senate
they did not want to pre- Republicans, with 49 seats,
empt. a, formal announce- could block any measure they
rnent House. Democrats opposed.
have announced plans for
House Speaker Nancy
an
economic
forum
on
Pelosi
told reporters in
DETROIT (AP)
The ' talks bave. stalled
.
Monday
"to
help
Congfes~
Denver
last Wednesday a
General Motors Corp. and because of the recent ttirChrysler LLC have held moil 'in the financial mar- develop an economic recov- $150 billion stimulus package
preliminary talks about a ke'ts, according to the ery plan t!Jat focuses on ere- is necessary and she may call .
atmg jobs and strengthening the House back into session
merger or an acquisition of Journal. Its sources said ·our economy:" ·
after the election. Her
Chrysler by GM, according · negotiations could resume if
Democrats
said
Obama's
·
spokesman,
Brendan Daly,
to. published
reports markets stabilize b,ecause
campaign
has
~n .fuvolved added, "Congress just worked
Saturday.
·
. both GM and Cerberus want in discussions on ·a possible in a bipartisan way with the
The Wall Street. Journal, to quickly divest ihe assets
stim~lus J?3Cll:age.llJs: party's Administration to pass an.
citing ·people it described under discussion.
·
pres1d~nttal . candidate, run- . economic rescue plan to help
as familiar wi.th the discus· · ,The negoti~tions beiween ning ·ahead ..in the polls, has stabilize · our financial marsions,
said
Cerberus · 100-year-old· GM and 83- outlined his own proposals kets, and we milst now work
Capital Management, the year-old Chrysler began for stimulating the economy. together to pass a jobs creprivate equity firm that more than a month ago,
Democmts are increasingly ation and economic recovery
owns . 80.1. percent of · according to the Times. Its confident of capturing the . stimulus package."
·
Chrysler and 5 I percent of sources said the chances of White House and increasing
In the Senate, Majority
GMAC Financial Services, a merger were "50-50" as of their majorities in the House Leader Harry Reid of Nevada
proposed
trading Friday and likely · would and Senate on Nov. 4.
has announced a post-election
Chrysler's
automotive take weeks to complete.
If they are successful, a session beginning Nov. 17 to
operations to GM. The
Both newspapers posted
Journal said Cerberus their stories on their Web
',.
would
receive
GM's sites late Friday.
remaining 49 percent stake
"Without referencing this
in GMAC.
specific rumor, as ·Vfe,"ve
The ·New York Times, ofteo said, GM offtctals ,
also citing people familiar routinely discuss issues of
with the talks, said the mutual interest with other
GM
automakers were discussing automak:ers,"
merger. The Times did not spokesman Tony •Cervone
mention GMAC, a tradi- said.
Chrysler spokeswoman
tional auto lender hit hard
by the housing market · Shawn Morgan declined
dowaturn .
comment.

stevecokie@gmail.com.)

at the time . "I'm going to
make sure that from this
point on I don 't even come
close to the line."
McCain arid vice running
mate Sara.~ Palin have mentioned Rezko little if at all.
But Republicans have aired
a television ad focusing on
Rezko. And McCain aides
have repeated! y tweaked
their opponent over the real
estate deal in e-m ails· to
reporters.
"We're delighted to h.ave
a ~ebate on judgment with
Barack Obama, who bOught
his million-dollar mansion
in a sh~dy deal with a convicted felon," . McCain
spokesman Brian Rogers
said in August.
·.
·
Blagojevich, meanwhile, .
got';"' ~laG,It~e from the
, trial. · ' . · ·. o· :):''.
' One witness testified tlfat
Blagojevich talked . about
hiring him for a major state
job while his $25.000 donation to the governor's cam•
paign fund was lying on the
table.
·r· d
Two anor~eys . testl le
that BlagoJeVIC\1 hmted t~at
they could g.et lucra~lve
stale contracts 1fthey ra1sed
money - . poss1bly f?r a
future Wh1te House campaJgn.
' Obama's name has not
surfaced in accounts of th~
investigation since the triaL
But Rezko himself raised it
in a lener to the judge
months ago.
.
"Your Honor, the prose-.
cutors have been overzealous in pursuing a crime that
. never happehed." he wrote.
'They are pressuring me to
tell them the wrong things
that I supposedly · know
. about Gov. Blagojevich and
Sen. Barack Obama."

j

Tax rebate, food stamp money possible in aid plan

'fHI5 ISN'T ASOU'f' YOUR

Jt:

~imr!i ·iltnttnrl

·-

Obituaries

·Cheering the demise of·tirm limits
Finally, some good news.
New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg wants to overtum the law that limits him
Cokle
to two four-year terms , and
and
it looks as if he'll win .
Steven
Bloomberg's vast finanRoberts
cial expertise is needed
more than ever, ·and he
woulil not inherit a third
tenn by divine right. Voters
can always reject him, as were highly seasoned in
they rejected Mario Cuomo military matters when they
for a fourth term as New led the country into a disasYork'sgove'rnor in 1994.
trous war in Iraq. Despite
Bloomberg's decision Alan Greenspan's long
represents a serious blow to tenure heading the Federal
. one of the worst ideas to Reserve, he clearly failed
sweep through American to anlicipate the financial
public life in recent years: . volcano that erupted shortterm limits for elected offi- Jy after h,e left.
.
cials. Ronald ReagaQ . But the odds of solvmg
always condemned the rule problems improve sharply
· barring him from a third when time-tested hands
term as profoundly unde- guide the process. And
mocratic. an~ he was right. even strong supporters of
But there's much more at term limits are starting to
stake than absiract princi- concede that principle. As
pies. Governing 1s a profes- the New Yotk Times
sion, a .demanding and reported recently, "about
highly skilled profession two dozen local governrequiring years of training ments are suffering from a
and experience. The argu- case of buyer's remorse"
ment that amateurs can do after seeing the downside
the job better is absurd.The of tossing incumbents
late Henry Hyde, a long- aside. ·
time Republican congress"It has been an unmiti- .
man from Illinois, had the · gated disaster for the .city,"
best analogy. When you said Phil Hardberger,
need brain surgery, and that forced to leave his job as
drill is bearing down on mayor of San Antonio,
your skull, you want' the Texas, after four years.
· best surgeon available, not "The learning curve of how
someone who got the job city government works .and
because the top gun was how to get things done is
term-limited out of office. · steep, but when you keep
Does this mean that puttmg people in, and then
experienced public offi- throwing them out, there is
cials guarantee good gov- very little accountability.
ernment?
No.
Don We do .a lot of churning
Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney here, but we don't proJuce

iJunllap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

·

IRRA\IONAL. ReACIION11'~ A80UT MY

IRRATION,A.L- REAC.110N

)

Deaths

consider public lands legisla- Burton, said the campaign is·
tion. His spokesman, Jim monitoring the situation.
·
Manley, issued a written
The candidate has said prestatement that said "recent viously he favors $25 billion
developments only reinforce to help states meet their qwp
the need for additional ·action
to reinvigomte the economy." needs, another $25 billion fqr
He :added, "rio·decisions liave roads, bridges and·other infra,
yet been made on how fo pro- structure, and $65 billion fcir
tax rebates paid for by a windceed ."
'
An Obama spokesman. Bill fall profits tax on oil.

Shannon .Phipps

Dear Fellow
·Gallia Countians:

,. Reports: Chrysler, GM
discuss merger; acquisition

McCain, Palin slinging mud from the. gutter
You know what time it is
when the ·gloves start
swinging at rallies, the mud
starts flying around the
. Internet, interesting photos
start appearing in your
Donna
mailbox (just wait), and the
fact-checking staffs with
Brazile
the daily papers decide to
take an early vacation. It's
gutter time, and this year
promises to become the
The McCain camp is now
best (or rather; worst) one
the
gutter-season poster
ever.
Ever been in a gutter? It's child. His campaign has
made it clear, repeatedly,
not the prettiest place to . that
it will conjure up fear,
land after your candidate sow divisions, incite
has spent years of his or her riotous behavior. and prolife preparing for this voke hostilities just to win
moment. Every candidate a few poisoned votes.
wants to · end on a high
How sad, especially
note . Every candidate · since this is the same canaspires to inspire us to didate who, in · 2000, was
believe again, hope again, the recipient of some of the
can-do again. And every most vicious political
last one of them hopes their attacks ever waged, up
vision will lead I!S to the until that point, in a presipromised land of a better dential campaign by people
America in a more hopeful inside his own party. And
tomorrow.
when you hear Cindy
But when the gutter sea- McCain, who also had to
son begins, it's hard for endure vicious attacks on
anyone to hear what the her character and family in
candidates are trying to tell 2000, unleash her maternal
us. It's hard to hear . what (ury on Barack Obama for
they have to say about a Senate vote that made her
improving our lives, "blood run cold" - a vote
putting the. country back on identical to her husband's
track or taking on the - you know · the McCain
mounting deficits, fiscal campaign is now in full
and trade. The candidates gutter mode.
and their campaigns are too
Guess what? We have not
busy thrashing e.ach other, . heard the last of these
inciting hateful mob scenes . attacks: the snarky guilt by
and , worse, wasting pre- ~sociation, 'the false
cious time and energy try- charges of "palling around
ing to implode their oppo- with a 'terrorist," the e.vernent.
·
popular game of Who is a

Better Patriot and the most warn townspeople of the
insidiously evil one of all, dangers of waking up on
dehumanizing your worthy Nov. 5 to President-elect
opponent by referring to Barack Hussein · Obama,
. him, a fellow member of the pointedly reminding the
U.S. Senate, as "that one."
all-white crowd that this
The red-hot McCain election is about "preservrhetoric will get even loud- ing America's past and proer, and his attacks more vile tecting the promise of the
and vitriolic, as the days future." Later, after the
count down and the lights · crowd has been warmed up
go out in state after state, to the boilirig point, ·cries of
and the tina! tally comes in. "Kill him!" are heard after
McCain · is not a leader. Palin says in her speech
He never has been. and he that Obama was "palling"
never will be. It's just not around with "rerronsts.''
in his nature. He's a loner, a
The demons have taken
maveril;6;. Good for the oyer.the McCain campaign,
Senate, 'bad for the .Oval ktcktog aside the better
Office. He's just a weary an~~ls to allow the worst to
old politician who doesn't be said at a time when the
have what il'takes to bring nation cries out 'for leader
us . together and move us ship in solving our economforward: the ability to ic crisis and national woes.
inspire . Instead, McCain
Is this the best McCain
harkens back to another has to offer? Is this what his
era, when one's service and years of experience have
sacrifice during a war taught him? Is this what we
allowed you to $0 ~gh yearn .for after eight years
the rest of your life w1thout of d1v1s1on and one month
ever having. to answer for . of watching political leadyour own fat lures.
ers use a nattonal crisis ·w
I have news for the . stoke 'facial animus for
McCain-Palin ticket: It political points?
It's · time we say no 111
won't work. .
Voters are sitting home gutter politics - no matter
itow watching their pen- whether it comes dressed
sions and retirement funds up like an elephant or ~
disappear; so far, they've donkey.
.
watched more than $2 trilAmerica deserves ~er
lion vanish into the poi·(Donna Brazile i1 ~
soned air of Wall Street political COifiiMnfalor on
greed and Republican eco- CNN,ABCand NPR; co11•
nomic policies.
·' tributing columnist to RoU
At McCain-Palin .rallies, CaU, · the newspaper oj
crowds are IJ:eing worked Capito~ Hill; and /oTnU!r
up to a mob-hke frenzy by CtullpGlgn nUuulgtr for AI
sheriffs in uniform who Gore.)

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J1111T ~Jfd M

M11111 apin111 Diqi4J

14U352
Afttrholrsad
CaiiLbyd
or Davit Tawney 446-1615

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740-446·3484 • Silver Bridge Piau • Gallipolis, OH

When c~ting your absentee ballots this
week .please remember that

Roger Brandeberry
is the only sheriff candidate:
• With experience as alaw enforcement CEO
13 years.,; polict cbiel ·

• With job applicable higher educalion
B.S. Manltall Ulli•mily in CrimiiiBI Jlllli"' I Law [nfor"""eol

• With over 25 ,ears law enforcement experieitce
27+ y111' ial'atnll, lmiliptilll. Nan:otics. Sapmisioo. Adminislr.otion

•With enensive public budget experience.
Wrot.,deloaded, &amp;idminisltm!IJ aonual bvdgots nmr ~in! over ..
.

~ IIVIftUf1illl: ief\li!Slo ihf pubJi&lt;.

• Selected as Gallia Coonty1 Lawman of the Year
19811Gallia COWity Gun Oub IJim Milb La•lllan ollht YrJr

Please vote for
.ROGER BRANDEBERRY
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lI

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f

OPINION
•

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Diane Hill
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"
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Kevin Kelly
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.TODAY. IN HISTORY
· · TOday is Sunday, Oct 12, tl)e 286th day of 2008. There
are 80 days left in the year.
.
· Todafs Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; Oct. 21 New
Style), Christopher Columb~s arrived with his expedition
jn the present-day Bahamas.
·
On this date:
·
;. In 1870, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee died in
;l-exington, Va., at age 63.
. In 1908, the Detroit Tigers beat the Chicago Cubs.S-3 in
;Ganie 3 of the World Series, played in Chicago.
· In 1915, English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the
'Germans in occupied Belgium during World War I.
· In 1918, the Cloquet Fire erupted in Minnesota, claiming
)lome 450 lives.
.
•
~ In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail
in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of his gang. who killed
the sheriff, Jess Sarber.
· In 1960, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev disrupted a
'U.N. General Assembly session by pounding his desk with
a shoe when a speaker criticized his country.
In 1968, the Summer Games of the 19th Olympiad offi'tially opened in Mexico City.
' In 1968, Equatorial .Gumea became· independent of
Spain.
'
· In 2000, 17 sailors were killed ·in a suicide bomb attack
un the destroyer USS Cole in Yeinen.
· • In 2002, a bomb blamed on Islamic militants destroyed a .
:Oightclub on the Indonesian island of Bali, killing 202 people, man~ of them foreign tourists. ·
. Ten years ago: Matthew"Shepard, a gay University of
Wyoming student, died five days after being beaten and
lashed to a fence; two men were charged with his murder.
(Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney are serving life
.sentences.) Three Americans, Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J.
lgnarro and Dr. Ferid Murad, won the Nobel Prize in phys_iology or medicine for blood vessel research. · ·
Five years ago: A suicide attack outside a Baghdad hotel
'full of Americans killed six bystanders. Doctors in Dallas ·
succeeded in separating 2-year-old conjoined twins from
Egypt. Germany won the Women's Soccer World Cup 2- I
over Sweden in .the eighth minute of overtime. Hall of
Fame jock~y Bill Shoemaker died in San ty~arino, Calif., at
.age 72. Ph1lanthrop1st Joan B. Kroc d1ed m Rancho Santa
Fe, Calif., at age 75. British wartime hero Patnck DalzelJob, whose exploits made him a model for James Bond.
died in Plockton, Scotland, at age 90.
One year ago: Former Vice President AI Gore and the
:U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change won
the Nobel Peace Prize for sounding the alarm over global
warming. A fiery, 34-vehicle pileup at a freeway tunnel in
Santa Clanta, Calif., left three people ·dead. A jury in
Panama City, Fla., acquitted seven former juvenile boot
camp guards and a nurse in a black teena¥er's death.
Today's Birthdays: · Actress Antoma Rey is 81.
Comed1an-activist Dick Gregory is 76. Former Sen. Jake .
Gam, R-Utah, is 76. Singer Sam Moore (formerly .of Sam
and Dave) is 73. Sportscaster Tony Kubek is 72. TV
reporter Chris Wallace is 61. Actress-singer Susan Anton is
58. Rock singer-musician Pat DiNizio is 53. Actor Carlos
Bernard is 46. Jazz musician Chris Botti is 46.
l'hought for Today: "Some people always sigh in thank-'
ing God." - Elizabeth Barrett Browning, English poet
(1806-1861).
.

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sunday, October 12, 2008

-·
.1:!'::.
~--

a lot of butter."
Another glaring example
is California, where a governor and a state legislature
- aJI facing strict limits on
their tenure - failed for
months to compromise on a
budget. As columnist Joe
Altschule wrote in the
Visalia Times-Delta, those
rules "ensured that we get a
new crop oflegislators who
have no institutional memory, no on-the-ground
savvy and experience, and
most important, none of the
personal relationships that
are necessary in order to
govern smoothly and effectively."
Experience is also playing a major rple i.n the presidential contest, and the
Republican ticket is sending out very mixed messages. Sarah Palin clearly ·
mirrors the mindset that
produced the term-limit fad
m the first place. l.n her
v1ew, Washmgton IS an
inherently
corrupting
place, Gomorrah-on-thePotomac, where all those
doggone "insiders" - lawmakers, lobbyists, media
elites - conspire to undermine the interests of ordinary Americans. And only
an "outsider" like herself
can clean up the mess by
applying the ·lessons she
learned back home in
Wasilla, Ala. (Barack
Obama also criticizes the
capital but doesn't share
the visceral animus of Palin
and 'the term-limits team.)
Common sense is always
welcome, and all too rare,
in the capital, and Palin's
message - like term limits .

• Page As

Obama fundraiser, convicted of fraud, spills beans
BY MIKE ROBINSON

Robert M. Hall

in general - has a superficial appeal. But is a newcomer
really
bette•
equipped to solve the complex financial crisis than
the legislators from both
parties who have spent
!"any year_s studying these
ISSues?
Of course not.
, John McCain li)Ouths his
talking
points
about
"change
is
coming"
because he has to distance
himself from a Republican
president with a dismal
approval rating. But he
knows in his heart that his
own running mate is
wrong, that experience
does matter. That's why. in
his ·two debates wit I)
Obama, he kept referring to
his 26 years in the Senate.
to the places he's traveled.
the leaders he''s met, the
problems he's confronted.
He ·even bragged about a
35-year friendship with
Henry Kissinger, hardly an
outsider/termlimit/change-ligen! message.
McCain is right, the best
reason to elect him president is his long record and his opponent's ·short
one. That's also the. besl
reason to abOlish term lim•
its and let voters, in New
York City and everywhere
else, decide which leaders
they want to keep in office.
(Cokie Roberts' latest
book is "lAdies of Liberty:
The Wo11fen Who Sha~d
Our Nation" (Willraln
Mo"ow, 2008). Steve and
Cokie Roberts can be
reached
m

~SSOCI~TED

.._
Robert M. "Bob" Hall,
53, of Patriot, former
•
.(ronville resident, passed
away Friday, October 10,
2008 at his home.
•
'-y ,.
Mr. Hall was born _,
. •'
January 22, 1955, in
~
Ashland, Ky., a son o1 the
.,.;.::;
~·~!!
late James Mitchell and
:. '·
··~
Hazel Williams Hall. He
attended Guiding Hand and
·~
Galco Schools, where he
was a long distance runner, '
played basketball, softball
and bowled. Robert enthusiastically participated in the
I I
special Olympics for 12
Robert M. Hall
years, and was a member of
·the Straight Creek Nazarene
Church. The things he enjoyed most were singing in
. church, riding with Terence on his motorcycle, and playing
with his dog, Yona, who was by his side at the time of his
de~.
.
.
.
Surviving are two sisters, Glel)na Hopkins, her husband
Terence, with whom he made his home, of Patriot, Ohio,
Shirley Frasher; of Gallipolis, Ohio; four brothers, Keith B.
Hall, !tis wife Nancy, James Hall, his wife Debra, John C.
Smith, his wife Donna, all of Ashland, Ky., .Charles E.
Smith, his wife Jennifer, of Lancaster, Ohio; brother-inlaw, James Colt; and several nieces and nephews. . ·
Preceding him in death is a sister, Marilyn Colt.
A funeral service for Mr. Hall will be held at II a.m.
Monday, October 13, 2008 at the Kilgore &amp; Collier Funeral
Home on Panola Street in Catlett~burg. A ~e~sage of .comfort will be offered by Bro. Carl Ross. Committal serv1ce to
follow at Rose Hill Burial Park Chapel in Ashland, Ky.
Those wishing to call on the Hall fa~ily may· do so 6:00
p.m. to 8:00p.m. on Sunday at the funeral home. .

'".. t
),

/

....

,,,

·il

v

Oarice L Longsbetch carpenter

PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO
Jailed
political fundraiser Antoin
'Tony" Rezko, the Chicago
real estate developer who
helped launch Barack
Obama on his political
career, is whispering secrets
to federal prosecutors about
corruption in Illinois and
the political fallout could be
explOSIVe.
Democratic Gov. Rod
Blagojevich, whose administration faces multiple federal investigations over h~w
it handed out jobs and
money with advice from
Rezko, is considered the
most vulnerable.
Rezko also was friendly
with Obama - offering
'him a job when he finished
Jaw school ; funding his earliest political campaigns
. and purchasing a lot next to
his house. But based on the
known facts, charges so far
and testimony at Rezko's
.trial, there's no indication
there' II be a so-called
"October surprise" that
could hurt the Democratic
presidential nominee even though Rezko says
·prosecutors are pressing
him for dirt about Obama.
"l think this strikes fea.
\nto the Blagojevich administration' and the Statehouse
Democrats but not into the
Obama campaign," says
state Sen. Kirk Dillard, RWestmont, a John McCain
dele¥ate to the GOP convention but an old friend of
Obama.
Rezko, 53, a real estate
developer, was convicted in
June of scheming to use .his
clout with the Blagojevich
administration to squeeze
$7 million in kickbacks out
of a contractor and seven ·

money management fi~s times, twice in connection
seekin·g to do business with with an obscure legislative
the state:
memo. as a guest at a Rezko
Within two months , party and when defense
Rezko was seen in U.S. attorney · Joseph Duffy told
J. jurors his client was a friend
Attorney
Patrick
Fitzgerald's office, along of the senator.
with his attorneys.
None of the witnesses
There has been no official accused the Democratic
coniu ... ~Lion that Rezko is . nominee for president of
talking but his sentencing 'doing anything irnptoper. In
has been postponed indefi- June, Duffy told the
nitely and both sides say Chicago Tribune that prose·
they are going to "engage in cutors had not asked him a
discussions that could affect single question about
Obama.
their sentencing postures."
'They never would have ' But questions concerning
delayed the sentencing if he Ol:i.ama's relationship with
weren't talking - it's proof Rezko liQger, particularly
positive," said Jay Stewart, over Rezko's role in the
executive director of the purchase of the Obamas'
.·
.
Better
Government home.
Association of Chicago.
·
The two have known e.ach
In addition, attorneys say other for years, start.mg.when
federal investigators have Rezko offered Obama .II. )Ob
been
questioning lifter he graduated fro!"
Blagojevich co.litribuiions Harvard La~ . S~hool ~n
around the state using infor- 1991. Obama d1dn t take 1!,
mation ·that only Rezk() but a fnendsh1p developed:
could
have
supplied.
The men talked j)Ohl1cs
Finally, courthouse person- frequently and occas10nally
nel requesting anonymity dmed together wtth the1r
because grand jury probes w1ves.
are seer~! said Rezko has
In 2005, the Obamas paid
been . repeatedly l&gt;rought $1.65 million for their home
from his cell to the U.S. near the University of
attorney's office to talk to .Chicago. The sellers wanted
prosecutors..
.
·a parcel they owned next
Rezko could have a lot to door to sell on the.same day,
tell. He has raised millions and Rezko's wife, Rita, was
of dollars in campaign the buyer. At the request of
money for many Illinois the Obamas, Mrs. Rezko
politicians and according to later sold them a 10-foot
federal prosecutors used his strip of land to enlarge their
clout to control appoint- lot. They paid $.104,500.
ments to state boards.
The deal took place while
Obama has sent to charity Rezko was under investiga$159,000 that Rezko raised , tion and when details of the
for his campaigns for the cozy relationship surfaced,
state legislature, the House Obama said it was a "boneand the Senate. Rezko head" error to have asked
raised nothing for Obama's for the additional land
because it looked like he
White House run : ·
Obama's name came up was getting a favor.
in testimony at the trial four
"I regret it," Obama said

Clarice L. 'Longstretch Carpenter, 89, of Rutland, passed
away Friday, October 10, 2008 at Overbrook Center,
Middleport, Ohio.
..
Born October 12, 1918 at Kyger, Ohto, daughter of the
·tate Worthy and Evelyn Marie Darst Tate. . .
In addition to her parents, she was preceded m death by
her first husb.and, Kenneth Floyd "Curt" Longstretch,
. daughter Let.a Fetty, granddaughter Cindy Jones, three.
brothers, two sisters, and two stepsons. .
.
Clarice is survived by her husband, Lawrence (Smitty)
Carpenter; son, Kenneth (Betty) Longstretch; stepson, Bob
"
· (Joyce) Carpenter; grandsons, Lanny (Rena) Longstretch,
John (Kelly) Longstretch, Mike (Gayla) Fetty; granddaughters., Teresa (Bob) Varian, Missy (Bill) Myers; 13
great-grandchildren, two great-great grandchil&lt;Jren. .
Services will be Monday, October 13,2008 at II a.m. at .
lame-duck
sess10n
of
BY DAVID EsPO
·the First Southern Baptist Church, Pomeroy, with Pastor
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONOENT
Congress two weeks later
Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow at the Miles
would allow them to start.
Cemetery, Rutland.
·
·
.
WASHINGTON - After work ·on a response to the
Family will receive friends from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, consulting with Barack .credit crunch that has sent
October 12,2008 at the Birchfield .Funeral Home, Rutland. Obama, Democratic leaders stock prices plummeting
are likely to call Congress . and also threatens to trigger
backtoworkaftertheelectioo a deep recession. It often
in hopes of passing legislation takes two or three months
that would include extended for a new Congress to begin
jobless benefits, money for turning out legislation, par. food stamps and possibly a ticularly when a new presitax rebate, officials said dent is settling into the
Saturday.
White House.
Shannon Phipps, 37, of Pomeroy, passed away at
Tbe bill's total cost could
On the other hand, by
Pleasant Valley .Hospital October 10, 2008. Arrangements reach $150 billion, these offi- attempting to pass legislation
next month, Democrats
are incomplete and will be announced by the Anderson cials said. ·
The officials stressed that would have to negotiate with
.
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
no final decisions have been President Bush, whose term
made. They .spoke on condi, runs until Jan. 20, 2009.
tion of anonymity, saying Additionally,
Senate
they did not want to pre- Republicans, with 49 seats,
empt. a, formal announce- could block any measure they
rnent House. Democrats opposed.
have announced plans for
House Speaker Nancy
an
economic
forum
on
Pelosi
told reporters in
DETROIT (AP)
The ' talks bave. stalled
.
Monday
"to
help
Congfes~
Denver
last Wednesday a
General Motors Corp. and because of the recent ttirChrysler LLC have held moil 'in the financial mar- develop an economic recov- $150 billion stimulus package
preliminary talks about a ke'ts, according to the ery plan t!Jat focuses on ere- is necessary and she may call .
atmg jobs and strengthening the House back into session
merger or an acquisition of Journal. Its sources said ·our economy:" ·
after the election. Her
Chrysler by GM, according · negotiations could resume if
Democrats
said
Obama's
·
spokesman,
Brendan Daly,
to. published
reports markets stabilize b,ecause
campaign
has
~n .fuvolved added, "Congress just worked
Saturday.
·
. both GM and Cerberus want in discussions on ·a possible in a bipartisan way with the
The Wall Street. Journal, to quickly divest ihe assets
stim~lus J?3Cll:age.llJs: party's Administration to pass an.
citing ·people it described under discussion.
·
pres1d~nttal . candidate, run- . economic rescue plan to help
as familiar wi.th the discus· · ,The negoti~tions beiween ning ·ahead ..in the polls, has stabilize · our financial marsions,
said
Cerberus · 100-year-old· GM and 83- outlined his own proposals kets, and we milst now work
Capital Management, the year-old Chrysler began for stimulating the economy. together to pass a jobs creprivate equity firm that more than a month ago,
Democmts are increasingly ation and economic recovery
owns . 80.1. percent of · according to the Times. Its confident of capturing the . stimulus package."
·
Chrysler and 5 I percent of sources said the chances of White House and increasing
In the Senate, Majority
GMAC Financial Services, a merger were "50-50" as of their majorities in the House Leader Harry Reid of Nevada
proposed
trading Friday and likely · would and Senate on Nov. 4.
has announced a post-election
Chrysler's
automotive take weeks to complete.
If they are successful, a session beginning Nov. 17 to
operations to GM. The
Both newspapers posted
Journal said Cerberus their stories on their Web
',.
would
receive
GM's sites late Friday.
remaining 49 percent stake
"Without referencing this
in GMAC.
specific rumor, as ·Vfe,"ve
The ·New York Times, ofteo said, GM offtctals ,
also citing people familiar routinely discuss issues of
with the talks, said the mutual interest with other
GM
automakers were discussing automak:ers,"
merger. The Times did not spokesman Tony •Cervone
mention GMAC, a tradi- said.
Chrysler spokeswoman
tional auto lender hit hard
by the housing market · Shawn Morgan declined
dowaturn .
comment.

stevecokie@gmail.com.)

at the time . "I'm going to
make sure that from this
point on I don 't even come
close to the line."
McCain arid vice running
mate Sara.~ Palin have mentioned Rezko little if at all.
But Republicans have aired
a television ad focusing on
Rezko. And McCain aides
have repeated! y tweaked
their opponent over the real
estate deal in e-m ails· to
reporters.
"We're delighted to h.ave
a ~ebate on judgment with
Barack Obama, who bOught
his million-dollar mansion
in a sh~dy deal with a convicted felon," . McCain
spokesman Brian Rogers
said in August.
·.
·
Blagojevich, meanwhile, .
got';"' ~laG,It~e from the
, trial. · ' . · ·. o· :):''.
' One witness testified tlfat
Blagojevich talked . about
hiring him for a major state
job while his $25.000 donation to the governor's cam•
paign fund was lying on the
table.
·r· d
Two anor~eys . testl le
that BlagoJeVIC\1 hmted t~at
they could g.et lucra~lve
stale contracts 1fthey ra1sed
money - . poss1bly f?r a
future Wh1te House campaJgn.
' Obama's name has not
surfaced in accounts of th~
investigation since the triaL
But Rezko himself raised it
in a lener to the judge
months ago.
.
"Your Honor, the prose-.
cutors have been overzealous in pursuing a crime that
. never happehed." he wrote.
'They are pressuring me to
tell them the wrong things
that I supposedly · know
. about Gov. Blagojevich and
Sen. Barack Obama."

j

Tax rebate, food stamp money possible in aid plan

'fHI5 ISN'T ASOU'f' YOUR

Jt:

~imr!i ·iltnttnrl

·-

Obituaries

·Cheering the demise of·tirm limits
Finally, some good news.
New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg wants to overtum the law that limits him
Cokle
to two four-year terms , and
and
it looks as if he'll win .
Steven
Bloomberg's vast finanRoberts
cial expertise is needed
more than ever, ·and he
woulil not inherit a third
tenn by divine right. Voters
can always reject him, as were highly seasoned in
they rejected Mario Cuomo military matters when they
for a fourth term as New led the country into a disasYork'sgove'rnor in 1994.
trous war in Iraq. Despite
Bloomberg's decision Alan Greenspan's long
represents a serious blow to tenure heading the Federal
. one of the worst ideas to Reserve, he clearly failed
sweep through American to anlicipate the financial
public life in recent years: . volcano that erupted shortterm limits for elected offi- Jy after h,e left.
.
cials. Ronald ReagaQ . But the odds of solvmg
always condemned the rule problems improve sharply
· barring him from a third when time-tested hands
term as profoundly unde- guide the process. And
mocratic. an~ he was right. even strong supporters of
But there's much more at term limits are starting to
stake than absiract princi- concede that principle. As
pies. Governing 1s a profes- the New Yotk Times
sion, a .demanding and reported recently, "about
highly skilled profession two dozen local governrequiring years of training ments are suffering from a
and experience. The argu- case of buyer's remorse"
ment that amateurs can do after seeing the downside
the job better is absurd.The of tossing incumbents
late Henry Hyde, a long- aside. ·
time Republican congress"It has been an unmiti- .
man from Illinois, had the · gated disaster for the .city,"
best analogy. When you said Phil Hardberger,
need brain surgery, and that forced to leave his job as
drill is bearing down on mayor of San Antonio,
your skull, you want' the Texas, after four years.
· best surgeon available, not "The learning curve of how
someone who got the job city government works .and
because the top gun was how to get things done is
term-limited out of office. · steep, but when you keep
Does this mean that puttmg people in, and then
experienced public offi- throwing them out, there is
cials guarantee good gov- very little accountability.
ernment?
No.
Don We do .a lot of churning
Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney here, but we don't proJuce

iJunllap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

·

IRRA\IONAL. ReACIION11'~ A80UT MY

IRRATION,A.L- REAC.110N

)

Deaths

consider public lands legisla- Burton, said the campaign is·
tion. His spokesman, Jim monitoring the situation.
·
Manley, issued a written
The candidate has said prestatement that said "recent viously he favors $25 billion
developments only reinforce to help states meet their qwp
the need for additional ·action
to reinvigomte the economy." needs, another $25 billion fqr
He :added, "rio·decisions liave roads, bridges and·other infra,
yet been made on how fo pro- structure, and $65 billion fcir
tax rebates paid for by a windceed ."
'
An Obama spokesman. Bill fall profits tax on oil.

Shannon .Phipps

Dear Fellow
·Gallia Countians:

,. Reports: Chrysler, GM
discuss merger; acquisition

McCain, Palin slinging mud from the. gutter
You know what time it is
when the ·gloves start
swinging at rallies, the mud
starts flying around the
. Internet, interesting photos
start appearing in your
Donna
mailbox (just wait), and the
fact-checking staffs with
Brazile
the daily papers decide to
take an early vacation. It's
gutter time, and this year
promises to become the
The McCain camp is now
best (or rather; worst) one
the
gutter-season poster
ever.
Ever been in a gutter? It's child. His campaign has
made it clear, repeatedly,
not the prettiest place to . that
it will conjure up fear,
land after your candidate sow divisions, incite
has spent years of his or her riotous behavior. and prolife preparing for this voke hostilities just to win
moment. Every candidate a few poisoned votes.
wants to · end on a high
How sad, especially
note . Every candidate · since this is the same canaspires to inspire us to didate who, in · 2000, was
believe again, hope again, the recipient of some of the
can-do again. And every most vicious political
last one of them hopes their attacks ever waged, up
vision will lead I!S to the until that point, in a presipromised land of a better dential campaign by people
America in a more hopeful inside his own party. And
tomorrow.
when you hear Cindy
But when the gutter sea- McCain, who also had to
son begins, it's hard for endure vicious attacks on
anyone to hear what the her character and family in
candidates are trying to tell 2000, unleash her maternal
us. It's hard to hear . what (ury on Barack Obama for
they have to say about a Senate vote that made her
improving our lives, "blood run cold" - a vote
putting the. country back on identical to her husband's
track or taking on the - you know · the McCain
mounting deficits, fiscal campaign is now in full
and trade. The candidates gutter mode.
and their campaigns are too
Guess what? We have not
busy thrashing e.ach other, . heard the last of these
inciting hateful mob scenes . attacks: the snarky guilt by
and , worse, wasting pre- ~sociation, 'the false
cious time and energy try- charges of "palling around
ing to implode their oppo- with a 'terrorist," the e.vernent.
·
popular game of Who is a

Better Patriot and the most warn townspeople of the
insidiously evil one of all, dangers of waking up on
dehumanizing your worthy Nov. 5 to President-elect
opponent by referring to Barack Hussein · Obama,
. him, a fellow member of the pointedly reminding the
U.S. Senate, as "that one."
all-white crowd that this
The red-hot McCain election is about "preservrhetoric will get even loud- ing America's past and proer, and his attacks more vile tecting the promise of the
and vitriolic, as the days future." Later, after the
count down and the lights · crowd has been warmed up
go out in state after state, to the boilirig point, ·cries of
and the tina! tally comes in. "Kill him!" are heard after
McCain · is not a leader. Palin says in her speech
He never has been. and he that Obama was "palling"
never will be. It's just not around with "rerronsts.''
in his nature. He's a loner, a
The demons have taken
maveril;6;. Good for the oyer.the McCain campaign,
Senate, 'bad for the .Oval ktcktog aside the better
Office. He's just a weary an~~ls to allow the worst to
old politician who doesn't be said at a time when the
have what il'takes to bring nation cries out 'for leader
us . together and move us ship in solving our economforward: the ability to ic crisis and national woes.
inspire . Instead, McCain
Is this the best McCain
harkens back to another has to offer? Is this what his
era, when one's service and years of experience have
sacrifice during a war taught him? Is this what we
allowed you to $0 ~gh yearn .for after eight years
the rest of your life w1thout of d1v1s1on and one month
ever having. to answer for . of watching political leadyour own fat lures.
ers use a nattonal crisis ·w
I have news for the . stoke 'facial animus for
McCain-Palin ticket: It political points?
It's · time we say no 111
won't work. .
Voters are sitting home gutter politics - no matter
itow watching their pen- whether it comes dressed
sions and retirement funds up like an elephant or ~
disappear; so far, they've donkey.
.
watched more than $2 trilAmerica deserves ~er
lion vanish into the poi·(Donna Brazile i1 ~
soned air of Wall Street political COifiiMnfalor on
greed and Republican eco- CNN,ABCand NPR; co11•
nomic policies.
·' tributing columnist to RoU
At McCain-Palin .rallies, CaU, · the newspaper oj
crowds are IJ:eing worked Capito~ Hill; and /oTnU!r
up to a mob-hke frenzy by CtullpGlgn nUuulgtr for AI
sheriffs in uniform who Gore.)

\

a

l
CIIIDI4tsipltl&amp;lftttrrd
J1111T ~Jfd M

M11111 apin111 Diqi4J

14U352
Afttrholrsad
CaiiLbyd
or Davit Tawney 446-1615

ForTittl
Holt~!

352 THilD Avm •GALIOOLIS, OR

t-ICnd~

lAyAway ·
(

'DUuTtontis-&gt;'(,. .(jo/4

A..Uioblo
..............
...,....,)

740-446·3484 • Silver Bridge Piau • Gallipolis, OH

When c~ting your absentee ballots this
week .please remember that

Roger Brandeberry
is the only sheriff candidate:
• With experience as alaw enforcement CEO
13 years.,; polict cbiel ·

• With job applicable higher educalion
B.S. Manltall Ulli•mily in CrimiiiBI Jlllli"' I Law [nfor"""eol

• With over 25 ,ears law enforcement experieitce
27+ y111' ial'atnll, lmiliptilll. Nan:otics. Sapmisioo. Adminislr.otion

•With enensive public budget experience.
Wrot.,deloaded, &amp;idminisltm!IJ aonual bvdgots nmr ~in! over ..
.

~ IIVIftUf1illl: ief\li!Slo ihf pubJi&lt;.

• Selected as Gallia Coonty1 Lawman of the Year
19811Gallia COWity Gun Oub IJim Milb La•lllan ollht YrJr

Please vote for
.ROGER BRANDEBERRY
for Gallia County Sheriff '

lI

�PageA6

OHIO

Sunday, October 12,2008

Correction

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Palin raises money in Cincinnati, Cleveland·

Adoptable Dogs

Bv JoE MtuciA

town Cleveland earlier, Palin
ASSOOATED PRESS WRITER
said more than One person has
whispered in her ear during
CLEVELAND
her time in the state lhat John
Republican vice presidential McCain needs .'1o take the
nominee Sarah Palin said an · gloves off'' in his campaign
ethics repot1 due to be against Democrat Barack
released Friday in her home Obema.
state of Alaska would not
Speaking to about 200 suphave an impact on the presi- porters in a ballroom at The
dential campaign.
Ritz-Carlton - her second
Palin attended fundraisers fundraiser of the day in the
near Cincinnati and in state - Palin said there's
Cleveland on Friday. and after nothing wrong with 'asking
an afternoon ribbon-cuiting at lhe public and the media to
a suburban Cleveland group take a closer look at Obama •
home - her last stop in hard- and his associations.
fought Ohio - the Alaska
"With only 25 days to go,
governor was asked about the . it's not negative and it's not
anticipated repl&gt;rt into.her frr- mean-spirit¢," she said.
ing of her state. public safety
The Alaska· governor also
conunissiot;~er.
said Obama was exploiting
She answered briefly, shak- the economic crisis for politiing her head as she stepped on cal gain. "instead of trying to
· Subm._ Photo a bus. Palin has been accused find solutions and work
Pictured above is a full-blooded female collie. She is three- · of firing the conunissioner to together to deal with it."
years-old and is one of many dogs awaiting adoption at the settle a family dispute.
Palin led a campaign rally
Gallia County Animal Shelter.
At a fundraiser in down- in Wilmington in soulhwest

Ohio on Thursday, and
attended a fundraiser Friday
morning at a private home in
the upscale Cincinnati suburb
of Indian Hill.
·
ln Oeveland, she immediately turned folksy, telling the
cheering crowd to sit down
and keep eating.
"We'11 just he a: big happy
family here, just like.my own
family," Palin said.
She also accused Obama of
proposing a trillion dollars in
new government spending
without explaining where that
money will come from.
"Media, don't know why
they're · not asking him:
'Where is that money gonna
come from?"' she said. "He's
got to raise taxes."
Palin was greeted by protesters at both of Friday's
stops. Tbere were at least 20
protesters when slie arrived in
Cleveland, with one holding a
sign that read, "Like Bush's

. '

economy'? Hire McCain."
Tbe group chanted :'BushMcCain 1 More of the same!"
Earlier in Indian Hill, a few
neighbors stood alo~g the
streetlo greet Palin wtth supportive posters and American
flags. Ahout a dozen protesters gathered ne:uby wearing
·'Joe Six-pack" nametags and
holding empty beer cans.
Palin has 'said she appeals
to "Joe Six-pack;' meaning
everyday people who buy
beer.
.
At the ribbon-cutting in
North Olmsted, Palin met the
group home's namesake, 5year-old Michael T. George, .
who has Down syndrome.
"I see in him what I hope
that my son in just a few years
will be also," Palin said referring to her infant son Trig,
who also has Down syndrome. "A happy, healthy,
such a joy-filled little man."

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipoiis

I

I'

I

8 Prep.
FoOtball Scores

.

In Friday's sports edition of the
Gallipqlis Daily Tribune, the results of
the 2008 Ohio Valley Conference
Cross Country Championships were
r - - - - - , listed.
In past years, the
OVC has awarded AllOVC honors to the top10 boys ~ finishers and
the top-8 girls' finish ers from the meet.
This year, the OVC
decided to award an
lith all-league spot
because Fairland cap.Goodrich
tu.red nine of the top-10
places.
With that, River Valley senior Matt
Goodrich earned honorable mention
All-OVC accolades by placing lith
with a time of 20:18.18.11 was the first
all-league honor for Goodrich i,n cross
·
country.

•

Logan 42,W81Ten 0

Chillicothe 41, Jackson 6
Ironton 37, Portsmouth 6

Zanesville 25. Marietta 14
Trimble 28, Federal Hocking 6
Eastern 49, Miller 34
Waterford 15, Southern 7
Meigs 4 I, Alexander 28
Nelsonville-York 22, Athens 14
Belpre 33, Vinton County 21
Gallia Academy 42, Wellston 20
Chesapeake 28, River Valley 14
Coal Grove 42, Rock Hill 13
South Point 39, Fairland 34
Sciotoville East 31, South Gailia 0
Point Pleasant 41, Poca 12
Wahama 42, Win County 14
Gilmer County at Hannan, late
ChapmanviUe 28, Man 3
Sissonville 24, Herbert Hoover 14

interest
for

"

months*
I

I'
.1

I

i

·Railroad crossing
.to close for repairs
. Bv

Beginning
Monday.
Roush said electronic .signs
will be alerting drivers and ·
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, commercial transportation
W.Va. - A small portion of about the closure and advisW.Va. 2 will be closed next inJl them to take altemat~
weekend as railroad crews routes.
repair and replace one
In the south, motorists will
cross mg.
be able to travel north to Point
· Motorists are being asked . Pleasant by detouring along
to plan an alternative route if Jerry's Run Road to U.S. 35.
they nommlly travel W.Va. 2 Motorists who are traveling
between Point Pleasant and south will be advised to.take
Huntington as workers with U.S. 35 to Plantation Road in
CSX Transportation repair
and replace tracks and con· Putnam County, which
crete at the crossing in becomes Jerry's Run Road in
Mason County.
·
Gallipolis Ferry.
Because
the
closure
will
According to Ross Roush,
acting administrator for the be on a weekend, school bus
Mason County Garage of traffic will not be affected,
the West Virginia Division . Roush said. Mason County
'Medical
of Highways, the crossing Emergency
Services
has
been
notified
will be closed from 6 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 17 to 6 p.m . . so that members can make
arrangements to transport
Sunday, Oct. 19.
Roush said the crews will patients to local medical
be rebtiifding and upgrading facilities. ·
Roush said drivers also ·
the crossing, which has seen
· a lot of traffic in recent can use Ohio Route 7 to
travel to Huntington.
years.
DIANE .POTTORFF

OPOII01FFOMY~ILYREGISTER.ro.t

Buy now and pay no interest for 6years on our GC2400/GC2600 Series
sub&lt;ompects &amp;·1500 Series compact tractors.
Thirt of ft lSI he rille illlnns of no imd !¥'ents ir six 'Mtale )VI. 1m fie belt ride !I'Ef, lllleh ~ comes _, Mwy
~~lid ~hd«pebtno1ct.So h.rry¥1d jll!!poo tis oiler flCIW~ ~ _ , ld ~SEt

. )W Milley fquioo deilri:Jdlror \iit_,-1

~-Miidltl U"IAdl*lhiiOQ)Iillaw:J , • .....,. .... AsAs..,..;__..._.;.,-.lllllllllal,lllfllf--~1 :F

..----US.&lt;I&lt;s&gt;WI*"'fi-M,liiiiQ

..............

M,...

2150 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH
(740) 446-9777. (740) 446-2484

· - slness as Usual

.r.

Farmert Sank Aepr..,nlltlvee art empowartd to
make the right dlclllon• tor thl right !'Neon• - you
and your family. Oilr clleltlon• hive bien and will
continua to bl rteponllble, logical and eolld.
MakJng
right dlcltlona for the right rt110na
11111 Ul through IInce wa opanad In 1804; whalller
ftnltiClllllmta Wlrt good or bact On• hundred and
to.ur y..11.
wt IIIYI kept our promlll and we
.contlniHI to baa eolid community bank. .
·

th•

hu

-.r.

from 3:15 to 6:15p.m.
Parents should call 4463250 to set up conference
appointments · with the
teachers. Please · have the
following information at the
time of the phone call: student's name and the name
of the teachers they would
like to visit. ·
Conferences at Green,
Rio Grande and Washington
elementaries will be held on
Thursday, Nov. 6 and again
on Tuesday, Nov. II from
3:45 to 6:45 p.m. on each
day.
Parents do not need to call
the buildi'ng' as conference
schedules will be sent home
with .the students.

You art WIIComl to contact me pa11011ally with eny
qullliona or conceme you may have. You are
equally wtlcoml to contact or vlait your local
Farmers Sank branch; wt look forward.to mMting
you In parson.

Farmers Bank
It's Who We Are!
Friends. Neighbors. Volunteers.

FARMERS BANK • MEMBER FDIC
Pomeroy • Tuppers Plains • Gallipolis • Mason • Point Pleasan t

Local Weather
Sunday ...Sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s . East winds
around 5 mph .
Sunday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows around 50 . East
winds ;~round 5 mph.
· Columbus Day and
night ... Mostly
Monday
clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
Lows in the mid 50s.

Tuesday and Thesday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
· in the upper 70s. Lows in
the mid 50s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
cloudy. A 40 percent chance
of showers. Highs in the
mid 70s. Lows in the lower.
50s.

,.
FREE SHIPPING I 1.866.MOBIL1TY- ATT.COM/W IRELESS - VISIT A STORE

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+*Gollipolls 2145 E.ffi!'fll Ave.. l7401 44&amp;-2407

Local Stocks

,,

___ ______
,

,

·----~

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ} - 19.25
BBT (NYSE) - 30,46
Peopleo (NASDAQ) - .20.04
~leo (NYSE)- 57.80
P111mler (NASDAQ) - 8.15
Rockwell (NYSE) - 25.71
13.19
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Champion (NASDAQ)- 3.11
Royal Dutch Shell - 44.70
Channing Shope (NASDAQ) .S...IIoldlng (N."SDAQ) - 70.92
2.15
WII-MIIrt (NYS!) - 50.95
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.71
Wondy'o (NYSE) - 4
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WooBanco (NYSE) - 25.54
DuPont (NYSE) - 33.40
Worthington (NYSE)- 10.89
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.36
Dally atock 111porto a111the 4 p.m.
Gannett (NYSE) - 12.87
ET cloolng quot•a of trenaac·
General Electric (NYSE) - 21.50 Ilona lor Oct. 10, 2008, provided
Harley-Dovldaon (NYSE}- 29.54
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(304} 674-0174. Member SIPC.

cont1nt sent lt..,.IO yow p110ne1

•opon Sund•y
+H ~'1h

Speed ·lnterntH S&lt;1ld liere

+The Zoo.. 7) [ H&lt;Jron Sr.. (7401266·9698
"ATIT lllsol.,....s moolhly a ~Coli lite-r Cloarp olop to SUS to llelp dtflfy com iftcurrtd 1ft tOIIIptylng wilt! State and ftdlrol
totocoM Nptlllloll; Still lid ft4tlfl Uillft!NI Strttc. dllfpt; and soirdlargos tor caslo. .r-Nstd and ..,..., bosod 11111 ..d tout
ossos_rrll .. AT&amp;!. Tlonoartnel 111ft or gourr-llr. .IIHdllrltl.
Slandald ledlnq l.ie,aw!Y.lG I\Qiavlllable In alar~ lar!Jlrhi!WI Ftt: NoiltH canullfd In thO lint lO days:lhtttafttf up ID sm:Someag&lt;nlllrnposudd'l •
1.... Oiler availab~ 00 select ph,.,.. II n . . . . , . . . . Cllllor condiiiOM 6 rtsiiiCiioiiS apply. s.. contract &amp; rate plan brochure lor details. SUbl&lt;rliro!I!Mtllwe 6
11M a malting !lddr.wtlhln AIITs OW11W . . - _ . aowrage ilfN. Up to S36 ad!Y. Ito appU.S.Iqulpment pr1&lt;1! &amp;avail may va.y by mrl! &amp;may nOt bt Milatllt
kom ~ldoptndetrt retaler; • • - .... Or* • ...,.. 11 ptl&lt;e bffatelllilllin rl!bate Hbll &lt;Md unUmled messaging plan, and wHh l·yeat Wlrelessstl'llct
""'"'"""" 5199.99. tttnlmum SIO.OO u-l1lfSII!Itno ()!In ~tqwtred.lG Shlnf" ()l(!es before mall·ln rebatt debl cat4 MEdlll"/messagtnq leatr~e purcllast, and
wiltt l·ytat w~eless setvlte 09tem&lt;n1 per phone.,. su~~ eod 169.99, respoc~~vely. Minimum 510.00 Mldla"/messa9"91eahlre purdlase requited. Allow 60 days
lor luHtllment. C..ld may be used only In Ute u.S. ir!d ~ llllld lor 110 days lfter tssuan&lt;e date 11.- ~not redeemable lor calh and cannol be used lor cash withd&lt;awal at
~llls orautontatert gasoline pump• C..rd rtqt~e~ """' be posblli!!terl by 12/11/2008; you mu&lt;1 be a &lt;11!10111« IDf lO tOMKUII'Ie days lo receNe card, SaiH Ill
catculalt!tl based on pnce of iiC!tvated equipment. Oflllot Uup: Hyour mlns of usellndudlng unttd svcs) on otller t.lrriers' networks foffnet usage") during any two .
conseCIIItve months e•cted youroffnt!l usage allowance. AI&amp;I may at It$ option lermlnalt J0U1 svc. deny vour tontd ust ol Olhe&lt; canters covtn~gt, or change your plan
to one Imposing usage charges loroftna
Your offna usage allowance~ equal to the tosser oil 50 mlns or 40% ollhe ~nyllme mlns lncl'd wih yoor plan (dala
olfnet usage allowan&lt;e ~ the lesser ol6 MB Qt 10!1 o1 lilt Kllncfd wtlh your plan~ UniMklll •oltt stnrkto: Unltd voke svcs are p1ovlded solely lor live 4~
bttwetntwo Individuals. No addH~..I dls&lt;®nis are iN1ab1f wllh unlimited plan. s.r.tce provided by ~l&amp;!Mobtlltj. ~2008 AT&amp;T lnlelledual Property. All rights
rese!Ved. AT&amp;T. lhe AI&amp;I logo, and all other marts contained herein are ~adomarls ol Al&amp;llntPUedual Property and/o&lt; Al&amp;lalfillated companl&lt;!&lt; All other ma&lt;ks
contained lteretn •relhe property ollltelrrespectlve owner;
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+JI(bolt Communicat.m COtm«lictn
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WOOCI;.tltnltOfbec.cam

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EVP 6 Prealdtnt Fennert
Benk of Wttt Virginia

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JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

Parent-teacher
conferences set
· GALLIPOLIS - Parents
of all students attending
Gallipolis City Schools,
grades K-12. will have an
opportunity to talk with the
teachers about their stu:
dent's progress and performance thus far in the school
year.
School administrators,
counselors, and teachers
encourage all parents to
make appointments to talk
with their children's teachers.
Conferences at Gallia
Academy High School and
Alternative Schoof will be
held on Thursday, Nov. 6
from 3:15 to 6:15p.m. , and
again on . Monday, Nov. 10

rl}ltrpll.oom.

· l!dpr "l!dctle" Llnhttm
Branch Man1ger &amp; VP
Farmer~ B1nk of
'Nist VIrginia

ecldle,llnhtmOfbaciCOm
:104-174'-1200

�PageA6

OHIO

Sunday, October 12,2008

Correction

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Palin raises money in Cincinnati, Cleveland·

Adoptable Dogs

Bv JoE MtuciA

town Cleveland earlier, Palin
ASSOOATED PRESS WRITER
said more than One person has
whispered in her ear during
CLEVELAND
her time in the state lhat John
Republican vice presidential McCain needs .'1o take the
nominee Sarah Palin said an · gloves off'' in his campaign
ethics repot1 due to be against Democrat Barack
released Friday in her home Obema.
state of Alaska would not
Speaking to about 200 suphave an impact on the presi- porters in a ballroom at The
dential campaign.
Ritz-Carlton - her second
Palin attended fundraisers fundraiser of the day in the
near Cincinnati and in state - Palin said there's
Cleveland on Friday. and after nothing wrong with 'asking
an afternoon ribbon-cuiting at lhe public and the media to
a suburban Cleveland group take a closer look at Obama •
home - her last stop in hard- and his associations.
fought Ohio - the Alaska
"With only 25 days to go,
governor was asked about the . it's not negative and it's not
anticipated repl&gt;rt into.her frr- mean-spirit¢," she said.
ing of her state. public safety
The Alaska· governor also
conunissiot;~er.
said Obama was exploiting
She answered briefly, shak- the economic crisis for politiing her head as she stepped on cal gain. "instead of trying to
· Subm._ Photo a bus. Palin has been accused find solutions and work
Pictured above is a full-blooded female collie. She is three- · of firing the conunissioner to together to deal with it."
years-old and is one of many dogs awaiting adoption at the settle a family dispute.
Palin led a campaign rally
Gallia County Animal Shelter.
At a fundraiser in down- in Wilmington in soulhwest

Ohio on Thursday, and
attended a fundraiser Friday
morning at a private home in
the upscale Cincinnati suburb
of Indian Hill.
·
ln Oeveland, she immediately turned folksy, telling the
cheering crowd to sit down
and keep eating.
"We'11 just he a: big happy
family here, just like.my own
family," Palin said.
She also accused Obama of
proposing a trillion dollars in
new government spending
without explaining where that
money will come from.
"Media, don't know why
they're · not asking him:
'Where is that money gonna
come from?"' she said. "He's
got to raise taxes."
Palin was greeted by protesters at both of Friday's
stops. Tbere were at least 20
protesters when slie arrived in
Cleveland, with one holding a
sign that read, "Like Bush's

. '

economy'? Hire McCain."
Tbe group chanted :'BushMcCain 1 More of the same!"
Earlier in Indian Hill, a few
neighbors stood alo~g the
streetlo greet Palin wtth supportive posters and American
flags. Ahout a dozen protesters gathered ne:uby wearing
·'Joe Six-pack" nametags and
holding empty beer cans.
Palin has 'said she appeals
to "Joe Six-pack;' meaning
everyday people who buy
beer.
.
At the ribbon-cutting in
North Olmsted, Palin met the
group home's namesake, 5year-old Michael T. George, .
who has Down syndrome.
"I see in him what I hope
that my son in just a few years
will be also," Palin said referring to her infant son Trig,
who also has Down syndrome. "A happy, healthy,
such a joy-filled little man."

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipoiis

I

I'

I

8 Prep.
FoOtball Scores

.

In Friday's sports edition of the
Gallipqlis Daily Tribune, the results of
the 2008 Ohio Valley Conference
Cross Country Championships were
r - - - - - , listed.
In past years, the
OVC has awarded AllOVC honors to the top10 boys ~ finishers and
the top-8 girls' finish ers from the meet.
This year, the OVC
decided to award an
lith all-league spot
because Fairland cap.Goodrich
tu.red nine of the top-10
places.
With that, River Valley senior Matt
Goodrich earned honorable mention
All-OVC accolades by placing lith
with a time of 20:18.18.11 was the first
all-league honor for Goodrich i,n cross
·
country.

•

Logan 42,W81Ten 0

Chillicothe 41, Jackson 6
Ironton 37, Portsmouth 6

Zanesville 25. Marietta 14
Trimble 28, Federal Hocking 6
Eastern 49, Miller 34
Waterford 15, Southern 7
Meigs 4 I, Alexander 28
Nelsonville-York 22, Athens 14
Belpre 33, Vinton County 21
Gallia Academy 42, Wellston 20
Chesapeake 28, River Valley 14
Coal Grove 42, Rock Hill 13
South Point 39, Fairland 34
Sciotoville East 31, South Gailia 0
Point Pleasant 41, Poca 12
Wahama 42, Win County 14
Gilmer County at Hannan, late
ChapmanviUe 28, Man 3
Sissonville 24, Herbert Hoover 14

interest
for

"

months*
I

I'
.1

I

i

·Railroad crossing
.to close for repairs
. Bv

Beginning
Monday.
Roush said electronic .signs
will be alerting drivers and ·
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, commercial transportation
W.Va. - A small portion of about the closure and advisW.Va. 2 will be closed next inJl them to take altemat~
weekend as railroad crews routes.
repair and replace one
In the south, motorists will
cross mg.
be able to travel north to Point
· Motorists are being asked . Pleasant by detouring along
to plan an alternative route if Jerry's Run Road to U.S. 35.
they nommlly travel W.Va. 2 Motorists who are traveling
between Point Pleasant and south will be advised to.take
Huntington as workers with U.S. 35 to Plantation Road in
CSX Transportation repair
and replace tracks and con· Putnam County, which
crete at the crossing in becomes Jerry's Run Road in
Mason County.
·
Gallipolis Ferry.
Because
the
closure
will
According to Ross Roush,
acting administrator for the be on a weekend, school bus
Mason County Garage of traffic will not be affected,
the West Virginia Division . Roush said. Mason County
'Medical
of Highways, the crossing Emergency
Services
has
been
notified
will be closed from 6 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 17 to 6 p.m . . so that members can make
arrangements to transport
Sunday, Oct. 19.
Roush said the crews will patients to local medical
be rebtiifding and upgrading facilities. ·
Roush said drivers also ·
the crossing, which has seen
· a lot of traffic in recent can use Ohio Route 7 to
travel to Huntington.
years.
DIANE .POTTORFF

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2150 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH
(740) 446-9777. (740) 446-2484

· - slness as Usual

.r.

Farmert Sank Aepr..,nlltlvee art empowartd to
make the right dlclllon• tor thl right !'Neon• - you
and your family. Oilr clleltlon• hive bien and will
continua to bl rteponllble, logical and eolld.
MakJng
right dlcltlona for the right rt110na
11111 Ul through IInce wa opanad In 1804; whalller
ftnltiClllllmta Wlrt good or bact On• hundred and
to.ur y..11.
wt IIIYI kept our promlll and we
.contlniHI to baa eolid community bank. .
·

th•

hu

-.r.

from 3:15 to 6:15p.m.
Parents should call 4463250 to set up conference
appointments · with the
teachers. Please · have the
following information at the
time of the phone call: student's name and the name
of the teachers they would
like to visit. ·
Conferences at Green,
Rio Grande and Washington
elementaries will be held on
Thursday, Nov. 6 and again
on Tuesday, Nov. II from
3:45 to 6:45 p.m. on each
day.
Parents do not need to call
the buildi'ng' as conference
schedules will be sent home
with .the students.

You art WIIComl to contact me pa11011ally with eny
qullliona or conceme you may have. You are
equally wtlcoml to contact or vlait your local
Farmers Sank branch; wt look forward.to mMting
you In parson.

Farmers Bank
It's Who We Are!
Friends. Neighbors. Volunteers.

FARMERS BANK • MEMBER FDIC
Pomeroy • Tuppers Plains • Gallipolis • Mason • Point Pleasan t

Local Weather
Sunday ...Sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s . East winds
around 5 mph .
Sunday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows around 50 . East
winds ;~round 5 mph.
· Columbus Day and
night ... Mostly
Monday
clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
Lows in the mid 50s.

Tuesday and Thesday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
· in the upper 70s. Lows in
the mid 50s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
cloudy. A 40 percent chance
of showers. Highs in the
mid 70s. Lows in the lower.
50s.

,.
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JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

Parent-teacher
conferences set
· GALLIPOLIS - Parents
of all students attending
Gallipolis City Schools,
grades K-12. will have an
opportunity to talk with the
teachers about their stu:
dent's progress and performance thus far in the school
year.
School administrators,
counselors, and teachers
encourage all parents to
make appointments to talk
with their children's teachers.
Conferences at Gallia
Academy High School and
Alternative Schoof will be
held on Thursday, Nov. 6
from 3:15 to 6:15p.m. , and
again on . Monday, Nov. 10

rl}ltrpll.oom.

· l!dpr "l!dctle" Llnhttm
Branch Man1ger &amp; VP
Farmer~ B1nk of
'Nist VIrginia

ecldle,llnhtmOfbaciCOm
:104-174'-1200

�Sunday, October 12, 2008
Sunday, October 12,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

:Tornadoes, 15·1

~Eastern blows 42-14lead in second·half
BY BRYAN WALTERS
. TUPPERS
PLAINS
~Sometimes looks can be deceiv-tog. ·
: Eastern football appeared to
:have· everything well in hand
shortly after halftim e of its
l'lomecoming con te st against
Miller on Friday night - lead ing
42'- 14 - but the visiting Falcons
:managed to put quite a damper on
lhe early celebration plans by raJJying back to within eight points
·early in the fourth · before ulti Alately fallin g to the hosts by a
.:49-34 margin duril)g a Week 8
·Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
:Oivision matchup at East Shade
.
. :River Stadium.
:. The Eagles (3-5, l -2 TVC
Hocking) scored a season-high in
points. picked up their first
league wm 6f the season and also
:eclipsed last year 's win total of
two, but the hosts sure managed
to turn a comfortable 28-point
second half advantage into a narrow one-possession contest with
over II minutes left regulation .
The Green and White never
;trailed in the contest and held a
.commanding 35-14 advantage at
.the intermi ssion, then scored on
their opening drive of the second
haW to take a 42-14 lead with
9:44 left in the third quarter.
And that's when things became
.real interesting .
: The Falcons ( 1-7, 0-3) put.
together an 11 -play, 74-yard scoring drive on their ensuing possessio,n to pull within 42-20 at 4:0 l,
then recovered an EHS fumble on
the opening pJ;iy of the next drive
to · take over possession at the
·hosts· 17-yard line .
MHS needed just three plays to
reach paydirt , pulling the deficit
to within 42-28 with 2:19 left in
. the third stanza.
Eastern again fumbled on its
_opening .play of the ensuing
.drive. and· Miller again recovered
·the loose ball - this time at the
llagles' 34 with 2: 14 left in the
period. Seven plays later, the

Purple and White .were within a
possession after a touchdown
with II :20 left in regulation made
it 42-34.
The &amp;!gles, however. managed
to regroup ·on the following drive,
putting together a 12-play._ 62yard scohng drive that concluded
with 5:28 left in the contest ~
making it 49-34. Eastern's
defense forced a loss of down s on
the next drive and also h;Jd an
interception with less than a
minute left, securing the IS -poi nt
decision.
·
Figuring the way the .evening
started. the final result was a little
bit of a bitter pill to swallow for
EHS coach Kevin Welsh : Then
again , a win is a win - especially whel) it ends a two-game losing streak.
"I am proud of our kids because
they didn't give in and didn't get
down and didn't let them come
)}ack and beat us," Welsh commented. "Our offense stepped it
up wh.en we had to score again
there late , and our defense picked
it up late when it had to as welL
We gave them some momentum
with those turnovers though. and
you can really blame anybody for
those mistakes - we jus t didn't
finish the way we needed to fin ish.
"If we ever learn to finish, then
we can start to be great."
The finish may have ended up
shaky, but the start was anything
but for the Eagles. The hosts
scored first when James Russell
hauled in a 10-yard touchdown
pass from Brayden Pratt with
7:22 showing in the opening stanza, makihg it a 7-0 contest.
The Falcons responded with a
score of their own at 3:53 tying things at seven - when
Tyler HousehoJder scored from
one-yard out on 'a run.
Eastern retaliated late in the
first
quarter
when
Kelly
Winebrenner scored on a oneyard run to make it 14-7 with 42
seconds remaining. Winebrenner
would also add a pair of 12-yard
scampers for paydirt in the sec-

Eastern 49, Miller 34

'Miller
'Eastern

7 7 14 6 - 34
14 21 7 7 - 49

Scoring summary
First Quarter
.E-James Russell 10 pass trom
ilrayden Pratt (Zach Hendrix kick)
:?:22
-M- Tyler Householder 1 run (Jake

:Reynolds kick) 3:53
~-Kelly

Winebrenner 1 run

(Hendrix kick) 0:42

Second Quarter
E-Win·ebrenner 12 run (Hendrix

kick) 11:01

;M-Adam Foster

3~

pass from·

.Householder (Reynolds kick) 6:22

:£-Winebrenner 12 ru'n (Hendrix,

-kick) 2:44
E-Mike Johnson 19 pass from
Pratt (Hendrix kick) 0:12
·
Third Quarter
.E-Kiint Connery 55 run (Hendri&lt;
-kick) 9:44
Jill-Andrew Levering 2 run (kicl&lt;
4ailed) 4:01
JJj-Householder 13 run (Tony

-Adkins run) 2:19

Fourth Quarter

M- Reynolds 1 run (kick failed)
11:20 .
: E-Hendrix B pass from Pratt

RV

Bryan WaHera/photo
Eastern running back Kelly Winebrenner, right, is dragged down by a Miller defender du.iing Friday night's TVC
Hocking football COI)test at East Shade River Stadium in Tuppers Plains.
·
ond quarter to give the hosts a 28- from turnovers , plunging iil from totes. while Kyle Connery was
14 edge with 2:44 left in the halL one yard out at the rl :20 mark to next with 62 yards on nine carMiller's Adam Foster hauled in make it a one-possession contest. ries .
a .. 3·5 -yard TD pass from
On Eastern's clinching scoring
Pratt finished the night 6-of-17
Hou se holder
in
between drive late , things got a little dicey. passing for 75 yards with two
Wi.nebreuner 's seco nd period Facing a fourth-and-five at the touchdowns and no interceptions.
scores at 6:22 to make it 2 1-14. Miller 8-yard line, Pratt went to ·Jordan Kimes led the Eagle wideEastern 's Mike Johnson added the air after a fake handoff - · outs with 38 yards on three catch'
the ·final score of the first half, finding a wide-open Zach es.
bringing down a 19-yard pass Hendrix in the back of the endThe Falcons managed 320
from Pratt with 12 seconds left zone for an eight-yard strike and yards of total offense, including
the 49-34 finale.
137 rushing yards on 38 attempts.
for a 35-14 intermi ss ion edge.
Miller was forced to punt on the
The late scare ultimately didn' t MHS also had 14 first downs, ·
opening drive of the second .half, tak~ away from the Eagles· fine threw three inter&gt;eptions.and had
then Eastern needed only two offensi~e display, as the hosts 183 passing yarcjs.
plays to cover 56 yards for a amassed 449 total. yards of. Levering paced the FalCons'
score when Klint Connery went offense - including 374 rushing ground, game with 95 yards on 18
55 yards to the house at 9:44 for a yards on 49 carries·. The Eagles . carries, while Householder finalso finished the night plus-one in ished 6-of-14 pass ing for 183
42-14 le11d.
Andrew Levering scored from turnover differential ·and had a yards. Levering had a· team-high
two yards out at 4:0 l to pull the season-high 24 first downs in the two grabs for 37 yards.
deficit to within 42-20 . then trillmph .
Eastern will make its final road
HMse holder added a 13-yard
Eastern had two rushers hit the trip of the season next Friday
scoring run at 2: 19 to make it 42- century mark. with Winebrenner when it travels to Waterford for a
28 through three frames.
leading that charge with 1.84 Week 9 TYC Hocking matchup
Jake . Reynolds had the other yards on 29 rushes. Connery also with the Wildcats. Kickoff is
Miller touchdown which resulted had 124 rushing yards on nine scheduled for 7:30p.m.

1-35, Tucker McClean 1-30. Aaron
:Ansel 1-24.
'E-Jordan Kimes 3·38, Mike
:Johnson 1·19. James Russell1-10,
. •ZaJ:h Hendrix 1·B.
••
•
Cheaapeake 28,
•·
River Valley 14
River Valley 7 7 0 0 - 14.
.Chesapeake 14 7 7 o - 28
r

•

Scoring summary

First Quarter
:c-Draw Blaka 12 run (kick failed)
.2:54

:C-Aaron Donahoe 7 run (pass
,good) 1:30
·I!V- Zak Deal 27 pass from
.Clayton Curnutte (Tyler Smith kick)
-0:30

•
Secan·d i)uarter
::C-T. West 12 run (Zach Harris
"lck) 6:14
.
·RV-Curnutta 1 run (Smilh kick)
:J:33
Third Q~arter
t- Kyle Webb 6 pass from
Donahoe (Harris kick) 8:02

17

SAVERFriendly

GA-Ouinlon Nibert26 run (Mason
kick) :07
.
.
Second Quarter

18
53-294 GA-Nate Allison 11 run (Mason
kick) 6:39
46
WWilkett 23 run {Darnell pass
340
from
Wilken) 1:24
3-7-{)
Third Quarter
2-1
GA-Moore 4 run (Mason kicl&lt;) .
6-48
7:14
GA- Nibert pass from Moore
Individual Statistics
(Mason kick) 1:22
·
Rushing: RV-Ciayton Curnutte
· Fourth Qu8rtar
15-63. Zachary Baird 11-33, Cody GA-AIIison 5 run (Mason kick)
McAvena 2-18,Tyler Smith 2-1.
10:32
C-Aaron Donahoe 18·110, Alex W-Michael
Grey 1 run (run failed)
Wells 18-76. Drew B.lake 6-46. Tyler 3:06
.
Edwards 5-34, Peter Hintz 3-12, T .
West 1-12, #21-3, A. Reynolds 1-1 .
w
GA
'
Pasolng: RV-Ciayton Curnutte First Downs
13
26
13-25-3 210. .
Rushes-yards
39-170 45-225
C-Aar9n Donahoe 3-7-0 46.
Passing yards
40
128
Receiving: RV- Kody Johnson 5· Total yards
210
353
64, Jordan Deal 3-57, Cody Comp-att-int
2-5-0
11-12McAvena 2·33, Zak Deal 1-27, 0
Chad Smith 1·22. Travis Roush 1·7. Fumbles-k)s~
3·2
0-1
C-Kyle Webb 3-46.
Penalties-yards
1-5
2·25

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

30-115
210
325
13-2.5-3
1-1
3-25

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. Individual Statistics
14 7 20 o - 41 Ruehlng: W-cody WilkeU f1-62 ,
0 6 6 16 - 28 Matt Lockard 15-54. Brad Miller 3-

Scoring summary
· First Quarter
M-Clay Bolin npass from Jac;ob
Well (Mason Metts kick) 6:06
·M-Jeremy Sm.ilh 1 run (Mens
kick) 2:43
·
Second Quarter
M-Smith 11 run (Mens kicl&lt;) 11 :05
A-Cody Lawson 3 run (kick failed)
8:21
Third Quarter
M-Smilh 48 run (Mens kick) 11 :19
M-Smilh 3 run (kick failed) 7:22
A-Jake Heodrick 20 run (run
failed) 5:15
Fourth Quarter
· A-Lawson 6 run (Josh Mortlz
pass from Michael Chapman) 5:0) .
A-,Lawson 29 run (Hendncl&lt; pass
from Chapman) 3:34

-(Hendn&lt; kick) 5:28
•
•
M
E
:First Downs
14
24
·flushes-ya rds
38·137 49-374
·Passing yards
183
75
Total yards
320
449
·Comp-att-inl
6·14-3 6-17.0
:Fumbles-lost
4-0
3·2
;Penallies·yards 5-20
4·30
•
•
tndtvtduat Statistics
1luahtng: M-Andrew Levering 18·
:95, Tyler Householder 8·26, Tony
Adkins B-19. Neil Adkins 1-2. Jake
Reynolds 1-). Aaron Ansel 2-(-6).
E-Kelly Winebrenner 29- 184 Klint
·Connery 9·124. Kyle Connery'9-62.
:Srayden Pratt 2-4.i
;
.
.Poaelng: M-Tyler Householder 6· A h · d
:14·3 183. •
us .•s·yar s
-E:-Brayden Prall 6-1 7-0 75.
Passing yards
~Receiving·: M~Andrew Levering 2~7. Adam Foster 1-57, Tony Adkins

c

M

A

37, Tayler Prates 7·15, Tim Ervin 11.
.

GA-Nale Allison 15·76, Austin
Wilson 4·43, Jared Gravely 5·36,
Ethan Moore 10·33, Quinton Nibert
2-28, Chris McDermitt 5-8, Ben
Saunders 2-1. Tyler Eastmon 1-0,
Patslng: W-cody Wilkell 2·5·0
40.
GA-Ethan Moore 11-12·0 128.
Reeetvtng: W-Jeff Matteson 1·29, ·
Man Lockard H 1.
GA-Quinton Nibert 5-52. Austin

..._

•

·

Waterford 15, Southern 7

Scorlng summary
Third Quarter

30-273 57-408 S-Justin Porter 441umle recO'Jery
261
95
(Zach Ash kick) 10:34
·
5S4
503
W-Cody Strahler 14 pass from
Totat .yard.s
6-14-1 7-12.0 Man McCutcheon (kick failed) 6:10
Comp·att-•nl
Faurth Quarter
Individual Statistics
W-Cody Hall271ield goal7:18
Ruahlng: M-Jeremy Smith 27- W-Michael Fulton 1 run (kick
25Ei. Cody Laudermitt 2-14, Cory failed) 4:14
Hutton 1-3.
A.,-Cody Lawson 43·350, Jake
w
s
Hendrick 5·55, Cody Tolley 2-18, Flrsi.Downs
13
5
Michael Chapman 7-(-16).
Rushes-yards
31-79 41 ·248
Paning: M-Jacob Well 6;14-1 Passing yards
10
40
261.
Total yards
89
258
A-Michael Chapman 7-12-Q 95.
Comp-att-lnt
1-4-0
3-4-0
Rtcalvlng: M-clay Bolin 5·238, Fumbles-lost
1-0
11-3
Cameron Bolin 1·23.
·Panallles-yards 5·40
4-40
A-Greg Croxford 2-34, Josh"
Morliz 1-8, Jake Hendrick 2·23,
Individual StatlatiC.
Cody Lawson 1-23.
Ruahlng: S-Sean Copplck 10·48.
Michael Manual 14-32, Greg
Gallla Academy 42,
Jenkins 5-2, Eric Buzzard 1-(-1),
Wellston 20
Jerry Justis 1·(·2).
Wellston
6 8 0 6 - 20 w-cooy Strahler 19·1o1. Michael
Gallia Ac. 14 7 14 7 - 42 Fullon 12-100. Jerrod Eichhorn 849, Matt McCulheon 2-(-2).
Scoring aummary
Paoslng: S-Michaal Manuel 1·2·0
First Quarter
10, Dustin Salser 0-2·0 0.
W-JeH Matteson 29 pass from
Cody Stahler 2-3-0 26, Mall
Coxy Wilken (kick failed) 5:33
McCutcheon 1·1·0 12.
GA~Auslin Wilsoo 22 pass from
Receiving: s-Greg Jenkins 1-10.
Ethan Moore (Corey Mason .[&lt;i.ck)
W-Cody Strahler 2·27. Micha~l
4:37
~~~on 1-13, Kelns 1·tt.
•

STAFF REPORT

GAI,.LIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy continued its
-home turf dominance Friday
night with a commanding •
42-20 non-conference victory over
Wellston
at
Memorial Field in Gallipolis
in the first of three straight
home games for the Blue
and White.
The Blue Devils (5-3) ·
improved ·to 4-0 at home this
season while outscoring · its
opponents 113-69 in the
friendly
confines
of
'Memorial Field.
And Friday's win was
made possibly by do-it-all
sophomore Ethan Moore
who scored three touchdo.wns -'- two through the
air and another on the
ground - in leading the
Blue an,j White to their third
win in four games.
. Moore was nearly perfect
under center, completmg 11 of-12 passes for 128 yards
and two touchdowns, and
added 33 mo.re yards on the
ground with a score to lead
the Devils to the win over
their Tri-Valley Conference
foe.
And while Moore moved
the
offense.
Gallia
Academy 's defe1ise took
care of the rest, holding the
Rockets (3-5) to just 210
total yards- of offense on the
night.
But Moore wasn't the only
GAHS player with multiple
scores on the night.
Nate Allison added two
more scores and finished
with 76 yards on 15 carries
and Quinton Nibert rushed
twice for 28 yards and a
touchdown and had five
receptions for 52 yards and a
score. Austin Wilson scored
. Gallia Academy's other
touchdown and finished
with four receptions for 53
yards .
And it was Wilson's 22-

Mike Brace/submitted phOto

Gallia Academy sophomore Austin Wilson, left, gives a stiff arm to Wellston defender
Austin Osborne (11) during a catch-and-run effort Friday night in a Week 8 non-conference
football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
yard scoring reception from found the endzone on a 26- tucked on 21 more points.
Moore late in the first quar- yard run and Allison made .it
Moore struck firs! in the
ter that put the Blue Devils 21-6 with 6:39 remaining second half with a 4-yard
on top for good.
before the half when be touchdown run and added ·
Wellston actually scored broke free for an 11 -vard his second score of the half
first in Friday's contest with touchdown ru"n.
moments· later when he.
a little over five minutes left
Wellston
· quarterback found Nibert for a score to
in . the first quarter when Cody Wilken . who finished make · it 35-14 after three
Cody Wilkett found Jeff the night with 40 yards on 2- quarters of play.
Matteson for a 29-yard pitch of-5 passing and also n1shed
Allison then finished out
and catch to put the Rockets II times for 62 yards. then the scoring for the Blue and
on top 6-0 after the missed finished out the half with a White a l~tle over a minute
22-yard touchdown run to into the fourth qum1er when
extra point.
But the lead was short- make the score 21-14 at the he ran it in from 5 yards out .
lived.
half after a Wilkett two- lo make-it -ll-14 .
Gallia Aca&lt;l~my answered point conversion.
O·;erall it was a very effiless than a minute later when
In the second half. howev- cient night for the Devils
Moore found Wilson for the er, the ·Blue Devil defense who pic ked up a total of 26
go-ahead score to. put the took over.
first downs and punted only
De:vils on top 7-6 after the
Galli a Academy held the once.
Corey Mason extra-point.
visiting Rockets to . just ohe
Gallia Academy will try to
And from there the llood- score in the second half make it five straight at home .
when Michael Grey found .next Friday when SEOAL
gates were opened.
Gallia Academy extended the endzone on a l-yard run opponent Zanesville visi~l
its lead to 14-6 at the end of with three minutes left in the the GAHS campus. Kick-off
·
the first quarter when Nibert game as the Blue Devils is slated for 7:30p.m.

..........
. ....
xura
~

Fainters Bank

Wilson 4-53, Krulze Wandling 1-10,

Southern
0 0 7 o- 7
Pt Pleasant o 0 6 9 - 15

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'

Attstin Smith 1-0.

Beua Whaley 1-13.

____

forced to punt. That punt
would be returned by Cody
Strahler 38 yards to .the
• WATERFORD - I! was Southern 24 yard line . Just
~homecoming in Waterford two plays after ' the return,
.(4-4, 2-1) Friday nignt, but Strahler, the Waterford go-to
;apparently no one informed man responsible for inflict;the Tornadoes.
ing a hurricane-like chunk of
; The 'Tomadoes (3-5, 1-2) damage . upon Southern,
,rose to the occasion and would again ·victimize the
:nearly played the role of Tornadoes.
•spoiler. In fact, Southern led
Strahler caught a 14-yard
:after three rounds . Played in touchdown pass from Matt
:two very distinctly different McCutcheon with 6:18 to IJ.O
·types of halfs the oame saw in the third. The extra pomt
:waterford e~plode offen- was .missed, allowing
:sively in the second half, Southern to maintain a 7-6
;especially the last -quarter. lead.
;That was the difference in . · That lead· would hold up
.the game as Waterford rolled until midway through the
fourth quarter when after a
;to a 15-7. VICtory. ·
: The Wildcats of Coach short Sotithe~n punt , the
-Doug
Balcjwm
tratled Wate1tord offense would go
:southern until Cody Hall to work .
Although Strahler was a
. ;drilled a 27-yard _fie )~ geal
~ with 7: .18 rema1mng m the decoy ·~nd key blocker in the
.4th to gtve Waterford 1ts first play, he turned the offensive
: lead of the game. The 'Cats reigns over to other capable
:then would get a 1-yard hands. Waterford made a
:Michael Fulton . run with complete about-face from its
.4:?4 remammg to seal the first half effort, making necessary adjustments during
·wm.
· The first half of the game the intermtssion.
.
· wa~ a deftnse lovers dream .
A 30~yard run from Jarrod
Netther. team m~nag.ed to Eichhorn and a 14-yard run
score m the !•rst half, from Michael Fulton set \lP
although the . Cats dtd the Wildcats for a 27-yard
thre.aten several times, only go-ahead field goal . from
to be turned away by the Cody Hall with 7:18 to go in
Southern defense . In the the garne. ·
·half, the Southern defense
Waterford wasted little
recovered . two fumbles, time before taking advantage
recorded two sacks and had of a SHS mistake and scora noteworthy goaHinc stand. ing again. A fumbled snap on
Waterford was only able to a punt gave the 'Cats a first. seriously make headway late and -goal at the one-yard
. m the half when Cody line and Michael Fulton
Strahler took a broken play punched the ball in with 4:54
. 78 ya~ds to the Tornado I to go. The extra poi11t ·was
·yard lme, where he was run· blocked by Southem'sAdam
down by Southern's Michael Warden. The block would
ManueL Waterford was keep the game a one-score
. unable be able to score on game , underlining the great
the drive as they' failed on a defensive
effort
from
Jake field goal attempt as the Warden, the score 15-7.
half expired. The Southern
Southern would not ~
:offense did not threaten in able to·move the ball on their
the half, not even mildly. next drive and Waterford
·Collectively,. both ·teams take a knee to run out the
barely broke the I00-yard clock in preserving the TVC
. mark in a sputtering first half Hocking win.
·
In addition to Porter's
,effort.
Waterford was only able to defensive touchdown The
gain 48 yards in · the half Southern D would have
while Southern put up 72. · another star. Junior line. Waterford changed the ba,kerlnose guard Taylor
complexion of the . game in Lemley rec.orded 17 tackles,
the second half. Southern five of which were for Joss.
continlled to muddle. The Lemley would also add three
second half unfolded much sacks, was involved in six
worse for the Southern forced fumbles and a fumble
offense. lit the secot\d half, · reeovery.
Southern managed only 17
"Overall, I was proud of
. yards and two first downs. my defense· tonight. They
But it was the Southern kept us in the game. We were
defense that would keep able
to
take
them
Southern in the game.
(Waterford) away from their
On the fourth play of the game plan for most of the
second half. nose guard game, unfortunately we
Taylor Lemley hit the. qu.ar- couldn't get it going on
terback as he was handmg offense . They (Waterford)
off, the ball fell to the gn;mnd ·did. Then aga1i1 it took them
where defensive tackle three quarters to· get going
·Justin Po.rter would pick it and that was the difference
up and ramble 44 yards for tonight," added the veteran
the only Tornado touch- coach Dennis Teaford.
•
-. The Southern offense was
down .
Coming off a good defen- lead by junior fullback Sean
sivegame last week,Porter's Coppick's II canies for48
ron and the Zach Ash extra ·yarifs. So.uthem also got"32
po.int !:lave Southern a 7-0 yards fium Michael Manuel
lead wtth 10:34 to go in the on 14 canies. Greg Jenkins
third. On the next Southern caught the lone Southern
possession the 'Does were completion for 10 yards.

•.

.Ohio ·Prep Football Boxscores

i;&gt;mtllnv lrimr5 -ISrntml'l • Page B3

·sl spast Blue Devils blast Wellston, stay perfect at home

Eagles survive scare from Miller on Hom~coming, win 49-34
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�Sunday, October 12, 2008
Sunday, October 12,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

:Tornadoes, 15·1

~Eastern blows 42-14lead in second·half
BY BRYAN WALTERS
. TUPPERS
PLAINS
~Sometimes looks can be deceiv-tog. ·
: Eastern football appeared to
:have· everything well in hand
shortly after halftim e of its
l'lomecoming con te st against
Miller on Friday night - lead ing
42'- 14 - but the visiting Falcons
:managed to put quite a damper on
lhe early celebration plans by raJJying back to within eight points
·early in the fourth · before ulti Alately fallin g to the hosts by a
.:49-34 margin duril)g a Week 8
·Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
:Oivision matchup at East Shade
.
. :River Stadium.
:. The Eagles (3-5, l -2 TVC
Hocking) scored a season-high in
points. picked up their first
league wm 6f the season and also
:eclipsed last year 's win total of
two, but the hosts sure managed
to turn a comfortable 28-point
second half advantage into a narrow one-possession contest with
over II minutes left regulation .
The Green and White never
;trailed in the contest and held a
.commanding 35-14 advantage at
.the intermi ssion, then scored on
their opening drive of the second
haW to take a 42-14 lead with
9:44 left in the third quarter.
And that's when things became
.real interesting .
: The Falcons ( 1-7, 0-3) put.
together an 11 -play, 74-yard scoring drive on their ensuing possessio,n to pull within 42-20 at 4:0 l,
then recovered an EHS fumble on
the opening pJ;iy of the next drive
to · take over possession at the
·hosts· 17-yard line .
MHS needed just three plays to
reach paydirt , pulling the deficit
to within 42-28 with 2:19 left in
. the third stanza.
Eastern again fumbled on its
_opening .play of the ensuing
.drive. and· Miller again recovered
·the loose ball - this time at the
llagles' 34 with 2: 14 left in the
period. Seven plays later, the

Purple and White .were within a
possession after a touchdown
with II :20 left in regulation made
it 42-34.
The &amp;!gles, however. managed
to regroup ·on the following drive,
putting together a 12-play._ 62yard scohng drive that concluded
with 5:28 left in the contest ~
making it 49-34. Eastern's
defense forced a loss of down s on
the next drive and also h;Jd an
interception with less than a
minute left, securing the IS -poi nt
decision.
·
Figuring the way the .evening
started. the final result was a little
bit of a bitter pill to swallow for
EHS coach Kevin Welsh : Then
again , a win is a win - especially whel) it ends a two-game losing streak.
"I am proud of our kids because
they didn't give in and didn't get
down and didn't let them come
)}ack and beat us," Welsh commented. "Our offense stepped it
up wh.en we had to score again
there late , and our defense picked
it up late when it had to as welL
We gave them some momentum
with those turnovers though. and
you can really blame anybody for
those mistakes - we jus t didn't
finish the way we needed to fin ish.
"If we ever learn to finish, then
we can start to be great."
The finish may have ended up
shaky, but the start was anything
but for the Eagles. The hosts
scored first when James Russell
hauled in a 10-yard touchdown
pass from Brayden Pratt with
7:22 showing in the opening stanza, makihg it a 7-0 contest.
The Falcons responded with a
score of their own at 3:53 tying things at seven - when
Tyler HousehoJder scored from
one-yard out on 'a run.
Eastern retaliated late in the
first
quarter
when
Kelly
Winebrenner scored on a oneyard run to make it 14-7 with 42
seconds remaining. Winebrenner
would also add a pair of 12-yard
scampers for paydirt in the sec-

Eastern 49, Miller 34

'Miller
'Eastern

7 7 14 6 - 34
14 21 7 7 - 49

Scoring summary
First Quarter
.E-James Russell 10 pass trom
ilrayden Pratt (Zach Hendrix kick)
:?:22
-M- Tyler Householder 1 run (Jake

:Reynolds kick) 3:53
~-Kelly

Winebrenner 1 run

(Hendrix kick) 0:42

Second Quarter
E-Win·ebrenner 12 run (Hendrix

kick) 11:01

;M-Adam Foster

3~

pass from·

.Householder (Reynolds kick) 6:22

:£-Winebrenner 12 ru'n (Hendrix,

-kick) 2:44
E-Mike Johnson 19 pass from
Pratt (Hendrix kick) 0:12
·
Third Quarter
.E-Kiint Connery 55 run (Hendri&lt;
-kick) 9:44
Jill-Andrew Levering 2 run (kicl&lt;
4ailed) 4:01
JJj-Householder 13 run (Tony

-Adkins run) 2:19

Fourth Quarter

M- Reynolds 1 run (kick failed)
11:20 .
: E-Hendrix B pass from Pratt

RV

Bryan WaHera/photo
Eastern running back Kelly Winebrenner, right, is dragged down by a Miller defender du.iing Friday night's TVC
Hocking football COI)test at East Shade River Stadium in Tuppers Plains.
·
ond quarter to give the hosts a 28- from turnovers , plunging iil from totes. while Kyle Connery was
14 edge with 2:44 left in the halL one yard out at the rl :20 mark to next with 62 yards on nine carMiller's Adam Foster hauled in make it a one-possession contest. ries .
a .. 3·5 -yard TD pass from
On Eastern's clinching scoring
Pratt finished the night 6-of-17
Hou se holder
in
between drive late , things got a little dicey. passing for 75 yards with two
Wi.nebreuner 's seco nd period Facing a fourth-and-five at the touchdowns and no interceptions.
scores at 6:22 to make it 2 1-14. Miller 8-yard line, Pratt went to ·Jordan Kimes led the Eagle wideEastern 's Mike Johnson added the air after a fake handoff - · outs with 38 yards on three catch'
the ·final score of the first half, finding a wide-open Zach es.
bringing down a 19-yard pass Hendrix in the back of the endThe Falcons managed 320
from Pratt with 12 seconds left zone for an eight-yard strike and yards of total offense, including
the 49-34 finale.
137 rushing yards on 38 attempts.
for a 35-14 intermi ss ion edge.
Miller was forced to punt on the
The late scare ultimately didn' t MHS also had 14 first downs, ·
opening drive of the second .half, tak~ away from the Eagles· fine threw three inter&gt;eptions.and had
then Eastern needed only two offensi~e display, as the hosts 183 passing yarcjs.
plays to cover 56 yards for a amassed 449 total. yards of. Levering paced the FalCons'
score when Klint Connery went offense - including 374 rushing ground, game with 95 yards on 18
55 yards to the house at 9:44 for a yards on 49 carries·. The Eagles . carries, while Householder finalso finished the night plus-one in ished 6-of-14 pass ing for 183
42-14 le11d.
Andrew Levering scored from turnover differential ·and had a yards. Levering had a· team-high
two yards out at 4:0 l to pull the season-high 24 first downs in the two grabs for 37 yards.
deficit to within 42-20 . then trillmph .
Eastern will make its final road
HMse holder added a 13-yard
Eastern had two rushers hit the trip of the season next Friday
scoring run at 2: 19 to make it 42- century mark. with Winebrenner when it travels to Waterford for a
28 through three frames.
leading that charge with 1.84 Week 9 TYC Hocking matchup
Jake . Reynolds had the other yards on 29 rushes. Connery also with the Wildcats. Kickoff is
Miller touchdown which resulted had 124 rushing yards on nine scheduled for 7:30p.m.

1-35, Tucker McClean 1-30. Aaron
:Ansel 1-24.
'E-Jordan Kimes 3·38, Mike
:Johnson 1·19. James Russell1-10,
. •ZaJ:h Hendrix 1·B.
••
•
Cheaapeake 28,
•·
River Valley 14
River Valley 7 7 0 0 - 14.
.Chesapeake 14 7 7 o - 28
r

•

Scoring summary

First Quarter
:c-Draw Blaka 12 run (kick failed)
.2:54

:C-Aaron Donahoe 7 run (pass
,good) 1:30
·I!V- Zak Deal 27 pass from
.Clayton Curnutte (Tyler Smith kick)
-0:30

•
Secan·d i)uarter
::C-T. West 12 run (Zach Harris
"lck) 6:14
.
·RV-Curnutta 1 run (Smilh kick)
:J:33
Third Q~arter
t- Kyle Webb 6 pass from
Donahoe (Harris kick) 8:02

17

SAVERFriendly

GA-Ouinlon Nibert26 run (Mason
kick) :07
.
.
Second Quarter

18
53-294 GA-Nate Allison 11 run (Mason
kick) 6:39
46
WWilkett 23 run {Darnell pass
340
from
Wilken) 1:24
3-7-{)
Third Quarter
2-1
GA-Moore 4 run (Mason kicl&lt;) .
6-48
7:14
GA- Nibert pass from Moore
Individual Statistics
(Mason kick) 1:22
·
Rushing: RV-Ciayton Curnutte
· Fourth Qu8rtar
15-63. Zachary Baird 11-33, Cody GA-AIIison 5 run (Mason kick)
McAvena 2-18,Tyler Smith 2-1.
10:32
C-Aaron Donahoe 18·110, Alex W-Michael
Grey 1 run (run failed)
Wells 18-76. Drew B.lake 6-46. Tyler 3:06
.
Edwards 5-34, Peter Hintz 3-12, T .
West 1-12, #21-3, A. Reynolds 1-1 .
w
GA
'
Pasolng: RV-Ciayton Curnutte First Downs
13
26
13-25-3 210. .
Rushes-yards
39-170 45-225
C-Aar9n Donahoe 3-7-0 46.
Passing yards
40
128
Receiving: RV- Kody Johnson 5· Total yards
210
353
64, Jordan Deal 3-57, Cody Comp-att-int
2-5-0
11-12McAvena 2·33, Zak Deal 1-27, 0
Chad Smith 1·22. Travis Roush 1·7. Fumbles-k)s~
3·2
0-1
C-Kyle Webb 3-46.
Penalties-yards
1-5
2·25

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

30-115
210
325
13-2.5-3
1-1
3-25

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Meigs 41, Alexander 28

Meigs
Alexander

. Individual Statistics
14 7 20 o - 41 Ruehlng: W-cody WilkeU f1-62 ,
0 6 6 16 - 28 Matt Lockard 15-54. Brad Miller 3-

Scoring summary
· First Quarter
M-Clay Bolin npass from Jac;ob
Well (Mason Metts kick) 6:06
·M-Jeremy Sm.ilh 1 run (Mens
kick) 2:43
·
Second Quarter
M-Smith 11 run (Mens kicl&lt;) 11 :05
A-Cody Lawson 3 run (kick failed)
8:21
Third Quarter
M-Smilh 48 run (Mens kick) 11 :19
M-Smilh 3 run (kick failed) 7:22
A-Jake Heodrick 20 run (run
failed) 5:15
Fourth Quarter
· A-Lawson 6 run (Josh Mortlz
pass from Michael Chapman) 5:0) .
A-,Lawson 29 run (Hendncl&lt; pass
from Chapman) 3:34

-(Hendn&lt; kick) 5:28
•
•
M
E
:First Downs
14
24
·flushes-ya rds
38·137 49-374
·Passing yards
183
75
Total yards
320
449
·Comp-att-inl
6·14-3 6-17.0
:Fumbles-lost
4-0
3·2
;Penallies·yards 5-20
4·30
•
•
tndtvtduat Statistics
1luahtng: M-Andrew Levering 18·
:95, Tyler Householder 8·26, Tony
Adkins B-19. Neil Adkins 1-2. Jake
Reynolds 1-). Aaron Ansel 2-(-6).
E-Kelly Winebrenner 29- 184 Klint
·Connery 9·124. Kyle Connery'9-62.
:Srayden Pratt 2-4.i
;
.
.Poaelng: M-Tyler Householder 6· A h · d
:14·3 183. •
us .•s·yar s
-E:-Brayden Prall 6-1 7-0 75.
Passing yards
~Receiving·: M~Andrew Levering 2~7. Adam Foster 1-57, Tony Adkins

c

M

A

37, Tayler Prates 7·15, Tim Ervin 11.
.

GA-Nale Allison 15·76, Austin
Wilson 4·43, Jared Gravely 5·36,
Ethan Moore 10·33, Quinton Nibert
2-28, Chris McDermitt 5-8, Ben
Saunders 2-1. Tyler Eastmon 1-0,
Patslng: W-cody Wilkell 2·5·0
40.
GA-Ethan Moore 11-12·0 128.
Reeetvtng: W-Jeff Matteson 1·29, ·
Man Lockard H 1.
GA-Quinton Nibert 5-52. Austin

..._

•

·

Waterford 15, Southern 7

Scorlng summary
Third Quarter

30-273 57-408 S-Justin Porter 441umle recO'Jery
261
95
(Zach Ash kick) 10:34
·
5S4
503
W-Cody Strahler 14 pass from
Totat .yard.s
6-14-1 7-12.0 Man McCutcheon (kick failed) 6:10
Comp·att-•nl
Faurth Quarter
Individual Statistics
W-Cody Hall271ield goal7:18
Ruahlng: M-Jeremy Smith 27- W-Michael Fulton 1 run (kick
25Ei. Cody Laudermitt 2-14, Cory failed) 4:14
Hutton 1-3.
A.,-Cody Lawson 43·350, Jake
w
s
Hendrick 5·55, Cody Tolley 2-18, Flrsi.Downs
13
5
Michael Chapman 7-(-16).
Rushes-yards
31-79 41 ·248
Paning: M-Jacob Well 6;14-1 Passing yards
10
40
261.
Total yards
89
258
A-Michael Chapman 7-12-Q 95.
Comp-att-lnt
1-4-0
3-4-0
Rtcalvlng: M-clay Bolin 5·238, Fumbles-lost
1-0
11-3
Cameron Bolin 1·23.
·Panallles-yards 5·40
4-40
A-Greg Croxford 2-34, Josh"
Morliz 1-8, Jake Hendrick 2·23,
Individual StatlatiC.
Cody Lawson 1-23.
Ruahlng: S-Sean Copplck 10·48.
Michael Manual 14-32, Greg
Gallla Academy 42,
Jenkins 5-2, Eric Buzzard 1-(-1),
Wellston 20
Jerry Justis 1·(·2).
Wellston
6 8 0 6 - 20 w-cooy Strahler 19·1o1. Michael
Gallia Ac. 14 7 14 7 - 42 Fullon 12-100. Jerrod Eichhorn 849, Matt McCulheon 2-(-2).
Scoring aummary
Paoslng: S-Michaal Manuel 1·2·0
First Quarter
10, Dustin Salser 0-2·0 0.
W-JeH Matteson 29 pass from
Cody Stahler 2-3-0 26, Mall
Coxy Wilken (kick failed) 5:33
McCutcheon 1·1·0 12.
GA~Auslin Wilsoo 22 pass from
Receiving: s-Greg Jenkins 1-10.
Ethan Moore (Corey Mason .[&lt;i.ck)
W-Cody Strahler 2·27. Micha~l
4:37
~~~on 1-13, Kelns 1·tt.
•

STAFF REPORT

GAI,.LIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy continued its
-home turf dominance Friday
night with a commanding •
42-20 non-conference victory over
Wellston
at
Memorial Field in Gallipolis
in the first of three straight
home games for the Blue
and White.
The Blue Devils (5-3) ·
improved ·to 4-0 at home this
season while outscoring · its
opponents 113-69 in the
friendly
confines
of
'Memorial Field.
And Friday's win was
made possibly by do-it-all
sophomore Ethan Moore
who scored three touchdo.wns -'- two through the
air and another on the
ground - in leading the
Blue an,j White to their third
win in four games.
. Moore was nearly perfect
under center, completmg 11 of-12 passes for 128 yards
and two touchdowns, and
added 33 mo.re yards on the
ground with a score to lead
the Devils to the win over
their Tri-Valley Conference
foe.
And while Moore moved
the
offense.
Gallia
Academy 's defe1ise took
care of the rest, holding the
Rockets (3-5) to just 210
total yards- of offense on the
night.
But Moore wasn't the only
GAHS player with multiple
scores on the night.
Nate Allison added two
more scores and finished
with 76 yards on 15 carries
and Quinton Nibert rushed
twice for 28 yards and a
touchdown and had five
receptions for 52 yards and a
score. Austin Wilson scored
. Gallia Academy's other
touchdown and finished
with four receptions for 53
yards .
And it was Wilson's 22-

Mike Brace/submitted phOto

Gallia Academy sophomore Austin Wilson, left, gives a stiff arm to Wellston defender
Austin Osborne (11) during a catch-and-run effort Friday night in a Week 8 non-conference
football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
yard scoring reception from found the endzone on a 26- tucked on 21 more points.
Moore late in the first quar- yard run and Allison made .it
Moore struck firs! in the
ter that put the Blue Devils 21-6 with 6:39 remaining second half with a 4-yard
on top for good.
before the half when be touchdown run and added ·
Wellston actually scored broke free for an 11 -vard his second score of the half
first in Friday's contest with touchdown ru"n.
moments· later when he.
a little over five minutes left
Wellston
· quarterback found Nibert for a score to
in . the first quarter when Cody Wilken . who finished make · it 35-14 after three
Cody Wilkett found Jeff the night with 40 yards on 2- quarters of play.
Matteson for a 29-yard pitch of-5 passing and also n1shed
Allison then finished out
and catch to put the Rockets II times for 62 yards. then the scoring for the Blue and
on top 6-0 after the missed finished out the half with a White a l~tle over a minute
22-yard touchdown run to into the fourth qum1er when
extra point.
But the lead was short- make the score 21-14 at the he ran it in from 5 yards out .
lived.
half after a Wilkett two- lo make-it -ll-14 .
Gallia Aca&lt;l~my answered point conversion.
O·;erall it was a very effiless than a minute later when
In the second half. howev- cient night for the Devils
Moore found Wilson for the er, the ·Blue Devil defense who pic ked up a total of 26
go-ahead score to. put the took over.
first downs and punted only
De:vils on top 7-6 after the
Galli a Academy held the once.
Corey Mason extra-point.
visiting Rockets to . just ohe
Gallia Academy will try to
And from there the llood- score in the second half make it five straight at home .
when Michael Grey found .next Friday when SEOAL
gates were opened.
Gallia Academy extended the endzone on a l-yard run opponent Zanesville visi~l
its lead to 14-6 at the end of with three minutes left in the the GAHS campus. Kick-off
·
the first quarter when Nibert game as the Blue Devils is slated for 7:30p.m.

..........
. ....
xura
~

Fainters Bank

Wilson 4-53, Krulze Wandling 1-10,

Southern
0 0 7 o- 7
Pt Pleasant o 0 6 9 - 15

Bv Scorr WOLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
__:_:__

,

SPORTSIIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

'

Attstin Smith 1-0.

Beua Whaley 1-13.

____

forced to punt. That punt
would be returned by Cody
Strahler 38 yards to .the
• WATERFORD - I! was Southern 24 yard line . Just
~homecoming in Waterford two plays after ' the return,
.(4-4, 2-1) Friday nignt, but Strahler, the Waterford go-to
;apparently no one informed man responsible for inflict;the Tornadoes.
ing a hurricane-like chunk of
; The 'Tomadoes (3-5, 1-2) damage . upon Southern,
,rose to the occasion and would again ·victimize the
:nearly played the role of Tornadoes.
•spoiler. In fact, Southern led
Strahler caught a 14-yard
:after three rounds . Played in touchdown pass from Matt
:two very distinctly different McCutcheon with 6:18 to IJ.O
·types of halfs the oame saw in the third. The extra pomt
:waterford e~plode offen- was .missed, allowing
:sively in the second half, Southern to maintain a 7-6
;especially the last -quarter. lead.
;That was the difference in . · That lead· would hold up
.the game as Waterford rolled until midway through the
fourth quarter when after a
;to a 15-7. VICtory. ·
: The Wildcats of Coach short Sotithe~n punt , the
-Doug
Balcjwm
tratled Wate1tord offense would go
:southern until Cody Hall to work .
Although Strahler was a
. ;drilled a 27-yard _fie )~ geal
~ with 7: .18 rema1mng m the decoy ·~nd key blocker in the
.4th to gtve Waterford 1ts first play, he turned the offensive
: lead of the game. The 'Cats reigns over to other capable
:then would get a 1-yard hands. Waterford made a
:Michael Fulton . run with complete about-face from its
.4:?4 remammg to seal the first half effort, making necessary adjustments during
·wm.
· The first half of the game the intermtssion.
.
· wa~ a deftnse lovers dream .
A 30~yard run from Jarrod
Netther. team m~nag.ed to Eichhorn and a 14-yard run
score m the !•rst half, from Michael Fulton set \lP
although the . Cats dtd the Wildcats for a 27-yard
thre.aten several times, only go-ahead field goal . from
to be turned away by the Cody Hall with 7:18 to go in
Southern defense . In the the garne. ·
·half, the Southern defense
Waterford wasted little
recovered . two fumbles, time before taking advantage
recorded two sacks and had of a SHS mistake and scora noteworthy goaHinc stand. ing again. A fumbled snap on
Waterford was only able to a punt gave the 'Cats a first. seriously make headway late and -goal at the one-yard
. m the half when Cody line and Michael Fulton
Strahler took a broken play punched the ball in with 4:54
. 78 ya~ds to the Tornado I to go. The extra poi11t ·was
·yard lme, where he was run· blocked by Southem'sAdam
down by Southern's Michael Warden. The block would
ManueL Waterford was keep the game a one-score
. unable be able to score on game , underlining the great
the drive as they' failed on a defensive
effort
from
Jake field goal attempt as the Warden, the score 15-7.
half expired. The Southern
Southern would not ~
:offense did not threaten in able to·move the ball on their
the half, not even mildly. next drive and Waterford
·Collectively,. both ·teams take a knee to run out the
barely broke the I00-yard clock in preserving the TVC
. mark in a sputtering first half Hocking win.
·
In addition to Porter's
,effort.
Waterford was only able to defensive touchdown The
gain 48 yards in · the half Southern D would have
while Southern put up 72. · another star. Junior line. Waterford changed the ba,kerlnose guard Taylor
complexion of the . game in Lemley rec.orded 17 tackles,
the second half. Southern five of which were for Joss.
continlled to muddle. The Lemley would also add three
second half unfolded much sacks, was involved in six
worse for the Southern forced fumbles and a fumble
offense. lit the secot\d half, · reeovery.
Southern managed only 17
"Overall, I was proud of
. yards and two first downs. my defense· tonight. They
But it was the Southern kept us in the game. We were
defense that would keep able
to
take
them
Southern in the game.
(Waterford) away from their
On the fourth play of the game plan for most of the
second half. nose guard game, unfortunately we
Taylor Lemley hit the. qu.ar- couldn't get it going on
terback as he was handmg offense . They (Waterford)
off, the ball fell to the gn;mnd ·did. Then aga1i1 it took them
where defensive tackle three quarters to· get going
·Justin Po.rter would pick it and that was the difference
up and ramble 44 yards for tonight," added the veteran
the only Tornado touch- coach Dennis Teaford.
•
-. The Southern offense was
down .
Coming off a good defen- lead by junior fullback Sean
sivegame last week,Porter's Coppick's II canies for48
ron and the Zach Ash extra ·yarifs. So.uthem also got"32
po.int !:lave Southern a 7-0 yards fium Michael Manuel
lead wtth 10:34 to go in the on 14 canies. Greg Jenkins
third. On the next Southern caught the lone Southern
possession the 'Does were completion for 10 yards.

•.

.Ohio ·Prep Football Boxscores

i;&gt;mtllnv lrimr5 -ISrntml'l • Page B3

·sl spast Blue Devils blast Wellston, stay perfect at home

Eagles survive scare from Miller on Hom~coming, win 49-34
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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 12,2008

Panthers outlast River Valley, 28-14
STAFF REPORT

Bv LARRY CAUM
. LCRUMOMYDAILYAEGISTER.COM

CHESAPEAKE - It was
a tale of two halves Friday
riight during the Week 8
Ohio Valley Conference
gridiron matchup between
yisiting River Valley and
Pesapeake. as a first half
'shootout turned into a sec- ·
ond half defensive struggle
that witnessed .the host
Panthers claim a hard-fought
28·14 victory tn Lawrence
C:ounty.
: The Raiders (2-6 , 0-3
OVC) fell behind 14-0 late
.in the first quarter after the
Panthers (4-4, 2-1) scored
twice in less than 90 seconds ·
. :With just under three min~tes left in the opening
4:anto.
~ The Silver · and Black,
however, responde&lt;,! nicely·
witli just 30 seconds left in
,
Courteay of Tony Shotaky of Southern Ohio Sporta Photoa.com
the opener, as Zak Deel got River Valley quarterback ' Clayton Curnutte, right, ,avoids a Chesapeake tackler during
the guests on the scoreboard Friday night's Week a OVC football contest at Chesapeake.
·
·
,With a 27-yard touchdown
catch from Clayton Curnutte
The game was scoreless with an 11 -play, 68-yard carries, followed by Cody
to make it a 14-7 deficit after for the opening nine minutes drive that was capped off McAvena with 18 yards on
12 minutes of play.
of the game, but the Panthers with a one-yard run by two totes .
Kody Johnson led the
Both teams traded scores drew first blood with 2:54 Curnutte with I :33 remainin the second period - with showing on the clock when ing in the half. The score receivers with five catches
CHS scoring first to take a . Drew Blake scored on a 12· would stay at 21-14 entering for 64 yards. Deel also had
21 -7 lead _ and entered yard run - making it a 6-0 the intermission.
57 yards on three grabs. A
halftime with the Panthers game.
RVHS. however, wr:mld total of six River Valley
leading 21 -14. The Purple
RVHS fumbled on its run into trouble in its open- receivers.caught at least one
and White tacked on another ensuing possession at. 2:30, ing drive of the second hal.f, pass in the ·setback.
~core four minutes into the giving CHS possession at as C~rnutte commllted his
The Raiders were 0-for-8.
8econd half to make it a two- the · Raider 32-yard hne. third mtercepuon pass of the on ·third down conversions
score, 28-14 contest - Four plays and 60 seconds night less than a minute into and 1-for-3 on fourth down
\llhich ended up being the later, Chesapeake was up · that drive.
'tries on the night.
way things ended.
14-0 after Aaron Donahoe
Six play and 31 yards
Donahoe led CHS with
Chesapeake tallied 340 scored on a seven-yard run later, the Panthers again held II 0 rushing yards on 18
total yards of offense in the with 1:30 remaining in the a 14-p&lt;iint advantage follow- attempts and also added 46
triumph, including 294 rush· first quarter.
.
ing a six-yard touchdown passing yards, going 3-of-7
ing yards on 53 carries - an
Deel's score 60 seconds pass from Donahoe to Kyle overall with one TD and
average of 5.5 yards per - and 68 yards - later Webb at the 8:02 mark.
zero
interceptions.
carry. CHS also had 18 first helped the guests trim their
Neither team came overly Chesapeake had six running
downs in the contest and fin- deficit to 14-7 after one stan- close to scoring again, leav- backs accumulate at least a
ished the night plus-thr.ee in za.
ing the final outcome at a dozen yards in the win.
turnover differential.
·
Both teams traded punts to. 14-polnt decision.
Webb had all three catches ·
· . The Raiders were close start the second canto, but
Curnutte led the Raiders .for 46 yards and a score.
tehind with 325 total yards Chesapeake again found the with 63 rushing yards on ·15
River Valley will look to
'o f offense, including 1'15 endzone at the 6:14 mark- carries and added another end its ' current 20-game
' rushing yards on 30 attempts as T. West capped a five- 210 yards through the air on OVC losing streak next
·- an average of 3.8 yards play, .31-yard drive with a 13-of-25. passing. Curnutte Friday when it travels to
i:Jercarry.RVHSalsohadl7 12-yardjaunttomakeit21 · also had one TD pass and Coal Grove for a Week 9
:first downs and 210 passing 7.
three interceptions. Zacllary matchup with the Hornets.
:yards, but also threw three
The
Raiders. again ,!,3aird was next for the guests Kickoff is scheduled for
)nterceptimis in the setback. responded nicely, this time with 33 rushing yards on II 7:30p.m.

Wabama whips Wirt·County, stays unbeaten
'

Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

'

.

Zerkle returned the ensuing
Flrtt Quarter
ff
80
d
t
t
th
·
W-Colin
Pierce
13 pass from
.
k
kIC o
yar s 0 nega e e William zuspan (Kyle Zerkle kick)
Tiger score. Wirt County 5,03
answered with nine seconds
Second Quarter
remaining in the third canto W-Garrett Undetwood 10 pass
when Valentine scrambled from Zuspan (Zerkle kick) 4:02
Third Quarter
free and· ran 32 yards to pay
W-Micalah
Branch 18 pass from
dirt to pull the hosts to within Zuspan (Zerkle
kick) 7:34
13 at 27- 14.
WC-Zach Cheuvront 37 pass
Zuspan 's second TD pass from Josh Valentine (Jordan Vlach
to Underwood, covering 34 kick) 3:05
.
yards. as the final period W-Zerkle 80 kickoff return (kick
began increased the WHS failed) 2:53
32 run (Vlach kick)
advantajle to 33-14 with the WC-Valentine
:09
.
junior signal caller also passFourth Quarter
mg to Efijah Honaker for the w-Underwood 34 pass from
two-point conversion to Zuspan (Elijah Honaker pass from
make it a 35-14 contest. Zuspan) 11:41
Zerkle ended the evenings W-Zerkle 55 run (Ryan Anderson
scoring activity when he kickl7:01
broke free on a 55-yard galw · we
lop with 7:0 I to play to ice First Downs
18
8
the game and give Wahama Rushes-yards
31·189 41 .105
Passing yards 163
82
the hard earned victory.
352
187 .
· Tom McCoy paced the Total yards
1().20-0 6-12·1
Tigers on the ground with 62 Comp-alt·int
().()
· 1·0
yards in 12 carries while Fumbles-lost
Panaltles-yards 5·30
5·55
Devin Dye added 28 rushing
yards in nine attempts.
Individual Statlattca
Valentine connected on six of Fh18hlhg: W.,-Kyle Zerkle 6-90,
12 aerials for 82 yards and a Jacob Roach 5-42, Mlcaiah Branch
score with Roach picking off 12·29, Anthony Grimm 2·18, Ryan
a valentine offen~ late in be 2·&amp;, William Zuspan 3-4, Clay
VanMeter 1-1 .
the game . Zach
euvront we-Tom McCoy 12·62, Devin Oya
led Wirt County in receiv- 9-28, Levi Kerby 4·18, Josh
ing with four catches for 53 Valentine 15:2, Jake Hutchinson t·
yards and a touchdown.
(·51.
Wahama will now put its Paaatng: W-William Zu9p!!n 1Q.
2Q.O 163.
unbeaten record on the line WC-Josh Valentine 6-12·1 82.
next week when the White Receiving: W-Garran Undetwood
Falcons travel to once beaten 3-69, Micaiah Branch 4&gt;40, Kyle
WilliaTjlstown for a 7:30p.m . . Zerkle .1·23, Jacob Ro~ch 1-18,
outing. The Yellow Jackets Colin P1erce 1·13.
WC-Zach Cheuvront 4·53, Taran
d ' h h · fi
loss
the season
·
wereoftagge
Wit tlast
etr mght
.trst 1-1 4. .
against third rated Class AA
Grafton by a 37-7 margin .

s;unba!' m:imes .s;rntiml • Page 85

Point Pleasant handles P~ on Homecoming liP

SPORTSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

BY DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY
- Jeremy
Smith rushed for 256 yards
and four touchdowns, and
Jacob Well passed for 261
yards and a pair of scores
to lead Meigs to a han!
fought 41-28 win over
Alexander Friday night in
Clay Bolin
Smith
Albany. '
Smith's big game for
Meigs put hi mover the hit sophomore ·Cameron ·
1,000 mark for the season . Bolin for.23 yards, and two
Smith has now rushed for plays later Smith took it in
1,151 yards in 153 carries . from the five to give Meigs
The two juniors for the a 34-6 lead with 7:22 left
Marauders overshadowed in the period.
an outstanding game by the
The Spartans came right
and
Brandon
Spartans sophomore· tail- back
back Cody Lawson who McCarty scored from 20
carried 43 times for 350 yards out breaking several
yards and three scores. .
tackles along the way to
The young Spartans pull the Spartans to within
refused to give up as Meigs 34-12.
built a 41-6 lead midway
It took the Marauders
into the third period. But just three pla)'S to answer
Alexander sparked · by that score with a score of
· Lawson refused to give up their own. Smith carried
and made the game inter- twice for 18 yards, and
esting in the final minutes·. then Well went on top from
Meigs scored first when 55 yards out to Bolin for
Well hooked up with Clay the score. Metts added the'
Bolin on a 72-yard touch- kick and Meigs was on top
down pass, Mason Metts 41-12.
·
added the extra points and
Lawson scored twice late
Meigs held a 7-0 lead . at in the game, one from six
the 6:06 mark of the first yard.s out. And after an
period.
onside kick recovered by
. Cody Laudermilt recov- . the Spartans from 29 yards
ered a Spartan fumble at out with 3:34 left. Both
the Marauder·.34. On first score the Spartans went for
down Well hit Bolin for a two and converted, the last
45-yard gain, with the last to pull to within 41-28. But
Spartan making a touch- Metts
recovered
the
down saving tackle. Three Spartan onside kick with
plays later Smith scored 3:34 left. and Meigs ran
from
yard out. Metts OUt the clock.
.
added the kick and at the
Smith had 256 yards in
2:43 mark of the period 27 carries to lead Meigs;
Meigs held a 14-0 lead.
Laudermilt added 14 in
, One play after Well and two carries . Well was six
Bolin hooked up for a 57- of 14 in the air for 261
yard gain, Smith scored his yards. Clay Bolin · had a
third touchdown· of the huge game with five recepnight from II yards out. tions for 238 yards.
Metts added the PAT for a Cameron Bolin caught one
21-0 Meigs lead with 11:05 for 23.
left in the half.
Lawson led all rushers
Alexander .cut the Meigs with . his 350 yards in 43
lead to 21-6 at the half carries. Jake Hedrick
when Lawson scores from added · 55 in five tries.
a yard out with 11:05 left Michael Chapman was
in the second period.
seven of 12 in the air for 95
The maroon and gold. yards. Greg Croxford
received the second half caught two for 34 and Josh
kickoff, and Smith carried Mortiz two for 23.
twice; for 17 and then the
Alexander is now 0-4 in
final 48 for· the score. the TVC and 3-5 overall;
Metts again was true with the Spartans will travel to ·
the kick for a 28-6 Meigs Vinton County next ·week.
lead.
Meigs with the win is 6-2
The Spartans gambled on overall and 3-1 in the TVC,
fourth down, deep in their the Marauders "will· return
own territory by going for home next week for the
it, but the Meigs defense . first time in a month to
held. On first down Well play Wellston.

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Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is Friday, October 17
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
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,' POINT'
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - It was billed as a
battle of the backs. but
;what began as a showdown
between the two best rushers in Class AA quickly
turned into a defensive
showcase
for . Point
'Pleasant.
·
Sure Poca (2-5, · 1-2
Cardinal) running back
Caleb Arthur got his y~rds,
but most of his numbers
came late with the game
already out ef re.ach as the
Point Pleasant (5·2 , 3-0
Cardinal) defense · shutdown the Dots to 'the tune
of a 41 - 12 homecoming
victory Friday night in
Poirit Pleasant.·
Arthur
came
mto
Friday's contest leading the
conference in rushing with
1;2~7 yards - over 100
yards more than Point
Pleasant's equivalent Allan
Wasonga - setting up an
epic battle of .running
backs in front of one of the
biggest crowds for a Point
Pleasant home game in
years .
But instead of the high
scoring, back·and·fourth
contest that was ·expected,
Larry Crum/photo
Point Pleasant's defense Point Pleasant's Phillip Allen wraps up Poca running back
stepped up and answered C.aleb Arthur during the first quarter of a high school foot·
the call, keeping Arthur in ball game Friday during homecoming at Sanders Stadium
check while the offense in Point Pleasant, W.Va:
•
helped the Big Blacks jump offensive possession of the
Starting on the Dot 47
out to a 27-6 halftime lead~ night.
Point Pleasant yard line, the Big Blacks
Point Pleasant tacked on received the ball on the 43 quick!~ found themselves
two more scores in the sec- yard line after a punt and knockmg ·on the door once
ond half to open up a com- Wasonga needed only one again when Lloyd found
manding 41-6 lead before play to find the endzone, Cody Durst for a 40-yard
putting it on cruise control taking the ball up the mid· completion to set up the
late in the second half, giv- die for a 43-yard touch· Red and Black on the I
ing Arthur enough room for down to put the Big Blacks yard ·line. Lloyd then called
his only score 'and most of up 6-0 after a blocked extra · his own number on the !)ext
his yards as the Red. and poinr: .
play, but fumbled the ball
Black cruised to the 41-12
Poca did, however, make on the goalline ~iving the
victory.
·. '
Point Pleasant fans hold ball back to Poca with 46
Arthur stlll finished the their breath for a moment seconds remaining ...
night with 20 I yards and a on the next drive.
While the half appeared
After receiving the ball to be over, another wild
score on 33 carries, accumula!ing well. over half of . on the 14 yard line - one play saw the Dots fumble
Poca s offensive yardage, of several possessions that the ball two snaps later and
but fo.r the most part was " started deep in their own junior Clay . Krebs was
held m check. The b~st territory thanks to excellept there, recovenng the ballm
rusher for theDots outside. kick coverage by . the Big , the endzone for a touch·
!l.f Arth9r ,.j:\:M quat1~F.b.\IC.k Blacks - . the Dots down with 13 seconds
.
Jason Cune.e who _had 33 m'arched 86 yards in five , remaining.
yards on sa carne$. He . minutes helped out by a
With the ga!lle well' m
also completed three pass- few clutch plays and a 15- hand, the second half was
es in eight attemp~s for 40 yard PPHS penalty and was used more to experiment
yards.
capped with an· 11 -yard than anything else as
For
Point
Pleasant touchdown pass from Mitchell finished out the
. sophomore Allan Wasonga Cuffee to Forest Mattox to scoring for Point Pleasant
led the way with I 83 yards kno,t the score.at 6:6 after a with a pair of touchdowns.
on 22 carries and finished failed extra point.
His first score came on
with one touchdown Despite the quick answer, the opening possession of
scoring on the first ·offen- · the Dots had no ans'\Ver the second h.alf when a few
sive· play of the night for from then on. as the Big big runs by Wasonga set
the Big Blacks. Derek Blacks rolled up 35 unan- Mitchell up for a 9-yard
Mitchell tacked on 78 swered points to put ~~e .scamper to put the home
yards on eight carries and game away. And most of squad on top 34-6.
Nathan Roberts added 27' those points were scored in Mitchell's second sco~e
yards on eight carries and the second quarter as Point came just seconds into the
was huge in short-yardage Pl~asant scored on three of . fourth quarte~ when Llo_Yd
situations, scoring twice its final four possessions CC?nnected wllh the semor
from inside the 3 yard line. before the half. .
for a::31-yard to~chdown
Quarterback B J. Lloyd
Two of those touchdowns . pass. tq seal the btg home·
also had an effiCient night .were scored by ' Roberts .commg v1ctory. .
for Point Pleasant, finish- who turned big. runs f~om
~1th the game. m hand,
ing with 71 yards through Wasonga and Mttchell mto Pomt _Pleasant shtfted new
the air on 2-of-3 passing scores of I and 3 yards for faces m and out of the ltneand one score. Lloyd's a 20-6. Point Pleasant lead. up throughout the fourth.
touchdown found Mitchell He also set up one of his quarter and. Arthur took
a. 31-yard pitch and own scores when he recc;&gt;V· advantage ,
slashing
· catch to wr~ up Poi~t ered . ~ Po~.~ f~tpble le.admg· throu_gh the PPHS defense
Pleasant's scoring early m to a b1g sli1ft 1n momentum. for b•g chunks of y:a,rds' He
the fourth quarter. .'
·.
Point Pleasant~·s ' final. fiJ?ally founc) t~e. en?~one
After holding Poca to lit· score ~fore tile half came w1t.h 6:30 remammg m the
tie yardage on the first on a w1ld senes of plays. , . contest when he broke free

ojl

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
for a 44-yard scamper to
Southeaatem Ohio Athletic League
cap the scoring at 41-12.
The Big Blacks next
SEOAL
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
game is scheduled for
......................5.() .... 157 .. SO .... . .6·2 . . .201 .. It6
.Friday
night
against Chillicolhe
Logan ............. .. ..........4.() .... 142 .. 38 ......6-0 ....283 ..69 ·
Ironton ........................ 3-2 .... 152 . .70 .....5·3 .... 246 .. 10!1
Ravenswood . Kick-off is Gallia
Academy .. ................ 2·2 ....49 .. 111 . . . 5·3 .... 157 ..214
slated for 7:30p.m.
Zanesville ...................... 2·2 .... 109 .. 57 . . 3-5.... 162 lSQ
Jacl&lt;son ........................ 2·3 ....96 ... 179 . . . .5·3 .... 19t ..213
Warren . . ......... . ......... .. 1·3 .... 33 .. .74 ... . .4·4 .... 95 ... 1'~
Point Pleasant 41, Poca 12 Marietta
... ..
.. ............. 1·3 ....82 ... 130 .... .2-6. ... 185 .. 284
Poca
6 0 0 6 -'- 12
Portsmouth ..
.. ...... .. 0·5 .... 47 .. 108
. 1·7 .... 81 ... 185
Pt. Pleasant 6 21 7 7 - · 41
Ohio Valley Conference
OVC
ALL
'•
Scoring aummary
W·l
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA'
· First Quartar
.C9al Groile .... ................. 3-0 ... 91 .. .4 7 .
5·3 ..... 171 ..113
PP-AIIan Wasonga 43 run (kick
South l'llint..
. ... : ......... 2·1. 102 , .62 .. ' .4·4.. .206 .. 119
failed) 7:18
Chesapeake ...... , ........... 2 -1. . 77 ... 69 . . 4-4. ... 196 ..201
.Po-Forest MaHox 11 pass from
Fei~and .......... .... ........ 2·1 .
152 .. 98 . ....2·5.... 217 . 198
River Val1ey . .
. .. .......... 0·3 . ... 54 .. .139 . 2·6.. .. t21 .. 274
Jason Cuffee (kick failed) 2,:03
RockHill ....
..·, ......... 0·3 .. ..66 ... 127 .... 0·8 .... 117 .. ~
Second Quarter '
PP-Nathan Roberts 3 run (Justin
Tri·Valley Conference
Weaver kk;k) 10:41
..•
Ohio Division
PP-Roberts 1 run (Weaver kick)
TVC
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
p&amp;·
3:36
Nelsonville,York ....
. ..5·0 .... 169 .. 96 .. ... ·. 7-1 ... 244 .. 15t
PP-C1ay Krebs fumble recovery
MeiQS . . . .. . . . . . .. ..
..3·1.... 136 .. 78 .. .... 6·2 .... 255 •.. 15~
(Weaver kick) :13
Wellston
....
..
......
3·1 .... 116 . 76 ...... 3·5 .. 184 ..21
Third Quarter
Belpre .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..2·2.., .79 ... 106 .. .. .3·5 , .. 129 .174
PP-Derek Mitchell10 run (Weaver A1hens ....... ..................2·3 .... 107... 95 . . ..2·6 t 42 .t69
Alexander .. .. .
.. .....0·4.... 67 ... t41 ..... 3-5 192 . t~
kick) 6:26
Vinton County ... ... .... , ....... .0·4... .43 ... t23 ..... I· 7 .. .. 97 , ..2
· Fourth Quarter
Hocking Division
PP-Mitchell 31 pass from B.J.
TVC
ALL
lloyd (Weaver kicl&lt;) 11 :17
W·L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA'
· Po-Cateb Mhur 44 run (pass
Trimble .. .. . .. . .. ........ 3·0 .... 11 3 ..6 .......6-2 .. .220 .. 1\3
Federal Hocking .. ......... .. .... 2·1 ....97 ..62 ......5·3 .. 181 .. 149
failed) 6:30
·
Wate~ord .. . ........ .......... 2·1 .... 50 .. 52 .
..4·4 .129 .. 161i
Eastern
....
.....
.....
,
...
...
...
1·2
....
75
...
122
...
.
.3-5 .. ,. t92 ..25Q
pp
Po
Southern
....
.
.............
1·2
....
46 ...85 ...... 3·5 .... 139 .. 207
First DoWns
t2
22
Miller ... ..
. ...... : .. ..... 0-3 ....61 ... 117 ..... 1·7 .... t15 .. 2~
Rushes-yards 44·260 49-332
Independents
Passing yards 44
71
ALL
Total yards ~.,
403
304
W·L
PF
PA
Comp-aH·int
4-12·2 ' 2·3·1
.wahama
..
..
..
..
..
...
..........
6·0
....
271
..
86
Fumbles lost
2
3
South Gallia .
. . .2-6 ... .78 ... 231
Penalties-yards 2·10
7-65
Hannan . . . . . .
. .1-4 .: .. 74 ... 216 •••
Cardinal Conference
Individual Statistics
CARD
ALL
Rushing: Po-C~Ie.b Arthur 33·
•
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA, ·
201 , Jason Cuffee 6·33, Matt Chapmanville .
.........
3.()..
93
...
31
..
.
7
.
0
..
175
..
59
McClanahan t-14, Tyler McCallister Point Pleasani
. .' . ...... 3-0 . . .. t05 . .43 ...... 5·2 ... .25:7 .. 139
2·7, Brad Thomas 1·3, Jonathan Waynp . ... . . .
....... 2·1. . '. 123 .. 60 .... :·.5·1 ... 232 ·.. t18
Bush 1·2.
Poca ... .
.., ........1·2 .. 54 ... 89 ...... 2·5 .... 166 ..224
PP-AIIan Wasonga 22·183, Derek Sissonville .... . .
t-3.. .. 67 ... 148 ..... 3'4... 138 ..22t
MltcheiiS-78, Nathan Roberts 8-29, Herber1 Hoover_. ..............
...........0·4 .... 58 .. .129. . 2'5 .... 131 ..IQ1
Caleb Wasonga 2·16, B:J. lloyd 2·
14, Derek Pinson 3·7, Chris
Blankenship 1-6, Toby Martin 2-4,
•
'·
Layne Thompson 1-( ·3).
f'
Passing: Po-Jason Cuffee 3-8·1
'{
40. Trevor Dunlap 1-4·1 4.
PP-B.J. lloyd 2-3-1 71.
\•
't:... &lt; .
Re&lt;:elvlng: Po-Forest Matlock 2·
··~
39, Caleb Arthur 1·4, Tyler
Subsc~ibe today.
t· •....
McCallister H.
"
P.P-Cody Durst 1·40, Der~k
992-2155
or
4'46-2342
•.f
'
.·
d
~
Mitchell 1·31.

..

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 12,2008

Panthers outlast River Valley, 28-14
STAFF REPORT

Bv LARRY CAUM
. LCRUMOMYDAILYAEGISTER.COM

CHESAPEAKE - It was
a tale of two halves Friday
riight during the Week 8
Ohio Valley Conference
gridiron matchup between
yisiting River Valley and
Pesapeake. as a first half
'shootout turned into a sec- ·
ond half defensive struggle
that witnessed .the host
Panthers claim a hard-fought
28·14 victory tn Lawrence
C:ounty.
: The Raiders (2-6 , 0-3
OVC) fell behind 14-0 late
.in the first quarter after the
Panthers (4-4, 2-1) scored
twice in less than 90 seconds ·
. :With just under three min~tes left in the opening
4:anto.
~ The Silver · and Black,
however, responde&lt;,! nicely·
witli just 30 seconds left in
,
Courteay of Tony Shotaky of Southern Ohio Sporta Photoa.com
the opener, as Zak Deel got River Valley quarterback ' Clayton Curnutte, right, ,avoids a Chesapeake tackler during
the guests on the scoreboard Friday night's Week a OVC football contest at Chesapeake.
·
·
,With a 27-yard touchdown
catch from Clayton Curnutte
The game was scoreless with an 11 -play, 68-yard carries, followed by Cody
to make it a 14-7 deficit after for the opening nine minutes drive that was capped off McAvena with 18 yards on
12 minutes of play.
of the game, but the Panthers with a one-yard run by two totes .
Kody Johnson led the
Both teams traded scores drew first blood with 2:54 Curnutte with I :33 remainin the second period - with showing on the clock when ing in the half. The score receivers with five catches
CHS scoring first to take a . Drew Blake scored on a 12· would stay at 21-14 entering for 64 yards. Deel also had
21 -7 lead _ and entered yard run - making it a 6-0 the intermission.
57 yards on three grabs. A
halftime with the Panthers game.
RVHS. however, wr:mld total of six River Valley
leading 21 -14. The Purple
RVHS fumbled on its run into trouble in its open- receivers.caught at least one
and White tacked on another ensuing possession at. 2:30, ing drive of the second hal.f, pass in the ·setback.
~core four minutes into the giving CHS possession at as C~rnutte commllted his
The Raiders were 0-for-8.
8econd half to make it a two- the · Raider 32-yard hne. third mtercepuon pass of the on ·third down conversions
score, 28-14 contest - Four plays and 60 seconds night less than a minute into and 1-for-3 on fourth down
\llhich ended up being the later, Chesapeake was up · that drive.
'tries on the night.
way things ended.
14-0 after Aaron Donahoe
Six play and 31 yards
Donahoe led CHS with
Chesapeake tallied 340 scored on a seven-yard run later, the Panthers again held II 0 rushing yards on 18
total yards of offense in the with 1:30 remaining in the a 14-p&lt;iint advantage follow- attempts and also added 46
triumph, including 294 rush· first quarter.
.
ing a six-yard touchdown passing yards, going 3-of-7
ing yards on 53 carries - an
Deel's score 60 seconds pass from Donahoe to Kyle overall with one TD and
average of 5.5 yards per - and 68 yards - later Webb at the 8:02 mark.
zero
interceptions.
carry. CHS also had 18 first helped the guests trim their
Neither team came overly Chesapeake had six running
downs in the contest and fin- deficit to 14-7 after one stan- close to scoring again, leav- backs accumulate at least a
ished the night plus-thr.ee in za.
ing the final outcome at a dozen yards in the win.
turnover differential.
·
Both teams traded punts to. 14-polnt decision.
Webb had all three catches ·
· . The Raiders were close start the second canto, but
Curnutte led the Raiders .for 46 yards and a score.
tehind with 325 total yards Chesapeake again found the with 63 rushing yards on ·15
River Valley will look to
'o f offense, including 1'15 endzone at the 6:14 mark- carries and added another end its ' current 20-game
' rushing yards on 30 attempts as T. West capped a five- 210 yards through the air on OVC losing streak next
·- an average of 3.8 yards play, .31-yard drive with a 13-of-25. passing. Curnutte Friday when it travels to
i:Jercarry.RVHSalsohadl7 12-yardjaunttomakeit21 · also had one TD pass and Coal Grove for a Week 9
:first downs and 210 passing 7.
three interceptions. Zacllary matchup with the Hornets.
:yards, but also threw three
The
Raiders. again ,!,3aird was next for the guests Kickoff is scheduled for
)nterceptimis in the setback. responded nicely, this time with 33 rushing yards on II 7:30p.m.

Wabama whips Wirt·County, stays unbeaten
'

Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

'

.

Zerkle returned the ensuing
Flrtt Quarter
ff
80
d
t
t
th
·
W-Colin
Pierce
13 pass from
.
k
kIC o
yar s 0 nega e e William zuspan (Kyle Zerkle kick)
Tiger score. Wirt County 5,03
answered with nine seconds
Second Quarter
remaining in the third canto W-Garrett Undetwood 10 pass
when Valentine scrambled from Zuspan (Zerkle kick) 4:02
Third Quarter
free and· ran 32 yards to pay
W-Micalah
Branch 18 pass from
dirt to pull the hosts to within Zuspan (Zerkle
kick) 7:34
13 at 27- 14.
WC-Zach Cheuvront 37 pass
Zuspan 's second TD pass from Josh Valentine (Jordan Vlach
to Underwood, covering 34 kick) 3:05
.
yards. as the final period W-Zerkle 80 kickoff return (kick
began increased the WHS failed) 2:53
32 run (Vlach kick)
advantajle to 33-14 with the WC-Valentine
:09
.
junior signal caller also passFourth Quarter
mg to Efijah Honaker for the w-Underwood 34 pass from
two-point conversion to Zuspan (Elijah Honaker pass from
make it a 35-14 contest. Zuspan) 11:41
Zerkle ended the evenings W-Zerkle 55 run (Ryan Anderson
scoring activity when he kickl7:01
broke free on a 55-yard galw · we
lop with 7:0 I to play to ice First Downs
18
8
the game and give Wahama Rushes-yards
31·189 41 .105
Passing yards 163
82
the hard earned victory.
352
187 .
· Tom McCoy paced the Total yards
1().20-0 6-12·1
Tigers on the ground with 62 Comp-alt·int
().()
· 1·0
yards in 12 carries while Fumbles-lost
Panaltles-yards 5·30
5·55
Devin Dye added 28 rushing
yards in nine attempts.
Individual Statlattca
Valentine connected on six of Fh18hlhg: W.,-Kyle Zerkle 6-90,
12 aerials for 82 yards and a Jacob Roach 5-42, Mlcaiah Branch
score with Roach picking off 12·29, Anthony Grimm 2·18, Ryan
a valentine offen~ late in be 2·&amp;, William Zuspan 3-4, Clay
VanMeter 1-1 .
the game . Zach
euvront we-Tom McCoy 12·62, Devin Oya
led Wirt County in receiv- 9-28, Levi Kerby 4·18, Josh
ing with four catches for 53 Valentine 15:2, Jake Hutchinson t·
yards and a touchdown.
(·51.
Wahama will now put its Paaatng: W-William Zu9p!!n 1Q.
2Q.O 163.
unbeaten record on the line WC-Josh Valentine 6-12·1 82.
next week when the White Receiving: W-Garran Undetwood
Falcons travel to once beaten 3-69, Micaiah Branch 4&gt;40, Kyle
WilliaTjlstown for a 7:30p.m . . Zerkle .1·23, Jacob Ro~ch 1-18,
outing. The Yellow Jackets Colin P1erce 1·13.
WC-Zach Cheuvront 4·53, Taran
d ' h h · fi
loss
the season
·
wereoftagge
Wit tlast
etr mght
.trst 1-1 4. .
against third rated Class AA
Grafton by a 37-7 margin .

s;unba!' m:imes .s;rntiml • Page 85

Point Pleasant handles P~ on Homecoming liP

SPORTSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

BY DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY
- Jeremy
Smith rushed for 256 yards
and four touchdowns, and
Jacob Well passed for 261
yards and a pair of scores
to lead Meigs to a han!
fought 41-28 win over
Alexander Friday night in
Clay Bolin
Smith
Albany. '
Smith's big game for
Meigs put hi mover the hit sophomore ·Cameron ·
1,000 mark for the season . Bolin for.23 yards, and two
Smith has now rushed for plays later Smith took it in
1,151 yards in 153 carries . from the five to give Meigs
The two juniors for the a 34-6 lead with 7:22 left
Marauders overshadowed in the period.
an outstanding game by the
The Spartans came right
and
Brandon
Spartans sophomore· tail- back
back Cody Lawson who McCarty scored from 20
carried 43 times for 350 yards out breaking several
yards and three scores. .
tackles along the way to
The young Spartans pull the Spartans to within
refused to give up as Meigs 34-12.
built a 41-6 lead midway
It took the Marauders
into the third period. But just three pla)'S to answer
Alexander sparked · by that score with a score of
· Lawson refused to give up their own. Smith carried
and made the game inter- twice for 18 yards, and
esting in the final minutes·. then Well went on top from
Meigs scored first when 55 yards out to Bolin for
Well hooked up with Clay the score. Metts added the'
Bolin on a 72-yard touch- kick and Meigs was on top
down pass, Mason Metts 41-12.
·
added the extra points and
Lawson scored twice late
Meigs held a 7-0 lead . at in the game, one from six
the 6:06 mark of the first yard.s out. And after an
period.
onside kick recovered by
. Cody Laudermilt recov- . the Spartans from 29 yards
ered a Spartan fumble at out with 3:34 left. Both
the Marauder·.34. On first score the Spartans went for
down Well hit Bolin for a two and converted, the last
45-yard gain, with the last to pull to within 41-28. But
Spartan making a touch- Metts
recovered
the
down saving tackle. Three Spartan onside kick with
plays later Smith scored 3:34 left. and Meigs ran
from
yard out. Metts OUt the clock.
.
added the kick and at the
Smith had 256 yards in
2:43 mark of the period 27 carries to lead Meigs;
Meigs held a 14-0 lead.
Laudermilt added 14 in
, One play after Well and two carries . Well was six
Bolin hooked up for a 57- of 14 in the air for 261
yard gain, Smith scored his yards. Clay Bolin · had a
third touchdown· of the huge game with five recepnight from II yards out. tions for 238 yards.
Metts added the PAT for a Cameron Bolin caught one
21-0 Meigs lead with 11:05 for 23.
left in the half.
Lawson led all rushers
Alexander .cut the Meigs with . his 350 yards in 43
lead to 21-6 at the half carries. Jake Hedrick
when Lawson scores from added · 55 in five tries.
a yard out with 11:05 left Michael Chapman was
in the second period.
seven of 12 in the air for 95
The maroon and gold. yards. Greg Croxford
received the second half caught two for 34 and Josh
kickoff, and Smith carried Mortiz two for 23.
twice; for 17 and then the
Alexander is now 0-4 in
final 48 for· the score. the TVC and 3-5 overall;
Metts again was true with the Spartans will travel to ·
the kick for a 28-6 Meigs Vinton County next ·week.
lead.
Meigs with the win is 6-2
The Spartans gambled on overall and 3-1 in the TVC,
fourth down, deep in their the Marauders "will· return
own territory by going for home next week for the
it, but the Meigs defense . first time in a month to
held. On first down Well play Wellston.

a

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k

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Next clinic date is Friday, October 17
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
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,' POINT'
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - It was billed as a
battle of the backs. but
;what began as a showdown
between the two best rushers in Class AA quickly
turned into a defensive
showcase
for . Point
'Pleasant.
·
Sure Poca (2-5, · 1-2
Cardinal) running back
Caleb Arthur got his y~rds,
but most of his numbers
came late with the game
already out ef re.ach as the
Point Pleasant (5·2 , 3-0
Cardinal) defense · shutdown the Dots to 'the tune
of a 41 - 12 homecoming
victory Friday night in
Poirit Pleasant.·
Arthur
came
mto
Friday's contest leading the
conference in rushing with
1;2~7 yards - over 100
yards more than Point
Pleasant's equivalent Allan
Wasonga - setting up an
epic battle of .running
backs in front of one of the
biggest crowds for a Point
Pleasant home game in
years .
But instead of the high
scoring, back·and·fourth
contest that was ·expected,
Larry Crum/photo
Point Pleasant's defense Point Pleasant's Phillip Allen wraps up Poca running back
stepped up and answered C.aleb Arthur during the first quarter of a high school foot·
the call, keeping Arthur in ball game Friday during homecoming at Sanders Stadium
check while the offense in Point Pleasant, W.Va:
•
helped the Big Blacks jump offensive possession of the
Starting on the Dot 47
out to a 27-6 halftime lead~ night.
Point Pleasant yard line, the Big Blacks
Point Pleasant tacked on received the ball on the 43 quick!~ found themselves
two more scores in the sec- yard line after a punt and knockmg ·on the door once
ond half to open up a com- Wasonga needed only one again when Lloyd found
manding 41-6 lead before play to find the endzone, Cody Durst for a 40-yard
putting it on cruise control taking the ball up the mid· completion to set up the
late in the second half, giv- die for a 43-yard touch· Red and Black on the I
ing Arthur enough room for down to put the Big Blacks yard ·line. Lloyd then called
his only score 'and most of up 6-0 after a blocked extra · his own number on the !)ext
his yards as the Red. and poinr: .
play, but fumbled the ball
Black cruised to the 41-12
Poca did, however, make on the goalline ~iving the
victory.
·. '
Point Pleasant fans hold ball back to Poca with 46
Arthur stlll finished the their breath for a moment seconds remaining ...
night with 20 I yards and a on the next drive.
While the half appeared
After receiving the ball to be over, another wild
score on 33 carries, accumula!ing well. over half of . on the 14 yard line - one play saw the Dots fumble
Poca s offensive yardage, of several possessions that the ball two snaps later and
but fo.r the most part was " started deep in their own junior Clay . Krebs was
held m check. The b~st territory thanks to excellept there, recovenng the ballm
rusher for theDots outside. kick coverage by . the Big , the endzone for a touch·
!l.f Arth9r ,.j:\:M quat1~F.b.\IC.k Blacks - . the Dots down with 13 seconds
.
Jason Cune.e who _had 33 m'arched 86 yards in five , remaining.
yards on sa carne$. He . minutes helped out by a
With the ga!lle well' m
also completed three pass- few clutch plays and a 15- hand, the second half was
es in eight attemp~s for 40 yard PPHS penalty and was used more to experiment
yards.
capped with an· 11 -yard than anything else as
For
Point
Pleasant touchdown pass from Mitchell finished out the
. sophomore Allan Wasonga Cuffee to Forest Mattox to scoring for Point Pleasant
led the way with I 83 yards kno,t the score.at 6:6 after a with a pair of touchdowns.
on 22 carries and finished failed extra point.
His first score came on
with one touchdown Despite the quick answer, the opening possession of
scoring on the first ·offen- · the Dots had no ans'\Ver the second h.alf when a few
sive· play of the night for from then on. as the Big big runs by Wasonga set
the Big Blacks. Derek Blacks rolled up 35 unan- Mitchell up for a 9-yard
Mitchell tacked on 78 swered points to put ~~e .scamper to put the home
yards on eight carries and game away. And most of squad on top 34-6.
Nathan Roberts added 27' those points were scored in Mitchell's second sco~e
yards on eight carries and the second quarter as Point came just seconds into the
was huge in short-yardage Pl~asant scored on three of . fourth quarte~ when Llo_Yd
situations, scoring twice its final four possessions CC?nnected wllh the semor
from inside the 3 yard line. before the half. .
for a::31-yard to~chdown
Quarterback B J. Lloyd
Two of those touchdowns . pass. tq seal the btg home·
also had an effiCient night .were scored by ' Roberts .commg v1ctory. .
for Point Pleasant, finish- who turned big. runs f~om
~1th the game. m hand,
ing with 71 yards through Wasonga and Mttchell mto Pomt _Pleasant shtfted new
the air on 2-of-3 passing scores of I and 3 yards for faces m and out of the ltneand one score. Lloyd's a 20-6. Point Pleasant lead. up throughout the fourth.
touchdown found Mitchell He also set up one of his quarter and. Arthur took
a. 31-yard pitch and own scores when he recc;&gt;V· advantage ,
slashing
· catch to wr~ up Poi~t ered . ~ Po~.~ f~tpble le.admg· throu_gh the PPHS defense
Pleasant's scoring early m to a b1g sli1ft 1n momentum. for b•g chunks of y:a,rds' He
the fourth quarter. .'
·.
Point Pleasant~·s ' final. fiJ?ally founc) t~e. en?~one
After holding Poca to lit· score ~fore tile half came w1t.h 6:30 remammg m the
tie yardage on the first on a w1ld senes of plays. , . contest when he broke free

ojl

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
for a 44-yard scamper to
Southeaatem Ohio Athletic League
cap the scoring at 41-12.
The Big Blacks next
SEOAL
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
game is scheduled for
......................5.() .... 157 .. SO .... . .6·2 . . .201 .. It6
.Friday
night
against Chillicolhe
Logan ............. .. ..........4.() .... 142 .. 38 ......6-0 ....283 ..69 ·
Ironton ........................ 3-2 .... 152 . .70 .....5·3 .... 246 .. 10!1
Ravenswood . Kick-off is Gallia
Academy .. ................ 2·2 ....49 .. 111 . . . 5·3 .... 157 ..214
slated for 7:30p.m.
Zanesville ...................... 2·2 .... 109 .. 57 . . 3-5.... 162 lSQ
Jacl&lt;son ........................ 2·3 ....96 ... 179 . . . .5·3 .... 19t ..213
Warren . . ......... . ......... .. 1·3 .... 33 .. .74 ... . .4·4 .... 95 ... 1'~
Point Pleasant 41, Poca 12 Marietta
... ..
.. ............. 1·3 ....82 ... 130 .... .2-6. ... 185 .. 284
Poca
6 0 0 6 -'- 12
Portsmouth ..
.. ...... .. 0·5 .... 47 .. 108
. 1·7 .... 81 ... 185
Pt. Pleasant 6 21 7 7 - · 41
Ohio Valley Conference
OVC
ALL
'•
Scoring aummary
W·l
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA'
· First Quartar
.C9al Groile .... ................. 3-0 ... 91 .. .4 7 .
5·3 ..... 171 ..113
PP-AIIan Wasonga 43 run (kick
South l'llint..
. ... : ......... 2·1. 102 , .62 .. ' .4·4.. .206 .. 119
failed) 7:18
Chesapeake ...... , ........... 2 -1. . 77 ... 69 . . 4-4. ... 196 ..201
.Po-Forest MaHox 11 pass from
Fei~and .......... .... ........ 2·1 .
152 .. 98 . ....2·5.... 217 . 198
River Val1ey . .
. .. .......... 0·3 . ... 54 .. .139 . 2·6.. .. t21 .. 274
Jason Cuffee (kick failed) 2,:03
RockHill ....
..·, ......... 0·3 .. ..66 ... 127 .... 0·8 .... 117 .. ~
Second Quarter '
PP-Nathan Roberts 3 run (Justin
Tri·Valley Conference
Weaver kk;k) 10:41
..•
Ohio Division
PP-Roberts 1 run (Weaver kick)
TVC
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
p&amp;·
3:36
Nelsonville,York ....
. ..5·0 .... 169 .. 96 .. ... ·. 7-1 ... 244 .. 15t
PP-C1ay Krebs fumble recovery
MeiQS . . . .. . . . . . .. ..
..3·1.... 136 .. 78 .. .... 6·2 .... 255 •.. 15~
(Weaver kick) :13
Wellston
....
..
......
3·1 .... 116 . 76 ...... 3·5 .. 184 ..21
Third Quarter
Belpre .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..2·2.., .79 ... 106 .. .. .3·5 , .. 129 .174
PP-Derek Mitchell10 run (Weaver A1hens ....... ..................2·3 .... 107... 95 . . ..2·6 t 42 .t69
Alexander .. .. .
.. .....0·4.... 67 ... t41 ..... 3-5 192 . t~
kick) 6:26
Vinton County ... ... .... , ....... .0·4... .43 ... t23 ..... I· 7 .. .. 97 , ..2
· Fourth Quarter
Hocking Division
PP-Mitchell 31 pass from B.J.
TVC
ALL
lloyd (Weaver kicl&lt;) 11 :17
W·L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA'
· Po-Cateb Mhur 44 run (pass
Trimble .. .. . .. . .. ........ 3·0 .... 11 3 ..6 .......6-2 .. .220 .. 1\3
Federal Hocking .. ......... .. .... 2·1 ....97 ..62 ......5·3 .. 181 .. 149
failed) 6:30
·
Wate~ord .. . ........ .......... 2·1 .... 50 .. 52 .
..4·4 .129 .. 161i
Eastern
....
.....
.....
,
...
...
...
1·2
....
75
...
122
...
.
.3-5 .. ,. t92 ..25Q
pp
Po
Southern
....
.
.............
1·2
....
46 ...85 ...... 3·5 .... 139 .. 207
First DoWns
t2
22
Miller ... ..
. ...... : .. ..... 0-3 ....61 ... 117 ..... 1·7 .... t15 .. 2~
Rushes-yards 44·260 49-332
Independents
Passing yards 44
71
ALL
Total yards ~.,
403
304
W·L
PF
PA
Comp-aH·int
4-12·2 ' 2·3·1
.wahama
..
..
..
..
..
...
..........
6·0
....
271
..
86
Fumbles lost
2
3
South Gallia .
. . .2-6 ... .78 ... 231
Penalties-yards 2·10
7-65
Hannan . . . . . .
. .1-4 .: .. 74 ... 216 •••
Cardinal Conference
Individual Statistics
CARD
ALL
Rushing: Po-C~Ie.b Arthur 33·
•
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA, ·
201 , Jason Cuffee 6·33, Matt Chapmanville .
.........
3.()..
93
...
31
..
.
7
.
0
..
175
..
59
McClanahan t-14, Tyler McCallister Point Pleasani
. .' . ...... 3-0 . . .. t05 . .43 ...... 5·2 ... .25:7 .. 139
2·7, Brad Thomas 1·3, Jonathan Waynp . ... . . .
....... 2·1. . '. 123 .. 60 .... :·.5·1 ... 232 ·.. t18
Bush 1·2.
Poca ... .
.., ........1·2 .. 54 ... 89 ...... 2·5 .... 166 ..224
PP-AIIan Wasonga 22·183, Derek Sissonville .... . .
t-3.. .. 67 ... 148 ..... 3'4... 138 ..22t
MltcheiiS-78, Nathan Roberts 8-29, Herber1 Hoover_. ..............
...........0·4 .... 58 .. .129. . 2'5 .... 131 ..IQ1
Caleb Wasonga 2·16, B:J. lloyd 2·
14, Derek Pinson 3·7, Chris
Blankenship 1-6, Toby Martin 2-4,
•
'·
Layne Thompson 1-( ·3).
f'
Passing: Po-Jason Cuffee 3-8·1
'{
40. Trevor Dunlap 1-4·1 4.
PP-B.J. lloyd 2-3-1 71.
\•
't:... &lt; .
Re&lt;:elvlng: Po-Forest Matlock 2·
··~
39, Caleb Arthur 1·4, Tyler
Subsc~ibe today.
t· •....
McCallister H.
"
P.P-Cody Durst 1·40, Der~k
992-2155
or
4'46-2342
•.f
'
.·
d
~
Mitchell 1·31.

..

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
'·MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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..

.

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Sound,
&amp; Secure.
Since 1872
On October 3, 2008, FDIC deposit insurance temporarily
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December 31,2009. If you have questions abou.t FDIC coverage
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or give us a call, we'll be happy to assist you.
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Less Rebate&amp; &amp; Cash Back.... -$1.500

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HEADQU AR·~ t.:n '"'

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• Hardy Fall Garden Mums
(while quantities last)
• Fodder Shocks · Baled Straw
· Fall Flags • Fall Wreaths

.

2008 Chevy Malibu
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2008 Chevy Suburban
$6000

2008 Chevy Silverado Ext. Cab
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Victory Red, MSRP $16,655
Sale Price .................. .........$18,010
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:Scenes from Bob Evan's Farm Festival

HEADQU AR·~ t.:n '"'

Corn game

• Hardy Fall Garden Mums
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• Fodder Shocks · Baled Straw
· Fall Flags • Fall Wreaths

.

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Don't forget Bob's f(n
fresh fall produce ,. ~ \:L .,
including: · ~ · f

Total Cash Back or

0.0% for 72 Months

****"*PREMIUM PRE•OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKs•••••
•

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· lOOt ·oMO lftvo

4x4, .4 In Stock, SLE &amp; SLT MO(i';lt
Custom Cloth &amp; leattler Seating
Mileage,RIInge19,000-26,000

31n Stock, Black/Silver &amp;Gold

FROM $1 900 .

Both

. 1.fWD. 1-AWD. B~ unra
are Extra Clean, loaded w/ Options

4x4 Model, 5.7V8, Air, Auto

Ml CM'fV DMalhllltt, .
4x4 Model, WIT Pack

SALE $9,990

Muat Seel

SALE $16,800

SALE $24,900

Crew Cab, 4x4, 2 Tone Paint
New TI[8S, Locally Owned

SALE $5,990

.

Super Clean, 4x4 Model

................

. ..... f*•vY 111 "haft

Silver Birch Exterior

......
"'*'- .......
Blael&lt; , Only 25K Milet. 4x4

Only

FROM $12,900

.

SALE PRICED

aooa
••o22K•WAV
$LT,
Mlloa

IOMhld~tu

,

ltW

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IOMC1111111t.._.Mt

· S~ver, VB, Air. Auto
Only 32K Miles, 1 OWner

SALE $17,800

.

Children compete to see who cap shell their corn the fastest in a game organized by the
Bob Evans Farm Festival te""!im. ·
·

Mlktwl ......

aooo
OM'•"» . .'10
Model,
4x4

SALE $9,990

All Power, Extra Cl.eanl

SALE $19,900

rf&gt;4

Fresh from the Shenandoah Valley!
• Golden Delicious •Red Delicious
• Winesap
~ Many More Favorites

Two Convenient Locations:
2400 Eastern Ave.
· 1/4 Mile North
"Acrc,ss from KMart)
Pomeroy/Masdn Bridge
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•
Mason, WV 25260
(740) 446-1711
Phone (304) 773·5323

1004
Poull•·r•
XLT, 4x4, Just traded!
SALE $9,995

5 Speed, \15, Air
Only 67K Miles

4x4,

Thursday, October 16th • 10-6
Friday, October 17th • 10-8 .
Saturday, October 18th • 10-5

HOI Da 'f.a CuM•

. One Local Owner
Only 21 K Miles

SE, 8 ass. Van
Only 33K Miles

.

SALE $10,900

$17

aoos
Ceftlao ern
Black Raven Interior

Delicious Fall ;\ppli·'

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4DR SedaQ, 5 Speed, Air
Custom Cloth Interior, Only 38K Miles

Joy Kocmoudlphoto

FROM $101880

SALE $7,990

IIMitCNwCM

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. 31n StOdt, LT Models
·
1-Biack, 1-Burvundy, 1-Btack &amp; Silver

1-Biack, 1-Diamond WhHe w/20'
Wheels. loaded w/ Options
NAV. Radio

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Factory WaiT!Inty

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IMMMIC
ttl·~
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Full~

Equipped

Diamond White Exterior ·

SALE $12,900

STARTING@ $13,850

SALE $27,900

- l .. dll man CD

_., t Ttl I

Lcc:alf OWned. New Ct1 Traded
•

ERSONALITY

n•• CIL

Blick,.Company car

Fuii.Power, Only 201&lt; Miles

l..eath11&lt;, L~

. SALE $20,900

SALE $16,900: .

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Salactloa Of Used
Trucks &amp; ...... Utlltlas
Palcad u..dar $t0,000

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AM/FM Radio w/ CD

SALE $15,800

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Page ·C2

. RIO GRANDE - Six stu- Craig Kincaid, she also
:dents from the University of hopes to learn more abour
Rio Grande are spending the international. political and
fall se mester studying in economic issues during the
Wales at Trinity College.
semester.
.
. Located in Carmarthen,
Jones, sophomore from
·Wales . Trinity College has an Jackson , is a non-traditional
exchange program with Rio student who has served in the
.Grande that allows Rio U.S . Army. The intervention
.Grande students to travel to specialist major said that the
Trinity . College 1(11' the fall Welsh culture is an integral
semester · and srude nts fmm part of his past. 'present and
Trinity Coi!L,4, to travel to future . and is excited aboUI
.Rio Grundc for the spring· spending time in Wales . He
-semc, ter. The Madog Center took part iri the Jackson
·for Wchh Studic' at Rio Eisteddfod as a child and
Grande .coordinates the said that one reason he wantexchange program, and also ed to be a part of the
organi1.es faculty exc hanges. exchange program is "to be
The six Rio Grande stu- able to learn firsthand where
dents spendmg the fall those who founded by com:~c mc &gt; tc r in W:.tlcs are Scoll . nlunity originated."
·;Iones. Courtney Kincaid.
Jones is the son of Allen
.•Natalie Miller. Leah Newton. Jones and Lulu Jones:
:thclsea Smith and Derek
Miller. an arts ~:oinprehen- ·
:Weber.
sive major lmd a photogra. . ·Tve always loved ·travel- phy minor from Oak Hill.
.ing and I' ve never had the said that the time· spent in
:.&lt;:hance to go to Europe Wales will help her in her
;)Jefore.'' said Kincaid. who i&gt; education and her caree~ As
junior from Jackson. The an art major, being able to go
·~ducation major said she is to a different country will
'excited about tak ing classes influence her a great deal as
_iln the Welsh camptls.travel- both an artist and a teacher.
·ing around the country and she said. The sophomore is
taking part iticultural enrich- the daughter of Donna Miller
and Robert Miller.
Jnent progtanb.
: Having thi&gt; ex perience
Newton is a sophomore
:now sh()uld help her in her from Columbia Station. The
- ~ ork '" a tead 1cr. Kincaid · early ch ildhood . education
sa id.
major said "the best way to
"I want to ~o on to become leam new thin2s is to be
:a l.twyer. an(l I think it will there and see it Tor yourself,
-help with that. too." she said . not to have someone tell you
~· I'm r~all y exc ited about it."
how they work." Her experi:The daughter of Dr. and Mrs. ences i11 the exchange pro-

a

:a

Sunday, October 12, 2008

gram will be a great tool to
help her in her work as a
teacher when she talb to her
students about the different
cultures she has visited.
Newton explained. She is the
daughter of Robet1a Newton
and Karl Newton .
Smith is an education
major from Racine. It has
been a lifelong dream for the
sophomore 101 . travel . to
Europe. and she is very excit- ·
ed about taking part in the
exchange program. The program gives her )he opportu'
nity to accomplish her dream
by studying at a similar insli·
tution in Wales . while still
paying tuition fees through
Rio Grande. One of her goals
for the program is to become
more independent
and
responsible through the
experience . Smith is the
daughter of Meg and Kenny
Guinther and Perry Smith.
,. Weber is a so phomore
from Pomeroy. He is in the
multi-age visual arts program
~t Rio Grande , and said that
the time in the exchange program will help him as an
artist. Experiences like this
can open his mind even further to creativity. Weber
e~plained. He is the son of
Keith and Marcella Weber:
The students left for Wales
on Sept. 14 and will return to
Rio Grande on Dec. 15.
For more information 011
the exchange pmgram. ·call
Jetinne ·Jindra. director of
till' Madog Celller for Welsh
Studie,;, at (800) 282-7201.

.· .Gallipolis
had its 'Stage Door' at one time
.
.

Bv

· JACKSON
About under the trees is set for give the little ones some
600 works of art are Saturday evening from 5 in,p iration and advice. Of
expected for the 27th to 7 p.m .
course, youngsters will
The hot sounds of the take their · masterpieces
annual
Foothills Art
Fe,tival at Canter's Cave Third · Shift Band wi II home with them.
4-H Ca mp , fiv e miles knock the chill off · th e . Foothills is sponsored
north of Jackson off U.S. evening air. You are wel - by Sat)ds Hill Mining
35.
come to pack your own LLC. OSCO Indu stries
The festival will be held picnic and spread a blan- Employees Charity Fund ,
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on ket on the lawn . Box supFriday. Oct. 17 and pers, at a modes t price. Adena Health System,
Cotner &amp; Cooley CPA of
Saturday, Oct. 18 , and will be available.
from noon 10 5 p.m. on
Kids are invited to try McArthur and Jackson ,
Holzer
Sunday , Oct. 19 .
their hand at a variety ·of We sBanco.
Thank s to a host of gen- arts projects on the mezza- Medical Center-Jackson,
erous sponsors, there is no nine from noon to 2 p.m. State Farm:lnsurance , Dan
admission charge. Parking on Saturday and from Dailey. agent , and the
is convenient · and free. noon to 2 p.m: on Sunday. Ohio Arts Council. .
The lodge is handicapped Art teacher Bob Eisnallgle
For informatio)t , call
accessible . Concessions of Jackson High School Southern Hills at (740)
are available through the will bring his students to 286-6355.
Canter's Cave staff.
Work will be hung in the
following
categori(\s.:
Oil/Ac rylics,
Mixed
M 'e di_a/Frints,
Pa s t el/ Drawing,
Photog raphy, Enhanced
Photog raphy ,
Three
Dimension al
and
Wate rco lor. Most of the
artwork is for sale.
Participant s . range from
emerging to professional
artists.
.
Live· music will be heard
For more information ·
at the fes tival with classical
gu itarist
Sean
Call740·992-6768
Ferg uso n on Saltlrday
'
from ' 10 4 p.m . and The
Hillside Baptist Church
Brighton Trio playing
James Acree Sr.
chamber musk on Sunday
from 2 to 4 p .m. A picnic

.·
40B•r
Surface Mining Classes
-24 Openings
lsi Coma- lsi Served
.Ohio 8 Wast Virginia Cartllad·
Classes Begin October 20111

BY JAMES SANDS

Gynecology.Services

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Booth
6 Easy marl&lt;
11 Noblewomen
16 Nosebag filler
20 Pea soup. e.g
21 Garment part
22 Oily fruit
23 Learn the - ·
25 Standoffish
26 Hollow
27 Kind of printer
28 Resul
29 Allen or Russert
30 london's river
32 Citadel
34 Fall mo.
35 So&lt;
37 A~irm
38 Hurts
39 Motifs
41 Make ch!inges In
43 Bond 01 T~or
44 Bovine animal
46 Head ol state
49 Relocates
50 Burnet for a welder
54 Hobbled
55 Grew wan
56 Ball of yarn
57 Terrible
58 Fuss
59 Lustrous Iabrie
60 Amphi(jans
61 Lawful
62 French nog~1n
64 Espresso wtlh milk
65 Boonsh
66 An antiseptic
67 Minerals
66 Beery drinks
69 Take lorcibly
70 Letters in genetics
7l Lair
72 Rescues
74 Specter
75 -de menthe
77 Plant pouch
80 Jewel ·
81 Utter ~a~iness
82 Consomme
83 Shapeless mass
87 LoWered in prestige
89 Casual pants
90 Dull
91 Ali92 Data

93 Beat rhythmically
94 Verge
95 Sack
96 James the singer
97 Artist's paints
98 Lilho!lraph
99 Tum lnto
102 Make stronger
105 Sarcastic tematk
tOO Innate ·
107 ~quant
t 06 Through - and lhin
10~ Speeder's undoing
t t 0 Frusttate
t 13 Vesttpe
114 Floatrng ica mass.
·
forshort
115Pro(unco~sated)

119 Vis~
120 Revete
123 Military units
125 T~r
126 Aston~h
t 28 Happen I~
129 Israel's Mer
130 Rustic dweting
·132 Black bird·
·133 Chop .
134 Sornelhl~ valuable
t 35 Cordial flavoring
136 Time of fasting
· 137 More senior
138 Filced gaze
139 Appfaised

DOWN
1 Old·tima ga1Jers
· 2 A flower

3 Odor

4 Zodiac sign ·
5 Departed
6 Butcher's knife
7 Carpenter·s toot
8 Higher
9 NY team ·
tO Worl&lt; at
t f King·s' - Claiborne"
t 2 Frightens
13 Fine sprays
t 4 Pecpetually
15 W~he&lt;ed
IS Sudden flood
17 Long, lOng time
t 8 Kind of s8Jts .
19 Card with two pips
24 Hardens '
31 Loalhed
32 WeiHcnown
33 Cook in water
36 lncl01ed we_y
38 Place of retuge
40 Destroyed gradually
42 Rest
·
43 Acttess A~elina 44 Toboggans
45 Pulls
46 Greek ph1losophec
47 Horseman
48 Act like a Ham
49 Damon and Dillon
50 Explos1on
5f S1ilf
52 Hoisb~ de~ce ·
. 53 - ofTroy
55 Spreads for crackers

81 Gin at aball
82 Go steaHhily
84 Toil

85 Barack of politics
86 Roll w1th a hole
88 Poem part

89 like an orange
90 Adobe
93 Harbortown
94 Support
98 "The - is Righr ·
99 Sheriff's star
tOO Letter after-zeta
101 Restrain
103 lmpao;sioned
Ul4 Bone(prefix)
105 Gab
106 Ptovide commentary

t..-

106 Hypnot~ state
109 Mote ruddy
ttO Rus~artruter
111 Of blood
.
112 tntertace
113 Fashion
, t 4 Light wood
t t6 Satet~e' s path
117 Racket
t18Had
121 Verne·s captain
122 Wickedness
123 E&lt;pense
·124 Wound mark
127 Kind of Buddhism
129 Petrrn
131 Litetary cotteclon

56 Seashore

59 Wilh hunt city
60 Lock ot hair
61 Rich soil
· 63 A letter
64 Washed
65 Traverse
66 Like abungler
69 Comptan
70 Tipsy
73 Gets older

74 Tumtier
75 Titie for Dracula
76 Rece&lt;je
n More secure
78 Die down
79 Spiny plants

Available In Meigs County

' '

JAMES HENRY

All right. I admit that
that the contents of ·this
article may not be -the
answer io getting your·
ftrst-class ticket to some
·far away destination where
JOU spend the rest of your
days basking in the sun
v.4iile sipping fruit-fla:vored drinks from coconut
shaped ~lasses adorned
with mimature umbrellas .
I may have chosen the title
of this article in order to
add a bit of "shock value,"
but. bear with me for just a
bit because, though they
may II'Ot unlock untold
riches. the use of annuities
·in a well-balanced retire.ment plan may very well
provide you with a sustain·ability tha! will allow you
·to hve otf ol your life 's
savings dpring your retirement years better than
,alternative investments.
: In re~ent years. insur•ance companies have
:become very creative in
:developing additional fea;tures they offer with annu'
•ities. This tinkering with
. :t~e basic annuity . concept
:bas made the analy sis and
:selectiO)l of an annuity
-more complicated for
:clients contemplating an
:annutly
'purchase.
•However. these added
:choices also mean that the
:consumer is better able to
;find a product suitable for
•his or her needs than ever
:before.
: Yet, with all of these new
•choices comes the greater
possibility that you , as the
consumer, may be taken
advantage of · by some
unscrupulous advisor who
is more concerned over his
own finances than yours.
As with -any investment, it
is important that you do
your homework · before
investing. So fiFst let's get
down the "basics" on
annuities. In its basic form,
·. the annuity is very simple.
An annuity is a stream of
monthly paymepts to be
paid in the future to some,
l}ite who has accumulated a
lump sum of money and
wishes to exchange that
lump sum for the security
of a continuing stream. of
income. The payments can
be straight -life annuities'
promised for the life of a
single annuitant or the
joint lives of a husband and
wife .
Alternatively, annuities.
can be paid for a fixed term
of years (term certain
annuities), with a beneficiary named to receive any
value · left in the annuity if
the annuitant dies before
the term ends. Most often
annuities are bought for
future retirement income.
Only an annuity can pay an
income·that can be guaranteed to · last as long as you
Jive.Your value in an annuity contract is the premiums you've paid less any

applicable charges, plus her advisor had placed her
tnterest
credited .
A in the variable annuity was
deferred annuity has two the fact that the advisor
parts or periods . During was able to earn her a high- .
the accumulation period , er commission on the sale.
the money you put into the
Remember. seek out
annuity, less any applica- advisors who have your
ble .charges, earns interest. interests at heart, not their
·
The earnings grow ta-x- · own!
deferred as long as you
ln recent years , a varileave them in the annuity. ance on the traditional
During the second' period, fixed annuity concept has
called the payo ut period , emerged. Known as the
the company pays income ·"Equity Indexed Annuity,':
to you or to someone you these annuities are fixed in
choose .
nature but allow the conAnnuities fall one of two sumer the possibility of
basic categorie s: fi~ed or achieving greater stock
variable. Fixed annuities market returns by using
earn interest at rates set by options on popular stock
the insurance company or market indexes. Touted .by
tn a way spelled out in the . insurance companies for
al)nuity contract. The com- their, ability to provide all
pany guarantees that it will of the upside of the stock
pay no less than a mini - market with none of the
mum rate of interest. downside of losing money
During the payoui period . in a down mark~t. the only
the amount of each income ones who don 't seem to
payment to you is general- favor these investments are
ly set when the payment s the financial advisors and
start and will not change. stock brokers whose liveliVariable annuities arc dif- hood are tied to the high
fer~nt in that the company
commissions associated
places any premiums paid with investments in Wall
by the consumer into a sep- Street.
arate account that will then
However, my response to
be · invested in different over- infl~ted criticisms by
· investments depending on ad.visnrs is usually simple
the consumer's level of risk -' I merely say, "My
tolerance. Common inve st- . dients have lost zero dolments used by variable lars in the last six months,
annuities include stock what about yours?" Silence
indexes and bonds.
suddenly fills the room.
· If you follow my The most important part of
columns regularly (by last any annuity contract for
count there were four of the consumer to underyou - hi. mom). you ·may stand is the portion that
already know that I don't addresses surrender or
favor var.iable annuities. withdrawal charges .
As a rule of thumb, the
Simply stated. annuities
oloer you are and the rich- are long-term investments.
er you are, the less useful Hence, it is important for
these products are for you. the consumer to realize
But if·you are old and rich, that investments should be
they can be a rlisaster. allowed to accum ulate durVariable annuitie s are ing the investment's term.
being sold to people for Should the consumer need
whom they are not suitable the money prior to the
jn ·terms of multiple fees completion of the annuity
and the many years time period , it could very
required before they can well be costly as a result of
become reasonable invest- surrender charges that
ments. For instance, just would be paid for early
this ~eek a woman was in withdrawal. For this reamy offtce who had been son, it is impm:tant that the
placed in a variable annu- consumer always anticiity product but was invest- pate future expenses so
ed in the guaranteed pay- that an early termination of
out option. Many of you the annuity contract can be
may be thinking the same avoided. Additionally, the
thing that I did-"lsn't that consumer should be able to
just a fixed annuity?" The find -many annuities that
answer is yes , but I can will allow for a parti&lt;tl
only guess that the reaspn withdrawal of premium

•

Auction for Holzer Hospice .

(usually 10-20 percent in
one year's time), and t!tat
also allow for complete
access to the premium and
any interest. when certain
events occur. usually being
diagnosed with a terminal
illness, being placed in a
nursing facility or upon the
deat.h of the annuity holder.
(James Henry is an
attorney and insurance
agent licem·ed in the
states of Ohio a11d West
Virgi11ia. · He is the
founder of French City
Pla11ning
Estate
Solutions, LLC, with
offices
located
in
Gallipolis and Columbus,
Ohio. Visit online at
www.OhioEstatePlanning
Solutions.com.)

r•• • •

GALLIPOLIS -Area residents can lind unique holidav gift
and craft items during the "Deck the Halls. Walls and Tables"
silent auction to benefit Holzer Hospice.
.
The event will be held at the Bob Evans Hums Homestead
Mu~um on ~aturday. Nov. 8. beginning at 10:30 a.m. and will
contmue unttl5:30 p.m.
Items for the auction have been donated by artisans from the
Bob Evans Craft Bam, Bob Evans Fann Festival, as well a~
local artisans. The items will be on display and participants are
mvtted to submtl btds on paper throughout the day. with the
highest bidder receivi ng each item at the dose of the auction.
Holzer Hospice provides end of life care for patienL&lt;; with a
life-limiting illness in Athcn,, Gallia. Jackwn. Meigs. Vinton
and portions of L1wrence and Scioto counties. The focus of
hospice care is to provide quality of life with emotional and
spiritual support tor the patient' and family members .
Holzer Hospice will accer,t any patient, regml le" of ability
to pay. Commumty suppon and fund-raisinc actiYities such as
this event enables Holzer Ho,pice to cm1tinue this service
throughout our communities.
Donations are still being accepted for the event.
For more il({rmnllfion plea:'e call Ho/:er Hmpice at 1740)
446-5074 or (801)) 51XJ-4850.

PROUD TO BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Sub$cribe today ' ·
446-2342 or 992·2155

~ Over6roo(!l(f.lia.6i£itation Center

W

·

"Jt Cefe6ration of Life"

We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Annivers~ry

Saturday, October 18,2008
10:00 a.m.-2:00pm

•

• Hog Roast
• Hayrides
• Holzer Wellness Wagon
• Craft Show
• Inflatahles &amp; Games

• Musical Entertainment
Truly Saved Trio .
Forgiven Four
Eye 2 Eye
• Free to the Public

Specializing in fhe Following Services For 20 Years:
• Short and Long Term Care Provided
• Offering Skilled and intermedia.te
.
Levels of Nursing Care
• Rehabilitation : Physical Thenipy, Occupational Therapy. Speech Therapy
• Payment Accepted Through: Medic~re, Medicaid . Workers Cornpensatron.
Private Insurance and Priv·are Pay

Open house on Friday, October 17" from 9am to 6pm.
·
join us for refreshments &amp; rklor prizes/
(Grand priu - 3 Free cusram si12 vinyl replaremtnr windows!)
US 33 @County Rood 18 in Pomeroy, OH .
Need di.reaioru? CaU {740)' 992-4119

For more Information or to reserve booth space for the event
contact Michelle kennedy or Emily Casto ·

333 Page Street • Middleport, OH
(740) 992-6472
www .overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

.,
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Pedomete·rt($

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1Svalue) .

• .while supplies last ·

. When yQu-sched.ule a·
·Weight Loss Consultation

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Be sure to bring this ad!

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Sunday,Cktobert2,20o8

Annuities: Key to wealth beyond your dreams?

.

ers · bei~g local people. from the realities of the
There were _circus people, everyday world.
_ One of the hit movies in . showboat entertainers. travElla and her sister moved
·Gall ipoli s in 1952 was "The eling musicians. a · famous to Columbus. where they
Star,'' featuring Bene Davis, magician (Galvani), as well entered the dressmaking
who played the role of an as medicine show entrepre- business. But even into her
actre" who once had been neurs and even a number of late 60s. Ella was preparing
her great comeback. In
:famous but had fall en to the dog and pony people .
Henry
Gibbs
was
a
well1937. the pair 's fortune hit
:depths of ddcat. Bette was
:nominated fur an Academy respected Shakespearean rock bouom as they wet:e
actor, but in order to make evicted from their home on
:Award for Best Actress.
One mov ie historian ends meet , he also per- Walnut Street for keeping
described
the
role: formed in minstrel shows too many dogs.
In her defense , Ella
"Margaret Elliot (Bette from time to time. For a
;Davis) was. once one of while , the whole Gibbs fam- claimed that the dogs were
:Hollywood's great stars, but ily traveled through every trick dogs . Said Ella to the
•as she edges mto her 50s. state in lhe Union giving Columbus Dispatch , " I had
:both her career and her life short plays. In that era. planned to get dates in difhave reached an unfortunate every schoolhouse and rural ferent places, but now I
crossroads. Margaret hasn ' t church would sponsor such have to board them out and
.
worked for several . years. performances as a way of · that 's expensive."
:her marriage has fallen increasing the cultural
Said the Dispatch, "For
:apart, her former husband learning of the community. two years Mrs. Carroll had
Ella Gibbs Carroll was been training her dogs, part
:has custody of her daughter
:Gretchen (Natalie Wood) once a part of the Corse collie and part police, sharing
·and she's running . short of Payton Comedy Company, her meager. old age pension
money. Margaret's agent which in time· built a reper- with them." Ella could not
Stone
(Warner. toire of over 300 ·plays. The understand why_ her neighHarry
Anderson) can 't get her a company would stay a bors would object to nine
. part. and isn 't · willing to whole week in a particular · potentially famous show
:lend her the money to pay . theater and perform as dogs living next to them.
~her bills. When they learn many as II different plays
Said Ella, "Some people
·Margaret is all but penni - duriQg that week. Ella•s think that the stage is on its
less, her sister (Fay Baker) favorite role was as the way out, but I don ' t. The
·nnd brother-in-law (David noblewoman
in
"The stage is coming back and
Alpert ) turn their back on Parisian Princess."
don 't you think it won 't."
But after World War I, Said the Dispatch, "The
·her, and M.arga ret's landla:cty (Katheri ne Warren) is such plays were no longer incident has not blighted her
:threatening to evict her.
popular in America as they interest in a 'comeback."'
• "Depre"ed and · desper- had given way to movies
(James Sands is a special
ate , Margaret goes on a · and to vaudevtlle and bur- correspondent for tile
prinkin g binge. and ends up lesque. The horrors of Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
!n jail on a drunk dri vi ng World War l had caused the call be contacted by writi11g
·charge. :--Jo one come.&lt;to her public to turn to lighter to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
aid hut Jim Johan sen entertainment for relief . 43767.)
.(Sterling Ha yden). a former
:actor who worked with
~Margaret years ago and has
long been in lo ve with her.
Jim urges Margaret to leave
!-Jollywood behind and .go
·with him ."
But then Margaret gets
• Well·woman exams
one last audition and she
::holds on to a fleeting
• Birth Control Including
:chance of returning to star• Implanon (First &amp; Only
dom. The concept was used
in other movies and TV par3-year implantAble,.
_odies, the most class ic of
birth control
:\vhich was done by Carol
• Garda.~il Vaccine
•Burnell.
• STD detection &amp; treatment
Perhaps the movie in
..some ways could describe
• Minimally-invasive
:the li ves of many actor&gt; and
gynecologic surgica~ care
actrcs;es that once called
• Pregnancy Care
Gallipolis hom~. From the
. 1880s to the 1910&gt;. there
• F.ssure (Searless Permanent
:wa&gt; a hou,·e in Gallipoli , on
.Jane IJ. Broecker, MD Hirth Control Sterilization)
•Second Avenue t400 bl&lt;1c~ J
that was known a' the
"home of entertainer,."
113 Ea'it Memorial Drive
:: The hou'c belonged tn
Pomeroy. OH • 992-9158
Mr. and Mr,. Henry Gibb' .
them;elve'
profe,;ic•n al
Castrol' Center 75 Hospital Dr
thespian, . Al'o living there
Suite 260
· ;were their two daughter\.
Athens. OH • 594-8819
•Ell a and Lulu . a\ wei' "'
·other struggling acto" and
actre"e'
. It i' ama1ing how man y
peopl e in Gallipoli' in that
An•mtial•oflht
' 30-ycar ' pan made their li vO'BLENESS
'~
ing !rom the entertainment
HIALTH SYST!M
.bu"ne'·'· Over th at era ,
·there were at lea\! three
:minstrel , flow' ba,ed here
•
www.riverroseobgyn.com
with many of the perform'

COMMUNI1'Y

iunbap ltme' ·&amp;tntind

YOUR H OMETOWN
·Six Rio student~ studying in Wales ·Foothills Art Festival comes
to Jackson on Oct.-17-19
·iunba~ ltme.s·ientintl

PageC3

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 20
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877.527 .495_7
-. ··-- • •.• --- '

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Page ·C2

. RIO GRANDE - Six stu- Craig Kincaid, she also
:dents from the University of hopes to learn more abour
Rio Grande are spending the international. political and
fall se mester studying in economic issues during the
Wales at Trinity College.
semester.
.
. Located in Carmarthen,
Jones, sophomore from
·Wales . Trinity College has an Jackson , is a non-traditional
exchange program with Rio student who has served in the
.Grande that allows Rio U.S . Army. The intervention
.Grande students to travel to specialist major said that the
Trinity . College 1(11' the fall Welsh culture is an integral
semester · and srude nts fmm part of his past. 'present and
Trinity Coi!L,4, to travel to future . and is excited aboUI
.Rio Grundc for the spring· spending time in Wales . He
-semc, ter. The Madog Center took part iri the Jackson
·for Wchh Studic' at Rio Eisteddfod as a child and
Grande .coordinates the said that one reason he wantexchange program, and also ed to be a part of the
organi1.es faculty exc hanges. exchange program is "to be
The six Rio Grande stu- able to learn firsthand where
dents spendmg the fall those who founded by com:~c mc &gt; tc r in W:.tlcs are Scoll . nlunity originated."
·;Iones. Courtney Kincaid.
Jones is the son of Allen
.•Natalie Miller. Leah Newton. Jones and Lulu Jones:
:thclsea Smith and Derek
Miller. an arts ~:oinprehen- ·
:Weber.
sive major lmd a photogra. . ·Tve always loved ·travel- phy minor from Oak Hill.
.ing and I' ve never had the said that the time· spent in
:.&lt;:hance to go to Europe Wales will help her in her
;)Jefore.'' said Kincaid. who i&gt; education and her caree~ As
junior from Jackson. The an art major, being able to go
·~ducation major said she is to a different country will
'excited about tak ing classes influence her a great deal as
_iln the Welsh camptls.travel- both an artist and a teacher.
·ing around the country and she said. The sophomore is
taking part iticultural enrich- the daughter of Donna Miller
and Robert Miller.
Jnent progtanb.
: Having thi&gt; ex perience
Newton is a sophomore
:now sh()uld help her in her from Columbia Station. The
- ~ ork '" a tead 1cr. Kincaid · early ch ildhood . education
sa id.
major said "the best way to
"I want to ~o on to become leam new thin2s is to be
:a l.twyer. an(l I think it will there and see it Tor yourself,
-help with that. too." she said . not to have someone tell you
~· I'm r~all y exc ited about it."
how they work." Her experi:The daughter of Dr. and Mrs. ences i11 the exchange pro-

a

:a

Sunday, October 12, 2008

gram will be a great tool to
help her in her work as a
teacher when she talb to her
students about the different
cultures she has visited.
Newton explained. She is the
daughter of Robet1a Newton
and Karl Newton .
Smith is an education
major from Racine. It has
been a lifelong dream for the
sophomore 101 . travel . to
Europe. and she is very excit- ·
ed about taking part in the
exchange program. The program gives her )he opportu'
nity to accomplish her dream
by studying at a similar insli·
tution in Wales . while still
paying tuition fees through
Rio Grande. One of her goals
for the program is to become
more independent
and
responsible through the
experience . Smith is the
daughter of Meg and Kenny
Guinther and Perry Smith.
,. Weber is a so phomore
from Pomeroy. He is in the
multi-age visual arts program
~t Rio Grande , and said that
the time in the exchange program will help him as an
artist. Experiences like this
can open his mind even further to creativity. Weber
e~plained. He is the son of
Keith and Marcella Weber:
The students left for Wales
on Sept. 14 and will return to
Rio Grande on Dec. 15.
For more information 011
the exchange pmgram. ·call
Jetinne ·Jindra. director of
till' Madog Celller for Welsh
Studie,;, at (800) 282-7201.

.· .Gallipolis
had its 'Stage Door' at one time
.
.

Bv

· JACKSON
About under the trees is set for give the little ones some
600 works of art are Saturday evening from 5 in,p iration and advice. Of
expected for the 27th to 7 p.m .
course, youngsters will
The hot sounds of the take their · masterpieces
annual
Foothills Art
Fe,tival at Canter's Cave Third · Shift Band wi II home with them.
4-H Ca mp , fiv e miles knock the chill off · th e . Foothills is sponsored
north of Jackson off U.S. evening air. You are wel - by Sat)ds Hill Mining
35.
come to pack your own LLC. OSCO Indu stries
The festival will be held picnic and spread a blan- Employees Charity Fund ,
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on ket on the lawn . Box supFriday. Oct. 17 and pers, at a modes t price. Adena Health System,
Cotner &amp; Cooley CPA of
Saturday, Oct. 18 , and will be available.
from noon 10 5 p.m. on
Kids are invited to try McArthur and Jackson ,
Holzer
Sunday , Oct. 19 .
their hand at a variety ·of We sBanco.
Thank s to a host of gen- arts projects on the mezza- Medical Center-Jackson,
erous sponsors, there is no nine from noon to 2 p.m. State Farm:lnsurance , Dan
admission charge. Parking on Saturday and from Dailey. agent , and the
is convenient · and free. noon to 2 p.m: on Sunday. Ohio Arts Council. .
The lodge is handicapped Art teacher Bob Eisnallgle
For informatio)t , call
accessible . Concessions of Jackson High School Southern Hills at (740)
are available through the will bring his students to 286-6355.
Canter's Cave staff.
Work will be hung in the
following
categori(\s.:
Oil/Ac rylics,
Mixed
M 'e di_a/Frints,
Pa s t el/ Drawing,
Photog raphy, Enhanced
Photog raphy ,
Three
Dimension al
and
Wate rco lor. Most of the
artwork is for sale.
Participant s . range from
emerging to professional
artists.
.
Live· music will be heard
For more information ·
at the fes tival with classical
gu itarist
Sean
Call740·992-6768
Ferg uso n on Saltlrday
'
from ' 10 4 p.m . and The
Hillside Baptist Church
Brighton Trio playing
James Acree Sr.
chamber musk on Sunday
from 2 to 4 p .m. A picnic

.·
40B•r
Surface Mining Classes
-24 Openings
lsi Coma- lsi Served
.Ohio 8 Wast Virginia Cartllad·
Classes Begin October 20111

BY JAMES SANDS

Gynecology.Services

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Booth
6 Easy marl&lt;
11 Noblewomen
16 Nosebag filler
20 Pea soup. e.g
21 Garment part
22 Oily fruit
23 Learn the - ·
25 Standoffish
26 Hollow
27 Kind of printer
28 Resul
29 Allen or Russert
30 london's river
32 Citadel
34 Fall mo.
35 So&lt;
37 A~irm
38 Hurts
39 Motifs
41 Make ch!inges In
43 Bond 01 T~or
44 Bovine animal
46 Head ol state
49 Relocates
50 Burnet for a welder
54 Hobbled
55 Grew wan
56 Ball of yarn
57 Terrible
58 Fuss
59 Lustrous Iabrie
60 Amphi(jans
61 Lawful
62 French nog~1n
64 Espresso wtlh milk
65 Boonsh
66 An antiseptic
67 Minerals
66 Beery drinks
69 Take lorcibly
70 Letters in genetics
7l Lair
72 Rescues
74 Specter
75 -de menthe
77 Plant pouch
80 Jewel ·
81 Utter ~a~iness
82 Consomme
83 Shapeless mass
87 LoWered in prestige
89 Casual pants
90 Dull
91 Ali92 Data

93 Beat rhythmically
94 Verge
95 Sack
96 James the singer
97 Artist's paints
98 Lilho!lraph
99 Tum lnto
102 Make stronger
105 Sarcastic tematk
tOO Innate ·
107 ~quant
t 06 Through - and lhin
10~ Speeder's undoing
t t 0 Frusttate
t 13 Vesttpe
114 Floatrng ica mass.
·
forshort
115Pro(unco~sated)

119 Vis~
120 Revete
123 Military units
125 T~r
126 Aston~h
t 28 Happen I~
129 Israel's Mer
130 Rustic dweting
·132 Black bird·
·133 Chop .
134 Sornelhl~ valuable
t 35 Cordial flavoring
136 Time of fasting
· 137 More senior
138 Filced gaze
139 Appfaised

DOWN
1 Old·tima ga1Jers
· 2 A flower

3 Odor

4 Zodiac sign ·
5 Departed
6 Butcher's knife
7 Carpenter·s toot
8 Higher
9 NY team ·
tO Worl&lt; at
t f King·s' - Claiborne"
t 2 Frightens
13 Fine sprays
t 4 Pecpetually
15 W~he&lt;ed
IS Sudden flood
17 Long, lOng time
t 8 Kind of s8Jts .
19 Card with two pips
24 Hardens '
31 Loalhed
32 WeiHcnown
33 Cook in water
36 lncl01ed we_y
38 Place of retuge
40 Destroyed gradually
42 Rest
·
43 Acttess A~elina 44 Toboggans
45 Pulls
46 Greek ph1losophec
47 Horseman
48 Act like a Ham
49 Damon and Dillon
50 Explos1on
5f S1ilf
52 Hoisb~ de~ce ·
. 53 - ofTroy
55 Spreads for crackers

81 Gin at aball
82 Go steaHhily
84 Toil

85 Barack of politics
86 Roll w1th a hole
88 Poem part

89 like an orange
90 Adobe
93 Harbortown
94 Support
98 "The - is Righr ·
99 Sheriff's star
tOO Letter after-zeta
101 Restrain
103 lmpao;sioned
Ul4 Bone(prefix)
105 Gab
106 Ptovide commentary

t..-

106 Hypnot~ state
109 Mote ruddy
ttO Rus~artruter
111 Of blood
.
112 tntertace
113 Fashion
, t 4 Light wood
t t6 Satet~e' s path
117 Racket
t18Had
121 Verne·s captain
122 Wickedness
123 E&lt;pense
·124 Wound mark
127 Kind of Buddhism
129 Petrrn
131 Litetary cotteclon

56 Seashore

59 Wilh hunt city
60 Lock ot hair
61 Rich soil
· 63 A letter
64 Washed
65 Traverse
66 Like abungler
69 Comptan
70 Tipsy
73 Gets older

74 Tumtier
75 Titie for Dracula
76 Rece&lt;je
n More secure
78 Die down
79 Spiny plants

Available In Meigs County

' '

JAMES HENRY

All right. I admit that
that the contents of ·this
article may not be -the
answer io getting your·
ftrst-class ticket to some
·far away destination where
JOU spend the rest of your
days basking in the sun
v.4iile sipping fruit-fla:vored drinks from coconut
shaped ~lasses adorned
with mimature umbrellas .
I may have chosen the title
of this article in order to
add a bit of "shock value,"
but. bear with me for just a
bit because, though they
may II'Ot unlock untold
riches. the use of annuities
·in a well-balanced retire.ment plan may very well
provide you with a sustain·ability tha! will allow you
·to hve otf ol your life 's
savings dpring your retirement years better than
,alternative investments.
: In re~ent years. insur•ance companies have
:become very creative in
:developing additional fea;tures they offer with annu'
•ities. This tinkering with
. :t~e basic annuity . concept
:bas made the analy sis and
:selectiO)l of an annuity
-more complicated for
:clients contemplating an
:annutly
'purchase.
•However. these added
:choices also mean that the
:consumer is better able to
;find a product suitable for
•his or her needs than ever
:before.
: Yet, with all of these new
•choices comes the greater
possibility that you , as the
consumer, may be taken
advantage of · by some
unscrupulous advisor who
is more concerned over his
own finances than yours.
As with -any investment, it
is important that you do
your homework · before
investing. So fiFst let's get
down the "basics" on
annuities. In its basic form,
·. the annuity is very simple.
An annuity is a stream of
monthly paymepts to be
paid in the future to some,
l}ite who has accumulated a
lump sum of money and
wishes to exchange that
lump sum for the security
of a continuing stream. of
income. The payments can
be straight -life annuities'
promised for the life of a
single annuitant or the
joint lives of a husband and
wife .
Alternatively, annuities.
can be paid for a fixed term
of years (term certain
annuities), with a beneficiary named to receive any
value · left in the annuity if
the annuitant dies before
the term ends. Most often
annuities are bought for
future retirement income.
Only an annuity can pay an
income·that can be guaranteed to · last as long as you
Jive.Your value in an annuity contract is the premiums you've paid less any

applicable charges, plus her advisor had placed her
tnterest
credited .
A in the variable annuity was
deferred annuity has two the fact that the advisor
parts or periods . During was able to earn her a high- .
the accumulation period , er commission on the sale.
the money you put into the
Remember. seek out
annuity, less any applica- advisors who have your
ble .charges, earns interest. interests at heart, not their
·
The earnings grow ta-x- · own!
deferred as long as you
ln recent years , a varileave them in the annuity. ance on the traditional
During the second' period, fixed annuity concept has
called the payo ut period , emerged. Known as the
the company pays income ·"Equity Indexed Annuity,':
to you or to someone you these annuities are fixed in
choose .
nature but allow the conAnnuities fall one of two sumer the possibility of
basic categorie s: fi~ed or achieving greater stock
variable. Fixed annuities market returns by using
earn interest at rates set by options on popular stock
the insurance company or market indexes. Touted .by
tn a way spelled out in the . insurance companies for
al)nuity contract. The com- their, ability to provide all
pany guarantees that it will of the upside of the stock
pay no less than a mini - market with none of the
mum rate of interest. downside of losing money
During the payoui period . in a down mark~t. the only
the amount of each income ones who don 't seem to
payment to you is general- favor these investments are
ly set when the payment s the financial advisors and
start and will not change. stock brokers whose liveliVariable annuities arc dif- hood are tied to the high
fer~nt in that the company
commissions associated
places any premiums paid with investments in Wall
by the consumer into a sep- Street.
arate account that will then
However, my response to
be · invested in different over- infl~ted criticisms by
· investments depending on ad.visnrs is usually simple
the consumer's level of risk -' I merely say, "My
tolerance. Common inve st- . dients have lost zero dolments used by variable lars in the last six months,
annuities include stock what about yours?" Silence
indexes and bonds.
suddenly fills the room.
· If you follow my The most important part of
columns regularly (by last any annuity contract for
count there were four of the consumer to underyou - hi. mom). you ·may stand is the portion that
already know that I don't addresses surrender or
favor var.iable annuities. withdrawal charges .
As a rule of thumb, the
Simply stated. annuities
oloer you are and the rich- are long-term investments.
er you are, the less useful Hence, it is important for
these products are for you. the consumer to realize
But if·you are old and rich, that investments should be
they can be a rlisaster. allowed to accum ulate durVariable annuitie s are ing the investment's term.
being sold to people for Should the consumer need
whom they are not suitable the money prior to the
jn ·terms of multiple fees completion of the annuity
and the many years time period , it could very
required before they can well be costly as a result of
become reasonable invest- surrender charges that
ments. For instance, just would be paid for early
this ~eek a woman was in withdrawal. For this reamy offtce who had been son, it is impm:tant that the
placed in a variable annu- consumer always anticiity product but was invest- pate future expenses so
ed in the guaranteed pay- that an early termination of
out option. Many of you the annuity contract can be
may be thinking the same avoided. Additionally, the
thing that I did-"lsn't that consumer should be able to
just a fixed annuity?" The find -many annuities that
answer is yes , but I can will allow for a parti&lt;tl
only guess that the reaspn withdrawal of premium

•

Auction for Holzer Hospice .

(usually 10-20 percent in
one year's time), and t!tat
also allow for complete
access to the premium and
any interest. when certain
events occur. usually being
diagnosed with a terminal
illness, being placed in a
nursing facility or upon the
deat.h of the annuity holder.
(James Henry is an
attorney and insurance
agent licem·ed in the
states of Ohio a11d West
Virgi11ia. · He is the
founder of French City
Pla11ning
Estate
Solutions, LLC, with
offices
located
in
Gallipolis and Columbus,
Ohio. Visit online at
www.OhioEstatePlanning
Solutions.com.)

r•• • •

GALLIPOLIS -Area residents can lind unique holidav gift
and craft items during the "Deck the Halls. Walls and Tables"
silent auction to benefit Holzer Hospice.
.
The event will be held at the Bob Evans Hums Homestead
Mu~um on ~aturday. Nov. 8. beginning at 10:30 a.m. and will
contmue unttl5:30 p.m.
Items for the auction have been donated by artisans from the
Bob Evans Craft Bam, Bob Evans Fann Festival, as well a~
local artisans. The items will be on display and participants are
mvtted to submtl btds on paper throughout the day. with the
highest bidder receivi ng each item at the dose of the auction.
Holzer Hospice provides end of life care for patienL&lt;; with a
life-limiting illness in Athcn,, Gallia. Jackwn. Meigs. Vinton
and portions of L1wrence and Scioto counties. The focus of
hospice care is to provide quality of life with emotional and
spiritual support tor the patient' and family members .
Holzer Hospice will accer,t any patient, regml le" of ability
to pay. Commumty suppon and fund-raisinc actiYities such as
this event enables Holzer Ho,pice to cm1tinue this service
throughout our communities.
Donations are still being accepted for the event.
For more il({rmnllfion plea:'e call Ho/:er Hmpice at 1740)
446-5074 or (801)) 51XJ-4850.

PROUD TO BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Sub$cribe today ' ·
446-2342 or 992·2155

~ Over6roo(!l(f.lia.6i£itation Center

W

·

"Jt Cefe6ration of Life"

We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Annivers~ry

Saturday, October 18,2008
10:00 a.m.-2:00pm

•

• Hog Roast
• Hayrides
• Holzer Wellness Wagon
• Craft Show
• Inflatahles &amp; Games

• Musical Entertainment
Truly Saved Trio .
Forgiven Four
Eye 2 Eye
• Free to the Public

Specializing in fhe Following Services For 20 Years:
• Short and Long Term Care Provided
• Offering Skilled and intermedia.te
.
Levels of Nursing Care
• Rehabilitation : Physical Thenipy, Occupational Therapy. Speech Therapy
• Payment Accepted Through: Medic~re, Medicaid . Workers Cornpensatron.
Private Insurance and Priv·are Pay

Open house on Friday, October 17" from 9am to 6pm.
·
join us for refreshments &amp; rklor prizes/
(Grand priu - 3 Free cusram si12 vinyl replaremtnr windows!)
US 33 @County Rood 18 in Pomeroy, OH .
Need di.reaioru? CaU {740)' 992-4119

For more Information or to reserve booth space for the event
contact Michelle kennedy or Emily Casto ·

333 Page Street • Middleport, OH
(740) 992-6472
www .overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

.,
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Pedomete·rt($

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1Svalue) .

• .while supplies last ·

. When yQu-sched.ule a·
·Weight Loss Consultation

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Be sure to bring this ad!

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Sunday,Cktobert2,20o8

Annuities: Key to wealth beyond your dreams?

.

ers · bei~g local people. from the realities of the
There were _circus people, everyday world.
_ One of the hit movies in . showboat entertainers. travElla and her sister moved
·Gall ipoli s in 1952 was "The eling musicians. a · famous to Columbus. where they
Star,'' featuring Bene Davis, magician (Galvani), as well entered the dressmaking
who played the role of an as medicine show entrepre- business. But even into her
actre" who once had been neurs and even a number of late 60s. Ella was preparing
her great comeback. In
:famous but had fall en to the dog and pony people .
Henry
Gibbs
was
a
well1937. the pair 's fortune hit
:depths of ddcat. Bette was
:nominated fur an Academy respected Shakespearean rock bouom as they wet:e
actor, but in order to make evicted from their home on
:Award for Best Actress.
One mov ie historian ends meet , he also per- Walnut Street for keeping
described
the
role: formed in minstrel shows too many dogs.
In her defense , Ella
"Margaret Elliot (Bette from time to time. For a
;Davis) was. once one of while , the whole Gibbs fam- claimed that the dogs were
:Hollywood's great stars, but ily traveled through every trick dogs . Said Ella to the
•as she edges mto her 50s. state in lhe Union giving Columbus Dispatch , " I had
:both her career and her life short plays. In that era. planned to get dates in difhave reached an unfortunate every schoolhouse and rural ferent places, but now I
crossroads. Margaret hasn ' t church would sponsor such have to board them out and
.
worked for several . years. performances as a way of · that 's expensive."
:her marriage has fallen increasing the cultural
Said the Dispatch, "For
:apart, her former husband learning of the community. two years Mrs. Carroll had
Ella Gibbs Carroll was been training her dogs, part
:has custody of her daughter
:Gretchen (Natalie Wood) once a part of the Corse collie and part police, sharing
·and she's running . short of Payton Comedy Company, her meager. old age pension
money. Margaret's agent which in time· built a reper- with them." Ella could not
Stone
(Warner. toire of over 300 ·plays. The understand why_ her neighHarry
Anderson) can 't get her a company would stay a bors would object to nine
. part. and isn 't · willing to whole week in a particular · potentially famous show
:lend her the money to pay . theater and perform as dogs living next to them.
~her bills. When they learn many as II different plays
Said Ella, "Some people
·Margaret is all but penni - duriQg that week. Ella•s think that the stage is on its
less, her sister (Fay Baker) favorite role was as the way out, but I don ' t. The
·nnd brother-in-law (David noblewoman
in
"The stage is coming back and
Alpert ) turn their back on Parisian Princess."
don 't you think it won 't."
But after World War I, Said the Dispatch, "The
·her, and M.arga ret's landla:cty (Katheri ne Warren) is such plays were no longer incident has not blighted her
:threatening to evict her.
popular in America as they interest in a 'comeback."'
• "Depre"ed and · desper- had given way to movies
(James Sands is a special
ate , Margaret goes on a · and to vaudevtlle and bur- correspondent for tile
prinkin g binge. and ends up lesque. The horrors of Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
!n jail on a drunk dri vi ng World War l had caused the call be contacted by writi11g
·charge. :--Jo one come.&lt;to her public to turn to lighter to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
aid hut Jim Johan sen entertainment for relief . 43767.)
.(Sterling Ha yden). a former
:actor who worked with
~Margaret years ago and has
long been in lo ve with her.
Jim urges Margaret to leave
!-Jollywood behind and .go
·with him ."
But then Margaret gets
• Well·woman exams
one last audition and she
::holds on to a fleeting
• Birth Control Including
:chance of returning to star• Implanon (First &amp; Only
dom. The concept was used
in other movies and TV par3-year implantAble,.
_odies, the most class ic of
birth control
:\vhich was done by Carol
• Garda.~il Vaccine
•Burnell.
• STD detection &amp; treatment
Perhaps the movie in
..some ways could describe
• Minimally-invasive
:the li ves of many actor&gt; and
gynecologic surgica~ care
actrcs;es that once called
• Pregnancy Care
Gallipolis hom~. From the
. 1880s to the 1910&gt;. there
• F.ssure (Searless Permanent
:wa&gt; a hou,·e in Gallipoli , on
.Jane IJ. Broecker, MD Hirth Control Sterilization)
•Second Avenue t400 bl&lt;1c~ J
that was known a' the
"home of entertainer,."
113 Ea'it Memorial Drive
:: The hou'c belonged tn
Pomeroy. OH • 992-9158
Mr. and Mr,. Henry Gibb' .
them;elve'
profe,;ic•n al
Castrol' Center 75 Hospital Dr
thespian, . Al'o living there
Suite 260
· ;were their two daughter\.
Athens. OH • 594-8819
•Ell a and Lulu . a\ wei' "'
·other struggling acto" and
actre"e'
. It i' ama1ing how man y
peopl e in Gallipoli' in that
An•mtial•oflht
' 30-ycar ' pan made their li vO'BLENESS
'~
ing !rom the entertainment
HIALTH SYST!M
.bu"ne'·'· Over th at era ,
·there were at lea\! three
:minstrel , flow' ba,ed here
•
www.riverroseobgyn.com
with many of the perform'

COMMUNI1'Y

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·Six Rio student~ studying in Wales ·Foothills Art Festival comes
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Sunday, October 12, 2008

ON THE BOOKSHELF

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

~Dragonslayer's

Sword' author _Ex-Gallia resident publishes new work-:
coming.to Shawnee State •

PORTSMOUTH - Resa · Darren Harris-Fain, professor
Nelson, author of The. and chair cf the Deparl!Tlent
Dragonsll&lt;yer's Sword, based of English and Humanities.
on a iihor;t stoty first published
Her main character in the
in the premiere issue of book is ,a female blacksmith,
Science Fiction Age maga- ~stnd, who makes swords
zine, I'liiWng second in the for dragon slayers and who
f"lllit Readers Top Ten Poll , reluctantly is drawn to danbe at Shawnee State gerous situations herself
University at 7:30 p.m. oti' when one of l~Jeltl , her best
Tuesday. Oct·. 28 in the Flohr friend, disappears .
Lecture Hall at . Clark · [rt order to write about
Memorial Library.
blacksmithing. Nelson took a
Nelson also sells short st(}- course with John Stevens at
ries to magazines and she is . Old Sturbridge Village in
the TV/movie columnist for Massachusetts. • ,
Realms of Fantasy magaZine,
"Even
though
I
a contributorto SCI FI mag- hated weapons, I •made
aziDe, and has sold more than myself read about them,"
200 articles to magazines in Nelson said. "While slogging
the
United States and through a pile of books and ·
the United Kingdom. . . o~n nodding. off, I was
· "Nelson is a. newer writer unexpectedly .captivated by
who has been building a repu- Ewart Oakeshott's
The
tation with her short stories in Arr:haeo/ogy of ~apoll.l'. His
fanta~y magazines." said enthusiasm and love of

will

Chad Lambert

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Alun1 addresses Rio

· freshman class.

:•

Mr. and Mrs. Cody Hysell

Mr. and Mrs. David Burdell
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RIO GRANDI' · - A~claimed author Chad Lambert
·ltturncd to the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
'
'
~r nmunity Co iiC);C recently ·_to welcome the U2nd i:lass
RACINE - Selena Ma_rie Spencer and Cody ~o5eph
~t studenh to carnplls and give them some advice.
GALLIPOLIS - David Burdell and Shelli Rossiter were
" Lambert spoke dunng the annual Founders' Day ceremo- Hysell were unrted m marrrage on Saturday, Aug. 16~ 2oox united in marriage on June 7, 200X. at the Church of the
which is held in the fa ll of each .year to honor Rio at the First Baptist Church of Racine . Pastor Don Walker Nazarene in Gallipolis. 'Pastors Robert Fulton and Gene
officiated at the double .ring ceremony.
l;irande 's founders . ·
Harmon officiated .
Selena is the daughter of David and Linda Spen~er of
A video was shown before the ceremony of the couple's
;;·Lambert . who is originally from Jackson and today lives
Racine
.
the
granddaughter
of
Elson
and
Dorothy
Spencer
growing up and in t~e prese'nt.
~- Cinci_nnati. earned hi~ bac~helor'~ degree ' in. mass comftlUnr cat rull.s amJ Jlllli'llalrsm trom .RIO Grande 111 1994. He ·of Racine and Aleta Weaver and the late Robert Weaver of · Shelli is the daughter .of Susie Rossiter and Roger
·
Rossiter of Lecta. David is the son of Lawrence and Judy
;.,en! ,·11, to wo r'k ;" a\\ ritcr and producer for the natiomilly New Haven , W.Va .
Cody
is
the
son
of
Randy
and
Genia
Hy
sell
of
Pomeroy,
.
Burdell of Bidwell.
i yndicatcd Gary Burbank Show on WLW-AM radio. and
the
grandson
of
Charlotte
HyseiJ
~nd
the
late
Nathan
Hysell
.
Shelli is a medical specialties secretary at Hol zer Clinic
p1en latl'r bccnmc• ver:.; sun:essful ill c~m1ic book publishPomeroy
and
Andrew
and.
Nellie
Grover
of
Pomeroy.
of
and
a full-time student at Marshall University. David is a
fng .
.
.
The
bride
wore
a
strapless
white
beaded
mermaid
style
graduate
.of the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
. ' Hi s first buok. /'o .I .IW/1 ;\t Large. was based on the chargown
with
a
shoulder
length.
veil.
Her
accessories
included
Coinmunity College and works as &lt;!n Internet speciali st ill
acters and stmy lines he cr:eated while l1e was at Rio Grande
a
tiara,
diamond
necklace
'•nd
a
white,
black
and
gold
JB Net Wireless Services.
~nd working on the student newspaper. Signals.
bracelet
worn
in
remembrance
of
her
grandfather
Robert.
Jan Duncan presented a program of piano_ music . As
; Lam be rt lras now published several award-winning
Her
bouquet
of
white
and
fuchsia
ffowers
was
made
by
the
mothers
were seated, Teresa Hampton sang "Sunrise,
~ook.s ami has also published material in , more than 40
bride.
, Sunset."
tomic book pub I icatiuu, .
were
Lind
see
Davis,
Emily
Babbitt,Chelsea
Bridesmaids
· Shel)i:s dad walked her down the decorated aisle. The
•: During his renwrks at Founders' Day. Lambert explained
and
Amber
Holsinger.
all
friend
s
of
the
bride
.
The
Smith
sanctuary
was decorated with huge ferns. ribbons and can!lULl when he first arrived as a student at Rio Grande. he did
groom's
niece,
Isabelle
Reynolds
of
North
Carolina,
was
dles.
not know what he wa nted to do with hi s life . He knew that
the
!lower
girl.
·
Shelli's dress was white with spaghetti straps . The bodice
,he loved listening to the Gary Burbank Showand the he
.
Groomsmen
were
Brandon
Kimes
,
Weston
Fife
,
Tyler
was.
covered in sequins : The skirt was layers of soft netting
loved rcadinu conlic books. but he had no . idea what he
Wayland
and
Jesse
Price.
friends
of
the
groom
.
Clayton
the. back falling into a chapel train. She \Vore a white
with
:would do for' a c:rrc-c r.
.
Wamsley of Racine. family friend of the bride, was the ring illusion fingertip veil and a gold tiara. Her bouquet was a
:. He took SlllllC c'llllllll!lnications courses at Rio Grande,
bearer.
und found that he really liked the writing and broadcasting ·The music for the wedding was provided by Becky clutch bollquet of pink roses . In her bom.juet sh, carried
two stemmed roses and presented them to the mothers as a
courses. He ·.dove fiii'o the work in his classes. but also Zuspan and . the guests were reg istered by Christina symbol of unity for the families .
.
uddcd c.xtra work by _.hcrng-activc.with the .studcnt newspa- ·Williams.'. The reception followed in the First Baptist
The matron of honor was Bre Lasseter. Bridesmaids were
per and gett ing a joh at WKOV-FM radio in Jackson .
Church's Christian Outreach Center. The couple took a Madonna Cook and Crista Schoolcraft. The ladies wore
: '.'Rio will give yo u a ccrtai·n underdog spirit." Lambert wedding trip to the Outer Banks, N.C.
blue v-necked sleeveless chiffon .dresses. They can·ied
·
Said·.
• ,
.
· .·
The bride is a graduate of Southern High School and clutch bouquets of pink roses. .
: Tlwt spirit sclvctl him well. as he worked hard to get dif- attend s the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
The ffciwer girl was Savannah Morrow. She wore a pink
ferent jt&gt;bs and excel at them. a·nd he was soon able to ·land Community College, where she is pursuing a degree _in dress and dropped rose petals into Shelli 's path.
·
hi s dream job with the Gary Burbank Show.
The best man was Daniel Simmons .-Groomsmen were
early childhood, development to become a kindergarten
"I got paid· money to write poop jokes," Lambert s.aid.
teacher. She is employed at Sally 's Beauty . Supply in Kevin Lamphier and Cliarles Hollanbaugh . Devon McGhee
: The j(rb also in vQivcd a great deal of work , but he learned Gallipolis .
was \he ring bearer. They wore black tuxedos in contrast' to
. ·,
:from it and enJoyed workirig ih a field where he could be
Devon's
grey-and- black striped tuxedo. ~
The groom is a graduate of Meigs High School and is
;creative .
As David and Shelli knelt at the altar, Dr. Keith Sheets
'employed by Local 207 as an asbestos journeyman.
: "The need to create never went away." Lambert said.
'
.
sang the Lord's Prayer.
He decided to en ter the world of comic book writing , and
After greeting,guests and having photos taken, the couple
the tmJcrdog spirit helped hini here again as he . became
headed to the Gallia County Senior Resource Center on
successfu l in this J'i eld as well . Lambert's trip to Rio
Jackson Pike. The reception hall was also decorated in
Grande. in fact. was set up in between stops on ·his latest
GALLIPOLIS - Strange
"What scares one person, pink. Many varieties of food were served on the buffet. The
book tour.
cake was raspberry torte with white cremyieing. Black and
sounds a.n d frightening
. He ned ted Rio Grande pl·ofessors such as Leslie Dotson creatures are filling -the mtly not scare another," he pink ribbon was wrapped around eaclllayer. Mu si.c. was
· added. "Some are afraid of
:.witll helping him so much in college, and said the educa- Ariel -Dater · Hall
in clowns , while others may be played by Mike Davis.
.Shelli · and David went to .Gatlinburg, Tenn .. for their
tion he received at Rio Grande has served him very well .
Gallipolis , as the perform- afraid of snakes , fortunatehonyemoon.
,
"There arc some cxec llenl teachers here : make no mis- ing arts center prepares to ·
ly, we have both , and much ~
The
couple
resides
at
7348
State
Route 7 South .
take:· Lambert said.
·
open its creaky doors fot.thc much more!"
Gallipolis.
·
For the inet&gt;ming students, Lambert also gave some fourth-annual Haunted Ariel
· Variou s area businesses
advice im how to do well in college.
Theatre Halloween allrac- are supporting the Ariel
· : "College is still 1cry much a privilege, and not a right ," tion .
·organization's
efforts
:Lambert said. atfding that the student&gt;; should appreciate
The Haunted Ariel will be through
~
sponsorship,
where they arc ami work hard at school. '
open weekends , beginning including ; Big. ·Country
. Tlw Rio. Grande degree will serve the stl1dents just as Oct. 17.
99.5, 101.5 Bob FM, Sunny
,(,nniversaP"t Safe
weU as a ckgree from any large institution , as employe,rs
Area actors, as well as 93 . I , and Pepsi-Cola. ,
care mo,;t abou t the wo rk that you can do, Lambert Sf!,id . youth and adult volunteers ,
The Hqunted Ariel will
Rio Grande prepares it s student s to do this work and to be will · have the · enjoyabl e
operate
weeke.nds, Friday
:sLrceess ful ~ he added.
··
challenge of ~c aring th.e.
through·
.Sunday.
October
lie iLl so told the students to avoid the often-popular atti- wits · out
of ' brave
OCTOBER f0-f6TH ~
20% off . ~ I
tude 0 f doin g jllst enough to ge t by.
.
·explorers \vho dare to jour- .17- 19 and 24-26, . and
AU Wood FUrniture -Custom
"Have some pride. llq great work ," Lambert said .
ney through many · rooms Thursday through Saturday,
k · -· (Includes
Drap&lt;nes, ~
·
I -n-J&lt;'toc
Laml1crt also told the students to go to sparling events. and hallway ~ designed to Oct. 30-Nov. I.
.
-"" Curtams, Sheers~ Throw"Box
office
will
open
get involvc·d with ~a mp11 s groups and to octively participate return guests to their most
• Dining • Living • Bedroom/.. s\V.ags,.:cut ardage) ~'
·nightly at 7 p.m. Admi ssion
in the wll c ~c expe rience·.
fearful nightmares .
• Coffe~ ~en~ Tables ~"/.~1 AFAY£Ir[ ' ~
EJ!,ecutive and Artistic is· $7 per person . The
. "Thi s i.&gt; '·' reall y great place to be in your life ," Lambert
• Parnted Pieces
". . /
"',;c;,.,. ,.,,.,,. ·'\.."
·
Haunted
Ariel
is
not
recom:said. adding that he hopes the students enjoy their time at Director, Joseph Wright
says, "Our selection of the mended for young children.
.
• Accent Pieces.
//I'"
~
Rio Grande.
more
information
,
For
nightmare
theme
allows
~ .. "If you want an example of how Ri o Grande is going to
151 Second Ave. • 740·446.-0332 •Gatlipolis. OH
wm'k out for you in the cnd .just look at me," Lambert said. many options for inspira- contact the Ariel-Dater Hall
Opea DaUy 9:30 lo S • Fri. 9·6 CIO$ed Sunday
· Dr. Greg So1k&lt;i. tile un ive~s ity presidem, thanked tion , from psychological at (740) 446-ARTS (2787).
:Lambert for hi s remarks and al so discussed the .history of thrills to over-thee-top ter$he 'in, titlllion . lie &gt;&lt;il uted the fo unders of the institution , ror." ··
;Who were also detailed i·n the program so the students could ·
read about them .
~· Dr. ·Herman Koby. presiclcnt of Rio Grande Community
t:;ollc!le . lcd the· Memoria l Prayer, and those in attend;lnce.
·led by the Grande ChMa le. sang the Memorial Hymn , ·
''Faith ot ·our Fathers."
·
.
• Sotka also wc kornecl tlw students to campus during the I'he Srmday._'ltmes·Se'nrinel
. ·~:· .
cercrnony. &lt;llttl to ld th cni that the faculty and staff are here
io hel p the' Il l .
. Subscribe today
·
; "No matter what your goa ls are,· your future is within
44&amp;2342 or 992-215.5 ,.j&lt;
f~ach :r t Rio Gra11dc," Sojka said .

Spencer-Hysellwedding Rossiter-Burdell wedding
'

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'Haunted Arie1' opens,Oct. 17

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PORTSMOUTH - The solutions to help redesign said Susan . McComas,
Literacy Council Of Scioto .programs to be.tter serve director of The Literacy
County is offering a. free ·people . in poverty, build CounCil of Scioto C.ounty..
seminar, "Bridges Out of skill sets for managemept to "As the number of those on
Poverty: . Strategies for help guide employees ~ welfare goes Up, literacy
Professionals
and · improve . treatment out- levels go down . 'Bridges
Communities," for profes- comes in health care and out of Poverty' gives us
sionals and organizations behavioral health care. and strategies to assist those we
from 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. on increase the likelihood of serve to transition from welWednesday, Oct. 22 at the. moving from welfare to fm:e to work."
SOMC Friends Center.
work, among other things.
Registration is free and
"Bridges Out of Poverty"
"We need to fmd wan to limited seatingis available.
·
·
is based in part on Pr. Ruby ' decrease the number of Deadline for
K. Payne's, A Framework · those on welfare in Scioto Oct. 10. To reserve a seat,
for Understanding Poverty. c2ounty and increase the lit- call S!iU at (740) 351-3}71
"Bridges" provides specific eracy rate in our county," . or (800) 672-8778.
'

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· S ~f-P.Il1JIIOIM . ·S tllllen~

·EartyRetitees

·leaving a grlllljJ plan ·Dependent C!lvorage
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Local Business Update .

' Prepared By County News, Inc. ©2008AIIRigbtsReserved
(800) 580-0485 • · www.countynewsinc.com

f;unily fe&lt;:l c:omri&gt;nable. Listening to the needs ond cono:C(tls ofcus10mers is thcinop priori1y. Forrman &amp; Abbott
Heat1n1 &amp; Cooling is the comflllll)' you can lm&gt;1.1o service rhe lop brands and models of home i:oml\1n cquipmenL '
Tbeyrepoir, mainl8in, sell and install reliahlc. r~cogni1£d home comfort pnxlucrs. ~Ulll'3ntccing all work.
..
Twenry-four hour emergency service is 8\'Bilable, l!S well as regulnr contracts.
.
The author• of this 1008 Fill Lacal Business Update suggest that you tall Fortman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp;
Cooling today at (740) 992-!!893 or (800) 39-4.103 for a frte quote! Thtir hours are 8am-4:.!0pm MondayFriday;

Arbors at Gallipolis . ,
Nurs1ng and Rehabilitation Center
. Providing

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Rehabilitation Back To Home!
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Gallla • ~23!42.. • ' .
Meigs • 992.21W . '
Mason • 67!&gt;1933 -

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Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgery, I came to Arl;Jors at
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·. Gallipolis for Rehabilitation. ram ·

so impre~ed. with .the efficiency of t!le staff.
·When I first arrived at Arbors at Gallipolis
(

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I did not thin!- I would ever walk on rny
own again. Now, thanks to the wonderful

t~rapy and nursing staff." I have returned home.

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170 Pinecrest Drive • .Galllpi)lis, OH 45631
. 740-446-7112' • . ~~~.com

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Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling

Skilled Nursing &amp; Re~bflitation ·Center

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ft, t~ ~ ;~,; 1 ,~111J•)~~JIIet.-w.:0.8_..att $1.-,:,. !f tn~ mlllt l*l ~ ft $ 1eU ~~ llllr3· 1~~ A~eMttte t r~QIII!~IIl~ t'M~ I~ IIlt
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•PIU!!~Toch--

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As writer and painter in
oils , having lived in Ohio.
New Orleans and Florida,
Pinschmidt draws on her
own experiences to inform
the characters and settings
of · her novels. Her next ,"·
novel is Spanish Moss,
based in New Orleans .
Visit her on the web at

I

. HuNTINGTON, W.Va . .'- where she also
the open to the public. .
Poet Devon McNamara will HonOr-s PrograriJ..
.
For mnre information, con-'
read from her work at 8 p,m.
.Her appearance is sponSave Money. Live Better
·
uicr·
Art
Stringer
in
the
Thursday, Oct. 16 in the sored by the Marshall English
Danny Meadows, Store Manager
Shawkey Room · · of t~e · Departrrtent and the College English Department at (304 )' Imagine a place thai can meet all of your shopping ""'"d.' in just one C""Y and convenient trip. AI W•I-Mart.lhoy .
Memorial Student Center on of Liberal Art$. It is free and 696-2403.
can olfer )·Oujusl t~at. They olfer everything )'OU could e-.·er wt\nt l1r n~d in the ~:om'tnicnce of just one s;ture.
Marshall
University's .
from food ro feed your family and roys ro entenaln them to rhc laresr sryles in clothing. W•I·Marl otTers the
Huntington campus.
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most.affordable prices rhat always beat rhos&lt; of their competilors. They pride them.clves on being your one-stop
shopping tadlily. Wo~Morl has slood behind rcliablo cu:&gt;tomor service and qua lily mer~handi&gt;e for years.
Her . poems, essays and·
Open ,24 hour.~, rhey can meet all ofyour needs at anygivcn time of day or night lf)ou arc shopping lbr appliances
reviews have·appeared in The
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· ·knowledgeable and helpl~l employoes.
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Boston Poetry .and Fiction,
Whcrher you nc.id 10 cesll your che&lt;:k or pick up apn.'SCription. Woi-Mort' makes it affordable •nd convenient.
Trellis, The Christian Science
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Monitor and other publicaMart.1
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l'be autbon ofthil %008 Fall Loul Business Update IUIBUI that you stop by Woi-Mort toctoy ar320 ~fall1rd
Line In Maaon, phone (JIW) 77J-911S and eojoy tht (Onvenielce of onwtop holiday shopping.
fellowship in ·non-fiction
ftom the Ohio Arts Council as
well as one .from the Yaddo
Arts Cimununity in SaratOga
·Barbara Wickline, Owner
Springs, N.Y. .
Flowers are a pert'ecl gil\ for birthdays, a1111iversaries or jusr toler someane know you care. four Se11ons Florl•t
McNamara has taught writis the prefelTed ftorisr that is dedic:aled to providing true ronvenience. selection and value in delivering your ftoral
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gifts perfectly beautiful and in a timeiyfashion.
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n:form facilities in WeiSt
~belher it is for a loved one, a small wedding or a grand affair, lh,ey delight in creating a lruly memorable event
with lhe perfect ftornl seuings. Sunftowers, lilie~ reses. tulips. in~ o~dlids and dallooils are just a few of rheir
V'll"ginia and the midwest.
lovely flowers that make great arnmg&lt;:ments -perfeCt for any OCC8Sl&lt;ln. ~ f o
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Also a dancer and choreogAI Four Seaions .floris~ each flower anangtm~l,is rhoughrtully desrgnod to firrhe occashm hy rhe besl floral .
_r,apher, she has had her poems
designers in the area. They give friendly and, prompt service to every cusrumer w•d are dedicated to making your
l)elformed by dancers from .
e~perlence a pleasant one. They always go tift .eXtra mile to make your ftoh\1 gi.fi perfCcl. Say i111 irh fl ow.:rs 1
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The a•thors ofthls 1008 Fall Local B1slnes1 (Jpdate&amp;Ufttlllhat you rail Four Seasons Florist today tl (JIW)
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675-5033 or vlsitlhem at SIM Main Stretlln Pt. Pteat~nl, WV, ond choose from utenstvr srlrdions w•tch .
Company. She has •served on ·
lletl repment your O(ttolon.
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the West Vii"ginia GQvernor's ·
Task Fore~ .o n • Art~ in
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Established 1953
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five cultural tours of the ·
If vou are look.ing fQr experienced. professional heating and cooling services! where the equipment is top-quality
Republic of Ireland. for stu- .
and the custorner comes first. call Fomuan &amp; Abbo.tt Healing &amp; Coollnil wday. They provide service and
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McNamara teaehes at West
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· V'rrginla Wesleyan College, .
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Keeping Gallia,~
· Meigs &amp; ·
· M~son ·· ,
informed

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• lnst..nt Mesteging ·• keep your buddy liltt

Poet plans reading at Matsbrul

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Boo~s are available through
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through her web site.
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For autographed copies ,
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cast.net, or call (561) 62-f;
9003.
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'Bridges Out of Poverty' seminar slated

,,

Individual heaRh covera&amp;e ldlll for.

GALLIPOLIS - Maggie
thought per life was finally
alitlned with the brighte'st
stars in the sky, but could
sworc!S jumped off the. page. , h,er .newfound happiness
It was as if he'd knocked on last? · my front door, taken my
She wus a promising new
hand, and mvited me to com~ artist with gallery represenoutside and get into a sword- tation in New Orleans. She
fight."
. was reunited with Brad. a
[rt her reseaoch, Nelson dis- man whose love she had
covered the Higgins A!nlory thought was lost to her forMuseum, .one of two, muse- · ever.
urns in.the United States dedEvents soon begin to
icated to · anns and annory, . threaten Maggie's seemingwhere she decided to ·take a ly · utopian existence in
baSic cour:Se in sword fight- unexpected ways. Such is
ing and Mer took more cours- the story found in Maggie's
es. After she finished her Retreat, the latest novel
novel, she joihed the Higgins · from
Marie ·
Bush
Armory Sword .Guild and Pinsehmidt, formerly of
now.gives demonstr.jtions at Gallipolis and now of Palm
the museum in the ,German Beach Gardens , Fla.
.
-longsword .
.
Maggie's Retreat is no(
Thelecrureisfreeandopen just a romance novel; it's a
to the public. For mnre infor- . story about friendships ,
marion,
call
DontUJ courage and maintaining
Thompson at(740) 351-3323 one 's integrity in an unsetor
e·mail tled world . · Regardless of
dthompson@shawnee:edu.
age, it will instill in the
heart of the .reader a nice,
cozy feeling of renewed
hope.

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Trimming and prwting txiautiry and enhance not only thelree. but also rhc grass coverage i&gt;:nca1h dtc 1ree. Thinning
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PageC4

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CELEBRATIONS

~unbap ~imts-itntintl
:.'

Sunday, October 12, 2008

ON THE BOOKSHELF

iunbap limes-ientintl

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PageCs

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

~Dragonslayer's

Sword' author _Ex-Gallia resident publishes new work-:
coming.to Shawnee State •

PORTSMOUTH - Resa · Darren Harris-Fain, professor
Nelson, author of The. and chair cf the Deparl!Tlent
Dragonsll&lt;yer's Sword, based of English and Humanities.
on a iihor;t stoty first published
Her main character in the
in the premiere issue of book is ,a female blacksmith,
Science Fiction Age maga- ~stnd, who makes swords
zine, I'liiWng second in the for dragon slayers and who
f"lllit Readers Top Ten Poll , reluctantly is drawn to danbe at Shawnee State gerous situations herself
University at 7:30 p.m. oti' when one of l~Jeltl , her best
Tuesday. Oct·. 28 in the Flohr friend, disappears .
Lecture Hall at . Clark · [rt order to write about
Memorial Library.
blacksmithing. Nelson took a
Nelson also sells short st(}- course with John Stevens at
ries to magazines and she is . Old Sturbridge Village in
the TV/movie columnist for Massachusetts. • ,
Realms of Fantasy magaZine,
"Even
though
I
a contributorto SCI FI mag- hated weapons, I •made
aziDe, and has sold more than myself read about them,"
200 articles to magazines in Nelson said. "While slogging
the
United States and through a pile of books and ·
the United Kingdom. . . o~n nodding. off, I was
· "Nelson is a. newer writer unexpectedly .captivated by
who has been building a repu- Ewart Oakeshott's
The
tation with her short stories in Arr:haeo/ogy of ~apoll.l'. His
fanta~y magazines." said enthusiasm and love of

will

Chad Lambert

.,.
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Alun1 addresses Rio

· freshman class.

:•

Mr. and Mrs. Cody Hysell

Mr. and Mrs. David Burdell
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RIO GRANDI' · - A~claimed author Chad Lambert
·ltturncd to the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
'
'
~r nmunity Co iiC);C recently ·_to welcome the U2nd i:lass
RACINE - Selena Ma_rie Spencer and Cody ~o5eph
~t studenh to carnplls and give them some advice.
GALLIPOLIS - David Burdell and Shelli Rossiter were
" Lambert spoke dunng the annual Founders' Day ceremo- Hysell were unrted m marrrage on Saturday, Aug. 16~ 2oox united in marriage on June 7, 200X. at the Church of the
which is held in the fa ll of each .year to honor Rio at the First Baptist Church of Racine . Pastor Don Walker Nazarene in Gallipolis. 'Pastors Robert Fulton and Gene
officiated at the double .ring ceremony.
l;irande 's founders . ·
Harmon officiated .
Selena is the daughter of David and Linda Spen~er of
A video was shown before the ceremony of the couple's
;;·Lambert . who is originally from Jackson and today lives
Racine
.
the
granddaughter
of
Elson
and
Dorothy
Spencer
growing up and in t~e prese'nt.
~- Cinci_nnati. earned hi~ bac~helor'~ degree ' in. mass comftlUnr cat rull.s amJ Jlllli'llalrsm trom .RIO Grande 111 1994. He ·of Racine and Aleta Weaver and the late Robert Weaver of · Shelli is the daughter .of Susie Rossiter and Roger
·
Rossiter of Lecta. David is the son of Lawrence and Judy
;.,en! ,·11, to wo r'k ;" a\\ ritcr and producer for the natiomilly New Haven , W.Va .
Cody
is
the
son
of
Randy
and
Genia
Hy
sell
of
Pomeroy,
.
Burdell of Bidwell.
i yndicatcd Gary Burbank Show on WLW-AM radio. and
the
grandson
of
Charlotte
HyseiJ
~nd
the
late
Nathan
Hysell
.
Shelli is a medical specialties secretary at Hol zer Clinic
p1en latl'r bccnmc• ver:.; sun:essful ill c~m1ic book publishPomeroy
and
Andrew
and.
Nellie
Grover
of
Pomeroy.
of
and
a full-time student at Marshall University. David is a
fng .
.
.
The
bride
wore
a
strapless
white
beaded
mermaid
style
graduate
.of the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
. ' Hi s first buok. /'o .I .IW/1 ;\t Large. was based on the chargown
with
a
shoulder
length.
veil.
Her
accessories
included
Coinmunity College and works as &lt;!n Internet speciali st ill
acters and stmy lines he cr:eated while l1e was at Rio Grande
a
tiara,
diamond
necklace
'•nd
a
white,
black
and
gold
JB Net Wireless Services.
~nd working on the student newspaper. Signals.
bracelet
worn
in
remembrance
of
her
grandfather
Robert.
Jan Duncan presented a program of piano_ music . As
; Lam be rt lras now published several award-winning
Her
bouquet
of
white
and
fuchsia
ffowers
was
made
by
the
mothers
were seated, Teresa Hampton sang "Sunrise,
~ook.s ami has also published material in , more than 40
bride.
, Sunset."
tomic book pub I icatiuu, .
were
Lind
see
Davis,
Emily
Babbitt,Chelsea
Bridesmaids
· Shel)i:s dad walked her down the decorated aisle. The
•: During his renwrks at Founders' Day. Lambert explained
and
Amber
Holsinger.
all
friend
s
of
the
bride
.
The
Smith
sanctuary
was decorated with huge ferns. ribbons and can!lULl when he first arrived as a student at Rio Grande. he did
groom's
niece,
Isabelle
Reynolds
of
North
Carolina,
was
dles.
not know what he wa nted to do with hi s life . He knew that
the
!lower
girl.
·
Shelli's dress was white with spaghetti straps . The bodice
,he loved listening to the Gary Burbank Showand the he
.
Groomsmen
were
Brandon
Kimes
,
Weston
Fife
,
Tyler
was.
covered in sequins : The skirt was layers of soft netting
loved rcadinu conlic books. but he had no . idea what he
Wayland
and
Jesse
Price.
friends
of
the
groom
.
Clayton
the. back falling into a chapel train. She \Vore a white
with
:would do for' a c:rrc-c r.
.
Wamsley of Racine. family friend of the bride, was the ring illusion fingertip veil and a gold tiara. Her bouquet was a
:. He took SlllllC c'llllllll!lnications courses at Rio Grande,
bearer.
und found that he really liked the writing and broadcasting ·The music for the wedding was provided by Becky clutch bollquet of pink roses . In her bom.juet sh, carried
two stemmed roses and presented them to the mothers as a
courses. He ·.dove fiii'o the work in his classes. but also Zuspan and . the guests were reg istered by Christina symbol of unity for the families .
.
uddcd c.xtra work by _.hcrng-activc.with the .studcnt newspa- ·Williams.'. The reception followed in the First Baptist
The matron of honor was Bre Lasseter. Bridesmaids were
per and gett ing a joh at WKOV-FM radio in Jackson .
Church's Christian Outreach Center. The couple took a Madonna Cook and Crista Schoolcraft. The ladies wore
: '.'Rio will give yo u a ccrtai·n underdog spirit." Lambert wedding trip to the Outer Banks, N.C.
blue v-necked sleeveless chiffon .dresses. They can·ied
·
Said·.
• ,
.
· .·
The bride is a graduate of Southern High School and clutch bouquets of pink roses. .
: Tlwt spirit sclvctl him well. as he worked hard to get dif- attend s the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
The ffciwer girl was Savannah Morrow. She wore a pink
ferent jt&gt;bs and excel at them. a·nd he was soon able to ·land Community College, where she is pursuing a degree _in dress and dropped rose petals into Shelli 's path.
·
hi s dream job with the Gary Burbank Show.
The best man was Daniel Simmons .-Groomsmen were
early childhood, development to become a kindergarten
"I got paid· money to write poop jokes," Lambert s.aid.
teacher. She is employed at Sally 's Beauty . Supply in Kevin Lamphier and Cliarles Hollanbaugh . Devon McGhee
: The j(rb also in vQivcd a great deal of work , but he learned Gallipolis .
was \he ring bearer. They wore black tuxedos in contrast' to
. ·,
:from it and enJoyed workirig ih a field where he could be
Devon's
grey-and- black striped tuxedo. ~
The groom is a graduate of Meigs High School and is
;creative .
As David and Shelli knelt at the altar, Dr. Keith Sheets
'employed by Local 207 as an asbestos journeyman.
: "The need to create never went away." Lambert said.
'
.
sang the Lord's Prayer.
He decided to en ter the world of comic book writing , and
After greeting,guests and having photos taken, the couple
the tmJcrdog spirit helped hini here again as he . became
headed to the Gallia County Senior Resource Center on
successfu l in this J'i eld as well . Lambert's trip to Rio
Jackson Pike. The reception hall was also decorated in
Grande. in fact. was set up in between stops on ·his latest
GALLIPOLIS - Strange
"What scares one person, pink. Many varieties of food were served on the buffet. The
book tour.
cake was raspberry torte with white cremyieing. Black and
sounds a.n d frightening
. He ned ted Rio Grande pl·ofessors such as Leslie Dotson creatures are filling -the mtly not scare another," he pink ribbon was wrapped around eaclllayer. Mu si.c. was
· added. "Some are afraid of
:.witll helping him so much in college, and said the educa- Ariel -Dater · Hall
in clowns , while others may be played by Mike Davis.
.Shelli · and David went to .Gatlinburg, Tenn .. for their
tion he received at Rio Grande has served him very well .
Gallipolis , as the perform- afraid of snakes , fortunatehonyemoon.
,
"There arc some cxec llenl teachers here : make no mis- ing arts center prepares to ·
ly, we have both , and much ~
The
couple
resides
at
7348
State
Route 7 South .
take:· Lambert said.
·
open its creaky doors fot.thc much more!"
Gallipolis.
·
For the inet&gt;ming students, Lambert also gave some fourth-annual Haunted Ariel
· Variou s area businesses
advice im how to do well in college.
Theatre Halloween allrac- are supporting the Ariel
· : "College is still 1cry much a privilege, and not a right ," tion .
·organization's
efforts
:Lambert said. atfding that the student&gt;; should appreciate
The Haunted Ariel will be through
~
sponsorship,
where they arc ami work hard at school. '
open weekends , beginning including ; Big. ·Country
. Tlw Rio. Grande degree will serve the stl1dents just as Oct. 17.
99.5, 101.5 Bob FM, Sunny
,(,nniversaP"t Safe
weU as a ckgree from any large institution , as employe,rs
Area actors, as well as 93 . I , and Pepsi-Cola. ,
care mo,;t abou t the wo rk that you can do, Lambert Sf!,id . youth and adult volunteers ,
The Hqunted Ariel will
Rio Grande prepares it s student s to do this work and to be will · have the · enjoyabl e
operate
weeke.nds, Friday
:sLrceess ful ~ he added.
··
challenge of ~c aring th.e.
through·
.Sunday.
October
lie iLl so told the students to avoid the often-popular atti- wits · out
of ' brave
OCTOBER f0-f6TH ~
20% off . ~ I
tude 0 f doin g jllst enough to ge t by.
.
·explorers \vho dare to jour- .17- 19 and 24-26, . and
AU Wood FUrniture -Custom
"Have some pride. llq great work ," Lambert said .
ney through many · rooms Thursday through Saturday,
k · -· (Includes
Drap&lt;nes, ~
·
I -n-J&lt;'toc
Laml1crt also told the students to go to sparling events. and hallway ~ designed to Oct. 30-Nov. I.
.
-"" Curtams, Sheers~ Throw"Box
office
will
open
get involvc·d with ~a mp11 s groups and to octively participate return guests to their most
• Dining • Living • Bedroom/.. s\V.ags,.:cut ardage) ~'
·nightly at 7 p.m. Admi ssion
in the wll c ~c expe rience·.
fearful nightmares .
• Coffe~ ~en~ Tables ~"/.~1 AFAY£Ir[ ' ~
EJ!,ecutive and Artistic is· $7 per person . The
. "Thi s i.&gt; '·' reall y great place to be in your life ," Lambert
• Parnted Pieces
". . /
"',;c;,.,. ,.,,.,,. ·'\.."
·
Haunted
Ariel
is
not
recom:said. adding that he hopes the students enjoy their time at Director, Joseph Wright
says, "Our selection of the mended for young children.
.
• Accent Pieces.
//I'"
~
Rio Grande.
more
information
,
For
nightmare
theme
allows
~ .. "If you want an example of how Ri o Grande is going to
151 Second Ave. • 740·446.-0332 •Gatlipolis. OH
wm'k out for you in the cnd .just look at me," Lambert said. many options for inspira- contact the Ariel-Dater Hall
Opea DaUy 9:30 lo S • Fri. 9·6 CIO$ed Sunday
· Dr. Greg So1k&lt;i. tile un ive~s ity presidem, thanked tion , from psychological at (740) 446-ARTS (2787).
:Lambert for hi s remarks and al so discussed the .history of thrills to over-thee-top ter$he 'in, titlllion . lie &gt;&lt;il uted the fo unders of the institution , ror." ··
;Who were also detailed i·n the program so the students could ·
read about them .
~· Dr. ·Herman Koby. presiclcnt of Rio Grande Community
t:;ollc!le . lcd the· Memoria l Prayer, and those in attend;lnce.
·led by the Grande ChMa le. sang the Memorial Hymn , ·
''Faith ot ·our Fathers."
·
.
• Sotka also wc kornecl tlw students to campus during the I'he Srmday._'ltmes·Se'nrinel
. ·~:· .
cercrnony. &lt;llttl to ld th cni that the faculty and staff are here
io hel p the' Il l .
. Subscribe today
·
; "No matter what your goa ls are,· your future is within
44&amp;2342 or 992-215.5 ,.j&lt;
f~ach :r t Rio Gra11dc," Sojka said .

Spencer-Hysellwedding Rossiter-Burdell wedding
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'Haunted Arie1' opens,Oct. 17

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.·Furniture Galleries

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off~\\rl

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Drapery~
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PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

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PORTSMOUTH - The solutions to help redesign said Susan . McComas,
Literacy Council Of Scioto .programs to be.tter serve director of The Literacy
County is offering a. free ·people . in poverty, build CounCil of Scioto C.ounty..
seminar, "Bridges Out of skill sets for managemept to "As the number of those on
Poverty: . Strategies for help guide employees ~ welfare goes Up, literacy
Professionals
and · improve . treatment out- levels go down . 'Bridges
Communities," for profes- comes in health care and out of Poverty' gives us
sionals and organizations behavioral health care. and strategies to assist those we
from 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. on increase the likelihood of serve to transition from welWednesday, Oct. 22 at the. moving from welfare to fm:e to work."
SOMC Friends Center.
work, among other things.
Registration is free and
"Bridges Out of Poverty"
"We need to fmd wan to limited seatingis available.
·
·
is based in part on Pr. Ruby ' decrease the number of Deadline for
K. Payne's, A Framework · those on welfare in Scioto Oct. 10. To reserve a seat,
for Understanding Poverty. c2ounty and increase the lit- call S!iU at (740) 351-3}71
"Bridges" provides specific eracy rate in our county," . or (800) 672-8778.
'

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· S ~f-P.Il1JIIOIM . ·S tllllen~

·EartyRetitees

·leaving a grlllljJ plan ·Dependent C!lvorage
-Enmn&amp; COBRA ·MeUicare Supplement

As Low As

saa41·.
· me.!

.Local ~umoriled Afli)ntnr
Sorilllg Your Collrtrunllr

74o.-586-4282 or~
881J..730-2809
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• to &amp;ofTI8Jl addraatetlllittl Webmall! ,
#.I!DD

( Sutf ;.j, lo 6X

lttsftNJl
~

)uM'3mrn

Sign Up Online I www.Loc.-N«.com

•

Local Business Update .

' Prepared By County News, Inc. ©2008AIIRigbtsReserved
(800) 580-0485 • · www.countynewsinc.com

f;unily fe&lt;:l c:omri&gt;nable. Listening to the needs ond cono:C(tls ofcus10mers is thcinop priori1y. Forrman &amp; Abbott
Heat1n1 &amp; Cooling is the comflllll)' you can lm&gt;1.1o service rhe lop brands and models of home i:oml\1n cquipmenL '
Tbeyrepoir, mainl8in, sell and install reliahlc. r~cogni1£d home comfort pnxlucrs. ~Ulll'3ntccing all work.
..
Twenry-four hour emergency service is 8\'Bilable, l!S well as regulnr contracts.
.
The author• of this 1008 Fill Lacal Business Update suggest that you tall Fortman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp;
Cooling today at (740) 992-!!893 or (800) 39-4.103 for a frte quote! Thtir hours are 8am-4:.!0pm MondayFriday;

Arbors at Gallipolis . ,
Nurs1ng and Rehabilitation Center
. Providing

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Rehabilitation Back To Home!
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Gallla • ~23!42.. • ' .
Meigs • 992.21W . '
Mason • 67!&gt;1933 -

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Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgery, I came to Arl;Jors at
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·. Gallipolis for Rehabilitation. ram ·

so impre~ed. with .the efficiency of t!le staff.
·When I first arrived at Arbors at Gallipolis
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I did not thin!- I would ever walk on rny
own again. Now, thanks to the wonderful

t~rapy and nursing staff." I have returned home.

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170 Pinecrest Drive • .Galllpi)lis, OH 45631
. 740-446-7112' • . ~~~.com

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Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling

Skilled Nursing &amp; Re~bflitation ·Center

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Four Seasons Florist

5tr6ors :at·(ja{Ci_E9.[is .

ft, t~ ~ ;~,; 1 ,~111J•)~~JIIet.-w.:0.8_..att $1.-,:,. !f tn~ mlllt l*l ~ ft $ 1eU ~~ llllr3· 1~~ A~eMttte t r~QIII!~IIl~ t'M~ I~ IIlt
_..,, llf ::~a~~~~rt!; ·tttr.lffttMP!'I, h t~ k11Ut If INJIIIII ~l'NI IllltAII:SIIi!ll~ Jfq ~ tr11l111'15 hli h• liltM!~ A~IIiil l

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
. .·. "
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. ·Wai-Mart Super Center

I NO \J. Ul N I I II// ) I() } 01 R '-t

Anthem.+.V

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• c..~cwr~ skirt Page • """'· weather arTKn!

co-diiects

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•PIU!!~Toch--

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As writer and painter in
oils , having lived in Ohio.
New Orleans and Florida,
Pinschmidt draws on her
own experiences to inform
the characters and settings
of · her novels. Her next ,"·
novel is Spanish Moss,
based in New Orleans .
Visit her on the web at

I

. HuNTINGTON, W.Va . .'- where she also
the open to the public. .
Poet Devon McNamara will HonOr-s PrograriJ..
.
For mnre information, con-'
read from her work at 8 p,m.
.Her appearance is sponSave Money. Live Better
·
uicr·
Art
Stringer
in
the
Thursday, Oct. 16 in the sored by the Marshall English
Danny Meadows, Store Manager
Shawkey Room · · of t~e · Departrrtent and the College English Department at (304 )' Imagine a place thai can meet all of your shopping ""'"d.' in just one C""Y and convenient trip. AI W•I-Mart.lhoy .
Memorial Student Center on of Liberal Art$. It is free and 696-2403.
can olfer )·Oujusl t~at. They olfer everything )'OU could e-.·er wt\nt l1r n~d in the ~:om'tnicnce of just one s;ture.
Marshall
University's .
from food ro feed your family and roys ro entenaln them to rhc laresr sryles in clothing. W•I·Marl otTers the
Huntington campus.
·
most.affordable prices rhat always beat rhos&lt; of their competilors. They pride them.clves on being your one-stop
shopping tadlily. Wo~Morl has slood behind rcliablo cu:&gt;tomor service and qua lily mer~handi&gt;e for years.
Her . poems, essays and·
Open ,24 hour.~, rhey can meet all ofyour needs at anygivcn time of day or night lf)ou arc shopping lbr appliances
reviews have·appeared in The
or fumirurc. Wa~Mart offers you the kind of quality you deserve.
.
.
·
..
Hiram Poetry Review. The
Choosing
Wai'Mart
is
a
smart
clmict,
o1li:ring
you
fully
;1ockcd
sh&lt;lves
from
loots
ro
auto
acccssnries,
along
wrth
Laurel Review, Dar!&lt;: Horse:
· ·knowledgeable and helpl~l employoes.
.
Boston Poetry .and Fiction,
Whcrher you nc.id 10 cesll your che&lt;:k or pick up apn.'SCription. Woi-Mort' makes it affordable •nd convenient.
Trellis, The Christian Science
· Don 't waste precious time driving limn store lo store when )'ou' lllind •-vcrything un your hoiida) lisl at Wo.~
Monitor and other publicaMart.1
.
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·
tions. She is. the reciprent of a
l'be autbon ofthil %008 Fall Loul Business Update IUIBUI that you stop by Woi-Mort toctoy ar320 ~fall1rd
Line In Maaon, phone (JIW) 77J-911S and eojoy tht (Onvenielce of onwtop holiday shopping.
fellowship in ·non-fiction
ftom the Ohio Arts Council as
well as one .from the Yaddo
Arts Cimununity in SaratOga
·Barbara Wickline, Owner
Springs, N.Y. .
Flowers are a pert'ecl gil\ for birthdays, a1111iversaries or jusr toler someane know you care. four Se11ons Florl•t
McNamara has taught writis the prefelTed ftorisr that is dedic:aled to providing true ronvenience. selection and value in delivering your ftoral
ing in sehools, prisons and
gifts perfectly beautiful and in a timeiyfashion.
·
.
n:form facilities in WeiSt
~belher it is for a loved one, a small wedding or a grand affair, lh,ey delight in creating a lruly memorable event
with lhe perfect ftornl seuings. Sunftowers, lilie~ reses. tulips. in~ o~dlids and dallooils are just a few of rheir
V'll"ginia and the midwest.
lovely flowers that make great arnmg&lt;:ments -perfeCt for any OCC8Sl&lt;ln. ~ f o
·
•
Also a dancer and choreogAI Four Seaions .floris~ each flower anangtm~l,is rhoughrtully desrgnod to firrhe occashm hy rhe besl floral .
_r,apher, she has had her poems
designers in the area. They give friendly and, prompt service to every cusrumer w•d are dedicated to making your
l)elformed by dancers from .
e~perlence a pleasant one. They always go tift .eXtra mile to make your ftoh\1 gi.fi perfCcl. Say i111 irh fl ow.:rs 1
'I'he Dayton Ballet · and the · .
The a•thors ofthls 1008 Fall Local B1slnes1 (Jpdate&amp;Ufttlllhat you rail Four Seasons Florist today tl (JIW)
Dayton Contemporary Dance .
675-5033 or vlsitlhem at SIM Main Stretlln Pt. Pteat~nl, WV, ond choose from utenstvr srlrdions w•tch .
Company. She has •served on ·
lletl repment your O(ttolon.
·
·
.
the West Vii"ginia GQvernor's ·
Task Fore~ .o n • Art~ in
. Education and has conducted
·
Established 1953
',
five cultural tours of the ·
If vou are look.ing fQr experienced. professional heating and cooling services! where the equipment is top-quality
Republic of Ireland. for stu- .
and the custorner comes first. call Fomuan &amp; Abbo.tt Healing &amp; Coollnil wday. They provide service and
·dents.
·
· .
insta.llation of cooling, hearing, venrilation ond G\:othdmol units for your home or office.
McNamara teaehes at West
.. Foreo1ao &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling, locared at 391 Norlb l '' Avenue in Middleport. phone (740) 99l-S89J .
· V'rrginla Wesleyan College, .
or (800) 3!9-4.303 undersumds the imp:~rtancc of selecting and designing a syslem which will make you and your

\'iv' -'\!.;&gt;

APPlY !J11li!l now at -~--.llllm

Marie Bush Plnschmldt

Keeping Gallia,~
· Meigs &amp; ·
· M~son ·· ,
informed

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• lnst..nt Mesteging ·• keep your buddy liltt

Poet plans reading at Matsbrul

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.AMANDA ·BRAN•

www.mariepinschmidt.com:
Boo~s are available through
all bookstores, Internet sellers, or from the publisher
through her web site.
··
For autographed copies ,
~- mail MariePin001 @com:
cast.net, or call (561) 62-f;
9003.
•

'Bridges Out of Poverty' seminar slated

,,

Individual heaRh covera&amp;e ldlll for.

GALLIPOLIS - Maggie
thought per life was finally
alitlned with the brighte'st
stars in the sky, but could
sworc!S jumped off the. page. , h,er .newfound happiness
It was as if he'd knocked on last? · my front door, taken my
She wus a promising new
hand, and mvited me to com~ artist with gallery represenoutside and get into a sword- tation in New Orleans. She
fight."
. was reunited with Brad. a
[rt her reseaoch, Nelson dis- man whose love she had
covered the Higgins A!nlory thought was lost to her forMuseum, .one of two, muse- · ever.
urns in.the United States dedEvents soon begin to
icated to · anns and annory, . threaten Maggie's seemingwhere she decided to ·take a ly · utopian existence in
baSic cour:Se in sword fight- unexpected ways. Such is
ing and Mer took more cours- the story found in Maggie's
es. After she finished her Retreat, the latest novel
novel, she joihed the Higgins · from
Marie ·
Bush
Armory Sword .Guild and Pinsehmidt, formerly of
now.gives demonstr.jtions at Gallipolis and now of Palm
the museum in the ,German Beach Gardens , Fla.
.
-longsword .
.
Maggie's Retreat is no(
Thelecrureisfreeandopen just a romance novel; it's a
to the public. For mnre infor- . story about friendships ,
marion,
call
DontUJ courage and maintaining
Thompson at(740) 351-3323 one 's integrity in an unsetor
e·mail tled world . · Regardless of
dthompson@shawnee:edu.
age, it will instill in the
heart of the .reader a nice,
cozy feeling of renewed
hope.

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Tree Care Sp.ecialists
Scott Swain, Owner

•

· Well·slraped and trimmed trees arc a direct reH«rion ofyour neighborhOod rwd you. AI T,... Care Spe&lt;iolists.rhoy
go "out on a limb".hl11Chkve a professional appearance. while ser&gt;·ing pmcrical pull'"' "'·
Trimming and prwting txiautiry and enhance not only thelree. but also rhc grass coverage i&gt;:nca1h dtc 1ree. Thinning
the tree's croWil and oonopy allow muoh needed light to penetrate and revive dead gra." previously sh:tded by thr
thick leaves of overgrown bnioches. Removing dead li111bs also n:duces lhc risk of certain &lt;n icroorgnnisms that ·
uhimalcly prove fatal hla tree.
·
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Trimming allows passage for sidewalks and clearance.trimming can t xlcnd the life l1f )'&lt;rur roof and gu11ering
rranendoosly. They havelh¢ skillarnfequipment required to 1'&lt;1lli&gt;•e a tree thar thn:a101" lhc toum!ntion of your.
property or in~eres wiih power lines. Tree CareSpedalistS rakes special care with tn:es rhat musr b&lt; removed.
insuring the highest degree of saf~ ahd leavi~g a natumlap~nce in the a~nce ?fthe tr;:e. Chtxis&lt; TJ:~• Core
• Speclalisll for your removal servrccs and you II never know It was rhere. They provrde ser. '"" tlmr IS full) 1nsured
with priceHllat won't"saw•· Into your budget.
·
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Tbe authors of this l008 Fall Lo&lt;al Busia"s Update suggtst that you taU Tree Care Speeialisr.at (740) ~
l015for your fret quote today!
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. ·L·&amp; L Scrap Metals Recyding, Inc

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Prutecrrhe environment white iooreasing ytlUr bonk halnnc"! Unwanted steel. rin and junk cars con quickly be
convc'rted.to" cash 111 L &amp; L Sl:up Melli I• Re&lt;y&lt;llng, 1•&lt;.. hJCilled in Gallifllllis, Ohio ai 118 Teu• Road, phone
(740) +lfi-7300. They pay Ulp pric-es based 011 cumnl mlllket for your fem&gt;U ~ and non-ferrQus mcrals. A leadei ·
in rhc industry, they pl'{l\!•.s a tremendous amount of scrup each y&lt;ar. Th&lt;ir high-rech equipment allow; thc'lll
ro. quickly and efficiently handle and pay you tbr your metol. Do )our pufl to in&gt;llr&lt; the future healrh of tile ·
ei!' ironment by reoycling wit~ ~ lr: L Sl:rap Metals Rt&lt;ytiiDB, Inc. They purchase baneric-s, rod in tors. c'&lt;lpper,
' brass and.aluminum BmOJI!i other i~s. Exchanging lilufninum .~uns for c~ is a gfl'!U :'· a ~ to l(ach _your )'OU~, ..
children the value of earning and smog money! Roll off contamers and truilers an: available to bu,ness.:s wttb
a high volume of SC!llp metals. They offer quick pick up and tintdy. professio~al ttucking services taitor£d 1o.
save you time ond money. Recycled producrs are shipp&lt;d dir..:tly ro mills and smelrers tor use in manufacturing.
Llllldfills willevenrually reoch ma•imum capucily. and with no way to dc"&lt;ompu'"' the an1 cles dumped there, they
Will be an extreme hazard 10 the environment. Recycle with~ caring company th81 works hard to prolc'CI the air
vou breathe.
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The ••thqn'ofthlsl008 Fall Lo&lt;al Buoioossl 1pdlle •ret you to cheek' your homund,bu1in.., fonaluable
suap mttaland taktitto L&amp; L Scrap Morals Retyellng.lnr. and RecytHnK&gt;Inc. roday! Help Keep Amerlu
Beautiful! Let's D&lt;l Oar Part!
·
Elite Methlnlnl Contracton...... your •-uthoriz£d TRAN£ dealer, IO&lt;aled in Point Plusant. Wut Vlrainil at
1619 \li Ja&lt;kson An, phone (384) 67S-78U or (800) 150-9077. Comptere sates, service •nd installation.

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Sunday, &lt;ktober 12, 2008

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

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis. OH ~ Point Pleasant. WV

The Sunday Times Sentinel

ERSHIP
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· HONDA ·.
NISSAN

FALLTENT EVENT

TAYLOR HONDA

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·..MMT MOTORS,

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\iilkii~l

CADILLAC CTS '
· CR'I$TAL RED, ·
PfRFQMANCE

()()tlECT/ON. .
U/11/R'I MCKME

CHEW EQUI/101
A~

FriWEI WINIIOir,

PoNTIAc IS's

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91HTOCKI

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CREw CotBALT~s
. . MW BODY SlYtE.

1 tw sroctd

IN ROCK/ ·

9MC CAfrtott's

8 IN sroctd

CHEW SltVEAtAiltO

EtT CA~
CRIIISE, CD

5 SFA,

EtTfl/t1Etl CAB .

CREw MAl/Btls ·

REC. CA4 AI/TO,
2WD, ONSTAR, 1'6

2008

BUICI(

LACROSSE .

. Cl, COMFORT Pf!G.
ONSTAR '

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Sunday, &lt;ktober 12, 2008

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

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: Page D-1- Sunday, &lt;ktober 12. 2oos

Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis. OH ~ Point Pleasant. WV

The Sunday Times Sentinel

ERSHIP
. ·a····----- ..

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I

.
.

· HONDA ·.
NISSAN

FALLTENT EVENT

TAYLOR HONDA

'''·

·..MMT MOTORS,

I

\iilkii~l

CADILLAC CTS '
· CR'I$TAL RED, ·
PfRFQMANCE

()()tlECT/ON. .
U/11/R'I MCKME

CHEW EQUI/101
A~

FriWEI WINIIOir,

PoNTIAc IS's

. PoNTIAC t;6's

91HTOCKI

BIIHTOCd

RllttllDe~

OIISTA/l

CREw CotBALT~s
. . MW BODY SlYtE.

1 tw sroctd

IN ROCK/ ·

9MC CAfrtott's

8 IN sroctd

CHEW SltVEAtAiltO

EtT CA~
CRIIISE, CD

5 SFA,

EtTfl/t1Etl CAB .

CREw MAl/Btls ·

REC. CA4 AI/TO,
2WD, ONSTAR, 1'6

2008

BUICI(

LACROSSE .

. Cl, COMFORT Pf!G.
ONSTAR '

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&amp;unbaplimt~·itntintl DO'WN.
. ON THE ·FARM
Sunday, Ckiobert2,2oo8
EXTENSION CORN,ER
_At Greenhand Camp
· Boxelder bugs prompt
;homeowner complaints
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Bv HAL KNEEN

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-creatin
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uest :room

BY .). W. ELPHINSTONE

cover. · and . when you . head light. Place unscented
ch~ge the sheet,, vacuum · candles around.
.
·'
the top of the mattress a' a
"If yuu have layers of
The holidays are around precaution.
.
light, the room is not too
. the comer and this year
Domino's
CaponigrQ glaring," Sforza of Real
: niight be the time to offer suggests• using an uphol- s·.1mpJe •a
, ys.
.
- houseguesis more than a steretl headboard, which are . . To pamper your guests,
·couch and extmblanket.
comfortable and good ·for put bottled water. packaged
Creating an inviting guest reading and watching tele' snacks or fresh fruit in a
room takes thought. time vision. It Will also go a long basket by the· bed. Offer .
and a little money. but will way in a small room as .a
,
wke the hassle out of travel- ·decorative element that some reading matenal for
ing and leave a lasting good . docsn 't take· up too much your guests too. Classic ..
impression.
·· space.
.
books. up-to-date maga"A cuest ruom bw, to
Another decomting trick zines or newspapers, local
functiol1. It can·t just be she recommends is using a maps or books on your
pretty:.:· says
Kevin canopy bed as a main ele- city's hi story and local
Sharkev, decorJting execu- men!.
.e&gt;ents are good options.
ti've editorial director of
''It's a strong piece &lt;'lf furCaponigro 's top · book
. Martha ·Stewart . Living niture and makes decomt- recommendation:
the
magazine. "TI1e content of ing the rest of the roo.m very Norton Anthology of Short
·a .gOod guest room Is ever- easy," she says: "You don't Fiction.
green. lt .never changes."
·need ·elaborate window
"Most people don'i re'dd
Start with the basics. The treatments, and just simple short stories, so you don't
. bed is the central element in ·beds1'de
•abies
.
" . , and lamps
. ·," . nm the ri.sk . that they've
the room . anu the place
To add wanmth,.include a reaa it already," she says.
__ :w!1ere gue&gt;ts will spend throw blanket arid a soft "And there's something in
·• most of their time.
rug. If there's space, fit in
Nicole . Sforza. senior an upholstered chair for .there for everybody!'
::home editor at R~al Simple lounging and a .small desk
Even if you can't offer a
.. magazine
recommends that can be used .for writing guest-only bathroom, make .
sure to .&gt;upply high-quality'
::investing in a good quality post cards or as a vanity.
" mattres·s. at least a full-sized
Sharkey. of Martha towels. If they're all white ,
one, but says you don't Stewart Living, suggests include one dark towel for
have to spend too much. having windows that open ' makeup removal, Sharkey
:. Room &amp; Board has a good and close so . guest~ can suggests. And if there 's
:: mattress in the $500 range, have fresh air and better· room in the budget, add a
::she say,, Spting for a feath- · control the temperature of bathrobe for extra comfort.
:: er top .for the mattress if you · theroom . Have a screen on
Stock up on fresh bath. have the extra cash.
the windo"! to keep out room amenities too like a
A new trend. even though bugs ·and a heavy enough · new bar .0 f soap, travelit's thought of as "uld-fash, shade or curtain to block siz~d shampoo. conditioner ·
· ioned." is opting for two out light and add privacy . . · ·
:: twt'tl beds inste:'i'd of one
I
h
and lotions, an unopened
.
A ways
ave empty toothbrush, new toothpaste,
::bigger bed, says Dara drawers in a dresser or
•: Caponigro. style director at s pace in the .closet With disposable razors and
: Domino .magazine . The extm hangers so your guest spray-on deodorant. Store
beds can be pushed togeth- docsn't have tfl live out of a them in a decorative basket
er for a couple.or kept apart suitcase. Also con·s ider. in 'the bathroom or guest
·.,o a mother and daughter. keeping a 'tr;lVel .iron and root)l. Other items you
: for example. can also share board in the closet. ·
could include are a lint
.. the room.
Keep the decor soothing brush (especially if you
. Provide a variety of pil- and timeless, Sharkey says. 'own a dog or.cat). a sewing '
::lows in di!Terent weights. do for neutral colors. kit and a shoe shine kit.
::two down pillows and two Simple black and white
Homeowners should also
··!(lam pillows for those who ' landscape photos, for · consider guests' technology
are allergic. Foam pillows example, work well on the needs. Offer an extra iPod
.. also work well for support walls.
dock in the room and a·
AP photo
.. when read in~ iti bed. Buy a
"Leave the real dramatic P,OWer strip to plug in multiIn
this
undated
photo
provided
by
Domino
Magazine,
old-fashioned
is
new
again.
Some
guest
:: clown comfone r (Pacific decorating statements for pie chargers.
::Coast selb u full-sized one your own room. · Guests
To top off the room and rooms have two twin beds. They can be pushed together to make'a larger bed for a visiting cou·
:· for about $ 1.1 0 ) and stock a don't want to wake ·up to personalize it. leave a note.. . pie or kept apart for two pebple.
wool or ]Jolves.ter one in the · lipstick-red walls" he says
'
·
for your guest. Or, put a
:closet as 'an allergy-free with a laugh.
· alternative
Adding a touch of holi- flower by the bed .as
~ Conside.r pressing the day decorations can also Caponigro likes to do.
sheets. or at le~Lit the pillow · put gu~sts in a festive
"A flower really says .
:cases. to give that "crisp . mood.
'I'm happy to have you
:and styl i&gt;h" of nice hotels.
Don't forget about light-. here. Welcome,"' she says.
To keep out dust mites, ing. Provide a night light, a "It's one extra touch that ·
cover the mattress. with an small reading lamp by the makes people feel appreci:
allt: rgen resistant dust bed well as a bright over.- ·ated."
AP BUSINESS WRITER

as

'&lt;~·

'

' '

;&gt;' ~~~

e. ,

. . (.,

.'

Are you being bothered
by hundred s of lightning
bug-like. in sects with red
stripes on their backs congregating along the side of
·your home ?
. My phone keeps ringing ·
wtth complaints from
homeowners . concerning
. · the large numbers of box elder bugs (Boi sea trivittatus) . The adult boxelder
bug . is a dark. browni shblack bug about one-half
inch long and a third -inch
wide with three red stripes
.
.
.
·.
,
Submitted photo
on its back .
·
•••
Qn
Sept.
26-28,
some
of
the
Gallipolis
FFA
Greenhand
members
attended
Greenhand
camp
at
camp
'Muskingham
near
They can fly bui normal "
Do you want . to grbw Carrollton, Ohio. The members that attended wet:e Brooke Turley, Caleb Craft, Dustin Hill, Drew Shong , Kari Crance ,
ly ·move by crawling . This
bug is a nuisance due to its your own pumpkins next Ethan Bostic, Lindsey Craigo, Bill and Cory Angell, Megan Cremeans, Jordan Lear, Cory Rubbins, and Ali Clonch. While
numbers, but is not detri- year? Learn about grow- at camp, these members attended leadArship workshops provided by the State FFA .officers. At these workshops the
mental to most human ing quality pumpkins for members set goals for life and for the FFA. They als.o received training at Jhe shotgun, rifle, and archery r;mges .
activities.. They overwin- the commercial market by Throughout all of the activities the members interacted with over 2()0 other Greenhands from all over the state of Ohio.
ter as adult bugs in cracks attimding Ohio State
ExteP.sion's
and ere vices in and around University
: our homes. Their bodies Pumpkin Twilight Tour on
; can withstand winter in a Oct. 16 . The event will
· state of hibernation and take place from 6 to 8 p.m .
: will not ·eat (pollen and at the OSU South Centers
REYNOLDSBURG , Ohio's economy::
revolving loan fund and assist
For m~n·e inj(Jrmar/un. con; tree sa p) . again until at Piketon (Ohio 32 and Business enterprises in
Private for-profit business- ·with the development 'of Ohio Wet OVRDC at ( 740) 947~
: spring.
· Shyviile
Road). Appalachia Ohio looking to es located in a 21 county area
businesses."
2853 or (800) 223-7491.
. They reprm:luce iii th e Horri culturali st
· Brad expand or develop can take - Adams. Athens. Belmont.
· spring and again in mid Bergefurd will walk with ad van_tage of $100.000 in Columbiana; · Coshocton ,
:·sumhler. They give binb
rural development loans Gallia, Guernsey, .Harrison.
In Memory
. ::to similarly shaped youth atten'dees thrOttgh the offered by the Ohio Hocking, Jackson, Jefferson.
to
gi.
v
e
fields
of
pumpkins
O:that are bright red in color.
Department of Agriculture in Lawrence , Meigs , Monroe,
::Like our lady beetles. the tips on techniques on partnership with the U.S. Morgan, Noble, Perry. Pike,
: adults gather in the fal) to growing pumpkins ,
Department of Agriculture Scioto,
Vinton
and
: mate and start hibernating · New varieties, disease (USDA) Rural Development, Washington - arc eligible to
· around ou~ homes : The management , irrigation Ohio Rural Partners (ORP), apply for a loan up to $40.000
; received
their name, and insect control will be and Ohio Valley Regional or one-half of their project
: Boxelder Bug , hecause give·n in a classroom set- Development Commission cost.
: they spend mo st of their ting upon completion .of (OVRDC).
.
Upon submission, loan
: life . cycle in .and around the tour. Cost is $5·per.perThe Ohio Department of applications are reviewed and
·.female boxelder trees soli. For further informa- Agriculture granted $20,000 submitted for approval to
: (Acer negundo) , a tri•foli - tion contact Julie Strawser to Ohio Rural Partne" from ORP and their loan commit·
1859-Snn., March 16-Mon., March 17,2008
: ate maple tree.
at (740) 289-2071, exten- the Ohio Fann · Loan tee. Once approved, a recomJanuary 28, 1974-Sunday, October 8, 2006
.; Control may be as easy
Revolving Fund. These funds mendation is presented to
siOn
223
or
e-mail
.
:;as chopping down female
· In memory of all who lived there.
leveraged $80,000 from the USDA. Upon approv"l, loan
:Oboxelder trees in the area. strawser.35@osU.edu.
USDA Rural Development closing wi II occur by
•••
We would like to thank everyone who contributed
;:some town s have brdiRural Business Ente!lirise OVRDC and ORP officials
Take some time ·today to Grant Program .
their help white we lived here and when ~e moved .
::nances· prohibiting the
following the comple.ti&lt;Jn of
great
outdoors.
enjoy
the
Thanks to our current landlord and neighbors.
:·:growing of these tree s.
"An exciting part about this ·Jegal binding documents .
.·Adults also feed on ash , Take the family on .a pic- endeavor is the fact that all the
"One
of ·
Rural
And in memory of Matt,
;:maple ; plum, cherry, nic, a ride in the country, a ·partnering agencies have Development's core strengths
'O,Ho\1', Beautiful Heaven Must Be"
::apple. peach, grape ;tnd walk in the woods or just a worked together to . provide is our partnerships with other
: strawberry plants,
.
few minutes in the sun this loan program with no . Ohio economic development
Thanks, Neighbors, for
. Adults and )IOung imma- ·outside the door. Capture administrati1le or overhead organizations," s~id USDA
: tures can be sprayed wi'th the moments of warmth costs," said ODA Deputy State Director Randy Hunt.
32 Wonderful Years!
: a,solution of one half cup and beauty because soqn Director Greg Hargett . "This "The . Rural
Busin~ss
.
Betty and Pearl Cantrell
: household detergent to enough, winter will be . allows the total $ IOO,OOO to Enterprise Grant we've pro• one gallon of water. Th1s
Jim and Mary Nemeth and children.
be available to help business- vided to Ohio Rural Partners
: ~ olution sprayed onto the here. Have a great day!
Mighty Power is on Our Side!"
"God's
Hal Kneen is the Meigs es create jobs and still)ulate will help capitalize their'
; bugs plugs up the breath·
. : ing holes (spiracles) found County Educator for
Natural
on their bodies. Carbaryl Agriculture,
· . and permethrin sprays Resources, Community
. ·may also be applied with Development, Ohio State
.some residual value to kill . University Extension.)
·GALUPOUS- UniJed ,
Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis for
Well-Muscled/Fleshed; '
sales
conducted
on $42-$52.
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2008.
Medium/Lean, $35-$42.
Thin/Light, $10-$35,
Bulls, $55-$67.50.
Public Auction

ODA partners to provide loans to rural enterprises

Tlie John M. Cherrington House ·

l

"'

LivESTOCK REPORT
Cows-Lower

Ohio ·Farm Bureau sets
:·new
membership
record
.

. ·&gt;.. :;.

I '

. 'c.....

Farm:

'

AP photo

: In this undated photo provided by Domino Magazine. a throw blanket and a soft rug
·can m11ke a small room·warm and comfortable. If there's space,. fit an upholstered
: chair for lounging.
.
. .
,

,

AP photo

In this undated photo provided by .Domino Magazine, .a small desk can offer guests more space
to work with and can double as a vanity. . ·
.
.
.

•

•

Back To The

COLUMBUS
The involved in the member: Ohio
Farm
Bureau . ship campaign in every
275·•H5 lbs., Steers, $70: Federation (OFBF) has county of Ohio, and he
$1{)9, Heifers, $65-$97.50;
: announced its 41.st consec- thanked Farm Bure.au
425-525 lbs., Steers, $70: utive year of membership partners N ationwi4e and . $104, Heifers, $60-$90; · Cow/Calf Pairs, $400. $760; Bred Cows, $350· growth , reaching .a record Medical Mutual of Ohio
550-625 lbs., Steers, $70; $625; Baby Calves. $22.50- .
: 234,061 members.
· for their contribulions to a
$95, HeiferS, $60-$85; 650- $220; Goats, $15-$92.50:
: "We're tremendously . successful recruiting year.
725 lbs., Steers. $70-$85, Lambs, $62-$75; .Hogs.
: excited that our 90-year- Fisher also cited the
Heifers, $60-$80: 750-850 $41.
&lt;
. • •
. o)d organization continues efforts of Farm Bureau
lbs ., Steers, $65-$80,
: to . grow," said OFBF staff members.
Heifers, $55-$75.
' ..
: Executive Vice President ' · "It takes teamwork to
:John C. (Jack) Fisher. keep Farm Bureau grow~
l·
· ''I'm especially pleased ing ," Fisher said, adding
(Second Wednesday of ·
1
:.that our active farmer that the campaign was "a
the month)
. Ohio approved feeder
· :·numbers have increased." lot of work. but importimt
sale,
Wednesday, Oct. )5,
'·
· :: Ohio Farm Bureau is the work ,,· Our sustained
\
Choice - Steers, $82- to a.m.
::state 's largest and ·most growth keeps us relevant
$90; Heifers, $80-$87.
F'or more information,
·:influential farm organiza- to policy-makers and the
Select - Steers, $72-$80; call De Wayne at (740) 339::tion, and is governed by public ."
Heifers, $72-$77.
0241 or Stacy a~ (304) 634Farm Bureau member:•actual farmers while repHolsteins - Steers, $60" 0224 . Visit the website at
.::resentin(l tile interests of ship is ·open to anyone
$70. .
~~nvw.upmducers .com.
·'its entne · membership . interested m ht:lpi'llg meet
: Ohio Farm Bureau focuses its vision of a partnership ·
.:on public policy and IJU~ .between farmers and con- rr:;;;;;=,~;;;~~;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;=;;;;;;i]
: lie relations,. and provtdes sumers. ·OFBF provides
," a comprehensive set of the opportunity for con::personal and .business ben- sumers to experience and
understand the people and
: efits to its members.
places
that . make . up
, OFBF men1b'ership .grew
· in 83. of Ohio's 88 coun- Ohio's agricultural com.
: ties, while farmer gain munity. ',
For more informatioll qn
: was reached in 81 counmembership in O!Jio Farm
: ties.
. visit
' Fisher prai sed the hard Bureau,
:. work of Farm Bureau vol- www.GrowWithFB .org or
: unteers
who
were call (888) GrqwWithFB .

!.Enters sheep ir/1competition,
·
.

.

Feeder CattleLower

Fed Cattle

••

•

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later bug arrivals .
Diatomaceous · ea rth
(shells of diatoms) or sil ica gels can be dusted intt
cracks and
crevices.
.Commercial pe,st q&gt;ntrol
operators may also be
hi ~ed tu spray. In side the
house use a vacuum clean- .
er to suck them up or . an
indoors aerosol pesticide.
'Filfiher information may
be obtai ned by accessing
the fac't sheet 2106 ,
Boxelder Bug , from our
w e b s i '. t e
www.ohioline.osu .edu .

•

EWINGTON - Kaitlyn
: Roberts of Ewington has
:entered three head of sheep
: ~n the Junior Market Wetqer
·t.amb division of the 35th
::annual North American
:,nternational , Livestock
' ·Exposition (NAILE).
· · · The NAILE is recognized

.

.

as the world's largest purebred livestock show with
more than 22,000 entries .
and nearly . $70o ;ooo in
prizes and·awards.
Scheduled for Nov. 8-21,
the..event takes place at the
Kentucky '
Exposition
Center at Louisvi lle . ·

Upcoming
specials: .

Saturday, October 18,2008 I O:OOAM
Located at 708 Second A venue . Gallipolis.Qhio. Th~ follm,&gt;i'ng will he
sold:

Collc"c"top llems- Bottles: Wooden pop crates. th c-rmo m~.· ters. com ic
books , 'stoneware , ta bles. ~ i' dc ,stu.l~le. Tobacco memorabilia .

ch andeliers , Milk ca n.

F~nton

glass. rut'

g las~. wqm.lc~t

telephone ,

McGuffy readers . oth~r books. sen:·in g tray. Barbit' dq iL gret&gt;n j t!r,
rudio ~, cust iron skilleb, drhw k nih:, v i'ol in . &lt;:nolo. book , 1ine.n::.. l'am~:ruS,

smokers stand , chenill e bed sprend. crochet work. c herry drop leaf t&lt;lble
base, one lot of Antiq·ue hand mob. Telephone sttLnJ . wimlow. frame:,.
cigar boxes. picni c set. and co ll ecto r ~ pl at~~ from the B radfun~
Exchange.
Household-· MicroWave toqster. sheet seh . et~d and cn!Tee. rahl~~. tahle
iamps,·writing desk iJild cho.1iL Tupper ware. upri,glll :-.weepe ~. wardrobe.
l3mps 1 k itc'l~e n uten.;;ils, pun ch b(l wl ·set. gun cabinet wilh ammo
cab inet , Gibson refrigerator. small J eep frct:z.c. window ac. kern~ene
h~aters. oysler kilcheu center. ami baskets.

Garase items- Wood lathC. benc h.~rimlcr~. ~e\'' t:ral met~l l stnr~t~e chesL
sharpen ing sloneo;;, chain hinde rs. L'al-p~nt e r be lt . tap :m J dye set. roll \ilg
tool chest, Cralhman.leaf blower. Craftsm~m weeJ eat.:-r. roll~' of win;.
'
One extremely largc amount ~f hand toll Is so me neY; in pad.

.-,g". many

drilhr (EleCtric and Cmdl!!s~l. bo;-;..::~ of g&lt;~rde-n suppli es. 1 .. rorage
·buildings full of boxc~ of tool s. bolts . nuts. electrical supplies. batt e rie ~.
caulkin g compound. wrench("S. saws . scrt'"idrivcrs. many of the:-.c item~
are new.
~ .-.Yamaha

4.0 HP motor. 50 p l u~ Rod~ and reel s. fishin,g lures.
weigh.ts. flashlights. roolers. folding t&lt;lhles. :o~ t;m din g outd9or deep
fryer.
·
Walker. ab cru.ncher. exercise ·bi ke. Ele('lrk ~cooter (for handkap) ~,./
battery.

· This will be an all day &lt;Juction with t\"0 sale rings.
We are appreci ative for the mink family sck~ctin g u:-. tl) do their auction .

Auction by request of
Dan Mink and Cinda Mink· Tackett
Co Executors of the Jack and Eileen Mink Estate

Johnson-AUCTIONE
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

t(ot Respomihle Fqr Accidron Qr _fttm~· qfPcgperry•

•

�-.
.

&amp;unba~

•

.·.

&amp;unbaplimt~·itntintl DO'WN.
. ON THE ·FARM
Sunday, Ckiobert2,2oo8
EXTENSION CORN,ER
_At Greenhand Camp
· Boxelder bugs prompt
;homeowner complaints
PageD3

D2

Ott me~ -&amp;tnttntl.
·.

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•
•

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· Sunday, October 12t 20o8

.'.

·..-- -======:=c::============

Bv HAL KNEEN

•

-creatin
•
•

uest :room

BY .). W. ELPHINSTONE

cover. · and . when you . head light. Place unscented
ch~ge the sheet,, vacuum · candles around.
.
·'
the top of the mattress a' a
"If yuu have layers of
The holidays are around precaution.
.
light, the room is not too
. the comer and this year
Domino's
CaponigrQ glaring," Sforza of Real
: niight be the time to offer suggests• using an uphol- s·.1mpJe •a
, ys.
.
- houseguesis more than a steretl headboard, which are . . To pamper your guests,
·couch and extmblanket.
comfortable and good ·for put bottled water. packaged
Creating an inviting guest reading and watching tele' snacks or fresh fruit in a
room takes thought. time vision. It Will also go a long basket by the· bed. Offer .
and a little money. but will way in a small room as .a
,
wke the hassle out of travel- ·decorative element that some reading matenal for
ing and leave a lasting good . docsn 't take· up too much your guests too. Classic ..
impression.
·· space.
.
books. up-to-date maga"A cuest ruom bw, to
Another decomting trick zines or newspapers, local
functiol1. It can·t just be she recommends is using a maps or books on your
pretty:.:· says
Kevin canopy bed as a main ele- city's hi story and local
Sharkev, decorJting execu- men!.
.e&gt;ents are good options.
ti've editorial director of
''It's a strong piece &lt;'lf furCaponigro 's top · book
. Martha ·Stewart . Living niture and makes decomt- recommendation:
the
magazine. "TI1e content of ing the rest of the roo.m very Norton Anthology of Short
·a .gOod guest room Is ever- easy," she says: "You don't Fiction.
green. lt .never changes."
·need ·elaborate window
"Most people don'i re'dd
Start with the basics. The treatments, and just simple short stories, so you don't
. bed is the central element in ·beds1'de
•abies
.
" . , and lamps
. ·," . nm the ri.sk . that they've
the room . anu the place
To add wanmth,.include a reaa it already," she says.
__ :w!1ere gue&gt;ts will spend throw blanket arid a soft "And there's something in
·• most of their time.
rug. If there's space, fit in
Nicole . Sforza. senior an upholstered chair for .there for everybody!'
::home editor at R~al Simple lounging and a .small desk
Even if you can't offer a
.. magazine
recommends that can be used .for writing guest-only bathroom, make .
sure to .&gt;upply high-quality'
::investing in a good quality post cards or as a vanity.
" mattres·s. at least a full-sized
Sharkey. of Martha towels. If they're all white ,
one, but says you don't Stewart Living, suggests include one dark towel for
have to spend too much. having windows that open ' makeup removal, Sharkey
:. Room &amp; Board has a good and close so . guest~ can suggests. And if there 's
:: mattress in the $500 range, have fresh air and better· room in the budget, add a
::she say,, Spting for a feath- · control the temperature of bathrobe for extra comfort.
:: er top .for the mattress if you · theroom . Have a screen on
Stock up on fresh bath. have the extra cash.
the windo"! to keep out room amenities too like a
A new trend. even though bugs ·and a heavy enough · new bar .0 f soap, travelit's thought of as "uld-fash, shade or curtain to block siz~d shampoo. conditioner ·
· ioned." is opting for two out light and add privacy . . · ·
:: twt'tl beds inste:'i'd of one
I
h
and lotions, an unopened
.
A ways
ave empty toothbrush, new toothpaste,
::bigger bed, says Dara drawers in a dresser or
•: Caponigro. style director at s pace in the .closet With disposable razors and
: Domino .magazine . The extm hangers so your guest spray-on deodorant. Store
beds can be pushed togeth- docsn't have tfl live out of a them in a decorative basket
er for a couple.or kept apart suitcase. Also con·s ider. in 'the bathroom or guest
·.,o a mother and daughter. keeping a 'tr;lVel .iron and root)l. Other items you
: for example. can also share board in the closet. ·
could include are a lint
.. the room.
Keep the decor soothing brush (especially if you
. Provide a variety of pil- and timeless, Sharkey says. 'own a dog or.cat). a sewing '
::lows in di!Terent weights. do for neutral colors. kit and a shoe shine kit.
::two down pillows and two Simple black and white
Homeowners should also
··!(lam pillows for those who ' landscape photos, for · consider guests' technology
are allergic. Foam pillows example, work well on the needs. Offer an extra iPod
.. also work well for support walls.
dock in the room and a·
AP photo
.. when read in~ iti bed. Buy a
"Leave the real dramatic P,OWer strip to plug in multiIn
this
undated
photo
provided
by
Domino
Magazine,
old-fashioned
is
new
again.
Some
guest
:: clown comfone r (Pacific decorating statements for pie chargers.
::Coast selb u full-sized one your own room. · Guests
To top off the room and rooms have two twin beds. They can be pushed together to make'a larger bed for a visiting cou·
:· for about $ 1.1 0 ) and stock a don't want to wake ·up to personalize it. leave a note.. . pie or kept apart for two pebple.
wool or ]Jolves.ter one in the · lipstick-red walls" he says
'
·
for your guest. Or, put a
:closet as 'an allergy-free with a laugh.
· alternative
Adding a touch of holi- flower by the bed .as
~ Conside.r pressing the day decorations can also Caponigro likes to do.
sheets. or at le~Lit the pillow · put gu~sts in a festive
"A flower really says .
:cases. to give that "crisp . mood.
'I'm happy to have you
:and styl i&gt;h" of nice hotels.
Don't forget about light-. here. Welcome,"' she says.
To keep out dust mites, ing. Provide a night light, a "It's one extra touch that ·
cover the mattress. with an small reading lamp by the makes people feel appreci:
allt: rgen resistant dust bed well as a bright over.- ·ated."
AP BUSINESS WRITER

as

'&lt;~·

'

' '

;&gt;' ~~~

e. ,

. . (.,

.'

Are you being bothered
by hundred s of lightning
bug-like. in sects with red
stripes on their backs congregating along the side of
·your home ?
. My phone keeps ringing ·
wtth complaints from
homeowners . concerning
. · the large numbers of box elder bugs (Boi sea trivittatus) . The adult boxelder
bug . is a dark. browni shblack bug about one-half
inch long and a third -inch
wide with three red stripes
.
.
.
·.
,
Submitted photo
on its back .
·
•••
Qn
Sept.
26-28,
some
of
the
Gallipolis
FFA
Greenhand
members
attended
Greenhand
camp
at
camp
'Muskingham
near
They can fly bui normal "
Do you want . to grbw Carrollton, Ohio. The members that attended wet:e Brooke Turley, Caleb Craft, Dustin Hill, Drew Shong , Kari Crance ,
ly ·move by crawling . This
bug is a nuisance due to its your own pumpkins next Ethan Bostic, Lindsey Craigo, Bill and Cory Angell, Megan Cremeans, Jordan Lear, Cory Rubbins, and Ali Clonch. While
numbers, but is not detri- year? Learn about grow- at camp, these members attended leadArship workshops provided by the State FFA .officers. At these workshops the
mental to most human ing quality pumpkins for members set goals for life and for the FFA. They als.o received training at Jhe shotgun, rifle, and archery r;mges .
activities.. They overwin- the commercial market by Throughout all of the activities the members interacted with over 2()0 other Greenhands from all over the state of Ohio.
ter as adult bugs in cracks attimding Ohio State
ExteP.sion's
and ere vices in and around University
: our homes. Their bodies Pumpkin Twilight Tour on
; can withstand winter in a Oct. 16 . The event will
· state of hibernation and take place from 6 to 8 p.m .
: will not ·eat (pollen and at the OSU South Centers
REYNOLDSBURG , Ohio's economy::
revolving loan fund and assist
For m~n·e inj(Jrmar/un. con; tree sa p) . again until at Piketon (Ohio 32 and Business enterprises in
Private for-profit business- ·with the development 'of Ohio Wet OVRDC at ( 740) 947~
: spring.
· Shyviile
Road). Appalachia Ohio looking to es located in a 21 county area
businesses."
2853 or (800) 223-7491.
. They reprm:luce iii th e Horri culturali st
· Brad expand or develop can take - Adams. Athens. Belmont.
· spring and again in mid Bergefurd will walk with ad van_tage of $100.000 in Columbiana; · Coshocton ,
:·sumhler. They give binb
rural development loans Gallia, Guernsey, .Harrison.
In Memory
. ::to similarly shaped youth atten'dees thrOttgh the offered by the Ohio Hocking, Jackson, Jefferson.
to
gi.
v
e
fields
of
pumpkins
O:that are bright red in color.
Department of Agriculture in Lawrence , Meigs , Monroe,
::Like our lady beetles. the tips on techniques on partnership with the U.S. Morgan, Noble, Perry. Pike,
: adults gather in the fal) to growing pumpkins ,
Department of Agriculture Scioto,
Vinton
and
: mate and start hibernating · New varieties, disease (USDA) Rural Development, Washington - arc eligible to
· around ou~ homes : The management , irrigation Ohio Rural Partners (ORP), apply for a loan up to $40.000
; received
their name, and insect control will be and Ohio Valley Regional or one-half of their project
: Boxelder Bug , hecause give·n in a classroom set- Development Commission cost.
: they spend mo st of their ting upon completion .of (OVRDC).
.
Upon submission, loan
: life . cycle in .and around the tour. Cost is $5·per.perThe Ohio Department of applications are reviewed and
·.female boxelder trees soli. For further informa- Agriculture granted $20,000 submitted for approval to
: (Acer negundo) , a tri•foli - tion contact Julie Strawser to Ohio Rural Partne" from ORP and their loan commit·
1859-Snn., March 16-Mon., March 17,2008
: ate maple tree.
at (740) 289-2071, exten- the Ohio Fann · Loan tee. Once approved, a recomJanuary 28, 1974-Sunday, October 8, 2006
.; Control may be as easy
Revolving Fund. These funds mendation is presented to
siOn
223
or
e-mail
.
:;as chopping down female
· In memory of all who lived there.
leveraged $80,000 from the USDA. Upon approv"l, loan
:Oboxelder trees in the area. strawser.35@osU.edu.
USDA Rural Development closing wi II occur by
•••
We would like to thank everyone who contributed
;:some town s have brdiRural Business Ente!lirise OVRDC and ORP officials
Take some time ·today to Grant Program .
their help white we lived here and when ~e moved .
::nances· prohibiting the
following the comple.ti&lt;Jn of
great
outdoors.
enjoy
the
Thanks to our current landlord and neighbors.
:·:growing of these tree s.
"An exciting part about this ·Jegal binding documents .
.·Adults also feed on ash , Take the family on .a pic- endeavor is the fact that all the
"One
of ·
Rural
And in memory of Matt,
;:maple ; plum, cherry, nic, a ride in the country, a ·partnering agencies have Development's core strengths
'O,Ho\1', Beautiful Heaven Must Be"
::apple. peach, grape ;tnd walk in the woods or just a worked together to . provide is our partnerships with other
: strawberry plants,
.
few minutes in the sun this loan program with no . Ohio economic development
Thanks, Neighbors, for
. Adults and )IOung imma- ·outside the door. Capture administrati1le or overhead organizations," s~id USDA
: tures can be sprayed wi'th the moments of warmth costs," said ODA Deputy State Director Randy Hunt.
32 Wonderful Years!
: a,solution of one half cup and beauty because soqn Director Greg Hargett . "This "The . Rural
Busin~ss
.
Betty and Pearl Cantrell
: household detergent to enough, winter will be . allows the total $ IOO,OOO to Enterprise Grant we've pro• one gallon of water. Th1s
Jim and Mary Nemeth and children.
be available to help business- vided to Ohio Rural Partners
: ~ olution sprayed onto the here. Have a great day!
Mighty Power is on Our Side!"
"God's
Hal Kneen is the Meigs es create jobs and still)ulate will help capitalize their'
; bugs plugs up the breath·
. : ing holes (spiracles) found County Educator for
Natural
on their bodies. Carbaryl Agriculture,
· . and permethrin sprays Resources, Community
. ·may also be applied with Development, Ohio State
.some residual value to kill . University Extension.)
·GALUPOUS- UniJed ,
Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis for
Well-Muscled/Fleshed; '
sales
conducted
on $42-$52.
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2008.
Medium/Lean, $35-$42.
Thin/Light, $10-$35,
Bulls, $55-$67.50.
Public Auction

ODA partners to provide loans to rural enterprises

Tlie John M. Cherrington House ·

l

"'

LivESTOCK REPORT
Cows-Lower

Ohio ·Farm Bureau sets
:·new
membership
record
.

. ·&gt;.. :;.

I '

. 'c.....

Farm:

'

AP photo

: In this undated photo provided by Domino Magazine. a throw blanket and a soft rug
·can m11ke a small room·warm and comfortable. If there's space,. fit an upholstered
: chair for lounging.
.
. .
,

,

AP photo

In this undated photo provided by .Domino Magazine, .a small desk can offer guests more space
to work with and can double as a vanity. . ·
.
.
.

•

•

Back To The

COLUMBUS
The involved in the member: Ohio
Farm
Bureau . ship campaign in every
275·•H5 lbs., Steers, $70: Federation (OFBF) has county of Ohio, and he
$1{)9, Heifers, $65-$97.50;
: announced its 41.st consec- thanked Farm Bure.au
425-525 lbs., Steers, $70: utive year of membership partners N ationwi4e and . $104, Heifers, $60-$90; · Cow/Calf Pairs, $400. $760; Bred Cows, $350· growth , reaching .a record Medical Mutual of Ohio
550-625 lbs., Steers, $70; $625; Baby Calves. $22.50- .
: 234,061 members.
· for their contribulions to a
$95, HeiferS, $60-$85; 650- $220; Goats, $15-$92.50:
: "We're tremendously . successful recruiting year.
725 lbs., Steers. $70-$85, Lambs, $62-$75; .Hogs.
: excited that our 90-year- Fisher also cited the
Heifers, $60-$80: 750-850 $41.
&lt;
. • •
. o)d organization continues efforts of Farm Bureau
lbs ., Steers, $65-$80,
: to . grow," said OFBF staff members.
Heifers, $55-$75.
' ..
: Executive Vice President ' · "It takes teamwork to
:John C. (Jack) Fisher. keep Farm Bureau grow~
l·
· ''I'm especially pleased ing ," Fisher said, adding
(Second Wednesday of ·
1
:.that our active farmer that the campaign was "a
the month)
. Ohio approved feeder
· :·numbers have increased." lot of work. but importimt
sale,
Wednesday, Oct. )5,
'·
· :: Ohio Farm Bureau is the work ,,· Our sustained
\
Choice - Steers, $82- to a.m.
::state 's largest and ·most growth keeps us relevant
$90; Heifers, $80-$87.
F'or more information,
·:influential farm organiza- to policy-makers and the
Select - Steers, $72-$80; call De Wayne at (740) 339::tion, and is governed by public ."
Heifers, $72-$77.
0241 or Stacy a~ (304) 634Farm Bureau member:•actual farmers while repHolsteins - Steers, $60" 0224 . Visit the website at
.::resentin(l tile interests of ship is ·open to anyone
$70. .
~~nvw.upmducers .com.
·'its entne · membership . interested m ht:lpi'llg meet
: Ohio Farm Bureau focuses its vision of a partnership ·
.:on public policy and IJU~ .between farmers and con- rr:;;;;;=,~;;;~~;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;=;;;;;;i]
: lie relations,. and provtdes sumers. ·OFBF provides
," a comprehensive set of the opportunity for con::personal and .business ben- sumers to experience and
understand the people and
: efits to its members.
places
that . make . up
, OFBF men1b'ership .grew
· in 83. of Ohio's 88 coun- Ohio's agricultural com.
: ties, while farmer gain munity. ',
For more informatioll qn
: was reached in 81 counmembership in O!Jio Farm
: ties.
. visit
' Fisher prai sed the hard Bureau,
:. work of Farm Bureau vol- www.GrowWithFB .org or
: unteers
who
were call (888) GrqwWithFB .

!.Enters sheep ir/1competition,
·
.

.

Feeder CattleLower

Fed Cattle

••

•

.'

later bug arrivals .
Diatomaceous · ea rth
(shells of diatoms) or sil ica gels can be dusted intt
cracks and
crevices.
.Commercial pe,st q&gt;ntrol
operators may also be
hi ~ed tu spray. In side the
house use a vacuum clean- .
er to suck them up or . an
indoors aerosol pesticide.
'Filfiher information may
be obtai ned by accessing
the fac't sheet 2106 ,
Boxelder Bug , from our
w e b s i '. t e
www.ohioline.osu .edu .

•

EWINGTON - Kaitlyn
: Roberts of Ewington has
:entered three head of sheep
: ~n the Junior Market Wetqer
·t.amb division of the 35th
::annual North American
:,nternational , Livestock
' ·Exposition (NAILE).
· · · The NAILE is recognized

.

.

as the world's largest purebred livestock show with
more than 22,000 entries .
and nearly . $70o ;ooo in
prizes and·awards.
Scheduled for Nov. 8-21,
the..event takes place at the
Kentucky '
Exposition
Center at Louisvi lle . ·

Upcoming
specials: .

Saturday, October 18,2008 I O:OOAM
Located at 708 Second A venue . Gallipolis.Qhio. Th~ follm,&gt;i'ng will he
sold:

Collc"c"top llems- Bottles: Wooden pop crates. th c-rmo m~.· ters. com ic
books , 'stoneware , ta bles. ~ i' dc ,stu.l~le. Tobacco memorabilia .

ch andeliers , Milk ca n.

F~nton

glass. rut'

g las~. wqm.lc~t

telephone ,

McGuffy readers . oth~r books. sen:·in g tray. Barbit' dq iL gret&gt;n j t!r,
rudio ~, cust iron skilleb, drhw k nih:, v i'ol in . &lt;:nolo. book , 1ine.n::.. l'am~:ruS,

smokers stand , chenill e bed sprend. crochet work. c herry drop leaf t&lt;lble
base, one lot of Antiq·ue hand mob. Telephone sttLnJ . wimlow. frame:,.
cigar boxes. picni c set. and co ll ecto r ~ pl at~~ from the B radfun~
Exchange.
Household-· MicroWave toqster. sheet seh . et~d and cn!Tee. rahl~~. tahle
iamps,·writing desk iJild cho.1iL Tupper ware. upri,glll :-.weepe ~. wardrobe.
l3mps 1 k itc'l~e n uten.;;ils, pun ch b(l wl ·set. gun cabinet wilh ammo
cab inet , Gibson refrigerator. small J eep frct:z.c. window ac. kern~ene
h~aters. oysler kilcheu center. ami baskets.

Garase items- Wood lathC. benc h.~rimlcr~. ~e\'' t:ral met~l l stnr~t~e chesL
sharpen ing sloneo;;, chain hinde rs. L'al-p~nt e r be lt . tap :m J dye set. roll \ilg
tool chest, Cralhman.leaf blower. Craftsm~m weeJ eat.:-r. roll~' of win;.
'
One extremely largc amount ~f hand toll Is so me neY; in pad.

.-,g". many

drilhr (EleCtric and Cmdl!!s~l. bo;-;..::~ of g&lt;~rde-n suppli es. 1 .. rorage
·buildings full of boxc~ of tool s. bolts . nuts. electrical supplies. batt e rie ~.
caulkin g compound. wrench("S. saws . scrt'"idrivcrs. many of the:-.c item~
are new.
~ .-.Yamaha

4.0 HP motor. 50 p l u~ Rod~ and reel s. fishin,g lures.
weigh.ts. flashlights. roolers. folding t&lt;lhles. :o~ t;m din g outd9or deep
fryer.
·
Walker. ab cru.ncher. exercise ·bi ke. Ele('lrk ~cooter (for handkap) ~,./
battery.

· This will be an all day &lt;Juction with t\"0 sale rings.
We are appreci ative for the mink family sck~ctin g u:-. tl) do their auction .

Auction by request of
Dan Mink and Cinda Mink· Tackett
Co Executors of the Jack and Eileen Mink Estate

Johnson-AUCTIONE
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

t(ot Respomihle Fqr Accidron Qr _fttm~· qfPcgperry•

•

�P~tge 04 • 6unbap G:tllld -6ttitintl

Sunday, October 12, 2008

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

.Sunda~October12, 2008

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

'

CLASSIFIED

Meigs

',

C&lt;?unty, OH

. "fa •r*l

Help Wonlld •Goneral

TOWilhouseo
=~~~§:"~~-

2BR house lOcated 111
1BA Apt, WID hoolwps, town,
GallipOlis;
OH.
TV Incl. wlrent, S500/mo plus utilities, No
dose to hospal. Gall Pets. 740-441-Q110 Of

Gallla

740-J39.0362
1BR cloto 10

E - mail
c fasslf•e d @ my«;Jrt• lvtrib ur 1e .com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

'm:rlbune

.To Place

You• Ad,

www.mydailytrlbune.com
www.mydailys entinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

Regi!Ster

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 ' (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
675-5234·
992-2157
Or Fax To
Oead'~;,e&lt;f'

OffYoe #oW""'&lt;f'
Monday t:hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

2 00

Anno uncements

Mond•y - Prldey ror :rn • •rtton
an N••~ o•v•• pap•r
• u n d • y J:n- Colun•n : 0 : 00 a . n. .
,.rld•y .,..,r Sund•y• P...,p•r

Bu•ln••• o • v • Prior To
Pu-tlc•tlon
Sund•y Dl•pt•y : :t : OO ~.-~;.;_,
Thur•d•y •or •und•v•

Farm Equlpmenl

au

--===--==•

•POLICIES•

»Box number ad.s a
lways confidential.
&gt;Current
pplles

r t~te

car

Real
Estat
dvertisements
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
1968.
~All

~ Th!S

newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetin
EOE standards.

will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertisement
!alation of the law.

~We

Shop the

Classifieds!
~

~~~-P:;eh~":"~;;;;; ~,;,::,:~~,=~
~

AK C Min. Dachshunds 7
wk old. 1 Dapple long
ha1r male 1 short hair
mate. 740 -446-275 1 or -;;:Of"'a:'rm:""Eq;;iu~lpiom;;;:o•n-:t:-"
740-645-2340.
:":'
'584 International farm
Lab puppies for sale tractor with loader, can$ 100
each opy, new rear t1res. and
740-645-4941
2600 hours.
Ask1ng
$1 0500.00. Also selling
CKC Registered Bichon
Frise pupp1es 8 wks old. a 2001 Econoline 12 ton
flal·bed tra~er wifh elec·
Great w;th Children and
!ric
brakes and pin 11e
non
shedding.
Male
hitch for o:t.ttVVlJJO .
$450,
females
$500.
..,..-vv~
(304)440·0111 "
Mar,.tt,
OH. ----~-.-740·376·0664
or "Two row new Idea corn
740 _525 _41 43
~~~~~~~:-- picker/sheller:
lnterna·
2 AKC female Boston Ilona! 1066 Tracto r/Cab,
Terrier puppies beautiful 8 ' ~ 20 ' Gooseneck caUie
martdngs black &amp; while lrmler
Call
$125 ea 740-388-8743
740·446·4432

EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HOR SE/LI VE ·
STOCK
1RAI(EAS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CAR GO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
g.,.w
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VI EW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT

I

I

-~M;;;isc;;;;;;;t;;;lla;;;n~t:Oou"'s;;;;;;;;;;;;;

"":'

Jet AeratiOn Motors repB1rad. new &amp; rebuilt in
sloe~. Call Ron Evans,
1· 600 ·537 "9528

~~~=~-~~
~ACA TV 27" Floo od I

r m e·
beautiful
cab1net
With
sWive1 base • works well
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
$100 740· 256 -u&lt;276
TRAILERS.COM
FREE Wurll'lzer
740 _446 _3825
Organ
~-.~-.--...,..- 16 base pedal needs
720 ~. D . d1esel w!pony some
repairs
motor. (740)949·2072
::i04-88 2-2385

=

~H~av~e-.yo:-u-.
pr~,c~ed~a-.
Jo~hn ~G~iv.ea·w·a-y:-.Sa~clc-.l~ul~
l -.of(
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out our
used
inventory
at
www CAR EO com
Car·
michael
Equipment
_
.
740 446 241 2

leftover
clothing
740-388-8217

· Call

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
for
Concrete
Angle,
"""'"""""""""""""". Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating !Of Dra1ns, Drive·
Garden &amp; Produce
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Kiwi just E. of Syracuse Tue
Wed
&amp;
Fn,
on
St.
Rt.
124.
C
( 740 )992 . 7449
Bam-4:30pm.
tosed
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
Sun
74 44 5. 7300
Pumpk1ns and Fall deco- ~~-~~-~~
rat1ons lor sale~ at the Scag
Tiger
Cub
Melon Patch on SA t41 , Zero:tum
mower.
eJC.
9 miles from Gallipolis
con.,
low
hours,
$3,000,
1
0
Th
t
pen
ur · a ·
740·742·2373
_
;.;,::..:.;~~~~--,

o.

s

STEELAFICH
BUILDINGS
Made in USA Three
cancelled orders • will
sell for balance ow·•.
ltiU
16x24 &amp; 25JC36. Call
today to save thousands! 600·352..()469

Anti ques

AntiQue
gas
StOlle
green/cream in color &amp;
an antique bab1. bed
white w!brass accents,
mattross &amp; spnngs, bo\h
WantTo a.~
for $ 800 firm, call a"..er :~==-.-=:;;~"-'=:;;
spm, (740)949-3059 ··
Buying tools set! or trade
mec han 1c-car penter Iawn
Appliances
&amp; gard~n power tools.
=;;;;;;;;;;~~:""'""'iiii;'":' Call 740-388·15)5 or cell
~F
f1
d
ree-re rgerator,
use , 740·208-o320
in good running condif.
p 1 K
Ch8 st
con, au
arr,
er, Absolute Top Dollar • silOh, (740 )98 5- 3538
:::;;,,\·~5~;;;,.,,. ver/gold
coins,
any
~ F' I O'l Coal/
10K/14K/16K gold J9W·

t(ld' s Corner ........................................... ...... 960
MIscellaneou s .................. , ... ..,............. ........ M&amp;
Want to buy .... ....'. ........... :........ -. .... ...... ... ...... 970
Yard Sate .............................................. ... .... 975

Restaurants ......:... , .... ..,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 6044
$ales ............., ..... ,...... ,................:............... 6048
1echnlj:al Trades ................ ....................... G050
TextilesiFactory .... ....... .......... .................... 6052

. ~~~~~~·~t·&amp;..sp;rt::::·.:·.~:·.·.:·....·..::·.::::·.::~~·.::::·. :: ~~~~~·~e:T~~~;~ri·;;·............................

.

::g

Spom Utility

Yard Sale

HouMI For

1st time sale w/ the sell·
ingot 100 rolls of carpet
remarus,
flourescent
lights,furniture,
much
more.
3S 198
PeachFork,
Porn eroy.Every
Mon.-Fri 10amto 4pm.

1993 510 Blaze ,4 door,
131 ,000 mil~s . Good gas
mileage, 4x4, 6cyl .. 4,3
engine. Air, All Power,
Red &amp; Cream color,
Great conditiOn, $3000
Neg.. Call 740-2S6· t 332
~~~~~~~:::" or 304-638-0485
Yard &amp; garage sale Oct
.
11 &amp; 12 from t2-3. Log 97 Ford Expeditron, 4JC4.
spliUer.Band Saw, guitar, ' runs kgrea 1.d loo~s $g ~ •
k
lo es &amp; tow P g, 3r sea ·
·
100 1
s, wor
g 11
740·379·21 79
much more. 4253 SA 7 :..;;;,;;,;;,.,.,;;,;;,""""""""
N
=
~-·.,...-.-::--.--.-.. ;;;;;;;;:;~"'!'!~~=-=
Trucb
•·
Yard pnnt &amp; indoor c"-'se
,
f
books 97 Ford F250 4WD. expnnts sale o toys
tended
cab,
power
decoratiOns, fu rniture, of·
lock/windows
.
tinted
win flee supplies, etc . 1458
doWs 5 speed . 645·5357
Jackson Plke, Gallipolis
SS Ford F-250 , flatbed .
Truck call after 7 PM
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; 304 -458-1727

2 00

-:::2001
Colema'n
Chey·
anne
pop-up camper,
electnc brakes, A/C, 3
way refr1g., steeps 6·8, 2
stoves
plus screened
porch,
"'
ca ll
(740)367 •7569

Commercial
-;;;;;;;;.;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oo;
'For

sale

Pel. 245·5893

to

extend

our

theJamily and friends who
supported us during this
difficult lime. Words are
not suffi9ienl for all the
kindness

that

were

extended to us. We will
never forget all the love that was ehown in his memory. Jay was
so veiy special to a lot ol people and he will, be loved and

us lor reasons that we

cannot understand but we will trust in God that we will be
re·u nited someday. May God bless each and every one ol his
And friends who demonstrated through words and

actions how much he meant to all of us.
Helen; Austin , Paisley,
Tom, Mickey, Mark, Nancy, Matt, Jim and Jackie

HelpWanled

dopat\men\.

An Excellenf way to eam

monev. The

No

Taylor

New AVort
Marilyn

COORDINATOR
Eta ou d IIMor

~~-~'!"'-~-

50

Colonial Home for Sale .
@
See
' details
www.orvb.com, 10: Margan
or
call
( 740)~Hl031

House in Clifton for
rent.4
bedrooms.
Kitchen, basement, living
room. 1 bath , gas heat,
city water, unfemished,
$500 month + utilittes
and
cJeposit. possible
sale on land contractor
sell fe&lt; 35,000 304 593
8187 or 593 8107

ca

Help Wanted

HR apartment 174o)-509
7
:r.KI'

a-vu

.t Profe:i':a! Work

calls
9pm,

Environment!
../Medical, Dental, EAP,
40IKt

~2B~R:-~~b~--'!"l1

·

Equal Housing Opportu·
nlty. This Institution is an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vlder and Employer.
Qraclouo Living 1 and 2
Badtoom Apia. 81 Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apia. In Middleport, lrom
$327
to
740-992·5064.

ath on

..; On-site Doctor
.t Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

ann

clu TODAY!
Interview

TOMO.,ROWII
Work NEXT WEEK Ill

leased for Land Owners.
No. closing cost and
ZERO DOWNt Will do
land
imptovements.
BankrupiC\' &amp; Bad Crodtt
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 b8do
rooms
available.

1..aaa.-IMC·PAYU
Ell. 11121
httpt,..lnlocl-.r:cm

~74;,;0-44;...•&amp;3384.-;,;,~-:--

· $592. 2 bedroom mobile home - - - - - - - Equal s. Gallla School Dlslrlct.
Real Ea._.

;===:;;;;;;;

Housing Opportunity.
Must
~;;;;;::~;;;;;;~=~ $375

:::" i~;;!~,:~;
~·

60-hr. EMT Miner Class
&amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur·

Pat Hill , New Car Managar for an interview at
446-9800
·

Jil!iiiiJII

face Apprentice 80-hr.
Underground
Apprentice
h
T
M16ne·r. U dereerg
d"taFrlng
""""''"~""''"""' "''1
n
roun
or~ ; ,..,... . ...,...
man Class. Minor Safety
Equipment Store.
For
f
ion
more ' In ormat
call
:~;~_
Training Sub.
Bus
Ortvers
Needed for Meigs Local
A LOCAL MANUFAC· School Olstrict.$55 for all
TURER is taking appllca· day.Must attend dnver
tions for EXPEAIENCEQ .tr&amp;;lnlng class.Class to be
MIO Weldors. Please ap· hetd Oct20,08 \hrough
ply In parson a\ 2150 Oct.24,0B.Interested
Eastem Avenue, Oalllpo- please call Paul McElroy
lis, OH
ol74lH42·2990

c

8346

Real Estale

Sarvice Manager &amp; Sarv·
ice Technician positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send resume
to
LLCOCAREO.COM
or
fa)l to 740..446-9104
Sportswriter
~Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. •s seeking mo11~ated, people-oriented
Individual ti fill a .vacancy
in the newa dept. as a
Sportswrtt&amp;r. The suc·
,,
cessful candidate will
coverhiQh.schoolathlet.:
lcs 11 the area for the
dally edition of the newspaper, as well as assist
with ltle prOduction ot
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills,
pholography skills and
knowledge or desktop
publishing are sought.

benefits. Interested parties can send resumes to
Ke~ln Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Volley Pub!ishlng Co . 825 Third
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 orkkel~llmy·
dallytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

Real Estate

Real Estate

apt $700/ren\ (uUIIIies In· ~~!:;,;;;Saloo:;;;;;;~~"!!!"'
eluded).' Call oller' Spm. :-:

:

1990 Clayton 14x70, . 3br,

new

lb.
oarpet,
new carNC
w/fumlture
&amp; metal
port, porches, ex. con.,
must be moved, $12,900

2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease (740)992.£849
44
required. Call
1&gt; 3644 2004

for more Info.
Commerical Space

m

condition. 4

In now

bedroonl,

2
tor bolh. al appliances . In-

HoUMI for Rlnt
~~;;;;;""!~~"!:=

Brand new 3bed 2bath

~han

acre in Pt.
OWNER· Fl·
NANCE
· AVAILABLE,
(740&gt; 446-3570
91 14x70 mobile homo, 3
br., 2 batt), ready 10 be
movad,
$t0,500,
V40!59HI936
New 3 Badtoom homes
on +

+ ~11, 1BR, Plea&amp;al\1.

$400/mo

Rg&amp;Ref.
lum,
W&amp;O
hookup, No steps, Vel)'
4

.-o,

114 State
740-44Hl596

51,

"

2 BR

..,_ In Gallipolis,
WID
cono: $415/mo
,150/dDp. ·You pay all from $214.36 per 'month.
· No aect\on. 8 "' Includes many upg.-,
HUD.
Cal
Wayne delivery
&amp;
set-up.
404-15&amp;3802
740,385-2434

Colonial Orive lt 11 3
Bidwell, Ohi0 45614
74044&amp;3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM · 5PM

1oMow. ,M Equal oppor· 1\onal&amp;l&lt;ils allll bode1unly Employer.
pendlbla. Hoal\h lnlur·
,nee &amp; .01k a..,.ailabkt.

Help Wanted

, Certified.Occupational
' .· · Therapy. ~sSist.,t's.

No e~ required!
No CA!dit Cs!!l Sales! No Colleclionsl

(1 FUJJ-nme·&amp;zPrl!t-irnre R¥ti011. c;r11f.fi/af)18J
• PleviiMIS IA1Ig Tenri c.e l!J. !llalctlf. . .

•VIrydltNIIIIUeptw/rultlaw11tei;'lil~f

• Rexillie sd1ediHig ·Team • itntecl iljljiiNdl

t1•

·~

2004 TAUflUS SE
$4500
Automatic,

, Hn's what vou do:

Part-Thne Dietary "llM:b
We Offer:
. ( . . lllhtWigll ·Gncfii!IIPnt Huntrlllo

• h!llleil!flbprioge•lncHIIw• a-pwloge
· -~·4011

,.,. ••tm.s:Moltdlp l'rilla,flum 101 tD 4p '
Applyin person:Scenic Hills. TriCIJ firlct I AINndl if11
111 Bud: Ridge Road,llidMI, 01145614
tKEmail~m tKOnlineot

.www.vrablehealthcare.com

A fH of $20.00 will be ·charged fa&lt;

Books &amp; Books on taptule

Here'• whir WI offer:
We@ Pay arwll!onus fncenfi'iu!
I Fulllnd Pill-lime PositiOns!
I ProfeS$10ns/ Worlf EnvironmenV.
I ~. Dental, EAP. 401K!
Doc/or!

CIJITOOAYI
lniWVIew TOIIORROWI!
.Wvrt NEXT WEEKI/I

..

''

Sticks &amp; Stones Logging
&amp; Firewood
We accept CAA &amp; HEAP
446-6783- 446·4112
645-2480

1-888-IMC.PAYU, Ext. 2321
Apply

441..()442

Bossard Library
Sat., Oct. 18
10am-3pm

I

' on.m

BASKET GAMES

eerly antvll, late arrival, early
removal, 1111 removll, ar anytime
ICOIM 11 wanted 10 flltgroundl other
thin llafiG dated. Building ap110e , II

.

.

6 cyl,

Mark Your Calendars!

Very good condition

Raise fullds Bnd l8lleW membetShips lor the
Na/illl!fll Rille Associalkin

We are also currently seeki!J8: ..

WINTER STORAGE ·
Meigs County Falrgrouilds
Amval: Oct 25, 2008
9:00a.m.· 11:00 a .m.
A~e:Apnl25, 2009

FOR SALE

onlint:

http:1~obl.lnfocillon.com

flntl oomt ""'

"

~==""""'""'""'"""

Modlcal

•;;;;;;;;;;..i;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;oo;

:~:gra~r;~~.co~.re- l2;;~~{;[J
mium Retailer
Auction

Auction

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS!
Real Ealate

1st Time
IIMEBUYUS
FHA$3%

mymidwesthome.com

748.828.2151
Auction

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS: 7-slgned Lloyd Middleto~
Dolls plus several Middleton outflls, dolllurniture, cedar chest ,
cookie jar, carnival dish, antique hand painted hurricane style lamp ,
12t pieces of stained glass , 12+ pieces of slate,

.The GALLERY AT 409
is now offering the following
classes :

.!'it.

lnlkll8loflgl .... 00111
Open bn; 12.00111
lnlldt ~-; 11.00111

Sponsored by

Military Family
· Support Grp.

Fllver Cities

Rio Gra11de Elem
Fall Festival

Calllllll-4372 lor tnOfllnlormaUon

Oct. 18 4:30 • 6:30
7 pmAuction

COURTSIDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
Presents
Elixir
Fri., Oct. 17th
10 pm- 2 am

Thursday, October ;13
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464

COURTS IDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
Halloween Party
Sat., Oct. 25th
Costume Contest

\

llleglnnor Youii\IAdult Art. ·
Four Total Classes (One n1ght per
week &amp; art materials/
Pastel, wa\ercolor &amp; oil instruction
OPEN TO ALLAGESI
Saturdays (1 p.m. lo 3 p.m 1
Beginning October 1t , 2008
$140/person
lnlrOductlon 10 CharcDII Art
Four Total Classes (One night per
week &amp; art matsrlala)
Tuesdays (6 p.m. lo 8 p.m.)
OPEN TO All AGES I
Btalnnlng Octol!er t4, 2008
S100/pereon
lntroduotlon 10 llllnld Qla• Art
ANOTHEA DAY A00EOI
November 1, 2008 (Full)
8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m .
Novtmbtr 2 , 2008 (Aac:epUng

ludenta)

oon toe p.m.
$155/pttwOn (lncludtlolllntd gl111
atarter kit &amp; Instruction)
II you alreacly have a alarter kit,
lt!en lnatrucllon Is $75

All classes will be held at
409 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
Pl.... call (304) 812-4625
to reseNe a seat in the class. Some
of lt!e ctasses have limited sealing.

•

/ \ •''
~I '

I

',·, . ' •
J ,,
''

experience. Submtt resume &amp; salary requirements to: Gallipolis C.M.,
Gor&gt;ucfl Mgt, P.O. sOx • All types Masonry, brick,
190, Lancaster OH
·
block, stone , Free Esti43130-0190 or email to
mate,
740-416-7305.
kdasbury 0 embarqmall com
304·593.£421
EOE

•
Home Health Care ol
Southeast Ohio Inc., 1S
currently
hiring
home
health aides. Cer11f1ed or
experience
Bonuses
Available .
Call
Community
service~. 1866.a68· 1100
P.O. Box 604, Joclcson,
OH 45640 or e·mall to ~~~~~~~beyeeserv@yahoo.com.
ResCare Home Care •
Deadline for applicants Provider
of
Support
E
rt
Services
to
Individuals
10115108
10
· qua
ppo u- · h "RIDD 01
ea
n"" Employe
wi1 M
.
rect
re
..,
r.
Staff. Contact Rhonda
Harnson.
Monday
through
Friday 9a-5p.
Wireless: The areas fast- 740-446--4814 ext 26 or
est growing Verizon re- e-mail resume to: marritailer. Now hiring the lol- son@rescare.com
· low1ng: Ass1stant Man1
ager
starting
at
$1 0.50·$11 .50/hr
plus
commissjpn.
Part-time
sate associate starting at
$
8.50/lu plus commls·
sion. Please ~ resumes
to

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

$250$ Sign On Bonus!!

9000

~~!'""'~---- Salo!ry dependent upon

BULLETIN BOARD

(740/

"Pieasan==t=====

:;

TER~S; Cash or check wlpositive I. D. No Credit Cards. Checks
over 1000 must have bank aumori~ation of funds ·available. All
sales are final. Food will be available. Nol responsible for loss or
accidents.
OWNERS: Mike &amp; Kay Sheridan
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick "Pal" Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd &amp; Brent King
Llcenaed &amp; Bonded In Ohio &amp;.wv- Member of Ohio &amp;
Nallonal Auc11oneer's Associations
Email: HYPERLINK "mallto:ShamrockAucllon@aol.com"
"malllo:ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com"
ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com WEB: HYPERLINK
"t,tlp:/lwww.ahamrack·eucllons.com" ·
www.ahamrock-aucllona.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

son City 004.£75-2117

· ·

program.
Call 740-379-2267 tor

P.T. Community Manager needed tor local
apartment &lt;Xlmmunny tocated rn GatlipoUs, Ot1io .
Ideal candidate wiHhave
previous elq)Brience 1n
property management at
a Aural Dewiopment
property, excellent comIn- ~ication and organizS-

Appalachian lire f'lroduc\s, Inc . ~ curmnllj,
seeking a salesperson
lor our Point Pleasant,
wv location, EICpel ieuce
is preferred. Job benefits lf'ICiude 401K, Health
Insurance , and Paid VacatiOI'l are also available.
Please apply 111 person.
Located 0 426 VIand
Street: 1n downtown Point

miscellaneous items.

Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas. eluded, $37,000 lOcated
$400/mo.
2000
sq/11 at 176 Zuspan La,. Ma·
7Q3.50H808

surtace fabricalors. Elperience 1n cabi1et shop
will bo helpfl&gt; but witt
tnm ~t people . Must
pass
prHWnplorment
testing,
drug
screen,
crYninal
background
check. 6 month training

:~~P~•~t=•bw~y:J;;F"
Maoagement
:~;·Property

~Marlin 22 AHie, Eagle bee bee pump rifle , American 'Classic
&amp;CrOSsman pellet pistols,
.
,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: lape·so1a &amp; matching chair (like
new), newer glass door book shelf, new hall tree , newer brass
double bed complete, vanity &amp; stool , ,4·drawer chest of drawers,
maple night stand , small chest, several small cabinets/nigh! stands,
small wicker cabinet &amp; hamper, 2-door cab1ne1, 5·shelf knick knack
stand, Filter Queen air cleaner, humidlfJer, lots of wall decorations
and framed prints, ·several lamps, mirrors, jewelry boxes, curtains,
bedding, afghans &amp; linens, Qwk Top Broom, Dirt Devil sweeper,
Bissell shampooer, fans, portable TV, VCR , Brother electric
typewriter, new Europra Model 801 portable sewing machine, small
Whirlpool refrigerator, Galanz microwave, microwave stand,
kitchen dishes, pots, pans, &amp; small kitchen appliances, bar stools,
Christmas &amp; other holiday decorations, yard ornaments , gazing
balls &amp; 2·g&lt;iese w/outfils, Sperti Sun lamp, exerc1se equipment
(Gravity Aider, Health Master Bike, Fil One Glider, Wallen Belt
Vibrator), 2-folding tables, lawn cha1rs, metal detector,
MOWER, TRAILER, TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOU: new Tractor
Supply Sx10 ft. trailer wflold down .tailgate (never used), fold out
ramps, 2005 Cub Cadet riding lawn mower Series I 000' w/900
hours, Yard Man self propelled mower, Weed Eater mower, Weed
·Eater Feather Lite 20, Poulan Predator chain saw, Black &amp; Decker
electric hedge trimmer, tree trimmer, lawn &amp; garden tools,
Campbell Hausfeld 2 'gal. air compre'ssor, wheel barrow, lawn cart,
several gas cans, Karcher powtr washer, Megaheat kerosene
space heater, 3-aluminum extension ladders (2·12 &amp; 48ft.), 3·
aluminum step ladders, tool cabinet, hydraulic jack , Craftsman
Saws All, Shop Source Saber Saw, Pro Source t2 v &amp; t9.2 v
cordless drills, Skil circular saw, Power Craft angle grinder, Dremel
tool w/heads, hand saws, socket sets, nuts, bolts, and other

=

:~;;~~;
Commerdal

counter

Marlogs-t/

The position ls full time.
40 hours a week, with

playground, (trash, sew· ::or~'7~40-;:.2Q8.=.~786~1-::-:-~
age,
water
pd.)
$425/""'t,
$425/sec. 3BA located, on Bulavllle
dej&gt;. Caii 740-3S7.QS47
Pike.
$475/11111t
14Q.36H762
Two tBR new op\s. In ~--~~~~-­
lown wl off street pari&lt;· 3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant
lng, FUlly loaded wl area 304·273.s522 "'
stainless
steel
IPI&gt;1f 304·674.fi204
ances including trash Mobile Home· for Rent Pt.
compactor, OW, custom Pleasant area HUO ac·
b&lt;JII cabinets, WID also cepted, Depos~ required
included,
Call 304~75o3423
Llmllod 10 1 person per
.
7~!27

made

tops. LooklnQ too solid

WANTED: Part-time position available 10 assist
lnd~iduals with mer&lt;aJ
retardation at a group
home in Bidwoll:
Owner Oporate&lt; Dppor· 11 35 hrs: I 0:30a·7:30p
tun~ies R&amp;J Trucl&lt;fng • 5un; 2·IOp M/TufN;
Marietta, Oh&lt;J
' has ~ 21 27.5 his: 3:30-llp Fn;
- rportunities available for 9a-7p
Sat 1·9p Sun;
M
Owner OporatOfS within ust have higil SChOOl
dipfom·-eo
id d ·
the reg100. We feature
dl\3
'
val
nvor's liceose and three
weekly settiements. in. .
eluding luel su!dlarge &amp; years good dnvlng expe·
trailer rental. Operators rlence.
$8.40/hr
after
hould have newer equip- , training. Excellent benefit
packa~
Pre em"'O"
ment. For more tnforrnaljl~•
.... , tion • contact Dennis at ment Drug Testing. Send
resume
to:
Buckeye
800462 _9365

hove 18leren&lt;:es.' •
plus
depos~.
Nk:e
Clean
Ground 740-256- 1686
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, ~~~~"':""-.~
Ralerenees/Oepostt/No
Mobile hoine klr rent 2
PelS 304-675-5182
BR
1
batll;,
new
~---~--.- lumace/ca; new appl&gt;
Tara
Townhouse ances; new baltl Uke new
Apal1mllnls • 28~, 1.5 home, no pets: 3675 ~u­
batll, back pl\lo, pool, Iaviiie Pike 740-446-4234

Help Wanted

•

!:~u~bte le::

at Jack· $500 per month Includes
West- utilities. 540-752-0626 or
... ~~-~.
52
~w,..
·
9 ·;.:.1:fl~1 ~-:-"~~
wood Dr.,, from $365 to I ::;S4~(}~7~2::;.
$560.'
740-446-2568. Federal Funds just re-

Real Estate
Rentals

CIA.

!!!!

no

·CNA. CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis •. Ohio or

eas ·

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ter dep., no pets,

Ohio
valey
Home
Health , Inc. ~iring Home
Health
Aides
STNA,

T'AL

Camp .
Conley
304-B95- 3129
~~~~~=~~

~ sklfll

"\ntefporsonal &amp;
ot"g811izationat skiMS

chairs, booth space is
• To appty, visit:
limited, lntet'ested cratwww.consulatemgtca- .
reers.com
letS should contact Emily·
405 North Parte Ave
Casto or Michelle Ken·
Wellston, OH 45692
nedy to reseMI booth
74Q.384-5Sl1
space
br " calling
EOEISFIDF
74(}992.£472
.__ _..;,;_;__ _.

AVON! All Areast
To
Buy or Sell . Shine1
.._;;;;;-:~
wages, mileage reim· 5
.". .
.......
ft -..a bene!'
pears .rort-v751429
• uursement mn.J
Its
Inc!·~•
heallh
1
nsur· Diesel Mechanic
to
POS '' JOBS ·~.....,ng
&amp; m·~~9
• w
..........
"""'' " " ' ' '
boat experiece desired ,
$17.89-$28.27/HR.,
now ~~~~-~!!"'!'h'
'=
good wages, exc. benem
&gt;ring. For IPI&gt;rocatoo Gallipolis Career Cofk&gt;ge package 304·67s.4545.
~ free government job . is s&amp;fkjng part·tlme in·
info, call Amtnlcan As· structors who possess a Help Wanted· Now acsoc.
of
LabOr master's degree In gen- Mtontlng applications from
.....,..
1·913-599-8225,
24/hrs. ~ral educat!on subject ar- 9am-noon,
Mon.
thru
emp. serv.
such as: English, Fri., Roadside Hotspot,
Math, and Social Sc1· Portland, Ohio
Htlp Wantod • Genoral ences. E-maH resumes
to
fdonlckl@galllpollsca· · , I need to lind (2) people
S250 Sign on Bonus reercollege.cOm or call needing a full time job:
Ten positions need filled
800-214-0452
You need to be honest, a
by next weeki
person of lntegrrty, wiltl
No experience requ1redl
SUper 8 naN hiring for
good people skills. You
No Salest
part tlme 41'nploLtment.
v •"
J
also need to be able to
No Collections!
QuallfM!d persons must
follow instructions and
be 25 years 01 age, pos·
ha~e an ability to listen
Recruit 11olunteerslor
sess
strong
customer
and laid people .in tbe
non·profit orgamzabons
service sldlls and be able
right direction. 1need
such as St. Jude ,
to work ftoating shifts. people who want to work
Children's Research
Apply in person, NO
and will show up for
Hospital.
PHGNE CA~L.
work. If you are a recent
Gat paid to make a
collage grad and cannot
42 people needed 10 lose find employment and feel
dlirerencel
up to 30 lbs in 30 days.
that 0 ore q alff ed
30 day mon~ back
y ~
u ' ,
"Fun and Part-time
...,
give us a chance until a.
PositiOns
. ~:~2~101 Call
Usa
joblnyourcareer ·path
.t Day anc1 Evening
becomes available, Call

dl ~rt
~-·:;;;;·:....::-:----.;Three
Bedroom house
At* 2 North. Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home

communication&amp;

S580 per week, uroay October ' evon\s
rapid advancemeniS and begin at 1011ni and end
benefits. For an tnterview · Bl: 2pm, crafters are to
cal1740-44&amp;-n98.
,
provide .own table and

Joilo

smoklng, quiet, $475 a
mo. plus dep., pick-up
applicafions at 00 Mid-

..............,
--.-.-

lions

Go.em1M111 &amp; fedora~

lleeuttful Apta.

Clip tt\is AD and take 11
wittr you when you VISit
· our community to get
this special discount
Move·ln 1n Oct and get
$100.00 off your 2BR
Apt. 1n Nov. Currently
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA un1ts
Spacious floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
!lying, playground &amp;
basketball court, on -site
laundry fac di l~ . 24 h1
emergency maintenance , quiet country lo·
cation close tQmater
medical
facilities,
pharmac1es. grocery
store ... just minutes
away from other major
shopping 1n the area.
Honeysuckle Hilla
Apiu1ments

2BR APT.
441·0194

for

torll67"':••7e9k:terly/disabled,

houses are bemg built,
Sewagelelectric. $35,000
740·256- 1664

Oak Hill area 3 BR 2 lull
bath country nving riew
condition 1.5 acres value
$?5,000 now $59,900.
Call 600·951-2060.

·

·--.,.

wv

RHiab
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;...;;;;;...
~
2 br. mobile home In
· Racme, $325 per mo.,

applications

oidiZed,

lob

new refng, range &amp; dishwasher. included $75,000
740·44s.7029

-· Mor\.Fn, 30 hrs par
week.
Previous experi·
ence Is 8 plus. Please
maH/tmall resume
to:
Precision
. Fabricators,
7181 Qtlio River Aoad,
Polnt
Pleasant,
25550 or sales-p.......
v •o·
lablc.com
No phone
calls please.

.._. .

~RNbed Facility
'2 yrs M05
Expelioooe

,. •• _
...
.,....,,
\nil applications/resumes must be a Hl!jl Schoof ,..,. cara at our .,.
tor
'
····graduate. Ftil time po- nual ~ 00 Sa\·
t'-part·timl -~ 1 posl18

'In' Pomeroy, 2b&gt;, 1 bolh,

w•iting list for HUD sub- after

lease $40K . BC
uyellr mHust 5Survey
a a er
pm
offlce!warehouse/storage · 304-695-3 390
great location 1n Gallipolis.
1800
sq. ·t1 . Meigs Ca .. 5 acres on
$400/mon lh · Ca11 Wayn e Landaker or Cook Ads
404 456 3802
• '
$19900
Reedsv1·11e
, •

3500

Local bollness is aocep\·

Oh, $375 per mitt !&gt;us
ulilities, $375 deposH, no
pets. 256-6661
·
Ne~ 2BR 2 bath your
choice ot rentng com·
pletely furnished &amp; all
;,...
ol .,.
~~~ 1~ es pa~ or you . .Pro·
vldn-.g tumltuce &amp; utilities.
NO'I;;EASE ~702 9

Twin Rivers fower Is ac- : s

cepting

4

heart1ell gratitude to all of

Help Wanted

CONVENIENTLY
LDCATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE! Townhouse apartmenls.
arld/0&lt;
small
houses for rent Csll
74()-.U1-1111 for application &amp; lnfonnation.
~~;;,;::;;;;;.;;;;;;;:::.-:-~
Free
Rent
Speqialll!
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hookup, tenant
pays electric. EHO Elm
V1ew
Apts.
(304)882-3017
•'lcati
1i k ~
a '"g
op,. , ons
Gallipolis area near Wal mart. 1 BR Apf. Utilities

======- -:-=-::-:::;;;;;;-:-=;;;;;
~
lot on At sse where all

The family of Jay Smith

-

~~~~~-..;,~ stove &amp; frig., no pels, no

or

1992 Camoro, V6 needs
HouMI for Sa'·
work $1 ,000 .
1991
"'
VW Passan $750 call 186 Nor1h Park Dr. , can
•"'"12
4444 '
~"Q •
304·675·5640
or
~~-:-~--:-~~ 304 59:3 1204 111 11
02 Honda Acx:ord EX, 4 •"nd. Co.ntracwt osre Oonut
~
door,
auto, · ' loaded, ·Right. Also a WeiNngtoil
92,000 miles. 245·5526
Plano call lor oppolnl·

30o/.

.ted I
on C t'l
oI adl us
ncome. a
304-88 2•3121 , available
for Sani
a d 01 bl d
or n
sa e
people.
~

Extraordinary Property:
Spectacular view of the
Ohio River
Pnvate drive off lincoln
Hill .
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
woods on three sides
(4+ \acres, to a historical
home. Circa 1900. 5
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
full baths, 2 staircases.
beautiful orig1nal woodwork. many picture windows, mostly new win·
dows, large kitchen and

m/1

New 2BR 2 bath on ' 3 ac.

family.

lnduded ~

~~:--.--.::-~ •""""""""'""""""" wooded
12
acres
RV Sewice at Carmi· - fo r Sa,.
L 8pr•mor
"'·-·
$22,500! Salem Ctr. 16+
chael
Trailers
·
acres $49,9001 D~nville
740•446 _3825
3br. 1 112 ba. brick 13 acres NOW $26,900
ranch , approx. 13yrs old Gallla Co. 10+' acres
ceramic 1ile, wood floors. $12,500!
We llnance 1
Open House
Sunday Call 740;441 ·1492
for
Oct. 12th 1•4 37 BuUer- maps or VISi t www.brunAutos
nut Dr. 740 .386 ,9056
erland.com

I
1

missed forever. God has taken him from

•·Is.

Sal.

ApproJC. 25 acres
re·
mote.
rough
access

!!!!

93 Ford Tempo, 4Cyl.. ment to see them bOth.
2dr.. blue, good work
$650 --:~"::-~:-::~~~
VII
'
car,
•
bed 2 bath &amp; oHice In
Wood Gas
elry, dental · !JOid, pre (740159H936
f 935
US
town , hw &amp; tHe floors ,
"'"!~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~
~..;,":':"~--:--~~
~
fl · 1
~currertey,
d'
::99
B k
• ·s b
updated kltchen &amp; baths,
FI.Rc::wooo FOR SALE proo mill
se..,,
18·
UIC
L..cl a re,
u J'-PICK UP 545/LOAD monds, MTS co1n· Sh op . 112,000 mIfes, runs privacy fence &amp; above
poak
security
151 21\0 Avenue, Galli· good , 31MPG, $3,200 ground
446.8832
polis . 446·2842
080 740·200·1221
system, much more. 130
Bast1ani
Dr. $129.000
446·2923
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks

I

Rivert&gt;end
Apts.
New
Haven wv. Now ocoept·
· lng
app\icatloos
for
HUD·subsklized,
one
Bedroom .
Utilities

~==-::'=="-'::-•

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~~-::'"':"'""'".'-~-

740-59"5174

.,....rtment available now 2 BR house Gallipolis,

1

(740)949·2816,
740·591--6522

witt1 full

"""""·'· 2t&gt;r on tile River In ...

-:.-~~~':--~:"""-

breakfast room, beauli·
tullu landscaped with 1n
'
ground pool. Sit on the
wrap around porch and.
en1
the
spectacular
·0 1"
view ol the Ohio R1ver. 2
cm- detached garage and
2 out buildings. 'would
make a wonderful family
!!!!
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Campan / RVa &amp;
Want To Buy
Private and Picturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Tralltn
Wan! to buy Junk Cars, Senous
inquires
only,
~::"'~'":~~~~ call 740-388-0884
please catl740·992·3678
1995 24 ' Tefry Camper,
Real Esta te
sleeps 6, · $6,000. good 3000
S!llf'S
'wn
• d lAawage
s hape &amp; c1ean, ca11

wants

Recreailonal Vehicles ............. .................. 1000
ATV ....... ... :.................................................. 1005
Bicycles.. ................ ................... ................. 1010
BoatsiAcceasories .................................... 1015
Camper!RVs 1r Trallers ........................... .. 1020
Motorcycles ....... ........................................ 1025
Other .. ...... ............ ................ ...... ... ............. 1030
Want to buy ................:... .......................... .1035
Automotive ...... ... ............................. .......... 2000
Auto RentaVLease ... .................. ,.............. .2005
Autos ............. ...... ..................... ...... ,........... 2010
Claisic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Comtnercialflndustrial ... ......................... .. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ............ ......... ............. 2025
Sports Ullllty ............ ........ .......................... 2030
Trucks ................................... ......... ............. 2035
Utility Trailer&amp; .. ................................ ,,.. .... .. 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............. ................................. .2050
Real Estate 5alea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .. .............................. .......... 3005
Commercial ................................ ... .. ......... .. 3010
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Qwner ..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .. ............ .......................... :.3030
Lots .. ,...... .................. , ...... ........................... 3035
Want to buy ........... ... ...................... ............ 3040
Real Estate Rentals~ ...... :.. ......................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ....................... .. 3505
Cofnmerclal ..................................... ........... 3510
Condominiums ........ .....:.......... .................. 3515
Houses for Rent ......... ............................... 3520
Land (Acreage) ........ ................ .................. 3525
Storage ..... .................................................. 3535
Want to 'Rent ............ .................... .............. 3540
Manufectured Houslng ........... .................. 4000
Lots .............. ............ ........................... ........ 4005
. Movers ......... ............... ......... .......................4010
Rentals ....... .......... ............................ .......... 4015
Sates ............ ......................... ......... .. ........... 4020
Supplles .... ................................................. 4025
Want to Buy ..................... .......................... 4030
Resort Property ........................................ .5000
Resort Property tor sate ........................... 5025
Resort Property tor rent ........................... 505Q
Employrnent .... ............. .......... ... .................600e
Accountlng/Flnancla1 ......... ...... ......... ........ 6002
Adminlalrative/Proteaalona1 ............ .........6004
Cashler/Cferk .........................................., .. 6006
ChllcVEiderly Care .. .. .'..... ................ ...........6008
Clericai ... ... ........... ... ..·.....: ..... ...................... &amp;OtO
Construction .............. ....................... .........6012
Drivers &amp; Oeilvery '.......... ........................... 6014
Educatlon ..................... ........................ ...... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles ......... ................ ~.--8020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
FOOd Servlcea ... .-......... ....1......... .... ....... ... ... 6024
Government 1r Federal Jobe ....................6026
Help •nted- Gener•1 ........................... , ..... 6028
Law EnforC81n8nt ................................ ...... 6030
Melntenancet'Domettk .................... ......... 6032
ManagementiSupervisory ................... ..... 8034
Mechanlet .. ... .............................................6036
Me&lt;IIC.f ,............................................... .... ,.. 6038

.•

Noon~

Fuel/ Oil Coal
Wood/Gas
.._;;;;;"'".;;;:;i;;;;;;;;;;;;:-~
'Sea soned Firewood de·
live red. Call 446 -9204
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""
-:"

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legals ..... ... :... .......... ....... ...................... ..... ... 100
Announcemef!lS: ... ..... ........................ ... .... 200
Birthday"/Annlversary .. .... ,... ....... ......... ... ...205
Happy Ads .. ..... ... .. ,..... .... ...... ....... ............. .... 210
Lo ~t &amp; Found .. ..... ........................................ 215
Memory/Thank Vo u ......... ..... ..... ..... ... ... ..... .. 220
Notlces ......... .. ......... .. .................................... 225
Personals .
.. .... .. ... :.... .......... ....... 230
Wanted .... ..... ... .......... ......... ........ .......... ....... 235
Services .. ......... ....... .. .....,.......................... ... 300
Appliance Service ......... ... ... ................ ..~ ..... 302
Automotive ..... ... ........................... .... .. ......... 304
Building Materials ......... ... ....... .................... 306
Business ...... ..... .. .. , .. ...... ....................... ....... aoa
Calering .... ... ....................................... .... ......31 0
Child/Elderly Care .... .. ........... .... ........ ..... ..... 312
Computer s .... .. ..... ...... ,............ ..... ....: .......... 314
Contractors ... ,.. ,..........,.... .. .... ............ ...... , ... 316
Domestics1Janitori al ............ ........ .. ............. 318
Electrical ........................... ........................... 320
Financial .. ......... ................... .. ... ......... ,... ... ....322
Health .......... ........................ ......... ......... ....... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ............................. ... ...... 328
Home Improvements 330
·
Insurance .................................................. ... 332 ·
Lawn Service ..................................... , .... .... 334
· Music/Dance/Drama ........ ...... ................ ...... 336
Other Service s .............. ..................... ..... ..... 338
Plumbing/Eiectrlc al .......... ........ ................... 340
Profe_ssional Se rv1c es ................. ......... ....... 342
Repa1rs .. ,..... ...... .. ri ....................................... 344
Roofing ............... :........................................,346
Security .... .... .... ........ ..... .... ....... ...............~.... 348
Tax/Accounting ....................................... ... . 350
Travei/Enter1alnment ...... ... ... ~ ...... ..... .........352
Flnancial ... .. ... ........ ............ ............. ..... ........ .400
Flnnnc iaf Services ......... ....... .......... ...... ,., .. 405
Insurance ... .. ........................... .. ........ .... ...... 410
Money to L~nd ...........:......................... ........ 415
Educallon ............................. ,,, ........ ........ ..... 500
. ·Business &amp; Tr~de Schoof .............. ............. 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lesson s., .......................................................515
Personal ...... ................ ........................... ..... 520
Animals ... .. .. ................................................. 600
Animal Suppli es ...................................... .. .. 605
Horses ..................................... ..... ............ .... 610
Livestock ....... ,............................................ 615
Pets .... .... .. ...... ... -....... ........ .. -......................... 620
Want to buy ...................... ,..... .,, .. .,............,•. 625
, Agriculture ... ................................................ 700
· Farm Equipment.,. ...... ..... ................ .. ..... .... .. 70S
: Garden &amp; Produce ...................................... 710
, Hay, Feed. Seed , Grain ....... ........................ 715
• Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
.: Want to buy .... ............................................ .. 725
• Merchandise ...... ...... ........... .......... ....... ... .... . 900
Antiques .................. .......................... .......... !k)s
Appliance ........................ ,........... ........ .... ..... 910
AucUon s ..... ...... ...... ........... ...........................915
Bargain Basemen t... .. ,.... ,, ....................... ,, 920
• Collectibles ., .............................................. 925
: computers ··:. . " ·· ......... .................................. 930
, Equipment/Supplies .................................... 935
• F._a Markets ........................................ .. .. .... 940
: Fuet 011 Cool/Wood/Gas ., ............................ 945 ·

.

Now you can have borders and Qraphlcs
.,..,_,.
added lo your classified ads
.(.. ~
lrn
Borders$3.00/perod
~
Graphics 5041 for sm,o;~ll
$1 .00 for large

Ada

• All ada muat be prepaid""

Seeking owner or lost
70 yr old 'Counlry Boy"
dog. Large , all white, no
seeks
Romance
w/ .
Maney To ltnd
l.D. wander1ng v1cinlly of
lost &amp; Found
wo•nan !)5-72 · PO BoJC
Bulaville &amp; Circle Dr. for
~~;;;;;:;;;;;;::--:-== ?22 Poca. wv 25159
f oor'ld· Rio Gr.a11dP :mw
NOTICE Borrow Smart. 2
weeks.
contact
fi malt
pekinge~e
lv11e
Contact the Oh10 D1v1· 740·446·l 530
Serv1ces
&lt;log. fan, very lr rendly 300
s1on of F1nanc1al lnstttu- .,.,,....--,..,..--,...
J740)245-577U
lions Office of Consumer AKC reg Lab puppies
Affairs BEFORE you reli- vet/checked
•,
Hoa~ng &amp; Cooling
nance your home or ob- wo rmed/shots. 2 blk &amp; 1
lain a loan. BEWARE ol yellow.
females. Only
Notices
Down flow furnaces l enrequests lor any large 3 left. $175 to good
'
~
nox .BO thsBTU$200 ,/:!ISO
advance payments of homes. 740-256-6882
~OTICE OHIO VALLEY 'l 5tl1sBTUS t 50 Call Lee fees or insurance Call
992- 4408
.ce o1 c onsumer FOUND. Young medium
PUBLISHIN G CO
r')L·
the OH 1
Dmmcnds tM t ym1 do . Home lmprov•ments
Aff1ars
toll
free
at sized Golden Retriever
Female. Sidwell
area
business with peo ple )'OU
1·866-276-Q003 to team
38
8
8
65
5
know cll ltl NO T lQ SC' rd
1f th e mortgage broker or ;;;;.;:~·~;:~-.~--::Basemen1
tender is properly li· "'
4 Full Blooded Au stralian
money th rough, the lllilll
Waterproofing
11nt1l .you haw ' nwestl~&lt;l t·
censed. \This IS a public Shepherd
pups,
Red
Un,t:OIJdl!iOi rallilehrne
&lt;lhg the otte1'rng
'
ann o unc~ment Merle.
10
wks
old.
guara11tee. Local refer- . service
ences twnished Estabfrqm the Ohio Valley 304-675-7608.
lislled 191'5 Call 24 Hrs.
PubliShing Company)
' Beautiful white kitt ens to
740·446·0670, Rogers
give away, approx. · 8
Ohio Valley
Oasement Waterproofing.
old ,
call
500
Educat10r1 wks.
Publishing reserves
(740)992·7546
Supenor Home Maintethe right to edit,
nonce.
Carpentry,
reject or cancel any
CKC Reg . Mini DachsPlumb1ng.
Electncal.
ad at any time.
A 11111.1ls hunds, 1 long haired fe600
Rentals No Job to Small
male, $350, 1 short
&gt;Errors Must
8
Reasonable
Pnces.
haired male, $300. F1rst
Reported on the firs
339-3442 or 446·2805
shots and wormed. Call
y of publicatio
Ho
"::';;;;;;--~l'lt~S~;o;;:"':'
740-386-8445
or
nd
the
Tribune
Other
Service&amp;
":
"
'
:
~~~~~--~~ Minia!IJIC Paint
Stud. 740·645·2396
May
entinei-Reglster wll
~
Call $275.00 Call 256- 1233
Ieaiie a message.
e resPonsible tor n
Pet ' Cremations.
ore than the cost o
740 -44 6-3145
Uvellock
Free miKed breed puphe spm::e occupie
~---=-~-""="- ~;;;;o;;~;;;;o;;-:::.-,~;;;;;;• pies,
6
wks
Old
y the error and onl
Goo rge's Portable Saw- 'Reglsfered Black Angu s !:'74;;0-:
·2~56~·..
18;,;3;;2:-~--~
mill. Uon'1 haul uour
Logs heifers
"bred .., dl 1o
'
and
1e
d
he first Insertion. W
to the Mill JUS! call
t'OO e
r sa ' reg., re '
hall notrbe liable fo
I
he1erscows.
A.I. s1re•s female, 3 yrs. old, great
::10 4_6 75 _1957
'
ny loss or e~~:p e ns
GAR Pnme Oes1gn, GAR w/kids, up on all shots,
Retail
Products, .Bo1d on $200, (740)992·5106
hat result s from th
Profeasional Services
Target,
Trave lor
004, Rat
Terner
Pups
ublicalion
TURNED DOWN ON
SAV Des1ty.
Gar New
mission
ol
304 -458 . 1612
dvertisement.
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI Des1gn 5050 and Others.
No f- ee Unless w e w1n! Grand
View
Farm , York1e
puppies,
AKC,
orrections will
t
-868·582·3345
Southside,
WV
Champiori
bloodlines.
vet
ade irl the firs
r
-=-:"-:-.,----,
·;;
30
,4;,;
·6
;,;
7
;;
5·
;
20
;
;
,;
9
;;;
6""""'""'""
recommended.
Lowes!
vailable edition.
~
pnce ever' 44 1·9510

Get A Jump
on
SAVI NGS

ptagley

All Dl•pl•v = 1;1

Pols

Personals

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Wprd &amp;de
P
D•lly :In - Column : g , oo • · "" ·

c:ornponv

time llf1d part time po. Calf '
lions il our customer 304-882-2645

fum- . 740-441 ·3702 er""""" 304.a82·3512 or
or 28&amp;5789
J04.488.7946
2 bedroom Apartment &amp; 3 Bd. spacoous home
2 bedroom House on 5th $750 M. plus utiiH•.
St 3Q4.81H350 ask for available
mid
Nov
Don
P
omeroy, 740-992-7511 .
2 room lumlshed apt. for 3408 Mossman Ave. 3br,
. 111111. 7 miles below GaUl· $400 month, $200 Dam·
pol~. Parking tor one car age
Deposit
only. $275 month + elec· 304-634-5625
or
"'
.lite. ·Deposrt required. ~56H247
Stop in o~x;e at 1403 2 BR S400 month $400
Eastern Ave. tor rental depos~ p~; utilities. S8
application
or
call Galfleld · Av. Gallipolm.
448-514
74Q.64S-t646

Websjtes ·

Sentinel

Anamotl:
Local

expenoooe requinld par- A\\efltion Crane"': Over·
·-.,·manont pooition corn· broot&lt; Cen1ef is coltbrll·
WID ~. IPI&gt;fiaooes son. HUO Approved Raf. ~~~~~--~ pany .......... """"""" .., 20 years of __ ,.,

OH

6unbl!' t:illld -6mtlllt( • Page 05

..

�P~tge 04 • 6unbap G:tllld -6ttitintl

Sunday, October 12, 2008

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

.Sunda~October12, 2008

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

'

CLASSIFIED

Meigs

',

C&lt;?unty, OH

. "fa •r*l

Help Wonlld •Goneral

TOWilhouseo
=~~~§:"~~-

2BR house lOcated 111
1BA Apt, WID hoolwps, town,
GallipOlis;
OH.
TV Incl. wlrent, S500/mo plus utilities, No
dose to hospal. Gall Pets. 740-441-Q110 Of

Gallla

740-J39.0362
1BR cloto 10

E - mail
c fasslf•e d @ my«;Jrt• lvtrib ur 1e .com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

'm:rlbune

.To Place

You• Ad,

www.mydailytrlbune.com
www.mydailys entinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

Regi!Ster

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 ' (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
675-5234·
992-2157
Or Fax To
Oead'~;,e&lt;f'

OffYoe #oW""'&lt;f'
Monday t:hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

2 00

Anno uncements

Mond•y - Prldey ror :rn • •rtton
an N••~ o•v•• pap•r
• u n d • y J:n- Colun•n : 0 : 00 a . n. .
,.rld•y .,..,r Sund•y• P...,p•r

Bu•ln••• o • v • Prior To
Pu-tlc•tlon
Sund•y Dl•pt•y : :t : OO ~.-~;.;_,
Thur•d•y •or •und•v•

Farm Equlpmenl

au

--===--==•

•POLICIES•

»Box number ad.s a
lways confidential.
&gt;Current
pplles

r t~te

car

Real
Estat
dvertisements
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
1968.
~All

~ Th!S

newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetin
EOE standards.

will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertisement
!alation of the law.

~We

Shop the

Classifieds!
~

~~~-P:;eh~":"~;;;;; ~,;,::,:~~,=~
~

AK C Min. Dachshunds 7
wk old. 1 Dapple long
ha1r male 1 short hair
mate. 740 -446-275 1 or -;;:Of"'a:'rm:""Eq;;iu~lpiom;;;:o•n-:t:-"
740-645-2340.
:":'
'584 International farm
Lab puppies for sale tractor with loader, can$ 100
each opy, new rear t1res. and
740-645-4941
2600 hours.
Ask1ng
$1 0500.00. Also selling
CKC Registered Bichon
Frise pupp1es 8 wks old. a 2001 Econoline 12 ton
flal·bed tra~er wifh elec·
Great w;th Children and
!ric
brakes and pin 11e
non
shedding.
Male
hitch for o:t.ttVVlJJO .
$450,
females
$500.
..,..-vv~
(304)440·0111 "
Mar,.tt,
OH. ----~-.-740·376·0664
or "Two row new Idea corn
740 _525 _41 43
~~~~~~~:-- picker/sheller:
lnterna·
2 AKC female Boston Ilona! 1066 Tracto r/Cab,
Terrier puppies beautiful 8 ' ~ 20 ' Gooseneck caUie
martdngs black &amp; while lrmler
Call
$125 ea 740-388-8743
740·446·4432

EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HOR SE/LI VE ·
STOCK
1RAI(EAS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CAR GO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
g.,.w
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VI EW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT

I

I

-~M;;;isc;;;;;;;t;;;lla;;;n~t:Oou"'s;;;;;;;;;;;;;

"":'

Jet AeratiOn Motors repB1rad. new &amp; rebuilt in
sloe~. Call Ron Evans,
1· 600 ·537 "9528

~~~=~-~~
~ACA TV 27" Floo od I

r m e·
beautiful
cab1net
With
sWive1 base • works well
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
$100 740· 256 -u&lt;276
TRAILERS.COM
FREE Wurll'lzer
740 _446 _3825
Organ
~-.~-.--...,..- 16 base pedal needs
720 ~. D . d1esel w!pony some
repairs
motor. (740)949·2072
::i04-88 2-2385

=

~H~av~e-.yo:-u-.
pr~,c~ed~a-.
Jo~hn ~G~iv.ea·w·a-y:-.Sa~clc-.l~ul~
l -.of(
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out our
used
inventory
at
www CAR EO com
Car·
michael
Equipment
_
.
740 446 241 2

leftover
clothing
740-388-8217

· Call

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
for
Concrete
Angle,
"""'"""""""""""""". Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating !Of Dra1ns, Drive·
Garden &amp; Produce
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Kiwi just E. of Syracuse Tue
Wed
&amp;
Fn,
on
St.
Rt.
124.
C
( 740 )992 . 7449
Bam-4:30pm.
tosed
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
Sun
74 44 5. 7300
Pumpk1ns and Fall deco- ~~-~~-~~
rat1ons lor sale~ at the Scag
Tiger
Cub
Melon Patch on SA t41 , Zero:tum
mower.
eJC.
9 miles from Gallipolis
con.,
low
hours,
$3,000,
1
0
Th
t
pen
ur · a ·
740·742·2373
_
;.;,::..:.;~~~~--,

o.

s

STEELAFICH
BUILDINGS
Made in USA Three
cancelled orders • will
sell for balance ow·•.
ltiU
16x24 &amp; 25JC36. Call
today to save thousands! 600·352..()469

Anti ques

AntiQue
gas
StOlle
green/cream in color &amp;
an antique bab1. bed
white w!brass accents,
mattross &amp; spnngs, bo\h
WantTo a.~
for $ 800 firm, call a"..er :~==-.-=:;;~"-'=:;;
spm, (740)949-3059 ··
Buying tools set! or trade
mec han 1c-car penter Iawn
Appliances
&amp; gard~n power tools.
=;;;;;;;;;;~~:""'""'iiii;'":' Call 740-388·15)5 or cell
~F
f1
d
ree-re rgerator,
use , 740·208-o320
in good running condif.
p 1 K
Ch8 st
con, au
arr,
er, Absolute Top Dollar • silOh, (740 )98 5- 3538
:::;;,,\·~5~;;;,.,,. ver/gold
coins,
any
~ F' I O'l Coal/
10K/14K/16K gold J9W·

t(ld' s Corner ........................................... ...... 960
MIscellaneou s .................. , ... ..,............. ........ M&amp;
Want to buy .... ....'. ........... :........ -. .... ...... ... ...... 970
Yard Sate .............................................. ... .... 975

Restaurants ......:... , .... ..,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 6044
$ales ............., ..... ,...... ,................:............... 6048
1echnlj:al Trades ................ ....................... G050
TextilesiFactory .... ....... .......... .................... 6052

. ~~~~~~·~t·&amp;..sp;rt::::·.:·.~:·.·.:·....·..::·.::::·.::~~·.::::·. :: ~~~~~·~e:T~~~;~ri·;;·............................

.

::g

Spom Utility

Yard Sale

HouMI For

1st time sale w/ the sell·
ingot 100 rolls of carpet
remarus,
flourescent
lights,furniture,
much
more.
3S 198
PeachFork,
Porn eroy.Every
Mon.-Fri 10amto 4pm.

1993 510 Blaze ,4 door,
131 ,000 mil~s . Good gas
mileage, 4x4, 6cyl .. 4,3
engine. Air, All Power,
Red &amp; Cream color,
Great conditiOn, $3000
Neg.. Call 740-2S6· t 332
~~~~~~~:::" or 304-638-0485
Yard &amp; garage sale Oct
.
11 &amp; 12 from t2-3. Log 97 Ford Expeditron, 4JC4.
spliUer.Band Saw, guitar, ' runs kgrea 1.d loo~s $g ~ •
k
lo es &amp; tow P g, 3r sea ·
·
100 1
s, wor
g 11
740·379·21 79
much more. 4253 SA 7 :..;;;,;;,;;,.,.,;;,;;,""""""""
N
=
~-·.,...-.-::--.--.-.. ;;;;;;;;:;~"'!'!~~=-=
Trucb
•·
Yard pnnt &amp; indoor c"-'se
,
f
books 97 Ford F250 4WD. expnnts sale o toys
tended
cab,
power
decoratiOns, fu rniture, of·
lock/windows
.
tinted
win flee supplies, etc . 1458
doWs 5 speed . 645·5357
Jackson Plke, Gallipolis
SS Ford F-250 , flatbed .
Truck call after 7 PM
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; 304 -458-1727

2 00

-:::2001
Colema'n
Chey·
anne
pop-up camper,
electnc brakes, A/C, 3
way refr1g., steeps 6·8, 2
stoves
plus screened
porch,
"'
ca ll
(740)367 •7569

Commercial
-;;;;;;;;.;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oo;
'For

sale

Pel. 245·5893

to

extend

our

theJamily and friends who
supported us during this
difficult lime. Words are
not suffi9ienl for all the
kindness

that

were

extended to us. We will
never forget all the love that was ehown in his memory. Jay was
so veiy special to a lot ol people and he will, be loved and

us lor reasons that we

cannot understand but we will trust in God that we will be
re·u nited someday. May God bless each and every one ol his
And friends who demonstrated through words and

actions how much he meant to all of us.
Helen; Austin , Paisley,
Tom, Mickey, Mark, Nancy, Matt, Jim and Jackie

HelpWanled

dopat\men\.

An Excellenf way to eam

monev. The

No

Taylor

New AVort
Marilyn

COORDINATOR
Eta ou d IIMor

~~-~'!"'-~-

50

Colonial Home for Sale .
@
See
' details
www.orvb.com, 10: Margan
or
call
( 740)~Hl031

House in Clifton for
rent.4
bedrooms.
Kitchen, basement, living
room. 1 bath , gas heat,
city water, unfemished,
$500 month + utilittes
and
cJeposit. possible
sale on land contractor
sell fe&lt; 35,000 304 593
8187 or 593 8107

ca

Help Wanted

HR apartment 174o)-509
7
:r.KI'

a-vu

.t Profe:i':a! Work

calls
9pm,

Environment!
../Medical, Dental, EAP,
40IKt

~2B~R:-~~b~--'!"l1

·

Equal Housing Opportu·
nlty. This Institution is an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vlder and Employer.
Qraclouo Living 1 and 2
Badtoom Apia. 81 Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apia. In Middleport, lrom
$327
to
740-992·5064.

ath on

..; On-site Doctor
.t Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

ann

clu TODAY!
Interview

TOMO.,ROWII
Work NEXT WEEK Ill

leased for Land Owners.
No. closing cost and
ZERO DOWNt Will do
land
imptovements.
BankrupiC\' &amp; Bad Crodtt
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 b8do
rooms
available.

1..aaa.-IMC·PAYU
Ell. 11121
httpt,..lnlocl-.r:cm

~74;,;0-44;...•&amp;3384.-;,;,~-:--

· $592. 2 bedroom mobile home - - - - - - - Equal s. Gallla School Dlslrlct.
Real Ea._.

;===:;;;;;;;

Housing Opportunity.
Must
~;;;;;::~;;;;;;~=~ $375

:::" i~;;!~,:~;
~·

60-hr. EMT Miner Class
&amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur·

Pat Hill , New Car Managar for an interview at
446-9800
·

Jil!iiiiJII

face Apprentice 80-hr.
Underground
Apprentice
h
T
M16ne·r. U dereerg
d"taFrlng
""""''"~""''"""' "''1
n
roun
or~ ; ,..,... . ...,...
man Class. Minor Safety
Equipment Store.
For
f
ion
more ' In ormat
call
:~;~_
Training Sub.
Bus
Ortvers
Needed for Meigs Local
A LOCAL MANUFAC· School Olstrict.$55 for all
TURER is taking appllca· day.Must attend dnver
tions for EXPEAIENCEQ .tr&amp;;lnlng class.Class to be
MIO Weldors. Please ap· hetd Oct20,08 \hrough
ply In parson a\ 2150 Oct.24,0B.Interested
Eastem Avenue, Oalllpo- please call Paul McElroy
lis, OH
ol74lH42·2990

c

8346

Real Estale

Sarvice Manager &amp; Sarv·
ice Technician positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send resume
to
LLCOCAREO.COM
or
fa)l to 740..446-9104
Sportswriter
~Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. •s seeking mo11~ated, people-oriented
Individual ti fill a .vacancy
in the newa dept. as a
Sportswrtt&amp;r. The suc·
,,
cessful candidate will
coverhiQh.schoolathlet.:
lcs 11 the area for the
dally edition of the newspaper, as well as assist
with ltle prOduction ot
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills,
pholography skills and
knowledge or desktop
publishing are sought.

benefits. Interested parties can send resumes to
Ke~ln Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Volley Pub!ishlng Co . 825 Third
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 orkkel~llmy·
dallytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

Real Estate

Real Estate

apt $700/ren\ (uUIIIies In· ~~!:;,;;;Saloo:;;;;;;~~"!!!"'
eluded).' Call oller' Spm. :-:

:

1990 Clayton 14x70, . 3br,

new

lb.
oarpet,
new carNC
w/fumlture
&amp; metal
port, porches, ex. con.,
must be moved, $12,900

2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease (740)992.£849
44
required. Call
1&gt; 3644 2004

for more Info.
Commerical Space

m

condition. 4

In now

bedroonl,

2
tor bolh. al appliances . In-

HoUMI for Rlnt
~~;;;;;""!~~"!:=

Brand new 3bed 2bath

~han

acre in Pt.
OWNER· Fl·
NANCE
· AVAILABLE,
(740&gt; 446-3570
91 14x70 mobile homo, 3
br., 2 batt), ready 10 be
movad,
$t0,500,
V40!59HI936
New 3 Badtoom homes
on +

+ ~11, 1BR, Plea&amp;al\1.

$400/mo

Rg&amp;Ref.
lum,
W&amp;O
hookup, No steps, Vel)'
4

.-o,

114 State
740-44Hl596

51,

"

2 BR

..,_ In Gallipolis,
WID
cono: $415/mo
,150/dDp. ·You pay all from $214.36 per 'month.
· No aect\on. 8 "' Includes many upg.-,
HUD.
Cal
Wayne delivery
&amp;
set-up.
404-15&amp;3802
740,385-2434

Colonial Orive lt 11 3
Bidwell, Ohi0 45614
74044&amp;3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM · 5PM

1oMow. ,M Equal oppor· 1\onal&amp;l&lt;ils allll bode1unly Employer.
pendlbla. Hoal\h lnlur·
,nee &amp; .01k a..,.ailabkt.

Help Wanted

, Certified.Occupational
' .· · Therapy. ~sSist.,t's.

No e~ required!
No CA!dit Cs!!l Sales! No Colleclionsl

(1 FUJJ-nme·&amp;zPrl!t-irnre R¥ti011. c;r11f.fi/af)18J
• PleviiMIS IA1Ig Tenri c.e l!J. !llalctlf. . .

•VIrydltNIIIIUeptw/rultlaw11tei;'lil~f

• Rexillie sd1ediHig ·Team • itntecl iljljiiNdl

t1•

·~

2004 TAUflUS SE
$4500
Automatic,

, Hn's what vou do:

Part-Thne Dietary "llM:b
We Offer:
. ( . . lllhtWigll ·Gncfii!IIPnt Huntrlllo

• h!llleil!flbprioge•lncHIIw• a-pwloge
· -~·4011

,.,. ••tm.s:Moltdlp l'rilla,flum 101 tD 4p '
Applyin person:Scenic Hills. TriCIJ firlct I AINndl if11
111 Bud: Ridge Road,llidMI, 01145614
tKEmail~m tKOnlineot

.www.vrablehealthcare.com

A fH of $20.00 will be ·charged fa&lt;

Books &amp; Books on taptule

Here'• whir WI offer:
We@ Pay arwll!onus fncenfi'iu!
I Fulllnd Pill-lime PositiOns!
I ProfeS$10ns/ Worlf EnvironmenV.
I ~. Dental, EAP. 401K!
Doc/or!

CIJITOOAYI
lniWVIew TOIIORROWI!
.Wvrt NEXT WEEKI/I

..

''

Sticks &amp; Stones Logging
&amp; Firewood
We accept CAA &amp; HEAP
446-6783- 446·4112
645-2480

1-888-IMC.PAYU, Ext. 2321
Apply

441..()442

Bossard Library
Sat., Oct. 18
10am-3pm

I

' on.m

BASKET GAMES

eerly antvll, late arrival, early
removal, 1111 removll, ar anytime
ICOIM 11 wanted 10 flltgroundl other
thin llafiG dated. Building ap110e , II

.

.

6 cyl,

Mark Your Calendars!

Very good condition

Raise fullds Bnd l8lleW membetShips lor the
Na/illl!fll Rille Associalkin

We are also currently seeki!J8: ..

WINTER STORAGE ·
Meigs County Falrgrouilds
Amval: Oct 25, 2008
9:00a.m.· 11:00 a .m.
A~e:Apnl25, 2009

FOR SALE

onlint:

http:1~obl.lnfocillon.com

flntl oomt ""'

"

~==""""'""'""'"""

Modlcal

•;;;;;;;;;;..i;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;oo;

:~:gra~r;~~.co~.re- l2;;~~{;[J
mium Retailer
Auction

Auction

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS!
Real Ealate

1st Time
IIMEBUYUS
FHA$3%

mymidwesthome.com

748.828.2151
Auction

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS: 7-slgned Lloyd Middleto~
Dolls plus several Middleton outflls, dolllurniture, cedar chest ,
cookie jar, carnival dish, antique hand painted hurricane style lamp ,
12t pieces of stained glass , 12+ pieces of slate,

.The GALLERY AT 409
is now offering the following
classes :

.!'it.

lnlkll8loflgl .... 00111
Open bn; 12.00111
lnlldt ~-; 11.00111

Sponsored by

Military Family
· Support Grp.

Fllver Cities

Rio Gra11de Elem
Fall Festival

Calllllll-4372 lor tnOfllnlormaUon

Oct. 18 4:30 • 6:30
7 pmAuction

COURTSIDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
Presents
Elixir
Fri., Oct. 17th
10 pm- 2 am

Thursday, October ;13
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464

COURTS IDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
Halloween Party
Sat., Oct. 25th
Costume Contest

\

llleglnnor Youii\IAdult Art. ·
Four Total Classes (One n1ght per
week &amp; art materials/
Pastel, wa\ercolor &amp; oil instruction
OPEN TO ALLAGESI
Saturdays (1 p.m. lo 3 p.m 1
Beginning October 1t , 2008
$140/person
lnlrOductlon 10 CharcDII Art
Four Total Classes (One night per
week &amp; art matsrlala)
Tuesdays (6 p.m. lo 8 p.m.)
OPEN TO All AGES I
Btalnnlng Octol!er t4, 2008
S100/pereon
lntroduotlon 10 llllnld Qla• Art
ANOTHEA DAY A00EOI
November 1, 2008 (Full)
8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m .
Novtmbtr 2 , 2008 (Aac:epUng

ludenta)

oon toe p.m.
$155/pttwOn (lncludtlolllntd gl111
atarter kit &amp; Instruction)
II you alreacly have a alarter kit,
lt!en lnatrucllon Is $75

All classes will be held at
409 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
Pl.... call (304) 812-4625
to reseNe a seat in the class. Some
of lt!e ctasses have limited sealing.

•

/ \ •''
~I '

I

',·, . ' •
J ,,
''

experience. Submtt resume &amp; salary requirements to: Gallipolis C.M.,
Gor&gt;ucfl Mgt, P.O. sOx • All types Masonry, brick,
190, Lancaster OH
·
block, stone , Free Esti43130-0190 or email to
mate,
740-416-7305.
kdasbury 0 embarqmall com
304·593.£421
EOE

•
Home Health Care ol
Southeast Ohio Inc., 1S
currently
hiring
home
health aides. Cer11f1ed or
experience
Bonuses
Available .
Call
Community
service~. 1866.a68· 1100
P.O. Box 604, Joclcson,
OH 45640 or e·mall to ~~~~~~~beyeeserv@yahoo.com.
ResCare Home Care •
Deadline for applicants Provider
of
Support
E
rt
Services
to
Individuals
10115108
10
· qua
ppo u- · h "RIDD 01
ea
n"" Employe
wi1 M
.
rect
re
..,
r.
Staff. Contact Rhonda
Harnson.
Monday
through
Friday 9a-5p.
Wireless: The areas fast- 740-446--4814 ext 26 or
est growing Verizon re- e-mail resume to: marritailer. Now hiring the lol- son@rescare.com
· low1ng: Ass1stant Man1
ager
starting
at
$1 0.50·$11 .50/hr
plus
commissjpn.
Part-time
sate associate starting at
$
8.50/lu plus commls·
sion. Please ~ resumes
to

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

$250$ Sign On Bonus!!

9000

~~!'""'~---- Salo!ry dependent upon

BULLETIN BOARD

(740/

"Pieasan==t=====

:;

TER~S; Cash or check wlpositive I. D. No Credit Cards. Checks
over 1000 must have bank aumori~ation of funds ·available. All
sales are final. Food will be available. Nol responsible for loss or
accidents.
OWNERS: Mike &amp; Kay Sheridan
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick "Pal" Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd &amp; Brent King
Llcenaed &amp; Bonded In Ohio &amp;.wv- Member of Ohio &amp;
Nallonal Auc11oneer's Associations
Email: HYPERLINK "mallto:ShamrockAucllon@aol.com"
"malllo:ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com"
ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com WEB: HYPERLINK
"t,tlp:/lwww.ahamrack·eucllons.com" ·
www.ahamrock-aucllona.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

son City 004.£75-2117

· ·

program.
Call 740-379-2267 tor

P.T. Community Manager needed tor local
apartment &lt;Xlmmunny tocated rn GatlipoUs, Ot1io .
Ideal candidate wiHhave
previous elq)Brience 1n
property management at
a Aural Dewiopment
property, excellent comIn- ~ication and organizS-

Appalachian lire f'lroduc\s, Inc . ~ curmnllj,
seeking a salesperson
lor our Point Pleasant,
wv location, EICpel ieuce
is preferred. Job benefits lf'ICiude 401K, Health
Insurance , and Paid VacatiOI'l are also available.
Please apply 111 person.
Located 0 426 VIand
Street: 1n downtown Point

miscellaneous items.

Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas. eluded, $37,000 lOcated
$400/mo.
2000
sq/11 at 176 Zuspan La,. Ma·
7Q3.50H808

surtace fabricalors. Elperience 1n cabi1et shop
will bo helpfl&gt; but witt
tnm ~t people . Must
pass
prHWnplorment
testing,
drug
screen,
crYninal
background
check. 6 month training

:~~P~•~t=•bw~y:J;;F"
Maoagement
:~;·Property

~Marlin 22 AHie, Eagle bee bee pump rifle , American 'Classic
&amp;CrOSsman pellet pistols,
.
,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: lape·so1a &amp; matching chair (like
new), newer glass door book shelf, new hall tree , newer brass
double bed complete, vanity &amp; stool , ,4·drawer chest of drawers,
maple night stand , small chest, several small cabinets/nigh! stands,
small wicker cabinet &amp; hamper, 2-door cab1ne1, 5·shelf knick knack
stand, Filter Queen air cleaner, humidlfJer, lots of wall decorations
and framed prints, ·several lamps, mirrors, jewelry boxes, curtains,
bedding, afghans &amp; linens, Qwk Top Broom, Dirt Devil sweeper,
Bissell shampooer, fans, portable TV, VCR , Brother electric
typewriter, new Europra Model 801 portable sewing machine, small
Whirlpool refrigerator, Galanz microwave, microwave stand,
kitchen dishes, pots, pans, &amp; small kitchen appliances, bar stools,
Christmas &amp; other holiday decorations, yard ornaments , gazing
balls &amp; 2·g&lt;iese w/outfils, Sperti Sun lamp, exerc1se equipment
(Gravity Aider, Health Master Bike, Fil One Glider, Wallen Belt
Vibrator), 2-folding tables, lawn cha1rs, metal detector,
MOWER, TRAILER, TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOU: new Tractor
Supply Sx10 ft. trailer wflold down .tailgate (never used), fold out
ramps, 2005 Cub Cadet riding lawn mower Series I 000' w/900
hours, Yard Man self propelled mower, Weed Eater mower, Weed
·Eater Feather Lite 20, Poulan Predator chain saw, Black &amp; Decker
electric hedge trimmer, tree trimmer, lawn &amp; garden tools,
Campbell Hausfeld 2 'gal. air compre'ssor, wheel barrow, lawn cart,
several gas cans, Karcher powtr washer, Megaheat kerosene
space heater, 3-aluminum extension ladders (2·12 &amp; 48ft.), 3·
aluminum step ladders, tool cabinet, hydraulic jack , Craftsman
Saws All, Shop Source Saber Saw, Pro Source t2 v &amp; t9.2 v
cordless drills, Skil circular saw, Power Craft angle grinder, Dremel
tool w/heads, hand saws, socket sets, nuts, bolts, and other

=

:~;;~~;
Commerdal

counter

Marlogs-t/

The position ls full time.
40 hours a week, with

playground, (trash, sew· ::or~'7~40-;:.2Q8.=.~786~1-::-:-~
age,
water
pd.)
$425/""'t,
$425/sec. 3BA located, on Bulavllle
dej&gt;. Caii 740-3S7.QS47
Pike.
$475/11111t
14Q.36H762
Two tBR new op\s. In ~--~~~~-­
lown wl off street pari&lt;· 3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant
lng, FUlly loaded wl area 304·273.s522 "'
stainless
steel
IPI&gt;1f 304·674.fi204
ances including trash Mobile Home· for Rent Pt.
compactor, OW, custom Pleasant area HUO ac·
b&lt;JII cabinets, WID also cepted, Depos~ required
included,
Call 304~75o3423
Llmllod 10 1 person per
.
7~!27

made

tops. LooklnQ too solid

WANTED: Part-time position available 10 assist
lnd~iduals with mer&lt;aJ
retardation at a group
home in Bidwoll:
Owner Oporate&lt; Dppor· 11 35 hrs: I 0:30a·7:30p
tun~ies R&amp;J Trucl&lt;fng • 5un; 2·IOp M/TufN;
Marietta, Oh&lt;J
' has ~ 21 27.5 his: 3:30-llp Fn;
- rportunities available for 9a-7p
Sat 1·9p Sun;
M
Owner OporatOfS within ust have higil SChOOl
dipfom·-eo
id d ·
the reg100. We feature
dl\3
'
val
nvor's liceose and three
weekly settiements. in. .
eluding luel su!dlarge &amp; years good dnvlng expe·
trailer rental. Operators rlence.
$8.40/hr
after
hould have newer equip- , training. Excellent benefit
packa~
Pre em"'O"
ment. For more tnforrnaljl~•
.... , tion • contact Dennis at ment Drug Testing. Send
resume
to:
Buckeye
800462 _9365

hove 18leren&lt;:es.' •
plus
depos~.
Nk:e
Clean
Ground 740-256- 1686
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, ~~~~"':""-.~
Ralerenees/Oepostt/No
Mobile hoine klr rent 2
PelS 304-675-5182
BR
1
batll;,
new
~---~--.- lumace/ca; new appl&gt;
Tara
Townhouse ances; new baltl Uke new
Apal1mllnls • 28~, 1.5 home, no pets: 3675 ~u­
batll, back pl\lo, pool, Iaviiie Pike 740-446-4234

Help Wanted

•

!:~u~bte le::

at Jack· $500 per month Includes
West- utilities. 540-752-0626 or
... ~~-~.
52
~w,..
·
9 ·;.:.1:fl~1 ~-:-"~~
wood Dr.,, from $365 to I ::;S4~(}~7~2::;.
$560.'
740-446-2568. Federal Funds just re-

Real Estate
Rentals

CIA.

!!!!

no

·CNA. CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis •. Ohio or

eas ·

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ter dep., no pets,

Ohio
valey
Home
Health , Inc. ~iring Home
Health
Aides
STNA,

T'AL

Camp .
Conley
304-B95- 3129
~~~~~=~~

~ sklfll

"\ntefporsonal &amp;
ot"g811izationat skiMS

chairs, booth space is
• To appty, visit:
limited, lntet'ested cratwww.consulatemgtca- .
reers.com
letS should contact Emily·
405 North Parte Ave
Casto or Michelle Ken·
Wellston, OH 45692
nedy to reseMI booth
74Q.384-5Sl1
space
br " calling
EOEISFIDF
74(}992.£472
.__ _..;,;_;__ _.

AVON! All Areast
To
Buy or Sell . Shine1
.._;;;;;-:~
wages, mileage reim· 5
.". .
.......
ft -..a bene!'
pears .rort-v751429
• uursement mn.J
Its
Inc!·~•
heallh
1
nsur· Diesel Mechanic
to
POS '' JOBS ·~.....,ng
&amp; m·~~9
• w
..........
"""'' " " ' ' '
boat experiece desired ,
$17.89-$28.27/HR.,
now ~~~~-~!!"'!'h'
'=
good wages, exc. benem
&gt;ring. For IPI&gt;rocatoo Gallipolis Career Cofk&gt;ge package 304·67s.4545.
~ free government job . is s&amp;fkjng part·tlme in·
info, call Amtnlcan As· structors who possess a Help Wanted· Now acsoc.
of
LabOr master's degree In gen- Mtontlng applications from
.....,..
1·913-599-8225,
24/hrs. ~ral educat!on subject ar- 9am-noon,
Mon.
thru
emp. serv.
such as: English, Fri., Roadside Hotspot,
Math, and Social Sc1· Portland, Ohio
Htlp Wantod • Genoral ences. E-maH resumes
to
fdonlckl@galllpollsca· · , I need to lind (2) people
S250 Sign on Bonus reercollege.cOm or call needing a full time job:
Ten positions need filled
800-214-0452
You need to be honest, a
by next weeki
person of lntegrrty, wiltl
No experience requ1redl
SUper 8 naN hiring for
good people skills. You
No Salest
part tlme 41'nploLtment.
v •"
J
also need to be able to
No Collections!
QuallfM!d persons must
follow instructions and
be 25 years 01 age, pos·
ha~e an ability to listen
Recruit 11olunteerslor
sess
strong
customer
and laid people .in tbe
non·profit orgamzabons
service sldlls and be able
right direction. 1need
such as St. Jude ,
to work ftoating shifts. people who want to work
Children's Research
Apply in person, NO
and will show up for
Hospital.
PHGNE CA~L.
work. If you are a recent
Gat paid to make a
collage grad and cannot
42 people needed 10 lose find employment and feel
dlirerencel
up to 30 lbs in 30 days.
that 0 ore q alff ed
30 day mon~ back
y ~
u ' ,
"Fun and Part-time
...,
give us a chance until a.
PositiOns
. ~:~2~101 Call
Usa
joblnyourcareer ·path
.t Day anc1 Evening
becomes available, Call

dl ~rt
~-·:;;;;·:....::-:----.;Three
Bedroom house
At* 2 North. Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home

communication&amp;

S580 per week, uroay October ' evon\s
rapid advancemeniS and begin at 1011ni and end
benefits. For an tnterview · Bl: 2pm, crafters are to
cal1740-44&amp;-n98.
,
provide .own table and

Joilo

smoklng, quiet, $475 a
mo. plus dep., pick-up
applicafions at 00 Mid-

..............,
--.-.-

lions

Go.em1M111 &amp; fedora~

lleeuttful Apta.

Clip tt\is AD and take 11
wittr you when you VISit
· our community to get
this special discount
Move·ln 1n Oct and get
$100.00 off your 2BR
Apt. 1n Nov. Currently
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA un1ts
Spacious floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
!lying, playground &amp;
basketball court, on -site
laundry fac di l~ . 24 h1
emergency maintenance , quiet country lo·
cation close tQmater
medical
facilities,
pharmac1es. grocery
store ... just minutes
away from other major
shopping 1n the area.
Honeysuckle Hilla
Apiu1ments

2BR APT.
441·0194

for

torll67"':••7e9k:terly/disabled,

houses are bemg built,
Sewagelelectric. $35,000
740·256- 1664

Oak Hill area 3 BR 2 lull
bath country nving riew
condition 1.5 acres value
$?5,000 now $59,900.
Call 600·951-2060.

·

·--.,.

wv

RHiab
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;...;;;;;...
~
2 br. mobile home In
· Racme, $325 per mo.,

applications

oidiZed,

lob

new refng, range &amp; dishwasher. included $75,000
740·44s.7029

-· Mor\.Fn, 30 hrs par
week.
Previous experi·
ence Is 8 plus. Please
maH/tmall resume
to:
Precision
. Fabricators,
7181 Qtlio River Aoad,
Polnt
Pleasant,
25550 or sales-p.......
v •o·
lablc.com
No phone
calls please.

.._. .

~RNbed Facility
'2 yrs M05
Expelioooe

,. •• _
...
.,....,,
\nil applications/resumes must be a Hl!jl Schoof ,..,. cara at our .,.
tor
'
····graduate. Ftil time po- nual ~ 00 Sa\·
t'-part·timl -~ 1 posl18

'In' Pomeroy, 2b&gt;, 1 bolh,

w•iting list for HUD sub- after

lease $40K . BC
uyellr mHust 5Survey
a a er
pm
offlce!warehouse/storage · 304-695-3 390
great location 1n Gallipolis.
1800
sq. ·t1 . Meigs Ca .. 5 acres on
$400/mon lh · Ca11 Wayn e Landaker or Cook Ads
404 456 3802
• '
$19900
Reedsv1·11e
, •

3500

Local bollness is aocep\·

Oh, $375 per mitt !&gt;us
ulilities, $375 deposH, no
pets. 256-6661
·
Ne~ 2BR 2 bath your
choice ot rentng com·
pletely furnished &amp; all
;,...
ol .,.
~~~ 1~ es pa~ or you . .Pro·
vldn-.g tumltuce &amp; utilities.
NO'I;;EASE ~702 9

Twin Rivers fower Is ac- : s

cepting

4

heart1ell gratitude to all of

Help Wanted

CONVENIENTLY
LDCATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE! Townhouse apartmenls.
arld/0&lt;
small
houses for rent Csll
74()-.U1-1111 for application &amp; lnfonnation.
~~;;,;::;;;;;.;;;;;;;:::.-:-~
Free
Rent
Speqialll!
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hookup, tenant
pays electric. EHO Elm
V1ew
Apts.
(304)882-3017
•'lcati
1i k ~
a '"g
op,. , ons
Gallipolis area near Wal mart. 1 BR Apf. Utilities

======- -:-=-::-:::;;;;;;-:-=;;;;;
~
lot on At sse where all

The family of Jay Smith

-

~~~~~-..;,~ stove &amp; frig., no pels, no

or

1992 Camoro, V6 needs
HouMI for Sa'·
work $1 ,000 .
1991
"'
VW Passan $750 call 186 Nor1h Park Dr. , can
•"'"12
4444 '
~"Q •
304·675·5640
or
~~-:-~--:-~~ 304 59:3 1204 111 11
02 Honda Acx:ord EX, 4 •"nd. Co.ntracwt osre Oonut
~
door,
auto, · ' loaded, ·Right. Also a WeiNngtoil
92,000 miles. 245·5526
Plano call lor oppolnl·

30o/.

.ted I
on C t'l
oI adl us
ncome. a
304-88 2•3121 , available
for Sani
a d 01 bl d
or n
sa e
people.
~

Extraordinary Property:
Spectacular view of the
Ohio River
Pnvate drive off lincoln
Hill .
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
woods on three sides
(4+ \acres, to a historical
home. Circa 1900. 5
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
full baths, 2 staircases.
beautiful orig1nal woodwork. many picture windows, mostly new win·
dows, large kitchen and

m/1

New 2BR 2 bath on ' 3 ac.

family.

lnduded ~

~~:--.--.::-~ •""""""""'""""""" wooded
12
acres
RV Sewice at Carmi· - fo r Sa,.
L 8pr•mor
"'·-·
$22,500! Salem Ctr. 16+
chael
Trailers
·
acres $49,9001 D~nville
740•446 _3825
3br. 1 112 ba. brick 13 acres NOW $26,900
ranch , approx. 13yrs old Gallla Co. 10+' acres
ceramic 1ile, wood floors. $12,500!
We llnance 1
Open House
Sunday Call 740;441 ·1492
for
Oct. 12th 1•4 37 BuUer- maps or VISi t www.brunAutos
nut Dr. 740 .386 ,9056
erland.com

I
1

missed forever. God has taken him from

•·Is.

Sal.

ApproJC. 25 acres
re·
mote.
rough
access

!!!!

93 Ford Tempo, 4Cyl.. ment to see them bOth.
2dr.. blue, good work
$650 --:~"::-~:-::~~~
VII
'
car,
•
bed 2 bath &amp; oHice In
Wood Gas
elry, dental · !JOid, pre (740159H936
f 935
US
town , hw &amp; tHe floors ,
"'"!~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~
~..;,":':"~--:--~~
~
fl · 1
~currertey,
d'
::99
B k
• ·s b
updated kltchen &amp; baths,
FI.Rc::wooo FOR SALE proo mill
se..,,
18·
UIC
L..cl a re,
u J'-PICK UP 545/LOAD monds, MTS co1n· Sh op . 112,000 mIfes, runs privacy fence &amp; above
poak
security
151 21\0 Avenue, Galli· good , 31MPG, $3,200 ground
446.8832
polis . 446·2842
080 740·200·1221
system, much more. 130
Bast1ani
Dr. $129.000
446·2923
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks

I

Rivert&gt;end
Apts.
New
Haven wv. Now ocoept·
· lng
app\icatloos
for
HUD·subsklized,
one
Bedroom .
Utilities

~==-::'=="-'::-•

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~~-::'"':"'""'".'-~-

740-59"5174

.,....rtment available now 2 BR house Gallipolis,

1

(740)949·2816,
740·591--6522

witt1 full

"""""·'· 2t&gt;r on tile River In ...

-:.-~~~':--~:"""-

breakfast room, beauli·
tullu landscaped with 1n
'
ground pool. Sit on the
wrap around porch and.
en1
the
spectacular
·0 1"
view ol the Ohio R1ver. 2
cm- detached garage and
2 out buildings. 'would
make a wonderful family
!!!!
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Campan / RVa &amp;
Want To Buy
Private and Picturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Tralltn
Wan! to buy Junk Cars, Senous
inquires
only,
~::"'~'":~~~~ call 740-388-0884
please catl740·992·3678
1995 24 ' Tefry Camper,
Real Esta te
sleeps 6, · $6,000. good 3000
S!llf'S
'wn
• d lAawage
s hape &amp; c1ean, ca11

wants

Recreailonal Vehicles ............. .................. 1000
ATV ....... ... :.................................................. 1005
Bicycles.. ................ ................... ................. 1010
BoatsiAcceasories .................................... 1015
Camper!RVs 1r Trallers ........................... .. 1020
Motorcycles ....... ........................................ 1025
Other .. ...... ............ ................ ...... ... ............. 1030
Want to buy ................:... .......................... .1035
Automotive ...... ... ............................. .......... 2000
Auto RentaVLease ... .................. ,.............. .2005
Autos ............. ...... ..................... ...... ,........... 2010
Claisic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Comtnercialflndustrial ... ......................... .. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ............ ......... ............. 2025
Sports Ullllty ............ ........ .......................... 2030
Trucks ................................... ......... ............. 2035
Utility Trailer&amp; .. ................................ ,,.. .... .. 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............. ................................. .2050
Real Estate 5alea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .. .............................. .......... 3005
Commercial ................................ ... .. ......... .. 3010
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Qwner ..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .. ............ .......................... :.3030
Lots .. ,...... .................. , ...... ........................... 3035
Want to buy ........... ... ...................... ............ 3040
Real Estate Rentals~ ...... :.. ......................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ....................... .. 3505
Cofnmerclal ..................................... ........... 3510
Condominiums ........ .....:.......... .................. 3515
Houses for Rent ......... ............................... 3520
Land (Acreage) ........ ................ .................. 3525
Storage ..... .................................................. 3535
Want to 'Rent ............ .................... .............. 3540
Manufectured Houslng ........... .................. 4000
Lots .............. ............ ........................... ........ 4005
. Movers ......... ............... ......... .......................4010
Rentals ....... .......... ............................ .......... 4015
Sates ............ ......................... ......... .. ........... 4020
Supplles .... ................................................. 4025
Want to Buy ..................... .......................... 4030
Resort Property ........................................ .5000
Resort Property tor sate ........................... 5025
Resort Property tor rent ........................... 505Q
Employrnent .... ............. .......... ... .................600e
Accountlng/Flnancla1 ......... ...... ......... ........ 6002
Adminlalrative/Proteaalona1 ............ .........6004
Cashler/Cferk .........................................., .. 6006
ChllcVEiderly Care .. .. .'..... ................ ...........6008
Clericai ... ... ........... ... ..·.....: ..... ...................... &amp;OtO
Construction .............. ....................... .........6012
Drivers &amp; Oeilvery '.......... ........................... 6014
Educatlon ..................... ........................ ...... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles ......... ................ ~.--8020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
FOOd Servlcea ... .-......... ....1......... .... ....... ... ... 6024
Government 1r Federal Jobe ....................6026
Help •nted- Gener•1 ........................... , ..... 6028
Law EnforC81n8nt ................................ ...... 6030
Melntenancet'Domettk .................... ......... 6032
ManagementiSupervisory ................... ..... 8034
Mechanlet .. ... .............................................6036
Me&lt;IIC.f ,............................................... .... ,.. 6038

.•

Noon~

Fuel/ Oil Coal
Wood/Gas
.._;;;;;"'".;;;:;i;;;;;;;;;;;;:-~
'Sea soned Firewood de·
live red. Call 446 -9204
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""
-:"

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legals ..... ... :... .......... ....... ...................... ..... ... 100
Announcemef!lS: ... ..... ........................ ... .... 200
Birthday"/Annlversary .. .... ,... ....... ......... ... ...205
Happy Ads .. ..... ... .. ,..... .... ...... ....... ............. .... 210
Lo ~t &amp; Found .. ..... ........................................ 215
Memory/Thank Vo u ......... ..... ..... ..... ... ... ..... .. 220
Notlces ......... .. ......... .. .................................... 225
Personals .
.. .... .. ... :.... .......... ....... 230
Wanted .... ..... ... .......... ......... ........ .......... ....... 235
Services .. ......... ....... .. .....,.......................... ... 300
Appliance Service ......... ... ... ................ ..~ ..... 302
Automotive ..... ... ........................... .... .. ......... 304
Building Materials ......... ... ....... .................... 306
Business ...... ..... .. .. , .. ...... ....................... ....... aoa
Calering .... ... ....................................... .... ......31 0
Child/Elderly Care .... .. ........... .... ........ ..... ..... 312
Computer s .... .. ..... ...... ,............ ..... ....: .......... 314
Contractors ... ,.. ,..........,.... .. .... ............ ...... , ... 316
Domestics1Janitori al ............ ........ .. ............. 318
Electrical ........................... ........................... 320
Financial .. ......... ................... .. ... ......... ,... ... ....322
Health .......... ........................ ......... ......... ....... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ............................. ... ...... 328
Home Improvements 330
·
Insurance .................................................. ... 332 ·
Lawn Service ..................................... , .... .... 334
· Music/Dance/Drama ........ ...... ................ ...... 336
Other Service s .............. ..................... ..... ..... 338
Plumbing/Eiectrlc al .......... ........ ................... 340
Profe_ssional Se rv1c es ................. ......... ....... 342
Repa1rs .. ,..... ...... .. ri ....................................... 344
Roofing ............... :........................................,346
Security .... .... .... ........ ..... .... ....... ...............~.... 348
Tax/Accounting ....................................... ... . 350
Travei/Enter1alnment ...... ... ... ~ ...... ..... .........352
Flnancial ... .. ... ........ ............ ............. ..... ........ .400
Flnnnc iaf Services ......... ....... .......... ...... ,., .. 405
Insurance ... .. ........................... .. ........ .... ...... 410
Money to L~nd ...........:......................... ........ 415
Educallon ............................. ,,, ........ ........ ..... 500
. ·Business &amp; Tr~de Schoof .............. ............. 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lesson s., .......................................................515
Personal ...... ................ ........................... ..... 520
Animals ... .. .. ................................................. 600
Animal Suppli es ...................................... .. .. 605
Horses ..................................... ..... ............ .... 610
Livestock ....... ,............................................ 615
Pets .... .... .. ...... ... -....... ........ .. -......................... 620
Want to buy ...................... ,..... .,, .. .,............,•. 625
, Agriculture ... ................................................ 700
· Farm Equipment.,. ...... ..... ................ .. ..... .... .. 70S
: Garden &amp; Produce ...................................... 710
, Hay, Feed. Seed , Grain ....... ........................ 715
• Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
.: Want to buy .... ............................................ .. 725
• Merchandise ...... ...... ........... .......... ....... ... .... . 900
Antiques .................. .......................... .......... !k)s
Appliance ........................ ,........... ........ .... ..... 910
AucUon s ..... ...... ...... ........... ...........................915
Bargain Basemen t... .. ,.... ,, ....................... ,, 920
• Collectibles ., .............................................. 925
: computers ··:. . " ·· ......... .................................. 930
, Equipment/Supplies .................................... 935
• F._a Markets ........................................ .. .. .... 940
: Fuet 011 Cool/Wood/Gas ., ............................ 945 ·

.

Now you can have borders and Qraphlcs
.,..,_,.
added lo your classified ads
.(.. ~
lrn
Borders$3.00/perod
~
Graphics 5041 for sm,o;~ll
$1 .00 for large

Ada

• All ada muat be prepaid""

Seeking owner or lost
70 yr old 'Counlry Boy"
dog. Large , all white, no
seeks
Romance
w/ .
Maney To ltnd
l.D. wander1ng v1cinlly of
lost &amp; Found
wo•nan !)5-72 · PO BoJC
Bulaville &amp; Circle Dr. for
~~;;;;;:;;;;;;::--:-== ?22 Poca. wv 25159
f oor'ld· Rio Gr.a11dP :mw
NOTICE Borrow Smart. 2
weeks.
contact
fi malt
pekinge~e
lv11e
Contact the Oh10 D1v1· 740·446·l 530
Serv1ces
&lt;log. fan, very lr rendly 300
s1on of F1nanc1al lnstttu- .,.,,....--,..,..--,...
J740)245-577U
lions Office of Consumer AKC reg Lab puppies
Affairs BEFORE you reli- vet/checked
•,
Hoa~ng &amp; Cooling
nance your home or ob- wo rmed/shots. 2 blk &amp; 1
lain a loan. BEWARE ol yellow.
females. Only
Notices
Down flow furnaces l enrequests lor any large 3 left. $175 to good
'
~
nox .BO thsBTU$200 ,/:!ISO
advance payments of homes. 740-256-6882
~OTICE OHIO VALLEY 'l 5tl1sBTUS t 50 Call Lee fees or insurance Call
992- 4408
.ce o1 c onsumer FOUND. Young medium
PUBLISHIN G CO
r')L·
the OH 1
Dmmcnds tM t ym1 do . Home lmprov•ments
Aff1ars
toll
free
at sized Golden Retriever
Female. Sidwell
area
business with peo ple )'OU
1·866-276-Q003 to team
38
8
8
65
5
know cll ltl NO T lQ SC' rd
1f th e mortgage broker or ;;;;.;:~·~;:~-.~--::Basemen1
tender is properly li· "'
4 Full Blooded Au stralian
money th rough, the lllilll
Waterproofing
11nt1l .you haw ' nwestl~&lt;l t·
censed. \This IS a public Shepherd
pups,
Red
Un,t:OIJdl!iOi rallilehrne
&lt;lhg the otte1'rng
'
ann o unc~ment Merle.
10
wks
old.
guara11tee. Local refer- . service
ences twnished Estabfrqm the Ohio Valley 304-675-7608.
lislled 191'5 Call 24 Hrs.
PubliShing Company)
' Beautiful white kitt ens to
740·446·0670, Rogers
give away, approx. · 8
Ohio Valley
Oasement Waterproofing.
old ,
call
500
Educat10r1 wks.
Publishing reserves
(740)992·7546
Supenor Home Maintethe right to edit,
nonce.
Carpentry,
reject or cancel any
CKC Reg . Mini DachsPlumb1ng.
Electncal.
ad at any time.
A 11111.1ls hunds, 1 long haired fe600
Rentals No Job to Small
male, $350, 1 short
&gt;Errors Must
8
Reasonable
Pnces.
haired male, $300. F1rst
Reported on the firs
339-3442 or 446·2805
shots and wormed. Call
y of publicatio
Ho
"::';;;;;;--~l'lt~S~;o;;:"':'
740-386-8445
or
nd
the
Tribune
Other
Service&amp;
":
"
'
:
~~~~~--~~ Minia!IJIC Paint
Stud. 740·645·2396
May
entinei-Reglster wll
~
Call $275.00 Call 256- 1233
Ieaiie a message.
e resPonsible tor n
Pet ' Cremations.
ore than the cost o
740 -44 6-3145
Uvellock
Free miKed breed puphe spm::e occupie
~---=-~-""="- ~;;;;o;;~;;;;o;;-:::.-,~;;;;;;• pies,
6
wks
Old
y the error and onl
Goo rge's Portable Saw- 'Reglsfered Black Angu s !:'74;;0-:
·2~56~·..
18;,;3;;2:-~--~
mill. Uon'1 haul uour
Logs heifers
"bred .., dl 1o
'
and
1e
d
he first Insertion. W
to the Mill JUS! call
t'OO e
r sa ' reg., re '
hall notrbe liable fo
I
he1erscows.
A.I. s1re•s female, 3 yrs. old, great
::10 4_6 75 _1957
'
ny loss or e~~:p e ns
GAR Pnme Oes1gn, GAR w/kids, up on all shots,
Retail
Products, .Bo1d on $200, (740)992·5106
hat result s from th
Profeasional Services
Target,
Trave lor
004, Rat
Terner
Pups
ublicalion
TURNED DOWN ON
SAV Des1ty.
Gar New
mission
ol
304 -458 . 1612
dvertisement.
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI Des1gn 5050 and Others.
No f- ee Unless w e w1n! Grand
View
Farm , York1e
puppies,
AKC,
orrections will
t
-868·582·3345
Southside,
WV
Champiori
bloodlines.
vet
ade irl the firs
r
-=-:"-:-.,----,
·;;
30
,4;,;
·6
;,;
7
;;
5·
;
20
;
;
,;
9
;;;
6""""'""'""
recommended.
Lowes!
vailable edition.
~
pnce ever' 44 1·9510

Get A Jump
on
SAVI NGS

ptagley

All Dl•pl•v = 1;1

Pols

Personals

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Wprd &amp;de
P
D•lly :In - Column : g , oo • · "" ·

c:ornponv

time llf1d part time po. Calf '
lions il our customer 304-882-2645

fum- . 740-441 ·3702 er""""" 304.a82·3512 or
or 28&amp;5789
J04.488.7946
2 bedroom Apartment &amp; 3 Bd. spacoous home
2 bedroom House on 5th $750 M. plus utiiH•.
St 3Q4.81H350 ask for available
mid
Nov
Don
P
omeroy, 740-992-7511 .
2 room lumlshed apt. for 3408 Mossman Ave. 3br,
. 111111. 7 miles below GaUl· $400 month, $200 Dam·
pol~. Parking tor one car age
Deposit
only. $275 month + elec· 304-634-5625
or
"'
.lite. ·Deposrt required. ~56H247
Stop in o~x;e at 1403 2 BR S400 month $400
Eastern Ave. tor rental depos~ p~; utilities. S8
application
or
call Galfleld · Av. Gallipolm.
448-514
74Q.64S-t646

Websjtes ·

Sentinel

Anamotl:
Local

expenoooe requinld par- A\\efltion Crane"': Over·
·-.,·manont pooition corn· broot&lt; Cen1ef is coltbrll·
WID ~. IPI&gt;fiaooes son. HUO Approved Raf. ~~~~~--~ pany .......... """"""" .., 20 years of __ ,.,

OH

6unbl!' t:illld -6mtlllt( • Page 05

..

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

Page 06 • The Sunday Times- Sentinel

Sunday. October 12, 2008

.

· Breastfeeding
Awareness Month
activities, As

Hemsley sign
dedicated, As

•
~

Printed Oft • • 'ii;
ll.eydnl Newsptiul ~·

··• Burton wins at
Lowe's to move up in
standings. See Page Bl

BY KEviN KELLY
KKEUYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Wai-Mart shoppers were at first surprised
and then excited on
Sunday to find a national
political figure in their
midst who was , just as they
· were, picking up a few
things she needed.
.Accompanied by her
youngest son Trig, security,
staffers and a small pool of
news media, Republican
vice presidential candidate
Sarah Palin stepped off the
"Straight Talk Express" bus
to enter the store around
I :30 p.m., where she purchased a bag of Parents·
Choice brand disposable
~In K8ttylph0t0
·
Holding her youngest son Trig and flanked by jlecurily .personnel, Republican vice presi- diapers and a toy.
dential candidate Sarah Palin greeted shoppers at the Gallipolis Wal-Mart on Sunday. Palin · But it was also an opporwas enroute to events in Marietta and St. Clairsville. when she made
her stop in Gallipolis. tunity for the first-term
.

Enili Oldobor 31, ~

..

. DonWoodHvundal~com

810 E. STATE Sf., ATitENS~ OHIO
·Sales Hotline 888·288·9451

.

OBITUARIES

.

GMt:: '

Page AS
• Shannon Phipps,
37
.

.

.

'

Alaska governor to meet the
public at large and win
some votes for the ticket on
which she's running with
the GOP White Hol:se nominee. U.S . Sen . John
McCain of Arizona.
Palin did not have time to
answer questions from the
media following her tri.p
through southeastern Ohio ,
but left some folks exhilirated at meeting her.
" It was so ·exCiting," said
Pat · Miller of Patriot.
accompanied by her daugh- ·
ter Amber, a student at
South Gallia High School.
" She seemed to be very
sweet, and if she could stop
and take the time to buy
some diapers for her son, it
tells you that for her, family is first."

Pleue see Plllln. AS .

Southern fitness center ~pen to community
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYti'IILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - The Souihem
Local School District Fitness
Center, located at Southern
High School, is now open
for not olll).' students and fac·
to .uttlize but members
.

.

•'

p.m.,
only; 3:45-6 p.m.,
Friday, for. athletes '

...

2008 GMC

Y•kons,
Y•kon
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· .· . ·

Financing For
72 Months

Sale Ends Odaber 31, 2008

0% APR lor 721110$. with appo..d ~-

MSIP

·• Five generations.
SeePageA3
· • Garden club program
on Qre$ting cards.
: See Page A3
• !;!forts on global
warming ctiilled by
ecqnomic woes. •
See Page Al

WEATHER

.coach's
-9 p.m .•s~~~~:;~~~~u~f~~:
•
for community members.
In relation to special
times set aside for community · members, Thursday
evenings a hired attendant
will be available ill the fitness center, but from 9-11
a.m., Monday-Friday, community members are asked
to sign in at the hi$h school
office before utilizing the
center. The fitness center is
closed on Saturday . and
Sunday and children under
-the age of 12 are not.jll!rrnit. Submitted pl)oto
ted at the center due to liability reasons. Students in Around 125 people turned out for the recent open house at the Southern Local School District Fitness Center. The censeventh-twelfth grades will te.r Is open Monday-Friday w~h special hours for community, staff and students. Ajlmission into the center and use oflhe
·
·
·
also utilize the facility dur- equipment is free.
ing physical education and
This fitness center was $50,000 . for the district
lifetime fitness courses.
· advantage of free health is located in the renovated
next year.
The fitness center is avail- screenings offered by a vari" industrial arts room near the made possible by · a
Nelsonville
The
-able at no cost and anyone ety of health'care providers. back of the high school and $50,000 grant from the Osteopathic
Heritage
y;ishing to utilize the facili- Many participants signed up contains industrial quality Nelsonville Osteopathic Foundation grant will
ty is encouraged to visit · for a pilot study to evaluate equipment much like in pro- Heritage Foundation. Thi s address health , nutrition and
during evening hours to · the effectiveness and avail- fessional rehabilitation and year's money will come in physical activity efforts in
complete the medicallliabil, ability of the center with a work-out centers. In addi- two phases, as approval of the schools a~ part of the
ity waiver and tour.
follow up screening being tion to new equipment the first implementation Foundation 's Healthy and
is
analyzed .
During its recent open held 3:30-6:30 p.m., March (including Cardiovascular), phase
Fit in Southeastern Ohio
Successful
implementation
the room has new windows
house, the fitness center had 26,2009 .
mean
another Initiative ,
could
125 ~isitors, who also took
The SLSD Fitness Center and floor matting .

.

'

.

Delalll on Page A5

r-

Racine receives
.g rant for well repairs

repair but will now return
that money.
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Racine has five wells in
It SEI;TIONS- lll PAGES
RACINE - When light- its well field located in Star
ening recently hit two wells Mill Park within a Source
Annie's Mailbox
in the Racine well fields, the Water Protection Area.
At it's mo~t recent meetvillage was looking at
Calendars
repairs that were going to ing, Racine Council · set
$30,000 but luckily a trick-or-treat for 6:30-7:30
cost
Classifieds.
grant offset the l;&gt;ulk of that p.m ., Thursday, Oct . 30.
.
The start and ·end time is
Bs expense.
Comics
Racine recently received slightly different because of
a
EcJitorials ·
A4 grant for around $24,000 parent-teacher conferences
from the Ohio Public Works being held in the Southern
Obituaries
Commission to pay for the Local School District that
repairs , according to Clerk same night . .
B Section Treasurer Dave Spencer. . Council also adopted the
$ports
Spencer added that the vii- 2008
·Solid
Waste
As !age's insurance paid for Management Plan for the
Weather
around $6,000 of the cost district including Vinton,
® aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlsbinl Co. leaving Racine to pay . Meigs , Gallia and Jackson
around $300 for the repair. · Comities.
Before it knew about the
Racine. is al so consid~ro
grant, the vmage took out a ing buying new playP111H - Grent. AS
• loan to pay for the $30,000

INDEX

lL

,

EHS Homecoming Court

BY BETH SERGENT

•

•

'
•

Brion J . Reedlphoto

Eastern High School's Homecoming Court is pictured. Front: Flower Attendant Jenna
Chadwell and Crown Bearer Blake Newland , Allie Rawson , sophomore attendant, Queen
candidate Tresa Swatzel, Queen Morgan Burt, Queen Candidate Tesla Maynard, Junior
Attendant Chelsi Kearns and · Freshman Attendant Brenna Holter. Back, Escorts
Sophomore Jay .Warner, Seniors Anthony Putman, Derek Griffin and Travis Koenig, Junior
.
Jack Lynch and Freshman Jacob Parker.

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