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·.

www.mydailysentinel.com

~~

,Friday, October 24. 2008

Elec t

~oo8

ROGER
BRANDEBERRY
SHERIFF .. .. -.. ,......L.:·-:.::·-;.:::.:.:::::

ALONG THE RivER
Night lights: Majestic
scenes plentiful after dark, Cl

.

~

.. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

Sprint Cup ·

Nationwide ·

• Race: Pep Boys Auto 500

• .w r-: AUanta Motor Speed,

~:~~5~in
ecWI!
races ain&lt;:e,

began the
CM!f

Johnsen. In

Busch haHiopped 485 points.
~ That makes him last, not first.
: 1&gt; bpla's hold on the manufactur: et iJ9!nts lead rs sudden~~
~ ~ Only one T&lt;¥&gt;fa ~lin:. lshed lh the top 10 at Martipsville.
With 1oor races remain~ TOI'O!a
. has 193 Points, follciwed ~
· ; Chevrolet wltl11g;!, F!llll with 184 ·
' and ~e with 135.
.1&gt; Hilndtk:itMotorsports'.Mar· •
: tlnsvlle dOininan&lt;:e is etched
• dark irDrl!- tt was four years ago
' that 10 people died en route to
• Ulis track on the team's plane.
Johnson\; first Martins~lle victory
occurred on Ulat day. Hendrick · ,
Cl'em&gt;lets have won all but two of
the nine raoos run here sinre the
tragedy.
1&gt; At the remaining four Chase
· tracks, Johnson has won siK ~mes
and finished In the toP five 20
Hmes in 41 starts.
· 1&gt; As a practical matter, JOhnson
can probably afford two off races
in the final four and still win tile
- championship.
1&gt; Attendance cootinues to sutter,
and NASCAR continues to de!¥ it
The "estimated clll'Ml"listed in
tile raoo results I'H!S 64,000,
wh~h ;s near capacity and 1,000
more Ulan the estimate of an apparently larger Clll'M1 ea~ier this
year. A more likely attendanre fig.
ure was about 50.000.
1&gt; Jeff Gordon lost his best Shot at
winning a race. Gordon hasn't
gone Ulrough a season winless
since his first (1993). He's'won
more raoos at Martms~lle (se.:en)
Ulan ~ny other actO/e driver.
1&gt; Wl'en Gordon refers to Johnson
as "Mr. Martinsville; he knows
what he's talking about. Johnson's
career winning percentage at the
track Is .357. Gordon's is .219.
1&gt; The four Hendricl&lt; entries Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. (sec·
ond), GorOO!l (fourth) and Casey
Mears (sixtn)- all finished up ·
front. Two of Mears' best f~e finishes this year are !It Martins~lle.
1&gt; ~rt Busch's Dodge was so
bal~ \hat he wanted to gNe up.
~ Busch asked permission. denied
t1; Penske Racing's walt Czameo
ki, to pull off the track in the Mar·
. tin~He race's latter stages. Twice
Busch's car, in his words, "j,opped
~.front tires, and he finished ,
the raoo 34 laps behind.

way, Hampton, Ga. (1.54 m1.),
) 325 laps/500.5 miles.
\I • Wilen: Sunday, Oct. 26.
• t..t ya's wtnner: Jimmie
" . Johnson, Ch!Molet.
• ~-:Geoffrey Bo:1. dine, Ford,197.478 mph. Nov.
15, 1997.
• Race .-.1: Bobby Labonte. .
l ~ Pl:lntiac,159.904 mph, Nov.16.
1997.
.
. •Ust ~: What is there
• about Jimmie Johnson - and
Henarick Motorsports: for that
' matter- at Martinsville Speed~ wey? Johnson roared to within
shouting distance of a third
straight Sp&lt;int Cup championship
~winning the Turjls QuikPak
500. Natural~. of course. Johnson didn't shout. He spent qualf
ty t1me assuring everyone in

. earshot Ulat yet another champf
onsh1p wasn't a done deal. Most~ this led to ~ling bf eyes,
yawns and wances·of disbelief.
The race's Dnaming sponsor,meanwhile, undoobted~ came in
handly to all the v.oulilbe cor&gt;
tenders figuratO/ely drowning in
the wake of Johnson's Chevrolet.
In a raoo that ended with a twolap, overtime fin1sh. Johnson won
~ .708 ot a second. which is
k_
ind of like winning a 1(X}rard
dash ~five of them. Johnson, of
cour: e. said, UWe were one of
two or thre&lt;;! cars tl]at were realiy
strong." The other two, whoever
they were, mariaged not to lead
339 laps, capture a fourth race
out of the past five at th1s track
and pick up a mere 83 points
the driver, Jeff Bl.rton. who had
been closest to him in the Chase
standings entering tile race.

• Race: Kroger 250
• WheN: Memphis (Tenn.)
Motorsports Park (.75 mi.),
250 laps/187.5 miles.
• When: saturday, Oct. 25.
• lJilt year's w-: D~id
Reutimann, Toyota .
• Qualifying record: Jeff
Green, Chevrolet.120.267
mph, Oct. 28, 2000.
• Race record: Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet. 92.352
mph, Oct. 29,2000.
• Last race: Kyle Busch
won for the ninth time in the
series this year, capturing
the Dollar General 300 at
Lowe 's Motor SpeedWay.

· Craftsman Truck

'

(1.54 mi.), 130 laps/200.2
miles.
• When: saturday, Oct. 2~.
• lJilt year's wiMOr: Kyle
Busch. Chevrolet.
·•
• Qualifyln&amp; record: Rick
Crawford. Ford, 182.735
mph, March 17, 2005.
• Race record: Ron Hornaday Jr., Chevrolet, 142.424
mph, March 18, 2005.
• Last week: Johnny Benson closed ·in on the championship by winning the
Kroger 200 at Martinsville

.

SPORTS
• High school football
action.
Page 81

see

~

'" ·r'J;s tyrsSIJ
J .:::.=..1 .

.,• r.::.
,. . . :s i.Jr:...; !Jr
r ·

c

No. 48

SPRINT CuP

JiMMIE JOHNSON

son, whose

ever at Mar·
tinsMiie.
I&gt;Who~IIOI­

K)1e Busch has
gone from first
to worst (12th)
ih the first six
Chase raoes. ...

Sinoewinn~at

Tall~. TOO(

J

LowE's CHEVROLET

5

As always, Burton was diplomatic
about rt, but a pit-road penalty- for
pitting outside his box- cost Burton dearly in the points race. Burton
said he couldn't get in the box because Jeff Gordon's car was leaving
the pits as his came in. "He didn't
do anytning wrong. I didn't do anythTng wrong; said Burton, who noted
that the penalty wasn't immediate~
assessed.

NASCAR This Week's Monte Out·
ton gives hie take: · one can't help
but wonder if Burton's penalty might
have been overlooked had not TV announcers ra ised the 1ssue."
)

NASCAR This Week
Jimmie Johnson started lhe Chase In lhlnl place, 40 points behind then-leader Kyle Busch. Now; with foorracts left, hi Is a comfortable
149 points ahead of seCond-place Greg Billie arid 152 points ahead of thlnl-place Jeff Burton.

,.. happy Joe . . . Radii!(
lllolllll( at 11111111'1 111111
. Dell NASCAR Title Wtek.
I'm so glad JGR (Joe Gibbs Rae·
ing) is losing at the end of the season. I hated it when Joe Gibbs 1
stabbed GM in the back by going to
Toyota .... They are taking away
American racing! I'm glad they're losing.
.limy Raid

Winchester, va.
There are many fans driving Toy·
. otas, too, and there are many Amerl·
can workers building them..

Johnson leaving his competition in ·the dust
By Monte Dutton

need more than merely a true aim. haven't already drowned in Johnson's
Only Johnson can lose the champi· wake are determined to keep on tread·
onship. Without an improbable col· ing water.
lapse, none of the three can catch him.
But it's tough. Edwards had his
Johnson, of course, isn't talking best-ever finish at Martinsville. All
smack. His words are carefully con- finishing third got him was a loss of
sidered.
30 more points.
"Overconfident would be a mis·
"Being realistic, this really was a
take," he said. "That's the thing that · very successful day for as," he said.
we really want to focus on not doing,
Edwards' best wasn't good enough.
and we need to carry the momen~um
"It feels just like you think it would
and have it work in the right direction feel like,'' he said. "You think, 'Damn,
for us, and we need to be confident in those guys are good."'
what we are doing and the equipment
A year ago, Johnson won the first of
we are taking to the track.
four straight races here en route to
"But we can't b.e cocky. Cocky? We the championship. He arrived trailing
are going to get our hand slammed in Jeff Gordon by 68 points. This year,
the door. It's just not what we are he already had a substantial lead (69)
about ... "
when he got here and left with a
Similarly, the three 'drivers who might-nig_)rlnvincible one.

MARTINSVILLE, Va.- Poor Cale
Yarbomugh. The only man ever to win
three consecutive NASCAR Cup
championships is _going to have his
comfortable retirement complicated
by one call after another from some
intrusive media types:
That's because Jimmie Johnson is
four races away from duplicating
Yarborough's 30-year-old feat. Win·
ning for the foul'th time in his past
five tries at Martinsville Speedway
gave Johnson a clear patq to yet an·
other championship.
The three drivers still within range
-Greg Biffle (·149 points), Jeff Burton (·152).and Carl Edwards (·19B)-

Stewart has fin.

BuS.:H !Shed 11th and
26tll,

bank robbery, according to Wednesday
afternoon,
BAEEDOMYDAILYSENnNEL.COM
Agent Mike Brooks of the after allegedly robbing the
Federal
Bureau
of bank wearing a silver
POMEROY
A ,. Investigation..
. Halloween mask.
Middleport
woman · Sayre · spent Wednesday . Beegle said Sayre conaccused in the armed rob· night in the Southeastern · fessed to robbing' the bank
bery of the Peoples Bank Ohio Regional Jail in brancl,· Wednesday after
in Rutland is now in feder- Nelsonville before being . she was apprehended at a
al custody.
transferred to custody of home on Ash S1reet in
Billie Jo Sayre , . 28, the U.S. Marshal Thursday. Middleport.
She told
appeared in U.S. District She was arrested by Sheriff Beegle she had planned to
(:ourt Friday on a count of Robert
Beegle
on confess to the crime after

R I 0
GRANDE

NASCAR This Week we/comes letters
· to the ednor. but Plfa$e be aware that
we have room for on~ a ~each weel&lt;.
We'll do our beSt to seleCt the best. but
indMdual replies are lrnpossJble due to
the bulk of mailre&lt;eived. Ptea!;e do not
seno stamped and seW-addressed envelopes with JWr iettefS, which.shoold
be addressed to:
NASCAR Th~ Week

rhe Gaston Gazette

0BITUARIFS
"Page AS
• PhYllis Lee Hughes
• Andrew M. McCarty ·
· • RichartfW. Myers

A

Gallipolis
woman's
dedication to

~~fi~e; . e~~d

community
Pauline
service was Wlitherholt
recognized
• James Bill Sands
last week when . Pauline
• William Edward Kauff
(Polly) Wetherholt received
• Anna Mae Ellis
·
the 2008 "'Outstanding
Achievement
in
• Lena Mae Maynard
Trustee~hip" award from
• Mabel L. Mahan
the Ohio Association of
~ Kenneth Harlan Cundiff Community Colleges.
. "Polly has provided
unwavering sul?port and
·outstanding"llemce·'to. ·Rio
Grande Community Colle$e
for over 30 years," sa1d
INSIDE
RGCC
President
Dr.
Herman Koby. "She has
continually lobbied for what
• Republican fall rally set is best for local students
for Lyne Center.
regardless of political nuni·
fications ."
SeePageA2
. "Her concern has always
·• Breast Cancer Health
been, and continues to be,
FairNoV:8 at HCCC.
the students of Rio Grande
Community
. Collellf:,"·
SeePageA2
Koby added.
-"
• Running from past
Wetherholt's late husshadows doesn't help.
band, Manning Wetherholt,
was one of the founding
~eAJ
members of the community
• Rio boards commit to
· Please see Trust.H, A2
shared vision,
governance. See Page A6

WEATIIER

P.O.Ila&gt;&lt; 1538
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

...J.:!.

:\u. -J.O

.

BY BRIAN J. REED

NEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

NASCAR ilfftc181a

)-; I . .JO • \'ol.

aD" .

Accused bank robber in federal court

STAFF REPORT

NASCAR

Jeff Burton va.

John Clark/

.

trustee wins
• •
recogmuon

u
Burton

PonHTO! • \Iiddlt•jHll'l • ( •• tllipoli-.,. • ()('lohL•t· :!.h. :!UOX

Ex-RGCC

E
R

s

NASCAR This Week

worst finish in
the Chase is a
ninth .... Dale
Eamhardt Jr.'s·
runner-up ftniSh
washlsbest

I ..:

v

in

... Who~ hotWell, ot&gt;.iously,
Jimmie JoM.

( Hli 11 \ . dlt·~ Puhli-..l!ing ( o .

~~!~~~~~!~~~,g~~~

and65building
of
po1nts an
overadvantage
Hornaday.

on

l'rilllM on 100%
Rer,-cled N~"· spriat

Hometown News
for Gallia &amp; MeigS counties
.

• Race: E·Z-GO 200
• Where: AUanta Motor
SpeedWay, 'Hampton, Ga.

Jobless
rates post
·decrease

consulting with a minister.
but was arrested before she
could do so.
Sayre allegedly en'tered
the bank shortly ,after 9 a:m.
Wednesday, armed with an
automati~
weapon, and
forced a teller to enter the
vault and fill the bag with
money .
Sayre told local officials
she left the cash, costume

and other items on Beech
Grove Road . They were
later · recovered. and the
weapon she used in the
crime was recovered from
the Middleport residence.
The Mid&lt;!leport home
was subject "to a searc h
warrant investigation after
her arrest, Beegle sai d, but
no other evidence was
found .

Delta Mariner sails past Meigs
Bv BETH

SERGENT

.

.

.

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Friday
the
Delta
afternoon
Mariner, a 312-foot-long
vessel floated upon the
Ohio River past Meigs
County, casting a massive
shadow over the landscape
on it's way to Cape
Canaveral, Fla.
According to Foss Marine
in Seattle, Wash., owner of
the vessel, the Delta
Mariner is out of the Port of
Mobile, Ala·. · and often
delivers delta rockets to
Cape Canaveral. According
to an article written by Dave
Gossett from the Herald
Star, the vessel was in
Steubenville the day before
it passed by Meigs County.
Gossett reported the vessel was carrying comro.nents. .fur NASA:&lt; Ares -X
test 't'figtit lotht' Kennedy
Space Center on a journey
that began in Wellsville and
will go from the Ohio to the
Mississippi Rivers and
finally across the Gulf of
Mexico to Florida during a
trip that will take a total of
12 days.
According to NASA's
website, the Ares I-X, the
agency's "next-generation
spacecraft and launch vehicle system" will bring
NASA ""one step closer to
its exploration goals · to
return to the moon for more
ambitious exploration of the
lunar surface and to travel
to Mars ·and destinations
beyond ." Tlie first test Iight
is scheduled, to launch in
2009.
As the vessel and it's

...

Beth Sergenl/photo
The Delta Mariner casts a massive shadow along the Ohio River at Pomeroy Friday after·
noon. The vessel, which can travel on the open ocean or inland waterways, is 50 feet tall,
has an 8,000-horsepower engine and is 312-feet long. It's cargo is bound tor Cape
·
Canaveral and eventually, the moon .

SPliCe-bound cargo passed
by the Pomeroy parkmg lot
Friday afternoon, a small
gathering of 'people began
to gawk at the ship made for
both ocean and inland travel. The vessel is 50 feet tall ,
has a maximum speed of 15
knot&gt; at open sea and has an
8,000-horsepower engine.
Common questions heard
along the river front ,were:
uwhat is that?" As well as:
'" Is that going to make it

under the bridge?''
The vessel did make it
under the bridge on it's way
south just as it did ~arlier
this month on it's way north
to pick up its cargo.
According to Foss the sup·
ply ship often transports
space-bound
hardware ,
including the common
booster cores for the Boeing
Delta. IV rocket program.
Foss describes the vessel
as '"versatile" and says it

often rounds the Florida
peninsula en route to Cape
Canaveral or transits the
Panama Canal .en route to
the western range Delta IV
launch
fadlity
'at
Vandenberg Air Force Base
in California. However; on
Friday, it traversed the
Ohio River and caused
some conversation in
Meigs County as its cargo
floated f)y on its way to the
moon.

.Strickland back to Pomeroy for Phillips campai~
BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEEOO MYDAILYSENToiNEL.COM

• ev KEviN KEllY

.I

POMEROY - Gov. Ted
• Strickland made his second
'·
campaign vjsit in Pomeroy in
GALLIPOLIS
a month Friday, stumping for
Unemploymeni
dipped Sen. Barack Obama 's presislightly in southeastern Oruo dential campaign and for
counties during September, Debbie
Phillips,
the
the Ohio Department of Job Democratic candidate for the
and Fwnily Services found in Ohio
House
of
Detelll on Pqe A6
.
its release of county-by-co_un- Representatives .
..
ty data last week.
U.S. Senator Sherrod
Gallia County, which saw Brown was originally sched·
its August jobless l'llle spike at uled to make the trip 'with
7.4 · percent in August, fell . Sttickland, but was unable to
five-tenths of a percent to 6.9 do so, Strickland said.
,.
•
percent in September. Meigs
Carpenters Hall was
4 SIICI10NS - 24 PAGES
County was at 105 percent packed with Meigs County
~ound Town
Aa . last month, a three-tenths of a Democrats, members of labor
pen:ent drop from August's organizations and a 'delel!a·
reading
of 10.8.
lion of Ohio Univemty
Celebrations
C4.
Meigs remained amo~~g the Young Democrats, who
D Section four counties with the highest accompanied Athens County
6assifieds
une,nployment rates in the Democratic Chainnan Susan
insert state, followed by Morgan at Gwinn in support of Phillips'
Comics
10.6 percent, VanWert at 105 campaign.
'
·
I
and Huron.at 102, according ' · Sttickland emphasized the
Editorials
toJFS.
importance of a . Democratic
•
Cs
Reductions in joblessness majorit_y in the Ohio House to
Movies
were seen in surrounding furthenng his agenda. The
•
•
counties last month, with Democrats are only four seats
pbitli~rles
Athens going to 7.7 percent in away from the majority, and'
September, down five-tenths Strickland said he was confi·
B Section of a percent from 8.2 in dent that Phillips will be
SpGrts
August. Jackson fell two- elected.
Weather
~nths of a percent, from 8.7
"She knows a lot about a
in'August to 85 in September. -lot, but she is, especially
~ aool Ohio Valley Pub~&amp; Co.
Lawrence dropped one- knowledgeable about educa·
tenth of a percent from 6.3 in. tion," Strickland said of
August to 62 the following Phillips. "She will hit the
ground running. and will be
,.. . . . . . . . . . . Al
i.
one of the three or four most
KKEUYOMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

.lohnlon 11M IIWI•tt .~,..
Pllcel't
olactMidiiMI
Jimmie Johnson has the highest·
winning percentage (.155) of any ac·
tive dnver. S~n dnvers in NASCAR
history- Herb Thomas (.211). Tim
flock (.209), David Pearson (.183),
Richard Petty (.169), Fred Lorenzen
(.165), Fireball Roberts (.160) and
Junior Johnson (.160) - have won a
higher percentage of their career
races.

.

lNDEX

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH
(740}

992-~155

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~~~~I

.'

(

Brian J . Reed/photo

_

Ohio Governor led Strickland campaigned in Pomero{Friday afternoon .on behalf ol
Debbie Phillips, the Democratic candidate tor Ohio House of Representatives. He also discussed the importance of early voting to Democratic wins.
knowledgeable state legisla· of which refers to Phillips as Barack Obama ~·is a
Socialist."
tors in that area."
"Do-Nothing."
"Meigs
C!Junty
has
He said he was offended by
Strickland was critical of
negative campaigning by the mail, ·and by commenis endured a lot of hardship and
Republicans in this election, made · las! week at Meigs struggle, but the people here
including direct mail sent by County
Repub'N;iin are the salt of the earth , who
and on behalf of Phillips' Headquarters by Sen. Geotge
. Republican opponent - one Voinovich, that Senator Please see Strlcldand, A2

•

'

.•

�I

I

.

' I

PageA2

REGIONAL

Sunday, October 26,2008

.

'

Rates from Page At

· month, while Vmton 'w~!)t to
9.9 percent' last month, 'down
. three-tenths of a percent from
101 in August Washington
fell one-tenth. of a percent
· from August's reading of 5.9
· to 5.8 last month.
· The state said Ohio's unem. ployment rate was 7.2 percent
m September, down from 7.4
,. percent in August.
·.: The figures released Oct.
,_17 show that the number of
unemployed workers in
September was 434,000,
down from 445,000 in
August. The number of .
unemployed people has

. Running from pas{ shadows doesn't help
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

care about their community Cheney and s'upported by
· and their country. They will John McCain."
do the right thing," Strickland
Strickland encouraged votsaid.
ers to ignore the "scare tac. "People can tell we are tics" used by the Republi~ans
making history," Phillips against the Obama campaign,
said. "We have clear choices such as allegations that
. in races at both the national
··Jevel and here at home . It Obama is a Muslim.
Referring to President
appears that the Democrats
Franklin
Roosevelt's first
are going to win a majority in
the House, in districts whose inaugural address in 1933,
lines were drawn by the Strickland said, ·~ the only
thing we have to fear is fear
Republicans." ,
·
With reference to the presi- itself."
. dential campaign, Strickland
Strickland alsoemphasized
. emphasized the national eco- the importance of earJy ·vot-nomic crisis as a sign of the ing, and said he will cast. his
·failed policies of George ·own ballot next week,
Bush, endorsed by Senator accompanied by Columbus
John McCain .
television crews. He said
"If you want the next four Democrats are turning out
~ years to be like the last eight,
you should vote for John 12-1 over Republicans in the
McCain and Sarah Palin," state's early voting period.
"That shows that people .
Strickland said. "What we are
seein~ now is the result of really understand how imporpolic1es implemented by tant ·this election is,"
George Bush and Die~ Strickland said.

lhlstee rrom Page At
college Board of Trustees in
1972. Following his death
in 1997, she joined the com:munity college board and
:carried on her husband's 25:year commitment to the res:•dents · of the community
;college district: Gallia,
'Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
counties.
.
Her service on the bOard
continued until 2008.
"Polly's service and solid
commitment, both by sup·
porting her husband's work
rduring his 27-year term and
;jler own 10-year term, has
:sreatly improved the lives
·of residents in the fourcounty district," Ko~y said.
The OACC award was
announced following an
extensive statewide nomination and review process.
While recipienis are nominated by their loc~l boards,
they are selected by the
association.
RGCC Board Chairman
Michael Swisher said of the
selection, "I am very thankful to Mrs. Wetherholt for
her years of outstanding
leadership and service to the
board ani! the students of
the community college district. I am also very appreciative of her continued service as our first-ever trustee
emeritus."
In selecting Wetherholt as
the 2008 recipient, the
OACC . recognized her
numerous acts of community service, including:
· • With 21 years experience as a school nurse, she
urged and supported continual improvements in the
community college's nursing program .
• Realizing the importance of allied health programs in area health programs, she promoted the
addition of Radiologic
Technology and Diagnostic
Medical Sonography.
• She served on the building and grounds committee;
during that time , RGCC
contributed $3.2 million to
campus capital improvements .
• Serving on the negotiations
committee,
she
worked tirelessly over an
IS-month period to negotiate the two-year $20 million
instructional services con·
tract with the University of
Rio Grande .
• As a member of the
Campus
Beautification
Committee, she worked
year-round to ililprove the
physical appearance of the
campus. • She supported two
major educational surveys
of the four-county district,

and advocated for changes
that led to improved community' college services to
the district.
• In the local community,
Wetherholt has been active
in her church and the historic Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Theater, and has
·served as treasurer of the
Keep Gallia Beautiful
Committee.
"These activities show
Polly's dedication to the
community and the community college," . Koby con. eluded. "As does the fact
that during her term as
trustee she missed only one
meeting of the board, and
she continues to be actively
involved with Rio Grande
Community College."
The' OACC award was
presented during a Friday
luncheon and recognition
ceremony at the Deer Creek
Lodge near Circleville.
The OACC is an organization of independent community and technical colleges in Ohio. Its stated mission is to promote the continued "quality, strength,
vitality and effectiveness of ·
its members ."
The OACC focuses on
issues impacting Ohio community and technical colleges, and through dialogue
with trustees and presidents
adapts solutions to fit the
social, educational , and
political landscape in the
state.

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Seen here are members of the Gallia County Gun Club. The National Rifle Association is a non-partisan organization as
is the gun club. The gun club· does not do endorsements, however, the NRA does. This year. the NAA lias endorsed
McCain-Palin for president and vice president. Two years ago, the NRA endorsed new Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, a
Democrat. Information on the N RA's endorsements in this year's election is available in Its Octo~r magazine, which can
be borrowed from gun club .member Larry Betz by calling 446-0365. ·
,. .
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Republican fall rally set for Lyne Center
RIO GRANDE .,-- Gallia
County's Republican Fall
Rally, featuring former
presidential candidate Fred
Thompson as speaker, will
be Thursday, Oct. 30 at 6
p.m. in Lyne Center on the
campu&amp; of the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
·Community College.
The event is free, but

tickets may be picked up at
Republican headquarters in
the former Doxol Building
at 1502 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis. Tickets will be
available Monday through
Wednesday of this week
from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.
TholJlpSon, who represented Tennessee in the
U.S . Senate {rom 1994

.

until . 2003, was until .this
past January in. the running
for the GOP presidential
nomination . He withdrew
from the race and has been
lending his support · to
nominee John McCain.
A longtime attorney who
emere~
acting in the
1980s, Thompson spent
four seasons as Manhattan

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district attorney .Arthur
Branch on NBC•TV's
"Law and Order," repeating the role on several of
the series ' spinoff ·shows.
He left the series to launch
his presidential bid in
2007.
For inore information,
contact Philip Skidmore at
446·3993.

•

Breast Cancer Health Fair 'Nov. 8 at HCCC
GALLIPOLIS - .. The
Hol1cr Center for Cancer
Care will host a special
community health fair
focusing on breast cancer
awareness on Saturday,
Nov. 8 from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m .. at the Holzer Center
for . Cancer Care; • 170
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.
All women in the commu·
nity are welcome and
encouraged to attend.
Women should feel free to
bring a friend or two and
dress in pink, the signature
color 'for breast cancer
awareness. Refreshments ,
Longaberger basket drawings and door prizes will be
available. ·
Featured at the event will
be a variety of free health
screenings, including nonfasting cholesterol, glucose,
bone density, clinical breast
checks, and much more. In
addition, several display
tables will be on hand providing information, tea
samples from The Tea
Caddy of Jackson, and chair
massages .
At the health fair, infor-

mation will be on hand con- in a woman's life is about 1 screening schedule recomcerning the cancer center's in 8 (12 percent). In 2008, mended by the American
G.
Komen an estimated 182,460 new Cancer
Susan
Society.
This
Foundation grant funding. cases of invasive breast can- includes an annual mammoMonies that have been . cer will be diagnosed gram and . clinical breast
awarded to the Holzer among women in the U.S.
exam by a healthcare proCenter for Cancer Care are
The
important
fact
currently being used for women should keep in mind fessional for women age 40
counties located in the "red is the earlier breast cancer is and over; a clinical breast
zone" of southeastern Ohio, found, the chances of sue- .exam every three years for
including Gallia, Jackson cessful treatment increase. women in their 20s and 30s;
and Vinton counties. The Early detection of breast and breast self-exams, at
"red zone" refers to the area cancer and an immediate their discretion, for women
th~
American · Cancer start of cancer treatment in their 20s.
Society has noted as having ·saves many lives each year.
The Holzer Center for
high levels of breast cancers
The
important
fact Cancer Care encourages
diagnosed in late stages. women should keep in mind women in the community to
Grant dollars have been is the earlier breast cancer is attend this special Breast
used to provide important found, the chances of suebreast screenings, diagno- cessful treatment increase.· Cancer Awareness Month
sis, treatment and finanCial Early detection of breast Health Fair that is provided
insurance for uninsured and cancer and an immediate at no charge.
For more . information: •
underinsured women 50 " start of cancer treatment
year~ of age and youn11er in saves many lives each year. call the Hol:er Center for
Galha, Jackson and Vinton The Holzer Center for Cancer Care at (740) 446counties. .
Cancer Care encourages 5474 or toll-free at (800)
Accordmg
to . the ·women to · follow the 821-3860.
American Cancer Society,
breast cancer is the most ,,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ '_,
common cancer among
. , _ , . ,.
I
American women, except
for skin cancer1,. The chance
of developing invasive
breast cancer at some time

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mother is bubbling over, but
you are forcing yourself to
hold it in . The strain must
: Dear Annie: My father be unbearable . Although the
:was a vile, cruel man who therapist you saw in the past
:for 12 years molested , obviously didn ' t help
· threatened, humiliated and enough, the process can still
·beat my sisters and me. We be worthwhile and we hope
: never told my mother about . you will reconsider therapy.
:the sexual abuse. I once What do you have to lose'1
·brought up the subject indi- Contact Adult Survivors of
Abuse
rectly. and site said she'd Child
first kill our father and then (ascasupport .org), P.O. Box
come after us. I left home 14477 , San Francisco, CA
.when I was young and lived 94114, or the Rape , Abuse
·on the stteets , where 1 was &amp; Incest National Network
raped imd beaten and got (rainn.org) ill 1-800-656lnto some very bad relation- HOPE (1-800-656-4673).
ships .
·
Dear Annie: I am a
. My father died four years teacher in a school where
·ago, and .since then , my we · are lucky enough .to
:mother has turned him into receive lovely gifts for
. ·a saint. !love my mom with· · Christmas and at the end of
__:everything that is in me, but the year. These are usually
·I am so mad at her. She plants, lotions, $10 gift
:could have saved us , but her cards, etc., often accompa. eyes were always closed. I nied by darling notes from
' have kept my father's secret. the students.
.
for so long that even now he
At Christmas, I diligently
. is still controlling me. My write out thank-you notes to
mom's health is f~iling and my students, but I don 't
I believe telling her would know what to do at the .end
kill her. But when she of lh&lt;' year. Some teachers
claims iuY father was so say all gifts . should be
wonderful , it tears me ·up acknowledged in writing ,
·
but others feel ·that these
inside.
· I want desperately to look . gifts are essentially "thank. in the mi1mr without seeing you presents" and do not
my father's shadow behind require a note . What do you
me. I am angry all the time. say?
Grateful but
·1 want to tell my husband I Confused Teacher
·Jove him without being
Dear Grateful: Please
afraid he will hurt me. I acknowledge all such gifts
have already•had one failed · in writing. They do not fall
marriage. I am scared I'll into the category of tips for
destroy my current marriage services rendered. Plus , a
becau se I won 't let anyone written note from the
get close to me. I want to teacher sends an excellent
talk to my mom without message about manners and
being so angry. Forget the importance of a personcounseling. It doesn't work. altouch. It will surely mean
- Running from Shadows a great deal to ydur stu.in Virginia
dents.
Dear Virginia: The tnuh
Dear Annie: ·I could be
is. your anger toward your the daughter of "Not Really

Married," who doesn't want
his kids to plan a 50th
anniversary party ..
My parents have been
married for 54 years, very
few o( them happy. My
mother ·got tired of my
father 's arrtics, of which
there are . many . and
stopped having sex· with
him . It didn ' t make the
marriage better for her, just
less stressful. For Dad, it
went from a·great marriage
(for him) to an empty shell.
They stay together for
financial reasons . We children have been more. perceptive about the si tuation
and asked· about a 50th
aqniversary party . . The
answer was a resounding
''no" from both of them . ·
· My fat~er once said,
"Your mother isn't the same
woman I married ." I
replied , "And you're not the
same man. Deal with it." Upstate N.Y.
Dear Upstate: When neither parent waqts to cele~
brate 'an anniversary, it
makes sense not to do it.
Your parents· situation
sounds sad. Our condo- ·
lences .
Dear Readers: Today is
Mother-in-Law Day. Please
give yours a call.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the. Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190J- Chicago, /L
60611. To Jlnd out more
about Annie's · Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

events
Sunday, Oct. 26
GALLIPOLIS - Family
Movie Night, 6 p.m., at the
Pathway
Community ·
'Church. Third Avenue and
'Locust Street in Gallipolis.
·The plqt revolves around a
bizarre turn of events,
when the church janitor
becomes the youth leader,
and turns.the church upside
down with his unconventional
approach .
Refreshments, gaines and
an after-movie di scussion
are part of this evening
geared e:,pecially for families . All are welcome donations of $1 per person are
sug~ested. For more informauon, call 446-7943.
Monday, Oct. 27
GALLIPOLIS
Knights of Columbus will
meet at Courtside Bar &amp;
Grill, 308 Second Aye., at
6:30 p.m. for a dinner and
meeting .. All members are
urged to attend.
Tu~sday, Oct. 28
EWINGTON
American Legion Post 161
will meet , 7:30 p.m., at
Ewington
Academy.
·Snacks to follow meeting .
All members urged to
: attend.
. RIO GRANDE - Open
' Gate Garedn Club will
: meet at the home of
: Eleanor Fadeley, 7:30 ,p.m.
: Program by Brenda Covert.
: - Wednesday, Oct. 29
BIDWELL- Free com: munity health fair. 3 to 6
: p.m., at the Trinity United
· Methodist Church , near the
: intersection of Ohio 160
: and Ohio 554, provided by
'

Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 27
RACINE - Southern
Local School Board , regular meeting, 8 p.m., high
school media room.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commis sion, 9
a. m. , at office, 117
Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs
County District Public
Library Board, 3:30 p.m ..
Pomeroy Library .
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee , II :30 ·a.m .,
Senior Center.

Clubs and

organizations
Monday, Oct. 27
POMEROY. - Board
meeting of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs
Association, 6 to 8 p .m ..
Pomeroy Library. Plans
discus sed for annual
Christmas flower show.
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge #363, 7
p.m., Middleport Masonic
Temple, for work in
Entered
Apprentice
degree. All Master Masons
invited.
POMEROY - Partners

Holzer Medic.al Center. For
more information, ca114462565 or 245-5392.
Thursday, Oct. 30
RODNEY ..:. Trick or
treat at at the Rodney
United Methodist Church
Community Center. There
will be ·a costume contest
with · ~rii:es immediately
after t· ·ick or treat. Judging
at 7 p.m. Cookies and hot
chocolate se rved free of
charge.
Tuesday, Nov. 4
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Retirees will meet
for lunch at noon at the
Golden Corral Restaurant.
Friday, Nov. 7
GALLIPOLIS
,
Veterans Day Program and
Poster
Contest
at
Washington Elementary
School, 10 a.m. All veterans and public welcome .
For' information, contact
Donna DeWitt at 446-3213 .

·Support groups
GALLIPOLIS
GrieVing Parents Support
Group meets 7 p.m. second
Monday of each month at
Holzer Medical Center.
People attending should
meet in the general lobby.
For information, call Jackie
Keatley at 446-2700 or
Nancy Childs at 446-5446.
ATHENS - Survival of
Suicide support group
meets 7 p.m., fourth
Thursday of each month at
Athens Church of Christ,
785 W. Union St., Athens.
For information, call 5937414.
GALLIPOLIS - Look
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday of

2~08

the month at 6 p.m., Holzer
Center for Canc·er Care.
GALLIPOLIS
AlcQholics
Anonymous
Wednesday book study at 7
p.m. and Thursday open
meeting at noon at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church,
541 Second Ave. Tuesday
closed J'J'Ieeting is at 8 p.m .
at St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church.
· GALLIPOLIS
Narcotic s
Anonymou s
Miracles in Recovery
. meets every Monday and
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. , at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.

Carpenter Hill
In Care. 9 a.m . - I ·p.m .. 39091
Meigs Senior Center. for Road. Pomeroy. 742 -2832
people with
memory · for information. ·
Monday, Oct. 27
impairment. games,. activitie s. etc.. meets at same . RUTLAN D - Revival
time on Friday, 992 -2161 . at Rutland Freewill Baptist
Tuesday, Oct. .28
Church. Salem Streer.
POMEROY
. OH- through Saturday. Services
KAN Coin Club . 7 p.m .. at 7 p.m. each evening .
Pomeroy Publi c Library . Rob Fulton on Monday
and Tue sday, Rob Erwin
Open to public ·"
Wedne sday.
Tim
POMEROY
Open on
house meeting of Meigs Simp son on . Thursday ,
County garden dubs, host· Friday and Saturday.
singers
eac'h
ed by Winding Trail Special
Garden Club, 7 p.m .. eve ning. Pastor Ed Barney.
Meigs County Mu se um . 742-3205.
Program by Janet Bolin
Friday, Oct. 31
LANGSVILLE
with ideas and demonstra·
ti ons of the Christmas "O&lt;.'tober Festival." 6:30
flower show.
p.m., Hou se of Healing
Ministries .
Wednesday, Oct. 29
C::ampfire,
weather permitting . Food
POMEROY
Middkport Literary C.Jub and drink s provided. Pie
at Pomeroy
Library. ·auction for building fund.
Sunday, Nov. 2
Nadine Goebel will review
RUTLAND
- One Less
"The Other Boclyn Girl by
Phillipa Gregory. The Stone performing a varie(y
hostess will be Pat Holter. of gospel music , at 10:3,0
Friday, Oct. 31
a.m. at Rutland Church of
the Nazarene.
·
POMEROY
Alzheimer (and dementia)
Support Group. 1: 15 ,
Meigs Senior Center. 9922161.
Friday, Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
. community dinner, 4:30 to
6 p.m. , Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life
Sunday, Oct. 26
CARPENTER - Jim Center. Chili with cheese,
Eden in concert, 6:30p.m. , peanut butter sandwiches,
Mt. Union Baptist Church, dessert.

Other events

I

. Church events

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Preschool Screenings

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Gallia County calendar
Comm~nity

Sunday, October 26,

Meigs County calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.Strickland rrom Page At

PageA3.

AROUND TOWN

· ;iunbap uttme~ ·itnttntl

.

Touting information

increased by · 93,000 in the
past 12 months.
The rate this September
was up from the 5.7 percent
rate a year earlier.
The state's 7.2 percent
unemployment figure tops the
national rate of 6.1 percent,
unchanged from August .
JFS said Ohio's labor market showed little change· in
September and the decline in
the unemployment mte can be
attributed to nonnal fluctuations in tducational employment this time of year.
(The Associated Press C0/1tributed to this report.)

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Carleton School will be conducting
preschool screenings for children
ages 3-5 on Monday, November 3rd
II you have any concerns about your
child's development
(speech, behavior, academic, motor, or
other developmental areas),
'p lease call Carleton School
at 740·992·6681 to schedule
an appointment. .

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Card shower
. GALLIPOLIS ·
Florence Ragan celebrated
her 99th birthday on Oct.
23. Cards can be sent to 45
Vinton Ave ., Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
CHESHIRE - Phyllis
Rankin will celebrate her
80th birthday on Oct. 30.
Cards can be sent to her at
477 ·Roush Lane , Cheshire,
Ohio 45620.
GALLIPOLIS
Dorothy Haner. will celebrate her 85th birthday on
Oct. 31. Cards can be 1;e nt
to her at 17 Shoestring
Ridge Road, Gallipolis ,
Ohio 45631.
E-mail community calendar
· items ·
. to
kkelly@mydailytribune .co
m. Fax an'nou11cements ·to ·
446-3008. Mail items to
825 Thiril Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio .,..
45631 .
Announcements may also
be dropped · of! at ·the
Tribu11e office.

YOUR
Gallia Co.
Commissioner
{(Investing in Our Community· ·
for{)ur Community"

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U.S. CONGRESS

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REGIONAL

Sunday, October 26,2008

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Rates from Page At

· month, while Vmton 'w~!)t to
9.9 percent' last month, 'down
. three-tenths of a percent from
101 in August Washington
fell one-tenth. of a percent
· from August's reading of 5.9
· to 5.8 last month.
· The state said Ohio's unem. ployment rate was 7.2 percent
m September, down from 7.4
,. percent in August.
·.: The figures released Oct.
,_17 show that the number of
unemployed workers in
September was 434,000,
down from 445,000 in
August. The number of .
unemployed people has

. Running from pas{ shadows doesn't help
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

care about their community Cheney and s'upported by
· and their country. They will John McCain."
do the right thing," Strickland
Strickland encouraged votsaid.
ers to ignore the "scare tac. "People can tell we are tics" used by the Republi~ans
making history," Phillips against the Obama campaign,
said. "We have clear choices such as allegations that
. in races at both the national
··Jevel and here at home . It Obama is a Muslim.
Referring to President
appears that the Democrats
Franklin
Roosevelt's first
are going to win a majority in
the House, in districts whose inaugural address in 1933,
lines were drawn by the Strickland said, ·~ the only
thing we have to fear is fear
Republicans." ,
·
With reference to the presi- itself."
. dential campaign, Strickland
Strickland alsoemphasized
. emphasized the national eco- the importance of earJy ·vot-nomic crisis as a sign of the ing, and said he will cast. his
·failed policies of George ·own ballot next week,
Bush, endorsed by Senator accompanied by Columbus
John McCain .
television crews. He said
"If you want the next four Democrats are turning out
~ years to be like the last eight,
you should vote for John 12-1 over Republicans in the
McCain and Sarah Palin," state's early voting period.
"That shows that people .
Strickland said. "What we are
seein~ now is the result of really understand how imporpolic1es implemented by tant ·this election is,"
George Bush and Die~ Strickland said.

lhlstee rrom Page At
college Board of Trustees in
1972. Following his death
in 1997, she joined the com:munity college board and
:carried on her husband's 25:year commitment to the res:•dents · of the community
;college district: Gallia,
'Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
counties.
.
Her service on the bOard
continued until 2008.
"Polly's service and solid
commitment, both by sup·
porting her husband's work
rduring his 27-year term and
;jler own 10-year term, has
:sreatly improved the lives
·of residents in the fourcounty district," Ko~y said.
The OACC award was
announced following an
extensive statewide nomination and review process.
While recipienis are nominated by their loc~l boards,
they are selected by the
association.
RGCC Board Chairman
Michael Swisher said of the
selection, "I am very thankful to Mrs. Wetherholt for
her years of outstanding
leadership and service to the
board ani! the students of
the community college district. I am also very appreciative of her continued service as our first-ever trustee
emeritus."
In selecting Wetherholt as
the 2008 recipient, the
OACC . recognized her
numerous acts of community service, including:
· • With 21 years experience as a school nurse, she
urged and supported continual improvements in the
community college's nursing program .
• Realizing the importance of allied health programs in area health programs, she promoted the
addition of Radiologic
Technology and Diagnostic
Medical Sonography.
• She served on the building and grounds committee;
during that time , RGCC
contributed $3.2 million to
campus capital improvements .
• Serving on the negotiations
committee,
she
worked tirelessly over an
IS-month period to negotiate the two-year $20 million
instructional services con·
tract with the University of
Rio Grande .
• As a member of the
Campus
Beautification
Committee, she worked
year-round to ililprove the
physical appearance of the
campus. • She supported two
major educational surveys
of the four-county district,

and advocated for changes
that led to improved community' college services to
the district.
• In the local community,
Wetherholt has been active
in her church and the historic Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Theater, and has
·served as treasurer of the
Keep Gallia Beautiful
Committee.
"These activities show
Polly's dedication to the
community and the community college," . Koby con. eluded. "As does the fact
that during her term as
trustee she missed only one
meeting of the board, and
she continues to be actively
involved with Rio Grande
Community College."
The' OACC award was
presented during a Friday
luncheon and recognition
ceremony at the Deer Creek
Lodge near Circleville.
The OACC is an organization of independent community and technical colleges in Ohio. Its stated mission is to promote the continued "quality, strength,
vitality and effectiveness of ·
its members ."
The OACC focuses on
issues impacting Ohio community and technical colleges, and through dialogue
with trustees and presidents
adapts solutions to fit the
social, educational , and
political landscape in the
state.

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Seen here are members of the Gallia County Gun Club. The National Rifle Association is a non-partisan organization as
is the gun club. The gun club· does not do endorsements, however, the NRA does. This year. the NAA lias endorsed
McCain-Palin for president and vice president. Two years ago, the NRA endorsed new Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, a
Democrat. Information on the N RA's endorsements in this year's election is available in Its Octo~r magazine, which can
be borrowed from gun club .member Larry Betz by calling 446-0365. ·
,. .
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Republican fall rally set for Lyne Center
RIO GRANDE .,-- Gallia
County's Republican Fall
Rally, featuring former
presidential candidate Fred
Thompson as speaker, will
be Thursday, Oct. 30 at 6
p.m. in Lyne Center on the
campu&amp; of the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
·Community College.
The event is free, but

tickets may be picked up at
Republican headquarters in
the former Doxol Building
at 1502 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis. Tickets will be
available Monday through
Wednesday of this week
from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.
TholJlpSon, who represented Tennessee in the
U.S . Senate {rom 1994

.

until . 2003, was until .this
past January in. the running
for the GOP presidential
nomination . He withdrew
from the race and has been
lending his support · to
nominee John McCain.
A longtime attorney who
emere~
acting in the
1980s, Thompson spent
four seasons as Manhattan

'

.

district attorney .Arthur
Branch on NBC•TV's
"Law and Order," repeating the role on several of
the series ' spinoff ·shows.
He left the series to launch
his presidential bid in
2007.
For inore information,
contact Philip Skidmore at
446·3993.

•

Breast Cancer Health Fair 'Nov. 8 at HCCC
GALLIPOLIS - .. The
Hol1cr Center for Cancer
Care will host a special
community health fair
focusing on breast cancer
awareness on Saturday,
Nov. 8 from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m .. at the Holzer Center
for . Cancer Care; • 170
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.
All women in the commu·
nity are welcome and
encouraged to attend.
Women should feel free to
bring a friend or two and
dress in pink, the signature
color 'for breast cancer
awareness. Refreshments ,
Longaberger basket drawings and door prizes will be
available. ·
Featured at the event will
be a variety of free health
screenings, including nonfasting cholesterol, glucose,
bone density, clinical breast
checks, and much more. In
addition, several display
tables will be on hand providing information, tea
samples from The Tea
Caddy of Jackson, and chair
massages .
At the health fair, infor-

mation will be on hand con- in a woman's life is about 1 screening schedule recomcerning the cancer center's in 8 (12 percent). In 2008, mended by the American
G.
Komen an estimated 182,460 new Cancer
Susan
Society.
This
Foundation grant funding. cases of invasive breast can- includes an annual mammoMonies that have been . cer will be diagnosed gram and . clinical breast
awarded to the Holzer among women in the U.S.
exam by a healthcare proCenter for Cancer Care are
The
important
fact
currently being used for women should keep in mind fessional for women age 40
counties located in the "red is the earlier breast cancer is and over; a clinical breast
zone" of southeastern Ohio, found, the chances of sue- .exam every three years for
including Gallia, Jackson cessful treatment increase. women in their 20s and 30s;
and Vinton counties. The Early detection of breast and breast self-exams, at
"red zone" refers to the area cancer and an immediate their discretion, for women
th~
American · Cancer start of cancer treatment in their 20s.
Society has noted as having ·saves many lives each year.
The Holzer Center for
high levels of breast cancers
The
important
fact Cancer Care encourages
diagnosed in late stages. women should keep in mind women in the community to
Grant dollars have been is the earlier breast cancer is attend this special Breast
used to provide important found, the chances of suebreast screenings, diagno- cessful treatment increase.· Cancer Awareness Month
sis, treatment and finanCial Early detection of breast Health Fair that is provided
insurance for uninsured and cancer and an immediate at no charge.
For more . information: •
underinsured women 50 " start of cancer treatment
year~ of age and youn11er in saves many lives each year. call the Hol:er Center for
Galha, Jackson and Vinton The Holzer Center for Cancer Care at (740) 446counties. .
Cancer Care encourages 5474 or toll-free at (800)
Accordmg
to . the ·women to · follow the 821-3860.
American Cancer Society,
breast cancer is the most ,,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ '_,
common cancer among
. , _ , . ,.
I
American women, except
for skin cancer1,. The chance
of developing invasive
breast cancer at some time

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mother is bubbling over, but
you are forcing yourself to
hold it in . The strain must
: Dear Annie: My father be unbearable . Although the
:was a vile, cruel man who therapist you saw in the past
:for 12 years molested , obviously didn ' t help
· threatened, humiliated and enough, the process can still
·beat my sisters and me. We be worthwhile and we hope
: never told my mother about . you will reconsider therapy.
:the sexual abuse. I once What do you have to lose'1
·brought up the subject indi- Contact Adult Survivors of
Abuse
rectly. and site said she'd Child
first kill our father and then (ascasupport .org), P.O. Box
come after us. I left home 14477 , San Francisco, CA
.when I was young and lived 94114, or the Rape , Abuse
·on the stteets , where 1 was &amp; Incest National Network
raped imd beaten and got (rainn.org) ill 1-800-656lnto some very bad relation- HOPE (1-800-656-4673).
ships .
·
Dear Annie: I am a
. My father died four years teacher in a school where
·ago, and .since then , my we · are lucky enough .to
:mother has turned him into receive lovely gifts for
. ·a saint. !love my mom with· · Christmas and at the end of
__:everything that is in me, but the year. These are usually
·I am so mad at her. She plants, lotions, $10 gift
:could have saved us , but her cards, etc., often accompa. eyes were always closed. I nied by darling notes from
' have kept my father's secret. the students.
.
for so long that even now he
At Christmas, I diligently
. is still controlling me. My write out thank-you notes to
mom's health is f~iling and my students, but I don 't
I believe telling her would know what to do at the .end
kill her. But when she of lh&lt;' year. Some teachers
claims iuY father was so say all gifts . should be
wonderful , it tears me ·up acknowledged in writing ,
·
but others feel ·that these
inside.
· I want desperately to look . gifts are essentially "thank. in the mi1mr without seeing you presents" and do not
my father's shadow behind require a note . What do you
me. I am angry all the time. say?
Grateful but
·1 want to tell my husband I Confused Teacher
·Jove him without being
Dear Grateful: Please
afraid he will hurt me. I acknowledge all such gifts
have already•had one failed · in writing. They do not fall
marriage. I am scared I'll into the category of tips for
destroy my current marriage services rendered. Plus , a
becau se I won 't let anyone written note from the
get close to me. I want to teacher sends an excellent
talk to my mom without message about manners and
being so angry. Forget the importance of a personcounseling. It doesn't work. altouch. It will surely mean
- Running from Shadows a great deal to ydur stu.in Virginia
dents.
Dear Virginia: The tnuh
Dear Annie: ·I could be
is. your anger toward your the daughter of "Not Really

Married," who doesn't want
his kids to plan a 50th
anniversary party ..
My parents have been
married for 54 years, very
few o( them happy. My
mother ·got tired of my
father 's arrtics, of which
there are . many . and
stopped having sex· with
him . It didn ' t make the
marriage better for her, just
less stressful. For Dad, it
went from a·great marriage
(for him) to an empty shell.
They stay together for
financial reasons . We children have been more. perceptive about the si tuation
and asked· about a 50th
aqniversary party . . The
answer was a resounding
''no" from both of them . ·
· My fat~er once said,
"Your mother isn't the same
woman I married ." I
replied , "And you're not the
same man. Deal with it." Upstate N.Y.
Dear Upstate: When neither parent waqts to cele~
brate 'an anniversary, it
makes sense not to do it.
Your parents· situation
sounds sad. Our condo- ·
lences .
Dear Readers: Today is
Mother-in-Law Day. Please
give yours a call.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the. Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190J- Chicago, /L
60611. To Jlnd out more
about Annie's · Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

events
Sunday, Oct. 26
GALLIPOLIS - Family
Movie Night, 6 p.m., at the
Pathway
Community ·
'Church. Third Avenue and
'Locust Street in Gallipolis.
·The plqt revolves around a
bizarre turn of events,
when the church janitor
becomes the youth leader,
and turns.the church upside
down with his unconventional
approach .
Refreshments, gaines and
an after-movie di scussion
are part of this evening
geared e:,pecially for families . All are welcome donations of $1 per person are
sug~ested. For more informauon, call 446-7943.
Monday, Oct. 27
GALLIPOLIS
Knights of Columbus will
meet at Courtside Bar &amp;
Grill, 308 Second Aye., at
6:30 p.m. for a dinner and
meeting .. All members are
urged to attend.
Tu~sday, Oct. 28
EWINGTON
American Legion Post 161
will meet , 7:30 p.m., at
Ewington
Academy.
·Snacks to follow meeting .
All members urged to
: attend.
. RIO GRANDE - Open
' Gate Garedn Club will
: meet at the home of
: Eleanor Fadeley, 7:30 ,p.m.
: Program by Brenda Covert.
: - Wednesday, Oct. 29
BIDWELL- Free com: munity health fair. 3 to 6
: p.m., at the Trinity United
· Methodist Church , near the
: intersection of Ohio 160
: and Ohio 554, provided by
'

Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 27
RACINE - Southern
Local School Board , regular meeting, 8 p.m., high
school media room.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commis sion, 9
a. m. , at office, 117
Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs
County District Public
Library Board, 3:30 p.m ..
Pomeroy Library .
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee , II :30 ·a.m .,
Senior Center.

Clubs and

organizations
Monday, Oct. 27
POMEROY. - Board
meeting of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs
Association, 6 to 8 p .m ..
Pomeroy Library. Plans
discus sed for annual
Christmas flower show.
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge #363, 7
p.m., Middleport Masonic
Temple, for work in
Entered
Apprentice
degree. All Master Masons
invited.
POMEROY - Partners

Holzer Medic.al Center. For
more information, ca114462565 or 245-5392.
Thursday, Oct. 30
RODNEY ..:. Trick or
treat at at the Rodney
United Methodist Church
Community Center. There
will be ·a costume contest
with · ~rii:es immediately
after t· ·ick or treat. Judging
at 7 p.m. Cookies and hot
chocolate se rved free of
charge.
Tuesday, Nov. 4
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Retirees will meet
for lunch at noon at the
Golden Corral Restaurant.
Friday, Nov. 7
GALLIPOLIS
,
Veterans Day Program and
Poster
Contest
at
Washington Elementary
School, 10 a.m. All veterans and public welcome .
For' information, contact
Donna DeWitt at 446-3213 .

·Support groups
GALLIPOLIS
GrieVing Parents Support
Group meets 7 p.m. second
Monday of each month at
Holzer Medical Center.
People attending should
meet in the general lobby.
For information, call Jackie
Keatley at 446-2700 or
Nancy Childs at 446-5446.
ATHENS - Survival of
Suicide support group
meets 7 p.m., fourth
Thursday of each month at
Athens Church of Christ,
785 W. Union St., Athens.
For information, call 5937414.
GALLIPOLIS - Look
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday of

2~08

the month at 6 p.m., Holzer
Center for Canc·er Care.
GALLIPOLIS
AlcQholics
Anonymous
Wednesday book study at 7
p.m. and Thursday open
meeting at noon at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church,
541 Second Ave. Tuesday
closed J'J'Ieeting is at 8 p.m .
at St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church.
· GALLIPOLIS
Narcotic s
Anonymou s
Miracles in Recovery
. meets every Monday and
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. , at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.

Carpenter Hill
In Care. 9 a.m . - I ·p.m .. 39091
Meigs Senior Center. for Road. Pomeroy. 742 -2832
people with
memory · for information. ·
Monday, Oct. 27
impairment. games,. activitie s. etc.. meets at same . RUTLAN D - Revival
time on Friday, 992 -2161 . at Rutland Freewill Baptist
Tuesday, Oct. .28
Church. Salem Streer.
POMEROY
. OH- through Saturday. Services
KAN Coin Club . 7 p.m .. at 7 p.m. each evening .
Pomeroy Publi c Library . Rob Fulton on Monday
and Tue sday, Rob Erwin
Open to public ·"
Wedne sday.
Tim
POMEROY
Open on
house meeting of Meigs Simp son on . Thursday ,
County garden dubs, host· Friday and Saturday.
singers
eac'h
ed by Winding Trail Special
Garden Club, 7 p.m .. eve ning. Pastor Ed Barney.
Meigs County Mu se um . 742-3205.
Program by Janet Bolin
Friday, Oct. 31
LANGSVILLE
with ideas and demonstra·
ti ons of the Christmas "O&lt;.'tober Festival." 6:30
flower show.
p.m., Hou se of Healing
Ministries .
Wednesday, Oct. 29
C::ampfire,
weather permitting . Food
POMEROY
Middkport Literary C.Jub and drink s provided. Pie
at Pomeroy
Library. ·auction for building fund.
Sunday, Nov. 2
Nadine Goebel will review
RUTLAND
- One Less
"The Other Boclyn Girl by
Phillipa Gregory. The Stone performing a varie(y
hostess will be Pat Holter. of gospel music , at 10:3,0
Friday, Oct. 31
a.m. at Rutland Church of
the Nazarene.
·
POMEROY
Alzheimer (and dementia)
Support Group. 1: 15 ,
Meigs Senior Center. 9922161.
Friday, Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
. community dinner, 4:30 to
6 p.m. , Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life
Sunday, Oct. 26
CARPENTER - Jim Center. Chili with cheese,
Eden in concert, 6:30p.m. , peanut butter sandwiches,
Mt. Union Baptist Church, dessert.

Other events

I

. Church events

I .

DE

Preschool Screenings

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Sunday, October 26,

Meigs County calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.Strickland rrom Page At

PageA3.

AROUND TOWN

· ;iunbap uttme~ ·itnttntl

.

Touting information

increased by · 93,000 in the
past 12 months.
The rate this September
was up from the 5.7 percent
rate a year earlier.
The state's 7.2 percent
unemployment figure tops the
national rate of 6.1 percent,
unchanged from August .
JFS said Ohio's labor market showed little change· in
September and the decline in
the unemployment mte can be
attributed to nonnal fluctuations in tducational employment this time of year.
(The Associated Press C0/1tributed to this report.)

•

3

'·

Carleton School will be conducting
preschool screenings for children
ages 3-5 on Monday, November 3rd
II you have any concerns about your
child's development
(speech, behavior, academic, motor, or
other developmental areas),
'p lease call Carleton School
at 740·992·6681 to schedule
an appointment. .

.

c,

•j
'

'

J)

r

o pq rs

Card shower
. GALLIPOLIS ·
Florence Ragan celebrated
her 99th birthday on Oct.
23. Cards can be sent to 45
Vinton Ave ., Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
CHESHIRE - Phyllis
Rankin will celebrate her
80th birthday on Oct. 30.
Cards can be sent to her at
477 ·Roush Lane , Cheshire,
Ohio 45620.
GALLIPOLIS
Dorothy Haner. will celebrate her 85th birthday on
Oct. 31. Cards can be 1;e nt
to her at 17 Shoestring
Ridge Road, Gallipolis ,
Ohio 45631.
E-mail community calendar
· items ·
. to
kkelly@mydailytribune .co
m. Fax an'nou11cements ·to ·
446-3008. Mail items to
825 Thiril Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio .,..
45631 .
Announcements may also
be dropped · of! at ·the
Tribu11e office.

YOUR
Gallia Co.
Commissioner
{(Investing in Our Community· ·
for{)ur Community"

•

fav

U.S. CONGRESS

-

I

.

...

· sa

.., Ali.IWAt.
• '•

41-~.

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�r

OPINION
6unba~

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Kevin Kelly

Managing Editor

Ul/ers to the editor are welcome .. They should be less
than 300 word.,. All/etters are subject ro editing and must
be sig11ed and include address and telephone number. No
1111Ji~11ed tellers will be published. Ullers should be in
8t'od wsle, adllre~·#ng isSues, not personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Oct. 26, the 300th day of 2008 . There
are 66 days lef! in the year.
·
· Today's Highlighi in History:
On Oct. 26, I ~81, the "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" took
phice in Tombstone. Ariz., as Wyatt Earp, his two brothers
and "Doc" Holliday confronted Ike Clanton's gang. Three
members of Clanton's group were killed: Earp's brothers
·
and Holliday were wounded.
On this date:
·
In 1774. the First Continental Congress adjourned in
Philadelphia.
In 1825, the Erie Canal opened in upstate New York, connecting Lake Erie and the Hudson River.
In 1942, Japanese planes badly damaged the USS Hornet
in the Battle of Santa Cruz Islands during World War II.
(The Hornet sank early the next morning.) ·
'
In 1957, the Soviet Union announced that defense minister Marshal Georgi Zhukov had been relieved of his duties.
In 1958. Pan American Airways flew its first Boeing 707 ·
jetliner from New York to Paris in 8 hours and 41 minutes.
In 1967. the Shah of Iran crowned himself and his queen
after 26 years on the Peacock Throne.
In 1972, national security adviser Henry Kissinger
declared, "Peace is at hand" in Vietnam.
.. In 1979, South Korean President Park Chung-hee was
shot to death by the head of the Korean Central Intelligence
Agency, Kim Jae-kyu.
In I 984. "Baby Fae," a newborn with a severe heart
defect , was given the heart of a baboon in an experimental
tnmsplant in Lorna Linda, Calif. (Baby Fae lived 21 days
with the animal heart.)
. In 200 I, President Bush signed the USA Patriot Act; giving authorities unprecedented ability to search, seize,
detain or eavesdrop in their pursuit of possible terrorists.
Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin was
ordered by his doctors to cancel a one-day trip to Austria so
he could recuperate from high blood pressure and ex treme
Cutigue. The 'Education Department reported that the
default rate on student loans had fallen into single digits for
the first time .
One year ago: A federal jury in Kansas City, Mo., decided
that Lisa Montgomery, convicted of killing expectant mother Bobbie Jo Stinnett and cutting the baby from her womb,
should receive the death penalty. The Georgia Supreme
Court freed Genarlow Wilson, saying his 10-year sentence
!or consensual oral sex with a 15-year-old girl was cruel and
onusual punishment. Friedman Paul Erhardt, television's
·•ChefTell," died in Upper Black Eddy, Pa., at age 63. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actress Shelley Morrison ("Will and
Grace") is 72. Actor Bob Hoskins is 66. Author Pat Conroy
L' 63 : Actress Jaclyn Smith is 63. TV host Pat Sajak is 62.
·sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., is 61. Singer Maggie
litoche (The Roches) is 57. Musician Bootsy Collins is 57.
Actor James Picken~ Jr. ("Grey's Anatomy") is 56. Rock
ihusician Keith Strickland (The B-52's) is 55. Actor D.W.
Moffett is 54. Actress Rita Wilson is 52. Actor Dylan
McDermott is 47. Actor Cary Elwes is 46. Singer Natalie
Merchant is 45. Country singer Keith Urban is 41. Actor
Tom Cavanagh is 40. Actor Anthony Rapp is 37. Actor Jon
Heder is 31. Singer Mark Barry (BBMak) is 30. Olympic
silver medal figure skater Sasha Cohen is 24.
.
: Thought for Today: "Each child comes with the message
that God is not yet discouraged of man." - Sir
Rabindranath Tagore. Indian Nobel Prize-winning poet
(1861-1941).

:
;

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

· .: Letters to the editor are. welcome. They should be
·tess thm1 300 words. A{/ Letters are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
~umber. No unsigned Letters will be published. Letters
ihould be in good taste, addressing issues, not per~onalities. Letlers of thanks to organizations and indi~iduals will no! be accepted for publication.

~unbap

Ur:tmes -~entinel

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Correction Polley
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accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms.
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•

'

Sunday, October 26, 2008

This election matters.
We've heard that mantra
endlessly from both presidential campaigns. But
in fact every election
matters it matters
whom we choose to represent us at every level of
government. It's not just
what positions candidates
take on the issues that
count but what kinds of
people they are and
whether they are ready to
engage in the nitty-gritty
work of government. The
deaths on the same day
recently of two former
members of the House of
Representatives reminded
us of what a 'difference an
individual can, make .
Pau1 Rogers, Democrat
of Florida, b.e came known
. in his 24 years in
Congress
as
"Mr.
Health." In his career, he
was able to effect wholesale change, touching all
Americans, in the field of
health policy . Matthew
Rinaldo, Republican of
New
Jersey,
though
instrumental in the passage of legislation, was
more of a hands-on guy in
his district, where he con-.
centrated
on
retail
change. Both were nonideological workhorses
who crossed party lines to
improve the lives of the
people they served.
Rogers was the driving
force behind the National
Cancer Act, the 1971 law
that implemented the
".War on Cancer." ,.fJver
the years since its pas- ·
sage, the dollars going
into cancer research and
treatment have succeeded .
in lowering the incidence
of the disease and the

Prevention, told the New
York Times that Rogers
believed "that all lives are
Co~le
equally valuable and
and
everyone has a right to
Steven
experience access to the
Roberts
best possible health."
When
Rogers
left
Congress in 1980, the
country was cleaner and
healthier because he had
number of deaths of those been there. But the
diagnosed . There is prob- Floridian was no doctriably not a family. in naire liberal - far from
America that hasn 't been it. He scored high marks
affected by the progress on the report cards of varwrought by that act of ious conservative organiCongress. (Ironically, the zations, representing the
nonsmoker Rogers died majority views of his
of lung cancer.)
West Palm Seach district.
The year before he sue' tie was one of a vanishcessfully pushed through ing breed - a conserva'
the Cancer ,Act, Rogers tive Southern Democrat.
led the fight 0 n the tlouse
Matt Rinaldo, though
floor for passage of the . seated across the aisle of
Clean· Air Act, the land- the House chamber, sat
mark · legislation that near Rogers on the politiscrubbed the country's cal spectrum as a member
polluted skies. When of another vanishing
Rogers was making the breed. a moderate
case for the bill , he drew Northern Republican. A
the link between environ· member of the minority
mental factors and cancer for all of his two decades
in persuading his col- in Congress, it's harder to
leagues. to support stiff point to successful legisregulauon . The Safe !arion championed by
Drinking Water Act ·also .. Rinaldo, though he took
succeeded with his strong pride in a bill prohibiting
sponsorship.
loans from the Export
As chaurnan of the Import Bank to countries
Subcommittee on Health harboring terrorists and
and the Environment dur- another bill limiting the
ing his final four congres- number of commercials
sional terms, Rogers in children's television
helped pass numerous programming .
pieces of legislation prolnsteacl of taking on
rooting health and pro- major issues, Rinaldo
tecting the environment. used his time in Congress
Health equity became an to work on the problems
issue of particular con- of the. people back home.
cern 10 him. After his .. He traveled to the towns
death, Julie Gerberding, of central . New Jersey
director of the Centers for every, weekend, listening
Disease Control
and to the fears and frustra.'

tions of his constituents.
In Washington, when the .
House session ended. he
retreated to his office
where he spent the
evening calling back the .
folks who had telephoned .
. that day, assuring them he .
would get their Medicare
payments straightened ,
out or their veterans' benefits coming promptly. To
the person on the other
end, those 2alls provided
a lifeline.
Leaving office in 1992 •.
Rinaldo
complained·
about the increasing par-·
tisanship that made it
hard for someone like•
him to serve in Congress :
His centrist brand of·
Republicanism was no'
longer acceptable to
many . in his party. Paul:
Rogers had. suffered the
same kind of critici~m
from Democrats while he
was there, and in the
years after he left the
House, Rogers found the
deterioration of the diS·
. course distressing. It
would be hard for either
man to get · elected in
~oday ' s polarized politics.
Suppose that had been
true when they ran ·the
first time? The'Congress,
the country and their con-. ·
stituents would have been
deprived of the work of
two fine public servants
- two men whose elcc-·
tions· mattered.

(Cokie Robar.!' larest
book i.! "Ladies oj
Liberty: The Wome11 WhiJ
Shaped Our Nario11"
(William· Morrow, 2008).
Steve and Cokie Roberts.
call be reached at ste••e·
cokie@ gmail.com .)

You .ain't seen nothing yet
As someope who has
spent my entire ·life .on
one campaign trail or
another, I never coupt my
chickens until the last egg
has been hatched and is
scratching around the
farm yard. While Barack
Obama's momentum in
the polls is encouraging,
as a former presidential
campaign manager; I
know that his opponent
needs only five points to
cl&lt;;~se the gap. From there,
it's a matter of who can
get out their voters. .
Given the relentless and
vtctous attacks from
every quarte.r, Obama
must be steadfast and
unre.l enting in staying on
the offense - giving no
quarter
to
the
Republicans or their
smear campaign tactics.
The only pause Obarna
~hould allow following a
visit home to Hawaii to
check on his ailing grandmother is the refreshing
thought that nary a one of
us would have ever
guessed that the first
presidential election with
a
viable
AfricanAmerican candidate has
the possibility of being a·
landslide victory.
Perhaps it is just the
electoral
pendulum
swinging away from
where it seemed to be
stuck in -the nail-bitingly
close 2000 and 2004 elections, but as we watch
Obama' s projected number of electoral votes soar
past the 270 needed to
win and rest safely in the
300s, we know there is
something going on. And
it 's big . Republicans
know it too. and they're
pulling out all the stops.
They are extremely desperate, and it's time they
refrain f~om throwing the
kitchen sink and the
plumbing that keeps it
intact.
Aside from the 48-hour
break Obama took to visit
his grandmother, neither
side is slowing down or
easing up in the final
stretch of what has been
history 's longest presidential campaign. In fact,
the battle just gets more
pitched and , unfortunate-

for signs that you're in McCain's economic plan ..
trouble, your running If so, couldn 't girlfriend
mate turning against you have shared the wealth in
is a neon one.
this clever display of
. Voters are irritated trickle-down economics
because they aren't dumb. at its finest. I mean, while
Donna
They
know the Ayers con- Neiman Marcus and Saks.
Brazile
nection is bogus. In short
order,
people
have are great stores, Dillard's'
become sick and tired of and Macy's could use the
McCain's desperate and same kind of cash and
ly, downright ugly.
despicable
tactics. free publicity . Not to
It's gotten so bad that £?esperation doesn't win .mention Ross, TJ Maxx,
some workers hired to voters.,
determination Marshall's. and Filcnc's
help the McCain cam- does. By choosing a strat- Bitsem&lt;'nt.
paign have quit in disgust egy to just excite the
)lJ fairness to the cam-'
over
the
tactics. · Republican base, it has paign, perhaps it should
"Telemarketc:rs
in lead more Americans to be considered an investWisconsin
and
West tune out and, yes, conVirginia asked to make tribute more money 10 ment. Given the way it
calls bashing Barack McCain's opponent.
has shielded Palin from
. Obama and linking him to
McCain's kitchen-sink substantive
interviews·
1960s radical William strategy isn't doing him and press conferences;
Ayers," the AP reports, any favors. Now there is a it's been clear since the
"quit their jobs · rather rumor floating the idea of beginning that they thiQk
than read the required bringing back tile Rev. : she should be . seen and
script."
Jeremiah Wright for a not heard. In that case,
Can yoU imagine in this ·
"Best of The ' Worst of . she had better look good.
economy what it took to
· Barack Obama" episode.
And she does. Palin
walk away from a paying Voters have seen that one
job because reading that before. It didn't work looks good for a second
misleading filth must ihen and it won't work runner-up. At least she's ·
have been just despica- now. If simply stirring used to it. McCain might
. ble? These are the same racial antipathy is the need to get some pointers
people who deliberately goal, that shouldn't be too on how to be a gracious
call during the dinner hard. Though it should be loser. Fighters are the
hour to ask you to buy
beyond the pale, it's most dangerous when
things they know you .
increasingly evident that backed up against a wall.
don't want, and .e ven they
were unwilling to stoop nothing's beyond the and McCain's recent
attacks prove it. They just
as low as the McCain Palin .
just
says
things,
keep getting more vicious
Palin
camp.
.
whether they make sense
And when prominent or not. For example,.Palin and less grounded. A "win
members
of ·
the says she has more "exec- at any cost" mentality is·
Republican Party start utive . experience" than unbecoming of . him. We
speaking out against you,
Obama and, therefore, is expected better.
you should really know
qualified
than
this election srason
you've gone too far. more
Obama
to
be
president.
·
winds
to a close, we must
Republican Sens. Norm
Colemap, .
Olympia Hmrn, doesn't she also remember that the ends
Snowe, Susan Collins and have more executive never justify the means.
Gordon Smith have all experience than McCain? The ends ·are the means . .
The kind of campaign-;
condemned
McCain:s Therefore, following the
governor's
logic,
she
is
robocalls. "They (the more
qualified
than ing we see in the closing,
Ayers calls) are not taking
McCain to be president.. days is the kind of leader-:
place in Oregon," his
spokeswoman
noted, No wonder he sat beside ship we will see in the:
"and Sen&lt;~tor Smith does · her during their joint tap- Oval Office. There is
not condone these sort of ing of "Meet the Press" clear choice here , and:
Tom
Brokaw; most people have made:
c~lls. Negative robocalls with
are not appropriate and McCain wanted to keep the right one . Let's jus~ .
have no ·place in cam- Palin's ambition in check . hope their votes arC:
Speaking · of whom, counted as they are cast. :
paigns."
(Donna Brazile is ci·
Even Gov. Sarah Palin isn't she at least a little
agrees. McCain's vice- embarrassed that with political commentator· on;'
presidential running mate their campaign implod- CNN, ABC and NPR : con-:
admitted that voters are ing. Jhey blew $150,000
"irritated" by ·such calls . on her wardrobe? No pun · tributing colrmmist ro:
Let me heartily agree intended, but is she Roll Call, the •1ewspape,:.
with her, perhaps for the already shopping_for con- of Capitol Hill; and forfirst time. When looking cession prizes? Or per· mer campaign mam111er;
haps this is part of for AI Gore.)

As

a:

Deaths

Phyllis Lee Hughes

William ··am" Edward Kauff

Phyllis Lee Hughes , 88, of Bidwell, departed this life
on Thursday, Oct. 23, 2008, in Holzer Senior Care
Center at Bidwell, following an extended illness .
She was born May 13 , 1920, in Leon, W.Va., daughter
of the late Kenna and Emma Hazel (Kinzel) Hughes.
She was also prec.e~ed in death by brothers, Kenneth
J:Iughes and Wilham Hughes, and sisters ; Helen
Mane McFall, Leah Leota Hughes Ester Mae Hall and .
c:;:armen Adeleigh Hughes.
'
·
·
.• In her senior year at Point Pleasant High School, durmg World War ~I. she went to Akron , Ohio. to work in
the .Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber Co. Following her retirement, she moved back to this area to be close with her
~amily. S~e enjoyed bowling and playing cards, and was
a Methodist.
She is . survived by her brother, Herbert Hughes of
Akron;ststers, Ltlhan. "Lou" ,Swisher of Gallipolis, and
(')pal Beckner of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.: and several
nieces and nephews .
Services ~ill be 2 p.m . SuQday, Oct. 26, 2008, at the
Creston Umted Methodist Church in Evans, W.Va., with
the Rev. Ge.rald B. Sayre officiating. Visitaiion will be
one hour pnor to service time ai the church . Butial will
follow in the Creston Cemetery.
·
· Arrangements are by the Casto Funeral Home at
Evans.
· Online condolences may ·be sent to castofuneralhome@citynet.net.

William "Bill" Edward Kauft." 59, Rutland passed
away on Thursday, October. 23. 2008 at the Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. He was born on
September 5, 1949 in Pomeroy, to Opal (Stobart) Kauff
and the late Earl Cecil Kauff. Mr. Kauff worked as a
foreman at Ohio Power.
He is also survived by his wtte, Jenny Kauff of
Rutland and their daughter, Stephanie Kauff; brothers ,
Earl Kauff, .Jr. Richard Kauff and Jeffrey Kauff, all of
Pomeroy; sisters Debra 'Burke of Racine and Carla
Kauff of Pomeroy: children, Cynthia Smith of Rutland,
Christina Ferrell of Italy,
be ca Smith of Pomeroy.
William E. Kauff, Jr.
f
· lipolis . Ferry, W.Va ..
Benjamin Kauff of
e an Joshua Kauff of Racine ;
three step-daughters, Melinda Clark of Logan , Melissa
Clark of Chillicothe and Jennifer Clark of Pt. Pleasant ,
W.Va.; seventeen grandchildren ; a best friend, Sampson
Darst of Rutland; and s~veral nieces and nephews. ·
He was preceded in death by his father.
·
Services will be held at I p.m. on Monday, October
27, 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the . Pine Grove
Cemetery in Chester. Visitation will be . held two hours
prior to service. In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to the funeral horne to help offset the funeral
expenses.
·
·
Online condolences may be sent to www.andersonm·
cdaniel.com .

Andrew M. Mccarty

Anna Mae E~s

c.

~ndrew

S&amp;unllap ll:imrs -S&amp;rntmrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries

Two nien who 111{1de a difference

G::imtl1 ·&amp;tnttntl

Diane Hill
Controller

Pagei\4

Sunday, October z(j, zoos

M. McCarty, 84, of Wilkesville,. went to be

Anna Mae Ellis, 73 of Middleport, passed away on
Thursday, October .23; 2008 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Pt : Pleasant, W.Va. She.was born on March
2, 1935 in Athens County to the la'e Herbert and Mary
(Dye) Gilkey. Mrs. Ellis was a homemaker and a mem ber of the Middlepqrt Nazarene Church for 51 years .
She is survived by her husband of 56 years, Louis
Ellis of Middleport; a son; Gary and Pam Ellis of
Dublin, Oh; a daughter. Teresa and Kevin Hansher of
Columbus, Oh.; sisters, Mildred Nash of Middleoport
and Shirley .Kishbaugh of Colorado Springs, Co.;
grandchildren,· Tabitha and Ryan McPeeks, Jamie Ellis.
Mark Hansher, Krista Hansher, and Mychal Ellis; several nieces and nephews .
She .w as preceded in death by her parents and a
nephew, Adam Kishbaugh.
. ·
Services will be held on Monday, October 27 , 2008 at
II a.m. at the Middleport Nazarerie Churcll with Rev .
· Lynn Powell officiatmg. Buria.l will follow in · the
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be lield on
Sunday, October, 26 , 2008 from 2-4 p.m .and 6-8 p.m . at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport .
Online condolences may be sent .to www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Lena Mae Maynard

Lena Mae Maynard ,
Middleport , passed away
on Saturday, October ·25,
2008 at the o.,erbrook.
Rehabilitation Center in
Middleport. Sh1;1 was born
September 18, 1922 in
. Richardson, Ky., to the
late Melvin and Lucinda
(Stacy) Maynard. Mrs.
· Richard W. Myers, 81, of Gallipolis, passed away Maynard worked in the
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2008, at the Riverside Methodist Middleport Laundry . Mat ·
Hospital in Columbus,
and delivered 'the newspaRichard was a laborer, and enjoyed animals and fish· per for many yetirs in the
Middleport area.
.
was born April 26, 1927, in Mason 'county, W.Va.,
She fs survived by her
· son ·of the late Nelson T. 11nd Mona Whittington Myers. nieces, Eunice Fitch of
. He is survived by two sisters, Della Cox of Gallipolis, Rutland and Janice Cook
with whom he made his home tbe,Jast six years, and . of Gallipolis·; ~ist~r-in-law,
L"'a Mae Maynard
Nella (Earl) Dunlap of Kanauga . . Several nieces and Mary Preston of Louisa,
nephews survive.
.
Ky; 'spcci'al nieces arid
. He· was preceded in death by his parents and by a nephews that took care of .
her, Mary Priddy of Oallipolis, Thelma Ellis of Rutland,
brother, Nelson R. Myers.
· Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2008, at the Tara Blankenship of Albany, Charlie Fitchpatrick of
Willis Funeral Home, with Rev. Berkley Saunders offi- Middleport; and ~everal other nieces and nephews.
. In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in
eiating. Burial will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on death by her . husband, Claude Maynard; and brothers
. Scott, Melvin, Edgar. and ElziePreston .
.
Monda:r:, Oct. 27, 2008, from 6 to 8 p,m.
·
Services
wiU:·be
held
at
I
p.in.
Wednesday,
October
· F;~rnily members will serve as pallbearers. ·
. '
29; 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home Ill
· Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to "send
Middleport with the Rev.
mail condolences.
·
'
J11nior
.Preston officiating.
'
Burial will follow in the
Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport( Visitation will
: James "Bill" Sands, 79, of Crown City, died Saturday · be held from · 6-8 p.m. on
morning, October 25, 2008 at the Arbors at Gallipolis. Tuesday; October 28, 2008
Born February 22, 1929 in Gallia. County, he was the at the funeral home . The
son of the late Walter and Laura Sands . .
family would like to thank
, Bill owned and operated Sands Trash Service until his the staff at Overbrook
retirement.
Nursing Home for all their
He is survived by .his wife, Rosemary Phillips Sands; help and support ..
iwo siep-daughters, Christina and Jennifer Phillips of
Gallipolis; one sister, Jenivee Sands of Gallipolis; one
brother-in-law, James Phillips of Scottown; thrt!e sisters-in-law, Florence (Curtis) Short of Scottown, Dorie
~Bill) Montgomery of Crown City, and Marilyn Short of
Lawrence County.
.
.
· Funeral services will be I J&gt;.m. on Monday, October
HEARTS ON FIRE.
· 27 2008 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
. lliE WOILII'I MOn
wiih Pastor Gary Warner officiating. Burial will follow
.. llltl'lr ell'! OIAIIIOH0°
tn Good Hope Cemetery. Friends may call at the funer~1 home on Monday from, II . a.m. until the time. of the
service.
,
. An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood .com.
·

Richard W. Myen

~"fie

e·

James Bill Sands

' ~

SACRED HEART ..
CATHOLIC CHURCH ·

LIVI I!r,I'II'IIILT. LOYIINTII'IIJI.T,

IM:artsunlin:.cum

Thursday, Qetober 30th

Dinner begins at 4:30
$8.00 Adults- $4.00 6 to 12· 5 &amp; Under Eat Free

MENU
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham .
Homemade Noodles
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans • Coleslaw • Roll &amp; Dessert

tJJianumJS-9{-(joU

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Fancy Stands • Games • Reli&amp;loll!l Gifts

.

Mabel L. Mahan. 86. of Gallipoli,. died Saturday morn ing. October 25. 2008 at Hol Ler Senior Care Center.
Funeral services will be I I a.m. Wednesday. October 29.
2008 at Wau gh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial will
follow at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 58 p.m. An online guest registry is also available at waughhalley"wood .corn .
A complete obituary will be published in Monday 's edi tion.

Kenneth Harlan Cundiff
Kenneth Harlan Cundiff, 84. Lancaster. Ohio. formerly
of Meigs County. died Friday. October 24. 200X in the
Carriage Coun of Lancaster Assisted Living.
Arrangements will be announced by th e Cremeen'
Funeral Home . Racine .

vaccine slashes diarrhea[·
illness· in.kids
BY M~RILYNN MARCHIONE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

wtth the Lord on Friday, Oct. 24, 2008, at his residence
sqrrounded by his family.
He was retired from the Southern Ohio Coal Co.; a
World War II Army veteran, a member of Joseph
Freeman American Lellion Post No. 476 of Wilkesville,
and attended the Fairvtew Church of Christ in Christian
Union near ~ington .
·
.
· Andrew was born Aug. 15, 1924, at Orton Hollow,
Ohio, to the late Peter and Dessel McCarty.
On Oct. 8. 1951, he married Loretta Ann Martin, to
whom he was married for 54 years before she preceded
him in death on Nov. 25, 2005. To this union were born
three sons, Kenny (Nina) McCarty, Denver (Charlotte)
McCarty, Alva (Louise) McCarty, a.ll of Wilkesville,
and two daughters, Brenda (Mike Burridge) McCarty of
Wilkesville, and Debbie (Wayne) Shepherd of Wellston,
all of whom survive.
.
Also surviving are 10 grandchildren; 10 gre~t-grand­
children; two sisters and one brother, Bertha McCarty
of Wilkesville, Clary Ward of Hamden, and Joe
(Loret\a) McCarty of Marysville; and .a close friend,
Thelma Sturgeon.
..
In addition to his parents and beloved wife, he was
preceded in death by three brothers and seven sisters.
Services will be II a.m. Monday, Oct. 27, 2008 , in the
Fairview Church of Christ in Christian Union, with the
Rev. James McFadden officiating. Burial will follow in
the Yankee Street Cemetery near Wilkesville, with full .
mili·tary rites conducted by American Legion Post No.
161 Elf Vinton.
. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Fun era~ Home ·
tn Vinton on Sunday, Octo 26, 2008, from I to 5 p.m.

lsi· $500 • Znd -$ZOO • 3,4,5th • $100
Door Prtzes Every .Half Hour

Mabel L Mahan

f

Lly Away For Tbe

Instant Credit Avail1ble

Holidays!

(~roMIIr.,....IIIJ.

7,~0446-3484

Sil.ver Bridge Plaza, Gallipolis

WASHINGTON -A vaccine against rotavirus. the
leading cause of diarrhea in
infants. has led to a dramatic
drop in· hospitalization a nd
emergency room visits slnce
it came on the mru:ket two
years ago, doctors reported
. Saturday.
A bonus: the vaccine seems
to be preventing illness even
in unvaccinated children by
cutting the number of infeclions in the community that
kids can pick up and spread.
"We're a little surprised by
thedegreeofimpactgiventhe
covPrage we' ve achieved,"
said Jane Seward of the federal Centers for Disease Contrql
and Prevention. Only about
half of young children had
recei~ed the vaccine and very
few had received all three
doses when the studies were
done.
Results were reported
Saturday at an infectious diseases
conference
in
Washington.
Before the vaccine, more
than 200,000 U.S. children
· were taken to .emergency
rooms and more than 55,000
were hospitalized each year
with rotavirus, which causes
·vomiting and diarrhea. mostly
from January through May.

Worldwide . the viru&gt; kill s
( ,600 you ng children each
day.
Since Merck &amp; Co.-'s
Rotateq came out in 2006.
hospital visits 'and stays due to
the viru s have dropped 80
percent to 100 percent. studies by the CDC and several
other groups show.
Last winter. rotavirus cases
&gt;tarted and peaked two to
three months later and were
much less extensive than in
previous years. CDC scientists repo11. Hospi tab in a network that tracks these cases
· for the CDC saw more than
an 80 percent drop in ':Kim issions from them. one study
showed.
Another study. by Merck.
found a I00 percent drop in
. hospitalizations and ER visits .
during the 2007 and 2008
rota virus seasons compared to
previous ones. The study was
based on a review of healil\
insurance claims for about
61 .000 i11fants and diagnoses
by dqctors in routine clinical
practice.
Rotateq is an oral vaccine
given at two. four and six
months of age. In June. a seG:
ond rota virus vacCine came
on
the
market
GlaxoSmithKlinc's Rotarix.
It requires only two dose s,
completed by four months of
age.

�r

OPINION
6unba~

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Kevin Kelly

Managing Editor

Ul/ers to the editor are welcome .. They should be less
than 300 word.,. All/etters are subject ro editing and must
be sig11ed and include address and telephone number. No
1111Ji~11ed tellers will be published. Ullers should be in
8t'od wsle, adllre~·#ng isSues, not personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Oct. 26, the 300th day of 2008 . There
are 66 days lef! in the year.
·
· Today's Highlighi in History:
On Oct. 26, I ~81, the "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" took
phice in Tombstone. Ariz., as Wyatt Earp, his two brothers
and "Doc" Holliday confronted Ike Clanton's gang. Three
members of Clanton's group were killed: Earp's brothers
·
and Holliday were wounded.
On this date:
·
In 1774. the First Continental Congress adjourned in
Philadelphia.
In 1825, the Erie Canal opened in upstate New York, connecting Lake Erie and the Hudson River.
In 1942, Japanese planes badly damaged the USS Hornet
in the Battle of Santa Cruz Islands during World War II.
(The Hornet sank early the next morning.) ·
'
In 1957, the Soviet Union announced that defense minister Marshal Georgi Zhukov had been relieved of his duties.
In 1958. Pan American Airways flew its first Boeing 707 ·
jetliner from New York to Paris in 8 hours and 41 minutes.
In 1967. the Shah of Iran crowned himself and his queen
after 26 years on the Peacock Throne.
In 1972, national security adviser Henry Kissinger
declared, "Peace is at hand" in Vietnam.
.. In 1979, South Korean President Park Chung-hee was
shot to death by the head of the Korean Central Intelligence
Agency, Kim Jae-kyu.
In I 984. "Baby Fae," a newborn with a severe heart
defect , was given the heart of a baboon in an experimental
tnmsplant in Lorna Linda, Calif. (Baby Fae lived 21 days
with the animal heart.)
. In 200 I, President Bush signed the USA Patriot Act; giving authorities unprecedented ability to search, seize,
detain or eavesdrop in their pursuit of possible terrorists.
Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin was
ordered by his doctors to cancel a one-day trip to Austria so
he could recuperate from high blood pressure and ex treme
Cutigue. The 'Education Department reported that the
default rate on student loans had fallen into single digits for
the first time .
One year ago: A federal jury in Kansas City, Mo., decided
that Lisa Montgomery, convicted of killing expectant mother Bobbie Jo Stinnett and cutting the baby from her womb,
should receive the death penalty. The Georgia Supreme
Court freed Genarlow Wilson, saying his 10-year sentence
!or consensual oral sex with a 15-year-old girl was cruel and
onusual punishment. Friedman Paul Erhardt, television's
·•ChefTell," died in Upper Black Eddy, Pa., at age 63. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actress Shelley Morrison ("Will and
Grace") is 72. Actor Bob Hoskins is 66. Author Pat Conroy
L' 63 : Actress Jaclyn Smith is 63. TV host Pat Sajak is 62.
·sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., is 61. Singer Maggie
litoche (The Roches) is 57. Musician Bootsy Collins is 57.
Actor James Picken~ Jr. ("Grey's Anatomy") is 56. Rock
ihusician Keith Strickland (The B-52's) is 55. Actor D.W.
Moffett is 54. Actress Rita Wilson is 52. Actor Dylan
McDermott is 47. Actor Cary Elwes is 46. Singer Natalie
Merchant is 45. Country singer Keith Urban is 41. Actor
Tom Cavanagh is 40. Actor Anthony Rapp is 37. Actor Jon
Heder is 31. Singer Mark Barry (BBMak) is 30. Olympic
silver medal figure skater Sasha Cohen is 24.
.
: Thought for Today: "Each child comes with the message
that God is not yet discouraged of man." - Sir
Rabindranath Tagore. Indian Nobel Prize-winning poet
(1861-1941).

:
;

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EDITOR

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ihould be in good taste, addressing issues, not per~onalities. Letlers of thanks to organizations and indi~iduals will no! be accepted for publication.

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'

Sunday, October 26, 2008

This election matters.
We've heard that mantra
endlessly from both presidential campaigns. But
in fact every election
matters it matters
whom we choose to represent us at every level of
government. It's not just
what positions candidates
take on the issues that
count but what kinds of
people they are and
whether they are ready to
engage in the nitty-gritty
work of government. The
deaths on the same day
recently of two former
members of the House of
Representatives reminded
us of what a 'difference an
individual can, make .
Pau1 Rogers, Democrat
of Florida, b.e came known
. in his 24 years in
Congress
as
"Mr.
Health." In his career, he
was able to effect wholesale change, touching all
Americans, in the field of
health policy . Matthew
Rinaldo, Republican of
New
Jersey,
though
instrumental in the passage of legislation, was
more of a hands-on guy in
his district, where he con-.
centrated
on
retail
change. Both were nonideological workhorses
who crossed party lines to
improve the lives of the
people they served.
Rogers was the driving
force behind the National
Cancer Act, the 1971 law
that implemented the
".War on Cancer." ,.fJver
the years since its pas- ·
sage, the dollars going
into cancer research and
treatment have succeeded .
in lowering the incidence
of the disease and the

Prevention, told the New
York Times that Rogers
believed "that all lives are
Co~le
equally valuable and
and
everyone has a right to
Steven
experience access to the
Roberts
best possible health."
When
Rogers
left
Congress in 1980, the
country was cleaner and
healthier because he had
number of deaths of those been there. But the
diagnosed . There is prob- Floridian was no doctriably not a family. in naire liberal - far from
America that hasn 't been it. He scored high marks
affected by the progress on the report cards of varwrought by that act of ious conservative organiCongress. (Ironically, the zations, representing the
nonsmoker Rogers died majority views of his
of lung cancer.)
West Palm Seach district.
The year before he sue' tie was one of a vanishcessfully pushed through ing breed - a conserva'
the Cancer ,Act, Rogers tive Southern Democrat.
led the fight 0 n the tlouse
Matt Rinaldo, though
floor for passage of the . seated across the aisle of
Clean· Air Act, the land- the House chamber, sat
mark · legislation that near Rogers on the politiscrubbed the country's cal spectrum as a member
polluted skies. When of another vanishing
Rogers was making the breed. a moderate
case for the bill , he drew Northern Republican. A
the link between environ· member of the minority
mental factors and cancer for all of his two decades
in persuading his col- in Congress, it's harder to
leagues. to support stiff point to successful legisregulauon . The Safe !arion championed by
Drinking Water Act ·also .. Rinaldo, though he took
succeeded with his strong pride in a bill prohibiting
sponsorship.
loans from the Export
As chaurnan of the Import Bank to countries
Subcommittee on Health harboring terrorists and
and the Environment dur- another bill limiting the
ing his final four congres- number of commercials
sional terms, Rogers in children's television
helped pass numerous programming .
pieces of legislation prolnsteacl of taking on
rooting health and pro- major issues, Rinaldo
tecting the environment. used his time in Congress
Health equity became an to work on the problems
issue of particular con- of the. people back home.
cern 10 him. After his .. He traveled to the towns
death, Julie Gerberding, of central . New Jersey
director of the Centers for every, weekend, listening
Disease Control
and to the fears and frustra.'

tions of his constituents.
In Washington, when the .
House session ended. he
retreated to his office
where he spent the
evening calling back the .
folks who had telephoned .
. that day, assuring them he .
would get their Medicare
payments straightened ,
out or their veterans' benefits coming promptly. To
the person on the other
end, those 2alls provided
a lifeline.
Leaving office in 1992 •.
Rinaldo
complained·
about the increasing par-·
tisanship that made it
hard for someone like•
him to serve in Congress :
His centrist brand of·
Republicanism was no'
longer acceptable to
many . in his party. Paul:
Rogers had. suffered the
same kind of critici~m
from Democrats while he
was there, and in the
years after he left the
House, Rogers found the
deterioration of the diS·
. course distressing. It
would be hard for either
man to get · elected in
~oday ' s polarized politics.
Suppose that had been
true when they ran ·the
first time? The'Congress,
the country and their con-. ·
stituents would have been
deprived of the work of
two fine public servants
- two men whose elcc-·
tions· mattered.

(Cokie Robar.!' larest
book i.! "Ladies oj
Liberty: The Wome11 WhiJ
Shaped Our Nario11"
(William· Morrow, 2008).
Steve and Cokie Roberts.
call be reached at ste••e·
cokie@ gmail.com .)

You .ain't seen nothing yet
As someope who has
spent my entire ·life .on
one campaign trail or
another, I never coupt my
chickens until the last egg
has been hatched and is
scratching around the
farm yard. While Barack
Obama's momentum in
the polls is encouraging,
as a former presidential
campaign manager; I
know that his opponent
needs only five points to
cl&lt;;~se the gap. From there,
it's a matter of who can
get out their voters. .
Given the relentless and
vtctous attacks from
every quarte.r, Obama
must be steadfast and
unre.l enting in staying on
the offense - giving no
quarter
to
the
Republicans or their
smear campaign tactics.
The only pause Obarna
~hould allow following a
visit home to Hawaii to
check on his ailing grandmother is the refreshing
thought that nary a one of
us would have ever
guessed that the first
presidential election with
a
viable
AfricanAmerican candidate has
the possibility of being a·
landslide victory.
Perhaps it is just the
electoral
pendulum
swinging away from
where it seemed to be
stuck in -the nail-bitingly
close 2000 and 2004 elections, but as we watch
Obama' s projected number of electoral votes soar
past the 270 needed to
win and rest safely in the
300s, we know there is
something going on. And
it 's big . Republicans
know it too. and they're
pulling out all the stops.
They are extremely desperate, and it's time they
refrain f~om throwing the
kitchen sink and the
plumbing that keeps it
intact.
Aside from the 48-hour
break Obama took to visit
his grandmother, neither
side is slowing down or
easing up in the final
stretch of what has been
history 's longest presidential campaign. In fact,
the battle just gets more
pitched and , unfortunate-

for signs that you're in McCain's economic plan ..
trouble, your running If so, couldn 't girlfriend
mate turning against you have shared the wealth in
is a neon one.
this clever display of
. Voters are irritated trickle-down economics
because they aren't dumb. at its finest. I mean, while
Donna
They
know the Ayers con- Neiman Marcus and Saks.
Brazile
nection is bogus. In short
order,
people
have are great stores, Dillard's'
become sick and tired of and Macy's could use the
McCain's desperate and same kind of cash and
ly, downright ugly.
despicable
tactics. free publicity . Not to
It's gotten so bad that £?esperation doesn't win .mention Ross, TJ Maxx,
some workers hired to voters.,
determination Marshall's. and Filcnc's
help the McCain cam- does. By choosing a strat- Bitsem&lt;'nt.
paign have quit in disgust egy to just excite the
)lJ fairness to the cam-'
over
the
tactics. · Republican base, it has paign, perhaps it should
"Telemarketc:rs
in lead more Americans to be considered an investWisconsin
and
West tune out and, yes, conVirginia asked to make tribute more money 10 ment. Given the way it
calls bashing Barack McCain's opponent.
has shielded Palin from
. Obama and linking him to
McCain's kitchen-sink substantive
interviews·
1960s radical William strategy isn't doing him and press conferences;
Ayers," the AP reports, any favors. Now there is a it's been clear since the
"quit their jobs · rather rumor floating the idea of beginning that they thiQk
than read the required bringing back tile Rev. : she should be . seen and
script."
Jeremiah Wright for a not heard. In that case,
Can yoU imagine in this ·
"Best of The ' Worst of . she had better look good.
economy what it took to
· Barack Obama" episode.
And she does. Palin
walk away from a paying Voters have seen that one
job because reading that before. It didn't work looks good for a second
misleading filth must ihen and it won't work runner-up. At least she's ·
have been just despica- now. If simply stirring used to it. McCain might
. ble? These are the same racial antipathy is the need to get some pointers
people who deliberately goal, that shouldn't be too on how to be a gracious
call during the dinner hard. Though it should be loser. Fighters are the
hour to ask you to buy
beyond the pale, it's most dangerous when
things they know you .
increasingly evident that backed up against a wall.
don't want, and .e ven they
were unwilling to stoop nothing's beyond the and McCain's recent
attacks prove it. They just
as low as the McCain Palin .
just
says
things,
keep getting more vicious
Palin
camp.
.
whether they make sense
And when prominent or not. For example,.Palin and less grounded. A "win
members
of ·
the says she has more "exec- at any cost" mentality is·
Republican Party start utive . experience" than unbecoming of . him. We
speaking out against you,
Obama and, therefore, is expected better.
you should really know
qualified
than
this election srason
you've gone too far. more
Obama
to
be
president.
·
winds
to a close, we must
Republican Sens. Norm
Colemap, .
Olympia Hmrn, doesn't she also remember that the ends
Snowe, Susan Collins and have more executive never justify the means.
Gordon Smith have all experience than McCain? The ends ·are the means . .
The kind of campaign-;
condemned
McCain:s Therefore, following the
governor's
logic,
she
is
robocalls. "They (the more
qualified
than ing we see in the closing,
Ayers calls) are not taking
McCain to be president.. days is the kind of leader-:
place in Oregon," his
spokeswoman
noted, No wonder he sat beside ship we will see in the:
"and Sen&lt;~tor Smith does · her during their joint tap- Oval Office. There is
not condone these sort of ing of "Meet the Press" clear choice here , and:
Tom
Brokaw; most people have made:
c~lls. Negative robocalls with
are not appropriate and McCain wanted to keep the right one . Let's jus~ .
have no ·place in cam- Palin's ambition in check . hope their votes arC:
Speaking · of whom, counted as they are cast. :
paigns."
(Donna Brazile is ci·
Even Gov. Sarah Palin isn't she at least a little
agrees. McCain's vice- embarrassed that with political commentator· on;'
presidential running mate their campaign implod- CNN, ABC and NPR : con-:
admitted that voters are ing. Jhey blew $150,000
"irritated" by ·such calls . on her wardrobe? No pun · tributing colrmmist ro:
Let me heartily agree intended, but is she Roll Call, the •1ewspape,:.
with her, perhaps for the already shopping_for con- of Capitol Hill; and forfirst time. When looking cession prizes? Or per· mer campaign mam111er;
haps this is part of for AI Gore.)

As

a:

Deaths

Phyllis Lee Hughes

William ··am" Edward Kauff

Phyllis Lee Hughes , 88, of Bidwell, departed this life
on Thursday, Oct. 23, 2008, in Holzer Senior Care
Center at Bidwell, following an extended illness .
She was born May 13 , 1920, in Leon, W.Va., daughter
of the late Kenna and Emma Hazel (Kinzel) Hughes.
She was also prec.e~ed in death by brothers, Kenneth
J:Iughes and Wilham Hughes, and sisters ; Helen
Mane McFall, Leah Leota Hughes Ester Mae Hall and .
c:;:armen Adeleigh Hughes.
'
·
·
.• In her senior year at Point Pleasant High School, durmg World War ~I. she went to Akron , Ohio. to work in
the .Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber Co. Following her retirement, she moved back to this area to be close with her
~amily. S~e enjoyed bowling and playing cards, and was
a Methodist.
She is . survived by her brother, Herbert Hughes of
Akron;ststers, Ltlhan. "Lou" ,Swisher of Gallipolis, and
(')pal Beckner of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.: and several
nieces and nephews .
Services ~ill be 2 p.m . SuQday, Oct. 26, 2008, at the
Creston Umted Methodist Church in Evans, W.Va., with
the Rev. Ge.rald B. Sayre officiating. Visitaiion will be
one hour pnor to service time ai the church . Butial will
follow in the Creston Cemetery.
·
· Arrangements are by the Casto Funeral Home at
Evans.
· Online condolences may ·be sent to castofuneralhome@citynet.net.

William "Bill" Edward Kauft." 59, Rutland passed
away on Thursday, October. 23. 2008 at the Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. He was born on
September 5, 1949 in Pomeroy, to Opal (Stobart) Kauff
and the late Earl Cecil Kauff. Mr. Kauff worked as a
foreman at Ohio Power.
He is also survived by his wtte, Jenny Kauff of
Rutland and their daughter, Stephanie Kauff; brothers ,
Earl Kauff, .Jr. Richard Kauff and Jeffrey Kauff, all of
Pomeroy; sisters Debra 'Burke of Racine and Carla
Kauff of Pomeroy: children, Cynthia Smith of Rutland,
Christina Ferrell of Italy,
be ca Smith of Pomeroy.
William E. Kauff, Jr.
f
· lipolis . Ferry, W.Va ..
Benjamin Kauff of
e an Joshua Kauff of Racine ;
three step-daughters, Melinda Clark of Logan , Melissa
Clark of Chillicothe and Jennifer Clark of Pt. Pleasant ,
W.Va.; seventeen grandchildren ; a best friend, Sampson
Darst of Rutland; and s~veral nieces and nephews. ·
He was preceded in death by his father.
·
Services will be held at I p.m. on Monday, October
27, 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the . Pine Grove
Cemetery in Chester. Visitation will be . held two hours
prior to service. In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to the funeral horne to help offset the funeral
expenses.
·
·
Online condolences may be sent to www.andersonm·
cdaniel.com .

Andrew M. Mccarty

Anna Mae E~s

c.

~ndrew

S&amp;unllap ll:imrs -S&amp;rntmrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries

Two nien who 111{1de a difference

G::imtl1 ·&amp;tnttntl

Diane Hill
Controller

Pagei\4

Sunday, October z(j, zoos

M. McCarty, 84, of Wilkesville,. went to be

Anna Mae Ellis, 73 of Middleport, passed away on
Thursday, October .23; 2008 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Pt : Pleasant, W.Va. She.was born on March
2, 1935 in Athens County to the la'e Herbert and Mary
(Dye) Gilkey. Mrs. Ellis was a homemaker and a mem ber of the Middlepqrt Nazarene Church for 51 years .
She is survived by her husband of 56 years, Louis
Ellis of Middleport; a son; Gary and Pam Ellis of
Dublin, Oh; a daughter. Teresa and Kevin Hansher of
Columbus, Oh.; sisters, Mildred Nash of Middleoport
and Shirley .Kishbaugh of Colorado Springs, Co.;
grandchildren,· Tabitha and Ryan McPeeks, Jamie Ellis.
Mark Hansher, Krista Hansher, and Mychal Ellis; several nieces and nephews .
She .w as preceded in death by her parents and a
nephew, Adam Kishbaugh.
. ·
Services will be held on Monday, October 27 , 2008 at
II a.m. at the Middleport Nazarerie Churcll with Rev .
· Lynn Powell officiatmg. Buria.l will follow in · the
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be lield on
Sunday, October, 26 , 2008 from 2-4 p.m .and 6-8 p.m . at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport .
Online condolences may be sent .to www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Lena Mae Maynard

Lena Mae Maynard ,
Middleport , passed away
on Saturday, October ·25,
2008 at the o.,erbrook.
Rehabilitation Center in
Middleport. Sh1;1 was born
September 18, 1922 in
. Richardson, Ky., to the
late Melvin and Lucinda
(Stacy) Maynard. Mrs.
· Richard W. Myers, 81, of Gallipolis, passed away Maynard worked in the
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2008, at the Riverside Methodist Middleport Laundry . Mat ·
Hospital in Columbus,
and delivered 'the newspaRichard was a laborer, and enjoyed animals and fish· per for many yetirs in the
Middleport area.
.
was born April 26, 1927, in Mason 'county, W.Va.,
She fs survived by her
· son ·of the late Nelson T. 11nd Mona Whittington Myers. nieces, Eunice Fitch of
. He is survived by two sisters, Della Cox of Gallipolis, Rutland and Janice Cook
with whom he made his home tbe,Jast six years, and . of Gallipolis·; ~ist~r-in-law,
L"'a Mae Maynard
Nella (Earl) Dunlap of Kanauga . . Several nieces and Mary Preston of Louisa,
nephews survive.
.
Ky; 'spcci'al nieces arid
. He· was preceded in death by his parents and by a nephews that took care of .
her, Mary Priddy of Oallipolis, Thelma Ellis of Rutland,
brother, Nelson R. Myers.
· Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2008, at the Tara Blankenship of Albany, Charlie Fitchpatrick of
Willis Funeral Home, with Rev. Berkley Saunders offi- Middleport; and ~everal other nieces and nephews.
. In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in
eiating. Burial will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on death by her . husband, Claude Maynard; and brothers
. Scott, Melvin, Edgar. and ElziePreston .
.
Monda:r:, Oct. 27, 2008, from 6 to 8 p,m.
·
Services
wiU:·be
held
at
I
p.in.
Wednesday,
October
· F;~rnily members will serve as pallbearers. ·
. '
29; 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home Ill
· Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to "send
Middleport with the Rev.
mail condolences.
·
'
J11nior
.Preston officiating.
'
Burial will follow in the
Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport( Visitation will
: James "Bill" Sands, 79, of Crown City, died Saturday · be held from · 6-8 p.m. on
morning, October 25, 2008 at the Arbors at Gallipolis. Tuesday; October 28, 2008
Born February 22, 1929 in Gallia. County, he was the at the funeral home . The
son of the late Walter and Laura Sands . .
family would like to thank
, Bill owned and operated Sands Trash Service until his the staff at Overbrook
retirement.
Nursing Home for all their
He is survived by .his wife, Rosemary Phillips Sands; help and support ..
iwo siep-daughters, Christina and Jennifer Phillips of
Gallipolis; one sister, Jenivee Sands of Gallipolis; one
brother-in-law, James Phillips of Scottown; thrt!e sisters-in-law, Florence (Curtis) Short of Scottown, Dorie
~Bill) Montgomery of Crown City, and Marilyn Short of
Lawrence County.
.
.
· Funeral services will be I J&gt;.m. on Monday, October
HEARTS ON FIRE.
· 27 2008 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
. lliE WOILII'I MOn
wiih Pastor Gary Warner officiating. Burial will follow
.. llltl'lr ell'! OIAIIIOH0°
tn Good Hope Cemetery. Friends may call at the funer~1 home on Monday from, II . a.m. until the time. of the
service.
,
. An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood .com.
·

Richard W. Myen

~"fie

e·

James Bill Sands

' ~

SACRED HEART ..
CATHOLIC CHURCH ·

LIVI I!r,I'II'IIILT. LOYIINTII'IIJI.T,

IM:artsunlin:.cum

Thursday, Qetober 30th

Dinner begins at 4:30
$8.00 Adults- $4.00 6 to 12· 5 &amp; Under Eat Free

MENU
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham .
Homemade Noodles
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans • Coleslaw • Roll &amp; Dessert

tJJianumJS-9{-(joU

RAFFLE
Fancy Stands • Games • Reli&amp;loll!l Gifts

.

Mabel L. Mahan. 86. of Gallipoli,. died Saturday morn ing. October 25. 2008 at Hol Ler Senior Care Center.
Funeral services will be I I a.m. Wednesday. October 29.
2008 at Wau gh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial will
follow at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 58 p.m. An online guest registry is also available at waughhalley"wood .corn .
A complete obituary will be published in Monday 's edi tion.

Kenneth Harlan Cundiff
Kenneth Harlan Cundiff, 84. Lancaster. Ohio. formerly
of Meigs County. died Friday. October 24. 200X in the
Carriage Coun of Lancaster Assisted Living.
Arrangements will be announced by th e Cremeen'
Funeral Home . Racine .

vaccine slashes diarrhea[·
illness· in.kids
BY M~RILYNN MARCHIONE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

wtth the Lord on Friday, Oct. 24, 2008, at his residence
sqrrounded by his family.
He was retired from the Southern Ohio Coal Co.; a
World War II Army veteran, a member of Joseph
Freeman American Lellion Post No. 476 of Wilkesville,
and attended the Fairvtew Church of Christ in Christian
Union near ~ington .
·
.
· Andrew was born Aug. 15, 1924, at Orton Hollow,
Ohio, to the late Peter and Dessel McCarty.
On Oct. 8. 1951, he married Loretta Ann Martin, to
whom he was married for 54 years before she preceded
him in death on Nov. 25, 2005. To this union were born
three sons, Kenny (Nina) McCarty, Denver (Charlotte)
McCarty, Alva (Louise) McCarty, a.ll of Wilkesville,
and two daughters, Brenda (Mike Burridge) McCarty of
Wilkesville, and Debbie (Wayne) Shepherd of Wellston,
all of whom survive.
.
Also surviving are 10 grandchildren; 10 gre~t-grand­
children; two sisters and one brother, Bertha McCarty
of Wilkesville, Clary Ward of Hamden, and Joe
(Loret\a) McCarty of Marysville; and .a close friend,
Thelma Sturgeon.
..
In addition to his parents and beloved wife, he was
preceded in death by three brothers and seven sisters.
Services will be II a.m. Monday, Oct. 27, 2008 , in the
Fairview Church of Christ in Christian Union, with the
Rev. James McFadden officiating. Burial will follow in
the Yankee Street Cemetery near Wilkesville, with full .
mili·tary rites conducted by American Legion Post No.
161 Elf Vinton.
. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Fun era~ Home ·
tn Vinton on Sunday, Octo 26, 2008, from I to 5 p.m.

lsi· $500 • Znd -$ZOO • 3,4,5th • $100
Door Prtzes Every .Half Hour

Mabel L Mahan

f

Lly Away For Tbe

Instant Credit Avail1ble

Holidays!

(~roMIIr.,....IIIJ.

7,~0446-3484

Sil.ver Bridge Plaza, Gallipolis

WASHINGTON -A vaccine against rotavirus. the
leading cause of diarrhea in
infants. has led to a dramatic
drop in· hospitalization a nd
emergency room visits slnce
it came on the mru:ket two
years ago, doctors reported
. Saturday.
A bonus: the vaccine seems
to be preventing illness even
in unvaccinated children by
cutting the number of infeclions in the community that
kids can pick up and spread.
"We're a little surprised by
thedegreeofimpactgiventhe
covPrage we' ve achieved,"
said Jane Seward of the federal Centers for Disease Contrql
and Prevention. Only about
half of young children had
recei~ed the vaccine and very
few had received all three
doses when the studies were
done.
Results were reported
Saturday at an infectious diseases
conference
in
Washington.
Before the vaccine, more
than 200,000 U.S. children
· were taken to .emergency
rooms and more than 55,000
were hospitalized each year
with rotavirus, which causes
·vomiting and diarrhea. mostly
from January through May.

Worldwide . the viru&gt; kill s
( ,600 you ng children each
day.
Since Merck &amp; Co.-'s
Rotateq came out in 2006.
hospital visits 'and stays due to
the viru s have dropped 80
percent to 100 percent. studies by the CDC and several
other groups show.
Last winter. rotavirus cases
&gt;tarted and peaked two to
three months later and were
much less extensive than in
previous years. CDC scientists repo11. Hospi tab in a network that tracks these cases
· for the CDC saw more than
an 80 percent drop in ':Kim issions from them. one study
showed.
Another study. by Merck.
found a I00 percent drop in
. hospitalizations and ER visits .
during the 2007 and 2008
rota virus seasons compared to
previous ones. The study was
based on a review of healil\
insurance claims for about
61 .000 i11fants and diagnoses
by dqctors in routine clinical
practice.
Rotateq is an oral vaccine
given at two. four and six
months of age. In June. a seG:
ond rota virus vacCine came
on
the
market
GlaxoSmithKlinc's Rotarix.
It requires only two dose s,
completed by four months of
age.

�PageA6

OHIO

iunbap ttim~ ·itntintl

Inside

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Rio boards conlmit to shared vision, gover~ance

Regulators say Ohio nuclear
plant leak no threat

STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYOAILVTAIBUNE.COM

to examine the releases
and why they were happening after three Illinois
TOLEDO - Operators power plants reported
of a nuclear plant along leaks of tritium into
Lake Erie found and shut groundwater, inciuding
off a pipe that !)ad been one case where 6 million
·a
low-level · gallons was released intp
leaking
fadioactive material into soil outside the plant
the ground, the company boundary.
said Friday.
It's not known yet how
· The .leak at the Davis- long the three-inch pipe at
Besse plant near · Toledo. Davis-Besse had · been
wasn't a t'hreat to drinking leaking .or how much. got
water or the public , · into the ground, Schneider
according to the Nuclear said.
The pipeline leads to a
Regulatory Commission .
Samples show the radioac- retention pond where
tive material hasn 't seeped water is stored and does
into the groundwater or not go outside the plant
·
off the site, the agency property, he said.
said.
·
The acid leak found in
Workers d.igging in the 200 I nearly ate through
ground found the leak on the reactor's 6-inch-thick
Wednesday, said Todd · steel cap and led to sweepSchneider, a spokesman ing changes at the ant.
fo r FirstEnergy Corp ., The NRC beefe
up
which owns the plant ..
inspections and training
: The leaking liquid con- and began
requiring
tained tritium , a normal detailed records of its disproduct of a nuclear reac- cussions with plant operator that can cause cancer tors. ·
with significant exposure.
A k r o n - b a s e d
· The plant was site of the FirstEnergy paid a record
worst corrosion ever $28 million in fines a year
found at a U.S. reactor &amp;go while avoiding federal
when inspectors in 2001 charges. It also spent $600
discovered an acid leak. It million making repairs
was closed for two years · and buying replacement
and underwent extensive power while the plant was
r'.epairs.
·
closed from early 2002
The latest leak does not until 2004.
appear to be as worrisome .
Two company employ: At least eight tritium ees were convicted of conleaks with levels well cealing the leak from the
below the health standards government. Lawyers for
have been found over the the men said they were set
past few years, including up as scapegoats.
one last December at the
It was never clear how
Millstone Power Station in close the plant, midway
Waterford , Conn.
betweeri Toledo . and
The nuclear industry Cleveland, was to an accitook steps two years ago denJ
·f ·
Bv JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED ~RES$ WRITER

RIO GRANDE -

The

boards of the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande

Community College participated in a joint board retreat
on Oct. 9- 10 in. Chillicothe ·
along. · with Dr. Barbara'
Gellman-Danley, coordiriatirig officer.
· The purpose of the retreat
was to collectively discuss
key issues facing the state,
the region and each institution. Board members began
with a cnmmibnent ·to move
toward a shared vision, coupled with open comm1111ications and a focus on the key
stakeholder - Rio's learners.
Trends in higher education
were discussed, will) a robust
and vibrant discussion about
the positive future of the Rio
Grande. Participants discussed a shared vision of

/I

servirig a variety of students
and focusirig energy and
resources in the future which
has been promoted by the
new
Coordinating
Committee, consisting of
·members of both boards.
The highlight of the retreat
was a resolution, apr.roved
by both boards, to 'determine a way · to further the .
concept of a permanent
shared oversight entity." In
addition, the resolution supported "the presidential
search from this time fotward as a combined search
for one president with appropriate experience in public
two-year education and private higher education."
Don Wood, university
board chair, was elated at the
many suggestions and the
joint resolution. ·
"Titis is the best relationship we have had between the
two boards in years," he said.
"All members from both

bOards will work together
and the winners of these
efforts will be our students."
Mike Swisher, Rio Grande
Community College Board
chair, agreed.
"Without students we have
no purpose," he said. "Every
effort will be made in the
future to reach out to all
·potential students.and to meet
their needs."
Gellman-Danley observed,
"The joint board retreat
exemplifies the spirit of 'One
Rio,' an institution that stands
ready to work collabotatively
to serve learners in southeastern Ohio · and beyond.
Members worked very hard
to put differences where they
belong, iri the·past."
. She added, "This great passion for Rio and genuine
excitement about creating a
shared vision. will ensure a
fmancially healthy and sustainable future."
She concluded, "We are

Bulldogs bite Wabama, Page B3

grateful to Chancellor (Eric)
Fingerhut for encouraging
this type of rebuilding
together."
The
Coordinating
Committee will form a Task
Force on Governance by
Nov. 1 to "make recommendations on structure, authorities and responsibilities to all'
decision-makers." .
The boards have pledged to "
· work together in the future to
ensure the opportunity of
.· ~
educational opporfumtles or
all students who seek a better
future and more rewarding
life.
"We will move toward an
inward vision toward one
where a shared voice reaches
out to all our partners as we
build .a seamless transition
from high school through
graduate school for south- ·
eastern Ohio, through the colIective ·higher · e~ucation
offerings at Rio Grande."

LocAL ScHiinuLE
GAlliPOLIS - A ~It Of upcoming col-'

~ and

Wtdnpde 'Qctob!tr 29
VolloyboN '- 04 regional iamlo ,
Winner of Soutl") Webster· Lucasville

Valley match versus winner of EasternPike Eastern at Lancaster HS, 6 p.m.
Friday Odqblr 31

Footblll - Ohio playotto
Divisions II , IV and VI, 7:30p.m.

Saturday NoyembM t
. Footboll - Ohio playo"Olvlslons L Ill and V, 7 p.m.
Crou Country
State championships at Scioto Downs
11

a.m.

'

'

.'

'

J

·weatern Brown 41, PortamoUth ·12

o ··

, .River Vaney colil: Rock Hill 1~ • •
• ,Falt{and 41 , Cool Grove 6 "

·: Sooth'Polnt ·so, Chioapliakio i4'
Symmeo· v~loy· 3.5. So~iK Golilo .~ ·
·Roane co.·34, Htlflllri Roover 2i .·
., · Woyne ·e2: ~. 20··
: Sj 0oorwllle 39, .~ody SpriDg 27 .
'
'
L

'

•

'

Meigs blasts Belpre
on Senior Night, 48-8
Marauders likely playoff bound
for the first time in schoo.l history
Bv DAVE HARRIS

Log~n 23, Chillicothe 13
• Marlena 1~ , Galllo Academy 6 ·
'Ironton 31, Warren e
zanaavllle 28, JIIIJkson 6
Federal Hocking 30, Walarlbrd 0 '
Trimble 45, Miller 14
: ~ WeU.ton 46, Alt&gt;tander 15 •
Molgo 48, ·Belpre 8
.
l'l•loonvlllo-Vo\k 48, VInton C.o. 18

Atheno 20. Wahamo

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Smith scored his first
touchdown of the night on
an eight yard run at the 3:15
POMEROY - Jeremy mark of the first period. capSmith rushed for 361 yards ping off a 12 play, 64-yard
in 31 carries and six touch- drive. The. extra point try
downs·, -to lead the Mei.\!s was blocked.
Marauders to a 48-8 · wm
Mason Metts kicked off
over Belpre before a small and Ashton Packard had to
wet senior night crowd.
chase the loose ball to the
The 361 yards in good one yard line, where he
enough for the second high- slipped on the wet turf.
est single gall!e rushing total Three plays later, quarterby a Marauder running back Clay Ullman was hit
back. Justin Roysh rushed trying to run the option and
for 411 against Belpre in fumbled with Cory Hutton
1999.
. pouncing on the loose foot The win puts the Maroon ball for Meigs at the nine.
and Gold right in the middle On first down Smith blasted
of the playoff hunt for their · in to.for the score. Smith ran
first playoff appearance in .it in for the extra points and
the school's h1story. The the Marauders held a 14·0
official playoff pairings will lead with I :52 left in the
be !lnnounced by t)le Ohio period.
.
High
School Athletic
The Marauders made it
Association on Sunday
afternoon.
Please see Melp. Bl
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

WeeklOResbltS

. ..

: SATu,.oAv, ocT. 2s ·
.
.

Larry Crumlphoto

Members of lhe Meigs football team ring the victory bell at Bob Roberts Field alter defeating visiting Belpre Friday night during a Week 10 TVC Ohio contest in Pomeroy. The
Marauders- with the Senior Night win- are likely headed to the postseason for the first
.· time in school history, dating back to 1967.
·

Southern at Eutern, ~te _

SPORTS BRIEFS

Rebels fall

Football stats
needed for AP ·
district, OVP
nominations

to Vikings
STAFF REPORT
S~OATSCIMYOAILYTRIBUNE . COM

' GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football reg':'·
far season commg th1s ·
weekend, it is time to start
compiling slats for the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and also the
Ohio Valley Publishing

assassinate her or her fam- ·
ily.
Assistant
City
· Prosecutor
Lindsay
Broderick says McArtor
first told investigators he
didn't make the call, then
remembered he did .
Franklin
County
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien
asked for the high bond
he
believes
because
McArtor is a threat to the
Brunner family and to
society. .
.
If convicted McArtor
faces up lo fix.e years in
prison and a $10!000 fine.

S~tSteam.

Pryor wants to
prove himself ·
to Penn State·

AEP (NVSE) - 30.98
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 35.16
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21.95
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Big lots (NVSE) - 20:65
.
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Bob Evans (NASDAQ)
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.20 .
19.54
BorgWarner (NVSE)
Rockwell (NYSE) - 22.87
21.80 '
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Century Aluminum. (NAS- 3.40
DAQ)- 9.92
Champion (NASDAQ) - Royal Dutch Shell - 46.78
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
3.08
Charming Shops (NAS· -47.87
DAQ)- 1.18
Wal-Mart (NVSE) - 51.40
City Holding (NASDAQ) - Wendy's (NVSE)- 3.18
35.84
.
WesBanco (NYSE) - 23.96
Collins (NVSE) - 33.54
Worthington (NVSE)
DuPont (NVSE) - 29.33
10.90
US Bank (NVSE) - 29.45
Dally stock repor11 are the
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traneactlons for Oct. 24,
Harley--Davidson (NVSE) - 2008, provided by Edward
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' JP Morgan (NVSE) - 35.43
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Marietta slips past Devils, 14-6

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'

•

•

WILLOW WOOD ,... At
the end of the first quarter
the South Gallia football
team found itself in a ti~ht
battle w1th
its biggest
rival just a
few mile s
dbwn the
road
in
Willow
Wood.
12 minutes later.
L...JL-.!.....:.....:._:...~ the Rebels
were ready
to go home.
Symme s
Valley (55), holding
on to a narrow
7-0
lead after
one quarter
of
play.
exploded m
L..;.._ _ _...;;Jt the second
MCClanahan frame with
28 points
from four different players
to give the Vikings a 35-0
halftime advantage leading
to a 35-6 victory gver the
Rebels (2,8) on senior night
in Willow Wood .
With the win Symmes
Valley snaps a three-game
losing streak to finish the
season at .500 while South .
Gallia wraps · up its worst
grid campaign since 2004
with three straight road
losses by a combined score
of 120-6.
Not the most memorable
of seasons ·for a Rebel team
just two years out from
back-to-back
playoff
appearances .

All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
send individual nominations
from their respective teams
- along with regular season slats - · to Bryan
Walters of the sports department in Gallipolis.
·
Stats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalters@ mydailytribune .c
om
Don •r · forget to include
offensive and defensive
slats, as well as spech\1
teams for any individual
Walloralphoto
nominated.
Senior members of the Riv!3r Valley varsity football team pose tor a picture while celebrating their 46·13 victory over vic·
All nominations must be iting Rock Hill on Friday during the Week 10 OVC finale at Raider Field on Senior Night. The Raiders snapped a 21-game
received
by
Monday, losing slreak in the OVC and scored a season-high in points in the process.
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
district meeting .
Any questions, call the
sports line at 446-2342 ext.
Bv BRYAN WALTt:RS
OVC) amassed a season- then tacked on six more The last time the Raiders
33 .
BWALTERSOM'I'DAILYTRIBUNE.COM best 439 rushing yards while points in the last stanza to won a Week I0 Senior Night
outgaining the Redmen (0- secur~ the Raiders' biggest matchup was in ;2002 when
CHESHIRE - The streak 10, 0~5) by a 498-265 mar- margin of victory (33 points) they defeated Fairland by a
.is over - and in.grand fash- gin in total yards of offense. this season.
·
19-0 count.
·
ion too.
The hosts never trailed in the
River Valley's other two
River Valley's senior class
River Valley football contest ...:. jumping but. to a victories thi s season - - consisting of Clayton
ended its five-year, 21-game 12-0 first quarterlead - and Eastern
( 14-0)
and Curnutte, Zak Dee! , Jordan
losing streak in the Ohio held RHHS scoreless in the Waterford (27-7) - were by Dee! ~ Jordan Miller, Zach
Valley Conference on Friday second half after taking a a combined total of 34 Baird. Travi s Roush . Jeremy
COLUMBUS (AP) - In with a convincing 46-13 26, !3 advantage into the points .
·. Brumfield , Chuck Perry ,
the bright lights of a thumping of visiting Rock intermission.
RVHS picked up its first Bryce Darst, Ben Schrock
postgame interview last Hill during a Week 10 gridThe Silver and Black OVC win since Week 8 of and Kody Johnson - had
week, Ohib State quarter- iron matchup at Raider Field turned that 13-point halftime the 2004 campaign, when never tasted an OVC victory
back Terrene Pryor was on Senior N1ght.
.advantage into a 40-13 edge the Raiders defeated South
already thinking ahead to
Please - Rebels, Bl.
The Raiders (3-7, 1-4 after, three quarters of play; , Point (35-6) at ~aider Field.
Please see Raiders, 84
the showdown with a team
(rom his home state, a team
tie jilted to .become a
l}uc~eye.
·
· :- The freshman, 5-0 as a
Bv CRAIG McCORMICK
our game. It's not even real:
$iarter, threw down the
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .Jy football, its like mudchallenge to No. 3 Penn .
wrestling.". '
State, which comes to Ohio
GALLIPOLIS
GAHS (5-5, 2-4 SEOAL)
~tad.ium for a s·aturday
Field looked couldn't get their offense
bij!ht game likely to deter- Memorial
more
like
your
swim- moving as it was held to
)ilme the Big Ten champion rning hole ratherlocal'
than
a high seven first downs and 117
ahd its Bowl Championship school football field Friday
yards of total offense ,
~eries representative.
night.
mcluding 56 yards f!!Shing
· · "We're hung!t for more .
The
offensive
highlights
on
30 attempts. The Tigers
We want more,' Pryor said.
''We've got a big fight next were few and far between, were, only able to musler
i.veek. I ain't proved any- with both ~ffenses strug- 121 yards of total offense,
thing yet. I'm still young. 1 ghng to get mto any type of all of which came from 40
like playing with a chip on rhythm . In the end, the rushing attempts .
my shoulder and playing for weather, bad field position • The Blue Devils came into
m~ teammates.''
· and turnovers would ~e the game looking to lock
Pryor will be the central more than the Blue Devtls down a winning season and·
could overcome as they suf- with very slim hopes of a
PleaH Pryor, 84
fere~ a tough loss to the Division lV, Region 15
Manetta Ttgers 14-6 on playoff birth. For the second
Semor mght.
week in a row GAHS battled
"Our kids played as hard for four quarters only to
CoNrAcrUs
as they could play, but under come up just short on the
the conditions they were scoreboard.
·
· 1-74Q-446·2342 ext. 33
pro.babl_r the better team
Gallia Acade·ny stumbled
Fu - H 4!H46-3008
Mike BI'IICeloubm- pholo
tomght, sa1d GAHS head first when it atmost turned '
E-m•ll - sportsOmydally1rlbune.com
coach Matt Bokovitz. " It
Gallia Academy's Quinton Nibert (80) runs away from the Marietta punt defense during
completely took us out of
Please - Devils. 84
OR sportsOmydailysentinel.com
Friday night's Week 10 SEOAL football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.

,Roell

showers. Highs in the mid
40s. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Tuesday night and
Wednesday ••• Most I y
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Highs in the upper 40s.
Wednesday nlght ...Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Thursday
through
Friday...Mostly
clear.
Highs in .,·the lower 60s.
Lows in the upper 30s.

Local Stocks

•

hiltl

IIChool \IIW'Brty $pOI'Iing liYDrlfs
involving teamB fron:l Galia and Meigs counties:

1.ocal Weather
Sunday .. ,Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds I0 to I 5
mph.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s. West winds 5
to 10 mph.
,
Monday and Monday
night ...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the mid 30s.
Thesday...Partly sunny
with a chance of snow

•

-·

Bail at $1 million·in Ohio
elections chief threat
. COLUMBUS (AP)- A
judge has set bail at $1
million for a man charged
with making a death threat
against Ohio's elections
chief . .
Judge David Tyack
(TIE' -ak)
set
bail
Saturday at an initial hearing for 5 I-year-old Dana
McArtor of suburban
Columbus .
A State Highway Patrol
complaint says McArtor
c.alled Ohio Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner's
office from his cell phone
Oct. 7 and threatened to

Bl

The ~board, Page 82

on Senior

46-13

�PageA6

OHIO

iunbap ttim~ ·itntintl

Inside

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Rio boards conlmit to shared vision, gover~ance

Regulators say Ohio nuclear
plant leak no threat

STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYOAILVTAIBUNE.COM

to examine the releases
and why they were happening after three Illinois
TOLEDO - Operators power plants reported
of a nuclear plant along leaks of tritium into
Lake Erie found and shut groundwater, inciuding
off a pipe that !)ad been one case where 6 million
·a
low-level · gallons was released intp
leaking
fadioactive material into soil outside the plant
the ground, the company boundary.
said Friday.
It's not known yet how
· The .leak at the Davis- long the three-inch pipe at
Besse plant near · Toledo. Davis-Besse had · been
wasn't a t'hreat to drinking leaking .or how much. got
water or the public , · into the ground, Schneider
according to the Nuclear said.
The pipeline leads to a
Regulatory Commission .
Samples show the radioac- retention pond where
tive material hasn 't seeped water is stored and does
into the groundwater or not go outside the plant
·
off the site, the agency property, he said.
said.
·
The acid leak found in
Workers d.igging in the 200 I nearly ate through
ground found the leak on the reactor's 6-inch-thick
Wednesday, said Todd · steel cap and led to sweepSchneider, a spokesman ing changes at the ant.
fo r FirstEnergy Corp ., The NRC beefe
up
which owns the plant ..
inspections and training
: The leaking liquid con- and began
requiring
tained tritium , a normal detailed records of its disproduct of a nuclear reac- cussions with plant operator that can cause cancer tors. ·
with significant exposure.
A k r o n - b a s e d
· The plant was site of the FirstEnergy paid a record
worst corrosion ever $28 million in fines a year
found at a U.S. reactor &amp;go while avoiding federal
when inspectors in 2001 charges. It also spent $600
discovered an acid leak. It million making repairs
was closed for two years · and buying replacement
and underwent extensive power while the plant was
r'.epairs.
·
closed from early 2002
The latest leak does not until 2004.
appear to be as worrisome .
Two company employ: At least eight tritium ees were convicted of conleaks with levels well cealing the leak from the
below the health standards government. Lawyers for
have been found over the the men said they were set
past few years, including up as scapegoats.
one last December at the
It was never clear how
Millstone Power Station in close the plant, midway
Waterford , Conn.
betweeri Toledo . and
The nuclear industry Cleveland, was to an accitook steps two years ago denJ
·f ·
Bv JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED ~RES$ WRITER

RIO GRANDE -

The

boards of the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande

Community College participated in a joint board retreat
on Oct. 9- 10 in. Chillicothe ·
along. · with Dr. Barbara'
Gellman-Danley, coordiriatirig officer.
· The purpose of the retreat
was to collectively discuss
key issues facing the state,
the region and each institution. Board members began
with a cnmmibnent ·to move
toward a shared vision, coupled with open comm1111ications and a focus on the key
stakeholder - Rio's learners.
Trends in higher education
were discussed, will) a robust
and vibrant discussion about
the positive future of the Rio
Grande. Participants discussed a shared vision of

/I

servirig a variety of students
and focusirig energy and
resources in the future which
has been promoted by the
new
Coordinating
Committee, consisting of
·members of both boards.
The highlight of the retreat
was a resolution, apr.roved
by both boards, to 'determine a way · to further the .
concept of a permanent
shared oversight entity." In
addition, the resolution supported "the presidential
search from this time fotward as a combined search
for one president with appropriate experience in public
two-year education and private higher education."
Don Wood, university
board chair, was elated at the
many suggestions and the
joint resolution. ·
"Titis is the best relationship we have had between the
two boards in years," he said.
"All members from both

bOards will work together
and the winners of these
efforts will be our students."
Mike Swisher, Rio Grande
Community College Board
chair, agreed.
"Without students we have
no purpose," he said. "Every
effort will be made in the
future to reach out to all
·potential students.and to meet
their needs."
Gellman-Danley observed,
"The joint board retreat
exemplifies the spirit of 'One
Rio,' an institution that stands
ready to work collabotatively
to serve learners in southeastern Ohio · and beyond.
Members worked very hard
to put differences where they
belong, iri the·past."
. She added, "This great passion for Rio and genuine
excitement about creating a
shared vision. will ensure a
fmancially healthy and sustainable future."
She concluded, "We are

Bulldogs bite Wabama, Page B3

grateful to Chancellor (Eric)
Fingerhut for encouraging
this type of rebuilding
together."
The
Coordinating
Committee will form a Task
Force on Governance by
Nov. 1 to "make recommendations on structure, authorities and responsibilities to all'
decision-makers." .
The boards have pledged to "
· work together in the future to
ensure the opportunity of
.· ~
educational opporfumtles or
all students who seek a better
future and more rewarding
life.
"We will move toward an
inward vision toward one
where a shared voice reaches
out to all our partners as we
build .a seamless transition
from high school through
graduate school for south- ·
eastern Ohio, through the colIective ·higher · e~ucation
offerings at Rio Grande."

LocAL ScHiinuLE
GAlliPOLIS - A ~It Of upcoming col-'

~ and

Wtdnpde 'Qctob!tr 29
VolloyboN '- 04 regional iamlo ,
Winner of Soutl") Webster· Lucasville

Valley match versus winner of EasternPike Eastern at Lancaster HS, 6 p.m.
Friday Odqblr 31

Footblll - Ohio playotto
Divisions II , IV and VI, 7:30p.m.

Saturday NoyembM t
. Footboll - Ohio playo"Olvlslons L Ill and V, 7 p.m.
Crou Country
State championships at Scioto Downs
11

a.m.

'

'

.'

'

J

·weatern Brown 41, PortamoUth ·12

o ··

, .River Vaney colil: Rock Hill 1~ • •
• ,Falt{and 41 , Cool Grove 6 "

·: Sooth'Polnt ·so, Chioapliakio i4'
Symmeo· v~loy· 3.5. So~iK Golilo .~ ·
·Roane co.·34, Htlflllri Roover 2i .·
., · Woyne ·e2: ~. 20··
: Sj 0oorwllle 39, .~ody SpriDg 27 .
'
'
L

'

•

'

Meigs blasts Belpre
on Senior Night, 48-8
Marauders likely playoff bound
for the first time in schoo.l history
Bv DAVE HARRIS

Log~n 23, Chillicothe 13
• Marlena 1~ , Galllo Academy 6 ·
'Ironton 31, Warren e
zanaavllle 28, JIIIJkson 6
Federal Hocking 30, Walarlbrd 0 '
Trimble 45, Miller 14
: ~ WeU.ton 46, Alt&gt;tander 15 •
Molgo 48, ·Belpre 8
.
l'l•loonvlllo-Vo\k 48, VInton C.o. 18

Atheno 20. Wahamo

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Smith scored his first
touchdown of the night on
an eight yard run at the 3:15
POMEROY - Jeremy mark of the first period. capSmith rushed for 361 yards ping off a 12 play, 64-yard
in 31 carries and six touch- drive. The. extra point try
downs·, -to lead the Mei.\!s was blocked.
Marauders to a 48-8 · wm
Mason Metts kicked off
over Belpre before a small and Ashton Packard had to
wet senior night crowd.
chase the loose ball to the
The 361 yards in good one yard line, where he
enough for the second high- slipped on the wet turf.
est single gall!e rushing total Three plays later, quarterby a Marauder running back Clay Ullman was hit
back. Justin Roysh rushed trying to run the option and
for 411 against Belpre in fumbled with Cory Hutton
1999.
. pouncing on the loose foot The win puts the Maroon ball for Meigs at the nine.
and Gold right in the middle On first down Smith blasted
of the playoff hunt for their · in to.for the score. Smith ran
first playoff appearance in .it in for the extra points and
the school's h1story. The the Marauders held a 14·0
official playoff pairings will lead with I :52 left in the
be !lnnounced by t)le Ohio period.
.
High
School Athletic
The Marauders made it
Association on Sunday
afternoon.
Please see Melp. Bl
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

WeeklOResbltS

. ..

: SATu,.oAv, ocT. 2s ·
.
.

Larry Crumlphoto

Members of lhe Meigs football team ring the victory bell at Bob Roberts Field alter defeating visiting Belpre Friday night during a Week 10 TVC Ohio contest in Pomeroy. The
Marauders- with the Senior Night win- are likely headed to the postseason for the first
.· time in school history, dating back to 1967.
·

Southern at Eutern, ~te _

SPORTS BRIEFS

Rebels fall

Football stats
needed for AP ·
district, OVP
nominations

to Vikings
STAFF REPORT
S~OATSCIMYOAILYTRIBUNE . COM

' GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football reg':'·
far season commg th1s ·
weekend, it is time to start
compiling slats for the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and also the
Ohio Valley Publishing

assassinate her or her fam- ·
ily.
Assistant
City
· Prosecutor
Lindsay
Broderick says McArtor
first told investigators he
didn't make the call, then
remembered he did .
Franklin
County
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien
asked for the high bond
he
believes
because
McArtor is a threat to the
Brunner family and to
society. .
.
If convicted McArtor
faces up lo fix.e years in
prison and a $10!000 fine.

S~tSteam.

Pryor wants to
prove himself ·
to Penn State·

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Marietta slips past Devils, 14-6

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'

•

•

WILLOW WOOD ,... At
the end of the first quarter
the South Gallia football
team found itself in a ti~ht
battle w1th
its biggest
rival just a
few mile s
dbwn the
road
in
Willow
Wood.
12 minutes later.
L...JL-.!.....:.....:._:...~ the Rebels
were ready
to go home.
Symme s
Valley (55), holding
on to a narrow
7-0
lead after
one quarter
of
play.
exploded m
L..;.._ _ _...;;Jt the second
MCClanahan frame with
28 points
from four different players
to give the Vikings a 35-0
halftime advantage leading
to a 35-6 victory gver the
Rebels (2,8) on senior night
in Willow Wood .
With the win Symmes
Valley snaps a three-game
losing streak to finish the
season at .500 while South .
Gallia wraps · up its worst
grid campaign since 2004
with three straight road
losses by a combined score
of 120-6.
Not the most memorable
of seasons ·for a Rebel team
just two years out from
back-to-back
playoff
appearances .

All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
send individual nominations
from their respective teams
- along with regular season slats - · to Bryan
Walters of the sports department in Gallipolis.
·
Stats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalters@ mydailytribune .c
om
Don •r · forget to include
offensive and defensive
slats, as well as spech\1
teams for any individual
Walloralphoto
nominated.
Senior members of the Riv!3r Valley varsity football team pose tor a picture while celebrating their 46·13 victory over vic·
All nominations must be iting Rock Hill on Friday during the Week 10 OVC finale at Raider Field on Senior Night. The Raiders snapped a 21-game
received
by
Monday, losing slreak in the OVC and scored a season-high in points in the process.
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
district meeting .
Any questions, call the
sports line at 446-2342 ext.
Bv BRYAN WALTt:RS
OVC) amassed a season- then tacked on six more The last time the Raiders
33 .
BWALTERSOM'I'DAILYTRIBUNE.COM best 439 rushing yards while points in the last stanza to won a Week I0 Senior Night
outgaining the Redmen (0- secur~ the Raiders' biggest matchup was in ;2002 when
CHESHIRE - The streak 10, 0~5) by a 498-265 mar- margin of victory (33 points) they defeated Fairland by a
.is over - and in.grand fash- gin in total yards of offense. this season.
·
19-0 count.
·
ion too.
The hosts never trailed in the
River Valley's other two
River Valley's senior class
River Valley football contest ...:. jumping but. to a victories thi s season - - consisting of Clayton
ended its five-year, 21-game 12-0 first quarterlead - and Eastern
( 14-0)
and Curnutte, Zak Dee! , Jordan
losing streak in the Ohio held RHHS scoreless in the Waterford (27-7) - were by Dee! ~ Jordan Miller, Zach
Valley Conference on Friday second half after taking a a combined total of 34 Baird. Travi s Roush . Jeremy
COLUMBUS (AP) - In with a convincing 46-13 26, !3 advantage into the points .
·. Brumfield , Chuck Perry ,
the bright lights of a thumping of visiting Rock intermission.
RVHS picked up its first Bryce Darst, Ben Schrock
postgame interview last Hill during a Week 10 gridThe Silver and Black OVC win since Week 8 of and Kody Johnson - had
week, Ohib State quarter- iron matchup at Raider Field turned that 13-point halftime the 2004 campaign, when never tasted an OVC victory
back Terrene Pryor was on Senior N1ght.
.advantage into a 40-13 edge the Raiders defeated South
already thinking ahead to
Please - Rebels, Bl.
The Raiders (3-7, 1-4 after, three quarters of play; , Point (35-6) at ~aider Field.
Please see Raiders, 84
the showdown with a team
(rom his home state, a team
tie jilted to .become a
l}uc~eye.
·
· :- The freshman, 5-0 as a
Bv CRAIG McCORMICK
our game. It's not even real:
$iarter, threw down the
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .Jy football, its like mudchallenge to No. 3 Penn .
wrestling.". '
State, which comes to Ohio
GALLIPOLIS
GAHS (5-5, 2-4 SEOAL)
~tad.ium for a s·aturday
Field looked couldn't get their offense
bij!ht game likely to deter- Memorial
more
like
your
swim- moving as it was held to
)ilme the Big Ten champion rning hole ratherlocal'
than
a high seven first downs and 117
ahd its Bowl Championship school football field Friday
yards of total offense ,
~eries representative.
night.
mcluding 56 yards f!!Shing
· · "We're hung!t for more .
The
offensive
highlights
on
30 attempts. The Tigers
We want more,' Pryor said.
''We've got a big fight next were few and far between, were, only able to musler
i.veek. I ain't proved any- with both ~ffenses strug- 121 yards of total offense,
thing yet. I'm still young. 1 ghng to get mto any type of all of which came from 40
like playing with a chip on rhythm . In the end, the rushing attempts .
my shoulder and playing for weather, bad field position • The Blue Devils came into
m~ teammates.''
· and turnovers would ~e the game looking to lock
Pryor will be the central more than the Blue Devtls down a winning season and·
could overcome as they suf- with very slim hopes of a
PleaH Pryor, 84
fere~ a tough loss to the Division lV, Region 15
Manetta Ttgers 14-6 on playoff birth. For the second
Semor mght.
week in a row GAHS battled
"Our kids played as hard for four quarters only to
CoNrAcrUs
as they could play, but under come up just short on the
the conditions they were scoreboard.
·
· 1-74Q-446·2342 ext. 33
pro.babl_r the better team
Gallia Acade·ny stumbled
Fu - H 4!H46-3008
Mike BI'IICeloubm- pholo
tomght, sa1d GAHS head first when it atmost turned '
E-m•ll - sportsOmydally1rlbune.com
coach Matt Bokovitz. " It
Gallia Academy's Quinton Nibert (80) runs away from the Marietta punt defense during
completely took us out of
Please - Devils. 84
OR sportsOmydailysentinel.com
Friday night's Week 10 SEOAL football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.

,Roell

showers. Highs in the mid
40s. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Tuesday night and
Wednesday ••• Most I y
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Highs in the upper 40s.
Wednesday nlght ...Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Thursday
through
Friday...Mostly
clear.
Highs in .,·the lower 60s.
Lows in the upper 30s.

Local Stocks

•

hiltl

IIChool \IIW'Brty $pOI'Iing liYDrlfs
involving teamB fron:l Galia and Meigs counties:

1.ocal Weather
Sunday .. ,Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds I0 to I 5
mph.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s. West winds 5
to 10 mph.
,
Monday and Monday
night ...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the mid 30s.
Thesday...Partly sunny
with a chance of snow

•

-·

Bail at $1 million·in Ohio
elections chief threat
. COLUMBUS (AP)- A
judge has set bail at $1
million for a man charged
with making a death threat
against Ohio's elections
chief . .
Judge David Tyack
(TIE' -ak)
set
bail
Saturday at an initial hearing for 5 I-year-old Dana
McArtor of suburban
Columbus .
A State Highway Patrol
complaint says McArtor
c.alled Ohio Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner's
office from his cell phone
Oct. 7 and threatened to

Bl

The ~board, Page 82

on Senior

46-13

�.. - - ------ ~-----

..

SCOREBOARD

·~ ·iuaap lim~ ·itntlntl
PREP FOOTBALL
,J.

Friday's Boxsoores

r
River Valley 48,
~
•
Rock Hill 13
!Rock Hill
0 13 0 0 - 13
tRiver Valley 12 14 14 6 - 46
·~

'"I '

Scor'•'lll aummary

Flmau.rtor

:; fiV-Zach Baird 55 run (kick
.;.blocked) 6:24
!- AY-Balrd 46 run (pass failed) 2:14
Second Quarter
.,fltl-Trey Wild8 25 pass from Will
. : McCollist8f (Cody Massie kick) 8:16
· AY-Kody Johnson 5 pass from
: Clayt011 Cumutte (pass good) 3:30
:: AV-Belrd 65 run (pass failed) 1:40
·: Rf:I-Jeremy Blagg 9 pass from
' McCollistei(kick blOcked) 0:05
:
Third Quarter
.!AY-Jordan Oeel16 pass lrom
: Curnutte (Tyler Smith kick) 9:05
" : AV-Cody McAvena 8 pass from
· Curnutte (Smith kick) 3:05
·
Fourth Ouener
· 1111-Curnutte 5 run (kick blocked)
. 7:56

t·

..

- First Downs
. Rushes-yards
Passing yards
, Total yards
· eor..,.aH-int
. Furnbles·lost
. Panalties-yards

. Athena 20, Wahama 0
Wahama
oooo o
Athens
0 6 8 6 - 20
Scoring aummary
Second Quarter
A-Shad McCollum 36 run (run
failed) 9:19
ThtruQuorter
A-Cameron Tope 5 run (Frank
Vatentour pass from Trey Harris)
:55
Fourth Quarter
A-Tope 4 run
(run failed)
.
. 2:45

w

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att4nt
Fumbles-lost
Panalties-yal'!ls

A .

5.

15
46·224

21-49
53
102

' 83

307
9-11.()
1·1
6·50

~23-1

3-1
3·35

Marletta14,
Gallla Academy 6
Marlena
o 7 .o 7 - 14
· Gallipolis
o 6 o o- 6

:t,3

.
LoGan ...... ..... ...........
JL ... ~ . l.J
Chll- . ...... . .. , . ....... . .. 6-1 ... :227 . .80 .... ..7-3 ..• .271 .. 148
Ohlo·AIItfltlc: I r
'SoutlleutMn
.

'"

kenton ............. .. ........ .. .4·2 .... 1113 ..76 .. ·....7-3 ... .320 •.•138
Zanesville ....... .. .. .. .. .... .. .4-2 .... t49 . .63 ......s-5 .. . .202 ,.186
llatiella .... . . .. .... .. .. .... ....3-3 . . . . t41 .. t!iO .. .. ...... . .a.. . .36l
Go11ia -.ny , ..... ; .... .. , .. . .2-4 ... .55 ...137 .. .. .H .. ..1111 . .240
~

.. . .. , ., ... ... ........ . .2·5 .... 108 ..255 .. .. .5-S ... ~ . ,289

wan.. .. ..•. " ... ... ' .. .' ... ...1.S .. ..48 .. .162 .....4-41 .. ..101. . .271
Potlt•:cw.dh . ., ....... . -. ...... .....Q.6 . , .• 61 . . .153 ., ... tAL . .19f ,.zn
.
. .OhiO Yllflr Conference
,

. • . .
.•

,

.

· ·

•:&lt;.

W.L

'

OYC
Ill'

"

M .

w.t.

ALL

·PF

"

..,.

Ccol Gmvt,. . .,... .. . . . : .. ."'· , •• •4-.1.. . . 158 ..94 . .. . ..6-4·; . : .238 ' .. teo
South Point .' .. .. .. . •. ....,.... •... Jl-.1... . 207 , .92 . .. ...H .. .. 311 , .209
Folriand ..... ... . ... ... ...... . . ..4-1 .... 24!! .. t24 .. .. .4-5•.. ..311 • .224
:!'-. ~.2..a ...~ a, . .112 .. . ..«~ ... .230 . .304

che•c
........ ,.: .......
Rivef
....... .. .,

! . ; .. ....

·!"!.. .. 108 , .213 . .. . ,3-1 . .. •173

Rocktjlll . .. . ..... . ..•. .. ; . .. (. ..11'0 ..

.'. .(·'•.h::'·,. ::l,,
~'

~~

..

, .348
95 .. .228 .. , ..0.10 . .. 146 ..431

-~~··~
•·
'
'
*
Divtllon
.M . . • w.t.
,· ,,. ,, . ..w.L

,""""

.~

i1:~·\

l..r

i!

lVC
! .
ALL
Ill'
Ill' .M
Nell6n\lille-M .. .... .... : ..... , , , .a;o ... .2t7 ! .112 ·.... .a.a .. ..320! ·• .210

'

c•.. :.,..... .

, I

Symmes Valley 35, •
South Gallla 6
South Gallia 0 0 6 0 6
SymmesVa. 7 . 28 0 0 - 35
Scoring summary
Firat Quarter
SV-Kyle"Bowen 35 run (Cody
Bland) 9:55
Second Quanar
SV-Bowen 1 run (Bland kick)
10:24
SV-Evan Herrell61 run (Bland
kick) 7:58
SV -Jesse Graybeal 3 run (Bland
kick) 5:24
.SV-Biand 4 run (Bland kick) 1:32
Third Qllllrter .
SG-Austin Phillips 51 run (pass
failed) 5:52
'
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-lnl
Fumbles·los1
Penalties-yards

sv

SG
6
33-42

13
44-261
9
270
1-3-o
4·2
9·45

2:;
Scoring oummary
67
Second Quarter
4-14-1
M-Parry Wheeler 30 run (Zane
2.0
- Eschbaugh kick) 9:11
9·90
c. GA-1uinlon Nibert 70 punt return
• (kick blocked) 4:38
Individual Stlltlllico
Fourth Quarter
Ruohlng: SG-Austin Phillips 8·84,
M-Wheeler 14 run (Eschbaugh
Jeff Clyburn 5-13, B.J. Stanley 3·(·
kick) 2:19
. 14), Bryce Clary 8·(·37).
SV-Evan Herrell 5· 73, Kyle Bowen
M
GA
6-64. C&lt;ldy Bland 4-41, Nathan
First Dawns
7
7
Dockery 8-29, Ty~r Eas1hom 6.'18,
Rushes-yards
40·121 30·56
Cody Myers 7·13, Jesse Graybeal
.. Passing yards
0
61
3-11. Justin Payne 2·1.0, Bo Arthur
:. Total yards
~~1
1.17
1·2.
Comp-an-int
0-2.()
Paaalng: SG-B.J. Stanley. 2·8-0 8,
!l-16-1
Bryce Clary 2·4·1 18, Cory Haner
Fumbles-~sl
2-1
3·1
.
4·20
0·2.0
0.
. Panallies·yards
4-20
SV-Kyle Bowen 1·2·0 9, Cody
Myers 0-1-o o.
Individual Stllllotlco
Receiving:
SG-caleb
- Ruahlng: M-Hess Conner 14·55,
McClanahan
3·9.
Danny
Matney 1·
.Parry Wheeler 16·52, Lance
16.
· Weppler 6-21, Cody Westbrook 4-(·
SV-Tyler Easthorn 1·9.
' 7) .
GA-Jared Gravely 11 ·63, Nate
Allison 2·4. Austin Wilson 4-2.
· Kruize Wandling 1·(·2), Ethan
Moore 12·(·12).
OHIO
:.Pauing: M-Cody Westbrook 0-2·
00.
Ada 28, Lima Cent. Cath. 21
- GA-Ethan Moore 9-f6·1 61 .
Akr. Garfield 49, Akr. Buchtel20
; Receiving: M-None.
Akr. lioban 24, Chardoo NDCL 14
. .GA- Beau Whaley 4·47, Austin Akr. Kenmore 34, Akr. Frrestone 13
Wilson 3·14.
Alliance Marlington 26. Beloit W.
Branch 6
Meigs 48, Belpre'&amp; "
Anna 16, Maria Sl!lin Marion Local
: Belpre
o 0 8 0-8 6
· Meigs
14 13 7 14 -48 Ansonia 48, W. Alexandria Twin
Vall~y S. 13
•
Scoring summary
Apple Creek Waynedale 35, W.
•
·
First Quarter
Salem NW 0
! M-Jeremy Smith 8 run (kick failed) Ashland Crestview 57. Plymouth o
'3:15
.
.
Ashville Teays Valley 27. Cols.
: u..:smilh 9 run (SmHh run) 1:52
Hamilton Twp. 7
•
Second Quaner
Athens 20, Wahama. W.Va. 0
.M-Smith 11 run (kick blocked)
Attica Seneca E. 12, Tiffin Calvert 7
·.3:33
Aurora 47, Wickliffe 19
• M.. Smith ?Otun (Mason Metts
Avon 4.5, Bay Village Bay 6
·.kick) 10:43
Avon Lake 33. Amherst Steele 13
,:
Third Quarter
Bainbridge Paint Valley 52,
Southeastern 0
:B-Ashton Packard 16 run
~Rashawn Miller pass from Tyler
Baltimore liberty Union 31 , Cols.
• W~tkins) 9:06
'
Harvest Prep 14
: M-Smith 13 run (Mens kick) 2:32
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon · 42,

· Friday. Scores

:

PREP F0011lAU STANDINGs

J

---

Mlllal . . ; . . .. . : .... ............. .5-1 ' .. .226 . .106 .. ... w . ...345 ,,.187
Individual Statii!ICI
Ruahlng: W-Kyle Zerkle 5· 29. Welilton ... &gt;.. .. .. ..... .,_. .......+2 .... 182 .. 133 ... ..4-41 .... 250 •.272
Athens. .....•.. .. ....... .. .. .. , ; ..:J-3 ....140 .. 113 .....4-4! ... •186 .:187
Ryan Lee 3·24, Micaiah Branch 6· ~ ., , ...... . . 1 . ,,, .. .... ; ' ,'.),4 .... 1()5 .. 187 ..... 3-7 .... 155 . .255
. Aioialnder
: . :&gt;~... , .. 1•5 .. .. 125 .. 207 .. ...4-41 •. . .250 . .254
20, William Zuspan 7·(·24).
Vinlon.~
...
.....
·
.
-:·
..
•
.
• ;"1~-t~ ·.79 .. .214 .....1·9 .. ' ; 133 ...334
.
A-cameron Tope 35·151 , Shad
. ~,I';·'
• -~ . -'i.-Jji;i&lt;l . '
Dlvllkln
.
. ' -:.-, -_
McCollum 3·48. Reed Anderson 3·
' n· -· ·- --- · /_. " ·· -~' •i ~ 11 TVC., ... ·M
···'
,or ,. _·,r~. ··,.. t "~:. --~ o(-rf4&amp;"'~ &gt;r W-t,
-w-L ALL
PF ·PA·
16, Robby Glass 3·12, Trey Harris
{I'
~
-~-, "',\_
_'_. , . ,
,
•
1rifnbll .•.. ... ...• , j, ~.· • • , .,._.. . . . . s.o .. ..229 ·. .48 •.. . ••&amp;.2 . • .. 336 ..155
2·(·3).
f'tldeW t-lcic!dng .. .... .. , .. ;\ . , •:4-1 .. .. IfilL .68 ......7-3 .... 250 ..168
.RH
Paaelng:
W-William
Zuspan
~23· Wat.rlola . ' .. : . • : .. ' .. ' .1. ... ·.; .3-2 .. .. 84 . .'.88 .. .. .. s.s .... 1113 ..202
IIV
1 53.
Ea&amp;tem · ...... .. l' "" " "· : •,... ,H!. ...81 .. .158 .....3ie .... 198 . .284
14
22
. Southern ,,. .... ... .. ....... , ..... 1-3 .. ..76 .. .)56 . . ..,.3-6 . . , .107 .. .278
A..:. Trey Harris 9-11 ·0 83.
25 -102 57-439
· Receiving: W-Garren Underwood Miller•... .'• .., , .. ., .... . -;: •.: ,.: ".~·IL .,..81 : . .201' ... . .1-9 .. . ..135 ..3e8
163.
59
4-40, Micaiah Branch 3-8, CoJin
~~ ~• 1, ·~~ '·f .. ~~J~"frl'~ :.t &gt;,• fJ'·
265
49S
Pierce 2·5.
·
,.
·;:: ·,\.
'
.' '
11·22·2 5-11.()
~
. .
· .;.;· +. ·W:L
PF PA .
A-Frank Vaientour 4·47, Robby · Wihama
,
....
..
&lt;.,
...
:
,
:.,,.
..
...
114
...
.2lj4
..
152
. .
3.()
6·3
Glass 3-22. Shad McCollum 1· 7, Sooth Gallla ........ ... .. ·' ..•• .·.2-6 .....84 : .. 320
4&gt;40
5·39
Hannan .. .. :., ... .. .... ..... . . .... 141 .. .. 131 .. 2e2
Cameron Tope.

Individual Stetlallca
Ruahlng:' AH-Steve Lewis 10-60,
: Corey Brammer 8·25, Mitchell
· ·: Davenport 4-11 , Will McCollister 3·
·, 6.
, RV-Zach Baird 27-280, Tyler
·Smith 13-105, Zak Deel 6·36,
,~ Clayton Curnutte 8·13, Jordan Deal
·. 2·2, Cody McAvana 1·3.
Paaalng: RH-Will McCollister 11·
.. 22·2 163.
RV-clayton Curnutte 5·11·0 59.
"-lYing: RH-Milchell
· Davenport 3-50. Jeremy Blagg 3·
39, C.J. Justice 2·31 , Trey Wilds 1·
:25. Steve Lewis 2·18.
RV-Kody Johnson 2·28, Jordan
· Deel1·16, Cody McAvena 2·15.

Fourth Quarter

Fostoria St. Wendelin 12

; M-Sm1th 52 run (Mens kick)~ :49 Batavia . Clermont
NE
31 ,
· Williamsburg 14
1 M-Gabe Hill10 run (Mens k )
Beallsville 40. Beverly Ft. Frye (l
; 5:36
Bedford 26, Warrensville His. 13
B
M
Bellbrook 16, Milton-Union 6
'
~ First Downs
24
Bellelontaine
54.
Riverside
8
! Ru~es-vards 29-127 50-457 Stebbins 0
r Passing yards
99
78
Belmont
Union
Local
32,
ITotat yards
226
535 ,
Barnesville 6
i~-lnl
&amp;11·1 4-8-2
Berea 17, Middleburg His. t,!idpark
• Fumlllea·lost
4·3
1·1
14
'. ~yards 2·tO 0-0
Bertin
Center Western Raserve 51 ,
•
•
Sebring McKinley 19
:
lncllvlduel Stlllllllca
. Bethel· Tate 88. Manchnter 8
Htluahlng: ~hton Packard 13- Blencheotar 1~. Batavia 3
I121, Tyler WaHclna 6·22, Erik Bloom.Cerrotl24, Circtevllle8
%Widi!Dr 3-8. Corey Llw t·(·1), Bigl&gt;mdllo Elmwood 27, Millbury
Tate 2-(-2), Cley Ullman 4·(· Llk120
•221·
Bowling Green 37, Whllahoull
:M Je~ Smtih 31-381 , ·Gabe AnthonyWeyne20
: Hll 7-111, Cory Hutton 8-30, Heath Bradford 45, New Paris Nallonel
! Deltovtlltr 1·12, Chl~la aarr.tt 1-3. Trall.14
Lludermii11.0, JaQob WillS; Bracklvllle·Broadvlew Hts. 21·,
Westlake 0
1 (4).
llli\tl: 8-Ciay Ullman 6-11·1 Brtclgepon 24, Cameron, W.Va. 6
:1111.
'
Brookfield 28, NeWtoo Falls13
:M JeDob Wlll4+2 78.
Brookville 27, G8fman1own Valley
•llllllv'~rg: B-Tylar WaHclna 3-76, View 20
~AyM ._..HI, Aah10I1 Packard 1· Brunswick 31 , Medina 7
ie.
·
·
Bryan 28, Metamora Evergreen 7
~M-Cory Hutton 2·53, Clay Bolin 1· Bucyru• 28 . New Washington
:15, Celab Davis 1-10.
B,uckeya Cent. 14
•
Bucyrus Wynford 56, Crestline 22

:Mwlde

jCaty

•r

•

...

- - ------ -

PageB2

\

---- - -~

-

... .

._-

Clrci!MI Conference

.
• .,).::
CAIIO .. ,
... ALL .
~·\
t 1._ . :~ ~'.\L . -~....'' PF "' PA ... · fM,.. -~·~PF.. PA~
ChaprnatJY!Ile ... . •.• .,,, .. ,, ..... .3-0 ..... 93. . ..31 .. ., 1 .8,0 , ...,220 ..111 1
,

.......
.
,.. ., •. ,, . . ~" ' 1"" . •• . . •••
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Wayne . ... .. .. .. .... : ..........3·1.... 185 . .80 .. : .. .7·1·-'·. ,315 ...11i8
$isaorwil18 ..,: ....... .. .. .. ' · . •. ' ,1·3 .... 67 .. :141! ... .,4-5,. . .. 1118 .. ~
Paca .... ...... .... . . ... : . .. ..... 1-3 .... 74 ... 1~1 : ....2-7 .. .. 1118 ..319
H-Hoo\&lt;ff . .. .... . \ ... . ... ..0-4 .... 58 ..•.129 .... . :.2-6 ..... 152 ,'.225

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 26, :mo8
Logan 23. Chilli&lt;Jlthe 13
London 30, London Madison Plains
7
Lorain Clearview 32. Columbia
StatiOn Columbia 14
Louisville 27, Minerva 0

Loveland 27, Milford 7
Macedonia Nordonia 32, Garfield
Hts. 12
Madisoo 28, Painesville Riverside 7
Malvern 50, Magnolia Sandy Valley
6
Mansfield Sr. 26, Manslield
Madison 0
Mantua Crestwood 41. Ravenna SE
22
Maple His. 18. Shaker His. 2
Mariana 14, Gallipolis Gallia 6
Marion Ca1h. 28, Ridgeway
Ridgemont·14· ·
Marion Harding 32, Lima Sr. 7
Marion Pleasanl40, Marion Elgin 6
Martins Ferry 41. Bellaire 6
Marysville 13, Dublin SCioto 10
Massillon Tuslaw 27. Navarre
Fairless 6
Mayfield 21. Hudson 6
McComb41, Van Buren 14
McDonald 43, Lowellville 6
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 44,
Yellow Springs 13
Mechanicsburg 10, W. Liberty·
Salem 7
Medina Buckeye 47 ,. Sheffield
Brookside 0
Mentor 35, Cle. HIS. 8
Montor Lake Cath. 36, Bedford
Chanel 0
Middletown 29, Cin. Princeton 28
Milan Edison 41. Sandusky St.
Mary 14
'
Millord Center Fairbanks 31,
Waynesfield·Goshen 27
Millersburg W. Holmes 18, Bellville
Clear Fork l4
.
Minford 10,' Lucasvll!e Valley 7
Mogadore Field 45, Akr. Coventry 7
Monroe 28, Day. Northridge 6
Morral Ridgedale 20, Caledonia '
River Valley 14
Morrow LiHie r;liami 53, ,Batavia
Amtllia 27
MI. Blanchard Riverdale 28, N.
RobinsonCoi.Crawford25
MI. · Oritb Western Brown 41 ,
Portsmouth'il2 ,. ·
N. Can. Hoover 28, Massfllon
·Jai:kaon 7 ·
·
N:Lowisburg Triad 34, CedarVtlle 7
NJima S. Rllllge27, Ml.neraf,RidQa
14
, ,·
: . ·•
. N. Ridgeville ·1•. ~raftoo Mldvlew
13
· .,
·
Nelsonvllle-Vosjc · 48. McArth~r
Vinton County 16.
," , •
New Albany 3, MI. Vernon 0/ ·
New carlisle Tecumseh 54, Spring.
Kenton Ridge 7
•·
New Concord John Glenn 46.
McCoonalsville Morgan 6
New 'London "44, Greenwich S.
Cent. 14
New Mldillelowrl 'Spring. 15; Lisbon
David Anderson 12 .
N
. lljlarl( Cath. 34, Whitehall·Yearling

Burton Berkshire 16, Middlefield 7
Cardinal 13
Delphos St. John's 40, Fl. Recovery
Caldwell
27,
Sarahsville 27
Shenandoah 0
Delta 141 Montpellar 6
.
Cambridge .
34,
Byesville Dola )iardin Northern 40, Vanlue 7
Meadowbrook 13
Dover 30, New Phli!!delphla 7
Can. Cent. Ca1h. 17, Louisville Dublin Jerome 30, Westerville Cent.
Aquinas 12
7
can. GlenOak 9,,Masslllon Parry 6 E, Can. 20, Mogadore 14
can. South 28, &lt;;arrolllon 7
E. Cia. Shaw 34, Ei!CIId 23
canal Fu~on Northwest 15, Alliance E, Liverpool 34, s.lem 27
,
14
Eastlake N. 24, Ashtabula lalqlside·
Carlisle 36: New Lebanon Dixie 2d 21
Casstown Miami E. 48, Arcanum 0 Eaton 42, camden Preble Shawnee
Centerville 41, Kettaring Fairmont 14'
13 ·
·
Edgerton 39. Antwerp 21
Cheshire Rivar Yalley 46, Ironton Elyria 28, Lakewood 21 '
Rock Hill13 .
, Elyria Ca1h. 34, 'Cie. Cent. Calh 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 29, Fairport Harbor Harding · 45,.
Beachwood 0
Newbury 22
Cin. Colerain 42, Cin. Oak Hills 0
Findlay 49. Na;loteqn 28
Cin. Elder 49, Cin. Western Hills 20 Findlay Liberty-Benton 42, Cory·
Cln. Hills Christian Acedemy 24, Rawson 0
Cin. Country Day 13
Fostoria 50, Upper SandtJSky 0
Cin.lndian Hill27, Cin. Wyoming 24. Frankfort Adena 23, Chiili09the 8
Cin. La Salle 56, Day. Marsnall 0
Zane Trace 13
Newark Ucklng Valley 4 ( Gahanna
Cin. Madeira 64; N. Bend Taylor 14 . Franklin 17, Day. Oakwood 14
Cols. AcademycO ·
Cin. Mariemont34, Cin. Deer Park 6 Fredericktown 33, Loudonville 7
Northwood 54, Oregon 51rilch 6
Cin. N. College Hili 33. Lockland 7
Fremont Ross 26. Sandusky 20
Norwalk St. Paul 56, Monroeville 14
Cin. NW 30, Hamilton Ross 24
Gallon 24, Shelby·20
Oak Hlll34, Franklin Furnace Green
Cin. Summit Country Day 46; Cin. Gallon No"'1mor 10, Cerdington- 0
Christian 22
Lincoln 0 '
Olmsted Falls 48, N. Olmsted 31 ·
Cin. Sycamore 34, Mason 10
Garrensville Garfield 35, Windham
ntarlo 28.. Lucas 12
Cin. Taft 22, Cln. Hughes 6
o
~nge 18. Chagrin Falls Kenslon 7
Cln. Turpin 42, Wilmington 21
Gates Mills Gilmour 31, 'Geneva 0 · Oregon Clay 46, Tot. tibbey 13 .'
Cin. Winton Woods 28, Cin. Glen Gates Mills Hawken 34. Richmond Orrville 31 , Woosta• 0
Este 21
Hts. 27
Oxford Talawand~ 6, Norwood 0•
Circleville Logan Elm 16, Canal Genoa Area 45, Tontogany Otsego Painesville Harvey 47, Ashtabula
Winchester 13, OT
9
·
Edgewood 7 . ,:
·
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 15, Plain Gibsonbt,Jrg 28, Elmore Wpodmore Pandora-Gilboa 33, Arlington 21
City Jonathan Alder 7
14
Parma 21, Parma Hts. Vanay Forge
Clayton Northmont41, Beavercreek Girard 36, Youngs. Liber1y 22
6
7
Glouster Trimble 45, Corning Miller Parma Normandy 35, N. Royalton
Cle. Glenville 40, Cle. East 0
14
21
Cte. John Adams 36, Cia. E. Tech 0 Granville 36, Hebron Lakewood 20 Paulding 53. Convoy Crestview 13
Cia. John Marshall28. Cle. Lincoln Greenville 17. New Richmond 7 .
Pemberville Eastwood 31, Kansas
W. 14
·
Grove City 12, Pickerington N. 7
Lakota 6
·
Cia. Rhodes 26. Cle. Collinwood 12 Grove City Cent. Crossing 13. Peninsula Woodridge 38. AIWater
Clyde 67, Oak Harbor o
Galloway Westland o
Wa1erloo o
· '.
Coldwater 38, New Bremen o
Grove City' Christian 68, F~lrffeld Parry 27, Chagrin Falls 14
28;
Collins Western Reserve 56. Christian 6
'
Pickerington
Cent.
Ashland Mapleton 8
Groveport-Madison 20, G·ahanna Reynoldsburg ()
, cois. Beechcroft
29, Cols. Lincoln 0
Piketon 42. Chillicothe Huntington
Northland 0
Hamihon 35, Fairfield 7 .
16
Cols. Bexley 40, Heath 27
Hamilton Badin 42, Middletown Piqua 49, Xenia 14
. Poland Seminary 14, Canlield 7
Cols. Briggs 42, Cols. West12 ·
Fenwick 0 .
Cots. Brookhaven 38, Cols. Mifflin 0 Hamilton New Miami 32. Day. Pomeroy Meigs 48, Belpre 8
Cols. East 16, Cols. Linden ·Christian 15 ·
Portsmouth w. 14. Wheelersburg 7
McKinley o
Hamler Patrick Henry 47,' wauseon .Powell Oiontangy · Uberty 21 ,
Westerville S. 17
·
Cols. Eastmoor 57. Cols. Africenlric 10
s
Hannibal River 56. New Matamo~as PrOCtorville Fairland 41, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant 6
Cols. Marion-Franklin 53. Cols. Frontier 12
South 0
Haviland Wayne T~ace 17, Holgate Ravenna 25. ,O.kr. Springfield 12
Rayland Buckeye 27, Brooke, w.va.
Cols. Ready 52, Cols. Hartley 6
8
Cols. St. Charles 23. Pataskala Hillsboro 12. Greenliold McClain 0 3
Watkins Memorial 7
Holland Springfield 40. Parrysburg Reading 35, Cin. Finneytown 12
Cols. Upper ·Arlington 7. Dublin 24
.
Richlietd Revere 21 . BartJerton 6
Coffman 6
Hubbard 28, Niles I'.!.CKinley 0
, Rockford Parkway 25, Versailles 20
Cols. Walnut Ridge 34, Cols. Huber His. Wayne 20, Springfield Rocky River 26, Fairview,7
Independence 7
14
Rocky River Lutheran W. 19,
Cols. Whetstone
53, Cois. Huron 41 , Castalia Margarena 20
Brooklyn o
Centennial 0
S. Charleston SE 41. Spring. NE 27
Ironton 31. Vincent WMen 6
Columbiana 39, E. Palestine 13.
Jeromesville Hillsdale 41 , RiHman S. Point 50, Chesapeake 14
Columbiana
Crestview
44, 13
Salineville Southern 14, Wellsville
Hanoverton Un~ed 35
Johnstown-Monroe 28. Johnstown 12
Stindusky Perkins 48, Port Clirnon 6
C&lt;llumbus GrD\10 42, Bluffton 12
Northridge o
,
Sherwood Fairview 67, Deliance
Conneaut 20. Jelferson ·Area . 14, Ken1Roo~H 19, Norton 13. 0T
OT
Kenton 48, van Wert 7
Ayersville 2t
C&lt;&gt;pley 24. WadSWorth 12
Kettaring Aller 56, Dey. Chaminade- Sidney Lehrrian 24, LafayeHe Allen
E. 7
'
Cortland ~akeview 36, Warren Jullenne 7
Chlimpion 1o
Kings Mills Kings 21, Cin. Walnut Sparta Higl11ancl16, M1. Gilead 6
Coshocton 52, Warsaw River View ' HillsO
Spring. Cath. Cent. 18, Jamestown
6
Greeneview
6.
Kirtland 63, Orwell Grand Valley 6
Covington 42, Tipp City Bethel 19
Springboro 42, Fajrborn 0
Lancaster 46, Newark 0
Creston Norweyne 36. Smi111vllle 10 Lancaster Fairfield Union 25. St. Clairsville 21, Cadiz Harrison
Croolcavilla 33, Philo 0
, Cant. 16
Amanda-Ciaarcreek 12
Cuyahoga Faile CVCA 21 , Akr. LoaviHaburg
47, ,St. Henry 21 , Minatllr 13
~oBroe
Manchasttr 1~
St. Maryo·Memorlal68, Elida 20
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 0
Cuyahoge Falla Wllah Jaouil 21, Lebanon 33: Mlemlaburg 14
St. Peril Qrahem 25, Spring·.
Werten Harding 8 ·
LHI Create E. Clinton 47, Cin. Ciark Grunon 18, 20T
Cuyahoga Hll. 34, lndepet)dancl7 Monteuort 7
Steubenville 34, Cerdlnel O'Hara,
Delton 34, Doylaotown Chippewa LHtonla 20, N. Jlcklon Jackaon- Pa.. 14
18
SieWert Faderel HOCking 30,
Minon 14
Day. Cemlll24, Cln. M9Nicholu 0
Wlllerford 0
~elpolc 42. An:lldla 6
Dey. Dunbar 21, ~· Meaclowdale Lewlo Center Olentangy a, Stow-Munroe Falla 24. Cuyahoga
14
·
Falla a.
Wellervllle N. 0
Day. Jalfai'IOn 20, Day. Belmont 12 l.ewlotown Indian Lake 55. Spring. Stree1aboro 33, Rootllown o
Deflance35, Celina 14
Strongevllie 24, Solon 0
NWO
Defiance Tlnora 35, Hlckavillti 13
Strulhere 28, Campbell Memorr~ .
Lexington 10, Ashland 9
DeGraff Rlversldl35, uma Perry 0 Liberty Center 21, Arl:ltbold 14
13
Delaware Buckeye Valley 26, Lima Shawnee 28, ou--G~ Sugar Grove Berne · Union 53,.
Richwood N. Union 7
Millersport 0
10
Sugtarcraek Garaway 57. St~asburg·
Delaware Hayes 21 , Lewis Center Lisbon Beaver 15, Akr. North 14
·
Olentangy Orange 7
Lodi Cloverleal 20, Medina Franklin 8
Sullivan Black River 33, LaGrange
Delphos Jefferson 62. Spencerville Hlgl&gt;land 14, 20t

I

.Meigs

Keystone 7
Sunbury Big Walnut 48, Cols.
Franklin Hts' 7
Swanton 69. Lakeside Danbury 19
Sycamore Mohawk 55 , N. Bal1imore

from 'Page Bl

18

Sylvania Northvlew 34, Rosslord 0
Sylvania Southview 42, Maumee 12
Tallmadge 31 , Green 14
Thornville Sheridan 7. New
Le&lt;ington 0
Tiffin Columbian 26, Bellevue 14
Tipp City TlppecanO!&gt; 49, Spring.
Shawnee 14
Tol. Bowsher 23, Tol. Rogers 16, OT
Tal. Cent. Cath. 37, Tol. Walle 12
To\. Ottawa Hills 26, Tol. Christian
23·
Tol. Sl John's 36, Tol. St. Franci$ 17
Tel. Start21 , Tel. Soon 12
Tal. Whitmer 48, Tol. WQOdward 6
Trenton Edgewood 27. Cin. MI.
Healthy 21
Trotwood-Madison 27, Vandalia
Buder 25
Troy 48. Sidney 14
Twinsburg 28. Lyndhurst Brush 7
Union City Mississiriawa Valley 41 ,
Lewisburg Tri·Counly N. 19 1
Uniontown Lake 48, Dresden Tri·
Valley 26
Urbana 34. Bellefontaine Benjamin
Logan 0
Utica 29, Centerburg 0 ·
Vermilion 27, Oberlin Firelands 0
Vienna Mathews 32. Thompson
Ledgemonts
W. Carrollton 27, Goshen 9
W. Chester Lakota W. 20, Liberty
Twp. Lakota E. 19
W. Jefferson 28, Pataskala Licking
His. o
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 48,
Newcomerstown 0
'N. Unity Hilltop 39, Edon 14
Wapakoneta 29. Lima Bath 14
Warren Howland 21, Warren JFK 7
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 41.
washington C.H. 14
Waverly 26, McDermott Scioto NW
22
Waynesville
41,
Middletown
Madison 21
we~r,· wv
· hsv 111 e
. a. 18 , Uh nc
Claymonl1 5
Wellington 30. Oberlin 6
Wellston 46, Albany Alexander 15
Willard 26. Norwalk 13
Williamsport wesflall46, Chillicothe
Unioto 21
Wutoughby S. 55, Chardon 9
Willow Weed Symmes Valley 35.
Crown City s. Gallia 6
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 34 , Lore
City Buckeye Trail 0
Wooster Triway 57 . Can, Timken 0
Worthirlgton Kilbourne 43. Thomas
Worthington 3
·
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 33 .
Youngs. Boardman 14
Youngs. Ursuline 34 , Akr. SVSM 7
zanesville 28. Jackson 6
zanesville Rosecrans 26, Toronto 0
~=~=:~\\~ M:~vil~, u;king~m 20 ·
WEST VIRGINIA
Allegany, Md. 27, Frankfort 7
Athens. Ohio 20. Wahama 0
Bath County, Va. 33, Pandleton
County 14
Berea, Ky. 61, Williamson 8
Berkeley Springs 33, Kettle Run,
Va. 12
·
Bishop Donahue 26, Valley Wel2el
20, 20T
Bridgeport·, Ohio 24, Cameron 6
Bridgeport 49, Philip Barbour 14
Cabell Midland 36, Huntington 0
lh
ounty 32. Wirl County 6
C .PI
• Parkersburg 7
.
ay·Battelle 28, Tygarts Valley 0
East Fairmont 40, Buckhannon·
Upshur 22
Eastern View. Va. 60, Washington
14
.
FayettevHie 35, Buffalo 20
George Washington 44, Ripley 18
Grafton 48, Oak Glen 14
Greenbrier East 14, Woodrow
Wilson 3
Greenbrier West 29, Midland Trail
14
Hedgesv~le 14, Hampshire 6
Iaeger 44. Montcalm 24
Independence 22; PikeVIew 8
James Monroe 29. Mount View o
Keyser 54. Musselman 0
Lewis County 49, Elkins 25
Lincoln 13, Liberty Harrison 0
Lincoln County 28, Logan 7
Madonna 54, Paden City o
Man 15. Wyoming Eas1 0
Martinsburg 53, Jefferson 25 ,
Meadow Bridge 26, Gilmer County
7
Moorefield 50, Patersburg o
Morgantown 29. John Marshall 0
Mount Hope 30, South Harrison 7
Nicholas County 49. North Marion
14
·
Nitro 42, Hurricane 41
Parkersburg South 40, Robert C.
Byrd 20
Ravenswood 47, Clay County 12·
Rayland Buckeye, Ohio 27, ·Brooke

~

Larry Crurnlphoto
Wahama's Trey Anderson wraps up Athens' Camero!'\ Tope during the second quarter.of a
high school football game in The Plains. Athens .blanked the White Falcons 20·0 and held
the usually potent Wahama offense to 102 Iota! yards.

Bulldogs bite White Falcons, 20-0
Bv

GARY CLARK

Area team a 12-0 setback . The Bulldogs sealed the
in the 2006 season opener. win midway lhrough the
The Bulldogs game plan final period with a defenTHE PLAINS - For the became evident from the sive stop and another six
· second straight week the beginning with Wahama . play, 65 yard . scoring
Wahama White Falcons getting a sleady diet of series . Athem intercepted
· experienced a g~eat deal of senior
running
back a William Zuspan offering
,lro~ble .con:rpetmg agam.st Cameron Tope. Tope, at 6- ·at 1he . Bulldog seven yard
an mlenor hne thai was btg · foot-2 and 180 pounds, car- .line 10 turn Wahama away
· and strong and as a r~sult ried lhe pigskin a total of empty- handed befor.e Tope
.lhe Bend Area grid team 35 'times and fini shed with · led
another
successful
suffered a devastating loss a game higb 15 I yards and Bulldog driye momenls
as the Division III. Athens two second half touch- later that culminated in a 4Bulldogs pilc~ed a 20-0 downs. Junior
Shad yard run and a 20-0 edge
' shutout
at the
White McCollum scored lhe first with 2:45 remaining'.
· Falcons Friday evening in Athens touchdown early in
Wahama drove to the
Athens .
Wahama . went in to the the second quarter on a 36- Athens eight in the games
yard run followed by a pair final minute but time ran
contest needing one more of Tope gallops in the sec- out 9n the White. Falcons
victory on lhe 2008 grid
d h If
f
• season to insure·lhe Mason on
a on runs o five and before they could push the
. four yards.
pigskin into .the end zone
County team of its lhird
The White Falcons offen- and avoid the shutout.
'
. conseculive playoff ' posi- sive misfortunes plagued
Kyle
Zerkle
· pac.e d
lion, but inslead dropped
. its second straight outing the
Bend
Area
team Wahama on I he ground
afler recording six wins in lhroughoul' with Wahama with 29 yards in five cara row to fall to ·6-2 on the seldom
advancing into ries with Ryan Lee netting
. year. Athens wqn its first Athens territory. On lhe 24 yards in three altempts
·
few occasions the locals and Micaiah Branch 20
ever gridiron meeting with
· the White Falcons and did manage topenetrate the yards in six lries. William
closed out its 2008 cam- opposite side of the mid- Zuspan started out strong
paign with a senior night field stripe couple of yel - in completing hi s first six
·victory to finish at 4-6 on low handkerchiefs would passes but would connecl
, lhe season.
suddenly appear to kill the on just three of his next 17
The game was played Falcons budding momen - to finish with nine cor;nple·
t4fough a steady rain from lum.
tions in 23 tries for 53
start lo finish which negatAthens .look a 6-0 lead yards and an interception .
Slill , South Gallia found
ed the Falcons
overall with 9:19 remaining in the Garrett Underwood caught plenty of positives in its
edge of speed and quick- opening
half
when four passes for 40 yards to 2008 season and will have
ness which the Bend Area McCollum capped a 67 lead Wahama in
lhat plo~nty to build on for next
learn was counling on to yard, six play drive with a deparlment.
year with a large class of
underclas~men reiUrning for
offsel lhe Bulldogs size 36-yard scamper on a
Tope had 151 yards in 35
advantage. The wet condi- counter play throqgh the carries with McCollum another year.
But on Friday night.
tions combined with the center nf the WHS defense. a\lding 48 yards in three
· strong pass rush by the The r •, int after try was jaunls. Trey Harris had a 'things went south right from
the start.
Alhen s inlerior line also unsuccessful and the half productive night by conSymmes Valley's Kyle
grounded the locals pass- ended with the Bulldogs necling -on nine of II aeriBowen
toted the pi~skin 35
ing attack with WHS rele- clinging to a slim 6-0 . als · for 83 yards with
gated to throwing short, advantage .
Valentour grabbing . four. yards for a score JUst two
minutes 'into the conlest for
hurried tosses that often
The hosts marched 57 passes for 47 yards and
a 7-0 SVHS lead and from
fell to the soggy turf yards in seven plays with Robby Glass three for 22
there the roule was on.
untouched.
Tope carrying the mail six yards.
South Galli~ did respond
Wahama managed just times in the drive to
The White Falcons will
•to the early score with a
102 yards of total offense increase the Athens lead to try and right lhe ship nexl nice defensive stand over
with lhe White Falcons · 12-0 with 55 seconds to Saturday when the Bend the next 10 minules of play,
netting just 49 yards on the . play in the third canto. Area gridders condude its but the second quarter was a
ground and anolher 53 Tope rambled the final five long , four game road swing different story.
yards through the airways. yards with Trey Harris at Parkersburg Catholic
Bowen scored his second
The loss was the firs I time tossing the two -point con - before returning home for a touchdown of the nighfjusl
WHS suffered a shutout version · pass to Frank season ending , senior night a few licks into the second
loss in 23 games since Valenlour lo make it a 14-0 contest against
visiting quaner with a 1-yard run to
give the Vikings a14-0 lead
Waterford handed the Bend affair.
Buffalo.
SPORTS coRRESPONOENT

a

\

second team in the line-up lead' Meig s. leaving lhe
for Meigs , quanerback junior with I .741 for the seaCameron Bolin look lhe · son . Gabe Hill added 51 in
knee on four straight plays to seven tries , Co.r y Fhgton 30
give the ball back to Belpre.
in six and Dettwiller ~iw
On second down .the
12.
.
'
Golden Eagle s fumbled with
Jacob Well , was four of
tile Marauders recovering , eight passing for 78 yards .
once again · with Chancey Well wore number nine dur-.
showing class took the knee ing the game in memory of
and .ran out the clock .
Emily Deem . Emily, who
Six Marauders donned the was · II , lragically passed
Maroon and Gold for the away in her sleep last Friday
final lime at Bob Roberts night. She is the daughter of
Field. hoping they would get Meigs administrator pave
a chance to play an elevenlh
Deem and Jamey Deem a
week . They included Clay
teacher in the Meigs district .
Bolin. Gabe Hill , Cory
Nine was Emily's softball
Hutton,
Mason
Metts ,
number this past season; her
Crockett Crow and Ernie
was
held
on
Welch. who was seeing funeral
Thursday
..
action for the first time since
Hutton caught two passes
surgery for a broken finger.
for 53 yards. Davis one for
mi ssing three games.
·
18 and Bolin one for 15 .
"I wanl to thank lhe entire
Packard led Belpre with
team ," Marauder coach
Mike Chancey said afler ·the . 121 in 13 tries . Watkins
contest , "Especially the . added 22 in. six . Ullman was
seniors. They made it fun to six of II passing for 99
coach , thi s IS a great ~roup yards : Watkins caught three
and now we have to wmt and passes for 76 yards .
Now Meigs has to sit back
see what happen s with .the
playoffs ,"
and wait until Sunday for the
Smith led the way with his announcemenl for the play- .
361 yards in 31 carries to offs ~

after the Cody Bland kick
and from there lhe floodgate s were opened.
Evan Herrell was next to
score for th¢ Vikings .when
he broke free for a 61-yard
touchdown run at the 7:58
mark and Jesse Graybeal
added to the Symmes Valley
totals two minutes later with
a 3-yard ntmble for a ·28-0
home lead .
Bland, who was a perfect
5Cfor-5 on extra point s, then
capped the scoring with a 4yard louchdown run to give
the Vikings a 35-0 halftime
lead while South Gallia was
lefl .trying to find an answer.
The Rebels managed just
one first down in lhe opening half and only managed
to move the chains six times ·
tolal while racking just 67
yards of offense in the
game .
In
the
second · half
Symmes Valley slowed
things down considerably
while South Gallia man aged to find a little bit of a
spark 'fhen Auslin Phillips

broke free for a 51 -yard
yard touchdown run at lhe .
5:52 of the third frame to
cap the night's scoring . · ·
Overall the Vikings finished with 270 yards of
offense 261 of which
came on the ground - led
by Herrell who had 73 yards
on five carries and Bowen
. who. had 64 yards .four eight
cames.
South Gallia was led by
Phillips who toted lhe ball
eight times for 84 yards. bul
several plays resulting in
negative yardage look away
from the overall . rushing
numbers for the Rebels.
Through the air Bryce
Clary was 2-for-4 for 17
yards and B J. Stanley completed two passes in eight
attempts for eight yards .
Frida{s contest wraps up
the season for both teams as
five players played in their
final game in SGHS red and
gold. They are BJ. Stanley,
Aaron
Gwinn ,
Skylar
Wilford, Jacob Dotson and
Caleb McClanahan .

CONTRACTING
7 40-985-3444

22

Weir 1a, Uhrichsville Claymont,
Ohfo 15.
'
Waatslde 23, Summers C&lt;lunty 12 .
Wheeling Cantral29. Brashear, Pa.
14
Wheeling Park 45, Fairmont Senior
25
Willlam91own 52, Tolsia o
Win1ield 20. St. Albans 14. OT

Larry Crurnlphoto
Meigs senior running back Corey Hutton (31) fends off ·a
handful of Belpre defenders during the second half of
Friday night's TVC Ohio gridiron contest in Pomeroy. '
.

KARR

Richwood 44, Valley Fayette 42,
30T
.
Riverside 35, Princeton 21 .
Roane County 34, HertJert Hoover
21
Sherman 41, Tug Valley 14
Sissonville 39, Shady Spring 27
South Charleston 25. Spring Valley

7·

Rebels .
from Page Bl

:l

Tucker County 46, Doddridge
County 6
Tyler Conaolldetad a3, Rl1ohle
County 18
Univeralty 28. Pra11on 0
Ven 44, Burch 0
Wayne a2, Poc:a 20
Wabater County 28, Braxton County

20-0 at the half, when Smith
scored again, this time from
II yards out with 3: II left
in the half. That capped off
an eighl play, 71 -yard dri ve.·
Key plays in the drive
included a diving catch by '
Caleb Davi s of a Jacob Well
pass for I 8 yards and a 27yard toss from Well to Cory
Hulton.
The Marauders began the
second half on the 20 after
lhe Belpre kickoff went into
lhe end rone. Smith carried ·
for seven and three yards,
before breaking off a 70yard louchdown run. Mason
Melts added the extra points
for a 27-0 Meigs lead at lhe
IO :~B mark of the period.
Packard scored ·for Belpre
with 9:06 remaining on an ·
18-yard run, afler a bad
snap, Tyler · W atkins hit
Rashawn Miller for the extra
poinls to pull Belpre to with·
m 27-8 with 9:06 left in the
lhiro penoct .
But Smith, made il 33-8
when he made a beautiful
13-yard run at the 2:32 mark
of the third period. Once
again Metts added lhe extra
poiots for a 34-8 Meigs lead·
with 2:32 left in the third
period . .'
.
Smith s.c ored his final
touctidown of the night.
when the junior scored from
52 yards oul. Metts once
again was t~e on the extra
point for a 34-8 Meigs
advantage wilh II :49 left.
Gabe Hill capped off a 10
play, 51-yard drive with a
10-yard run .with 5:36
remaining. Metts added the
extra points for a 48-8 Meigs
lead.
Belpre fumbled the kickoff And Mei.gs recovered at
Belpre
23: Heath
the
Dettwiller ran for 12 yards
on first down and Charlie
Barrett took it three-yard to
the Golden Eagle 13. But
Coach
Mike
Chancey
showed class and with the

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..

SCOREBOARD

·~ ·iuaap lim~ ·itntlntl
PREP FOOTBALL
,J.

Friday's Boxsoores

r
River Valley 48,
~
•
Rock Hill 13
!Rock Hill
0 13 0 0 - 13
tRiver Valley 12 14 14 6 - 46
·~

'"I '

Scor'•'lll aummary

Flmau.rtor

:; fiV-Zach Baird 55 run (kick
.;.blocked) 6:24
!- AY-Balrd 46 run (pass failed) 2:14
Second Quarter
.,fltl-Trey Wild8 25 pass from Will
. : McCollist8f (Cody Massie kick) 8:16
· AY-Kody Johnson 5 pass from
: Clayt011 Cumutte (pass good) 3:30
:: AV-Belrd 65 run (pass failed) 1:40
·: Rf:I-Jeremy Blagg 9 pass from
' McCollistei(kick blOcked) 0:05
:
Third Quarter
.!AY-Jordan Oeel16 pass lrom
: Curnutte (Tyler Smith kick) 9:05
" : AV-Cody McAvena 8 pass from
· Curnutte (Smith kick) 3:05
·
Fourth Ouener
· 1111-Curnutte 5 run (kick blocked)
. 7:56

t·

..

- First Downs
. Rushes-yards
Passing yards
, Total yards
· eor..,.aH-int
. Furnbles·lost
. Panalties-yards

. Athena 20, Wahama 0
Wahama
oooo o
Athens
0 6 8 6 - 20
Scoring aummary
Second Quarter
A-Shad McCollum 36 run (run
failed) 9:19
ThtruQuorter
A-Cameron Tope 5 run (Frank
Vatentour pass from Trey Harris)
:55
Fourth Quarter
A-Tope 4 run
(run failed)
.
. 2:45

w

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att4nt
Fumbles-lost
Panalties-yal'!ls

A .

5.

15
46·224

21-49
53
102

' 83

307
9-11.()
1·1
6·50

~23-1

3-1
3·35

Marletta14,
Gallla Academy 6
Marlena
o 7 .o 7 - 14
· Gallipolis
o 6 o o- 6

:t,3

.
LoGan ...... ..... ...........
JL ... ~ . l.J
Chll- . ...... . .. , . ....... . .. 6-1 ... :227 . .80 .... ..7-3 ..• .271 .. 148
Ohlo·AIItfltlc: I r
'SoutlleutMn
.

'"

kenton ............. .. ........ .. .4·2 .... 1113 ..76 .. ·....7-3 ... .320 •.•138
Zanesville ....... .. .. .. .. .... .. .4-2 .... t49 . .63 ......s-5 .. . .202 ,.186
llatiella .... . . .. .... .. .. .... ....3-3 . . . . t41 .. t!iO .. .. ...... . .a.. . .36l
Go11ia -.ny , ..... ; .... .. , .. . .2-4 ... .55 ...137 .. .. .H .. ..1111 . .240
~

.. . .. , ., ... ... ........ . .2·5 .... 108 ..255 .. .. .5-S ... ~ . ,289

wan.. .. ..•. " ... ... ' .. .' ... ...1.S .. ..48 .. .162 .....4-41 .. ..101. . .271
Potlt•:cw.dh . ., ....... . -. ...... .....Q.6 . , .• 61 . . .153 ., ... tAL . .19f ,.zn
.
. .OhiO Yllflr Conference
,

. • . .
.•

,

.

· ·

•:&lt;.

W.L

'

OYC
Ill'

"

M .

w.t.

ALL

·PF

"

..,.

Ccol Gmvt,. . .,... .. . . . : .. ."'· , •• •4-.1.. . . 158 ..94 . .. . ..6-4·; . : .238 ' .. teo
South Point .' .. .. .. . •. ....,.... •... Jl-.1... . 207 , .92 . .. ...H .. .. 311 , .209
Folriand ..... ... . ... ... ...... . . ..4-1 .... 24!! .. t24 .. .. .4-5•.. ..311 • .224
:!'-. ~.2..a ...~ a, . .112 .. . ..«~ ... .230 . .304

che•c
........ ,.: .......
Rivef
....... .. .,

! . ; .. ....

·!"!.. .. 108 , .213 . .. . ,3-1 . .. •173

Rocktjlll . .. . ..... . ..•. .. ; . .. (. ..11'0 ..

.'. .(·'•.h::'·,. ::l,,
~'

~~

..

, .348
95 .. .228 .. , ..0.10 . .. 146 ..431

-~~··~
•·
'
'
*
Divtllon
.M . . • w.t.
,· ,,. ,, . ..w.L

,""""

.~

i1:~·\

l..r

i!

lVC
! .
ALL
Ill'
Ill' .M
Nell6n\lille-M .. .... .... : ..... , , , .a;o ... .2t7 ! .112 ·.... .a.a .. ..320! ·• .210

'

c•.. :.,..... .

, I

Symmes Valley 35, •
South Gallla 6
South Gallia 0 0 6 0 6
SymmesVa. 7 . 28 0 0 - 35
Scoring summary
Firat Quarter
SV-Kyle"Bowen 35 run (Cody
Bland) 9:55
Second Quanar
SV-Bowen 1 run (Bland kick)
10:24
SV-Evan Herrell61 run (Bland
kick) 7:58
SV -Jesse Graybeal 3 run (Bland
kick) 5:24
.SV-Biand 4 run (Bland kick) 1:32
Third Qllllrter .
SG-Austin Phillips 51 run (pass
failed) 5:52
'
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-lnl
Fumbles·los1
Penalties-yards

sv

SG
6
33-42

13
44-261
9
270
1-3-o
4·2
9·45

2:;
Scoring oummary
67
Second Quarter
4-14-1
M-Parry Wheeler 30 run (Zane
2.0
- Eschbaugh kick) 9:11
9·90
c. GA-1uinlon Nibert 70 punt return
• (kick blocked) 4:38
Individual Stlltlllico
Fourth Quarter
Ruohlng: SG-Austin Phillips 8·84,
M-Wheeler 14 run (Eschbaugh
Jeff Clyburn 5-13, B.J. Stanley 3·(·
kick) 2:19
. 14), Bryce Clary 8·(·37).
SV-Evan Herrell 5· 73, Kyle Bowen
M
GA
6-64. C&lt;ldy Bland 4-41, Nathan
First Dawns
7
7
Dockery 8-29, Ty~r Eas1hom 6.'18,
Rushes-yards
40·121 30·56
Cody Myers 7·13, Jesse Graybeal
.. Passing yards
0
61
3-11. Justin Payne 2·1.0, Bo Arthur
:. Total yards
~~1
1.17
1·2.
Comp-an-int
0-2.()
Paaalng: SG-B.J. Stanley. 2·8-0 8,
!l-16-1
Bryce Clary 2·4·1 18, Cory Haner
Fumbles-~sl
2-1
3·1
.
4·20
0·2.0
0.
. Panallies·yards
4-20
SV-Kyle Bowen 1·2·0 9, Cody
Myers 0-1-o o.
Individual Stllllotlco
Receiving:
SG-caleb
- Ruahlng: M-Hess Conner 14·55,
McClanahan
3·9.
Danny
Matney 1·
.Parry Wheeler 16·52, Lance
16.
· Weppler 6-21, Cody Westbrook 4-(·
SV-Tyler Easthorn 1·9.
' 7) .
GA-Jared Gravely 11 ·63, Nate
Allison 2·4. Austin Wilson 4-2.
· Kruize Wandling 1·(·2), Ethan
Moore 12·(·12).
OHIO
:.Pauing: M-Cody Westbrook 0-2·
00.
Ada 28, Lima Cent. Cath. 21
- GA-Ethan Moore 9-f6·1 61 .
Akr. Garfield 49, Akr. Buchtel20
; Receiving: M-None.
Akr. lioban 24, Chardoo NDCL 14
. .GA- Beau Whaley 4·47, Austin Akr. Kenmore 34, Akr. Frrestone 13
Wilson 3·14.
Alliance Marlington 26. Beloit W.
Branch 6
Meigs 48, Belpre'&amp; "
Anna 16, Maria Sl!lin Marion Local
: Belpre
o 0 8 0-8 6
· Meigs
14 13 7 14 -48 Ansonia 48, W. Alexandria Twin
Vall~y S. 13
•
Scoring summary
Apple Creek Waynedale 35, W.
•
·
First Quarter
Salem NW 0
! M-Jeremy Smith 8 run (kick failed) Ashland Crestview 57. Plymouth o
'3:15
.
.
Ashville Teays Valley 27. Cols.
: u..:smilh 9 run (SmHh run) 1:52
Hamilton Twp. 7
•
Second Quaner
Athens 20, Wahama. W.Va. 0
.M-Smith 11 run (kick blocked)
Attica Seneca E. 12, Tiffin Calvert 7
·.3:33
Aurora 47, Wickliffe 19
• M.. Smith ?Otun (Mason Metts
Avon 4.5, Bay Village Bay 6
·.kick) 10:43
Avon Lake 33. Amherst Steele 13
,:
Third Quarter
Bainbridge Paint Valley 52,
Southeastern 0
:B-Ashton Packard 16 run
~Rashawn Miller pass from Tyler
Baltimore liberty Union 31 , Cols.
• W~tkins) 9:06
'
Harvest Prep 14
: M-Smith 13 run (Mens kick) 2:32
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon · 42,

· Friday. Scores

:

PREP F0011lAU STANDINGs

J

---

Mlllal . . ; . . .. . : .... ............. .5-1 ' .. .226 . .106 .. ... w . ...345 ,,.187
Individual Statii!ICI
Ruahlng: W-Kyle Zerkle 5· 29. Welilton ... &gt;.. .. .. ..... .,_. .......+2 .... 182 .. 133 ... ..4-41 .... 250 •.272
Athens. .....•.. .. ....... .. .. .. , ; ..:J-3 ....140 .. 113 .....4-4! ... •186 .:187
Ryan Lee 3·24, Micaiah Branch 6· ~ ., , ...... . . 1 . ,,, .. .... ; ' ,'.),4 .... 1()5 .. 187 ..... 3-7 .... 155 . .255
. Aioialnder
: . :&gt;~... , .. 1•5 .. .. 125 .. 207 .. ...4-41 •. . .250 . .254
20, William Zuspan 7·(·24).
Vinlon.~
...
.....
·
.
-:·
..
•
.
• ;"1~-t~ ·.79 .. .214 .....1·9 .. ' ; 133 ...334
.
A-cameron Tope 35·151 , Shad
. ~,I';·'
• -~ . -'i.-Jji;i&lt;l . '
Dlvllkln
.
. ' -:.-, -_
McCollum 3·48. Reed Anderson 3·
' n· -· ·- --- · /_. " ·· -~' •i ~ 11 TVC., ... ·M
···'
,or ,. _·,r~. ··,.. t "~:. --~ o(-rf4&amp;"'~ &gt;r W-t,
-w-L ALL
PF ·PA·
16, Robby Glass 3·12, Trey Harris
{I'
~
-~-, "',\_
_'_. , . ,
,
•
1rifnbll .•.. ... ...• , j, ~.· • • , .,._.. . . . . s.o .. ..229 ·. .48 •.. . ••&amp;.2 . • .. 336 ..155
2·(·3).
f'tldeW t-lcic!dng .. .... .. , .. ;\ . , •:4-1 .. .. IfilL .68 ......7-3 .... 250 ..168
.RH
Paaelng:
W-William
Zuspan
~23· Wat.rlola . ' .. : . • : .. ' .. ' .1. ... ·.; .3-2 .. .. 84 . .'.88 .. .. .. s.s .... 1113 ..202
IIV
1 53.
Ea&amp;tem · ...... .. l' "" " "· : •,... ,H!. ...81 .. .158 .....3ie .... 198 . .284
14
22
. Southern ,,. .... ... .. ....... , ..... 1-3 .. ..76 .. .)56 . . ..,.3-6 . . , .107 .. .278
A..:. Trey Harris 9-11 ·0 83.
25 -102 57-439
· Receiving: W-Garren Underwood Miller•... .'• .., , .. ., .... . -;: •.: ,.: ".~·IL .,..81 : . .201' ... . .1-9 .. . ..135 ..3e8
163.
59
4-40, Micaiah Branch 3-8, CoJin
~~ ~• 1, ·~~ '·f .. ~~J~"frl'~ :.t &gt;,• fJ'·
265
49S
Pierce 2·5.
·
,.
·;:: ·,\.
'
.' '
11·22·2 5-11.()
~
. .
· .;.;· +. ·W:L
PF PA .
A-Frank Vaientour 4·47, Robby · Wihama
,
....
..
&lt;.,
...
:
,
:.,,.
..
...
114
...
.2lj4
..
152
. .
3.()
6·3
Glass 3-22. Shad McCollum 1· 7, Sooth Gallla ........ ... .. ·' ..•• .·.2-6 .....84 : .. 320
4&gt;40
5·39
Hannan .. .. :., ... .. .... ..... . . .... 141 .. .. 131 .. 2e2
Cameron Tope.

Individual Stetlallca
Ruahlng:' AH-Steve Lewis 10-60,
: Corey Brammer 8·25, Mitchell
· ·: Davenport 4-11 , Will McCollister 3·
·, 6.
, RV-Zach Baird 27-280, Tyler
·Smith 13-105, Zak Deel 6·36,
,~ Clayton Curnutte 8·13, Jordan Deal
·. 2·2, Cody McAvana 1·3.
Paaalng: RH-Will McCollister 11·
.. 22·2 163.
RV-clayton Curnutte 5·11·0 59.
"-lYing: RH-Milchell
· Davenport 3-50. Jeremy Blagg 3·
39, C.J. Justice 2·31 , Trey Wilds 1·
:25. Steve Lewis 2·18.
RV-Kody Johnson 2·28, Jordan
· Deel1·16, Cody McAvena 2·15.

Fourth Quarter

Fostoria St. Wendelin 12

; M-Sm1th 52 run (Mens kick)~ :49 Batavia . Clermont
NE
31 ,
· Williamsburg 14
1 M-Gabe Hill10 run (Mens k )
Beallsville 40. Beverly Ft. Frye (l
; 5:36
Bedford 26, Warrensville His. 13
B
M
Bellbrook 16, Milton-Union 6
'
~ First Downs
24
Bellelontaine
54.
Riverside
8
! Ru~es-vards 29-127 50-457 Stebbins 0
r Passing yards
99
78
Belmont
Union
Local
32,
ITotat yards
226
535 ,
Barnesville 6
i~-lnl
&amp;11·1 4-8-2
Berea 17, Middleburg His. t,!idpark
• Fumlllea·lost
4·3
1·1
14
'. ~yards 2·tO 0-0
Bertin
Center Western Raserve 51 ,
•
•
Sebring McKinley 19
:
lncllvlduel Stlllllllca
. Bethel· Tate 88. Manchnter 8
Htluahlng: ~hton Packard 13- Blencheotar 1~. Batavia 3
I121, Tyler WaHclna 6·22, Erik Bloom.Cerrotl24, Circtevllle8
%Widi!Dr 3-8. Corey Llw t·(·1), Bigl&gt;mdllo Elmwood 27, Millbury
Tate 2-(-2), Cley Ullman 4·(· Llk120
•221·
Bowling Green 37, Whllahoull
:M Je~ Smtih 31-381 , ·Gabe AnthonyWeyne20
: Hll 7-111, Cory Hutton 8-30, Heath Bradford 45, New Paris Nallonel
! Deltovtlltr 1·12, Chl~la aarr.tt 1-3. Trall.14
Lludermii11.0, JaQob WillS; Bracklvllle·Broadvlew Hts. 21·,
Westlake 0
1 (4).
llli\tl: 8-Ciay Ullman 6-11·1 Brtclgepon 24, Cameron, W.Va. 6
:1111.
'
Brookfield 28, NeWtoo Falls13
:M JeDob Wlll4+2 78.
Brookville 27, G8fman1own Valley
•llllllv'~rg: B-Tylar WaHclna 3-76, View 20
~AyM ._..HI, Aah10I1 Packard 1· Brunswick 31 , Medina 7
ie.
·
·
Bryan 28, Metamora Evergreen 7
~M-Cory Hutton 2·53, Clay Bolin 1· Bucyru• 28 . New Washington
:15, Celab Davis 1-10.
B,uckeya Cent. 14
•
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Sunday, October 26, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 26, :mo8
Logan 23. Chilli&lt;Jlthe 13
London 30, London Madison Plains
7
Lorain Clearview 32. Columbia
StatiOn Columbia 14
Louisville 27, Minerva 0

Loveland 27, Milford 7
Macedonia Nordonia 32, Garfield
Hts. 12
Madisoo 28, Painesville Riverside 7
Malvern 50, Magnolia Sandy Valley
6
Mansfield Sr. 26, Manslield
Madison 0
Mantua Crestwood 41. Ravenna SE
22
Maple His. 18. Shaker His. 2
Mariana 14, Gallipolis Gallia 6
Marion Ca1h. 28, Ridgeway
Ridgemont·14· ·
Marion Harding 32, Lima Sr. 7
Marion Pleasanl40, Marion Elgin 6
Martins Ferry 41. Bellaire 6
Marysville 13, Dublin SCioto 10
Massillon Tuslaw 27. Navarre
Fairless 6
Mayfield 21. Hudson 6
McComb41, Van Buren 14
McDonald 43, Lowellville 6
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 44,
Yellow Springs 13
Mechanicsburg 10, W. Liberty·
Salem 7
Medina Buckeye 47 ,. Sheffield
Brookside 0
Mentor 35, Cle. HIS. 8
Montor Lake Cath. 36, Bedford
Chanel 0
Middletown 29, Cin. Princeton 28
Milan Edison 41. Sandusky St.
Mary 14
'
Millord Center Fairbanks 31,
Waynesfield·Goshen 27
Millersburg W. Holmes 18, Bellville
Clear Fork l4
.
Minford 10,' Lucasvll!e Valley 7
Mogadore Field 45, Akr. Coventry 7
Monroe 28, Day. Northridge 6
Morral Ridgedale 20, Caledonia '
River Valley 14
Morrow LiHie r;liami 53, ,Batavia
Amtllia 27
MI. Blanchard Riverdale 28, N.
RobinsonCoi.Crawford25
MI. · Oritb Western Brown 41 ,
Portsmouth'il2 ,. ·
N. Can. Hoover 28, Massfllon
·Jai:kaon 7 ·
·
N:Lowisburg Triad 34, CedarVtlle 7
NJima S. Rllllge27, Ml.neraf,RidQa
14
, ,·
: . ·•
. N. Ridgeville ·1•. ~raftoo Mldvlew
13
· .,
·
Nelsonvllle-Vosjc · 48. McArth~r
Vinton County 16.
," , •
New Albany 3, MI. Vernon 0/ ·
New carlisle Tecumseh 54, Spring.
Kenton Ridge 7
•·
New Concord John Glenn 46.
McCoonalsville Morgan 6
New 'London "44, Greenwich S.
Cent. 14
New Mldillelowrl 'Spring. 15; Lisbon
David Anderson 12 .
N
. lljlarl( Cath. 34, Whitehall·Yearling

Burton Berkshire 16, Middlefield 7
Cardinal 13
Delphos St. John's 40, Fl. Recovery
Caldwell
27,
Sarahsville 27
Shenandoah 0
Delta 141 Montpellar 6
.
Cambridge .
34,
Byesville Dola )iardin Northern 40, Vanlue 7
Meadowbrook 13
Dover 30, New Phli!!delphla 7
Can. Cent. Ca1h. 17, Louisville Dublin Jerome 30, Westerville Cent.
Aquinas 12
7
can. GlenOak 9,,Masslllon Parry 6 E, Can. 20, Mogadore 14
can. South 28, &lt;;arrolllon 7
E. Cia. Shaw 34, Ei!CIId 23
canal Fu~on Northwest 15, Alliance E, Liverpool 34, s.lem 27
,
14
Eastlake N. 24, Ashtabula lalqlside·
Carlisle 36: New Lebanon Dixie 2d 21
Casstown Miami E. 48, Arcanum 0 Eaton 42, camden Preble Shawnee
Centerville 41, Kettaring Fairmont 14'
13 ·
·
Edgerton 39. Antwerp 21
Cheshire Rivar Yalley 46, Ironton Elyria 28, Lakewood 21 '
Rock Hill13 .
, Elyria Ca1h. 34, 'Cie. Cent. Calh 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 29, Fairport Harbor Harding · 45,.
Beachwood 0
Newbury 22
Cin. Colerain 42, Cin. Oak Hills 0
Findlay 49. Na;loteqn 28
Cin. Elder 49, Cin. Western Hills 20 Findlay Liberty-Benton 42, Cory·
Cln. Hills Christian Acedemy 24, Rawson 0
Cin. Country Day 13
Fostoria 50, Upper SandtJSky 0
Cin.lndian Hill27, Cin. Wyoming 24. Frankfort Adena 23, Chiili09the 8
Cin. La Salle 56, Day. Marsnall 0
Zane Trace 13
Newark Ucklng Valley 4 ( Gahanna
Cin. Madeira 64; N. Bend Taylor 14 . Franklin 17, Day. Oakwood 14
Cols. AcademycO ·
Cin. Mariemont34, Cin. Deer Park 6 Fredericktown 33, Loudonville 7
Northwood 54, Oregon 51rilch 6
Cin. N. College Hili 33. Lockland 7
Fremont Ross 26. Sandusky 20
Norwalk St. Paul 56, Monroeville 14
Cin. NW 30, Hamilton Ross 24
Gallon 24, Shelby·20
Oak Hlll34, Franklin Furnace Green
Cin. Summit Country Day 46; Cin. Gallon No"'1mor 10, Cerdington- 0
Christian 22
Lincoln 0 '
Olmsted Falls 48, N. Olmsted 31 ·
Cin. Sycamore 34, Mason 10
Garrensville Garfield 35, Windham
ntarlo 28.. Lucas 12
Cin. Taft 22, Cln. Hughes 6
o
~nge 18. Chagrin Falls Kenslon 7
Cln. Turpin 42, Wilmington 21
Gates Mills Gilmour 31, 'Geneva 0 · Oregon Clay 46, Tot. tibbey 13 .'
Cin. Winton Woods 28, Cin. Glen Gates Mills Hawken 34. Richmond Orrville 31 , Woosta• 0
Este 21
Hts. 27
Oxford Talawand~ 6, Norwood 0•
Circleville Logan Elm 16, Canal Genoa Area 45, Tontogany Otsego Painesville Harvey 47, Ashtabula
Winchester 13, OT
9
·
Edgewood 7 . ,:
·
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 15, Plain Gibsonbt,Jrg 28, Elmore Wpodmore Pandora-Gilboa 33, Arlington 21
City Jonathan Alder 7
14
Parma 21, Parma Hts. Vanay Forge
Clayton Northmont41, Beavercreek Girard 36, Youngs. Liber1y 22
6
7
Glouster Trimble 45, Corning Miller Parma Normandy 35, N. Royalton
Cle. Glenville 40, Cle. East 0
14
21
Cte. John Adams 36, Cia. E. Tech 0 Granville 36, Hebron Lakewood 20 Paulding 53. Convoy Crestview 13
Cia. John Marshall28. Cle. Lincoln Greenville 17. New Richmond 7 .
Pemberville Eastwood 31, Kansas
W. 14
·
Grove City 12, Pickerington N. 7
Lakota 6
·
Cia. Rhodes 26. Cle. Collinwood 12 Grove City Cent. Crossing 13. Peninsula Woodridge 38. AIWater
Clyde 67, Oak Harbor o
Galloway Westland o
Wa1erloo o
· '.
Coldwater 38, New Bremen o
Grove City' Christian 68, F~lrffeld Parry 27, Chagrin Falls 14
28;
Collins Western Reserve 56. Christian 6
'
Pickerington
Cent.
Ashland Mapleton 8
Groveport-Madison 20, G·ahanna Reynoldsburg ()
, cois. Beechcroft
29, Cols. Lincoln 0
Piketon 42. Chillicothe Huntington
Northland 0
Hamihon 35, Fairfield 7 .
16
Cols. Bexley 40, Heath 27
Hamilton Badin 42, Middletown Piqua 49, Xenia 14
. Poland Seminary 14, Canlield 7
Cols. Briggs 42, Cols. West12 ·
Fenwick 0 .
Cots. Brookhaven 38, Cols. Mifflin 0 Hamilton New Miami 32. Day. Pomeroy Meigs 48, Belpre 8
Cols. East 16, Cols. Linden ·Christian 15 ·
Portsmouth w. 14. Wheelersburg 7
McKinley o
Hamler Patrick Henry 47,' wauseon .Powell Oiontangy · Uberty 21 ,
Westerville S. 17
·
Cols. Eastmoor 57. Cols. Africenlric 10
s
Hannibal River 56. New Matamo~as PrOCtorville Fairland 41, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant 6
Cols. Marion-Franklin 53. Cols. Frontier 12
South 0
Haviland Wayne T~ace 17, Holgate Ravenna 25. ,O.kr. Springfield 12
Rayland Buckeye 27, Brooke, w.va.
Cols. Ready 52, Cols. Hartley 6
8
Cols. St. Charles 23. Pataskala Hillsboro 12. Greenliold McClain 0 3
Watkins Memorial 7
Holland Springfield 40. Parrysburg Reading 35, Cin. Finneytown 12
Cols. Upper ·Arlington 7. Dublin 24
.
Richlietd Revere 21 . BartJerton 6
Coffman 6
Hubbard 28, Niles I'.!.CKinley 0
, Rockford Parkway 25, Versailles 20
Cols. Walnut Ridge 34, Cols. Huber His. Wayne 20, Springfield Rocky River 26, Fairview,7
Independence 7
14
Rocky River Lutheran W. 19,
Cols. Whetstone
53, Cois. Huron 41 , Castalia Margarena 20
Brooklyn o
Centennial 0
S. Charleston SE 41. Spring. NE 27
Ironton 31. Vincent WMen 6
Columbiana 39, E. Palestine 13.
Jeromesville Hillsdale 41 , RiHman S. Point 50, Chesapeake 14
Columbiana
Crestview
44, 13
Salineville Southern 14, Wellsville
Hanoverton Un~ed 35
Johnstown-Monroe 28. Johnstown 12
Stindusky Perkins 48, Port Clirnon 6
C&lt;llumbus GrD\10 42, Bluffton 12
Northridge o
,
Sherwood Fairview 67, Deliance
Conneaut 20. Jelferson ·Area . 14, Ken1Roo~H 19, Norton 13. 0T
OT
Kenton 48, van Wert 7
Ayersville 2t
C&lt;&gt;pley 24. WadSWorth 12
Kettaring Aller 56, Dey. Chaminade- Sidney Lehrrian 24, LafayeHe Allen
E. 7
'
Cortland ~akeview 36, Warren Jullenne 7
Chlimpion 1o
Kings Mills Kings 21, Cin. Walnut Sparta Higl11ancl16, M1. Gilead 6
Coshocton 52, Warsaw River View ' HillsO
Spring. Cath. Cent. 18, Jamestown
6
Greeneview
6.
Kirtland 63, Orwell Grand Valley 6
Covington 42, Tipp City Bethel 19
Springboro 42, Fajrborn 0
Lancaster 46, Newark 0
Creston Norweyne 36. Smi111vllle 10 Lancaster Fairfield Union 25. St. Clairsville 21, Cadiz Harrison
Croolcavilla 33, Philo 0
, Cant. 16
Amanda-Ciaarcreek 12
Cuyahoga Faile CVCA 21 , Akr. LoaviHaburg
47, ,St. Henry 21 , Minatllr 13
~oBroe
Manchasttr 1~
St. Maryo·Memorlal68, Elida 20
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 0
Cuyahoge Falla Wllah Jaouil 21, Lebanon 33: Mlemlaburg 14
St. Peril Qrahem 25, Spring·.
Werten Harding 8 ·
LHI Create E. Clinton 47, Cin. Ciark Grunon 18, 20T
Cuyahoga Hll. 34, lndepet)dancl7 Monteuort 7
Steubenville 34, Cerdlnel O'Hara,
Delton 34, Doylaotown Chippewa LHtonla 20, N. Jlcklon Jackaon- Pa.. 14
18
SieWert Faderel HOCking 30,
Minon 14
Day. Cemlll24, Cln. M9Nicholu 0
Wlllerford 0
~elpolc 42. An:lldla 6
Dey. Dunbar 21, ~· Meaclowdale Lewlo Center Olentangy a, Stow-Munroe Falla 24. Cuyahoga
14
·
Falla a.
Wellervllle N. 0
Day. Jalfai'IOn 20, Day. Belmont 12 l.ewlotown Indian Lake 55. Spring. Stree1aboro 33, Rootllown o
Deflance35, Celina 14
Strongevllie 24, Solon 0
NWO
Defiance Tlnora 35, Hlckavillti 13
Strulhere 28, Campbell Memorr~ .
Lexington 10, Ashland 9
DeGraff Rlversldl35, uma Perry 0 Liberty Center 21, Arl:ltbold 14
13
Delaware Buckeye Valley 26, Lima Shawnee 28, ou--G~ Sugar Grove Berne · Union 53,.
Richwood N. Union 7
Millersport 0
10
Sugtarcraek Garaway 57. St~asburg·
Delaware Hayes 21 , Lewis Center Lisbon Beaver 15, Akr. North 14
·
Olentangy Orange 7
Lodi Cloverleal 20, Medina Franklin 8
Sullivan Black River 33, LaGrange
Delphos Jefferson 62. Spencerville Hlgl&gt;land 14, 20t

I

.Meigs

Keystone 7
Sunbury Big Walnut 48, Cols.
Franklin Hts' 7
Swanton 69. Lakeside Danbury 19
Sycamore Mohawk 55 , N. Bal1imore

from 'Page Bl

18

Sylvania Northvlew 34, Rosslord 0
Sylvania Southview 42, Maumee 12
Tallmadge 31 , Green 14
Thornville Sheridan 7. New
Le&lt;ington 0
Tiffin Columbian 26, Bellevue 14
Tipp City TlppecanO!&gt; 49, Spring.
Shawnee 14
Tol. Bowsher 23, Tol. Rogers 16, OT
Tal. Cent. Cath. 37, Tol. Walle 12
To\. Ottawa Hills 26, Tol. Christian
23·
Tol. Sl John's 36, Tol. St. Franci$ 17
Tel. Start21 , Tel. Soon 12
Tal. Whitmer 48, Tol. WQOdward 6
Trenton Edgewood 27. Cin. MI.
Healthy 21
Trotwood-Madison 27, Vandalia
Buder 25
Troy 48. Sidney 14
Twinsburg 28. Lyndhurst Brush 7
Union City Mississiriawa Valley 41 ,
Lewisburg Tri·Counly N. 19 1
Uniontown Lake 48, Dresden Tri·
Valley 26
Urbana 34. Bellefontaine Benjamin
Logan 0
Utica 29, Centerburg 0 ·
Vermilion 27, Oberlin Firelands 0
Vienna Mathews 32. Thompson
Ledgemonts
W. Carrollton 27, Goshen 9
W. Chester Lakota W. 20, Liberty
Twp. Lakota E. 19
W. Jefferson 28, Pataskala Licking
His. o
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 48,
Newcomerstown 0
'N. Unity Hilltop 39, Edon 14
Wapakoneta 29. Lima Bath 14
Warren Howland 21, Warren JFK 7
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 41.
washington C.H. 14
Waverly 26, McDermott Scioto NW
22
Waynesville
41,
Middletown
Madison 21
we~r,· wv
· hsv 111 e
. a. 18 , Uh nc
Claymonl1 5
Wellington 30. Oberlin 6
Wellston 46, Albany Alexander 15
Willard 26. Norwalk 13
Williamsport wesflall46, Chillicothe
Unioto 21
Wutoughby S. 55, Chardon 9
Willow Weed Symmes Valley 35.
Crown City s. Gallia 6
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 34 , Lore
City Buckeye Trail 0
Wooster Triway 57 . Can, Timken 0
Worthirlgton Kilbourne 43. Thomas
Worthington 3
·
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 33 .
Youngs. Boardman 14
Youngs. Ursuline 34 , Akr. SVSM 7
zanesville 28. Jackson 6
zanesville Rosecrans 26, Toronto 0
~=~=:~\\~ M:~vil~, u;king~m 20 ·
WEST VIRGINIA
Allegany, Md. 27, Frankfort 7
Athens. Ohio 20. Wahama 0
Bath County, Va. 33, Pandleton
County 14
Berea, Ky. 61, Williamson 8
Berkeley Springs 33, Kettle Run,
Va. 12
·
Bishop Donahue 26, Valley Wel2el
20, 20T
Bridgeport·, Ohio 24, Cameron 6
Bridgeport 49, Philip Barbour 14
Cabell Midland 36, Huntington 0
lh
ounty 32. Wirl County 6
C .PI
• Parkersburg 7
.
ay·Battelle 28, Tygarts Valley 0
East Fairmont 40, Buckhannon·
Upshur 22
Eastern View. Va. 60, Washington
14
.
FayettevHie 35, Buffalo 20
George Washington 44, Ripley 18
Grafton 48, Oak Glen 14
Greenbrier East 14, Woodrow
Wilson 3
Greenbrier West 29, Midland Trail
14
Hedgesv~le 14, Hampshire 6
Iaeger 44. Montcalm 24
Independence 22; PikeVIew 8
James Monroe 29. Mount View o
Keyser 54. Musselman 0
Lewis County 49, Elkins 25
Lincoln 13, Liberty Harrison 0
Lincoln County 28, Logan 7
Madonna 54, Paden City o
Man 15. Wyoming Eas1 0
Martinsburg 53, Jefferson 25 ,
Meadow Bridge 26, Gilmer County
7
Moorefield 50, Patersburg o
Morgantown 29. John Marshall 0
Mount Hope 30, South Harrison 7
Nicholas County 49. North Marion
14
·
Nitro 42, Hurricane 41
Parkersburg South 40, Robert C.
Byrd 20
Ravenswood 47, Clay County 12·
Rayland Buckeye, Ohio 27, ·Brooke

~

Larry Crurnlphoto
Wahama's Trey Anderson wraps up Athens' Camero!'\ Tope during the second quarter.of a
high school football game in The Plains. Athens .blanked the White Falcons 20·0 and held
the usually potent Wahama offense to 102 Iota! yards.

Bulldogs bite White Falcons, 20-0
Bv

GARY CLARK

Area team a 12-0 setback . The Bulldogs sealed the
in the 2006 season opener. win midway lhrough the
The Bulldogs game plan final period with a defenTHE PLAINS - For the became evident from the sive stop and another six
· second straight week the beginning with Wahama . play, 65 yard . scoring
Wahama White Falcons getting a sleady diet of series . Athem intercepted
· experienced a g~eat deal of senior
running
back a William Zuspan offering
,lro~ble .con:rpetmg agam.st Cameron Tope. Tope, at 6- ·at 1he . Bulldog seven yard
an mlenor hne thai was btg · foot-2 and 180 pounds, car- .line 10 turn Wahama away
· and strong and as a r~sult ried lhe pigskin a total of empty- handed befor.e Tope
.lhe Bend Area grid team 35 'times and fini shed with · led
another
successful
suffered a devastating loss a game higb 15 I yards and Bulldog driye momenls
as the Division III. Athens two second half touch- later that culminated in a 4Bulldogs pilc~ed a 20-0 downs. Junior
Shad yard run and a 20-0 edge
' shutout
at the
White McCollum scored lhe first with 2:45 remaining'.
· Falcons Friday evening in Athens touchdown early in
Wahama drove to the
Athens .
Wahama . went in to the the second quarter on a 36- Athens eight in the games
yard run followed by a pair final minute but time ran
contest needing one more of Tope gallops in the sec- out 9n the White. Falcons
victory on lhe 2008 grid
d h If
f
• season to insure·lhe Mason on
a on runs o five and before they could push the
. four yards.
pigskin into .the end zone
County team of its lhird
The White Falcons offen- and avoid the shutout.
'
. conseculive playoff ' posi- sive misfortunes plagued
Kyle
Zerkle
· pac.e d
lion, but inslead dropped
. its second straight outing the
Bend
Area
team Wahama on I he ground
afler recording six wins in lhroughoul' with Wahama with 29 yards in five cara row to fall to ·6-2 on the seldom
advancing into ries with Ryan Lee netting
. year. Athens wqn its first Athens territory. On lhe 24 yards in three altempts
·
few occasions the locals and Micaiah Branch 20
ever gridiron meeting with
· the White Falcons and did manage topenetrate the yards in six lries. William
closed out its 2008 cam- opposite side of the mid- Zuspan started out strong
paign with a senior night field stripe couple of yel - in completing hi s first six
·victory to finish at 4-6 on low handkerchiefs would passes but would connecl
, lhe season.
suddenly appear to kill the on just three of his next 17
The game was played Falcons budding momen - to finish with nine cor;nple·
t4fough a steady rain from lum.
tions in 23 tries for 53
start lo finish which negatAthens .look a 6-0 lead yards and an interception .
Slill , South Gallia found
ed the Falcons
overall with 9:19 remaining in the Garrett Underwood caught plenty of positives in its
edge of speed and quick- opening
half
when four passes for 40 yards to 2008 season and will have
ness which the Bend Area McCollum capped a 67 lead Wahama in
lhat plo~nty to build on for next
learn was counling on to yard, six play drive with a deparlment.
year with a large class of
underclas~men reiUrning for
offsel lhe Bulldogs size 36-yard scamper on a
Tope had 151 yards in 35
advantage. The wet condi- counter play throqgh the carries with McCollum another year.
But on Friday night.
tions combined with the center nf the WHS defense. a\lding 48 yards in three
· strong pass rush by the The r •, int after try was jaunls. Trey Harris had a 'things went south right from
the start.
Alhen s inlerior line also unsuccessful and the half productive night by conSymmes Valley's Kyle
grounded the locals pass- ended with the Bulldogs necling -on nine of II aeriBowen
toted the pi~skin 35
ing attack with WHS rele- clinging to a slim 6-0 . als · for 83 yards with
gated to throwing short, advantage .
Valentour grabbing . four. yards for a score JUst two
minutes 'into the conlest for
hurried tosses that often
The hosts marched 57 passes for 47 yards and
a 7-0 SVHS lead and from
fell to the soggy turf yards in seven plays with Robby Glass three for 22
there the roule was on.
untouched.
Tope carrying the mail six yards.
South Galli~ did respond
Wahama managed just times in the drive to
The White Falcons will
•to the early score with a
102 yards of total offense increase the Athens lead to try and right lhe ship nexl nice defensive stand over
with lhe White Falcons · 12-0 with 55 seconds to Saturday when the Bend the next 10 minules of play,
netting just 49 yards on the . play in the third canto. Area gridders condude its but the second quarter was a
ground and anolher 53 Tope rambled the final five long , four game road swing different story.
yards through the airways. yards with Trey Harris at Parkersburg Catholic
Bowen scored his second
The loss was the firs I time tossing the two -point con - before returning home for a touchdown of the nighfjusl
WHS suffered a shutout version · pass to Frank season ending , senior night a few licks into the second
loss in 23 games since Valenlour lo make it a 14-0 contest against
visiting quaner with a 1-yard run to
give the Vikings a14-0 lead
Waterford handed the Bend affair.
Buffalo.
SPORTS coRRESPONOENT

a

\

second team in the line-up lead' Meig s. leaving lhe
for Meigs , quanerback junior with I .741 for the seaCameron Bolin look lhe · son . Gabe Hill added 51 in
knee on four straight plays to seven tries , Co.r y Fhgton 30
give the ball back to Belpre.
in six and Dettwiller ~iw
On second down .the
12.
.
'
Golden Eagle s fumbled with
Jacob Well , was four of
tile Marauders recovering , eight passing for 78 yards .
once again · with Chancey Well wore number nine dur-.
showing class took the knee ing the game in memory of
and .ran out the clock .
Emily Deem . Emily, who
Six Marauders donned the was · II , lragically passed
Maroon and Gold for the away in her sleep last Friday
final lime at Bob Roberts night. She is the daughter of
Field. hoping they would get Meigs administrator pave
a chance to play an elevenlh
Deem and Jamey Deem a
week . They included Clay
teacher in the Meigs district .
Bolin. Gabe Hill , Cory
Nine was Emily's softball
Hutton,
Mason
Metts ,
number this past season; her
Crockett Crow and Ernie
was
held
on
Welch. who was seeing funeral
Thursday
..
action for the first time since
Hutton caught two passes
surgery for a broken finger.
for 53 yards. Davis one for
mi ssing three games.
·
18 and Bolin one for 15 .
"I wanl to thank lhe entire
Packard led Belpre with
team ," Marauder coach
Mike Chancey said afler ·the . 121 in 13 tries . Watkins
contest , "Especially the . added 22 in. six . Ullman was
seniors. They made it fun to six of II passing for 99
coach , thi s IS a great ~roup yards : Watkins caught three
and now we have to wmt and passes for 76 yards .
Now Meigs has to sit back
see what happen s with .the
playoffs ,"
and wait until Sunday for the
Smith led the way with his announcemenl for the play- .
361 yards in 31 carries to offs ~

after the Cody Bland kick
and from there lhe floodgate s were opened.
Evan Herrell was next to
score for th¢ Vikings .when
he broke free for a 61-yard
touchdown run at the 7:58
mark and Jesse Graybeal
added to the Symmes Valley
totals two minutes later with
a 3-yard ntmble for a ·28-0
home lead .
Bland, who was a perfect
5Cfor-5 on extra point s, then
capped the scoring with a 4yard louchdown run to give
the Vikings a 35-0 halftime
lead while South Gallia was
lefl .trying to find an answer.
The Rebels managed just
one first down in lhe opening half and only managed
to move the chains six times ·
tolal while racking just 67
yards of offense in the
game .
In
the
second · half
Symmes Valley slowed
things down considerably
while South Gallia man aged to find a little bit of a
spark 'fhen Auslin Phillips

broke free for a 51 -yard
yard touchdown run at lhe .
5:52 of the third frame to
cap the night's scoring . · ·
Overall the Vikings finished with 270 yards of
offense 261 of which
came on the ground - led
by Herrell who had 73 yards
on five carries and Bowen
. who. had 64 yards .four eight
cames.
South Gallia was led by
Phillips who toted lhe ball
eight times for 84 yards. bul
several plays resulting in
negative yardage look away
from the overall . rushing
numbers for the Rebels.
Through the air Bryce
Clary was 2-for-4 for 17
yards and B J. Stanley completed two passes in eight
attempts for eight yards .
Frida{s contest wraps up
the season for both teams as
five players played in their
final game in SGHS red and
gold. They are BJ. Stanley,
Aaron
Gwinn ,
Skylar
Wilford, Jacob Dotson and
Caleb McClanahan .

CONTRACTING
7 40-985-3444

22

Weir 1a, Uhrichsville Claymont,
Ohfo 15.
'
Waatslde 23, Summers C&lt;lunty 12 .
Wheeling Cantral29. Brashear, Pa.
14
Wheeling Park 45, Fairmont Senior
25
Willlam91own 52, Tolsia o
Win1ield 20. St. Albans 14. OT

Larry Crurnlphoto
Meigs senior running back Corey Hutton (31) fends off ·a
handful of Belpre defenders during the second half of
Friday night's TVC Ohio gridiron contest in Pomeroy. '
.

KARR

Richwood 44, Valley Fayette 42,
30T
.
Riverside 35, Princeton 21 .
Roane County 34, HertJert Hoover
21
Sherman 41, Tug Valley 14
Sissonville 39, Shady Spring 27
South Charleston 25. Spring Valley

7·

Rebels .
from Page Bl

:l

Tucker County 46, Doddridge
County 6
Tyler Conaolldetad a3, Rl1ohle
County 18
Univeralty 28. Pra11on 0
Ven 44, Burch 0
Wayne a2, Poc:a 20
Wabater County 28, Braxton County

20-0 at the half, when Smith
scored again, this time from
II yards out with 3: II left
in the half. That capped off
an eighl play, 71 -yard dri ve.·
Key plays in the drive
included a diving catch by '
Caleb Davi s of a Jacob Well
pass for I 8 yards and a 27yard toss from Well to Cory
Hulton.
The Marauders began the
second half on the 20 after
lhe Belpre kickoff went into
lhe end rone. Smith carried ·
for seven and three yards,
before breaking off a 70yard louchdown run. Mason
Melts added the extra points
for a 27-0 Meigs lead at lhe
IO :~B mark of the period.
Packard scored ·for Belpre
with 9:06 remaining on an ·
18-yard run, afler a bad
snap, Tyler · W atkins hit
Rashawn Miller for the extra
poinls to pull Belpre to with·
m 27-8 with 9:06 left in the
lhiro penoct .
But Smith, made il 33-8
when he made a beautiful
13-yard run at the 2:32 mark
of the third period. Once
again Metts added lhe extra
poiots for a 34-8 Meigs lead·
with 2:32 left in the third
period . .'
.
Smith s.c ored his final
touctidown of the night.
when the junior scored from
52 yards oul. Metts once
again was t~e on the extra
point for a 34-8 Meigs
advantage wilh II :49 left.
Gabe Hill capped off a 10
play, 51-yard drive with a
10-yard run .with 5:36
remaining. Metts added the
extra points for a 48-8 Meigs
lead.
Belpre fumbled the kickoff And Mei.gs recovered at
Belpre
23: Heath
the
Dettwiller ran for 12 yards
on first down and Charlie
Barrett took it three-yard to
the Golden Eagle 13. But
Coach
Mike
Chancey
showed class and with the

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Sunday, October 26,2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • 'G allipolis

McAllister, Smith violated steroids policy II victim taken lnm lslab Domas' NY heme
Bv BFiETT MARTEL

..

AP SPORTS WRITER

· New Orleans Saints veter!ns Deuce McAllister and
Will Smith .reportedly are
l!ffiong ·severn! players who
have violated the NFL
:~teroids policy.
· Fox 31 television in
:Denver, citing an unnamed
:source, reported Friday there
lire between six and 10 positive tests in the NFL for a
. weight-loss diuretic . The
.Qnly names the station men-

tioned were the two Saints, tify any of his clients or say
who are iri London for how many there were.
"These men are entitled to
Sunday's game with the San
Diego Chargers.
confidentiality and entitled to
ESPN .com, citing two go through appeal process, so
unnamed sources, reported the (Fox 31) report ... is comthe number is more than 10 pletely unfair," Cornwell
and may exceed 15.
said. "The cornerstone of any
The NFL would not com- workplace testing program,
menton the reports, byt a~r- ~especially one in professional
ney David Comwellt~rts wt~ .high-profile peoAssociated Press he has been pte ; is confidentiality."
hired to handle the appeals of
According to the NFL's
a. number of players who are policy, the first positive test
facing possible suspensions. results in a four-game susComwell declined to iden- pension .

Mike BracMubmltted photo

Gallia Academy running back Jared Gravely runs through a hole in the Marietta defense
during Friday night's Week 10 SEOAL football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.

Devils
from Page 81
over the ball on its first pos·
session which made them
resort to the first of their
seven punts in the ballgame.
Marietta appeared to start
strong with a quick first
'down but after a big sack by
Blue Devil senior C.J.
Harrison for an eight yard
loss the Tigers were. forced
to punt the ball away.
Both teams had three possessions .each in the first
4uurter while every one of
them resulted in having to
punt the ball back to the
opposing team. Neither
icurn could seem to get their
offensive footing through out the entire game and
after alternating punts to
start the second quarter, the
Tigers were able to get onto
· the scoreboard first.
Marietta
(4-6,
3-3
SEOAL) took advantage of
great field position off of a
short punt by the Blue
Devils m the second qUarter
which started their drive at
the Gallia Academy 30 yard
line. Their scoring drive
lusted all of one play when
Perry Wheeler ran 30 yards
for the first score of the
game at 9: II left in the first
half.
The Blue Devils' only
touchdown came with 4:38
remaining in the second
quarter as senior Quinton
Nibert streaked 70 yards
down the home sideline and
hllnllcd a Marietta defender
before running into the end?onc on a stellar punt
return.
The Tigers special teams
rose to the occasion and
.blocked the point after
attempt in what seemed for
rno~t pf the game to be a
crucial one point advantage.
Gullia Academy finished
the first half with one of
their most successful drives
with the help of Jared
Gravely who led GAHS
with 63 yards on II carries.
After converting two first
downs their offense stalled

Pryor
from Page 81

at the Marietta 30 yard line given both Moore and the
coaching
staff
when they couldn't convert GAHS
on fourth down as the half headaches all night.
expired.
"We just couldn't get a
The rain poured down big play. We had one on the
throughout the halftime fes- punt return and we just
tivities just as it had through needed another one, but we
most of the first half, which didn't get it," Bokovitz said.
in tum made the field condiIn the end, the lack of
lion almost· unbearable for timeouts and having to
drive three-fourths · of the
the remainder of the game.
The Tigers offense started football field were just more.
the third quarter with what than the exhausted Blue
seemed to be a promising Devil offense could handle.
drive when the Harrison ran
With one last ditch effort
down
the
Marietta's the offense pulled out the
Wheeler for a 10 yard loss. old hook-and-ladder play
The Tigers were forced to with 25 seconds left in the
punt the ball back to the game and the ball at the 50
Blue Devils and rely on yard line.
their defense to continue the
What ap]:ieared to he an
solid effort the showed incomplete pass when the
throughout
the
water receiver tried to tip the .ball
soaked game.
to a trailing teammate, but
Marietta's first of four was ruled a reception and
penalties for 20 yards came fumble recovered by a Tiger
almost three mmutes into defender.
The . Gallia Academy
the ·fourth quarter as their
offense was forced yet faithful could do nothing
again to punt the ball away. but watch as the remaining
Gallia Academy's offense 17 seconds ticked off the
wouldn 'I get the chance to clock after the Marietta
take advantage of the offense took a knee.
Seniors playing in their
Tigers' mistakes when quarterback Ethan Moore's pass final game tonight were
was
intercepted
by Beau Whaley, Cody Ward,
Mason,
C.J.
Marietta's Sean Munfield Corey
on the v.ery next play.
Harrison, Tyler Grimm, Jon
:I"he Tigers only other Ky11er, Tyler Wachs, Brett
score came after GAHS Stembeck, Clint Saunders,
Blazer,
Cole
failed to convert on fourth Adam
down at their own 27 yard Simpson, Will Morris,
line . With 2:19 left in the · Jarrod
Wray,
Robert,
game MHS went 27 yards Daniels, Quinton Nibert,
on seven plays, finishing up Evan Wood and Nick Bays.
"I think this group of
with Wheeler running the .
ball into the endwlle from seniors set the tone for -the
14 yards out to post the sec- · players that are corning
ond of Marietta's only back. They showed the
touchdowns.
harder you work in the offMarietta capped off their season will give you a bellfinal scoring drive when ter chance to get on the
their
kicker
Zane field," Bokovitz said. "I am
Eschbaugh booted · his proud of every one of
·
longest kick
o f the game them."
into the endzone for a
Although they finished ·
touchback.
· the season on a disappoint. The Blue Devils would ing note, Bokovitz has a lot
have to drive 80 yards down to look forward to next seathe field with 2: II left in the son with a strong group of
game and without any time- underclassmen
·c oming
· back for the 2009 seaspn.
outs remaining.
Gallia Academy made
Coach Bokovitz added.
one la~t attempt ,at the pass- "We are gonna expect our
ing game that due to the young kids to work even
weather conditions had harder for next year."
makes it so tough," Nittany
Lions ~oach Joe Paterno
said of defending against
Pryor. "Pryor has an awfully strong arm and quick
release . When he takes off,
he takes off. He's a tou~

figure in the drama played
out before more than
W5 ,000 fans , most of them guy to get. It's going to
.
.
interesting."
d resse d 10 scar 1et 10 an
But there's far more than
attempt to duplicate Penn
ak h
State 's "White Out'' games just one player tp m e I e
game interesting. Both
back at Beaver Stadium .
Penn State was one of teams have a lot riding on
the outcome .
Pryor's final four college
Penn State is 0-7 at Ohio
choices, but the Jeannette , State since joining the Big
Pa., native chose Ohio Ten, usually coming out on
· State . He hasn 't looked the short end of close
back , either. After splitting games.
playing time with sixth-year
"We haven't really talked
senior Todd Boeckman for about that. It's statistics,"
three games, he took over Buckeyes linebacker James
!he week before Big Ten Laurinaitis said. "Those
play started. He's one big things, you can take them
(6-foot -6) reason why the . for what they're worth."
· Buckeyes (7- 1, 4-0) now
The last time the Nittany
find themselves shari11g first Lions won at Ohio Stadium
place in the Big Ten with in 1978, they beat a freshthe Nittany Lions (8-0, 4-0). man quarterback (Art
"That's the t~ing that Schlichter) who threw five

interceptions that day.
Ohio State, which lost
earlier this season at
Southern California, can 'I
afford another defeat if it
wants to make a third .
straight appearance in the
BCS title game. The
Buckeyes are also !rying to
become the first Btg Ten
team to ever win three consecutive outright league
championships.
.
Also, the Buckeyes retain
an
us-against-the-world
stance because they've
been ridiculed by so many
people after one-sided losses to Florida and LS~ in
the last two BCS championships and under the
lights against USC .
"This is their game to get
back on the map, kind of
redemption to get that USC
loss behind them," Penn
State wide receiver Deon
Bulle! said. "On the flip
side, it's our game to make
a statement. People a~e

NEW YORK (A.P) - young black female."
Authorities were called to
Hall had earlier said the
the home of former New case was not a suicide
York Knicks coach lsiah attempt.
Thomas, where poliae said a
"We're classifying it as an
47-year-old man was taken accidental overdose of preto the hospital and treated scrirtion sleeping pins,"
for an accidental overdose of Hal said. "I'm not going to
sleeping pills early Friday confirm or deny that it was
morning.
lsiah Thomas. 1t was an
Police would not identify individual at .his home."
the man, except to give hts
He told The Daily News
age . But reached on his cell that !lie man took about 10
phone the 47-year-old Lunesta sleepin!) pills. "He
Thomas told the New York was
unconsctous,
but
Post he had not been treated breathing on his own," H!!n
·
for a sleeping pill overdose, · told the paper.
and that 11 was his 17-yearThomas' 20-_year-old son
old daughter Lauren who Joshua also satd it was his
had a medical issue.
sister, not his father, who
·
It "wasn't an overdose," required treatment.
he told the newspaper. "My
"He's 'fine." the Indiana
.daughter is very down riNht University student told the
now. None of us are OK .
Daily News. "Reports of
Harrison Police Chief sleeping pills are false."
David Hall refuted Thomas'
Tile dmma is the latest in
claim about his daughter to what has been a difficult
the New York Times on year for Thomas.
Friday night.
·
He was fired as the Knicks
"I understand that this per- coach on April 18 after a
son claims it was his daugh- season of dreadful basket,
ter; he is lying," Hall told ball, a tawdry sexual harassthe newspaper. "It was defi- ment lawsuit and unending
nitely not his daughter, it chants from fans demanding
was a male. We know the his dismissal. Still, he was
difference between a 47- retained by the organization
yeat-old black male and a as an adviser and consultant

to Donnie Walsh - who had
replaced him as president as
basketball operations.
Walsh said he had not spaken to Thomas·, though oth·,
ers in the organization had . .
"lsiah Thomas spoke wtth
members of the New York
Knicks organization ~nd is
OK" the Knicks said in a
stat~rnent. "He is dealing
with a family matte~. and we
will have no further comrnent. He has asked that we
respeci his privacy, and we
will."
'
Messages
l~ft
with
Tho~as' p!Jblicist and tw:&gt;
of hts attorneys weren I
returned.
Hall said an ambulance
and two police officers
responded to a 911 call that
came in from the Thomas
hom~ a couple minutes after
mtdnlght. The vtcltm was
taken to White Plains'
Hospital Center. about s·
miles from the' home.
Officials there would not
say whether Thomas was a .
patient, or identify the overdose patient. And officials
with Harrison's Emergency
Medical Service declined to
say what . happened, citing
medical privacy laws.
·

Raiders

Browns, Jags trymg t~

on the varsity gridiron field
before Friday night.
With that, · could there
have been any better sendoff for those II upperc lassmen on Senior Night?
RVHS first-year coach
Jared McClelland couldn't
think of anything better: In
fact, he felt the final outcome was. all to fitting.
.
"Those II seniors are
quality people and they are
also good students. We didn't necessarily have the season we had hoped for, but
they always did what I
asked. of them on the football . field," McClelland
commented. "For them to
go out with a win was
extremely important for us
(coaches) and for the team
at -rhe !l,eginnin~ of the
Bryan WolterslpholO
week. Those semol'$ have River Valley running back Zach Baird .(43) Is knocked.Qut r:J
been great leaders through- bounds by Rock Hill defenders during the second half of
out the co1,trse of the season Friday night's Week 10 CNC football contest at Raider Field
and ther deserved to go out In Cheshire.
on top.'
.
Baird started the offen- :first half · when Jeremy c.atch for 16 yards and.
sive barrage - literally Blagg caught a 9-yard rass McAvena had two grabs for
in the first quarter, scoring from McCollister to put the 15 yards. All three wideouts
on · touchdown runs of 55 .halftime deficit to 26-13, had one touchdown catch. '
yards and 46 yards to make Rock Flill would m;,t score
Steve Lewis led the
tl a two-possession lead . again in the contest.
Redmen with 60 yards on
Curnutte connected ori a 10 crtrries, followed by
after less than 10 minutes.of
play. The 55-yarder came pair of TD. passes in the Corey Brammer with 25
with 6:24 left in the'frrst .for third quarter. The first went yards on eight attempts.
a 6-0 edge, then the 46- to Jordan Deel from 16 McCollister finished · the
yarder carne at 2:14 yards out with 9:05lefl for a night 11-of-22 passing for
allowing the hosts to claim 33-13 lead, while the other 163 yards, throwing two
a 12-0 advantage through went to Cody Me Avena interceptions .and two TDs,
qne quarter of action.
. from 8 yards out with 3:05 Mitchell Davenport led trn;,
The Red and White retali- remaining for a 40-13 cush- receivers with 50 yards 0'1
ated with their.first points of ion.
three receptions.
. .:
Curnutte also added a 5- ·
NOTES: The Raiders'
the evening during the seconJ frame, as Trey Wilds yard scoring run · in the three wins this season are a~
hauled in a 25-yard TD pass fourth quarter,• concluding many as the program hn~
froni Will McCollister at the contest at its 46-13 out- had' over the previous twO:
8:16to m&amp;ke it a 12-7 con- come.
campaigns. Fairland, Coal
test.
Baird led the Raiders and Grove and South Point
The Raiders quickly all rushers with 280 ·yards shared the OVC title thi~.
countered with
. a scoring on 27 carries and three rush- season with matching 4-1
pass of thetr own, as ing touchdowns, followed records. It is ihe second
Johnson hauled in a 5-yard by Tyler Smith with 105 straight year that the OVC
TD from Curnutte for a 20- yards _on 13 totes. Zak Dee!
7 lead with 3:30 left in the also had 36 yards on six crown has been shared, as:
. attempts.
. Coal Grove and South Point
half .
rus h mg
Curnutte _ who had split the 2007 title. Riv~
Less than two minutes
later, Baird added his third · eight rushes for n yards Valley's 46 points were the'
rushing sc()re of the night . and a score - also went 5- . most scored by the offense'
after breaking off 65-yard of-11 passing for 59 yards, this season. The last time'
scamper to the house at! :40 with three TD passes and no RVHS
scored 40-plu~
'- making it a 26-7 advan- .·. interceptions.
points in a league game wat
tage.
Johnson led the receivers Week 7 of the 2003 season,
RHHS .added a final score with 28 yards on two catch- when it defeated Coal
with five seconds left in the es : Jordan Deel had one Grove by a ~2-6 margin. : ·

a

saying that we 'haven't offense, Pryor is joined in for a clash.
played a top-notch team the backfield by tailback
"You have to prepare'
yet."
Chris "Beanie" Wells, who yourself for the worst,
Penn State, which bashed is good for 124 yards a expect the worst, and pray
Oregon State 45-14 before game despite playing with that something good hap~
the Beavers turned around a foot injury.
"
pens," Penn State safety
and stunned USC, is allowThe game will be only Anthony Scirro.tto said, an
ing just 12 {Joints a game the eighth night game in odd approach for a team
while averagmg over 45.
the 86-year-old concrete favored by 2 112 · points .'
"I'll say this, and I could . structure on the banks of "There · .a re ups and
be dead wrong, but it seems the Olentangy River.
downs . You have to pull-'
like they're capable of
"Most of the guys on the through the adversity, and
scorin!) at will," said Ohio · team have never had a' that shows the character
State ltght end Rory Nicol, (night) home game in the of your team and what&lt;
who's from Beaver, Pa.
Horse.shoe," Ohio Stale kind of team we really
While Ohio State has a cornerback
Malcolm are."
Pryor wants to prove;
Pennsylvania native at Jenkins said."The last one
what
kind of a player he
quarterback, the Nittany was my freshman year, so
.
is,
particularly
against the
Lions have someone from about 90 percent of the
the Buckeye Stale behind team has never experi- big school from his home,
center. Darryl Clark is a enced that. Guys are really state. He's tired of anyone,
doubting him .
senior who mirrors Pryor in looking forward to it."
"J · don't listen to ir
his ability to both throw
Not everyone likes the
because people . don't
and run. Tailback . Evan late kickoff, however.
Royster is averaging. 112 · "Sitting around and know me or know what I
do ."
he
sa id.
yards a game.
·
everything is going to be can
The Buckeyes c~er-the problem ... waiting for "Everyone thinks 1' 11!'
with
an
e~~nced the
game to actually overrated . ..Wait and see.
defense that )!as played start," Laurinaitis said.
· Time will come. You'U.
well almost all year. On
Both sides are steeled find out."
. . (.

'

\!l:imes -~ttUintl • Page Bs

Texans have _haunting memory of Fitzpatrick

get back in division races .

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. for us in Jacksonville. It's an
(AP) - The Cleveland ~FC game. We know when
. Browns and Jacksonville 1t comes down to the end
laguars began the season there is a lot of tiebreakers at
t,alk.ing about getting to the slake."
playoffsandmaybemakinga
Jacksonville also had a big
nin .at the Super Bowl.
~m two weeks ago,although
·. Now, the~'d settle for get- II has since been diminished.
lmg back m their division The Jaguars manhandled
races.
Denver on the road, rolling
: The Browns (2-4) lost their· up 416 yards of offense and
first three games and trail forcing three turnovers in a
Pittsburgh by three games in 24-17 victory. But New
· the AFC Central. The England looked even better
. Jaguar-s (3-3) .have won three against the Broncos last
9f four since an 0-2 start. but week, creating some sreculafind themselves three games lion that Jacksonville s most
behind unbeaten Tennessee complete win of the season
in the AFC South.
might not"be all ihat impres; Even though both teams stve.
realize there's plenty of footStill, it got the Jags to .500
ball left, they know the loser and allowed them to enjoy
Of Sunday's game in the bye week. No~1 with
Jacksonville could end up in center
Brad
Meester
even bigger hole.
(biceps), guard Chris Naeole
, "We got off to a · rough (knee), safety Reggie Nelson
start, so we're trying tp focus (knee) and cornerback
and see if we can somehow Drayton Florence (Sroin)
win a game to stay close in returning from injuries, and ·
ibis race;" Cleveland coach with some closure in the
Romeo Crennel said.
Richard Collier shooting
The Browns looked like case - Collier has been
they had turned a comer by released from the hospital
pounding .the defending and a suspect arrested Super Bowl champion New coach Jack Del Rio believes
York Giants 35-14 two his team is capable of makeeks ago, but they followed ing a run after "surviving an
llh a 14-11 loss at early-season storm 'capable
ashington in which the of ruining a teain." ·
~ffen~ sputtered for the fifth
It starts against Cleveland,
time m SIX sames. . _a team the Jaguars have beat: Derek · Anderson· has en eight tithes ill to meetthrown for more than 170 . ings.
'
ards just O)lce, against the · Cleveland
and
iants. Jamal Lewis hasn't Jacksonville .also· have more
ad a 100-yard rushing in common than high expecame. And the defense has tations and a slow start, too.
Jven up more than 350 Both are dealing with a staph
ants three limes; incl\ldiog infection and a suspension.
e last two games, and has
Browns general manager
0\ostly been gouged on the Phil . Savage suspended
Jround. .
~ellen .Winslow one game
: "The common thread is without pay after the outstx&gt;::
fhen we don't execute, gen- ken Pro Bowl tight end
frally we lose," Crennel said. accused the team, which has
l The Browns can't afford io ))ad a high number of staph
l'eep losing, either.
cases in recent years, of try·• . "We 'all know that," center . ing to cover up bis staph
Hank Fraley said. "There are infection.
·
lcoupleteamsthathavekind
Jaguars receiver Mike
bf separated them!'Cives fron;t Walker spent four days in a
!he pack. There's a lot of local hos.Pitallast week with
teams that are 4-3 , 3-3 and 2- an infechOn in his right knee
4, so it a big hill for us to stay and has been ruled out
there and try to get to 3-4,to against the Browns.
ftt:ay with the ·pack and·don't · More important than either
lceep getting pushed bac.k te~·s 'suspe~sion, tho~~h.• is
rehind the leader.
gettmg back mto the dJvtston
"It's definitely a big game mce.

an

E

fromPageBl

~mlllap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~

E

BY CHRIS DUNCAN .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

me~ories,
and hopefully.
lookmg forward tO creating ,

some more ."
HOUSTON
The
If only he could get the
Houston-Texans haven't for- Benga'ls to play like the
gotten Ryan Fitzpatrick.
Rams did that day.
Cincin11ati's starting quarCincinnati ranks 30th i~
terback made his NFL debut passing (151 .7 yards per
with St. Louis at . Reliant game), 31st in rushing (73.9
Stadium on Nov. 27 , 2005. ypg) and has given up 26
replacing the injured Jamie sacks, second most in the
Martin and leading the Rams league. But the Bengals
back from a 21 -point half- have already faced the
time deficit to beat the league's top four defenses
Texans 33-27 in overtime.
- .Pittsburgh, Baltimore ,
Fitzpatrick, a seventh- Tennessee and the NeVI York
round draft pick out of Giants - and receiver Chad
Harvard earlier that year. Ocho Cinco said the offense
completed 19 of 30 passes is due to have a breakout
for 310 yards and three game.
touchdowns, including the
"At some point, it's going
56-yard winner to Kevin to bust wide open," he said .
Curtis in the extra period. · "We'lllook like the Bengals
"I remember that day like of old, just throwing it, runit was ·yesterday," said ning it, catching it. One of ·
Texans receiver Andre the things we haven't done
Johnson. "It was a feeling yet is.we don't. have as many
you definltely don't wanno explosive plays as we usualfeel again."
ly have. I think 1~ things
Fitzpatrick returns to are going to come."
· .
' Houston on Sunday to lead
The Bengals are heading
the Bengals (0-7) against \l;le to Hou~ton with an 0-7·
Texans (2-4) ih Jhe makeup record for the second time.
of a game postponed last In 2002, they beat the
month by Humcane Ike . Texans 38-3, a viFiory that
,He's struggled in 111i'ee starts Ocho Cinco - then C)lad
since Carson Palmer injured Johnson - guaranteed.
his right elbow · against the
The trash-talking receiver
AP phoiO
New York Giants on Sept. hasn 'I predicted a win this Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (11) gets
21, throwing three intercep- week, but these Bengals a pass off under pressure from Pittsburgh Stealers line·
tions and losing three fum- believe they're better than backer LaMarr Woodley (56) in the first half of an NFL foot·
bles.
..
.
the 2002 version that fin- ball game, Sunday, Oct. 19 in Cincinnati.
But the Texans won'ttake ished 2-14 under Dick looi,(ed as good as they have the . NFL at 104.8 yarJ~
Fitzpatrick for granted. Not LeBeau.
all year in the first half. run- receiVIng per game.
after what he did to them . "I honestly think we 're ning out to a 21-0 lead and
Bengals coach Marv in
three years ago.
going to win every game," beating the Lions 28-21.
Lewis say' some credit for
"He kept completing pass said
receiver
T.J.
The Texans are seeking a Johnson 's success must go
after pass," said linebacker Houshmandzadeh.
"Last third straight win for the first to Schaub. The Texans ' secMorton Green.wood, who week, I was like, 'Man, time in their seven-year his- ond-year starter has, com~ad two sack~ m the game_.·, Pittsburgh is 4-1.' But going . tory. They started 0-6 in pleted 68 percent of hi s
rt;te n~xt thm!) you know, into the game: I thought 2005 and fi-nished 2-14, so passes and thrown six toucti~
were m overtime. It was we're ;$oing to beat them. there's no way they're down passes in his last three
efimtely a heartbre~r for That dtdn't happen, but I underestimatine; Cincinnati. starts.
.
us.''
· ,
··· think the same thing this
"They kind of remind me
While · the Texans have
_The . , Rams .
lost . week, we're going I? win. of the Texans in smile point seemingly learned how to
Fttzpatnck s next three starts ~ventually we're gmng to in time," said Johnson, dmft- clgse out games. Lewis sail'
and the · 2004 Ivy . League win and hopefully it's spbn- ed. by Houston in 2003. that is his team ·s main weak~layer of the Year appeared er rather than later."
"They've been in games and ness. · They've lost fotir
m only two games over the Three ·. we~ks ago, the let games get away. We'v~ games by less than 10 points
next t~~ _seaso~Cls . before Texans we~ JUSt as de~per- been that 'team before. I . and trailed Pittsbur~h 17- 10
Pallljer s IDJUrythts year..
ate for a wm after blowmg a know they're going through last week before g•ving up
Naturally, he's lookmg 27-10 · lead
against some tough times, because 21 points in the fourth quarf&lt;;~rward to returning to.,the Indianapolis and dropping to I've been through the same ter.
·
slle of what he calls my 0-4. But ·Houston beat thing they've been through."
" We're playing well
best moment m the league so Miami just as · improbably,
Johnson has been the against all these teams. but
far."
with Mall Schaub hitting NFL's best receiver in we've just got to learn to fin~
"The. first game I ever tw:o long -passes in the final October, leading the league . ish,'~ said Ocho Cinco. "Yoit
played m was there, and we mmute and runnmg for ·the with 30 catches for 450 watch film and it's always
· en~ed up I&gt;ulli~~ out~ vi:to- winning touchdown in a 29- yards. For the season, one . thing here. one thing
ry m o~erllme, he srud. So 28 victory.
Johnson leads the AFC with there. That 's what's been
I· defimtely have some good . Last Sunday, the .Texans 62'J yards receiving and tops hurting us.''
·

I

New York-Pittsburgh:
· ~imilar ·scyles, identical records
The teams are eerily·similar, · tar
pressure on
Ben
much like .their re~ords each Roethlisberger, who has
·of the last four seasons.
heen sacked 18 times to
' PitTSBURGH - Tom
In 2005, when the Steelers · Manning's six.
And about .allthose sacks
Brady's injury, the Colts' fall were the champs, each went
io earth, San , Die~o·s slide 11-5. In 2006, each slipped allowed by · Pittsburgh,
and the Titans' raptd rise .are to 8•8 ... Each rebounded to Giants coach Totu Coughlin
upsetting the AFC's balance 10-6. last season, when the said, "They certainly com- ,
. of. power. The Pittsburgh Giants took the same route pensate. on·.the other side of
Steelers, off to .their USllal as the 'P5 Steelers by win- the ball.''
·
good start, are about the only ning · four playoff games . Pittsburgh could get a lift
el(j reliable in the mix.
.. away from horite to win t!Je from the return. of Pro Bowl
l The Steelers tuay hot neeg Super·Bowl.
. · running back Willie Parker
to wait any longer than
The approaches are the . from a three-11arne layoff
Sunday to find how exactly same, the ,rosters similar in with a knee mjury; with
9ood they are.
. makeup, the records identi- Parker out, backup Mewelde
• Too early to call the piv- cal.
.·
·
Moore ran for 219 yards the
6tal New York Giants- · "Pittsburgh is 5-1, we're 5- last two weeks.
Steelers
interconference I," said wide receiver , Remarkably, for all their •
sam~ 'if possible Super. Bowl PltiJ(iCO BllfTCsS,'who left the , similarities an~ successes prev1~w'! For sure. W1th 10 Steelers after the 2004 sea- weren't the.. Gtanls ready to
weeks left in the NFL sea- · son to join the GilllliS. "I draft Roethlisberger in 2004
son, the powers of October know those .guys well. I if they couldn't swing that ·
often are long forgotten , know , the defense · and ·trade for Manning '- this
when the playoffs begin in '· they're going to be cbming will be only the eighth rneet1anulll)'.
~
from everywhere. We will ing betweeQ · the one-time
' Stitf, the tmck records and haye to try .not to .let th~ir NFL division rivals since til~
~tay-with-the-basics styles of pressure and thetr no•se 1970 merger.
two of the NFL's most tradi- affect us . and go out and
The clubs met twice a year
· tioll-steeped franchises sug- make SPine ·plays."
from f945-67, and have
Given the teams' compara- played 77 times, yet this will
gest ihese Giants (5-IJ, tile
reigning Super Bowl cham- · ble , personalities, this one be the Giants' fli'St game in
pions,and ·the Steelers (5-1), may be decided by which Pittsbur$h in 17. years and
the champs of 2005, wJII •be runs the ball better, . forces only thetr second 1n 37 years,
very much in play once ·the . turnovers and gets after the or.since ~e now-d_ernolished
postseason starts. · ·
·
quarterback better.
~ Rtvers StadJulil was I
· "Both teams are 5-1, got
With
the
264-pound year old in 1971.
off to a good start and ·play- Brandon Jacobs averaging
Franchise founders Tim
ing a road _game at a storied · 5.4 yards. per carry and 86 Mara of the Giants and Art
{ranchise, 11 is a bi~ ga,me yards per game, the Giants' Rooney Sr. of the Steelers
IUid important to us,' Giants running game . will be a probably · wouldn't have
quanerback · Eli Manning major test for a Steelers believed during the NFL's
said.
.
defense that has allowed halcyon days that two teams.
It might be a big game for only one team to gain 100 so intertwined - there have
.
been marriages between .
a 1ot of reasons, and may yards.
remain so for the rest of the
So
will
controlling Mara and Rooney family
seuon If both telllll' k~ ·Burress, ~specially with the members - would play so
playin1 ~e .way they are ' Steelera' biagest cotnerblck, Infrequently. .
More than a few Maras
now. The Giants leail the Bryant 'McFiddeli, out with
· teague in rushlna. aze second a broken tiaht arm.
•
and Roone7s wouldn't mind
in offense and fourth in The Steelers lead the a revival o the old days and
defense. The Steelers are league with 2S sacks, with another
Giants-Steelers
first in defense, tops ag~st llrie\&gt;aeke~ JIUI!es Harrison game later this season. The
the pass and secolld agamst (8) and LaMarr Woodley (8) only way that can happen, of
the run.
combining for 16, and they course, is a Super Bowl
· • Run the ball Without f~. want to keep the Giants QUt remali:h between two of the
shut down the big play, $Ct of favorable running downs NFL's last three champions .
Then again, it's probably
after the quanerback wllh . by forcing Manning to make
aggressive
·.pass-rush · mistakes. The Giants, with too early to be thinking
!lchemes and stuff the run. 21 sacks, plan to apply simi- aix?ut that, right?
BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED P,RESS

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,.

Sunday, October 26,2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • 'G allipolis

McAllister, Smith violated steroids policy II victim taken lnm lslab Domas' NY heme
Bv BFiETT MARTEL

..

AP SPORTS WRITER

· New Orleans Saints veter!ns Deuce McAllister and
Will Smith .reportedly are
l!ffiong ·severn! players who
have violated the NFL
:~teroids policy.
· Fox 31 television in
:Denver, citing an unnamed
:source, reported Friday there
lire between six and 10 positive tests in the NFL for a
. weight-loss diuretic . The
.Qnly names the station men-

tioned were the two Saints, tify any of his clients or say
who are iri London for how many there were.
"These men are entitled to
Sunday's game with the San
Diego Chargers.
confidentiality and entitled to
ESPN .com, citing two go through appeal process, so
unnamed sources, reported the (Fox 31) report ... is comthe number is more than 10 pletely unfair," Cornwell
and may exceed 15.
said. "The cornerstone of any
The NFL would not com- workplace testing program,
menton the reports, byt a~r- ~especially one in professional
ney David Comwellt~rts wt~ .high-profile peoAssociated Press he has been pte ; is confidentiality."
hired to handle the appeals of
According to the NFL's
a. number of players who are policy, the first positive test
facing possible suspensions. results in a four-game susComwell declined to iden- pension .

Mike BracMubmltted photo

Gallia Academy running back Jared Gravely runs through a hole in the Marietta defense
during Friday night's Week 10 SEOAL football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.

Devils
from Page 81
over the ball on its first pos·
session which made them
resort to the first of their
seven punts in the ballgame.
Marietta appeared to start
strong with a quick first
'down but after a big sack by
Blue Devil senior C.J.
Harrison for an eight yard
loss the Tigers were. forced
to punt the ball away.
Both teams had three possessions .each in the first
4uurter while every one of
them resulted in having to
punt the ball back to the
opposing team. Neither
icurn could seem to get their
offensive footing through out the entire game and
after alternating punts to
start the second quarter, the
Tigers were able to get onto
· the scoreboard first.
Marietta
(4-6,
3-3
SEOAL) took advantage of
great field position off of a
short punt by the Blue
Devils m the second qUarter
which started their drive at
the Gallia Academy 30 yard
line. Their scoring drive
lusted all of one play when
Perry Wheeler ran 30 yards
for the first score of the
game at 9: II left in the first
half.
The Blue Devils' only
touchdown came with 4:38
remaining in the second
quarter as senior Quinton
Nibert streaked 70 yards
down the home sideline and
hllnllcd a Marietta defender
before running into the end?onc on a stellar punt
return.
The Tigers special teams
rose to the occasion and
.blocked the point after
attempt in what seemed for
rno~t pf the game to be a
crucial one point advantage.
Gullia Academy finished
the first half with one of
their most successful drives
with the help of Jared
Gravely who led GAHS
with 63 yards on II carries.
After converting two first
downs their offense stalled

Pryor
from Page 81

at the Marietta 30 yard line given both Moore and the
coaching
staff
when they couldn't convert GAHS
on fourth down as the half headaches all night.
expired.
"We just couldn't get a
The rain poured down big play. We had one on the
throughout the halftime fes- punt return and we just
tivities just as it had through needed another one, but we
most of the first half, which didn't get it," Bokovitz said.
in tum made the field condiIn the end, the lack of
lion almost· unbearable for timeouts and having to
drive three-fourths · of the
the remainder of the game.
The Tigers offense started football field were just more.
the third quarter with what than the exhausted Blue
seemed to be a promising Devil offense could handle.
drive when the Harrison ran
With one last ditch effort
down
the
Marietta's the offense pulled out the
Wheeler for a 10 yard loss. old hook-and-ladder play
The Tigers were forced to with 25 seconds left in the
punt the ball back to the game and the ball at the 50
Blue Devils and rely on yard line.
their defense to continue the
What ap]:ieared to he an
solid effort the showed incomplete pass when the
throughout
the
water receiver tried to tip the .ball
soaked game.
to a trailing teammate, but
Marietta's first of four was ruled a reception and
penalties for 20 yards came fumble recovered by a Tiger
almost three mmutes into defender.
The . Gallia Academy
the ·fourth quarter as their
offense was forced yet faithful could do nothing
again to punt the ball away. but watch as the remaining
Gallia Academy's offense 17 seconds ticked off the
wouldn 'I get the chance to clock after the Marietta
take advantage of the offense took a knee.
Seniors playing in their
Tigers' mistakes when quarterback Ethan Moore's pass final game tonight were
was
intercepted
by Beau Whaley, Cody Ward,
Mason,
C.J.
Marietta's Sean Munfield Corey
on the v.ery next play.
Harrison, Tyler Grimm, Jon
:I"he Tigers only other Ky11er, Tyler Wachs, Brett
score came after GAHS Stembeck, Clint Saunders,
Blazer,
Cole
failed to convert on fourth Adam
down at their own 27 yard Simpson, Will Morris,
line . With 2:19 left in the · Jarrod
Wray,
Robert,
game MHS went 27 yards Daniels, Quinton Nibert,
on seven plays, finishing up Evan Wood and Nick Bays.
"I think this group of
with Wheeler running the .
ball into the endwlle from seniors set the tone for -the
14 yards out to post the sec- · players that are corning
ond of Marietta's only back. They showed the
touchdowns.
harder you work in the offMarietta capped off their season will give you a bellfinal scoring drive when ter chance to get on the
their
kicker
Zane field," Bokovitz said. "I am
Eschbaugh booted · his proud of every one of
·
longest kick
o f the game them."
into the endzone for a
Although they finished ·
touchback.
· the season on a disappoint. The Blue Devils would ing note, Bokovitz has a lot
have to drive 80 yards down to look forward to next seathe field with 2: II left in the son with a strong group of
game and without any time- underclassmen
·c oming
· back for the 2009 seaspn.
outs remaining.
Gallia Academy made
Coach Bokovitz added.
one la~t attempt ,at the pass- "We are gonna expect our
ing game that due to the young kids to work even
weather conditions had harder for next year."
makes it so tough," Nittany
Lions ~oach Joe Paterno
said of defending against
Pryor. "Pryor has an awfully strong arm and quick
release . When he takes off,
he takes off. He's a tou~

figure in the drama played
out before more than
W5 ,000 fans , most of them guy to get. It's going to
.
.
interesting."
d resse d 10 scar 1et 10 an
But there's far more than
attempt to duplicate Penn
ak h
State 's "White Out'' games just one player tp m e I e
game interesting. Both
back at Beaver Stadium .
Penn State was one of teams have a lot riding on
the outcome .
Pryor's final four college
Penn State is 0-7 at Ohio
choices, but the Jeannette , State since joining the Big
Pa., native chose Ohio Ten, usually coming out on
· State . He hasn 't looked the short end of close
back , either. After splitting games.
playing time with sixth-year
"We haven't really talked
senior Todd Boeckman for about that. It's statistics,"
three games, he took over Buckeyes linebacker James
!he week before Big Ten Laurinaitis said. "Those
play started. He's one big things, you can take them
(6-foot -6) reason why the . for what they're worth."
· Buckeyes (7- 1, 4-0) now
The last time the Nittany
find themselves shari11g first Lions won at Ohio Stadium
place in the Big Ten with in 1978, they beat a freshthe Nittany Lions (8-0, 4-0). man quarterback (Art
"That's the t~ing that Schlichter) who threw five

interceptions that day.
Ohio State, which lost
earlier this season at
Southern California, can 'I
afford another defeat if it
wants to make a third .
straight appearance in the
BCS title game. The
Buckeyes are also !rying to
become the first Btg Ten
team to ever win three consecutive outright league
championships.
.
Also, the Buckeyes retain
an
us-against-the-world
stance because they've
been ridiculed by so many
people after one-sided losses to Florida and LS~ in
the last two BCS championships and under the
lights against USC .
"This is their game to get
back on the map, kind of
redemption to get that USC
loss behind them," Penn
State wide receiver Deon
Bulle! said. "On the flip
side, it's our game to make
a statement. People a~e

NEW YORK (A.P) - young black female."
Authorities were called to
Hall had earlier said the
the home of former New case was not a suicide
York Knicks coach lsiah attempt.
Thomas, where poliae said a
"We're classifying it as an
47-year-old man was taken accidental overdose of preto the hospital and treated scrirtion sleeping pins,"
for an accidental overdose of Hal said. "I'm not going to
sleeping pills early Friday confirm or deny that it was
morning.
lsiah Thomas. 1t was an
Police would not identify individual at .his home."
the man, except to give hts
He told The Daily News
age . But reached on his cell that !lie man took about 10
phone the 47-year-old Lunesta sleepin!) pills. "He
Thomas told the New York was
unconsctous,
but
Post he had not been treated breathing on his own," H!!n
·
for a sleeping pill overdose, · told the paper.
and that 11 was his 17-yearThomas' 20-_year-old son
old daughter Lauren who Joshua also satd it was his
had a medical issue.
sister, not his father, who
·
It "wasn't an overdose," required treatment.
he told the newspaper. "My
"He's 'fine." the Indiana
.daughter is very down riNht University student told the
now. None of us are OK .
Daily News. "Reports of
Harrison Police Chief sleeping pills are false."
David Hall refuted Thomas'
Tile dmma is the latest in
claim about his daughter to what has been a difficult
the New York Times on year for Thomas.
Friday night.
·
He was fired as the Knicks
"I understand that this per- coach on April 18 after a
son claims it was his daugh- season of dreadful basket,
ter; he is lying," Hall told ball, a tawdry sexual harassthe newspaper. "It was defi- ment lawsuit and unending
nitely not his daughter, it chants from fans demanding
was a male. We know the his dismissal. Still, he was
difference between a 47- retained by the organization
yeat-old black male and a as an adviser and consultant

to Donnie Walsh - who had
replaced him as president as
basketball operations.
Walsh said he had not spaken to Thomas·, though oth·,
ers in the organization had . .
"lsiah Thomas spoke wtth
members of the New York
Knicks organization ~nd is
OK" the Knicks said in a
stat~rnent. "He is dealing
with a family matte~. and we
will have no further comrnent. He has asked that we
respeci his privacy, and we
will."
'
Messages
l~ft
with
Tho~as' p!Jblicist and tw:&gt;
of hts attorneys weren I
returned.
Hall said an ambulance
and two police officers
responded to a 911 call that
came in from the Thomas
hom~ a couple minutes after
mtdnlght. The vtcltm was
taken to White Plains'
Hospital Center. about s·
miles from the' home.
Officials there would not
say whether Thomas was a .
patient, or identify the overdose patient. And officials
with Harrison's Emergency
Medical Service declined to
say what . happened, citing
medical privacy laws.
·

Raiders

Browns, Jags trymg t~

on the varsity gridiron field
before Friday night.
With that, · could there
have been any better sendoff for those II upperc lassmen on Senior Night?
RVHS first-year coach
Jared McClelland couldn't
think of anything better: In
fact, he felt the final outcome was. all to fitting.
.
"Those II seniors are
quality people and they are
also good students. We didn't necessarily have the season we had hoped for, but
they always did what I
asked. of them on the football . field," McClelland
commented. "For them to
go out with a win was
extremely important for us
(coaches) and for the team
at -rhe !l,eginnin~ of the
Bryan WolterslpholO
week. Those semol'$ have River Valley running back Zach Baird .(43) Is knocked.Qut r:J
been great leaders through- bounds by Rock Hill defenders during the second half of
out the co1,trse of the season Friday night's Week 10 CNC football contest at Raider Field
and ther deserved to go out In Cheshire.
on top.'
.
Baird started the offen- :first half · when Jeremy c.atch for 16 yards and.
sive barrage - literally Blagg caught a 9-yard rass McAvena had two grabs for
in the first quarter, scoring from McCollister to put the 15 yards. All three wideouts
on · touchdown runs of 55 .halftime deficit to 26-13, had one touchdown catch. '
yards and 46 yards to make Rock Flill would m;,t score
Steve Lewis led the
tl a two-possession lead . again in the contest.
Redmen with 60 yards on
Curnutte connected ori a 10 crtrries, followed by
after less than 10 minutes.of
play. The 55-yarder came pair of TD. passes in the Corey Brammer with 25
with 6:24 left in the'frrst .for third quarter. The first went yards on eight attempts.
a 6-0 edge, then the 46- to Jordan Deel from 16 McCollister finished · the
yarder carne at 2:14 yards out with 9:05lefl for a night 11-of-22 passing for
allowing the hosts to claim 33-13 lead, while the other 163 yards, throwing two
a 12-0 advantage through went to Cody Me Avena interceptions .and two TDs,
qne quarter of action.
. from 8 yards out with 3:05 Mitchell Davenport led trn;,
The Red and White retali- remaining for a 40-13 cush- receivers with 50 yards 0'1
ated with their.first points of ion.
three receptions.
. .:
Curnutte also added a 5- ·
NOTES: The Raiders'
the evening during the seconJ frame, as Trey Wilds yard scoring run · in the three wins this season are a~
hauled in a 25-yard TD pass fourth quarter,• concluding many as the program hn~
froni Will McCollister at the contest at its 46-13 out- had' over the previous twO:
8:16to m&amp;ke it a 12-7 con- come.
campaigns. Fairland, Coal
test.
Baird led the Raiders and Grove and South Point
The Raiders quickly all rushers with 280 ·yards shared the OVC title thi~.
countered with
. a scoring on 27 carries and three rush- season with matching 4-1
pass of thetr own, as ing touchdowns, followed records. It is ihe second
Johnson hauled in a 5-yard by Tyler Smith with 105 straight year that the OVC
TD from Curnutte for a 20- yards _on 13 totes. Zak Dee!
7 lead with 3:30 left in the also had 36 yards on six crown has been shared, as:
. attempts.
. Coal Grove and South Point
half .
rus h mg
Curnutte _ who had split the 2007 title. Riv~
Less than two minutes
later, Baird added his third · eight rushes for n yards Valley's 46 points were the'
rushing sc()re of the night . and a score - also went 5- . most scored by the offense'
after breaking off 65-yard of-11 passing for 59 yards, this season. The last time'
scamper to the house at! :40 with three TD passes and no RVHS
scored 40-plu~
'- making it a 26-7 advan- .·. interceptions.
points in a league game wat
tage.
Johnson led the receivers Week 7 of the 2003 season,
RHHS .added a final score with 28 yards on two catch- when it defeated Coal
with five seconds left in the es : Jordan Deel had one Grove by a ~2-6 margin. : ·

a

saying that we 'haven't offense, Pryor is joined in for a clash.
played a top-notch team the backfield by tailback
"You have to prepare'
yet."
Chris "Beanie" Wells, who yourself for the worst,
Penn State, which bashed is good for 124 yards a expect the worst, and pray
Oregon State 45-14 before game despite playing with that something good hap~
the Beavers turned around a foot injury.
"
pens," Penn State safety
and stunned USC, is allowThe game will be only Anthony Scirro.tto said, an
ing just 12 {Joints a game the eighth night game in odd approach for a team
while averagmg over 45.
the 86-year-old concrete favored by 2 112 · points .'
"I'll say this, and I could . structure on the banks of "There · .a re ups and
be dead wrong, but it seems the Olentangy River.
downs . You have to pull-'
like they're capable of
"Most of the guys on the through the adversity, and
scorin!) at will," said Ohio · team have never had a' that shows the character
State ltght end Rory Nicol, (night) home game in the of your team and what&lt;
who's from Beaver, Pa.
Horse.shoe," Ohio Stale kind of team we really
While Ohio State has a cornerback
Malcolm are."
Pryor wants to prove;
Pennsylvania native at Jenkins said."The last one
what
kind of a player he
quarterback, the Nittany was my freshman year, so
.
is,
particularly
against the
Lions have someone from about 90 percent of the
the Buckeye Stale behind team has never experi- big school from his home,
center. Darryl Clark is a enced that. Guys are really state. He's tired of anyone,
doubting him .
senior who mirrors Pryor in looking forward to it."
"J · don't listen to ir
his ability to both throw
Not everyone likes the
because people . don't
and run. Tailback . Evan late kickoff, however.
Royster is averaging. 112 · "Sitting around and know me or know what I
do ."
he
sa id.
yards a game.
·
everything is going to be can
The Buckeyes c~er-the problem ... waiting for "Everyone thinks 1' 11!'
with
an
e~~nced the
game to actually overrated . ..Wait and see.
defense that )!as played start," Laurinaitis said.
· Time will come. You'U.
well almost all year. On
Both sides are steeled find out."
. . (.

'

\!l:imes -~ttUintl • Page Bs

Texans have _haunting memory of Fitzpatrick

get back in division races .

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. for us in Jacksonville. It's an
(AP) - The Cleveland ~FC game. We know when
. Browns and Jacksonville 1t comes down to the end
laguars began the season there is a lot of tiebreakers at
t,alk.ing about getting to the slake."
playoffsandmaybemakinga
Jacksonville also had a big
nin .at the Super Bowl.
~m two weeks ago,although
·. Now, the~'d settle for get- II has since been diminished.
lmg back m their division The Jaguars manhandled
races.
Denver on the road, rolling
: The Browns (2-4) lost their· up 416 yards of offense and
first three games and trail forcing three turnovers in a
Pittsburgh by three games in 24-17 victory. But New
· the AFC Central. The England looked even better
. Jaguar-s (3-3) .have won three against the Broncos last
9f four since an 0-2 start. but week, creating some sreculafind themselves three games lion that Jacksonville s most
behind unbeaten Tennessee complete win of the season
in the AFC South.
might not"be all ihat impres; Even though both teams stve.
realize there's plenty of footStill, it got the Jags to .500
ball left, they know the loser and allowed them to enjoy
Of Sunday's game in the bye week. No~1 with
Jacksonville could end up in center
Brad
Meester
even bigger hole.
(biceps), guard Chris Naeole
, "We got off to a · rough (knee), safety Reggie Nelson
start, so we're trying tp focus (knee) and cornerback
and see if we can somehow Drayton Florence (Sroin)
win a game to stay close in returning from injuries, and ·
ibis race;" Cleveland coach with some closure in the
Romeo Crennel said.
Richard Collier shooting
The Browns looked like case - Collier has been
they had turned a comer by released from the hospital
pounding .the defending and a suspect arrested Super Bowl champion New coach Jack Del Rio believes
York Giants 35-14 two his team is capable of makeeks ago, but they followed ing a run after "surviving an
llh a 14-11 loss at early-season storm 'capable
ashington in which the of ruining a teain." ·
~ffen~ sputtered for the fifth
It starts against Cleveland,
time m SIX sames. . _a team the Jaguars have beat: Derek · Anderson· has en eight tithes ill to meetthrown for more than 170 . ings.
'
ards just O)lce, against the · Cleveland
and
iants. Jamal Lewis hasn't Jacksonville .also· have more
ad a 100-yard rushing in common than high expecame. And the defense has tations and a slow start, too.
Jven up more than 350 Both are dealing with a staph
ants three limes; incl\ldiog infection and a suspension.
e last two games, and has
Browns general manager
0\ostly been gouged on the Phil . Savage suspended
Jround. .
~ellen .Winslow one game
: "The common thread is without pay after the outstx&gt;::
fhen we don't execute, gen- ken Pro Bowl tight end
frally we lose," Crennel said. accused the team, which has
l The Browns can't afford io ))ad a high number of staph
l'eep losing, either.
cases in recent years, of try·• . "We 'all know that," center . ing to cover up bis staph
Hank Fraley said. "There are infection.
·
lcoupleteamsthathavekind
Jaguars receiver Mike
bf separated them!'Cives fron;t Walker spent four days in a
!he pack. There's a lot of local hos.Pitallast week with
teams that are 4-3 , 3-3 and 2- an infechOn in his right knee
4, so it a big hill for us to stay and has been ruled out
there and try to get to 3-4,to against the Browns.
ftt:ay with the ·pack and·don't · More important than either
lceep getting pushed bac.k te~·s 'suspe~sion, tho~~h.• is
rehind the leader.
gettmg back mto the dJvtston
"It's definitely a big game mce.

an

E

fromPageBl

~mlllap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~

E

BY CHRIS DUNCAN .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

me~ories,
and hopefully.
lookmg forward tO creating ,

some more ."
HOUSTON
The
If only he could get the
Houston-Texans haven't for- Benga'ls to play like the
gotten Ryan Fitzpatrick.
Rams did that day.
Cincin11ati's starting quarCincinnati ranks 30th i~
terback made his NFL debut passing (151 .7 yards per
with St. Louis at . Reliant game), 31st in rushing (73.9
Stadium on Nov. 27 , 2005. ypg) and has given up 26
replacing the injured Jamie sacks, second most in the
Martin and leading the Rams league. But the Bengals
back from a 21 -point half- have already faced the
time deficit to beat the league's top four defenses
Texans 33-27 in overtime.
- .Pittsburgh, Baltimore ,
Fitzpatrick, a seventh- Tennessee and the NeVI York
round draft pick out of Giants - and receiver Chad
Harvard earlier that year. Ocho Cinco said the offense
completed 19 of 30 passes is due to have a breakout
for 310 yards and three game.
touchdowns, including the
"At some point, it's going
56-yard winner to Kevin to bust wide open," he said .
Curtis in the extra period. · "We'lllook like the Bengals
"I remember that day like of old, just throwing it, runit was ·yesterday," said ning it, catching it. One of ·
Texans receiver Andre the things we haven't done
Johnson. "It was a feeling yet is.we don't. have as many
you definltely don't wanno explosive plays as we usualfeel again."
ly have. I think 1~ things
Fitzpatrick returns to are going to come."
· .
' Houston on Sunday to lead
The Bengals are heading
the Bengals (0-7) against \l;le to Hou~ton with an 0-7·
Texans (2-4) ih Jhe makeup record for the second time.
of a game postponed last In 2002, they beat the
month by Humcane Ike . Texans 38-3, a viFiory that
,He's struggled in 111i'ee starts Ocho Cinco - then C)lad
since Carson Palmer injured Johnson - guaranteed.
his right elbow · against the
The trash-talking receiver
AP phoiO
New York Giants on Sept. hasn 'I predicted a win this Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (11) gets
21, throwing three intercep- week, but these Bengals a pass off under pressure from Pittsburgh Stealers line·
tions and losing three fum- believe they're better than backer LaMarr Woodley (56) in the first half of an NFL foot·
bles.
..
.
the 2002 version that fin- ball game, Sunday, Oct. 19 in Cincinnati.
But the Texans won'ttake ished 2-14 under Dick looi,(ed as good as they have the . NFL at 104.8 yarJ~
Fitzpatrick for granted. Not LeBeau.
all year in the first half. run- receiVIng per game.
after what he did to them . "I honestly think we 're ning out to a 21-0 lead and
Bengals coach Marv in
three years ago.
going to win every game," beating the Lions 28-21.
Lewis say' some credit for
"He kept completing pass said
receiver
T.J.
The Texans are seeking a Johnson 's success must go
after pass," said linebacker Houshmandzadeh.
"Last third straight win for the first to Schaub. The Texans ' secMorton Green.wood, who week, I was like, 'Man, time in their seven-year his- ond-year starter has, com~ad two sack~ m the game_.·, Pittsburgh is 4-1.' But going . tory. They started 0-6 in pleted 68 percent of hi s
rt;te n~xt thm!) you know, into the game: I thought 2005 and fi-nished 2-14, so passes and thrown six toucti~
were m overtime. It was we're ;$oing to beat them. there's no way they're down passes in his last three
efimtely a heartbre~r for That dtdn't happen, but I underestimatine; Cincinnati. starts.
.
us.''
· ,
··· think the same thing this
"They kind of remind me
While · the Texans have
_The . , Rams .
lost . week, we're going I? win. of the Texans in smile point seemingly learned how to
Fttzpatnck s next three starts ~ventually we're gmng to in time," said Johnson, dmft- clgse out games. Lewis sail'
and the · 2004 Ivy . League win and hopefully it's spbn- ed. by Houston in 2003. that is his team ·s main weak~layer of the Year appeared er rather than later."
"They've been in games and ness. · They've lost fotir
m only two games over the Three ·. we~ks ago, the let games get away. We'v~ games by less than 10 points
next t~~ _seaso~Cls . before Texans we~ JUSt as de~per- been that 'team before. I . and trailed Pittsbur~h 17- 10
Pallljer s IDJUrythts year..
ate for a wm after blowmg a know they're going through last week before g•ving up
Naturally, he's lookmg 27-10 · lead
against some tough times, because 21 points in the fourth quarf&lt;;~rward to returning to.,the Indianapolis and dropping to I've been through the same ter.
·
slle of what he calls my 0-4. But ·Houston beat thing they've been through."
" We're playing well
best moment m the league so Miami just as · improbably,
Johnson has been the against all these teams. but
far."
with Mall Schaub hitting NFL's best receiver in we've just got to learn to fin~
"The. first game I ever tw:o long -passes in the final October, leading the league . ish,'~ said Ocho Cinco. "Yoit
played m was there, and we mmute and runnmg for ·the with 30 catches for 450 watch film and it's always
· en~ed up I&gt;ulli~~ out~ vi:to- winning touchdown in a 29- yards. For the season, one . thing here. one thing
ry m o~erllme, he srud. So 28 victory.
Johnson leads the AFC with there. That 's what's been
I· defimtely have some good . Last Sunday, the .Texans 62'J yards receiving and tops hurting us.''
·

I

New York-Pittsburgh:
· ~imilar ·scyles, identical records
The teams are eerily·similar, · tar
pressure on
Ben
much like .their re~ords each Roethlisberger, who has
·of the last four seasons.
heen sacked 18 times to
' PitTSBURGH - Tom
In 2005, when the Steelers · Manning's six.
And about .allthose sacks
Brady's injury, the Colts' fall were the champs, each went
io earth, San , Die~o·s slide 11-5. In 2006, each slipped allowed by · Pittsburgh,
and the Titans' raptd rise .are to 8•8 ... Each rebounded to Giants coach Totu Coughlin
upsetting the AFC's balance 10-6. last season, when the said, "They certainly com- ,
. of. power. The Pittsburgh Giants took the same route pensate. on·.the other side of
Steelers, off to .their USllal as the 'P5 Steelers by win- the ball.''
·
good start, are about the only ning · four playoff games . Pittsburgh could get a lift
el(j reliable in the mix.
.. away from horite to win t!Je from the return. of Pro Bowl
l The Steelers tuay hot neeg Super·Bowl.
. · running back Willie Parker
to wait any longer than
The approaches are the . from a three-11arne layoff
Sunday to find how exactly same, the ,rosters similar in with a knee mjury; with
9ood they are.
. makeup, the records identi- Parker out, backup Mewelde
• Too early to call the piv- cal.
.·
·
Moore ran for 219 yards the
6tal New York Giants- · "Pittsburgh is 5-1, we're 5- last two weeks.
Steelers
interconference I," said wide receiver , Remarkably, for all their •
sam~ 'if possible Super. Bowl PltiJ(iCO BllfTCsS,'who left the , similarities an~ successes prev1~w'! For sure. W1th 10 Steelers after the 2004 sea- weren't the.. Gtanls ready to
weeks left in the NFL sea- · son to join the GilllliS. "I draft Roethlisberger in 2004
son, the powers of October know those .guys well. I if they couldn't swing that ·
often are long forgotten , know , the defense · and ·trade for Manning '- this
when the playoffs begin in '· they're going to be cbming will be only the eighth rneet1anulll)'.
~
from everywhere. We will ing betweeQ · the one-time
' Stitf, the tmck records and haye to try .not to .let th~ir NFL division rivals since til~
~tay-with-the-basics styles of pressure and thetr no•se 1970 merger.
two of the NFL's most tradi- affect us . and go out and
The clubs met twice a year
· tioll-steeped franchises sug- make SPine ·plays."
from f945-67, and have
Given the teams' compara- played 77 times, yet this will
gest ihese Giants (5-IJ, tile
reigning Super Bowl cham- · ble , personalities, this one be the Giants' fli'St game in
pions,and ·the Steelers (5-1), may be decided by which Pittsbur$h in 17. years and
the champs of 2005, wJII •be runs the ball better, . forces only thetr second 1n 37 years,
very much in play once ·the . turnovers and gets after the or.since ~e now-d_ernolished
postseason starts. · ·
·
quarterback better.
~ Rtvers StadJulil was I
· "Both teams are 5-1, got
With
the
264-pound year old in 1971.
off to a good start and ·play- Brandon Jacobs averaging
Franchise founders Tim
ing a road _game at a storied · 5.4 yards. per carry and 86 Mara of the Giants and Art
{ranchise, 11 is a bi~ ga,me yards per game, the Giants' Rooney Sr. of the Steelers
IUid important to us,' Giants running game . will be a probably · wouldn't have
quanerback · Eli Manning major test for a Steelers believed during the NFL's
said.
.
defense that has allowed halcyon days that two teams.
It might be a big game for only one team to gain 100 so intertwined - there have
.
been marriages between .
a 1ot of reasons, and may yards.
remain so for the rest of the
So
will
controlling Mara and Rooney family
seuon If both telllll' k~ ·Burress, ~specially with the members - would play so
playin1 ~e .way they are ' Steelera' biagest cotnerblck, Infrequently. .
More than a few Maras
now. The Giants leail the Bryant 'McFiddeli, out with
· teague in rushlna. aze second a broken tiaht arm.
•
and Roone7s wouldn't mind
in offense and fourth in The Steelers lead the a revival o the old days and
defense. The Steelers are league with 2S sacks, with another
Giants-Steelers
first in defense, tops ag~st llrie\&gt;aeke~ JIUI!es Harrison game later this season. The
the pass and secolld agamst (8) and LaMarr Woodley (8) only way that can happen, of
the run.
combining for 16, and they course, is a Super Bowl
· • Run the ball Without f~. want to keep the Giants QUt remali:h between two of the
shut down the big play, $Ct of favorable running downs NFL's last three champions .
Then again, it's probably
after the quanerback wllh . by forcing Manning to make
aggressive
·.pass-rush · mistakes. The Giants, with too early to be thinking
!lchemes and stuff the run. 21 sacks, plan to apply simi- aix?ut that, right?
BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED P,RESS

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�•

Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Cl
~·

Sunday,Ck1ober26,2oo8

.,

'·

Gallipolis City Park

,.NIGHT LIGHTS
Majestic scenes plentiful after dark
•

STORY AND PHOTOS

BY Jov KocMouo
JKOCMOUDCMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

: GALLIPOLIS - Although it's eRsv to
appreciate the gorgeous landscapes ·and
rolling hills that surround our region during
. the da;y, after the sun goes down a variety of
tnajestic scenes take on a life of their own
as
light Up the night with their QWn .
specia glow.
.

ther

..

Rio Grande Alumni Memorial Bell
Tower
Bells take on an intense orange hue
against the pale violet sky as the sun sets
near the Alumni Memorial Bell Tower
located on campus at the University of Rio
Grande .
The bell tower, which was dedicated on
Sept., 13, 200 I , as pan of the university's
125th anniversary celebration, was buill by
the Verdin Co. of Cincinna\i. The design of
the current belltower is a replica of the
clock tower of Atwood Hall, the first building on the Rio Grande campus, constructed
in 1876, .which was destroyed by. a tragic.
fire in 1937.
The bell . tower's carillon can be played
manually or automatically, with digital
technology allowing for a variety of pre- .
programmed selections to be played at any
given time.

'&gt;-. ,•

· View from Mound. Hill Cemetery
. Lights from the city of Gallipolis twinkle
like tiny stars as moonlight reflects from the
~old waters of the mighty Ohio River on a.
cool October evening . .
• Mound Hill Cemetery was started in the
t 1180s and its founding was largely due to
the filling up of Pine Street Cemetery.lp the
earl~ years of the cemetery, many of the
family plots were enclosed with boxwoo!l
hedges. Although many cemeteries in
Oallia County are much older than Mound
Rockets Over Rio
Hill, few can boast of having such an
Fire rains down from the sky as the seci __
. ssive·v.ie.w, ,.. .! ..
,ond annual Rockets Over Rio Fall
:"'r.,.,
·
· Fireworks ExtraVaganza ·takes place near
,;
Gallipolis City Park
the soccer field$ at URG!RGCC.
' Lamps create a luminous glow upon the
According to Wikipedia, the earliest
Rockets Over 'Rio
surfaces of the bandstand and the Kerr unequivocal documentation of fireworks Rio Grande Alumni Memorial Bell Tower
. Memorial Fountain in the Gallipolis City dates back to 12th ·century China, where
Park.
they were first used to frighten away evil
I~ is believed that the bandstand was con- . spirits with their loud sound and also to
structed in 1885 by David and Bud Sterling. pray for happjness and prosperity.
The work was. conceived by the Grand
Evel)lually, the an and science of f~­
Army of the Republic, Blessing Post 126, work making developed into an indepen. Gallipolis, in memory of-Civil War heroes. dent profession.ln ancient China, pyrotechlt now serves as a focal point .of the nicians were well respected for their knowiGallipolis City Par.k, where many commu- , edge and skill in mounting dazzling disI ,
nity events take place.
· plays of hght and sound.
The Kery- Memorial Fountain was a gift . Since then, any event . a birth, wedding,
from Galha County busmess owner C.D. coronation or New Year's Eve celebration
Kerr, who operated a drug store directly _ has become a fitting occasion for noiseacross the street from the memonal's locaake
·
tion in the City park for many 'years.
m· rs .. ,
.
.
According to historical documents, Kerr
Ame.nca s earhest settlers brought the1r
originally offered a large sum of money 10 enthus1a~m for fireworks to the Umted
Gallia Academy, built in 1916, if officials States. F1rew?rks and black ash were used
would agree to change the name of the to .celebr~te 1mponan~ events long before
school to Kerr. The offer was rejected by the Amencan RevolutiOnary War..
the board of education because they felt the
The very fiTS! . celebratiOn of
ancient name Gallia should be preserved for Independence Day was m 1777, s1x years
the future as part of the area's rich French before Amencans knew whether . the new
15 HomeS to TRICK OR TREAT
heritage.
•
nation would survive the war, and fireworks
Bring the kids &amp; their costumes and enjoy our homes!
As .a result, the money was spent on the were a pan. of al,l festivities·. In 1789,
fountain and other benefactions to the citi- G~orge Washmgton s maugurahon was also
November 1•.4-6 PM
zens of the community, including special accompanied by a fireworks display. This
604 State Rnutl· 7 South, Gullipnlis, 011 • 7-tO-.:J.;t(,. JU9.\
funds distributed to needy persons at early fascination with their noise and color
Christmas time each year.
continues today. ·

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�•

Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Cl
~·

Sunday,Ck1ober26,2oo8

.,

'·

Gallipolis City Park

,.NIGHT LIGHTS
Majestic scenes plentiful after dark
•

STORY AND PHOTOS

BY Jov KocMouo
JKOCMOUDCMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

: GALLIPOLIS - Although it's eRsv to
appreciate the gorgeous landscapes ·and
rolling hills that surround our region during
. the da;y, after the sun goes down a variety of
tnajestic scenes take on a life of their own
as
light Up the night with their QWn .
specia glow.
.

ther

..

Rio Grande Alumni Memorial Bell
Tower
Bells take on an intense orange hue
against the pale violet sky as the sun sets
near the Alumni Memorial Bell Tower
located on campus at the University of Rio
Grande .
The bell tower, which was dedicated on
Sept., 13, 200 I , as pan of the university's
125th anniversary celebration, was buill by
the Verdin Co. of Cincinna\i. The design of
the current belltower is a replica of the
clock tower of Atwood Hall, the first building on the Rio Grande campus, constructed
in 1876, .which was destroyed by. a tragic.
fire in 1937.
The bell . tower's carillon can be played
manually or automatically, with digital
technology allowing for a variety of pre- .
programmed selections to be played at any
given time.

'&gt;-. ,•

· View from Mound. Hill Cemetery
. Lights from the city of Gallipolis twinkle
like tiny stars as moonlight reflects from the
~old waters of the mighty Ohio River on a.
cool October evening . .
• Mound Hill Cemetery was started in the
t 1180s and its founding was largely due to
the filling up of Pine Street Cemetery.lp the
earl~ years of the cemetery, many of the
family plots were enclosed with boxwoo!l
hedges. Although many cemeteries in
Oallia County are much older than Mound
Rockets Over Rio
Hill, few can boast of having such an
Fire rains down from the sky as the seci __
. ssive·v.ie.w, ,.. .! ..
,ond annual Rockets Over Rio Fall
:"'r.,.,
·
· Fireworks ExtraVaganza ·takes place near
,;
Gallipolis City Park
the soccer field$ at URG!RGCC.
' Lamps create a luminous glow upon the
According to Wikipedia, the earliest
Rockets Over 'Rio
surfaces of the bandstand and the Kerr unequivocal documentation of fireworks Rio Grande Alumni Memorial Bell Tower
. Memorial Fountain in the Gallipolis City dates back to 12th ·century China, where
Park.
they were first used to frighten away evil
I~ is believed that the bandstand was con- . spirits with their loud sound and also to
structed in 1885 by David and Bud Sterling. pray for happjness and prosperity.
The work was. conceived by the Grand
Evel)lually, the an and science of f~­
Army of the Republic, Blessing Post 126, work making developed into an indepen. Gallipolis, in memory of-Civil War heroes. dent profession.ln ancient China, pyrotechlt now serves as a focal point .of the nicians were well respected for their knowiGallipolis City Par.k, where many commu- , edge and skill in mounting dazzling disI ,
nity events take place.
· plays of hght and sound.
The Kery- Memorial Fountain was a gift . Since then, any event . a birth, wedding,
from Galha County busmess owner C.D. coronation or New Year's Eve celebration
Kerr, who operated a drug store directly _ has become a fitting occasion for noiseacross the street from the memonal's locaake
·
tion in the City park for many 'years.
m· rs .. ,
.
.
According to historical documents, Kerr
Ame.nca s earhest settlers brought the1r
originally offered a large sum of money 10 enthus1a~m for fireworks to the Umted
Gallia Academy, built in 1916, if officials States. F1rew?rks and black ash were used
would agree to change the name of the to .celebr~te 1mponan~ events long before
school to Kerr. The offer was rejected by the Amencan RevolutiOnary War..
the board of education because they felt the
The very fiTS! . celebratiOn of
ancient name Gallia should be preserved for Independence Day was m 1777, s1x years
the future as part of the area's rich French before Amencans knew whether . the new
15 HomeS to TRICK OR TREAT
heritage.
•
nation would survive the war, and fireworks
Bring the kids &amp; their costumes and enjoy our homes!
As .a result, the money was spent on the were a pan. of al,l festivities·. In 1789,
fountain and other benefactions to the citi- G~orge Washmgton s maugurahon was also
November 1•.4-6 PM
zens of the community, including special accompanied by a fireworks display. This
604 State Rnutl· 7 South, Gullipnlis, 011 • 7-tO-.:J.;t(,. JU9.\
funds distributed to needy persons at early fascination with their noise and color
Christmas time each year.
continues today. ·

••••••••••••••••••
•
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· e .terl($15value)
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When you ·schedule a
Weight Loss.C'onsultation
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~iunbap limd -itnttntl

YOUR HOMETOWN

PageC2

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CoMMUNITY

iunba~ lime~ -ienttnel

Sunday, October 26, 20~

P~diatric
.

Fund spo.,tsors

~ r••&amp;;wm.llltl1 r.~M

IA..L 11.-tt ~tli.r, fi&lt;Jt.i

HeLZER·
M ~ D- I&lt;"At CfNTJ: It

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IRVIN'S GLASS SERV.ICE

£(C
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Duckpin bowling once popular in Gallipolis

'

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.
•

32H~store

34 Devour

35 Meetirg (allbr.)
37 Smalll~and
311 Narrow street
40 Qty.
4~ Dir. letlers
42 Round dance
44 Subd~on developer
46 Where Cuzco is
49 Dais
52 Go afier geme
53 GooJ
55 Zoo deniiens
' 59 Ward off
60 Wheal
· 61 T)TII1nical ruler
64 Arche Bunker's .Ole
65 Good fonune
. 66 Fo.SIIuel .
67 LKJ&gt;id measure
68 Rocky hill
70 City in Norway
71 Anrox
72 Dupe
73 Muocal·group
74 Shine
76 Term in golf
·77 C\ll-de·sec (2 wds.)
79- Moines
.60 Adams or Falco
82 Reject an Heir
84 Ladder part
85 Pummel ·
86 Insubstantial
87 Egyplan goddess ·
88 Quick look
90 Gamblirg town
91 Actor - J&lt;ilmer
92 ~ace forskaling
(2wds.)
95 Decompose

J·

96 KndofseW
98 Space
· 100 Top pertmmer
101 ~a~ng· card
t02 Comella- Skinner
104 Pasture
1OS Animal den
106 Cad
. 107 Grow weary
108 lmpaaove
110 Go at a leisurely pace
112 Judge ·
113 Puon COfi'O!s to 114 Poem
116 Jump
117 Ue In arrl&gt;uah
118 Old a gardening job
119 Tengle
121 Ordered olliclally
124 Big increase 125 Unde128 Charged particle
130 ,SI1!g
131 Malle a rrnstake .
132 Sharp projection
13ll Sci'&lt;lol org.
137 -, sweat and tears
' 139'-abo I'
140 Sale or ~s1rada
141 Nothing .
142 Gamut
144 Went ~yond
lhelmits of
147 -and well
149 Fors~n
150 Bar legely
151 For the ~(presently)
152 Exodus leader
153 Squads
154 College VIPS
155 Hns
156 Furthars

· DOWN
1 Weedy plants

2 SoUrce of oil
a No bed of-

f' 5.4ThMn
Scull

6 A flower
7 George or T.S.
.. 8 Neck ROrt
· 9 lle&gt;11kin .
10 Like some niglts
tt Saweyeltieye
. t2 Le~n or Gershwin
t 3 Oodles
t4 Peron
tS Leave In
t8 Cummerbund
17 Splnnlrg toy ,
t8 WllS1em Indians
19 One of the Tnans
. 20 Dull SIJrtace
27 Prisoner's room
30 Ranch
33 Pace
36 Avoid. as
responslbifties
38 Female relative.
39 Aleavening
43 Not fashiolialile
· 44 Bovine animal
· '45 Tear
47 "Norma-·
48 Nullify
49 Grew wan
50 Seed·lti-be
51 - of Independence
52 Clet haallhy again
54 Variegated
•
56 Temperament
57 Attorney· Cut off, as fleece
60 Oak or ~e. e.g.
61 Noise
62 Atlempt
· 63 Shoe part
66 Bel:ome roore solid
67 Of tountry life
69Extreme
72 Engage in swordplay
73 Colfe8 or jelly
74 Lass
75 S~inflint
78 Demand

seem

sa

83 Knighti title.
85 l nh~aJ, .
88 Adozen dozen
89 Get·rich.quick game
92 PartK:ular
, . 93 Effrontery
·
94 Struck a c8itain way
97 Dweiirg (allbr I .
99 Lubricate
100 Try lti find
103 Godown
t 05 Went at an easy P"cce ·
106 Animal group
107Tom·
109 Time perkld (ebbr.) •
111 Pole
112 CI!Al Charge
113 Sign on amarquee
115l.Bbor
.
117 Dies clown
.
118 Sausage rve&lt;~ent
120 Sounded ahom
. 122 Potato chips, English

~~

123
on "'rfllUS
124 Wives·lti-be
125 Jack in arh)lrie
126 ·-- ofTwoCnies'
127 Craze
129 Scandinavian
131 Build
133 Cordlallavoring
134 Boll .
135 Co.nsecrate
137 AJtlect&lt; and Kingsley
138 Computer input
t40 Best orFerber
143 Jewel
145 - sequnur
146 The pr.esent
147 MDs org ·
148 llYow high

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Resident of Gallia, Jackson or Vinton County?

Arbors at Gallipolis
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Providing

79 Act

81 Line lhro14! a drcle

.

(abbr.)

FREE Mammograms

.

Saturday, November 8
Holzer Center for Cancer Care

Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgery, I came to Arbors at
·Gallipolis for Rehabilit~tion. 1am
. 'so impressed with the effiCiency of the staff.

•. Subhash Kumar, MD.

You must makf;! an appointment for this special offer and meet
the criteria mentioned above. Space is limited, call today!

740.448.5474 or 1.800.821.3880
I

Free mammograms are .
provided by
Holzer Center for Cancer Care
and Holzer Clinic
through funds received by the
Susan G. Komen Foundation.

Whi::n 1 first arrived at Arbors at Gallipolis

I did not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now, thanks to the w0nderful
therapy and nursing staff, I have returned home.

,

'~ HO LZER

FN0.\1 Ol I&lt; F \ .ll/1.} /0 l Ol 1&lt;.\

Arbors at (ja({iJ!ofis

•

PLEASANT VALLEY DIALYSIS, LLC

Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center
740-446-711 2

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'''·',' i " '

. CANCER CARE

'

·

170 Pinecrest Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631

3683 Ohio River Road • Pt. Pleasant, WV

.

.

Need a Mammogram?

Rehabilitation Back To Home!

'

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the selling of ~ppreciated .year, replacing them with nificanl amount of money
stock s purchased years other stocks (and some- in a fund in coming weeks,
Many of you may earlier, in order to gener- times ev~n buying the il may be wise lo check to
already be thinking from ate gains to offset those same stocks back after see if the fund is likely to
the title of this article that losses. This has the effect Jan .. !), of!en in an attempt be making a year-endpay·.something here doesn't · of minimi zing the fund's to beat th eir category out, and, if so, how much.
: make sense. Guess· what, I published loss-in-value at averages. Because of this , Many funds will post this
.: agree . . It doesn 't rtiake year end, allowing the mutual funds rarely pro~ information on ' their web• sens.e to pay capital gains fund lo claim that it .was vide the 15 percent long- sites . For investors who
· tax m a down market. But "only" down, say 9 per- term capital gains tax rate don't want to navigate
. : yet, many of you will do cent on the year while its that many claim their these confusing tax laws,
. :exactly that as the very peer group was down an owners might receive.
tax-deferred investments,
. : mutual funds that have average of 14 percent. · The repoL .. ble gains such as equity-indexed
. : underperformed for you The unsuspecting share- that a mutual fund share- annuiiies, offer a good
. all year begin tu make holder of this fund holder must pay taxes on solution. B,ecause · these
: their year-end capital receives his Dec. 31 slate- each year is ·exclusively a investments
are
tax
: gains tax distributions.
menl; sees· his account is function of how long the deferred ,' the investor can
: I don't think I'm letting. down 9 percent, assumes fund manages holds 'the better control his or her
· the cal out of the bag when incorrectly that "at least" underlying investments he tax liability by contro.lling
.
.
: I say that it's been a hor- ·he'll owe no taxes on his or she purchases, an\1 has~
: rendou.s year for mo.st "loss" come April . 15 . almost nothing to do with the limmg of makmg laxhow long the shareholder able withdrawals.,
~ mutual fund investors. The Three weeks later, he
As . always, if you are
:average U.S. stock fund is receives a Form 1099-Div has owned his or her fund.
, down 33 percent through from his mutual fund com - This myriad of tax laws concerned over the appli: Monday , accdrding to pany showing several can result in an.income tax · cation of these lax law ~ to
: Mort'1ingstar lnc. Ouch! thousand . · dollars
of trap for individuals pur- s our investments, be sure
:Despite these lackluster reportable income. The . chasing funds late in the to di scu ss your tax liabili· re sul.t s-. many investors reason for this is the year. Because mutual ty with a qualifi ed invest'will end up paying large longer-held stocks , which funds must distribute real - ment professional.
:tax bills on their losing the fund manager sold .to ized gains to fund owners . (James Henry is an
•funds , The reason behind reduce his fund's year-end each year, fund companies . attorney and .insurance
:the counterintuitive pay - loss were sold at a gain usually do so in November agent licensed in the
·states of Ohio and West
· ment of taxes ·on a fund (over · their original pur- or December.
.:
An
uninformed
investor
Virginia. · He is the
: that .loses overall value chase p'r'iCe year earlier), a
: lies with the rules ·govern- gain that .is now ~eportable . purchasing silth. a fund founder of French City
Planning
: ing year-end capital gains and taxable to the mutual during the last quarter of Estate
· diitributions .
Mutual fund -owqer . even though the year may place himself Solutions, LLC, with
.focated ' in ·
: funds not only require his statement shows his at a tax disadvantage . by offices
taking on some partial tax Gallipolis and Columbus.
• income reporting (and the account balance down.
· resulling annual taxation)
Mutual fund managers liability for gains which 'He can be contacted at
' when the mutual 'fund . is typically make ·. annual took place earlier in the · attyjamesrhenry@hot•going up in value , but can , capital gains distributions . year . whiCh he never saw mail_com,
or
•also impose income taxes whether , or no.t they accrued to his account . If www.OhioEstatePlanning
: in a year when the fund redeem any. shares for your investment lies · in a Solutions.com).
· has gone down in value. .
additional income . Many taxable account , rather
: When the markets take equity fun,ds have turnover than in a 401 (k) plan or
~~waM•-.-mn.-~~~.Na~~~,~--~
· an extended downturn rates averaging ove~ 80 . othe.r tax-favored retire: after several years of sus- percent annually, meaning ment account, these · pay· tained growth (as they did that management ·.sells ments are generally taxFemale and under years of age? ·
,
: in 2000-02). fund man- over SO ·percent of their able.
Prior to investing a sig: agers will often resort. to · fund's · holdings every
Underinsured or Uninsured?

NOW
PA,.IEN,I!

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BY JAMES HENRY

paymont~om

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How to pay Capital Gains Tax in a down market

SUNDAY PUZZLER
Hunan trunk
6 Cotton fallric
11 Fen sick
16 Kind of engine
21 Word of greeting
22 Texas landmark
23 Orchard'
24 Main artery
2s Stan part
·
26. Doctors' - oath.
28 Cry over - milk
29 First Woman
30 Floalng leo mua
31 Bom (Fr.)

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BY JAMES SANDS

ACROSS

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The Earl Ne!f Pediatric Fund at Hplzer Medical Center continues to be supported erithusiastlcally by area businesses and organizations. The Pediatric Fund, in existence·for 30 years, has supplied needed toys, equipment and
. entertainment to the thousands of pediatric patients.who have ~ceived care on Holzer Medical Center's Pediatric
Unit. October ,sponsors are Elks Lodge 107 and Irvin's Glass: Elks Lodge 107 is represented .In the photo above at
, left by Exalted Grand Ruler .;Tommy Johns(ln, and Linda \Jeffers-Lester, Fund DevelOpment Manager, Holzer
Foundation.: Irvin's Glass, is represented ,in the photo above at right Marttla Ellis and Metlnda Bruinfield. The entire
staff Clf .Holzer.Medjcaf Center joins in eXpressing their gratltud~, ·along with the.· young children and their families; for
these genet,ous c.ontributio,l)s;to .the Earl Nelf Pediatric Fund..Anyone who would like lllpre information or is inter. il![!ted in making a donation may contact Linda Jeffers-Lester'l!t the Holzer Foundation (740) 446-5217, .; · .·•

MIDDLEPORT - The armed services and veter- ll displayed, including original · newspaper accounts
Riverbend Arts Council will · ans.
host "An Evening .at the
All tickets will be sold in from the war years. The
Canteen, a · USO-style advance and are available orchestra, with two vocalVeterans Day celebration on now at King Hardware in ists , will feature music from
Saturday, Nov. I from 6 to Middleport and Clark's the 1940s and 1950s.
10 p,m. at the Arts Council Je~ry Store ' in Pomeroy.
There wi II be a pfize
facility · in the Masonic Admission is $25 per per- awarded for the best 1940s
Temple. ·
·
son With a .reduced price of style or military attire.
The event is sponsored by .
The event includes din- $20 for military personnel
Farmers Bank, Wal-Mart,
ner, catered by Millie's and veterans. '
Clinic ,
King
Restaurant of Middleport,
The Arts Council facility Holzer
Sturbois
followed by listening and at 2.90 N. Second Ave., ·Hardware,
dancing music by The Jay Middleport, will be decorat- Electric, Danielle's, Peoples
Flippin Orchestra. The ed in a usa theme. There Bank, Bob's Market and
McDaniel
orchestra will also present a will be many items from · Anderson
musical tribute to the U.S. World War I and World War Funeral Home.

War when a lane was set reP.ort said that ''nobody
up in the Garnett House.
wtll have to be buried as
Duckpin bowling made the resultof the fracas."
For about 20 .years in
Later in 1933, Gallipolis
two
different
eras, its second appearance in
. Gallipolis had a duckpin .Gallipolis starting in sent some teams to ·the
·
Duckpin .
.howling .alley. Duckpins 1933, an&lt;;! remained popii- Midwest
Jar
throughout
much
of
the
.
Bowling
Congress
held in ·
:are much smaller and
:!ighter than regular bowl~ 1930s. Bowling seas'on Circleville . .On hand !bat
lasted
from week were teams from
ing
pins, · weighing here
between I and 2 ·kilo- September to· about April. eight towns in Indiana and
::grams. '"While regular By DeceiJlber of 1933, Ohio teams from Celina,
:bowliJ;~g pins today · are Col. H.B. Ecker had set London, Eaton, Gallipolis,
:about 15 mches high· and the record for high score Cin:;Ieville,and Greenfield.
It was in 1933 when
ebout. 8.5 inches in diame- ·in town with . a 210 .
l,er, duckpins are 8.4 inch- Previously, only two men women ent~red the, sport
lis high and only 5 inches had ever broken 200 a11d of bowling. On~ ad from
1o diameter. The ball used they are Bob Jones and Jhe Recreation Rooin in
duckpin bowling gener- Bill Packard, who together the Womeldorff-Th·omas
aUy wetghs between 2 and owned an alley.
bui1ding · that year chat~ pounds and ·bas no holes
It is interesting to note lenged women to bring
!like the regular bowling that if Ecker remained as their bridge club down to
~all.
the high scorer throughout the alley. A w·omen 's
:; Scoring is similar to the whole season, his league Was formed and in
~owling, except in duck- reward was a fruitcake and the eatly going Mary
. :Pins, a person gets three a $1 gold piece. Gallipolis Kraus, who averaged
&gt;balls to knock down all the was the fourth du~kpin about 96, was the premier
:,Pins. Strikes and spares establishment begun by womeQ's bowler. The
?-re figured much like reg- Jones and Packard, with Tribune referred to Marv
~Jar llowling but if a per: previous · alleys
in as 3: "dyed in the wool~'
son knocks down all the Waverly, Hillsboro and bowler.
'
:pins with three balls, they Eaton.
Regular bowling in ,
»nly g~() points with no
Teams were established Gallipolis has, been done
;parry-over to · the next here and a league formed besides in the places menjrame.
. .
in 1933. One match pitted tioned already, at 41 Court
~ According to the reco~ds Evans Grocery
against St., in the Clen(Jenin
~f the Duckpin Bowling · Womeldorff-Thomas. The building (stood where the
i::ongress, the highest high score for the first Colony Theater is now),
:Score ever recorded in team was 118 and for the the olq Elks building· on
:duckpins is 279 set by latter ·team, 133. The aver- Secona (bur(led down in
Pete
Signor Jr.
in age score of all the bowlers 1958), the Notter building
Newington, Conn: The on the two teams was about on Court Street and at the
high series in duckpins is ·98 per game. There were current site on State Route
655.
two leagues in 1933,34, an 7. Duckpin bowling is ·still
· According to legend, it industrial league ·and a ~trong in the Washington
was baseball men John . merchants league.
D.C. and. Baltimore area,.
McGraw and · Wilbert
Around Christmas time as well as in Rhode Island
Robinson , both on the . when the regular league and Connecticut.
early Baltimore Orioles took a break, two teams
(James Sands is a speteam .from 1900, who called Army and lllavy cial'correspondentfor the
:carved
down
older were formed . One piece in Sunday Times-Sentinel.
banged-up bowling· pins the Tribune read: "Army He can be contacted by
and invented duckpin Bowlers ~ink Gob Five in writing to Box 92;
bowling . McGraw, later Hard Battle ." The . news· Norwich, Ohio 43767.)
manager of the New York
Giants and an avid duck
hunter, said that the pareddown pins scattered like a
flock of ·ducks , .hence the
name .
It was said that McGraw
and Robinson had cut the
pins down to play . two
games popular with bored
·baseball players - "Back
. Five" and "Cocked Hat."
In "Back Five," only the 5,
7, 8, 9 and I0 pins are
used . For "Cocked Hat"
one .would use the I 7 and
Jll pins:
'
· Duckpin bowling spread
from Baltimore and in
:1927 ,
the
Duckpin
Bowling Congress was
born. Gallipolis had duckpin lanes on Secdnd
Avenue in the . 19l0s. lhe
first mention . of regular
llowling in the Qld French
Specializing in Hypertension allll Kidney Disellse
~ity came during the Civil
Referrals Welcome
Call today for an appointment at
· 304-675-1500 or 304·529-2090

: '.

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RN

GALLI A COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

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' ;;./if-/oj?':'

and often yellow to white in
color. They can also appear
to be the same color as thl:
hair. making it more diffiAs parents and grandpar- cult to detect. The lice hatch
ents, one concern with every seven to 10 days and
school being back ·in Session ·cannot survive more than
is the risk of coming in con- two days wit]lout a host.
with · · head-lice .
tact
Infestation is common with- There are several steps to
in school s, child-care cen- follow to rid of lice.
ters, and the households of . Others lD direct conta~t
. , eC ted Ch'I ld ren, . W'th.
bedchecked
for. lice
tn1
I tn . should
d
' j' · ~
'
the United States, an esti- . an . treale ' m est~tion IS
mated 6 to 12 million cases, p~esenL Clothmg and beddmg Items should be
occur each year.
Signs and symptoms of washed m hot water and
head-lice infe station are : dned m a dryer, sweep fursensation of something nnure and carpet, a nd place
moving in the hair, itchini stuffed animals m plastic
difficulty sleeping, and bags . . for two weeks.
sores on the head from Chemtcal treatment can .be
scratching.·
Diagnosis purchased at · yo ur local
should be made by a health pha~acy . Be sure to follow
care provider. local health d1recttons on how to apply,
department , or .someone that amount . of time to leave
has been trained to identify product m the hair, and how
'lice infestation .
oftenproduct can be reapThe head louse is a para- plied.
.
sitic insect that can be found
Then use. a mt removal
on the eyebrows, eyelashes. c?mb to remov~ maJOI'IIY of
, and more commonly on the . mts . )&lt;epeat thts ·step untll
head of its victim. The y all m!s are removed , you
cannot jump or fly. Thev may need to pull some mt~
crawl and are spread off withyour fing~rs.
through direct contact. Lack . Treatment . kits are now
of personal hygiene or available after dt~gnm•ts at
cleanliness in the hollle the Galha County Heallh
does not cause you to get ,Department at no cost , ho":, '
head"lice. Lice feed on ever. don~tmn s are apprecihuman blood and must aled to help maintain th.e
puncture the skin , which supply of treatJ!!ent kits. : .
causes an allergic reaction, . We waul~ hke to thank
Galhpohs ' Jun10r
leading to an itching sensa- the
lion. The average louse lays · Women's Club and the
150 eggs. better known as Gallia County Board . of
"nits," within the 30-day Health for thm contnbunon
lifecycle.
·
to. help supply the treatment
· Nits can be confused with kits.
AmeriCan
dandruff, scabs , or hairResources:
spray droplets. Nits arc A,cademy of Pediatric s,
firmly atlached to the hair · http://www.aap .org Centers
Control ,
shaft . close to the. scalp , are for . Disease
oval in shape , very small, http://www.cdc.gov.
Bv BRENDA BRYAN,

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Sunday,Cktober26,2oo8

. Head lice concern for kids, adultS

B.P.O. ELKS NO.t07 .

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wtvw.gollipoliJslrillldJillrsing.com

A health fair will be held during this time with free screenings, health
Information, stress relief, and refreshments available. Bring a friend
and Celebrate Women I

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~iunbap limd -itnttntl

YOUR HOMETOWN

PageC2

.'

CoMMUNITY

iunba~ lime~ -ienttnel

Sunday, October 26, 20~

P~diatric
.

Fund spo.,tsors

~ r••&amp;;wm.llltl1 r.~M

IA..L 11.-tt ~tli.r, fi&lt;Jt.i

HeLZER·
M ~ D- I&lt;"At CfNTJ: It

~~~k '~(}tt!
IRVIN'S GLASS SERV.ICE

£(C
,1,

y

' .. '

Duckpin bowling once popular in Gallipolis

'

:m

.
•

32H~store

34 Devour

35 Meetirg (allbr.)
37 Smalll~and
311 Narrow street
40 Qty.
4~ Dir. letlers
42 Round dance
44 Subd~on developer
46 Where Cuzco is
49 Dais
52 Go afier geme
53 GooJ
55 Zoo deniiens
' 59 Ward off
60 Wheal
· 61 T)TII1nical ruler
64 Arche Bunker's .Ole
65 Good fonune
. 66 Fo.SIIuel .
67 LKJ&gt;id measure
68 Rocky hill
70 City in Norway
71 Anrox
72 Dupe
73 Muocal·group
74 Shine
76 Term in golf
·77 C\ll-de·sec (2 wds.)
79- Moines
.60 Adams or Falco
82 Reject an Heir
84 Ladder part
85 Pummel ·
86 Insubstantial
87 Egyplan goddess ·
88 Quick look
90 Gamblirg town
91 Actor - J&lt;ilmer
92 ~ace forskaling
(2wds.)
95 Decompose

J·

96 KndofseW
98 Space
· 100 Top pertmmer
101 ~a~ng· card
t02 Comella- Skinner
104 Pasture
1OS Animal den
106 Cad
. 107 Grow weary
108 lmpaaove
110 Go at a leisurely pace
112 Judge ·
113 Puon COfi'O!s to 114 Poem
116 Jump
117 Ue In arrl&gt;uah
118 Old a gardening job
119 Tengle
121 Ordered olliclally
124 Big increase 125 Unde128 Charged particle
130 ,SI1!g
131 Malle a rrnstake .
132 Sharp projection
13ll Sci'&lt;lol org.
137 -, sweat and tears
' 139'-abo I'
140 Sale or ~s1rada
141 Nothing .
142 Gamut
144 Went ~yond
lhelmits of
147 -and well
149 Fors~n
150 Bar legely
151 For the ~(presently)
152 Exodus leader
153 Squads
154 College VIPS
155 Hns
156 Furthars

· DOWN
1 Weedy plants

2 SoUrce of oil
a No bed of-

f' 5.4ThMn
Scull

6 A flower
7 George or T.S.
.. 8 Neck ROrt
· 9 lle&gt;11kin .
10 Like some niglts
tt Saweyeltieye
. t2 Le~n or Gershwin
t 3 Oodles
t4 Peron
tS Leave In
t8 Cummerbund
17 Splnnlrg toy ,
t8 WllS1em Indians
19 One of the Tnans
. 20 Dull SIJrtace
27 Prisoner's room
30 Ranch
33 Pace
36 Avoid. as
responslbifties
38 Female relative.
39 Aleavening
43 Not fashiolialile
· 44 Bovine animal
· '45 Tear
47 "Norma-·
48 Nullify
49 Grew wan
50 Seed·lti-be
51 - of Independence
52 Clet haallhy again
54 Variegated
•
56 Temperament
57 Attorney· Cut off, as fleece
60 Oak or ~e. e.g.
61 Noise
62 Atlempt
· 63 Shoe part
66 Bel:ome roore solid
67 Of tountry life
69Extreme
72 Engage in swordplay
73 Colfe8 or jelly
74 Lass
75 S~inflint
78 Demand

seem

sa

83 Knighti title.
85 l nh~aJ, .
88 Adozen dozen
89 Get·rich.quick game
92 PartK:ular
, . 93 Effrontery
·
94 Struck a c8itain way
97 Dweiirg (allbr I .
99 Lubricate
100 Try lti find
103 Godown
t 05 Went at an easy P"cce ·
106 Animal group
107Tom·
109 Time perkld (ebbr.) •
111 Pole
112 CI!Al Charge
113 Sign on amarquee
115l.Bbor
.
117 Dies clown
.
118 Sausage rve&lt;~ent
120 Sounded ahom
. 122 Potato chips, English

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123
on "'rfllUS
124 Wives·lti-be
125 Jack in arh)lrie
126 ·-- ofTwoCnies'
127 Craze
129 Scandinavian
131 Build
133 Cordlallavoring
134 Boll .
135 Co.nsecrate
137 AJtlect&lt; and Kingsley
138 Computer input
t40 Best orFerber
143 Jewel
145 - sequnur
146 The pr.esent
147 MDs org ·
148 llYow high

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Resident of Gallia, Jackson or Vinton County?

Arbors at Gallipolis
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Providing

79 Act

81 Line lhro14! a drcle

.

(abbr.)

FREE Mammograms

.

Saturday, November 8
Holzer Center for Cancer Care

Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgery, I came to Arbors at
·Gallipolis for Rehabilit~tion. 1am
. 'so impressed with the effiCiency of the staff.

•. Subhash Kumar, MD.

You must makf;! an appointment for this special offer and meet
the criteria mentioned above. Space is limited, call today!

740.448.5474 or 1.800.821.3880
I

Free mammograms are .
provided by
Holzer Center for Cancer Care
and Holzer Clinic
through funds received by the
Susan G. Komen Foundation.

Whi::n 1 first arrived at Arbors at Gallipolis

I did not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now, thanks to the w0nderful
therapy and nursing staff, I have returned home.

,

'~ HO LZER

FN0.\1 Ol I&lt; F \ .ll/1.} /0 l Ol 1&lt;.\

Arbors at (ja({iJ!ofis

•

PLEASANT VALLEY DIALYSIS, LLC

Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center
740-446-711 2

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•

•

•

'''·',' i " '

. CANCER CARE

'

·

170 Pinecrest Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631

3683 Ohio River Road • Pt. Pleasant, WV

.

.

Need a Mammogram?

Rehabilitation Back To Home!

'

.

the selling of ~ppreciated .year, replacing them with nificanl amount of money
stock s purchased years other stocks (and some- in a fund in coming weeks,
Many of you may earlier, in order to gener- times ev~n buying the il may be wise lo check to
already be thinking from ate gains to offset those same stocks back after see if the fund is likely to
the title of this article that losses. This has the effect Jan .. !), of!en in an attempt be making a year-endpay·.something here doesn't · of minimi zing the fund's to beat th eir category out, and, if so, how much.
: make sense. Guess· what, I published loss-in-value at averages. Because of this , Many funds will post this
.: agree . . It doesn 't rtiake year end, allowing the mutual funds rarely pro~ information on ' their web• sens.e to pay capital gains fund lo claim that it .was vide the 15 percent long- sites . For investors who
· tax m a down market. But "only" down, say 9 per- term capital gains tax rate don't want to navigate
. : yet, many of you will do cent on the year while its that many claim their these confusing tax laws,
. :exactly that as the very peer group was down an owners might receive.
tax-deferred investments,
. : mutual funds that have average of 14 percent. · The repoL .. ble gains such as equity-indexed
. : underperformed for you The unsuspecting share- that a mutual fund share- annuiiies, offer a good
. all year begin tu make holder of this fund holder must pay taxes on solution. B,ecause · these
: their year-end capital receives his Dec. 31 slate- each year is ·exclusively a investments
are
tax
: gains tax distributions.
menl; sees· his account is function of how long the deferred ,' the investor can
: I don't think I'm letting. down 9 percent, assumes fund manages holds 'the better control his or her
· the cal out of the bag when incorrectly that "at least" underlying investments he tax liability by contro.lling
.
.
: I say that it's been a hor- ·he'll owe no taxes on his or she purchases, an\1 has~
: rendou.s year for mo.st "loss" come April . 15 . almost nothing to do with the limmg of makmg laxhow long the shareholder able withdrawals.,
~ mutual fund investors. The Three weeks later, he
As . always, if you are
:average U.S. stock fund is receives a Form 1099-Div has owned his or her fund.
, down 33 percent through from his mutual fund com - This myriad of tax laws concerned over the appli: Monday , accdrding to pany showing several can result in an.income tax · cation of these lax law ~ to
: Mort'1ingstar lnc. Ouch! thousand . · dollars
of trap for individuals pur- s our investments, be sure
:Despite these lackluster reportable income. The . chasing funds late in the to di scu ss your tax liabili· re sul.t s-. many investors reason for this is the year. Because mutual ty with a qualifi ed invest'will end up paying large longer-held stocks , which funds must distribute real - ment professional.
:tax bills on their losing the fund manager sold .to ized gains to fund owners . (James Henry is an
•funds , The reason behind reduce his fund's year-end each year, fund companies . attorney and .insurance
:the counterintuitive pay - loss were sold at a gain usually do so in November agent licensed in the
·states of Ohio and West
· ment of taxes ·on a fund (over · their original pur- or December.
.:
An
uninformed
investor
Virginia. · He is the
: that .loses overall value chase p'r'iCe year earlier), a
: lies with the rules ·govern- gain that .is now ~eportable . purchasing silth. a fund founder of French City
Planning
: ing year-end capital gains and taxable to the mutual during the last quarter of Estate
· diitributions .
Mutual fund -owqer . even though the year may place himself Solutions, LLC, with
.focated ' in ·
: funds not only require his statement shows his at a tax disadvantage . by offices
taking on some partial tax Gallipolis and Columbus.
• income reporting (and the account balance down.
· resulling annual taxation)
Mutual fund managers liability for gains which 'He can be contacted at
' when the mutual 'fund . is typically make ·. annual took place earlier in the · attyjamesrhenry@hot•going up in value , but can , capital gains distributions . year . whiCh he never saw mail_com,
or
•also impose income taxes whether , or no.t they accrued to his account . If www.OhioEstatePlanning
: in a year when the fund redeem any. shares for your investment lies · in a Solutions.com).
· has gone down in value. .
additional income . Many taxable account , rather
: When the markets take equity fun,ds have turnover than in a 401 (k) plan or
~~waM•-.-mn.-~~~.Na~~~,~--~
· an extended downturn rates averaging ove~ 80 . othe.r tax-favored retire: after several years of sus- percent annually, meaning ment account, these · pay· tained growth (as they did that management ·.sells ments are generally taxFemale and under years of age? ·
,
: in 2000-02). fund man- over SO ·percent of their able.
Prior to investing a sig: agers will often resort. to · fund's · holdings every
Underinsured or Uninsured?

NOW
PA,.IEN,I!

•

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.

BY JAMES HENRY

paymont~om

•

,' .

' ~- :; ' '}. ,,

How to pay Capital Gains Tax in a down market

SUNDAY PUZZLER
Hunan trunk
6 Cotton fallric
11 Fen sick
16 Kind of engine
21 Word of greeting
22 Texas landmark
23 Orchard'
24 Main artery
2s Stan part
·
26. Doctors' - oath.
28 Cry over - milk
29 First Woman
30 Floalng leo mua
31 Bom (Fr.)

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BY JAMES SANDS

ACROSS

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The Earl Ne!f Pediatric Fund at Hplzer Medical Center continues to be supported erithusiastlcally by area businesses and organizations. The Pediatric Fund, in existence·for 30 years, has supplied needed toys, equipment and
. entertainment to the thousands of pediatric patients.who have ~ceived care on Holzer Medical Center's Pediatric
Unit. October ,sponsors are Elks Lodge 107 and Irvin's Glass: Elks Lodge 107 is represented .In the photo above at
, left by Exalted Grand Ruler .;Tommy Johns(ln, and Linda \Jeffers-Lester, Fund DevelOpment Manager, Holzer
Foundation.: Irvin's Glass, is represented ,in the photo above at right Marttla Ellis and Metlnda Bruinfield. The entire
staff Clf .Holzer.Medjcaf Center joins in eXpressing their gratltud~, ·along with the.· young children and their families; for
these genet,ous c.ontributio,l)s;to .the Earl Nelf Pediatric Fund..Anyone who would like lllpre information or is inter. il![!ted in making a donation may contact Linda Jeffers-Lester'l!t the Holzer Foundation (740) 446-5217, .; · .·•

MIDDLEPORT - The armed services and veter- ll displayed, including original · newspaper accounts
Riverbend Arts Council will · ans.
host "An Evening .at the
All tickets will be sold in from the war years. The
Canteen, a · USO-style advance and are available orchestra, with two vocalVeterans Day celebration on now at King Hardware in ists , will feature music from
Saturday, Nov. I from 6 to Middleport and Clark's the 1940s and 1950s.
10 p,m. at the Arts Council Je~ry Store ' in Pomeroy.
There wi II be a pfize
facility · in the Masonic Admission is $25 per per- awarded for the best 1940s
Temple. ·
·
son With a .reduced price of style or military attire.
The event is sponsored by .
The event includes din- $20 for military personnel
Farmers Bank, Wal-Mart,
ner, catered by Millie's and veterans. '
Clinic ,
King
Restaurant of Middleport,
The Arts Council facility Holzer
Sturbois
followed by listening and at 2.90 N. Second Ave., ·Hardware,
dancing music by The Jay Middleport, will be decorat- Electric, Danielle's, Peoples
Flippin Orchestra. The ed in a usa theme. There Bank, Bob's Market and
McDaniel
orchestra will also present a will be many items from · Anderson
musical tribute to the U.S. World War I and World War Funeral Home.

War when a lane was set reP.ort said that ''nobody
up in the Garnett House.
wtll have to be buried as
Duckpin bowling made the resultof the fracas."
For about 20 .years in
Later in 1933, Gallipolis
two
different
eras, its second appearance in
. Gallipolis had a duckpin .Gallipolis starting in sent some teams to ·the
·
Duckpin .
.howling .alley. Duckpins 1933, an&lt;;! remained popii- Midwest
Jar
throughout
much
of
the
.
Bowling
Congress
held in ·
:are much smaller and
:!ighter than regular bowl~ 1930s. Bowling seas'on Circleville . .On hand !bat
lasted
from week were teams from
ing
pins, · weighing here
between I and 2 ·kilo- September to· about April. eight towns in Indiana and
::grams. '"While regular By DeceiJlber of 1933, Ohio teams from Celina,
:bowliJ;~g pins today · are Col. H.B. Ecker had set London, Eaton, Gallipolis,
:about 15 mches high· and the record for high score Cin:;Ieville,and Greenfield.
It was in 1933 when
ebout. 8.5 inches in diame- ·in town with . a 210 .
l,er, duckpins are 8.4 inch- Previously, only two men women ent~red the, sport
lis high and only 5 inches had ever broken 200 a11d of bowling. On~ ad from
1o diameter. The ball used they are Bob Jones and Jhe Recreation Rooin in
duckpin bowling gener- Bill Packard, who together the Womeldorff-Th·omas
aUy wetghs between 2 and owned an alley.
bui1ding · that year chat~ pounds and ·bas no holes
It is interesting to note lenged women to bring
!like the regular bowling that if Ecker remained as their bridge club down to
~all.
the high scorer throughout the alley. A w·omen 's
:; Scoring is similar to the whole season, his league Was formed and in
~owling, except in duck- reward was a fruitcake and the eatly going Mary
. :Pins, a person gets three a $1 gold piece. Gallipolis Kraus, who averaged
&gt;balls to knock down all the was the fourth du~kpin about 96, was the premier
:,Pins. Strikes and spares establishment begun by womeQ's bowler. The
?-re figured much like reg- Jones and Packard, with Tribune referred to Marv
~Jar llowling but if a per: previous · alleys
in as 3: "dyed in the wool~'
son knocks down all the Waverly, Hillsboro and bowler.
'
:pins with three balls, they Eaton.
Regular bowling in ,
»nly g~() points with no
Teams were established Gallipolis has, been done
;parry-over to · the next here and a league formed besides in the places menjrame.
. .
in 1933. One match pitted tioned already, at 41 Court
~ According to the reco~ds Evans Grocery
against St., in the Clen(Jenin
~f the Duckpin Bowling · Womeldorff-Thomas. The building (stood where the
i::ongress, the highest high score for the first Colony Theater is now),
:Score ever recorded in team was 118 and for the the olq Elks building· on
:duckpins is 279 set by latter ·team, 133. The aver- Secona (bur(led down in
Pete
Signor Jr.
in age score of all the bowlers 1958), the Notter building
Newington, Conn: The on the two teams was about on Court Street and at the
high series in duckpins is ·98 per game. There were current site on State Route
655.
two leagues in 1933,34, an 7. Duckpin bowling is ·still
· According to legend, it industrial league ·and a ~trong in the Washington
was baseball men John . merchants league.
D.C. and. Baltimore area,.
McGraw and · Wilbert
Around Christmas time as well as in Rhode Island
Robinson , both on the . when the regular league and Connecticut.
early Baltimore Orioles took a break, two teams
(James Sands is a speteam .from 1900, who called Army and lllavy cial'correspondentfor the
:carved
down
older were formed . One piece in Sunday Times-Sentinel.
banged-up bowling· pins the Tribune read: "Army He can be contacted by
and invented duckpin Bowlers ~ink Gob Five in writing to Box 92;
bowling . McGraw, later Hard Battle ." The . news· Norwich, Ohio 43767.)
manager of the New York
Giants and an avid duck
hunter, said that the pareddown pins scattered like a
flock of ·ducks , .hence the
name .
It was said that McGraw
and Robinson had cut the
pins down to play . two
games popular with bored
·baseball players - "Back
. Five" and "Cocked Hat."
In "Back Five," only the 5,
7, 8, 9 and I0 pins are
used . For "Cocked Hat"
one .would use the I 7 and
Jll pins:
'
· Duckpin bowling spread
from Baltimore and in
:1927 ,
the
Duckpin
Bowling Congress was
born. Gallipolis had duckpin lanes on Secdnd
Avenue in the . 19l0s. lhe
first mention . of regular
llowling in the Qld French
Specializing in Hypertension allll Kidney Disellse
~ity came during the Civil
Referrals Welcome
Call today for an appointment at
· 304-675-1500 or 304·529-2090

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GALLI A COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

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' ;;./if-/oj?':'

and often yellow to white in
color. They can also appear
to be the same color as thl:
hair. making it more diffiAs parents and grandpar- cult to detect. The lice hatch
ents, one concern with every seven to 10 days and
school being back ·in Session ·cannot survive more than
is the risk of coming in con- two days wit]lout a host.
with · · head-lice .
tact
Infestation is common with- There are several steps to
in school s, child-care cen- follow to rid of lice.
ters, and the households of . Others lD direct conta~t
. , eC ted Ch'I ld ren, . W'th.
bedchecked
for. lice
tn1
I tn . should
d
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'
the United States, an esti- . an . treale ' m est~tion IS
mated 6 to 12 million cases, p~esenL Clothmg and beddmg Items should be
occur each year.
Signs and symptoms of washed m hot water and
head-lice infe station are : dned m a dryer, sweep fursensation of something nnure and carpet, a nd place
moving in the hair, itchini stuffed animals m plastic
difficulty sleeping, and bags . . for two weeks.
sores on the head from Chemtcal treatment can .be
scratching.·
Diagnosis purchased at · yo ur local
should be made by a health pha~acy . Be sure to follow
care provider. local health d1recttons on how to apply,
department , or .someone that amount . of time to leave
has been trained to identify product m the hair, and how
'lice infestation .
oftenproduct can be reapThe head louse is a para- plied.
.
sitic insect that can be found
Then use. a mt removal
on the eyebrows, eyelashes. c?mb to remov~ maJOI'IIY of
, and more commonly on the . mts . )&lt;epeat thts ·step untll
head of its victim. The y all m!s are removed , you
cannot jump or fly. Thev may need to pull some mt~
crawl and are spread off withyour fing~rs.
through direct contact. Lack . Treatment . kits are now
of personal hygiene or available after dt~gnm•ts at
cleanliness in the hollle the Galha County Heallh
does not cause you to get ,Department at no cost , ho":, '
head"lice. Lice feed on ever. don~tmn s are apprecihuman blood and must aled to help maintain th.e
puncture the skin , which supply of treatJ!!ent kits. : .
causes an allergic reaction, . We waul~ hke to thank
Galhpohs ' Jun10r
leading to an itching sensa- the
lion. The average louse lays · Women's Club and the
150 eggs. better known as Gallia County Board . of
"nits," within the 30-day Health for thm contnbunon
lifecycle.
·
to. help supply the treatment
· Nits can be confused with kits.
AmeriCan
dandruff, scabs , or hairResources:
spray droplets. Nits arc A,cademy of Pediatric s,
firmly atlached to the hair · http://www.aap .org Centers
Control ,
shaft . close to the. scalp , are for . Disease
oval in shape , very small, http://www.cdc.gov.
Bv BRENDA BRYAN,

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Sunday,Cktober26,2oo8

. Head lice concern for kids, adultS

B.P.O. ELKS NO.t07 .

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wtvw.gollipoliJslrillldJillrsing.com

A health fair will be held during this time with free screenings, health
Information, stress relief, and refreshments available. Bring a friend
and Celebrate Women I

�&amp;unba, Uttm~ ·ienttntl

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

COMMUNITY

Sunday,~ber26,2oo8

Mr. and Mrs. Justin Myers

Scites-Myers wedding
(i A LI .IPOLIS -

Laum Danielle Scites and Justin Cole
Mye r' were united in tnaniage on Friday. July 4, 2008.
Til.; our door evening ceremony took place at the home of the
bride \ grandparents. James and Louise Fraley, with Ryan
McKee orticiating.
The bride is t!Je daughter of Deborah Fraley and Timothy
Scitcs . both of. Gallipolis. She is the granddaughter of James
and Louise Fraley of Bidwell, Barbi\111 and Bob Stonecypher of
Columbus. and Jack and Barb Scites of Ravenswood, W.Va.
The ~rtxm1 is the son of Jilye and Jeannie Myers of
G ui'lipn~ s . He is the grandson cif Ronald and Nancy Myers of
C rown City. the late Fmncis Myers of Scottown, Marvin
Gindlesburger uf Gallipolis; and the late Mildred
Gindlesburt:er of Gallipolis.
The bride was escorted by her father. She wore a traditional
s ir&lt;~ pbs A-line gown in ivory with a lace overlay of beads and
J~&lt;~rb. with a satin champagne-colored bow around the waistl.inc . and with a chapel-length train. ,She carried a bouquet of
~vory and sonja-orange roses.
,.
·
.· Maids honor were Stefanie Scites and Rebekah Scites, sisters of the bride. Bridesmaids were Katie McCalla, Teresa
Harnson and Morgen Newill , all friends of the bride. They
wore black strdpless tea-length gowns with a champagne coll.lred sash. Their bouquets were made up of sonja and jade roses
with lavender hydrangeas . .
: Rower girls were Olivia Everett, niece of the groom, and
Katie Queen. friend of the bride. They each wore ivory gowns
-.\:ith a champa~e colored sash, and dropped ivory rose petals
down the aisle.
:·Serving as best man was Jaye Myers, father of the groom.
t.rnomsmen were Josh Myers, cousin of the groom, Garland
Monceaux , friend of the groom. AJ. Keeton, cousin of the
~nxun . and Andrew Holcomb, friend of the.groom. Ring bear&lt;!r was Aidan Willis, cousin of the bride. They wore black tuxe4os with cafe-colored vest and tie with a sonja rose boutonniere. while the groom had an ivory vest and tie with an ivory
Bputonniere.
:· Music for the ceremony was performed by the Appalachian
Strings. and pianist Jarod Myers, brother of the groom.
An outdoor tented reception followed the ceremony at the
Rome of the bride's mother. Guests enjoyed dinner and dancijtg. along wit.h a display of firew01t.s.
'
-The couple honeymooned in Cabo San Lucas,Mex.ico. They
ROW reside in Gallipolis.

,,r

Buck anniversary

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~-1-'.h,-"-'''--'I'P
&amp;. i i /'

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Mr. and Mrs. Justin Robson

All You Need
To Know

About

Diamonds•.

Andrew Holcomb and Rebekah Scltes

~cites-Holcomb engagement
•

GALLIPOLIS - Deborah Fraley and Timothy Scites of
Gallipolis. and Lee and Janet Holcomb of Gallipolis are·
pleased to announce the engagement and upcoming martoiagc of their chil dren. Rebekah Jayne Scites to Andrew
l:&lt;'c Hol comb.
~ Rebekah is the granddaughter of James and Louise
fral ey of Bidwell . Barbara and Bob Stonecypher of
C::Oiumbus . and Jack and . Barb Scites of Ravenswood ,

S tif'?4

OHIO

'VAllEY · 'I

W.Vu.

·Andrew is the grandson of Ch arles and Arleda Fraley of
eoint Pleasant, W.Va., and E. Lee and Luella Holcomb of
9 allipoli s.
· The bride-elect is a 2007 graduate of Gallia Academy
Aigh School and is currentl y ' tudying early childhood edueation at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
C'nmmunirY. College.
· :Tiw e rnn m-dcct j, .a 2005 graduate of Ohio Valley
Chn· ti'"' School ;mel 2006 graduate of Buckeye Hill s
( arccr Center. Qhio Basic Peace Officer Academy. He is
c;:urreillly employed with the Gallipoli s City Police
tJcpat1mcnt .
~ Th e wedd ing will take place on Saturday, Dec. 27 , 2008.

~

CHECK

218 Upper lllvltr lid.
.O.IIIpolle, Ohio ·

rJT

''• Mile eout11 of
the Sliver •ridge

...2404
u.-.ccam.........1

Uo.... CI 711111.1 _.,.,

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CASHING~
&amp;lOAN ·
204

w. 2nd • .,...

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Ct 7111M 101

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS CI MYDAILY REGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.ya. - A comprehensive
guide to t)]e hauntings and
·paranormal tales in West
Virgit ia and along the Ohio
River can be found in the
newly revised Cry of the
Banshu.

,

Submitted photo

Randall Lucas of Gallipolis is shown with his awards for his.wood carving works. The larger one, 'Harris Hawk," was the Peoples Choice In the balloting of those who attended the
Battle Days Art Show, The piece was also judged Best ol Show in the professional division .

· .Area·artistsiwork
hon9~ed at _Battle Days Art Show
I

enced innumerable hauntings in and around
Riverview
Cemetery.
Parkersburg's version of the
twthght zone. And · of
course , always a motherlode
of tragedy and vtolence.
Mbundsville Prison has
supplied plenty of tales of
its tortured inhabitants.
The author's most amaz- ·.
ing encounter with ghosts.
and the one that forged her
interest, occurred when she
was 4 years old , growing up
m Doddndge County .. She
r~counts: "J was. chmbmg a
ht~l between If!Y grandmother s and aunt's houses and
felt someone staring at me .
Looking up, I saw two
Indian braves, in primitive
dress, looking right at me .
Terrified. J dropped to my
belly and crawled toward
the house. As I got up to
make a dash for the door. I
looked back and they were
still staring."
. Sheppard says she had
always been told she was
"Black Dutch ," when in fact
she . . ~as . one-etghth
A~encan Indtan.
, Later, through DNA testmg , I Iearned that. I was.
Shawnee. I truly believe the
!Wo Jndtans 1 saw that da~
were my ancestors, trymg to .
le.t me know who I was, and
to let me know 1 was one of
them," she concluded.
Sheppard 's attraction . for
and interest in the paranormal has continued to this
·day, and she spins her yams
about tragic Civil War
ghosts grieving women in
'

The stories originated
with author and tour guide
Susan Sheppard's ever-popular Haunted Parkersburg
Tours. Recently voted as the
No . 2 Top , Most Up and
Coming Paranormal Person
in the United States by the
Haunted America Tours ,
Sheppard delves into the
people and history behind
the ghosts. She also reveals
how to know if your house
is haunted and the J~ most
likely places to find phantoms.
·
·
·
Included in the book are
tales of the phantom from
the shores of Scotland and
·Ireland called the bartshee a
cursed omen of bad ne~s
and death that plagued early
s~ttlers; a m9re famous
West Virginia red-eyed portent of doom, the Mothman;
and · for the · first time in
print ' West Virginia encoun' 'th th ' ~
M ·
!ers WI
e m,amous en
m_Biaek a~ well as the temfymg Indnd Cold. ,
•
. Some of Sheppard s stones feature 20th cen~u~y
ghost~, such as the spmts
ha~ntmg . a Parkers~ur}!
radto .station or the , CI\Y s
histone
Blennerhassett
Hotel. Many of these
Sheppard has witnessed 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
firsthand. She has experi, .';f:~~~~JC} ,v~.t,,lr ~~·,.

white and haunted rail roads
and tunnel s. Jn addition .''"'
is a regular guest speah'r at
the
annual · Moth111a n
FestivaL
Sheppard said her sea,onk h
al Haunted Par er' urg
tours, ~htch began J2 year'
ago, sttll grow m populant y.
The ghost tours begin at the
Blennerhassett Hotel ;inti
involve a two-mile walk.
· "Near Halloween we get
enormo11s crowds. Peuple
frequently have actual pa ranormal ex periences whik
on the tour and someti me' .
..
.
..
get terrtftc ghost ptctu re,.
Sheppard sa td .

We offer the .
best ·prices · ·
protection .
for
'

and

an lndt'pend(r)l

the heir insur;,uu:e p mt&lt;"!C..'llon :n

' ompetitiv&lt; prices. We repm~·m

POINT . ,\ PLEASAN:r, Bumgarner of New Haven. sion, "Covered aridge" by
anlph&lt;fin '" !A'--,
W.Va. '- 'A record number W.Va., for "Desert Horses"; . llilu) Bumgarner · was.
· ,
in•ur•n"
of guests signed the register . third place to Larry Bragg awarded first place; second
ai the re~ent Battle Days Art for '"Summer Fruit"; and place went to Ryan Dickie
COn')pi!ni d,
Show, h~Id in -a new loca- honorable mention to · of Letart, W.Va., for "Do
including
.tlon, upon the invitation of Judaline Carroll for her You See What I See"; third
Auro-Owm••rs
Gallery 469 , on Main "Man in the Box."
place went to Maxine
Street, Point Pleasant.
In watercolors, first place McCormick of Point
Insurance
The show was held in went to . Janet Rtpper Pleasant for "Country
Company.
conjunction with the Battle Chambers of Winfteld, Bam."
Days observance, spon- W.Va., for "Pumpkin
which has rruly carm.xl. thr
In other media, drawing,
sored by the Bat~le Days Seeds"; second place to .the work ofEmalea Neal of
Memorial Committee, and "Passengers Pigeons" by ApPle Grove, W.Va:, was
several local and regional Dale Harless of Culloden, awarded first pia"~ for "The
. firms. Guests were .from a W.Va.; third place to Debbie Joker"; · seconcl place for
m:tny other ~d"~.uwtge): of .d&lt;}i r:f:
record numberofstates;one Kalt Sisson of Ripley,
b~..~il'lr..'is wHh an i o depmdc n ~
foreign n~t~on this year, and . W.Va., .for "Backyard "Interstate One',' by Sue
Tipton
of
(lallipolis;
and
many Cities and towns Butterflies''; and honorable·
insul&lt;!nct ~gen cy ·
·throughout the area:
. mention to Dale 'Harless for thiro place to Emalea Neal
for ·~Rock)i Penguins."
· A large portion of the art "Yellow Billed Cuckoo." ·
In .the carving division,
In other media, painting.
works entered in the sliow
were invited by Gallery 409 first place went to Bridget first place went to Jim
. BY DAVID BAUDER
for the pieces of art to Siephens of Point Pleasant Dabney for his huge
AP TELEVISION WAITER .
Intarsia,
"Milking
in
·'te
remain at the gallery for all for her work "Rebirth": secNEW YORK _ Tom
of October. Anyone who ond place also went to Pasture." Second place also
missed getting to the show Stephens for "Spring Mi-x"; went to ' Dabney, of Point Cruise took some shots at
during Battle Days still Janet Ripper Chambers won Pleasant, for
another Mart Lauer on Friday - this
have an opportunity to view · third
place for her Intarsia, "End of the Trail," time for fun. But Lauer got in
the works of mariy local "Rodanthe"; and honorable · and to Todd Groves of the last word. ·
artists and nearby areas.
mention went to Stacy Let'art for his wood carving,
The actor was ,a surprise
Guests were gtven ballots Sager of Bidwell for ·
"American Totem."
g!lest at a Friar's Club roast of " '~~~==~~~.J
to vote their choice in each "Droplets."
This year's Battle Days tlie "Today" show host. He
of the divisions of the ~how,
In other media, 'drawing, Art Show had 60 pieces of joined Martha Stewart, Brian
(1rofessional and amateur. first place went to Stacy artwork by 21 artists. This Williams, Katie Couric and
"rhe People's Choice ballots Sager for "Worn Out"; sec- was the I 5th year for the Meredith Vieira to sling
were tabulated and awards ond place for "Roberta and show and organizers invite insults, proving some of TV's
'Yere given at the close of Stan - Just Married" by artists over 18 years of age sunniest personalities could
IJie show orr Sunday after- Debbie Kalt Sisson; third to contact them if they have work blue.
.
noon.
place for "Sunny" by not entered the show aild
Cruise said .Lauer was the
: Awards in the profession- . Judaline Carroll; and honor- . wish to participate next , man "we wake up to every
a'l division were:
able mention to Mike Cogar . year. Entries are accepted ·morning - only because we
: Best of Show and of New Haven for "Chief from residents of West · had the channel on NBC
P,eople's Choice to Randaf! 'Joseph."
·
,
Virginia,
Ohio
and before we fell asleep." .
l:ucas of Gallipolis for his.
Awards in the amateur Kentucky, both professional . Three years ago, Cruise had
:;:ood carving, "Harris , division were as follows:
and amateur. Rod. Brand can berated Lauer on a "Today" ·
~awk." The artwork also
In oil or acrylic, first be contacted at (304) 675- show interview for suggesting
received first place. Another place went to . John
that psychiatric treatment
wciod carving . by Lucas, Bumgarner
of
Point 2977 ·
might help some patients. It
This . year's show was was the same year he jumped
'Xireen
Horned
Owl Pleasant for "Shawnee
feather," was awarded sec- Lake"; second place to sponsored by the Battle up and down on Oprah
qnd place and his wood Carolyn H. .Brown of · Days Memorial Committee, Wmfrey's talk show couch,.
arving "Tiger Swallowtail Ravenswood, W.Va., for her Ohio Valley Electric Corp.• excited about falling in love
utterfly," was given the "Winter By Moonlight"; · Kyger Creek Station, and with Katie Holmes.
Cruise joked that Lauer
ird place ribbon .
third . place to John American Electric Power: In oil or acrylic, first Bumgarner for "Red Barn"; Mountaineer Plant . Co- had given him some advice
place went to Larry Br~gg and honorable mention to chairs Rod Brand of before his interview with
df Point Pleasant forpamt: "Autumn . Shadows" by Southside, W.Va., and Rhea Winfrey: "Go crazy. Trust
'Diamotu:fs- !7\{_-q oft£
. Knight of Letart served and me. Trust me. People will
i)lg, · "Southern Royalty"; Carolyn H. Brown.
Jove you for it."
*cond place to Harold
In the water colors divi- hosted the show.

7

' I

'

' '

.o I.II ' , l\ II&gt;

Tom Cruise
. returns the favor
to Lauer

JOIN THE FRIENDLY STAFF
AT.

Hayman-Robson wedding
LONGBOTTOM - Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hayman of
Longbottom recently announced the engagement and marriage of their daughter, Angela Dal&gt;(n, to Justin Bryan
Robson.
The bride is a 2005 graduate of-Southern High School.
She is the granddaughter of Thelma a11d the late Tom
White, and the late Fred and Garnet Hayman.
. Th~ groom is a 200 I graduate of Meigs High School. He
is the son of Jerrena and Tim Ebersbach of Middleport, and
Kelly and Sherry Robson of Newark.f1e is the grandson of
lrene and the late Gerald Dill of Racine, Bonnie Ebersbach
of Middleport and Roy and the late Lavetta Robson,
Newark.
The open church ceremony took place yesterday at Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport. A costume Halloween reception followed at the home of the bride's parents m
Longbottom. ·

Sunday, October 26, 2008

"

Mothman, other legends featured in new book

Rio's Fine
Woodworking Program ·
celebrating 20 Years
RIO GRANDE - The ages from around the ·
of
Rio re.gion, as well as students .
University
Grande/Rio
Grande from Chicago, Texas and ·
Community Coltege is cel- Great Britain. Two of the ·
ebrating 20 years of train- students currently work forj:
ing students from around Holzer Clinic and are anx- ·,
the country to work in fine ious tu learn fine woodwoodworking.
working skills.
·
Over the last 20 years,
Rio Grande graduates in :
graduates of Rio !]rande 's fine woodworking work
fine woodworking pro- all across the country, and
gram are working m their many of them are at the
field all across the country, top of their profession.
"When I open up a
and many of them have
started their own business- woodworking magazine. J :
es. The program attracts see the work of some of •
students from all across our alumni on the pages:.
America, ~nd this year inside," Matson said.
even has a student from Several of the graduates
England.
also !lave their own Web
· ·Rio Grande formed the sites showing the work
. fine woodworking pro- they are doing.
gram 20 years ago when
"It's just nice to see what
some
of our graduates arc
BEU..EVILLE, w,.Va. _ Doug and Brenda Buck of there weren't many similar
Belleville will be celebrating their 25th wedding anniver- programs at colleges in the up to," Malson said.
All Rio Grande alumni
sary with friends and family from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, region. The program started in the Rio Grande are always welcome back
Nov. 2, 2008, at·an open house at iheir home in Belleville . . School of Technology's on campus, and several of
The Bucks were married Oct. 30, !983 , at the St. Paul Davis Career Center. After the .fine woodworking
United Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains.
J2 years, the program alumni wllo live in the
Brenda is the daughter of the late Sharon Ginther Boyles moved into its own build- . region have stopped into
and Phillip (Mary Lou) Boyles of Washington,W.Va. She. ing,
the
Fine the Fine Woodworking
enjoys being .a homemaker and mother and likes sharil)g Woodworking Annex.
Annex in recent years.
her beauticontrol business with others.·
"We tripled our shop During the 20th anniver- ·
· Doug is the son of Roy and Anna Lou Buck of Belleville. space," explained Eric sary year, Matson and.
He has been employed as a lineman with Allegheny Power Matson, director of the Ass-istant Director Mark
since J984. He enjoys barbecuing and sharing it with fam- program. "Everyone has Nelson are inviting all
ily and friends.
their own benches in the alumni of the program to
The Bucks have ·two sons, Heath and Tyler and a daugh- facility we are in now." come back to campus.
ter, Katie (Clint) Radcliff.
The Fine Woodworking
Matson would like his
Annex has separate areas current students to be able ,
for the workbenches, to hear from some of the ·
classroom areas and space alumni, and he is anxious
for different woodworking to hear about the work
machines.
they are doing. He is tentaWhen the program start- tively planning to hold a .
ed, it just offered an asso- spectal event in the spring·,
ciate's degree program. probably in conjunction
Today, though, tt allows with 'the annual fine woodstudents to take courses working open house, fo(
toward an associate's the alumni. More informadegree, bachelor's degree tion on the ·spring alumni
OF certificate. Matson is event will be announced in
also planning to offer spe- 2009. The spring open
cial summer programs in house is an opportunity for'
fine woodworking.
.
the students to show off
The program has I 07 the beautiful and often
graduates m addition to intricate furniture pieces
the I 8 students who · are they build during the acad-,
. currently enrolled. The , emtc year at Rio Grande. ,,
program has had students
For more information 011
who have been just out of the 20th an11iversary cele -'
high school, non-tradition- · bratio11 or for more inforal students returning to mation 011 the .Fine
college and even .senior Woodworking program,
citizens. This year's class call Matson or Nelson a(
includes students of all . (800) 282-7201 '

PageC5

~

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PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

COMMUNITY

Sunday,~ber26,2oo8

Mr. and Mrs. Justin Myers

Scites-Myers wedding
(i A LI .IPOLIS -

Laum Danielle Scites and Justin Cole
Mye r' were united in tnaniage on Friday. July 4, 2008.
Til.; our door evening ceremony took place at the home of the
bride \ grandparents. James and Louise Fraley, with Ryan
McKee orticiating.
The bride is t!Je daughter of Deborah Fraley and Timothy
Scitcs . both of. Gallipolis. She is the granddaughter of James
and Louise Fraley of Bidwell, Barbi\111 and Bob Stonecypher of
Columbus. and Jack and Barb Scites of Ravenswood, W.Va.
The ~rtxm1 is the son of Jilye and Jeannie Myers of
G ui'lipn~ s . He is the grandson cif Ronald and Nancy Myers of
C rown City. the late Fmncis Myers of Scottown, Marvin
Gindlesburger uf Gallipolis; and the late Mildred
Gindlesburt:er of Gallipolis.
The bride was escorted by her father. She wore a traditional
s ir&lt;~ pbs A-line gown in ivory with a lace overlay of beads and
J~&lt;~rb. with a satin champagne-colored bow around the waistl.inc . and with a chapel-length train. ,She carried a bouquet of
~vory and sonja-orange roses.
,.
·
.· Maids honor were Stefanie Scites and Rebekah Scites, sisters of the bride. Bridesmaids were Katie McCalla, Teresa
Harnson and Morgen Newill , all friends of the bride. They
wore black strdpless tea-length gowns with a champagne coll.lred sash. Their bouquets were made up of sonja and jade roses
with lavender hydrangeas . .
: Rower girls were Olivia Everett, niece of the groom, and
Katie Queen. friend of the bride. They each wore ivory gowns
-.\:ith a champa~e colored sash, and dropped ivory rose petals
down the aisle.
:·Serving as best man was Jaye Myers, father of the groom.
t.rnomsmen were Josh Myers, cousin of the groom, Garland
Monceaux , friend of the groom. AJ. Keeton, cousin of the
~nxun . and Andrew Holcomb, friend of the.groom. Ring bear&lt;!r was Aidan Willis, cousin of the bride. They wore black tuxe4os with cafe-colored vest and tie with a sonja rose boutonniere. while the groom had an ivory vest and tie with an ivory
Bputonniere.
:· Music for the ceremony was performed by the Appalachian
Strings. and pianist Jarod Myers, brother of the groom.
An outdoor tented reception followed the ceremony at the
Rome of the bride's mother. Guests enjoyed dinner and dancijtg. along wit.h a display of firew01t.s.
'
-The couple honeymooned in Cabo San Lucas,Mex.ico. They
ROW reside in Gallipolis.

,,r

Buck anniversary

,r

· ·o

;; \

~-1-'.h,-"-'''--'I'P
&amp;. i i /'

''

Mr. and Mrs. Justin Robson

All You Need
To Know

About

Diamonds•.

Andrew Holcomb and Rebekah Scltes

~cites-Holcomb engagement
•

GALLIPOLIS - Deborah Fraley and Timothy Scites of
Gallipolis. and Lee and Janet Holcomb of Gallipolis are·
pleased to announce the engagement and upcoming martoiagc of their chil dren. Rebekah Jayne Scites to Andrew
l:&lt;'c Hol comb.
~ Rebekah is the granddaughter of James and Louise
fral ey of Bidwell . Barbara and Bob Stonecypher of
C::Oiumbus . and Jack and . Barb Scites of Ravenswood ,

S tif'?4

OHIO

'VAllEY · 'I

W.Vu.

·Andrew is the grandson of Ch arles and Arleda Fraley of
eoint Pleasant, W.Va., and E. Lee and Luella Holcomb of
9 allipoli s.
· The bride-elect is a 2007 graduate of Gallia Academy
Aigh School and is currentl y ' tudying early childhood edueation at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
C'nmmunirY. College.
· :Tiw e rnn m-dcct j, .a 2005 graduate of Ohio Valley
Chn· ti'"' School ;mel 2006 graduate of Buckeye Hill s
( arccr Center. Qhio Basic Peace Officer Academy. He is
c;:urreillly employed with the Gallipoli s City Police
tJcpat1mcnt .
~ Th e wedd ing will take place on Saturday, Dec. 27 , 2008.

~

CHECK

218 Upper lllvltr lid.
.O.IIIpolle, Ohio ·

rJT

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l

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lt2.04181
u.... ccJOOOn.o.
~

Ct 7111M 101

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS CI MYDAILY REGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.ya. - A comprehensive
guide to t)]e hauntings and
·paranormal tales in West
Virgit ia and along the Ohio
River can be found in the
newly revised Cry of the
Banshu.

,

Submitted photo

Randall Lucas of Gallipolis is shown with his awards for his.wood carving works. The larger one, 'Harris Hawk," was the Peoples Choice In the balloting of those who attended the
Battle Days Art Show, The piece was also judged Best ol Show in the professional division .

· .Area·artistsiwork
hon9~ed at _Battle Days Art Show
I

enced innumerable hauntings in and around
Riverview
Cemetery.
Parkersburg's version of the
twthght zone. And · of
course , always a motherlode
of tragedy and vtolence.
Mbundsville Prison has
supplied plenty of tales of
its tortured inhabitants.
The author's most amaz- ·.
ing encounter with ghosts.
and the one that forged her
interest, occurred when she
was 4 years old , growing up
m Doddndge County .. She
r~counts: "J was. chmbmg a
ht~l between If!Y grandmother s and aunt's houses and
felt someone staring at me .
Looking up, I saw two
Indian braves, in primitive
dress, looking right at me .
Terrified. J dropped to my
belly and crawled toward
the house. As I got up to
make a dash for the door. I
looked back and they were
still staring."
. Sheppard says she had
always been told she was
"Black Dutch ," when in fact
she . . ~as . one-etghth
A~encan Indtan.
, Later, through DNA testmg , I Iearned that. I was.
Shawnee. I truly believe the
!Wo Jndtans 1 saw that da~
were my ancestors, trymg to .
le.t me know who I was, and
to let me know 1 was one of
them," she concluded.
Sheppard 's attraction . for
and interest in the paranormal has continued to this
·day, and she spins her yams
about tragic Civil War
ghosts grieving women in
'

The stories originated
with author and tour guide
Susan Sheppard's ever-popular Haunted Parkersburg
Tours. Recently voted as the
No . 2 Top , Most Up and
Coming Paranormal Person
in the United States by the
Haunted America Tours ,
Sheppard delves into the
people and history behind
the ghosts. She also reveals
how to know if your house
is haunted and the J~ most
likely places to find phantoms.
·
·
·
Included in the book are
tales of the phantom from
the shores of Scotland and
·Ireland called the bartshee a
cursed omen of bad ne~s
and death that plagued early
s~ttlers; a m9re famous
West Virginia red-eyed portent of doom, the Mothman;
and · for the · first time in
print ' West Virginia encoun' 'th th ' ~
M ·
!ers WI
e m,amous en
m_Biaek a~ well as the temfymg Indnd Cold. ,
•
. Some of Sheppard s stones feature 20th cen~u~y
ghost~, such as the spmts
ha~ntmg . a Parkers~ur}!
radto .station or the , CI\Y s
histone
Blennerhassett
Hotel. Many of these
Sheppard has witnessed 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
firsthand. She has experi, .';f:~~~~JC} ,v~.t,,lr ~~·,.

white and haunted rail roads
and tunnel s. Jn addition .''"'
is a regular guest speah'r at
the
annual · Moth111a n
FestivaL
Sheppard said her sea,onk h
al Haunted Par er' urg
tours, ~htch began J2 year'
ago, sttll grow m populant y.
The ghost tours begin at the
Blennerhassett Hotel ;inti
involve a two-mile walk.
· "Near Halloween we get
enormo11s crowds. Peuple
frequently have actual pa ranormal ex periences whik
on the tour and someti me' .
..
.
..
get terrtftc ghost ptctu re,.
Sheppard sa td .

We offer the .
best ·prices · ·
protection .
for
'

and

an lndt'pend(r)l

the heir insur;,uu:e p mt&lt;"!C..'llon :n

' ompetitiv&lt; prices. We repm~·m

POINT . ,\ PLEASAN:r, Bumgarner of New Haven. sion, "Covered aridge" by
anlph&lt;fin '" !A'--,
W.Va. '- 'A record number W.Va., for "Desert Horses"; . llilu) Bumgarner · was.
· ,
in•ur•n"
of guests signed the register . third place to Larry Bragg awarded first place; second
ai the re~ent Battle Days Art for '"Summer Fruit"; and place went to Ryan Dickie
COn')pi!ni d,
Show, h~Id in -a new loca- honorable mention to · of Letart, W.Va., for "Do
including
.tlon, upon the invitation of Judaline Carroll for her You See What I See"; third
Auro-Owm••rs
Gallery 469 , on Main "Man in the Box."
place went to Maxine
Street, Point Pleasant.
In watercolors, first place McCormick of Point
Insurance
The show was held in went to . Janet Rtpper Pleasant for "Country
Company.
conjunction with the Battle Chambers of Winfteld, Bam."
Days observance, spon- W.Va., for "Pumpkin
which has rruly carm.xl. thr
In other media, drawing,
sored by the Bat~le Days Seeds"; second place to .the work ofEmalea Neal of
Memorial Committee, and "Passengers Pigeons" by ApPle Grove, W.Va:, was
several local and regional Dale Harless of Culloden, awarded first pia"~ for "The
. firms. Guests were .from a W.Va.; third place to Debbie Joker"; · seconcl place for
m:tny other ~d"~.uwtge): of .d&lt;}i r:f:
record numberofstates;one Kalt Sisson of Ripley,
b~..~il'lr..'is wHh an i o depmdc n ~
foreign n~t~on this year, and . W.Va., .for "Backyard "Interstate One',' by Sue
Tipton
of
(lallipolis;
and
many Cities and towns Butterflies''; and honorable·
insul&lt;!nct ~gen cy ·
·throughout the area:
. mention to Dale 'Harless for thiro place to Emalea Neal
for ·~Rock)i Penguins."
· A large portion of the art "Yellow Billed Cuckoo." ·
In .the carving division,
In other media, painting.
works entered in the sliow
were invited by Gallery 409 first place went to Bridget first place went to Jim
. BY DAVID BAUDER
for the pieces of art to Siephens of Point Pleasant Dabney for his huge
AP TELEVISION WAITER .
Intarsia,
"Milking
in
·'te
remain at the gallery for all for her work "Rebirth": secNEW YORK _ Tom
of October. Anyone who ond place also went to Pasture." Second place also
missed getting to the show Stephens for "Spring Mi-x"; went to ' Dabney, of Point Cruise took some shots at
during Battle Days still Janet Ripper Chambers won Pleasant, for
another Mart Lauer on Friday - this
have an opportunity to view · third
place for her Intarsia, "End of the Trail," time for fun. But Lauer got in
the works of mariy local "Rodanthe"; and honorable · and to Todd Groves of the last word. ·
artists and nearby areas.
mention went to Stacy Let'art for his wood carving,
The actor was ,a surprise
Guests were gtven ballots Sager of Bidwell for ·
"American Totem."
g!lest at a Friar's Club roast of " '~~~==~~~.J
to vote their choice in each "Droplets."
This year's Battle Days tlie "Today" show host. He
of the divisions of the ~how,
In other media, 'drawing, Art Show had 60 pieces of joined Martha Stewart, Brian
(1rofessional and amateur. first place went to Stacy artwork by 21 artists. This Williams, Katie Couric and
"rhe People's Choice ballots Sager for "Worn Out"; sec- was the I 5th year for the Meredith Vieira to sling
were tabulated and awards ond place for "Roberta and show and organizers invite insults, proving some of TV's
'Yere given at the close of Stan - Just Married" by artists over 18 years of age sunniest personalities could
IJie show orr Sunday after- Debbie Kalt Sisson; third to contact them if they have work blue.
.
noon.
place for "Sunny" by not entered the show aild
Cruise said .Lauer was the
: Awards in the profession- . Judaline Carroll; and honor- . wish to participate next , man "we wake up to every
a'l division were:
able mention to Mike Cogar . year. Entries are accepted ·morning - only because we
: Best of Show and of New Haven for "Chief from residents of West · had the channel on NBC
P,eople's Choice to Randaf! 'Joseph."
·
,
Virginia,
Ohio
and before we fell asleep." .
l:ucas of Gallipolis for his.
Awards in the amateur Kentucky, both professional . Three years ago, Cruise had
:;:ood carving, "Harris , division were as follows:
and amateur. Rod. Brand can berated Lauer on a "Today" ·
~awk." The artwork also
In oil or acrylic, first be contacted at (304) 675- show interview for suggesting
received first place. Another place went to . John
that psychiatric treatment
wciod carving . by Lucas, Bumgarner
of
Point 2977 ·
might help some patients. It
This . year's show was was the same year he jumped
'Xireen
Horned
Owl Pleasant for "Shawnee
feather," was awarded sec- Lake"; second place to sponsored by the Battle up and down on Oprah
qnd place and his wood Carolyn H. .Brown of · Days Memorial Committee, Wmfrey's talk show couch,.
arving "Tiger Swallowtail Ravenswood, W.Va., for her Ohio Valley Electric Corp.• excited about falling in love
utterfly," was given the "Winter By Moonlight"; · Kyger Creek Station, and with Katie Holmes.
Cruise joked that Lauer
ird place ribbon .
third . place to John American Electric Power: In oil or acrylic, first Bumgarner for "Red Barn"; Mountaineer Plant . Co- had given him some advice
place went to Larry Br~gg and honorable mention to chairs Rod Brand of before his interview with
df Point Pleasant forpamt: "Autumn . Shadows" by Southside, W.Va., and Rhea Winfrey: "Go crazy. Trust
'Diamotu:fs- !7\{_-q oft£
. Knight of Letart served and me. Trust me. People will
i)lg, · "Southern Royalty"; Carolyn H. Brown.
Jove you for it."
*cond place to Harold
In the water colors divi- hosted the show.

7

' I

'

' '

.o I.II ' , l\ II&gt;

Tom Cruise
. returns the favor
to Lauer

JOIN THE FRIENDLY STAFF
AT.

Hayman-Robson wedding
LONGBOTTOM - Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hayman of
Longbottom recently announced the engagement and marriage of their daughter, Angela Dal&gt;(n, to Justin Bryan
Robson.
The bride is a 2005 graduate of-Southern High School.
She is the granddaughter of Thelma a11d the late Tom
White, and the late Fred and Garnet Hayman.
. Th~ groom is a 200 I graduate of Meigs High School. He
is the son of Jerrena and Tim Ebersbach of Middleport, and
Kelly and Sherry Robson of Newark.f1e is the grandson of
lrene and the late Gerald Dill of Racine, Bonnie Ebersbach
of Middleport and Roy and the late Lavetta Robson,
Newark.
The open church ceremony took place yesterday at Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport. A costume Halloween reception followed at the home of the bride's parents m
Longbottom. ·

Sunday, October 26, 2008

"

Mothman, other legends featured in new book

Rio's Fine
Woodworking Program ·
celebrating 20 Years
RIO GRANDE - The ages from around the ·
of
Rio re.gion, as well as students .
University
Grande/Rio
Grande from Chicago, Texas and ·
Community Coltege is cel- Great Britain. Two of the ·
ebrating 20 years of train- students currently work forj:
ing students from around Holzer Clinic and are anx- ·,
the country to work in fine ious tu learn fine woodwoodworking.
working skills.
·
Over the last 20 years,
Rio Grande graduates in :
graduates of Rio !]rande 's fine woodworking work
fine woodworking pro- all across the country, and
gram are working m their many of them are at the
field all across the country, top of their profession.
"When I open up a
and many of them have
started their own business- woodworking magazine. J :
es. The program attracts see the work of some of •
students from all across our alumni on the pages:.
America, ~nd this year inside," Matson said.
even has a student from Several of the graduates
England.
also !lave their own Web
· ·Rio Grande formed the sites showing the work
. fine woodworking pro- they are doing.
gram 20 years ago when
"It's just nice to see what
some
of our graduates arc
BEU..EVILLE, w,.Va. _ Doug and Brenda Buck of there weren't many similar
Belleville will be celebrating their 25th wedding anniver- programs at colleges in the up to," Malson said.
All Rio Grande alumni
sary with friends and family from 2 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, region. The program started in the Rio Grande are always welcome back
Nov. 2, 2008, at·an open house at iheir home in Belleville . . School of Technology's on campus, and several of
The Bucks were married Oct. 30, !983 , at the St. Paul Davis Career Center. After the .fine woodworking
United Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains.
J2 years, the program alumni wllo live in the
Brenda is the daughter of the late Sharon Ginther Boyles moved into its own build- . region have stopped into
and Phillip (Mary Lou) Boyles of Washington,W.Va. She. ing,
the
Fine the Fine Woodworking
enjoys being .a homemaker and mother and likes sharil)g Woodworking Annex.
Annex in recent years.
her beauticontrol business with others.·
"We tripled our shop During the 20th anniver- ·
· Doug is the son of Roy and Anna Lou Buck of Belleville. space," explained Eric sary year, Matson and.
He has been employed as a lineman with Allegheny Power Matson, director of the Ass-istant Director Mark
since J984. He enjoys barbecuing and sharing it with fam- program. "Everyone has Nelson are inviting all
ily and friends.
their own benches in the alumni of the program to
The Bucks have ·two sons, Heath and Tyler and a daugh- facility we are in now." come back to campus.
ter, Katie (Clint) Radcliff.
The Fine Woodworking
Matson would like his
Annex has separate areas current students to be able ,
for the workbenches, to hear from some of the ·
classroom areas and space alumni, and he is anxious
for different woodworking to hear about the work
machines.
they are doing. He is tentaWhen the program start- tively planning to hold a .
ed, it just offered an asso- spectal event in the spring·,
ciate's degree program. probably in conjunction
Today, though, tt allows with 'the annual fine woodstudents to take courses working open house, fo(
toward an associate's the alumni. More informadegree, bachelor's degree tion on the ·spring alumni
OF certificate. Matson is event will be announced in
also planning to offer spe- 2009. The spring open
cial summer programs in house is an opportunity for'
fine woodworking.
.
the students to show off
The program has I 07 the beautiful and often
graduates m addition to intricate furniture pieces
the I 8 students who · are they build during the acad-,
. currently enrolled. The , emtc year at Rio Grande. ,,
program has had students
For more information 011
who have been just out of the 20th an11iversary cele -'
high school, non-tradition- · bratio11 or for more inforal students returning to mation 011 the .Fine
college and even .senior Woodworking program,
citizens. This year's class call Matson or Nelson a(
includes students of all . (800) 282-7201 '

PageC5

~

IN

CELEBRATING THEIR

Gynecology Services
·Available In Meigs County

• WeU·womao eums
,,
'
• Birth Control Including
•lmplanoo (First &amp;Only
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birth control
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•E.mtre (Scarless Permanent
Jane D. Broecker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)

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Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158
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Suite 260
Athens, OH • 594-8819

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.,

2 pc. L-SHAP,E O -

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Available in 3 Finishes

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$348.00
FINANCING SPECIALS
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$588.00

"
Plus

~

O'BLENESS ,~ •
HfAlfH HSTIM

www.riverroseobgyn.com

.

HURRY IN, SALE ENDS OCTOBER 31ST

$778.00

•
'

'

••

�Sunday. October 26, 2008

Middlepon, Pomeroy, Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WY

Page C6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Galli~lis . OH • Pt . Pleasant, WV

Page 0 I • &amp;unbap 1!::imrs ·ittntinrl

Sunday.Cktober26,2008

5
to DEAL

'

PONTIAC

Wtth
EPA-est .
.

"

Highwa Or Betterl'

PONTIACG6

3

VIBE ·

37 mpghwy

.3EPA-est

32
. mpg hwy

EPA-est

mpghwy

G6 Sedan has better available highwly fuel ecot10ITlY
. than TC¥rta Camty lE and Honda Al:cool. •

Better hiihway fuel economy than
Honda Civic Coupe.t

St.rdl, s21~ss~~

Better fue I economy than
Mazda 3 5-Door. tt

-Stard~ S15,485 ~rrcm..M .

St.~~$16,435 ~~rs~

·~PA-est MPG: G6 33 hwy wittlmllablt Sport Packapl, Camry and Accord 31 hwy.

•

EPA-est

tEP~t MPG: GS 37

**IISRP. Tax,litle,lk:me and dealer fees, and optional equipment eldra. Take deliwry by ll/3ffl8. See dealer lor detail$.

hwy, Civic 36 hwy.

ftEPA-est MPG: Vibe 32 hwy, Mazda2_
9hwy.

================

----To BeHer

APR** For
Qualified
Buyers

2008 BUICK ENCLAVE

OI
IO .

For 36 Months

2008 GMC Sierra 1500 Crew Cab

- ·-·--OR-----

0

0/
fO

Better.fuel economy than Honda Pilot.tt

2.9%APR
60
OR$2,500

2.9%APR
60 ~~.~th!:
OR$2500
'

Months*"
For IM!Ifiecl Buyn

For

· *EPA-est MPG, Enclm 16 cily/24 hwy: Acura 15 city/20 hwy.
*"Moorthhy payment is $17.92 for lMifY $1.000 linanced. Example
down PIY111enl21.6% Enclave, 18.~ Acadia. Some customen wm
not qualify. Take deiNery by 1113/08. Not avalable with some other offers.
See dealer lor details. tTake delivery by 1113/08. See dealer for details.
MPG: Acadia 2WD 24
Pilot 23

•.

.

..

APR. ForQualified
Buyers

.

•

2008 CiMC Sferra 1500

0% APR•• ForQu~llfiecl ORI

.•
•
•.
•

For 72 Months#

-----:--OR---

.$6,000 ~~~~Back'

Better fuel economy than Acura MDX:*

For

.·$5,000 ~~~~Back'

2008 GMC ACADIA

.

Buyers

For 36 Months

· ·

1

.•..

2008 GMC Yukon

And each comes with the best coverage in America.
2008 CiMC Yukon

Transferable 100,000-mile/5-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistance/Courtesy Transportation Prbgrams.

0% Ap. RFor~uallfied ORI . $6,000

•
•

Whichever comes first See dealer for d~taiiS.

•
..
•·

:~.. if~- - The Number One Volume Buick - Pontiac - GMC IJeale r in the ilrea for 8 consecutiv e mont hs.

.

.•

.

Buyen

For 72 Months~

.•

.

·

1

•

•

..
.•
•

'

And tiCh comH with th• belt coverage In Am~eric:a .
,T~nsferable

lOO,®mile/5-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistarice/Courte5y Transportation Programs.
Whichever comes first. See dea ler for details.

The Number One Volume Buick - Pont i ac

••'

.
304-485-4418 .
WWW.MATHENYMOTORS.COM ·

•
.'
•
:

•
'

.•
.'

*EPA-est MPG hwy (2WD): Sierra with .available 5.3l VB 20 vs. Tundra with available 5.7l VB 1B. . •• Monthly payment is $27,.78 for every $1,000 financed. Example down payment 8.5%.
Some customers will not qualify. Take delivery by 1113108. Not available with some other offers. See dealer for details. tTake delivery by 11/3/08. See dealer for details. ttEPA·est. MPG
hwy (2WO): Yukon with availabl~ 5.3l V8 20 1/s. Sequoia with available 5.7l VB 19. MMonthly payment is $13.89 for every '$1 ,000 financed. Example down payment 7.5%. Some customers
' will not qualify. Take delivery by 11/3108. Not available with some other offers. See dealer for details.
02008 GM Corp. All rights reserved. The marks of General Motors and its divisions are ~red tJademarks of General Motors Corporation.

.•'•
•

CMC Dealer. in the area lot 8 conseculive months.

3RD &amp; ANN STREET
..
1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
·. PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

#

•

SALE HOURS: MON-FRI ~AM-7 :JDPM • SAT 9AM-6:30PM • SUN 1PM-SPM

•

MOIDo

.'

&amp;ANN
1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
PARKERSBURG,VVV 26101

Cash Backt
.... ....fum

304-485-4418
WW-W.MATHENYMOTO.RS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON·FRI9AM·7:30PM • SAT 9AM-6:30PM • SUN 1PM-5PM

·'

•

·

�Sunday. October 26, 2008

Middlepon, Pomeroy, Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WY

Page C6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Galli~lis . OH • Pt . Pleasant, WV

Page 0 I • &amp;unbap 1!::imrs ·ittntinrl

Sunday.Cktober26,2008

5
to DEAL

'

PONTIAC

Wtth
EPA-est .
.

"

Highwa Or Betterl'

PONTIACG6

3

VIBE ·

37 mpghwy

.3EPA-est

32
. mpg hwy

EPA-est

mpghwy

G6 Sedan has better available highwly fuel ecot10ITlY
. than TC¥rta Camty lE and Honda Al:cool. •

Better hiihway fuel economy than
Honda Civic Coupe.t

St.rdl, s21~ss~~

Better fue I economy than
Mazda 3 5-Door. tt

-Stard~ S15,485 ~rrcm..M .

St.~~$16,435 ~~rs~

·~PA-est MPG: G6 33 hwy wittlmllablt Sport Packapl, Camry and Accord 31 hwy.

•

EPA-est

tEP~t MPG: GS 37

**IISRP. Tax,litle,lk:me and dealer fees, and optional equipment eldra. Take deliwry by ll/3ffl8. See dealer lor detail$.

hwy, Civic 36 hwy.

ftEPA-est MPG: Vibe 32 hwy, Mazda2_
9hwy.

================

----To BeHer

APR** For
Qualified
Buyers

2008 BUICK ENCLAVE

OI
IO .

For 36 Months

2008 GMC Sierra 1500 Crew Cab

- ·-·--OR-----

0

0/
fO

Better.fuel economy than Honda Pilot.tt

2.9%APR
60
OR$2,500

2.9%APR
60 ~~.~th!:
OR$2500
'

Months*"
For IM!Ifiecl Buyn

For

· *EPA-est MPG, Enclm 16 cily/24 hwy: Acura 15 city/20 hwy.
*"Moorthhy payment is $17.92 for lMifY $1.000 linanced. Example
down PIY111enl21.6% Enclave, 18.~ Acadia. Some customen wm
not qualify. Take deiNery by 1113/08. Not avalable with some other offers.
See dealer lor details. tTake delivery by 1113/08. See dealer for details.
MPG: Acadia 2WD 24
Pilot 23

•.

.

..

APR. ForQualified
Buyers

.

•

2008 CiMC Sferra 1500

0% APR•• ForQu~llfiecl ORI

.•
•
•.
•

For 72 Months#

-----:--OR---

.$6,000 ~~~~Back'

Better fuel economy than Acura MDX:*

For

.·$5,000 ~~~~Back'

2008 GMC ACADIA

.

Buyers

For 36 Months

· ·

1

.•..

2008 GMC Yukon

And each comes with the best coverage in America.
2008 CiMC Yukon

Transferable 100,000-mile/5-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistance/Courtesy Transportation Prbgrams.

0% Ap. RFor~uallfied ORI . $6,000

•
•

Whichever comes first See dealer for d~taiiS.

•
..
•·

:~.. if~- - The Number One Volume Buick - Pontiac - GMC IJeale r in the ilrea for 8 consecutiv e mont hs.

.

.•

.

Buyen

For 72 Months~

.•

.

·

1

•

•

..
.•
•

'

And tiCh comH with th• belt coverage In Am~eric:a .
,T~nsferable

lOO,®mile/5-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistarice/Courte5y Transportation Programs.
Whichever comes first. See dea ler for details.

The Number One Volume Buick - Pont i ac

••'

.
304-485-4418 .
WWW.MATHENYMOTORS.COM ·

•
.'
•
:

•
'

.•
.'

*EPA-est MPG hwy (2WD): Sierra with .available 5.3l VB 20 vs. Tundra with available 5.7l VB 1B. . •• Monthly payment is $27,.78 for every $1,000 financed. Example down payment 8.5%.
Some customers will not qualify. Take delivery by 1113108. Not available with some other offers. See dealer for details. tTake delivery by 11/3/08. See dealer for details. ttEPA·est. MPG
hwy (2WO): Yukon with availabl~ 5.3l V8 20 1/s. Sequoia with available 5.7l VB 19. MMonthly payment is $13.89 for every '$1 ,000 financed. Example down payment 7.5%. Some customers
' will not qualify. Take delivery by 11/3108. Not available with some other offers. See dealer for details.
02008 GM Corp. All rights reserved. The marks of General Motors and its divisions are ~red tJademarks of General Motors Corporation.

.•'•
•

CMC Dealer. in the area lot 8 conseculive months.

3RD &amp; ANN STREET
..
1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
·. PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

#

•

SALE HOURS: MON-FRI ~AM-7 :JDPM • SAT 9AM-6:30PM • SUN 1PM-SPM

•

MOIDo

.'

&amp;ANN
1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
PARKERSBURG,VVV 26101

Cash Backt
.... ....fum

304-485-4418
WW-W.MATHENYMOTO.RS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON·FRI9AM·7:30PM • SAT 9AM-6:30PM • SUN 1PM-5PM

·'

•

·

�'

~iunbap li.- ·itntintl.

.'•
•,

•

will protect perennials when moved

Bv HAL I&lt;NEEN

be stored at temperatures
between 50-60 degrees.
. Has frost nipped your ten- Store washed roots of
dahlias, cannas, tuberous
;der perennials?
• Now is the time to dig up begonias , mandevilla vine,
:and bring in th~ dahlias, sweet potato ,vines in peat
:gladioli, cannas, mandevilla moss placed into cardboard
~ines, and rul)erous bego- boxes. After curing the root
!nias for replanting next structure place into peat:Year. The root system moss, perlite or agef( saw60
:(tuberous roots, corms, rhi- dust keep roots at
degrees, 50-60 degrees. 45:~omes and tubers) needs to
;be dug with a minimal 50 degrees, 50-60 degrees,
;:amount of damage to the and 60 degrees respectively.
If your storage area is moist
~forage roots.
·
some
growers store using
~ Mold and rot damage are
imajor reasons why these sand or vermiculite .
Early next spring , divide
;Plants are not _successfully
the
roots and exchange with
.overwintered inside. Insect
Aind improper storage tern- other gardeners . For more
, fperatures are two other rea- information. check out
:Sons. When ·preparing the Extension's factsheet 1244,
Flowering
~I structures for overwin- " Summer
~ring gently wipe off or Bulbs." found at www.ohio:'1\'ash s.o i I 'from the roots.• line .osu .edu or from the
This assists, in minimizing local extension office.
•••
insect damage especially
"
Are
you
interested in
from sowbugs and pillbugs .
Allow the washed roots to learning more about alterair dry for several days. Be native renewable energy?
careful not to expose the Plan on attending "OSU
Energy
roots to too cold tempera- Renewable
tures (under 45 F.) as they Workshop" on Nov. 12 at
dry. Label the plants with , Ohio Agncultural Research
,both stake labels and write o;md Development Center in
Wooster.
on the bag , too.
Some plants like elephant
The workshop will
e!lf'S and caladiums prefer to , spotlight what's new in

..

alternative
energy,
what's · practical and
affordable, and what can
help people save money.
The workshop will bring
experts · with different
backgrounds together to
· address concerns related
to renewable energy such
as benefits, reliability,
maintenance, capital and
operating costs of the
new technologies.
Topics include: Energy
Conservation on Cars,
Homes and Businesses;
Solar and Wind Energy;
Biofuels;
and Other
Alternatives: Geothermal
and Wood Pellet The
workshop is sponsored by
· Sustainable
Energy
Network
of
Wayne
County, OARDC and
Ohio State University
Extension.
·
Contact Mary Wicks for
further information at
(330) 202-2533 or e-mail
wicks. l4@osu.edu.

FARM

cover everything from
how to get started in the
grape growing business,
including potential funding resources, to the differences and similarities
between growing grapes
·
·
and tobacco.
Today, Ohio is home to
more than I 00 wineries and
only 2 ,200 acres of grapes.
thus the potential and need
to grow more high-quality,
high-value · hybrid and

Sunday, October 26, 2oo8

E-mail

Feeder Cattle-Lower
275-415 lbs., Steers, $75-$117 ,
Heifers, $70-$106; 425-525 lbs .,
Steers, $75-$115 , Heifers, $65$92; 550-625 lbs., Steers. $75. $105. Heifers, $65-$88; 650-725
lbs .• Steers, $75-$97, Heifers, $65$84; 750-850.1bs., Steers, $75-$88,

Well-Muscled/Fleshed,
$59.50.
Medium/Lean, $35-$45.
Thin/Light, $20-$35.
Bulls, $50-$76.50.

Cow/Calf Pairs, $500-$840; Bred

.
.
Subtftltted photo
Members of he South Galtia FFA recently attended soil judging in Baltimore, Ohio, on Oct.
11. The contestants judged the soil for its value in home construction, septic systems and
landscaping. South Gallia FFA President Cody Crawford placed filth in the state overall!
Members of the team that competed at state were Cody Crawford, Tori Duncan, Colby Lee
and Beth Bush . The 'South Gallia Ff'A advisor is David Pope.

Pumpkin growers ,in Texas say demand is up
from Floyd County this year.
Across the country, pumpkin prices are up in many
places , though that could
reflect increased production
Halloween
and and transportation costs . said
Thanksgiving just around Gary Lucier of the U.S.
the comer. Youngsters and Agnculture Department.
adults are gearin~ up lo ·
U.S.. pumpkin production
carv'e ghoulish, frightening has grown stgnificantly over
or silly faces on the gourds; the past 25 years, according
omers will make pies from . to a 4007 USDA report. The
the innards .
·.
number of (arms reporting
Demand for pumpkins is pumpkin acreage has more
at an all-time high, Texas than doubled since 1982 to
a~culiur¢ officials said, and 14,073 farms and harvested
it s mostly because there are area has more than tripled to
fewer pumpkins coming about %,400 acres .

For more information, call
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241 or
Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the
website at-www.uproducers.com.

Now Reopen for
Business/

Wolfe's Auto
Repair

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

2008 Chev
Malibu Classic

61 Vine St.. M·F 7-6, Sat. B·5; sun. 1o-4

on sale now

$13,850
O'Dell True Value Lumber
Hunter Ceiling Fans in Stock
Limited LIFETIME Motor Warranty
Assemble in 5 min.
Hunter makes quiet fans.

Smith Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

61 Vine St., M-F 7-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun . 10-4

'

.

Now Taking
orders OJl th~
2010 Chev. Camara
at

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

Smith Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

HUNTERS EDUCATION
Nov. t ·2. Noon • 5
&amp;Noon - 6
To register Call
388·9436 or 446-9525
Gallla County Gun Club

Chainsaw Carving
Sale
going on now, until
November 30
at Davison Greenhouse
and Nursery
Check out the Eagles and Baars.
Variety ol Flowers and shrubs.
· Clay Chapel l=ld.
Gallipolis

...

Gallipolis Jr. Woman's Club
Small Business Expo
Nov. 1al•10am·2pm
Gallipolis Christian Church
Sl. Rl. 588
Tupparware, Xango·. Tasiefully
Simple, Tope's Furniture, Wanda
Willis Book "The Beveled Mirror:
Rallectlone of an Appalachian
Family (available for book signing
111112:30)
Morning Glory Breads &amp; Baked
Goods, Jewelry, Make up/Spa
products, Crafts. Basekts, many
more...
For more information contact:
740·367·5041

Please come support our local
busineues.

Poinl Pleasant
Monday, Oct. 27th
Kids Night 6 pm - 8 pm
Costume Contest
Friday .O ct. 31st
Adult Party
Live Band at 10 pm
Blue Sky Falling
Coslume Contest $250 prize

ENGLE CONStRUCTION
REUNION
November 2·, 2008
12:00 - 3:00 ..
Location Vintpn Co.
Fairgrounds
Bring covered. dish ,
Drinks and table service provided.

•

DEMOCRAT
CHILI DINNER
Monday, October 27
6pm
AMVETS in Kanauga
DONATIONS ONLY
AUCTION
Autographed Basketball
BEVO FRANCIS
Autographed Football, MIKE
BARTRUM, TROY BROWN
PLUS PRO PLAYE;RS.
..
367·7530

Tai·Chi Beginner
Class
Starting
Oct. 27, 2008
5pm

Pols

lost
white
Maltese
PUPP't.last 'seen in SyraLost &amp; found
cuse area.$50 reward for
M~ To Lend
:"'""!";;o;;;;o;;~;;;;;;;;o;;;;; retum740-591-7837
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~--~=
'Found near Holzer m """"""'""'""'""'""'"' NOTICE Borrow Smart.

FOUND, Siamese cat on
Jericho
Ad.
Pt.
Pl.
304-675·3522

A mou:1cemen1s

Bualne•• D•v• Prior To

Mi100llan00111

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Auctions
for
Concrete
Angle,
"':::~:::"'~~-:"":""':' ::---~----~;;;;;;;; Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
fREE. Blonde Lab 1 ~ 0 1 Cross
Creek
Auction , Grating .tor Drains , Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
112 yrs old, Wonderful Buffalo, Saturday~ pm
w·o·" Ch•'ldten caU a"er
U
sed
.
Cons•gnmen.ts
scrap Metals Open Mon.
11
Sp~ 304 _675_2529
from Jackson &amp; ·Roane Tue, Wed &amp; Fri.

Autos

Houoos For Sale

2006 Durango 4 wheel House for salelrenl 3BA
drive. leather. sun roof, &amp; 2 bath central air 1 stm'y
DVD
player.
$10,000 . in Gallipolis. 448-2692
256- 1618
Colonial Home for Sale.
51*!
details
@
Trucb
www.orvb.com, ID: Mor·

Land (Aa.ogt(
Meigs Co. 5 acres on
Landaker or Cook Ads.

$19 ,900.

Danville

Basket Games ·
.
Ani Vet Building
Sunday, October 26, 20C)8 '
Doors open at2:30 pm
Games start at 3:30 pm
B~ing items for packages for
Troops In Iraq
. Sponsored by: Xtreme
Cheemastlcs Alistars
.

Curves
"Girls Night In"
'
Open to all
Tuesday, Oct. 28
6:30 - 8:30 pm
Come pamper yourself
Fun. Free LivAid to assist
Breast Cancer Awareness

Cliff has recovered
from back surgery and
back to work.
Stop and see us at
805 Raccoon •Rd.
Open- M-F
8 :00 am - 4:00 pm or
Call 446-1588 for
appointment

Reedsville
7 acres,
Australian
Noticos
Contact the Ohio Divi$14,500! Salem Clr. 18+
Shepherd.
Call ~~~~::-"~~ slon· of Financial lnsliluacres, pond $49,900.
740-577-3008
':':'
tions Office of Consumer
gan
or
· call Gallla co. 10+ ac~
1996
964390
NOTICE
OH!OcoVALLEY
Affairs BEFORE yo.u rellCounties,
Furniture,
Bam-4:30pm._,
Closed miles, 70GMC
PUBLISHING
. rec
·
p
eng1ne gas, 5. (740)441·0031
51 2.500! . We linanc•l
.
· nance your ' home or ob- Miniature
·schnauzers Hand Tools &amp; rcxl.lce. Thurs. S~t &amp; Sun. speOO trans, 24 ·ft bed, Extraordinary Property: Call 740·4.4.1-1492 for
otn~ends
Ulat
you
do tain a loan. BEWARE of available. (740)992-1328
Building is fuK inside &amp; 740·446-7300
b
th
1
GVW 25950 lbs, Don't Speclacular view of the map~ or VISit www. runb
':!!!!;!~~::;~~ uslness WI peep e you requests for any large
·
out. Starting to sell hiQh ~~~~~~~ need , COL, . $B.5oo Ohio River
erland.com
'
know, and NOT to se~ · advance payments of ,Miniture . , . Dachshund_quality Knives such as New ·Lennox Pulse ·Furthrough the marl
CKC 1egr&lt; ered shols
naco down droH with .,. 304·773·5343
Pnvate drive off Lincoln ·
*POLICIES* money
.
. . · tees or insurance. Call
· , '
· Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
""',;,.,.;..,""'""'""'" Hi!l, Pomeroy, Ohio, Trade· 1995 Chevy Cori'Oido Valley
until you have lnvestlgat- the Office of Consumer wormed Males &amp; Fe- Oak. Air Conditioned. tr~ pans, 90,000 BTU. ~
Vans ,
woods on three sides version Van, excellent
PubUshlng reserves
ing the offering.
Affiars toll free at mates,
longhair &amp; VIsa, Master Card &amp; $699 00 740-446·4306
"'!"~~~~~~~ (4+)acres. to a historical condition, easy on gas
therlghtto edit,
1-866·278-0003 to learn shorthalr, red &amp; black/tan Debit 304·550·1616 SteSTEEL ARCH
0'1 Oldsmobile Silhouene home. Circa 1900, 5 also w/trailer "76"x16,
rejectore~ncelany
if the mortgage broker or $200 304 -593-3820
phenReedy'l t639
BUILDINGS
98000 mile, 1 owner. bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 2-35001i axles. 2 wheel
ad atany time.
lender" is properly li· Pomeranian pups. 6 ~k~
Made in USA. Three DVD player, great cond. full baths, 2 staircases, brakes wlramp tor 5
Errors Must
censed. (This is a public old, lst &amp; 2nd shots
Fuel I Oil I Coal I
cancelled orders · will $5495 740"441-9322
beautiful original wood- acres in Meigs County,
rted on the Hrs
DomesMcs 1Janitorial service
announcement wormed. 2 (M) lefl. $15"0.
Wood I Gas
sell fo r balance owed.
work, many picture win- (740)992-0174
~~--;;;;i;~;;o;;~ from the Ohio Valley 10321 SA 141. Gallipolis '
16x24 &amp; 25x36. Call
Wa~tlo_ luy
dows. mostly new win- •
Peal Estate
IY of pubU
Will do_ housekO&amp;rJing In Publishing Company)
Firewood for sale, hard today to save thoudows. large kitchen and 3500
nd the T
GallipoliS area. Calr
Shih-tzu puppies .for wood split delivered. sands! 800·352·0469
Cars, Trucks, and GMC, breakfast room, beauti·
Rentals
ndnei·Regiater wll
446-2115ask tor Lori.
sale, partially housebro· 256-9115
Saturn, Buipk SUV's with fully landscaped . wilt) 'in
i-espon~lble for n
ken &amp; 3 mOnths old, ::'se"'·•"'•o"'n"'ed':"'"--:F~r·r"'•w"'o...::od Zero
tum
mower. warranty. Visit us at ground pool. Sit· on the !!
ore than the cost o
Hom• Improvements
(740)416·6449
H d od 446 9204
Gravely. 60 inch deck. (gocdookmotoffi:com)
wrap around porch ai1r:!
Apartmenb/
he sPace occupl
ar wo . .
27 HF'. Moving. must Cook Motors 326 JackTownhouHI
Basement
Vorkle Puppies for salE! Se
F
ood CAA
son Pike. 740-446 .o1o3
enjoy the , spectacular
f tile error and onl
asoned irew
se11. 367·7129
0"-~-~~~- view ol the Ohio River. 2
e first lnsertiQn.' W
Waterproofing
$350 &amp; $450. Vet recom· HEAP
aCcepted. """'""'""'""'""'""'"" ,.,Want to buy Junk Cars, car detached garage and 1BA Apt, W/0 hookups,
Unconditional
life time
mended. 8 wks old. 64 5-5946 or 441 _0941
satellite TV. incl. · wfrenJ.
hall not be liable to
. guarantee. Local refer740-441-9510
,.~W~a~ni~To"".:'Buy~~ can740·388·0884
2 out buildings. Would close to hospital. Call
ences furnished. EstabPels
Hobb / H nt &amp; Sport ':::'
make a wonderflJI family 740-339·0362
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
y
u
Buying tools sell or trade
home or bed &amp;breakfast.
740·446-0870, Rogers 2 ki "e ns house b-'"ken 4
GUN SHOW . LANCAS· met:hailic-carpenter lawn
Private and Picturesque
2 be(jroom, living room.
TEA. ·oH. Nov. 1 lrom C
&amp; II garden
Basement W
aterprooI.lng.. months old lree to a
740 3"" power
515 tools.II ;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;; SPECTACULARVIEW . kitchen, bath Apanment.
pood home.
9·5 &amp; Nov. 2 from 9·3. a · · uu· l or ce
Serious inquires only, Ha&gt;Je Central Air, fur·
Other S.mc..
•·' 6-2273 or 709·9513
Faim Equipment
FairtieiO County Fair- ~740-:-...-2:-:06..,·0-,;3~0~~~~
2
Hou... For Sale
please cal1740·992·3676 nished ·'"' with couch,
:!P;;;et,..~Cr;;;em;;;a~li;;;ons;;o;;,;;;;;;:C~all "sh"'t"!T:-:zu-pu-p"'pi-es~3-m-al~es·. ::EB::Y,~;;o;;;;;i;;~IN:!TE::G::R::IT~Y, grounds. AAA Building. Absolute Top Dollar . sil· .~18::6~N:-ort~h""!:Pa~ri&lt;~D:"r,;;;;;;;ca;: l t;)f Sale 2 ~tor} al ~~1J Mt chairs. washer, dryei,
stove. microwave, beds,
Adm.. $4.
135 6' TBLS verlgold· ' coins, any 304·675·5640
or \'emon A~e Pih Pk:1sant,
740·446·3745
PIJre bread no papers KIEFER BUILt,
s
0-667·0412
,.
35
74
1
each. VALLEY HORSE/LIVE· ::.;;;!;.;!.!!!i;:!e;,;;""'""" 10K/14KI18K gold jew· 304-593-1204 will sell on ~tlr.. lha.. II. liS.:. ~~~ mg dining table and chairS,
5275
$400 deposit, $450 j
STOCK
TRAILERS, ... Miscellaneoua
elry, dentai gold, pre land . Contr.3ct or Out S80JlOU.m4-fl75-2AA7.
Prolouionol s.,...;co• 740-25 6.1907
monlh.
Call
~~~.,..~~~ LOAD
MAX.
EQUIP· ~..................;;;;;;;; 1935 US currency, Right. Also a Welllngton
304-882·2523
leavp
TURNED DOWN ON AKC Mini Dapple Oachs- MENT
.TRAILERS, ~200
dl proof/mint ~ts , dia- Plano call for , appoint·
MeS$age and Number ~
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI hund · pups Fema Ies CARGO EXPRESS &amp; + $ Nascar tra ng monds, MTS C&lt;&gt;'n Shop'. ment to see them both.
not at Home.
No Fee Unless We Win! $450. 740·256-t498
HOMESTEADER
cards 100·00
151 2nd Avenue. Galli· ~~~"":"~~~
1·886·582·3345
~~~-----~ CARGO/CONCESSION ~~d ~~ ~nOOin the red ~po~li~s.~44=6-=2=84i:2::::== 2 br. 1 b.. lull loasemenl,
2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 8~
CKC Maltese pups. Fe- TRAILERS.
B+W Dale Jr. Budweiser raeabove ground pool, deAM 'Rtal Ea
House on 5th St. ~
.
Read
your
mates $550. Males ·$500 GOOSENECK FLATBED ing- 3-D stand up $20.00
tached double garage,
· ertlstmenta a
Pleasant 304·81 2·435ll
newspaper
and
learn
on
740·256-1498
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· 304 _675 _6822
fenced-in back ' yard. nice
•
bjtciiO the Fodera
ask
for Don
something
today!
SAYINGS
~~~~~~TIRE
TRAILER'
INVEN·
~~~
......
~~
........
neighborhood
in
Aacone,
air Housing Act
Female Mini Schnauzer. TORY AT
"'!"
'!!!
( 740)992 .1424
6 month old. $iOO wilh
Jet Aeration Motors reCampen/ RVs &amp;
968,
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
cage. 740 _441 -03SS
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt in
Trailers
3 Bed. 2 Bath HUD
~~
.....
~~
......
~
TAAILERS.COM
stock.
Cal
!
R
on
Evans,
-;;;;~;;;;;;"'-"-;;;;;;;;=
Homes!
O
nly
$1
9,900
lor
This
For Sale Shih Tzu Pun· 740·446·3625
'.!-1·,::80:::0.::;5~3:,;
7-.::;95;:;28::0,-:-:::::: Av Service at carmi- listings 800·620·4946 ex
ccePI• only htl
pies
~...-...-~~
......
~
For
SaleOne 70,000 chael
Trailers R019
·
anted ads meeun
Born • 08-28·08,
CKC
Have
you
priced
a Joho BTU floor furnace, $50.00 740·446·'""5
DE standardt.
·
;..,;;;,;,;,;,;-;;;,;..,""'""'""
3BR
sq. H.
Reg. 1 .female ·$350.00,3
Deere lately? You'll .be 304·675·2902.
. ;. ;,
with full2.5BA
Bsmt.,1721
2 car 2,:p
will
. no
male
$300.00
vet. surprised! Check out our Holiday Baking
Now
Moton:ydea
on 0.6AC. in Spring ValWt.
ctlecked 1st shots &amp; used
inventory
at
. . ·
OHJO UNIVERSITY
nowlngly accept an·
wormed,wl papers.
WW'w .CAREO.com. Car- .available: Coat1 ng. choco- 2007 Kawasaki Ninja ley Est. move in rea~y ·
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
dvertlsement
I
Shop
parents on premises call m..::hael
Equipment fates, glazed lrwt, nuts, 250 uncter 1500 miles Appoint.
Only
THE .' OLLOWING POSITION:
lolatlon of lhe law.
304·593·6256.
740 446-24.12
. etc. Buy bulk and save. red helmel and lank bog _74":'0--2~860:-5":'2-80::-::-~~ Pan Time
Regu lar Food StJrvice Wnrk t-r
~~~~=~~~~C~ta~s~s~l~fl~e~d~s~l~:::::____~:::::__ _, Trickling
.,.
-;
Store. Spnng
Camdus Country
Rd. $2,800. 740-645·1912
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office ill Dining S e r&gt;JiCL'~
1
CLASSIFIED INDEX
740-379-9110
99 Honda XR70R Good lown · hw &amp; tile lloors, Pleas~ usc thb link. to view the posting dewil s
apply on line:
Leg81a ...... ..................................................... 100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
~M-ol-lo-ha-n--:C-arp-e~l~F~all ~~~iti~~- ;~~~ ~~· ~~~=~~d :~:n &amp;&amp; ~~hv~ and
www.ohioun i \'t' rsit ;)obs.comJappl iGm t-s
Announcements •• : ................. ............... ....... 200 ATV ............................. ... ....... ........ ...... ........ 1005
Special. 20 oz. COmmer- or _ _
~
ground pool, security /Central ?qu ickFi nd=55061
740 645 4647
Blrthday/Annlveraary.................................. 205 Blcyclee ...................................................... 1010
cia! Carpet S6.95/yard.
system, much more. 130
Happy Ads ............ ...... .................................. 210 Boata/Accessorles.................................... 1015
several
·
Colors.
Bastiani Or. S129.000For Application Deadline: November 9. 2008
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 Camper/RVa &amp; Trailers ............................. 1 ~
740-446·7444. Quality al
pies and information go For quc~ t ion s. please email: she ppanl @ohio.cd u
Memory/TI1ank You ....................:······.......:.. 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1 u.c:5
Notlcea ................................... .............. ........ 225 Other ..........................................................1030
Low Prices!
10.
www.orvb .com ur ' "II 740-.193-0J 12
Pareonale ..................................................... 230 Want 10 buy ...............................................1035
Travel trunk ·. 14" x
::44~6~
-2:0:92::03~~":::!:-::"~
Autos
~ek candidates with u commiunent in
WanIed ,.................................................,..... 235 Automo IIve ........................................ ......., 2000
14"/15"high
tooled -:::::-:~:#~~~
Oak Hil l area 3 BA 2 full
Servlcea ................................................... ~... 300 Auto Rentai/L.Hae.....................................2005
leather . Stenclled s A ~
bath Country living new working effectively with students, faculty ami
Appliance Servlce ..................:....................302 Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Couch, Pt Pleasant Va 2001 Pontiac Grand MA .condition 1.S acres value stan· frum diverse backgrounds. Ohio University
Automotlva .................................................. 304 Claoolc/AntlquH ....................................... 2o15
did May iB5B·Phone 304 take. .o ver paymenls $75 ,000 now $59;900. an Equal Opponunily/Affirmative .~c tioo
304 675 3166
Building Materia 11....................................... 306 Commerclalllnduatrlal............. .. ............... 2020
Employer.
Bualness .......... ::.......................................... 308 Pa~ &amp; Accasaorlea....... :...........:.............. 2025
592·1547 inElvening.
uCa:n~e:oo-:9:5:1·:20:6~0~.· .,=~;,:~;,;.;;,;;;;.;;;;;;::====~
Caterlng ........................................................3t0 Sporto Utlllty .............................................. 2030
r
Child/Elderly care·....................................... 3t2 Trucka ................................:........................ 2035
In Memory
SCHOOL OR INSTRUCTION
computero .......... :.....................-.................. 314 Utility Tratte...............................................204D
In Memory

· Gallipoli s.

1

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

67 7

Contractora .................................................. 316
Domeatlca/Janltorlal ................................... 318

Electrlcol ...-..................................................320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................328
Heating 6 Cooling ....................................... 328
Homa lmprovamenla 330

lnaurence ..................................................... 332

Vana ......................... ............................... .... 2045

Want to buy .................................... :.......... 2050

Roal Eatate Saloa ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plota ..........................................3005
commarclal ..............................._................3010
COndomlnlumo ..........................................3015
For Sale by Owner................ ..................... 3020
Houeee for Sale .... .-................ .............. ...... 3025

Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Lend (Acraoge) .......................................... 3030

GALLERY at 409
· Limited TI!M Holiday
offer
• .
'
Individual and Family

Muele/Dance1Drama ................,................... 338
OtherServlcea ................ ............................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrtcal ..................................... 340
Proteaalonal8ervlces ................................. 342
Repalra ............... ........................ ....... ,... .. ..... 344
Rooflng ............................................ ............. 346_
Securlty ........................................................348 ·

Lots ........ ............................... ~ .... ....... ........ 3035 ·
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real E1tale Rentllla ................................... 3500
ApartmenUt/Townhouaes ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Condomlnluma ..... .......................: .............. 3515

TraveVEntertalnment ...............................: .. 352
Flnanclal ............ ....... ..... .......... ..................... 400
Financial Servlces...... ~ ...............................,405
tneurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..........,.......................................... SOO
Bualne•• &amp; Trode School ........................... sos
ln•trucllon &amp; Tralnlng ... .............................. 510

Storage ................. ...................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
.Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lota............................................................. 4005
Movera........................................................ 4010
Aentala .......................................... ;...... ...... 4015

Peraonal ... ............................................. ....... 520
Anlmara ............. ........................ ................... 600

=rt

Animal Suppiloo .,_ ...................................... 605

Property ......................................... 5000
rt Property tor sale ........................... 5025

ort Property for rent ........................... 5050

Horae• ..................... :.................................... 810
Uveatock .................... ............................... .. .615
Pete ................. ,............................................. 620
Want to buy ............................. ... ~ ................. 625

!l1'iployment ..................................... ..........6000
A}:countlng/Financlal ................ ................ &amp;op2
Aeltnlnlatratlve1Proteaa.l onal ... ..................6004
Caahler/Cierk ............................................. 6006

Hou1es for Rent ........................................ 3520
Tu/Accounllng ..... ,..................................... 350 Lond (Acreage) .......................................... 3525

Memberships at the art
gallery are being paired
· with a
HIGHLY COLLECTIBLE
Special Edition Cobalt
Blue B,LENKO Glaas
Vase.
Individual Memberahl"l;ll
&amp; Vase ($120) .
Family Memberahlp &amp; ·
Vase ($160)
, Perfect holiday glftl

Solea ........................................................... 4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Lelaona........................................................515 Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030

For more Information or
to place order plecae• cell,

Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equipment--·············· .. ························ 705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Hay. Feed, Seed, Groin ............................... 715
Hunt1n116 Lend ........................................... 720
W1nt to buy ................................., .................725
MerchondiH ..............-................................. 100

· Child/Elderly Cara ............... :.....................eooa
Clerical ...................,........................_........... 6010
Conltructlon .............. ............. .:................. 6012
Drivers 6 Dellvory ..................................... &amp;014
Educatlon................,..................................6018
Electrlcol f'lumblng ....-.................. ;..........6018
Employment /lgenclo1 ..............................6020

Antlquee .......................................................905

Entertllnment .................. .......................... 6022

Auctlona ....................................................... 91!

Government&amp; Federal Joba ....................6026

Flea Markets ................. ~ ....... ................. ...... 940

Mechanlce .................................................. 6036

Furniture ....................................... ,............. , 950

Muelcel .................... ......, ..... - .......... ..... ...... 6040

Kid 's Corner ............... ..................... .. ..........960
Mlacellaneout ................. .,. ...........................965

Reatauranta .........•..................................... 6044
Salea ..................................................... ..... 6048 .

Appilanco .................................................... 810 Food Servtceo.....................................,......6024
Bargain Baeament.......................................820

(304) 812-4625
.

Help anted- Ganeral .................................. 6028
Coilectlblea ..................................................825 low Enforcemenl .................-...................,6030
Camputera ................................................... t30 Molntononco/Do~M~Uc ............................. 6032
Equlpment1Suppllea.................................... 935 Men•gement/Supervleory ........................6034
Fual Oil CoaVWood!Goo ............................. 945 Medical ............................................. ......... 6038

Senior Resource Center
Mark Hasse,man LMT, MMP

..

(740) 388-8002

.

Hobby!Hunt6 Sport....................................955 Part·Tima-Tomporarlea ............................6042
Want to buy .................................,................970 Technical Trodeo ....................................... 6050
Yard Sale .....................................................975 Textllea/Foctory ........:........................... ,.... 6052

•

13

acres . co. water $26,900.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Upcoming specials:

Halloween Party
at Bennigans

loll &amp; Found

200

.N ow you can have borders ond graphics
~
added to your classified ads
rJ~
,m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
5.1.00 for large

All Dl•play; 12 Noon 2

~

Monday thru Friday
.8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.ITI.

.

'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

ll

BULLETIN BOARD
O'Dell True Value Lumber
Case XX "Selecr Pocket Knives
30% off with is Ad!
Choose lrdm Stag, Bone or
Mother of Pearl

www.mydailysentinel,com
www.mydailyregister.com

Oeacll1/te:&amp;·o ;•9• .. v Ad&amp;
•'

Replacement brood cow sale,
Wednesday, Oct. 29 , 12:30 p .m.

Back To The Farm:

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

•

Cows, $300-$735; Baby Galves,
$25-$180; Goats, $25-$87 ; Lambs,
$60-$86; Hogs , $46-$50.
$45-

Websites:

www.mydailytribune .com

To Place
ll\.egtgter
m:rthune
Sentinel
Your Ad,.
992-2156 (304) . 675-1333
Call TOdCiy••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
, Or Fax To
992-2157
6!5-5234

recent rains have taken on
his family's pumpkin patch
in ihe state's top-producing
county.
vinifera grapes in Ohio.
Several heavy downpours
Scheduled on the agenda across many parts of ·West
are Maurus Brown of OSU Texas in the past few weeks
South Centers, two area carne at inopporrune times
owners, Don for pumpktn producers.
winery
Branson of SOACDF, and Muddy fields filled with the
Christy Eckstein of Ohio · orange Qrhs must . dry out
Grape
Industries before they can be harvested
and sold.
Committe.e .
The. delays 'have cost
for more information
Heptad
Vegetables - where
about the program, conCarthel
and his uncles work
tact Amy Corbin or
Richard Stephens at (740) in Floyd.County - several
thousand dollars.
446-7007.

Cows-Steady

In One Week With Us

classified@mydailytribune.com

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County
Agriculture,
BY BETSY BLANEY · ' "We couldn 't get them out
Natural Resources, and
ASSOCIATED PAESS WAITER
of the field," he said . "We
Community Development
didn't ·have them to sell."
LUBBOCK, Texas
Educator, Ohio · State
It's prime pumpkin time
Greg Carthel knows the toll across the country with
University Extension.)

Heifers, $65-$80.

C L A S S I F I ·E D

•

OH .

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS
United
Producers Inc. market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, Oct. 22,2008.

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

Gallia

'Grape Growing Listening Session' set for Nov. 12
QALLIPOLIS
Aspiring grape growers
looking to plant highijuality, high-value wine
:grapes can get their juicy
questions answered at 'a
"Grape Growing Listening
Session on Wednesday,
'Nov. 12 from 6:30 to 8:30
.p.m. at the C.». McKenzie
Agricultural Center, Ill
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The "Grape Growing
Listening Session" will

October 26, 2008

Takes part in soil judgillg

EXTENSION CORNER

~ Care
'

DOWN ON THE

PageD2

BECOME AN
IMPORTANT PART OF
THE MEDICAL
COMMUNITY AS A

In Memory of our
Dear Mother,
and.Grandmother

Arline
Davis
0etober 28, 1990

MEDICAL
ADMINISTRATLVE
ASSISTANT

How Precious are the
Sweet Memories.

DAYMAR COLLEGE

In Memory

504 McCarty Lane, Jackson, Ohio 456-10

..

Birthday

Memories
Forever
Missed,
Never

1-740-286-1554 08~t·I 8&gt;1T

�'

~iunbap li.- ·itntintl.

.'•
•,

•

will protect perennials when moved

Bv HAL I&lt;NEEN

be stored at temperatures
between 50-60 degrees.
. Has frost nipped your ten- Store washed roots of
dahlias, cannas, tuberous
;der perennials?
• Now is the time to dig up begonias , mandevilla vine,
:and bring in th~ dahlias, sweet potato ,vines in peat
:gladioli, cannas, mandevilla moss placed into cardboard
~ines, and rul)erous bego- boxes. After curing the root
!nias for replanting next structure place into peat:Year. The root system moss, perlite or agef( saw60
:(tuberous roots, corms, rhi- dust keep roots at
degrees, 50-60 degrees. 45:~omes and tubers) needs to
;be dug with a minimal 50 degrees, 50-60 degrees,
;:amount of damage to the and 60 degrees respectively.
If your storage area is moist
~forage roots.
·
some
growers store using
~ Mold and rot damage are
imajor reasons why these sand or vermiculite .
Early next spring , divide
;Plants are not _successfully
the
roots and exchange with
.overwintered inside. Insect
Aind improper storage tern- other gardeners . For more
, fperatures are two other rea- information. check out
:Sons. When ·preparing the Extension's factsheet 1244,
Flowering
~I structures for overwin- " Summer
~ring gently wipe off or Bulbs." found at www.ohio:'1\'ash s.o i I 'from the roots.• line .osu .edu or from the
This assists, in minimizing local extension office.
•••
insect damage especially
"
Are
you
interested in
from sowbugs and pillbugs .
Allow the washed roots to learning more about alterair dry for several days. Be native renewable energy?
careful not to expose the Plan on attending "OSU
Energy
roots to too cold tempera- Renewable
tures (under 45 F.) as they Workshop" on Nov. 12 at
dry. Label the plants with , Ohio Agncultural Research
,both stake labels and write o;md Development Center in
Wooster.
on the bag , too.
Some plants like elephant
The workshop will
e!lf'S and caladiums prefer to , spotlight what's new in

..

alternative
energy,
what's · practical and
affordable, and what can
help people save money.
The workshop will bring
experts · with different
backgrounds together to
· address concerns related
to renewable energy such
as benefits, reliability,
maintenance, capital and
operating costs of the
new technologies.
Topics include: Energy
Conservation on Cars,
Homes and Businesses;
Solar and Wind Energy;
Biofuels;
and Other
Alternatives: Geothermal
and Wood Pellet The
workshop is sponsored by
· Sustainable
Energy
Network
of
Wayne
County, OARDC and
Ohio State University
Extension.
·
Contact Mary Wicks for
further information at
(330) 202-2533 or e-mail
wicks. l4@osu.edu.

FARM

cover everything from
how to get started in the
grape growing business,
including potential funding resources, to the differences and similarities
between growing grapes
·
·
and tobacco.
Today, Ohio is home to
more than I 00 wineries and
only 2 ,200 acres of grapes.
thus the potential and need
to grow more high-quality,
high-value · hybrid and

Sunday, October 26, 2oo8

E-mail

Feeder Cattle-Lower
275-415 lbs., Steers, $75-$117 ,
Heifers, $70-$106; 425-525 lbs .,
Steers, $75-$115 , Heifers, $65$92; 550-625 lbs., Steers. $75. $105. Heifers, $65-$88; 650-725
lbs .• Steers, $75-$97, Heifers, $65$84; 750-850.1bs., Steers, $75-$88,

Well-Muscled/Fleshed,
$59.50.
Medium/Lean, $35-$45.
Thin/Light, $20-$35.
Bulls, $50-$76.50.

Cow/Calf Pairs, $500-$840; Bred

.
.
Subtftltted photo
Members of he South Galtia FFA recently attended soil judging in Baltimore, Ohio, on Oct.
11. The contestants judged the soil for its value in home construction, septic systems and
landscaping. South Gallia FFA President Cody Crawford placed filth in the state overall!
Members of the team that competed at state were Cody Crawford, Tori Duncan, Colby Lee
and Beth Bush . The 'South Gallia Ff'A advisor is David Pope.

Pumpkin growers ,in Texas say demand is up
from Floyd County this year.
Across the country, pumpkin prices are up in many
places , though that could
reflect increased production
Halloween
and and transportation costs . said
Thanksgiving just around Gary Lucier of the U.S.
the comer. Youngsters and Agnculture Department.
adults are gearin~ up lo ·
U.S.. pumpkin production
carv'e ghoulish, frightening has grown stgnificantly over
or silly faces on the gourds; the past 25 years, according
omers will make pies from . to a 4007 USDA report. The
the innards .
·.
number of (arms reporting
Demand for pumpkins is pumpkin acreage has more
at an all-time high, Texas than doubled since 1982 to
a~culiur¢ officials said, and 14,073 farms and harvested
it s mostly because there are area has more than tripled to
fewer pumpkins coming about %,400 acres .

For more information, call
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241 or
Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the
website at-www.uproducers.com.

Now Reopen for
Business/

Wolfe's Auto
Repair

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

2008 Chev
Malibu Classic

61 Vine St.. M·F 7-6, Sat. B·5; sun. 1o-4

on sale now

$13,850
O'Dell True Value Lumber
Hunter Ceiling Fans in Stock
Limited LIFETIME Motor Warranty
Assemble in 5 min.
Hunter makes quiet fans.

Smith Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

61 Vine St., M-F 7-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun . 10-4

'

.

Now Taking
orders OJl th~
2010 Chev. Camara
at

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

Smith Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

HUNTERS EDUCATION
Nov. t ·2. Noon • 5
&amp;Noon - 6
To register Call
388·9436 or 446-9525
Gallla County Gun Club

Chainsaw Carving
Sale
going on now, until
November 30
at Davison Greenhouse
and Nursery
Check out the Eagles and Baars.
Variety ol Flowers and shrubs.
· Clay Chapel l=ld.
Gallipolis

...

Gallipolis Jr. Woman's Club
Small Business Expo
Nov. 1al•10am·2pm
Gallipolis Christian Church
Sl. Rl. 588
Tupparware, Xango·. Tasiefully
Simple, Tope's Furniture, Wanda
Willis Book "The Beveled Mirror:
Rallectlone of an Appalachian
Family (available for book signing
111112:30)
Morning Glory Breads &amp; Baked
Goods, Jewelry, Make up/Spa
products, Crafts. Basekts, many
more...
For more information contact:
740·367·5041

Please come support our local
busineues.

Poinl Pleasant
Monday, Oct. 27th
Kids Night 6 pm - 8 pm
Costume Contest
Friday .O ct. 31st
Adult Party
Live Band at 10 pm
Blue Sky Falling
Coslume Contest $250 prize

ENGLE CONStRUCTION
REUNION
November 2·, 2008
12:00 - 3:00 ..
Location Vintpn Co.
Fairgrounds
Bring covered. dish ,
Drinks and table service provided.

•

DEMOCRAT
CHILI DINNER
Monday, October 27
6pm
AMVETS in Kanauga
DONATIONS ONLY
AUCTION
Autographed Basketball
BEVO FRANCIS
Autographed Football, MIKE
BARTRUM, TROY BROWN
PLUS PRO PLAYE;RS.
..
367·7530

Tai·Chi Beginner
Class
Starting
Oct. 27, 2008
5pm

Pols

lost
white
Maltese
PUPP't.last 'seen in SyraLost &amp; found
cuse area.$50 reward for
M~ To Lend
:"'""!";;o;;;;o;;~;;;;;;;;o;;;;; retum740-591-7837
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~--~=
'Found near Holzer m """"""'""'""'""'""'"' NOTICE Borrow Smart.

FOUND, Siamese cat on
Jericho
Ad.
Pt.
Pl.
304-675·3522

A mou:1cemen1s

Bualne•• D•v• Prior To

Mi100llan00111

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Auctions
for
Concrete
Angle,
"':::~:::"'~~-:"":""':' ::---~----~;;;;;;;; Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
fREE. Blonde Lab 1 ~ 0 1 Cross
Creek
Auction , Grating .tor Drains , Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
112 yrs old, Wonderful Buffalo, Saturday~ pm
w·o·" Ch•'ldten caU a"er
U
sed
.
Cons•gnmen.ts
scrap Metals Open Mon.
11
Sp~ 304 _675_2529
from Jackson &amp; ·Roane Tue, Wed &amp; Fri.

Autos

Houoos For Sale

2006 Durango 4 wheel House for salelrenl 3BA
drive. leather. sun roof, &amp; 2 bath central air 1 stm'y
DVD
player.
$10,000 . in Gallipolis. 448-2692
256- 1618
Colonial Home for Sale.
51*!
details
@
Trucb
www.orvb.com, ID: Mor·

Land (Aa.ogt(
Meigs Co. 5 acres on
Landaker or Cook Ads.

$19 ,900.

Danville

Basket Games ·
.
Ani Vet Building
Sunday, October 26, 20C)8 '
Doors open at2:30 pm
Games start at 3:30 pm
B~ing items for packages for
Troops In Iraq
. Sponsored by: Xtreme
Cheemastlcs Alistars
.

Curves
"Girls Night In"
'
Open to all
Tuesday, Oct. 28
6:30 - 8:30 pm
Come pamper yourself
Fun. Free LivAid to assist
Breast Cancer Awareness

Cliff has recovered
from back surgery and
back to work.
Stop and see us at
805 Raccoon •Rd.
Open- M-F
8 :00 am - 4:00 pm or
Call 446-1588 for
appointment

Reedsville
7 acres,
Australian
Noticos
Contact the Ohio Divi$14,500! Salem Clr. 18+
Shepherd.
Call ~~~~::-"~~ slon· of Financial lnsliluacres, pond $49,900.
740-577-3008
':':'
tions Office of Consumer
gan
or
· call Gallla co. 10+ ac~
1996
964390
NOTICE
OH!OcoVALLEY
Affairs BEFORE yo.u rellCounties,
Furniture,
Bam-4:30pm._,
Closed miles, 70GMC
PUBLISHING
. rec
·
p
eng1ne gas, 5. (740)441·0031
51 2.500! . We linanc•l
.
· nance your ' home or ob- Miniature
·schnauzers Hand Tools &amp; rcxl.lce. Thurs. S~t &amp; Sun. speOO trans, 24 ·ft bed, Extraordinary Property: Call 740·4.4.1-1492 for
otn~ends
Ulat
you
do tain a loan. BEWARE of available. (740)992-1328
Building is fuK inside &amp; 740·446-7300
b
th
1
GVW 25950 lbs, Don't Speclacular view of the map~ or VISit www. runb
':!!!!;!~~::;~~ uslness WI peep e you requests for any large
·
out. Starting to sell hiQh ~~~~~~~ need , COL, . $B.5oo Ohio River
erland.com
'
know, and NOT to se~ · advance payments of ,Miniture . , . Dachshund_quality Knives such as New ·Lennox Pulse ·Furthrough the marl
CKC 1egr&lt; ered shols
naco down droH with .,. 304·773·5343
Pnvate drive off Lincoln ·
*POLICIES* money
.
. . · tees or insurance. Call
· , '
· Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
""',;,.,.;..,""'""'""'" Hi!l, Pomeroy, Ohio, Trade· 1995 Chevy Cori'Oido Valley
until you have lnvestlgat- the Office of Consumer wormed Males &amp; Fe- Oak. Air Conditioned. tr~ pans, 90,000 BTU. ~
Vans ,
woods on three sides version Van, excellent
PubUshlng reserves
ing the offering.
Affiars toll free at mates,
longhair &amp; VIsa, Master Card &amp; $699 00 740-446·4306
"'!"~~~~~~~ (4+)acres. to a historical condition, easy on gas
therlghtto edit,
1-866·278-0003 to learn shorthalr, red &amp; black/tan Debit 304·550·1616 SteSTEEL ARCH
0'1 Oldsmobile Silhouene home. Circa 1900, 5 also w/trailer "76"x16,
rejectore~ncelany
if the mortgage broker or $200 304 -593-3820
phenReedy'l t639
BUILDINGS
98000 mile, 1 owner. bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 2-35001i axles. 2 wheel
ad atany time.
lender" is properly li· Pomeranian pups. 6 ~k~
Made in USA. Three DVD player, great cond. full baths, 2 staircases, brakes wlramp tor 5
Errors Must
censed. (This is a public old, lst &amp; 2nd shots
Fuel I Oil I Coal I
cancelled orders · will $5495 740"441-9322
beautiful original wood- acres in Meigs County,
rted on the Hrs
DomesMcs 1Janitorial service
announcement wormed. 2 (M) lefl. $15"0.
Wood I Gas
sell fo r balance owed.
work, many picture win- (740)992-0174
~~--;;;;i;~;;o;;~ from the Ohio Valley 10321 SA 141. Gallipolis '
16x24 &amp; 25x36. Call
Wa~tlo_ luy
dows. mostly new win- •
Peal Estate
IY of pubU
Will do_ housekO&amp;rJing In Publishing Company)
Firewood for sale, hard today to save thoudows. large kitchen and 3500
nd the T
GallipoliS area. Calr
Shih-tzu puppies .for wood split delivered. sands! 800·352·0469
Cars, Trucks, and GMC, breakfast room, beauti·
Rentals
ndnei·Regiater wll
446-2115ask tor Lori.
sale, partially housebro· 256-9115
Saturn, Buipk SUV's with fully landscaped . wilt) 'in
i-espon~lble for n
ken &amp; 3 mOnths old, ::'se"'·•"'•o"'n"'ed':"'"--:F~r·r"'•w"'o...::od Zero
tum
mower. warranty. Visit us at ground pool. Sit· on the !!
ore than the cost o
Hom• Improvements
(740)416·6449
H d od 446 9204
Gravely. 60 inch deck. (gocdookmotoffi:com)
wrap around porch ai1r:!
Apartmenb/
he sPace occupl
ar wo . .
27 HF'. Moving. must Cook Motors 326 JackTownhouHI
Basement
Vorkle Puppies for salE! Se
F
ood CAA
son Pike. 740-446 .o1o3
enjoy the , spectacular
f tile error and onl
asoned irew
se11. 367·7129
0"-~-~~~- view ol the Ohio River. 2
e first lnsertiQn.' W
Waterproofing
$350 &amp; $450. Vet recom· HEAP
aCcepted. """'""'""'""'""'""'"" ,.,Want to buy Junk Cars, car detached garage and 1BA Apt, W/0 hookups,
Unconditional
life time
mended. 8 wks old. 64 5-5946 or 441 _0941
satellite TV. incl. · wfrenJ.
hall not be liable to
. guarantee. Local refer740-441-9510
,.~W~a~ni~To"".:'Buy~~ can740·388·0884
2 out buildings. Would close to hospital. Call
ences furnished. EstabPels
Hobb / H nt &amp; Sport ':::'
make a wonderflJI family 740-339·0362
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
y
u
Buying tools sell or trade
home or bed &amp;breakfast.
740·446-0870, Rogers 2 ki "e ns house b-'"ken 4
GUN SHOW . LANCAS· met:hailic-carpenter lawn
Private and Picturesque
2 be(jroom, living room.
TEA. ·oH. Nov. 1 lrom C
&amp; II garden
Basement W
aterprooI.lng.. months old lree to a
740 3"" power
515 tools.II ;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;; SPECTACULARVIEW . kitchen, bath Apanment.
pood home.
9·5 &amp; Nov. 2 from 9·3. a · · uu· l or ce
Serious inquires only, Ha&gt;Je Central Air, fur·
Other S.mc..
•·' 6-2273 or 709·9513
Faim Equipment
FairtieiO County Fair- ~740-:-...-2:-:06..,·0-,;3~0~~~~
2
Hou... For Sale
please cal1740·992·3676 nished ·'"' with couch,
:!P;;;et,..~Cr;;;em;;;a~li;;;ons;;o;;,;;;;;;:C~all "sh"'t"!T:-:zu-pu-p"'pi-es~3-m-al~es·. ::EB::Y,~;;o;;;;;i;;~IN:!TE::G::R::IT~Y, grounds. AAA Building. Absolute Top Dollar . sil· .~18::6~N:-ort~h""!:Pa~ri&lt;~D:"r,;;;;;;;ca;: l t;)f Sale 2 ~tor} al ~~1J Mt chairs. washer, dryei,
stove. microwave, beds,
Adm.. $4.
135 6' TBLS verlgold· ' coins, any 304·675·5640
or \'emon A~e Pih Pk:1sant,
740·446·3745
PIJre bread no papers KIEFER BUILt,
s
0-667·0412
,.
35
74
1
each. VALLEY HORSE/LIVE· ::.;;;!;.;!.!!!i;:!e;,;;""'""" 10K/14KI18K gold jew· 304-593-1204 will sell on ~tlr.. lha.. II. liS.:. ~~~ mg dining table and chairS,
5275
$400 deposit, $450 j
STOCK
TRAILERS, ... Miscellaneoua
elry, dentai gold, pre land . Contr.3ct or Out S80JlOU.m4-fl75-2AA7.
Prolouionol s.,...;co• 740-25 6.1907
monlh.
Call
~~~.,..~~~ LOAD
MAX.
EQUIP· ~..................;;;;;;;; 1935 US currency, Right. Also a Welllngton
304-882·2523
leavp
TURNED DOWN ON AKC Mini Dapple Oachs- MENT
.TRAILERS, ~200
dl proof/mint ~ts , dia- Plano call for , appoint·
MeS$age and Number ~
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI hund · pups Fema Ies CARGO EXPRESS &amp; + $ Nascar tra ng monds, MTS C&lt;&gt;'n Shop'. ment to see them both.
not at Home.
No Fee Unless We Win! $450. 740·256-t498
HOMESTEADER
cards 100·00
151 2nd Avenue. Galli· ~~~"":"~~~
1·886·582·3345
~~~-----~ CARGO/CONCESSION ~~d ~~ ~nOOin the red ~po~li~s.~44=6-=2=84i:2::::== 2 br. 1 b.. lull loasemenl,
2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 8~
CKC Maltese pups. Fe- TRAILERS.
B+W Dale Jr. Budweiser raeabove ground pool, deAM 'Rtal Ea
House on 5th St. ~
.
Read
your
mates $550. Males ·$500 GOOSENECK FLATBED ing- 3-D stand up $20.00
tached double garage,
· ertlstmenta a
Pleasant 304·81 2·435ll
newspaper
and
learn
on
740·256-1498
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· 304 _675 _6822
fenced-in back ' yard. nice
•
bjtciiO the Fodera
ask
for Don
something
today!
SAYINGS
~~~~~~TIRE
TRAILER'
INVEN·
~~~
......
~~
........
neighborhood
in
Aacone,
air Housing Act
Female Mini Schnauzer. TORY AT
"'!"
'!!!
( 740)992 .1424
6 month old. $iOO wilh
Jet Aeration Motors reCampen/ RVs &amp;
968,
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
cage. 740 _441 -03SS
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt in
Trailers
3 Bed. 2 Bath HUD
~~
.....
~~
......
~
TAAILERS.COM
stock.
Cal
!
R
on
Evans,
-;;;;~;;;;;;"'-"-;;;;;;;;=
Homes!
O
nly
$1
9,900
lor
This
For Sale Shih Tzu Pun· 740·446·3625
'.!-1·,::80:::0.::;5~3:,;
7-.::;95;:;28::0,-:-:::::: Av Service at carmi- listings 800·620·4946 ex
ccePI• only htl
pies
~...-...-~~
......
~
For
SaleOne 70,000 chael
Trailers R019
·
anted ads meeun
Born • 08-28·08,
CKC
Have
you
priced
a Joho BTU floor furnace, $50.00 740·446·'""5
DE standardt.
·
;..,;;;,;,;,;,;-;;;,;..,""'""'""
3BR
sq. H.
Reg. 1 .female ·$350.00,3
Deere lately? You'll .be 304·675·2902.
. ;. ;,
with full2.5BA
Bsmt.,1721
2 car 2,:p
will
. no
male
$300.00
vet. surprised! Check out our Holiday Baking
Now
Moton:ydea
on 0.6AC. in Spring ValWt.
ctlecked 1st shots &amp; used
inventory
at
. . ·
OHJO UNIVERSITY
nowlngly accept an·
wormed,wl papers.
WW'w .CAREO.com. Car- .available: Coat1 ng. choco- 2007 Kawasaki Ninja ley Est. move in rea~y ·
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
dvertlsement
I
Shop
parents on premises call m..::hael
Equipment fates, glazed lrwt, nuts, 250 uncter 1500 miles Appoint.
Only
THE .' OLLOWING POSITION:
lolatlon of lhe law.
304·593·6256.
740 446-24.12
. etc. Buy bulk and save. red helmel and lank bog _74":'0--2~860:-5":'2-80::-::-~~ Pan Time
Regu lar Food StJrvice Wnrk t-r
~~~~=~~~~C~ta~s~s~l~fl~e~d~s~l~:::::____~:::::__ _, Trickling
.,.
-;
Store. Spnng
Camdus Country
Rd. $2,800. 740-645·1912
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office ill Dining S e r&gt;JiCL'~
1
CLASSIFIED INDEX
740-379-9110
99 Honda XR70R Good lown · hw &amp; tile lloors, Pleas~ usc thb link. to view the posting dewil s
apply on line:
Leg81a ...... ..................................................... 100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
~M-ol-lo-ha-n--:C-arp-e~l~F~all ~~~iti~~- ;~~~ ~~· ~~~=~~d :~:n &amp;&amp; ~~hv~ and
www.ohioun i \'t' rsit ;)obs.comJappl iGm t-s
Announcements •• : ................. ............... ....... 200 ATV ............................. ... ....... ........ ...... ........ 1005
Special. 20 oz. COmmer- or _ _
~
ground pool, security /Central ?qu ickFi nd=55061
740 645 4647
Blrthday/Annlveraary.................................. 205 Blcyclee ...................................................... 1010
cia! Carpet S6.95/yard.
system, much more. 130
Happy Ads ............ ...... .................................. 210 Boata/Accessorles.................................... 1015
several
·
Colors.
Bastiani Or. S129.000For Application Deadline: November 9. 2008
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 Camper/RVa &amp; Trailers ............................. 1 ~
740-446·7444. Quality al
pies and information go For quc~ t ion s. please email: she ppanl @ohio.cd u
Memory/TI1ank You ....................:······.......:.. 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1 u.c:5
Notlcea ................................... .............. ........ 225 Other ..........................................................1030
Low Prices!
10.
www.orvb .com ur ' "II 740-.193-0J 12
Pareonale ..................................................... 230 Want 10 buy ...............................................1035
Travel trunk ·. 14" x
::44~6~
-2:0:92::03~~":::!:-::"~
Autos
~ek candidates with u commiunent in
WanIed ,.................................................,..... 235 Automo IIve ........................................ ......., 2000
14"/15"high
tooled -:::::-:~:#~~~
Oak Hil l area 3 BA 2 full
Servlcea ................................................... ~... 300 Auto Rentai/L.Hae.....................................2005
leather . Stenclled s A ~
bath Country living new working effectively with students, faculty ami
Appliance Servlce ..................:....................302 Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Couch, Pt Pleasant Va 2001 Pontiac Grand MA .condition 1.S acres value stan· frum diverse backgrounds. Ohio University
Automotlva .................................................. 304 Claoolc/AntlquH ....................................... 2o15
did May iB5B·Phone 304 take. .o ver paymenls $75 ,000 now $59;900. an Equal Opponunily/Affirmative .~c tioo
304 675 3166
Building Materia 11....................................... 306 Commerclalllnduatrlal............. .. ............... 2020
Employer.
Bualness .......... ::.......................................... 308 Pa~ &amp; Accasaorlea....... :...........:.............. 2025
592·1547 inElvening.
uCa:n~e:oo-:9:5:1·:20:6~0~.· .,=~;,:~;,;.;;,;;;;.;;;;;;::====~
Caterlng ........................................................3t0 Sporto Utlllty .............................................. 2030
r
Child/Elderly care·....................................... 3t2 Trucka ................................:........................ 2035
In Memory
SCHOOL OR INSTRUCTION
computero .......... :.....................-.................. 314 Utility Tratte...............................................204D
In Memory

· Gallipoli s.

1

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

67 7

Contractora .................................................. 316
Domeatlca/Janltorlal ................................... 318

Electrlcol ...-..................................................320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................328
Heating 6 Cooling ....................................... 328
Homa lmprovamenla 330

lnaurence ..................................................... 332

Vana ......................... ............................... .... 2045

Want to buy .................................... :.......... 2050

Roal Eatate Saloa ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plota ..........................................3005
commarclal ..............................._................3010
COndomlnlumo ..........................................3015
For Sale by Owner................ ..................... 3020
Houeee for Sale .... .-................ .............. ...... 3025

Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Lend (Acraoge) .......................................... 3030

GALLERY at 409
· Limited TI!M Holiday
offer
• .
'
Individual and Family

Muele/Dance1Drama ................,................... 338
OtherServlcea ................ ............................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrtcal ..................................... 340
Proteaalonal8ervlces ................................. 342
Repalra ............... ........................ ....... ,... .. ..... 344
Rooflng ............................................ ............. 346_
Securlty ........................................................348 ·

Lots ........ ............................... ~ .... ....... ........ 3035 ·
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real E1tale Rentllla ................................... 3500
ApartmenUt/Townhouaes ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Condomlnluma ..... .......................: .............. 3515

TraveVEntertalnment ...............................: .. 352
Flnanclal ............ ....... ..... .......... ..................... 400
Financial Servlces...... ~ ...............................,405
tneurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..........,.......................................... SOO
Bualne•• &amp; Trode School ........................... sos
ln•trucllon &amp; Tralnlng ... .............................. 510

Storage ................. ...................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
.Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lota............................................................. 4005
Movera........................................................ 4010
Aentala .......................................... ;...... ...... 4015

Peraonal ... ............................................. ....... 520
Anlmara ............. ........................ ................... 600

=rt

Animal Suppiloo .,_ ...................................... 605

Property ......................................... 5000
rt Property tor sale ........................... 5025

ort Property for rent ........................... 5050

Horae• ..................... :.................................... 810
Uveatock .................... ............................... .. .615
Pete ................. ,............................................. 620
Want to buy ............................. ... ~ ................. 625

!l1'iployment ..................................... ..........6000
A}:countlng/Financlal ................ ................ &amp;op2
Aeltnlnlatratlve1Proteaa.l onal ... ..................6004
Caahler/Cierk ............................................. 6006

Hou1es for Rent ........................................ 3520
Tu/Accounllng ..... ,..................................... 350 Lond (Acreage) .......................................... 3525

Memberships at the art
gallery are being paired
· with a
HIGHLY COLLECTIBLE
Special Edition Cobalt
Blue B,LENKO Glaas
Vase.
Individual Memberahl"l;ll
&amp; Vase ($120) .
Family Memberahlp &amp; ·
Vase ($160)
, Perfect holiday glftl

Solea ........................................................... 4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Lelaona........................................................515 Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030

For more Information or
to place order plecae• cell,

Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equipment--·············· .. ························ 705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Hay. Feed, Seed, Groin ............................... 715
Hunt1n116 Lend ........................................... 720
W1nt to buy ................................., .................725
MerchondiH ..............-................................. 100

· Child/Elderly Cara ............... :.....................eooa
Clerical ...................,........................_........... 6010
Conltructlon .............. ............. .:................. 6012
Drivers 6 Dellvory ..................................... &amp;014
Educatlon................,..................................6018
Electrlcol f'lumblng ....-.................. ;..........6018
Employment /lgenclo1 ..............................6020

Antlquee .......................................................905

Entertllnment .................. .......................... 6022

Auctlona ....................................................... 91!

Government&amp; Federal Joba ....................6026

Flea Markets ................. ~ ....... ................. ...... 940

Mechanlce .................................................. 6036

Furniture ....................................... ,............. , 950

Muelcel .................... ......, ..... - .......... ..... ...... 6040

Kid 's Corner ............... ..................... .. ..........960
Mlacellaneout ................. .,. ...........................965

Reatauranta .........•..................................... 6044
Salea ..................................................... ..... 6048 .

Appilanco .................................................... 810 Food Servtceo.....................................,......6024
Bargain Baeament.......................................820

(304) 812-4625
.

Help anted- Ganeral .................................. 6028
Coilectlblea ..................................................825 low Enforcemenl .................-...................,6030
Camputera ................................................... t30 Molntononco/Do~M~Uc ............................. 6032
Equlpment1Suppllea.................................... 935 Men•gement/Supervleory ........................6034
Fual Oil CoaVWood!Goo ............................. 945 Medical ............................................. ......... 6038

Senior Resource Center
Mark Hasse,man LMT, MMP

..

(740) 388-8002

.

Hobby!Hunt6 Sport....................................955 Part·Tima-Tomporarlea ............................6042
Want to buy .................................,................970 Technical Trodeo ....................................... 6050
Yard Sale .....................................................975 Textllea/Foctory ........:........................... ,.... 6052

•

13

acres . co. water $26,900.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Upcoming specials:

Halloween Party
at Bennigans

loll &amp; Found

200

.N ow you can have borders ond graphics
~
added to your classified ads
rJ~
,m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
5.1.00 for large

All Dl•play; 12 Noon 2

~

Monday thru Friday
.8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.ITI.

.

'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

ll

BULLETIN BOARD
O'Dell True Value Lumber
Case XX "Selecr Pocket Knives
30% off with is Ad!
Choose lrdm Stag, Bone or
Mother of Pearl

www.mydailysentinel,com
www.mydailyregister.com

Oeacll1/te:&amp;·o ;•9• .. v Ad&amp;
•'

Replacement brood cow sale,
Wednesday, Oct. 29 , 12:30 p .m.

Back To The Farm:

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

•

Cows, $300-$735; Baby Galves,
$25-$180; Goats, $25-$87 ; Lambs,
$60-$86; Hogs , $46-$50.
$45-

Websites:

www.mydailytribune .com

To Place
ll\.egtgter
m:rthune
Sentinel
Your Ad,.
992-2156 (304) . 675-1333
Call TOdCiy••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
, Or Fax To
992-2157
6!5-5234

recent rains have taken on
his family's pumpkin patch
in ihe state's top-producing
county.
vinifera grapes in Ohio.
Several heavy downpours
Scheduled on the agenda across many parts of ·West
are Maurus Brown of OSU Texas in the past few weeks
South Centers, two area carne at inopporrune times
owners, Don for pumpktn producers.
winery
Branson of SOACDF, and Muddy fields filled with the
Christy Eckstein of Ohio · orange Qrhs must . dry out
Grape
Industries before they can be harvested
and sold.
Committe.e .
The. delays 'have cost
for more information
Heptad
Vegetables - where
about the program, conCarthel
and his uncles work
tact Amy Corbin or
Richard Stephens at (740) in Floyd.County - several
thousand dollars.
446-7007.

Cows-Steady

In One Week With Us

classified@mydailytribune.com

(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County
Agriculture,
BY BETSY BLANEY · ' "We couldn 't get them out
Natural Resources, and
ASSOCIATED PAESS WAITER
of the field," he said . "We
Community Development
didn't ·have them to sell."
LUBBOCK, Texas
Educator, Ohio · State
It's prime pumpkin time
Greg Carthel knows the toll across the country with
University Extension.)

Heifers, $65-$80.

C L A S S I F I ·E D

•

OH .

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS
United
Producers Inc. market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, Oct. 22,2008.

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

Gallia

'Grape Growing Listening Session' set for Nov. 12
QALLIPOLIS
Aspiring grape growers
looking to plant highijuality, high-value wine
:grapes can get their juicy
questions answered at 'a
"Grape Growing Listening
Session on Wednesday,
'Nov. 12 from 6:30 to 8:30
.p.m. at the C.». McKenzie
Agricultural Center, Ill
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The "Grape Growing
Listening Session" will

October 26, 2008

Takes part in soil judgillg

EXTENSION CORNER

~ Care
'

DOWN ON THE

PageD2

BECOME AN
IMPORTANT PART OF
THE MEDICAL
COMMUNITY AS A

In Memory of our
Dear Mother,
and.Grandmother

Arline
Davis
0etober 28, 1990

MEDICAL
ADMINISTRATLVE
ASSISTANT

How Precious are the
Sweet Memories.

DAYMAR COLLEGE

In Memory

504 McCarty Lane, Jackson, Ohio 456-10

..

Birthday

Memories
Forever
Missed,
Never

1-740-286-1554 08~t·I 8&gt;1T

�OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Apa-./

"Pa tl'*~a/

Townhou11r
2BR APT

(740) llNuHful Aptr. of

CIA

-1.·11 ·01 94

son Ettatea. 52 Westwood Dr.. from $365 to

74D-446-2568.

$560,

Auction

rdal

Townhourer

Jack-

2 bay serviCe station
Apanment available now JackSOn
Ptke. Lease
Riverbend
Apls.
New required. Call 446-~
Haven WV Now, accept- lor more info
!ng
apphcat1011s
tor
HUD-subsidiZed,
one
Hou111 For RMt

Federal Functs just re- . McDonald's

ot

RIO

Grande now lltnf19 momNo closmg cost and 1ng shift, HeXlble hours,
ZERO DOWN! Will do paid Holidays and Vacaland
1mprovements tlon. Apply within
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed·

leased tor Land Owners

2BR close to hosp1tal. Equal Houstng Opportu"~room Apts
Ut111t1os S238/mo• 4 bed . 2 bath
w1d hookup appl fur- mty. Th1s 1ns11tution 15 an ,_...
available
n1sr1ed 740·441 ·3702 or Eq ual Opportunity Pro- 1ncluded . Based on 30% Hank Repol tS% down. 15 rooms
u~
3384
vider
and
Employer
of
ad1vsted
income
Call
740"'4'"K1·
740-286-5789 ,.
ytlii'S , 811 APRI for hstmgs
304·882·3121.
avatlable soJ.e,~2(). 4 Q46t\ ROn
~~~----- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for 5em0r and Disabled

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.

people

lO· clean,

CONVENIENTLY ,

CATED
ABLE!
ments.

Do
an.·

~ ~~u

want to

Stale

St,

;;;o;;;;;""'====""'

&amp;

tor

rent

740-441-1111

mak~

114

AFFORD- ;:
_740
":"'-4~41~-05---00~.....~~ 2004 Doublewide 1n new
TownhOuse apart- 2 bedroom House $300
condition. 4 bedroom, 2
anrJIor
smaII month, Plus Utility, Ref &amp;

houses

Division

~~~-~~~~ For Rent
Management
•· H 1BR Mobile homos &amp; ~,.
Opportuni11es
mo + vg-pos '
• (no pets) In Ashton WV
Rg&amp;Rot. lum,
W&amp;D 304_576 _2942 _
we seek career oriented
hookup, No steps. Very ;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;,;;;,...,.....,,. indNIOOats who wll strive

Call Deposit

for

Pets bath, all appliances In·

No ..

appll- 304 _675_4874

a ,difTcrcnce? If you cation &amp; 1nlormation.
2br on the RIVer in Ma·
~..· ompussinnutc and ~.:om mitted to
2BA garage Apartment, son. HUD Approved Refptlw idmg Quality Cme come and be a part downtown. $425 mth rent erences 304-882-3512 or

ut nu t Lon~ Term Care/Home Care team.
We haw the follow ing positions available:
1-loll.cr Extra { 'a rej .
*Pl'r,pnull'un· Aidrs- Per Dirm:
Hnt1rl ~ nu~ :111J p~11d nulcage
1- ( ~nllia Count~·
1- .lal·kson County

"' u•N - 0() I·TE- Jadson
llon11.: H~o' .tlth AiJe 06 FTE- J.u:k.son
Hollrr Senjor t:y[e Cepter;
lcvc nin~s)

' STNA- I'T
lliolary ·\ld
1\pplicants for Nursing Assjstagt Classes

Holler Assjsted Li&gt;·ipg· GalUoolis;
*Resident Assislant- P'T

Fi.lr Jt't.uls pl~:a~c give Barb Pderson. Director
pf llum,m Rc.~oun:es for our long Tenn Care/
HonK Care Ji~,oi ~i o n &lt;1 cull at 740-441-340 1 or
entail m~ ·,u pctcrMm @holzer org or visi t us on
thl' \\Ch .It www.holzcr.org
Equ.tl Opportunity Employer

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Human Resources
Benefits Coordinator
H(J!L.:r Mt:dKal

Cent~r.

$58,M8
rnymldweslhome.com

house also 14K70 h'BIIer, '740) 446·3570

740.a24-2750

No ~~~~~~~~
smokers&amp;pets.
Ref&amp;dap Brand new 3bed 2bath
$450/mo wlsJt. 256-9190
on + ·haH acre In Pt

Stovelfndge

fum .

Apts 3 bedroom, total etectricj NANCE

1n~.:lud.c :

Bar.:helor·s
Dt:~l~l' 111 Hlllmtn Resources or related field,
Jllt.'\ IIlli-. t'XpC iil'llCt.' wurkmg Wtth
scJf1 unJt:d
worker \ compensm ion pmgram .
AllcnWHl to Jt:tail and c:&lt;cellent customer
...~ rvtcc ~k ill s arc nlso required. Prior
cxpcn L'IlCl' a~ an HR gencrul ist is preferred.
PHR l ~ rtll H.: at inn pteferred .
If inl ~l l' " tcll. pl~a\e contal..'l'

a

HUMAN RESOURCES
IIOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: (740) 446-5105
EOEIADA employer
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

s(occess?
We 'II Fill Your Cart.

3BRI2BA,

11•1••

rr

441.0110

or

•1,

olltl.lr u il111l'

,, fl,uu, 'll•'lll • •fi{H •/.,mlt&lt;' •
l\ 11/r ., , • ,'' (\II \fr •r•• w rlw
/ ' \ 1\ t /I~ ,,,,,. d lift

J,,, 'I ,r r..

Itt

rru/,,,

740-591-5174

3 AM's

I• f"''''t•"ll (, r I~~~~ qr•l.l/111
r, cl'itJ h•l!lltl ljlhll!l\

flrl~ilt.

.&gt;:t/ljlf, " ' \

\ \ , &lt;U&lt;

&amp;

bath rg.

&amp;

ref. Prices Reduced 2 2006

Chureh n•r$0nage. 3BR, chored.

Clean
Ground
2 bath, full basement, 2
Floor, 2br, WID hookup,
Qar
garage.
Includes
References!Deposlt/No
Pets
304•675 _5H32
WID, new fridge and
range Sits on nearly 2
acres $700 plus sec
Now accepting
de'p. For Info or tnspec·
applicatrons at
Valley View Apartments tion call245·0031
800 Slalo

Route 325

Thurman, Ohio 45685

Ho use For Rent tn PoInt

740-245-9170

Pleasant · 2-story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant,
2
2
br.,2
ba
tr.,dr.,k.i1chen w/stove, re·

1-2 Bedroom Apartments
with apptiances lumlshed

On Stte laundry facility.
Call tor details or piCk up · lrtgerator, 1/2 basement,
litrge yard, 110 pets,
application at rental
$550.00,dep &amp; ref req
office.

• i!ldil1•lll&lt;l l,l to .1:~•11 11 llh IH

G~

lllrlna f:vent
WodtlfSday. Octobtr 29th
7am·ll•m &amp; 4pm· 7pm AI ALOI Food•
176 Upper RJ ..r Road
Gallipolis. OH
1.1.'111' fiJI' ''Ut 1 &lt;111 -. ali u/J !h.• t' ovrt~ ~ ll•

111'h.lllt'nRinf Qlll./ n'\l'oJnltn ~:
rt'twJ j ~~~ r. R' V"•~IIhilltl~ ' incW • r11• umrt• r dtlt
(!»lin•' •1!" km •'1"-'fl ltl &lt;&gt;fl (t/_ t~ ll t-&gt;lt

1Jf¥do'il ft&gt; ( lr'dlt'

rf't&lt;I\W r .n .\1'/'m d~sitrx wtd JAA:t~
1/ll'l'rik~t l&lt;liv&gt; -U fl.l f f)(' r lhl~ 1•• "' t!li

i, mt· Jr..tmr 1/i flh Srlltiti
D'fJ/riiJII'I r•r Gf./J n•quiff'1l. ~* tll\o
t't 'tllli•~ pr~ , mr!/')''"1(1// J rru( ·" rrtlfinl
tlll&lt; f ~ /1 J.RIIIUIIt f /}.lr\"l ,l ~ lll'l' 00 rtjJiiiJ
lll 'fJ.JnU/111\ r'lllflm~t~ MJu·J~Ifff' r.uJI.~
ho•ht~'t'll

plt'lnl 1'/'1.1(' '" f'l'll••t.

mainta1ned 4
house &amp; 2 br. cabin
200
acres close
Pomeroy, available
mediately,
Well

Opportumty
TDD• 419-526·0466
"This institution is an
Equal Opportunity.

Provider and Employer"

(740)992-4590
740-416-7538

Ph.

740·388·0000

5

&amp;

•••
3
740"'1NI01·851

740 ·245 •92 15

Even 1ngs

weekends

&amp;

Ph.
&amp;
&amp;

740-388-8017
740-245-9215

740·794·0460
area.

Pleasanl

pt ,

bank. owned double
wide on lg 1181 lot,
close 10 town $24.900
Brokers' Realty Mike

Slack

Broker

304 _542 _5888 .

740-446·3400 or
304·529-0055
EOE

with a goal dnven, team

oriented and growing
company, we offer.
Health, dental, and life
Insurance, presorlptton
card, bonus program,
paid vacation,
management apparel,
Bctvancement from

POST

OFFICE

NOW

HIRING avg Pay S20/hr
$57Kiyr,
tncludes

Fl!d.Ben, OT. Place ·by
adSource. not aff11iated
USPS who hires.

1-866-403-2582

HO!p W-.1· G-..1
AVON.! All Areas!

To

Buy or SeD Sh!ney
Spears 304-6751429

wtthin.

Apply In person at the
Auction

to

lm·

E111, 1(1 1 11\t'lll

hOOO

or

Acc:ovnting I Flnandal
home

medical

equipment company now

Tara

R

': '

"
=----~~~-

"""""""""""""""" seeking

~=-:"':'~-=-=::=-::'"'

Townhouse 2BR 1 bath at 3675 Bu·

Apartments
bath, back

2BA.

patio,

water

age.

$425/rent,

experienced

med&lt;al billing

.~•,

spec1al~t

customer seNice
Fax resume and

with

skills

1 5 Iaviiie Pk Must See! No 74()-44 1. 1648
salary requirements to
pool, Pets. 740·446·4234 or !!!;,;,;,;,;;;,;;;,..,!!!!!....,

pd )
$425/sec. 2BR

Admlnitlralin&gt;/
Profe
1
uiona

dep, Call740·367·0547

tratler

for

rent

367-7762

Auction

Large Detorated Stoneware Auction
Saturday, November 1, 2008 10:00 a.m.
Mood!spaugh's Auction House

Torch, Ohio

to left , turn and gb appr9x . I mile toT, turn
right and follow signs to Auction House.

We will be selling thts private collection of 130
d~corated jars and consist of: 20 gal. T.F.
Reppert Eagle, 20 gal. Jas. Hamilton EaRle,
12 gal. Williams &amp; Reppert Eagle, 1 gal. A.P.

DonaRhho eagle, Very rare .l/2aal. HamUton
&amp; Jones Eagle, Very rare Freehand 1871
and I 112 gal. Williams &amp; Reppert pitcher.
Mercbapt and Towg Iars; ln, .ll&amp;l:
Wheeling, Palaline. Morgantown, Shinnston,
Sisler.ville. Woodland. Moundsville, Stanlon,
A.P. Donaghho's and Excelsior ·pottery. lliWl
.!Ia; Clairington, Powhatlen, Barnsville,
Matamoras , and Zanesville. Pcpg Ian;
Will iams &amp; Reppert, Hamilton 's, and .T. F.
Reppert. We al~o have ~everal Freehand
decoraled jars such as C.J Merrill &amp; others;
New York. Red Wing -and Bennington.

Auctioneer: Todd Moodlspaugh
Ohio Lic.#OOOOI07
Licensed and bonded in favor of the state of
ohio. 'A nnoun.c ements day or sale take
precedence of printed material. Terms: Cash or
Good check wlproper ID: (5% buyerj premium

on all credit card sales). lnformalion: (740)
667 -0644 or 989-2623 or web site at:
www.moodispaugh.com
Auctigneer;5 Nore; Please go to our website
for great photo's. If you have questmns you
·il son i

Help Wanted

;==~====~--=-=-=-=-=-~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--~

0

PHYSICIAN PRACTICE
SERVICES COORDINAtOR
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time Physician
Practice . Services Coordinator. Bachelors
degree in business, nursing or other
applicable
healthcare
related
field
preferred. Previous physician practice
management
experience
preferred.
Previous billing , experience preferred.
Previous supervisory/management skills
preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human ResouKes
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(l04) 674-2417
Or fax: l04-675-6975
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

check

available March 1, 2009
Housing and administrative ElXpenence is preferred. Resume, experi·
ence and salary requirements should be sent to

Gallla MHA, 381 ' Buck
Ridge Road, Bidwell. OH

Jars. Ephem (very old) 8&amp;)' Ponery. McCoy. Ameru:an
Bh.que. Fu-eking. Pyre~. Colonial. smaJI .figurines, hand
pamted F~nto.n frog, H painted glassware. milk
bonles(,Meigs Strcet . Kanawha D- Gallipolis D· Home
D- Broughtons D· Imperial D· Parkersburg Creamery)
Depression glassware, rolling pins, Gramtcware, "Pure
Milk" Boule Caps. Sunshme btscu1t tm bucket. oil
lamps. pinoclio bank, Hazel Atlas Dishes. Callrrtablr:s
&amp; Sloneware: '"Lilughhsl Brothers Crock (Blue writing
Main St, Wheeling. WV), II.S crock.IIO crock, #IS
crock hd. #10 anchor crock. 14 clover crock. #3 crock.
There are numerous crock jars &amp; jugs. brown Coke
Cola boltle (UxingtOn. KY ). Big Chief Pop Bottle,
MtSc. Stratght razors {Butcher- Clauss-WesterWadswonh-Butcher Shefield), Accordians (Con tinental
Mark 3- Maggt Mamaua- Atlantl ~ Supreme- Salantt '
"Les") . Printers Block (Wood of Church), Prinrersi
Pumtm t-loral Block. Model A- Luagage iltcks, Very
old wall toat rack, cherry pitters. com shellm.largt"
selectmn or Crad:er Jack toy5, one or the must umque
coltectmns or buttons (alot of glass &amp; bakealitc).
Beautiful •lintage key Yoind clock. Porcelain face &amp;
Pendulum. bam lanterns. Mt. Jo y cherry p!Utr, old
wood spools, stone crock foot wanner, sad irons, gmin
scoop. arrowheads. p1pes. hghters, pedal car, Blenko
glass. Quilts &amp; {..iaens: Ornate Crazy quill (Made by a
lad)' who p11.'iSed away m 1889) Double ~1de Cmzy quih ,
sunshine star quill, 9 block quilts (3) plus orh~rs. alsc
have some quilt tops, knotled quilts. hand made lncC,
feed sacks. hankies Paper Items &amp; books: 1st Edilion
books, 1961 Athena year book (O.S.U), l'ornate
wooden w/clusp Bibles (1 872), masonic Bool:s.
Railroad/Lionel! Magazmes, Newport H.S. Yearbook,
(2) H1s1ory of Oh1o Books, 1912 by Randall &amp; Ryan
and 1 hy Galbreath, Post cards. scrap books. un type
pictures, Mary Margaret McBnde cookbook set, Coal
mining books, 1951 pk BG directory. 1906 Scribbers
mags. Parkersburg. V. dapers. large scl«tion 'of vmtagt
ch1ldrens books. tax stamps. noral painting (by
Edwanls). fiat &amp; Volkswa~on car manuals ( 19~~·1969)
Life &amp; Post mags &amp; others. Toys &amp;: Tools &amp; Fishing
[teau. (2) Wicker doll carnages, spa1.'C rocket spy glass
toy, tricycles (2). Tonka Camper, grator toy. Nylint
firetruck. "Cowboy" Cap gu,n Clicker gun. "Kilgore··
cap strain set, scat JUUJor cap amf, fishmg rods (Fly),
Reels (South Bend, PFlueger} Montique fish k11l fly rOLl ,
3 pr.:. fly rod, bolt cutters, loggmg hook; wood blod:.
planes, breas! drills, 2 old ringer bo11.es, capirul hush
pullmg tool. cheeny fulton iron black smith anv1l vice
#00, There are alot of m1sc. tools in rhis sak Fumltu~
&amp;: Mise: Lane cedar chest (w/quilted top seat) Pa1lor
srand, dresser w/mirror, si ngin[! bird in cage . white
hous~ vinegar 1!2 gallon JKil. Drs tool kll. porcelain
dQIJ,jewdcy, very old black cat &amp; pumpkin dcco, J:om
planters. RC Thermometer, metal pop signs. largl!
sellecl.ion of pens &amp; pencils (leader Rcstnurant
Mt~rietta. OH) elc. Cast iron kettle (Beverly. OH }. old
wicker p1cnic basket, #30 washboard, postal M'ales, old
paper flom hags. (Colonial flour, Blue Ribbon Flout,
Equ1ty RoHer M1lls. Pastery flour. Silverton Mills corn
meal) Triangle shaped s tonew~re foot warmer. All
annoum;emenls day of s11lc takes precedence over all
printed materiitJ . Home cooked food availabJe. Ccmlc
out and enJOt dinner &amp; auchon.lerms of ~ale- ull 0111 of
state checks requin!: pre-approval or bank nme (unkliS
we know you) Duections. Frum Belpre take ST Rt. 7 S
to Mtddteport ex1t. From Gall1polis take St. Rt 7N to
Middleport uit. From Athens tnk~ R1. 33 E 10 St Rr 7S
10 Middleport exil. Signs will be posted. Thtre are st tll
items coming in 1hat are not listed yet.
James Thylor· Auctlooeer 10014
Lk:ensed &amp; Bonded In ravorofslale otOH &amp; WV
We will be having a very large comic booklbookfpost
card sale soon. We have no1 SCI a date yet. Wntch the

Auction

Auction .

Albany IS 14 miles west of Athens, go to center or Albany nnd tum on West Clinton
Street, go almost to the end, house ts on the nght, watch for signs.

UIHt'CTION5.

REAl ESTATE sells at NOON · 2-smry. li ving room, dming area, kitchen, 4-bedrooms, 2-bathroom~. full
basement, 2 car garuge on two lots. built in 1966. TERMS; BUYERS PREMIUM-K%- 10% dowtfm
auction, balance m full at clnsing and delivery of deed Within 30 days Possession at closing. Sold with
owner's consent Scllmg as 1s in present condttion, financing ir needed must be made pnor to auction. as
well us any impections. Property sells wilh ~o contmgcnC1es . Call for appoin!ment1o sec this property

tl'1er

information

call

No Lease On Cosfl

$1.74

VEHICI:f.S BOAT. MQIQB HOME : 1989 Chevrolet Blazer 4 x 4 ( 138.000 mtles), 1987 Ford Ranger
&lt;98.154 m1 lcs), 1974 Ford Courier Tru~,;k, 1969 Evmrude Sportsman Boat, 196H Evinrude Motor, Boat
Traller, l977 Cru1sc Master Motor Home-rough (45 .000 miles}, 2 ~wheel trailer,

'AdJusted Weekly to •

ANTJOJJES &amp; cgu,ECTJBI ES; Silvertone Victrola style record player cabinet w/old records. se~eral
Femon dishes. old sled , library table, gateleg table, older dresser &amp; chest of drawers, 22-Collector belt

Protect Our Contractors

buckles. 12-em'pty GulfOtl cans.

• Business Training
Suppon
• Spouse Rider PI'Ogfam

Drivers: Real Truck Drivers, Apply hem. Owner
Operator&amp; that want to
average $4000 plus a
week. Willing to run
where the work Is, East

Coast, West Coast, Con-

ada. We have the work
and you can make ttte
mooey. All the porl&lt;s. luel
card, fieense, lire net·
work, direct depostt. Apply now or call Jack
White, liquid Transpor1
Corp
800-346-8301

.

HOJ!StfHOI 1D fJ !RNJSHINGS: newer oak dinmg table w/6 chairs, china cabinet, Rowe matching sofu.
loveseat &amp; lounge chair, newer oak end tables &amp; sora table, 4-pi«e sections of newer oak bookshelf units,
large gun cabinet, GE ponable TV, VCR, newer oak. roll top desk &amp; oak desk chair. computer desk,
several bookshelves, newer oak bedroom suite complete, oak Jewelry cabinet, che"al mirror, oak quilt
stand. queen size bed &amp; twin bed (m1 headboards) . lamps. GE fl11t top electric range, GE refrigerator.
M aytag portable dishwasher, miscellaneous dishes , poo, pans &amp; small' kitchen appliances. GE washer &amp;
dryer, microwave, stand, fans , stools,lawn bench. porch glider, Mustang wheel chair

RIDING MOWER. 110JS OF TOOLS &amp; MJSCt:ll ANFPJJS: Kubota GR 2100 Glide Steer Riding
Lawn Mower. Gravely 812 Tractor/Mower (no deck), Cub Cadet 1450 nding mower, lawn dump ciU't.
Truy Bill tiller, Cub Cadet .S22WE electric start Snow Blower, Lincoln 225 welder, ne LinC()In electCJc
SP-125 Plus wire welder. 2-Reddy heaters. small i:enerator, air compres~. 3-large v1ses, Craftsman tool
bo11. w/drawers full of sockets, wrenches, eJO:tensions, Snap On tap &amp; dye sel, Hydraulic Ponapower new
in case, Cuterpillcr Puller Adaptor in case, bench grinders, Craftsman drill press, tool boxes w/tools, open
&amp; box end wrenches, pipe wrenches. nut drivers , I" socket sci. pipe wrenches, tool belts, shop lights, log
chains. wheel barrow. yard/garden tools, lawn seedcr/fertililer,1251 anvil. Fisher wood stove, and mu~h

more .
TERMS: Cash or check w/posidn I.D. Checks ovrr SIOOO must have bank authorlulton or funds
ovallable. Food will be av.Uable. NOI responsible for looo or ocddenls.
OWNER: Carolyn 'K. BurriU by Ronel A. Burrill, POA

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
OHIO REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS, LLC
AUCTIONEERIRULTOR: John Potrklf"Pa1" Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan Boyd, Mike Boyd &amp; Brenl Kl111

$1000 Sign oo Bonus
$1000 Referral Bonus.
Seeking
driver
w/CDlJHazmat qualificatiOns for full ttme employ·
ment C propane busl·

We are hiring!!!

Recruft volunteers tor
non-profit organizations
SUCh as St. Jude

Chtldreri's Research
Hosprtal.
Get paid to mclke a
difference!

.r Full and Part-time
Positions
.I Day and Evemng

funds and renew
member:stups for the
National Rifle AssocistiM
RSI$6

."' Weekl)l Pay anc1Sonus
lnc6ntlvu!
o/ FuH and Part-time

Shifts

PositJons!
ol' Profes!IOIJSI Worlc

401K!
.I On-site

..1

Doctor

Email:

AVPERLINK ••mailto:ShamrockAuction@aol.rom" ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com
WEB: www..shamrock~auctions.eotO

PH: 740·592-4310 or IIOIJ..419·91Zl

ness. send resumes to:
Daily Sentinel, PO Box
729-23, Pomero~. 0t1

I

Apprentice

Environment!
,., MediC81, Denral. EAP.
4CtKI
.r On-s1te Doctor/

information

Whrt·Co

can

Trarmng

304-372-8346
':'!'~~~~~~=

Wanted Welder,
Iron
workers, P1pe Fitters, &amp;
crane
operators.
Top

CLASSIFIEDS!

Auction

Auction

Call TODAY! ,

BOnus lncenttves!

Coli TODAY!
lnlervlow
TOMORROWII

WOI1&lt; NEXT WEEKIII

1-181HM().PAVU
Ext 1M1
hHp:t~.lnlodtlon.com

We are getting ready
lor the 2008
ettctlona and wo
nHdYOUI
Help us make calls on

behalf of COnseNatlve

Polnlcal organ!zallons,
Canclk!ates and causes .
• Eam up to S8.5Miour

t Medical, Denial, EAP,

and 40tK
+On sl1e doctor!
+Full and part·Hme
schedules

Slart doing work you can
bo proud of, Start doing
work that makes a

dlfrerence. Start your
ne~ career todayf

contodorl
1oi77-48U247 Ext.
2331
~:fl)oba.lnlocllktn.com

Auction

ln1ervlow TOMORROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKtll
HI81HMC-PAYU
Exl2311

Marilyn

paclca~~&amp;

Overbrook

November ~3th, 2008

Center

IS

cepting appllcattons for
full time cool&lt; Posi1ion,

800·442-6101

Home
Health, Inc. hlnng Home
vaMey

Health Aides. STNA,
'CNA, CHHA. PCA may
apptf at 1480n Jackson
P1ke , Gallipolis, Ohio or
pflone 740-441·1393 lor
more tnfo. Competittve
wages, · mileage
retm·
bursement and benefit&amp;
Including
health
insur·
ance &amp; much more.

"TO ALL RESIDENTS
OF
PERRY
TOWNSHIP"
. The 21108 General
Election voting will
take place on Nov. 4,
~008 al Buckeye Rural
Coop., 5830 State
Route 325 South,
Patrlot, Ohio or you
may vote abHnlee

t::.

Complete tenns of sale and pictures coming
soon to . www .wisemanrealestate .com

2 houses for the price of 1 resting on 1.116
acres of land!!
Localed in Wellston, Ohio-less than 2 miles
from the Genreal MilL• Planl Excellent
invesbnent property. Minimum slarting bid
of $35,000!! 3% Buyer's premium. CaD Josh
Bodimer Aurtioneer/Realtor for more details
or questions. Watch newspaper and website
for open house date.
Call Josh Bodimer al Wiseman Real Estate
David Wiseman- Broker
For more mfo 740-446·SOLD
, 1. 1J _,

Col~ Octotier 5 28, 21108

structom
whopart-time
pqseBOS Inm;
Is
seeking

mastofs. degree in gen· ·
eral educatton
ar·
eas
such as:.subject
English,
Math. and Social Sciencos. E·mail resumes
10 idanlck!Ogallipollscareercollege.edu or call
800-2 14-()452
Auction

EsTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER I • 10 AM
GALLIPOLIS F.ERRY, WV
Selling 1he estate of the late Howatd ~nd Lida
Garland
Dlred!ons: From Pt . Pleasant, Take Rt 2
SoUih approx. 6 miles and tum left onto Blain
Lane, then follow signs. From Huntington,
take Route 2 North approx. 30+ miles and turn

righl Blain Lane after passing the Supresla
Planl, then follow signs.
AUTOMOBILES/MOWERS:
1978
Coachman Econoline 250 Camper Van With
57,000 Miles, May Need Minor Repairs,·
Always Garage Kept: Husqvama 25HP, 48"
cut riding mower; 2 Murray push mowers; 2

~ Ill
'
l!iliil !rM

NM
S!!

aluminum tea kettle; electric skillets: crock
po;cs; serving platters; dehumidifier; wooden

Q

able

transportation

and

valid auto 1nsurance
Patd tra1n1ng Hourly rate

Auction

Auction

MP3 player, Leman's b'g camera le.ns &amp; attachmems. Zenith Clear see thru
TV, P1oneer Equaltzer CD Player/2' speakers, brown bag wtth assorted
remotes , Delta portable drill press, Cmftsman handsaw, white Ready
Heater. gm HB Bench grinder, HR power washer, Stanley Bo'stiteh air
compressor w/hos~ Amencan wickKerusene heater, orange Firesrom1
sawsaw, Bostitch air nailer, Cambell air compressor, Horton crossbow
w/quiver 4 arrou.·s , new Cruftsman dnllgress in box, gry case 4
battcrics.circular saw. cordless drill, Master Me:chanic cordless drill,
Powercraft drill &amp; light , s~ars Cordless drill 3/8 w caselballcnes , Dewalt
sawsaw w/case, Bosch electric drill wlcase, Sears Cordless dnll wfl.
batteries. gm. ·Makito sawsaw, DeWalt sawsaw wfcuse , Stihl Force
crossbow w/4 arrows/quiver new Mustang trash pump w/Hondn motor,
Dewalt Electric drill. silver &amp; black. Skill circular ·saw , Black &amp; Decker
rotary saw • Clark woodworker table saw, Fisher dual cassel! tunner, amp
and disc charger. Tej;hnica equalizer, dual casseue deck. CD player &amp; amp,
new Frigidaire Washer in box. Sony pon~ble boom box w/CD player. box 5
d1sc CD changer, Panasonic DVD player Optimus dual cassette deck.
Passlode Nailgun. 2 Craftsman sander. New Dual Audto/video Multi Media
receiver, GE CD player w/remote, Hi Pressure Air spray gun, Microsoft box
containing HP Keyboard. 7 mise!. brand VCRs, grey HP monitor, silver
Kodak. Kodavision series 200. metal case Bosch I'' hammer drill wlbit,
silver X·WaveDVD player. Silver,venturer DVD home Theatre Systertt w/3

plus

Programm•ng,

Sm1ce I Bus
D~rectory

Conaete

Mantnactunng Eng1neer
Gallipolis. bH

ABSOLUTE
Real Estate AUCTION

Put your eJO:penence to
use wtlh El&amp;ctroCratt, a
global leader 1n motor
and motion comrol solutions Candidates will Independently
prov1de
techmcal leaderShip, dt·
rection and support lor

Al l types Mason ry bnck.

block.
Free

stone.

conc rete.
Estimate,

304·593-6421

All types Masonry br1ck:

block , stone. Free Estt:

740·416-7305
Manufac1Ur1ng
of mate,
A(:;IBLDC
moto rs 304-593·6421

the ·

Bacllelor's degree in MeIndustrial. or
Electrical Eng (eqUiva·
lent ekpenence w11t be

r-:;:::::;;;;;;;.;;;:;;:;;~~;;;~;;~====;-

Items from Shoemaker case 07·1034, Boll. assorted knives, HP ..:omputer
tower, box 99 DVD 's. 6 .. -oomputer towers, monitors . keyboards; Dell
computer tower, 9- Direct TV boll., Stiver Sanyo DVDIVCR player. 6Magnavm. tv!&gt;, 3- APEX DVD players. grey Wolfe Panaview projection
screen white. OPTIMA TV PROJECfOR. Ptoneer surrund sound with
speakers, blk. laptop PAD. bag of 5 .remote controls. Pro.,S.Wdlo stereo
system speak.cn, cassett deck, 5 Dtsc el\.changer (TeaKv.ood) stereo
TeakwOOd and stereo stand, Stiver RCA tv. black. Symphonic TV. black.
Micro Tech Oat St..'Teen TV, Reahshc pollee scanner . Dell COJTiputer tower
wlkeyboanJ, Coby DVD player, Play Stat1on 2, Pamtball equipment Trit1on
2 and Slmgray, silver HP laplop, Sony Playstal ion r. 2.Dura Brand portable
DVD, X·, Box 360 w/3 controllers. box DVD's +f- H7. SEGA Game gear
with assorted games , Game Boy Advanced wtth games/anachments.
Panrasonic surround sound w/Speak:ers, Lexmark P350 Portable printer.
Toshiba TV, black Sanyo tlatsc~n TV, Raptor pamlball gun in blk case,
10- Digital Cameras , SONY Hi-8 video camera, blk leather bag dell
Laptop, Playstation 2 slim, Radio Shack. 200 chnnnel scanner, roshiba tv.
black..Magnavox LCD IS" TV flut screen, bluck. Playstation 2 w/controller,
Bellringer B8ss Amp, MESAIBOOOlE speakers+ 2 Meso Boog1e speukers,

a

Setup and Operat10n of
CNC Stator V"llnd1ng an~
Balanc1ng
equ1pment;
Metal ·stamp1ng F1nar
Assembly proces~ and
techn1ques ConstructiOrt
and F n1sh1ng MatenaiS:
Lakin
WV,
Mo nday (Sieels
AI.
Plas!les:·
through Friday, 8:00 an Powder Coaling. Pa1nt.,
- 4 00 p m. Lakin Hospi- AMdiZinQ Platmg. eic ) "
tal IS an EEO/AA em- For 1mmet;~ 1ate cons10:
ployer . Lak1n Hosp1ta l erat1on please mall your'
conducts
pre-em pl oy · resume and cover letter
ment drugla l&lt;:~ test· to ElectroCratt - Humar\
1ng
EmploYe's m8y be Resources 250 McCorexposed to streamlme or miCk Rd Gallipolis OH
secondhand smoke
4563 1
or
fa~
to
740·441 ·6305. An Equ?J
Opporh.Jmty
Employer
Restaurants
Supp0r11ng D1verstty tri
Now H1nng Expenenced. tile WorKplace

Technical Tradts

Auction

SHERIFF'S S,t.LE OF FORFEITED GOODS
By Dan Smith, Auctioneer
The Melga County Sheriff's Office (Case 17-1034) will offer
for aale to the highest bidder at PUBLIC AUCTION,
Saturday, Nov. 1, 2008, at 10:00 am
behind the old Veteran's Memorial Hoaplta1 (old emergency
room antntnce), Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, OH the following
forfeited goods:

provement tecllnJQues 15
also
reQu ired
Experience wnh me tollow1ng 1s,

- - - - - - - - ------.,--.,---' Dog.s New Haven

:=======-========
Auction

ment Exp must also Included management ol
multiple
p10j€CIS Wll il
strC•'l9
communication
and problem . so v1ng
SkillS
Knowledge
Qf
Lean pr1nC1p1es as weH
as khowledge of the lat-

starting at $7-$8 00/hour wa1tstaff , ·cooks. dtshPlease
call
1
washers &amp; delivery dnv·
304·373·1"011 or toll tree ers apply in person
9000
at 1·877-373·1 011 .
Har!)''s
Famous
Hot

If

doors: Emerson VCR; fOOts1ool; American
flag; sewmg kil; crib bedding; toddler bed;
quilling and cross slitch hoops; marble top 3
piece coffee/end tables: gun rack; handmade
quilts; Bissell Upright powerforce bagless
vacuum: porch swing; porch furniture; child's 1 speaken, Spori:omatic pflic equalizer. black Optimus Equalizer, 3· Zenith
pool table Ping Pong table; office chairs, ·' VCRsJ- Emerson VCRs, gtey Samsung DVDNCR Combo black Optimus
dubbing slerco black-Kenwood. ampUfter, black Echo Sttir Dish Network
wooden magazine rack.
box, factory Pooitac .casSiitie p!aye1 bltKk Pioheer \0~ pla~er. Uniden CD.
TOOLS: Eager Beaver chain saw; Craftsman.
climbing hamllsswlspikc &amp; rope Skill saw 2- Crafbfuan ~lectric 'drill , no
blow torch; Craftsmao wet/dry vac; 40'
nameyeUow drill, Bfack &amp;.'lle&lt;ker sawslw, Skill clrtular saw. Makim saw.
alUminum extension ladder; aluminum step
Benchtop ellectric &lt;Ifill. Montgomery Ward Electric drill. Master Mechanic
ladder: galvanized pump sprayer; water
electric
drill , Troybill power washer 6 HP. II hp Honda motor. Clarke 13
regulators: pump oil can; several electrical
hp
generaiOr,
3- Weedeaters, acetelyne lanks &amp;. dolly /gauges, 6. Black &amp;
supply pieces; wooden carpenters tool box; C.Decker
Jig
saw,
12- chainsaws • 5 - Black &amp; Decker drills .. 6· Black &amp;
Ciomps; Yankee drill; log chain, floor jaclc; 2
Decker circular saws, Zenith big sc:reen TV, 2· Zeruth TV woodgrain
" ton jack; saw horses; shol table. 1 pipe
\\!/stand, 6- camcorders, white 220 volt air conditioner 3- microwaves,
wrenches; hand saws, oil cans~ tire chains; gas
black Symphonic TV, beach top circular saw with case. 2 ·Honda Trash
cans; roll around 1001 box; drop light: ban:ry
pumps,Oclagon poker table, Master Mechanic drill in box, McGraw Edison
ch!Ui"r: wheelbarrow; sev hand tools; mce
1/2" electic drill, All Pro Propane heater. blue Rhino propane·· lank
benchtop vise; plus moro. ,
wJheater, Air tower port hose, 3· leaf blowers, Panisonic DVD/CD player
COLLECTIBLES: Ntttchez whiskey boal
Clnevislon DVDNCR player,~- miter Saws. Skill saw table saw w:11and
decanter with 6 shot slasses: Radio Flyer
LVI TV, OB DVD player, Techniques 5 disc: DC chqer. A V con 11011
wagon; Uns, 8' bamboo fly rocl; comic books:
receiver '!Khniquts, I 112 1onChlin hoiS1, ·black Playsta1ion screen
Ben Pierson recurve bow: beer stein: lrllnk
a~U~Chment, Silver Portable DVD player w/2 moniton . Durabrand portable
iac:k; CISI iron rea kettle; wooden nail kes:
DVD player w/men. i'"Y Sony ploystation ""I conuoller, I 2- grey Sony
piayslllion w/memory' card, RCA ponable: DVD/CDIMP3 Player, Litcon
Navy Life preserver.
&amp;rtlppgr'• Note; Several nice clean 1Ultique
in box w/extension DVD ·RW drive, blk Kodak bag con1aining Pho1o Deck,
2· laitifl Portable DVD. ~n camera wlflash 2 exu-a lens, Minolila
pieces. All pieces are in great shape. Bring a
Camera w/2 flash/ 2Uens Nicon Camem wlfash, silver Mustck Digital
lawn chair and a friend. Hope 10 see you there.
camem wltripod, 2·W# players new in package Sony Walkman w/' m
Tcg grthc Sek; Cash or approved check
phones
Announcemen1s sale day take precedence over
Directions: Off Rt 7 Bypass Pomeroy. Take Hiland Road watch for aucuon
written material
signs.
Refu:sbments Available
Du Smllb, Auctlo...r Ohio 113449 ·
Joe Arrington Auctioneering
Re!....,_nls for sole- Cash and r)osltlve ID
1-161 (304) 811-8114
Not restlonsD&gt;Ie for ICddenls or loss of property. Anoooomnen1s day of
(304) 576-4009
sale lakes-precedence o•er printed mauers.

'•

1ndrv1duals with MR/DD
H~gh school diploma or
GED requ1red. No eJO:pe·
nence necessary. Cnm~·
nal background check reQUired Must have rel i-

~ •

Slihl weedeaters.
ANTIQUES: 1800's baby carnage; 1920's
dresser and vanity with stool; cast tron cook
silver MAGNAVOX DVD/VCR 4 HEAD, Black speaker boxPYRAMYD,
stove; buffet wilh mirror: glass daisy buner
black MITSUBISHJ TV . black RCA TV, Shurp TV, Sony DISc changer.
chum #40 #4 Dasher crook chu111 I, 2, 3
yellow/chrome lightning Audio Amp. woodgrain CAPEHART TV. black .
SANVO TV. blacR case TV, silvet CLASSIC DVD PLAYER ' 2- black
gallon jugs; wooden cotlee gnnder: egg crate
ORION
TV. black Audio CD recorder in box. Rca Home Stereo W/2
and basket; Hupson sprayer; Griswald g~Udle
Speakers: Black Rca Home Stereo. Pioneer Disc Changer W/5 Speakers.
#9; Gnswald .!teal grinder; Griswald skillets;
RCA 100 wt receiver. dual cassette deck., blue rechar.gcable drtll, blue case
Dutch oven; Wagner com pol; Mail Pouch
side grinder, sander. jig saw &amp; drill. Wood Lathe. black case wlpowerAC
Thermometer; Krau~ cutter; Washboards;
plus cordless drilrwlbatteries charger, black. case lmpact Wrench&amp;. Jumper
Cherry seeder; stone jars; wOOden bowls; Milk
.
Cables,
Aeo Cordless Drill &amp;. Driver Wlcharger &amp;. Ba Tterie. Black&amp;.
botlles: bucket and dipper; !'1'nile wash tub;
Decker
Wtzard
Rotary Tool, Homemcdlcs llac~ Massager , 18 Volt Dewalt
old school desk: favore cookware; several 1
Cordless
Drill
W
/2 Batteries&amp;. Chager. Red Power S1t0ke Homellle Chain
• assorted iron skillets; draw knife; wooden
Saw, Dewall Sk11l Circulat Saw. Coleman Cordless Circular Saw/drill
butter mold: wicker high chair: wooden sled
Ckarger , blk case Black &amp;. Decker cordless screwdriver/driiUjig saw &amp;
with steel runners; set of 3 Mason jars. pt. qt,
batter pack. gry case cordlells drill2 batteries&amp;. charger, Radio Shack 100
HQ- wood auger, ch1cken feeder: rapid hand
wan soldenng gun3 Sony CD players I Panasomc new in pkg, new Sony

1950's "the Workbasket" sewing ·books; set of
WV books: Hurricane lamps Biclrola horn;
wet slones, Mail Pouch and Southem State
thermometers, reel type push mower, 20-40
stamps, McCoy
·
. 1
HOUSEHOLD/FURNITURE: Canning Iars;
2 Piece Ltving Room Suile With Recliner:
China Cabinet; Chest And Dresser With
Mirror; huge wooden desk: potato bin: comet

res1dent1a tlcom·

skill trammg w1th

AUCTIONEER NG

---' ---- •
Auction

phor&lt;l calls .

J()811 BQD1MER

~~~~ - ~lhlpBoard
Gelllpollo1 Career

Pom! Pleasant. wv pro·

Wanted:
'Part
Time
Room Attendant at the
Gallipolis
Holiday Inn.
Must be willtng to wort&lt;
. Weekends and holidays.
Experience preferred but
we Will tratn. Apply in
person. Absolu1ely no

~

you,

flllllpart

'""'""'""'""-""'--= munity
vidmg

bty 1r'1 an electncal as
sembly and test enwon-

per year. 18 Clays stck est manufacturmg procCare leave and 12 plus pard esses and process lf'Tl-

Health
Inc

curren11y
seek1ng
lime staff for

IS

Maintenanc» /

Domellic:

Conducled for I he Estate of Leslie Rowland
Execulor Mark Dillon

Bam-1:30pm. Anyone interested plea$8 pick up
an app!lcahon at 333

~-~--~-- pant ol the Drug-Free
"32 people needed to lose Workplace Program
up to 30 lbs In 30 days
30 day money back
guarahtee.
Call ·lisa
Public Notice

"

6:00 pm Sharp Rain or Shine
House's will be open at 5:00 pin

Aehabtlitation
currently ac-

ABODE

ServiCes.
H1nng
holi days. healthlhfe rn·
Caregivers 1n. Leon, &amp; 1n
surance
IS
ava1lable
Mason
County
Salary
commensurate
304·586-9441 or toll free
w1t1'1 experience
Must
1-866-327-721;2
have a WV C ~A eertlfl&lt;ta5 North Park Ave
cabon to work m West
Wei!Sioo , OH 45692
Virg1ma. and must pos740·384·5611
sess either a GED or
.___E_o_EIS_F_ID_F_ _,~ Tra1ner 0 1)sttlons
high school diploma ApAre you tnterested 1n a plications may be p1ck. ed
"""""""""""""""' rewarding position? PAIS up at Lakm Hosp1tal

234 West 13th Slreel, WeUsloo, Ohio

304-675-4545.

Sentrce Aetrrem ent, earn
up to 15 days vacatron

·ExCeptiOnal
communication &amp;
people skills
"Interpersonal &amp;
organizational skills
To apply, viSit.
www.consulatemgtcareers com

Real Estate Auction

Oi~l MechaniC , tow ,
boat expenec:e desired,
good Waij&amp;S, exc. -

Pa~~&amp; Street. Middlei!Ort.
OH. E.O.E . &amp; a Pa11iCI·

Ohio

'2 yrs MDS
EKpenence

An ExceUent way to eam Pay.304·763·2694
money. The New AVon .

Call
304-1182-2645

in
MaSOfl lacrhty
FuiHrme emCOUilty 304·586-9441 or ployment ot1e rs an e ~ ­
toll tree t-866-327·7262
tensr ve benefit package
rnc ludtng
State
CMI

·RN

Page 05

TocMical Trodoo

progra ms

50 skilled bed Facility

THE

Modic:al

ABODE
Health
Care Ctlrtlfted Nursii'IQ AssrsServas, Inc Accepting tant tun t11ne and temponew cf1ents and transfers rary (9Q.day) wo\1&lt; r ~n 114
1or "A/D Waiver and VA bed long term ca re .State

MDS
COORDINATOR
Edgi'W Dcd Minor
oiWolloton

SHOP

80-hr. available Health care &amp;

Apprentice

U~round

Weekly Pay and

wv

45769 '

face

more

.t Professional Wof1(
Environment!

' .r Medical, Denial. EAP,

60-hr. EMT Miner Class SeMCe Manager &amp; 5eN·
&amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur- 109 Technlc6an positions

Retirument plans avatl·
16-hr
Tree
Clearing able. Please send re·
tq
No flxpflrisrK;e required/ Mine Underground For- some
.
man
Class.
Minor
Safety
LLCOCAREO
COM
or
No Crodft C.ra Sales/ No
Equipment Store
For fax to 740-446-9104
Cdteclionol

milk cans; metal milk crates: Avon bottles,

Up to 20011 per Yean

OUT'Ind BACK
FREIGHT
• 100% Fuel Surcharge

""' 5a!es!

, plow; slerling silver teapot with cups: lamps.

DRIVERS ATIENTION
OWNER OPERATOR
Our Average Current
Total Revenue
Mile loaded or Empty is

S?W
Sign On Bonual!

washer, 2 old trunks; several crpcks and
cllums, brass spiuune: aluminum milk
buckets ; whiskey decan.ters; antique potato

740-446-0251

Required
1-lln-4117-2120

our

We have Detn commissioned to stlltht: following items

45614 on or before November 3, 2008. For fur-

ApprovodC'""M

current job openings on the web at

wwwJaolgr,prg

Posttlon

COL A Tanker!Hazmat •

If you are Interested in a great
opportunity or a career change please
call Barb Peterson, Director of Human
Resoun:es for Long Terni' Care, at 740441-3401
or
email
me
at
or

Director.

LEASE PURCHASE
wHh $0 Down Wfth

Stop by and fill out tin application as
soon as possible for lhe Nurse Aide
Clasoes. We will review all of the
applications and sel,,,~p Interviews to
seled eight studenl•. .

peterw®holzer«g

tlve

Auction

1250 Sigft on llonua
Ten pooitionl need filod
by next-!
No Colle&lt;tions!

SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1REAL ESTATE
&amp; PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Saturday, November 1 _; 10:00 a.m.
Athens County, Albany; OH

pohtan Housing Authority

fill
position
of Execu1s the
taktng
applications
to

Old Glory Auction House
659 Pearl St. Middleport, OH
Friday, Oct. 31st6:00 pm
(740) 992-9553

;========-========:.:.:=:::=====:.========;
Auction

The Board ot Commls- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - sioners of Gallla Metro-

Help Wanted

Aotique- Colledable Alldlon

for our upcoming auction m W•lksvllle. Oh10 on Sal.,
November 8th
·
GLASSWARE &amp; HouitwaRS: F~nton. Carmval.
He•sy. Crystal. Large Ruby (fenton?) Basket, Cookie

or

with

M·di:d

Auction

at auction. For compl~te hsung and picture5 gO to
Aucltonzip.com or WVLocatorcom . Watch for our ad

Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
Services

br.
on

local

EEOC

j

Day

call304-675·2319.

Posstblllty of rental
assistance.
Equal Hous1ng

,,., j i/11:

l••tlti ~h/; lt/l'f/ l llft'd

Jeny's

ver, clean, no pets. 16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
mo. + dep. ofl st. 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage Parking. 446-0596
bath, 1 1999 16x80 2
Manor and
Riverside
bed 2 bath gas, 1 1997
Apts tn Middleport, from 3BR, 1 112 bath on Jack· 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
$327
to
5592. son Pike No pols. $675 1 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2
740·992·5064.
Equal per month + Deposit. bath. Priced delivered
740-446· 4051
Housing Opportunity.
blocked, leveled and an-

• Free of Charge
• State Certified
• Great Career Opportunity

Ill /11 1' !H'fiJ 11./f/1 •I

CIA, . 16J0:32

~....,.-~~--~ fum.
Gracious Living 1 and 2 $400

Holzer Senior Care Center will bt
conducting Nurse Aide Classes.
These classes are:

''•'11&lt;'/tl • ,m 1

PO Box2407
Huntington, WV 25725 or
fax resume to:

Localloh: From Pomeroy. OH follow Ohio Rt.
~~~~-....,.-~ Eureka.
Deposit
$400 Includes many upgrades,
7
north !hrongh Coolvtlle lo Co. Rd . 63 (By
3BA. 1000 sq ft. Hard· rent
$400
256-6408, delivery
&amp;
set-up. '
wood floors. WID. No 441-0583, 256·67t8
740-385-2434
rest area) lum nght, follow CR 63 to first road

!(,/hi c Ml t l'r ltl'lr Ill

1

Customer SatistactiOn
and team wont If you
have a desire to succeed

-2BR house for rent In from $214.36 per month,

call675-6679

A Rare Opportunity
r ll.f'tll\ Ill

Burger Klrtg

Fl·

applications for near Nqrth Gallia High Run
Ad.
$46,500
waiting list for HUD sub· School. $500 tent + $500 304-576·311 1
sidized, 1-BA apartment deposit. 446 .B495
for the elderly/disabled,
New 3, Bedroom homes

Help Wanted

" '· /t,/

to actlieve the "Besr in

AVAILABLE

3BR house on SA 160 Deck, 112 acre.

playground. (trash, sew· 740·208·7661
quotlllll..'a\uln~

mail resume Ia

Raclne,(740)949-2237

a

.Rcql lti L'ti

OWNER

Pleasant.

Gallipolis. Ohio ~eks

full tnnc- Human Resource~ Benefits
l'onrt.li!Mtot Rcspons1b1ltttes for thi s posttton
mdudc hut ~Ill' not lmutcll to: Conrdma11ng the
d.11l y l unc llllll~ ul the bent!fll plans as well as
;!d lltllll ~l l'llllg
a
~el f
funLied worker' ~
l'! llll i X' I l~ atum prtlgr.un.

2001 4BR • 2BA

(304)882·30 17

Ntce

·• Rosldenl Assislan1 - I'T

son City 304-675-2117

'2BR, 1 bath In Ga!t1pohs

~-'""!!~-'""!!~~

Holur Assisted Lh·inR- lackson;

at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma-

~-~~-~....,.~
Free
Rent
Special!l1
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hoOkup, tenant
pays electriC. EHO Elm

pets

' llrallh Carr CIH&gt;rdinator/RN FT

eluded, $37.000 located

PETS. 304·488-7946

cepting

11mur ('ars;;
LPN - 1--T- U,d llpnli-.

Help Wanted

NO

Twin Rivers Tower is ac·

~lnll.l'r

'

+ utilities,
446-0415

View

•

Burger Ktng Restaurant
65 Upper River Rd or

=$4001
•

Long Term CaR/ Homo C....

61Uibap l!:IIIUf ·6mtintl

chantcal,

ATTENTION Huntaral
ATV'ersll lnveatora II
Bat., Nov.15, 2008 10:00 AM

considered)

with

2-4

years of related exp 1n a
manufacturing
environment ts requtred prefera·

newspaper and learn

Auction

Auction

WH4 T AN OPPORTUNITY II
'

ROOd your

somethmg today!

358Acrea
Offered In

4Tracte

Rott Co. tcan6c

WI ,.

property

viMI, rklgea &amp; •
etrtam In thlt

W!lteyplua
hilltOp

plrtooul
Ill

_poilu_..
1100111'

oc.

wooded: TNOt fb.n M. (AFPr- :Ill - /

pootuno

a

-~

II

Troct U.148

IIC.

(A!tf&gt;row. 43 ~"'a 1oe .. - ):
Troct 1 4"""""'"'. 32 ... - • ·
-lrl
t' IIU6NW. •atarW.Go
l..t mllee 1 turn left on Porter Hollow. Rd; go
% - · tho lind layo on the righl
Open for viewing duri"ff doyflght houra or for
• prhMte vfewjng call 0.\lid P. PMtar, e:.ac,
(740) 851-7021.
S.tta al AlmJiute Aua--

r.,.,.,-

Uon to tM Mlghalt Bidder; no rqlnlmuma or
naHrv..;· Ofhrwd frt.a &amp; clur of lien• or mort- · prior to clotlng by 12•15400e; caompiM. fi,IIOO dowt) ,.r troct or f15,0GO
max. at tit'IM of ..atlorl tn Cllh or check. No
bu)IO&lt; conllogencln Ollftl. Buyer rurtl!or
118fM to pay ldJIU: Rll.780 per net to ftiehard John.on, Surveyor, Ia •M~.a aurvey upon~~. a.,... -lpoUan Oflon&gt;d.
S. PoNr.hlot. RCPC UOOT-1!-807

Old Winchesler Rilles and Shol guns.
Belgium Browning sholgun 12 &amp; 16 ga,
Remington 1100 112, 20, 26 410 ga. Colt
Revolvers and pislols. Smtih &amp; Wesson
Revolvers including Model 29 in nickle
and Blue, S&amp;W 22LR Model 16 and 22.
Gennan Lugers and P36 , Augers and
revolvers, BereHa and Bernellt shotguns,
Remtnglon 700 cal rifles.
Model 70's • pre-64 Ruger, Marlin and
Savage Rtfles, Military Rtfles and
Bayonets, many modem muzzle loaders ,
scopes, Rocky boots and more arriving
each day For more detatls on ~uns go lo
auct1onzip .com

Terms: Cash or local check. No out of
state personal checks. All slate and
federal laws apply

CALL /'Oft DETAILS .S BROCHURE
ST~NI.,EV &amp; SON, INC.

' (740) 775-3330
~llf)!lil

....,Ill

ON, MitE, O!'P.... CEI A~c..,..r.
ftlallltnt

....,..r , ,

WWW.IITAIILEI'AHDIOIII.COM

Real Estate

Real Estate

,

. T COLUMBUS

sountiAS

ALLilllY

MOOIL HOHI G ., ll.ds.• ""1t on
ey
, ...... Pil1l
Off US ll at the"d1-1\IVOi
ross from

"h···-

Basll Wesurn " " oo
....S4T•0)15
,
...,~_.,n•
Mon-Sat \Q.6. Sufi ll·,or ., .

kttov:com

�OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Apa-./

"Pa tl'*~a/

Townhou11r
2BR APT

(740) llNuHful Aptr. of

CIA

-1.·11 ·01 94

son Ettatea. 52 Westwood Dr.. from $365 to

74D-446-2568.

$560,

Auction

rdal

Townhourer

Jack-

2 bay serviCe station
Apanment available now JackSOn
Ptke. Lease
Riverbend
Apls.
New required. Call 446-~
Haven WV Now, accept- lor more info
!ng
apphcat1011s
tor
HUD-subsidiZed,
one
Hou111 For RMt

Federal Functs just re- . McDonald's

ot

RIO

Grande now lltnf19 momNo closmg cost and 1ng shift, HeXlble hours,
ZERO DOWN! Will do paid Holidays and Vacaland
1mprovements tlon. Apply within
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed·

leased tor Land Owners

2BR close to hosp1tal. Equal Houstng Opportu"~room Apts
Ut111t1os S238/mo• 4 bed . 2 bath
w1d hookup appl fur- mty. Th1s 1ns11tution 15 an ,_...
available
n1sr1ed 740·441 ·3702 or Eq ual Opportunity Pro- 1ncluded . Based on 30% Hank Repol tS% down. 15 rooms
u~
3384
vider
and
Employer
of
ad1vsted
income
Call
740"'4'"K1·
740-286-5789 ,.
ytlii'S , 811 APRI for hstmgs
304·882·3121.
avatlable soJ.e,~2(). 4 Q46t\ ROn
~~~----- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for 5em0r and Disabled

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.

people

lO· clean,

CONVENIENTLY ,

CATED
ABLE!
ments.

Do
an.·

~ ~~u

want to

Stale

St,

;;;o;;;;;""'====""'

&amp;

tor

rent

740-441-1111

mak~

114

AFFORD- ;:
_740
":"'-4~41~-05---00~.....~~ 2004 Doublewide 1n new
TownhOuse apart- 2 bedroom House $300
condition. 4 bedroom, 2
anrJIor
smaII month, Plus Utility, Ref &amp;

houses

Division

~~~-~~~~ For Rent
Management
•· H 1BR Mobile homos &amp; ~,.
Opportuni11es
mo + vg-pos '
• (no pets) In Ashton WV
Rg&amp;Rot. lum,
W&amp;D 304_576 _2942 _
we seek career oriented
hookup, No steps. Very ;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;,;;;,...,.....,,. indNIOOats who wll strive

Call Deposit

for

Pets bath, all appliances In·

No ..

appll- 304 _675_4874

a ,difTcrcnce? If you cation &amp; 1nlormation.
2br on the RIVer in Ma·
~..· ompussinnutc and ~.:om mitted to
2BA garage Apartment, son. HUD Approved Refptlw idmg Quality Cme come and be a part downtown. $425 mth rent erences 304-882-3512 or

ut nu t Lon~ Term Care/Home Care team.
We haw the follow ing positions available:
1-loll.cr Extra { 'a rej .
*Pl'r,pnull'un· Aidrs- Per Dirm:
Hnt1rl ~ nu~ :111J p~11d nulcage
1- ( ~nllia Count~·
1- .lal·kson County

"' u•N - 0() I·TE- Jadson
llon11.: H~o' .tlth AiJe 06 FTE- J.u:k.son
Hollrr Senjor t:y[e Cepter;
lcvc nin~s)

' STNA- I'T
lliolary ·\ld
1\pplicants for Nursing Assjstagt Classes

Holler Assjsted Li&gt;·ipg· GalUoolis;
*Resident Assislant- P'T

Fi.lr Jt't.uls pl~:a~c give Barb Pderson. Director
pf llum,m Rc.~oun:es for our long Tenn Care/
HonK Care Ji~,oi ~i o n &lt;1 cull at 740-441-340 1 or
entail m~ ·,u pctcrMm @holzer org or visi t us on
thl' \\Ch .It www.holzcr.org
Equ.tl Opportunity Employer

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Human Resources
Benefits Coordinator
H(J!L.:r Mt:dKal

Cent~r.

$58,M8
rnymldweslhome.com

house also 14K70 h'BIIer, '740) 446·3570

740.a24-2750

No ~~~~~~~~
smokers&amp;pets.
Ref&amp;dap Brand new 3bed 2bath
$450/mo wlsJt. 256-9190
on + ·haH acre In Pt

Stovelfndge

fum .

Apts 3 bedroom, total etectricj NANCE

1n~.:lud.c :

Bar.:helor·s
Dt:~l~l' 111 Hlllmtn Resources or related field,
Jllt.'\ IIlli-. t'XpC iil'llCt.' wurkmg Wtth
scJf1 unJt:d
worker \ compensm ion pmgram .
AllcnWHl to Jt:tail and c:&lt;cellent customer
...~ rvtcc ~k ill s arc nlso required. Prior
cxpcn L'IlCl' a~ an HR gencrul ist is preferred.
PHR l ~ rtll H.: at inn pteferred .
If inl ~l l' " tcll. pl~a\e contal..'l'

a

HUMAN RESOURCES
IIOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: (740) 446-5105
EOEIADA employer
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

s(occess?
We 'II Fill Your Cart.

3BRI2BA,

11•1••

rr

441.0110

or

•1,

olltl.lr u il111l'

,, fl,uu, 'll•'lll • •fi{H •/.,mlt&lt;' •
l\ 11/r ., , • ,'' (\II \fr •r•• w rlw
/ ' \ 1\ t /I~ ,,,,,. d lift

J,,, 'I ,r r..

Itt

rru/,,,

740-591-5174

3 AM's

I• f"''''t•"ll (, r I~~~~ qr•l.l/111
r, cl'itJ h•l!lltl ljlhll!l\

flrl~ilt.

.&gt;:t/ljlf, " ' \

\ \ , &lt;U&lt;

&amp;

bath rg.

&amp;

ref. Prices Reduced 2 2006

Chureh n•r$0nage. 3BR, chored.

Clean
Ground
2 bath, full basement, 2
Floor, 2br, WID hookup,
Qar
garage.
Includes
References!Deposlt/No
Pets
304•675 _5H32
WID, new fridge and
range Sits on nearly 2
acres $700 plus sec
Now accepting
de'p. For Info or tnspec·
applicatrons at
Valley View Apartments tion call245·0031
800 Slalo

Route 325

Thurman, Ohio 45685

Ho use For Rent tn PoInt

740-245-9170

Pleasant · 2-story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant,
2
2
br.,2
ba
tr.,dr.,k.i1chen w/stove, re·

1-2 Bedroom Apartments
with apptiances lumlshed

On Stte laundry facility.
Call tor details or piCk up · lrtgerator, 1/2 basement,
litrge yard, 110 pets,
application at rental
$550.00,dep &amp; ref req
office.

• i!ldil1•lll&lt;l l,l to .1:~•11 11 llh IH

G~

lllrlna f:vent
WodtlfSday. Octobtr 29th
7am·ll•m &amp; 4pm· 7pm AI ALOI Food•
176 Upper RJ ..r Road
Gallipolis. OH
1.1.'111' fiJI' ''Ut 1 &lt;111 -. ali u/J !h.• t' ovrt~ ~ ll•

111'h.lllt'nRinf Qlll./ n'\l'oJnltn ~:
rt'twJ j ~~~ r. R' V"•~IIhilltl~ ' incW • r11• umrt• r dtlt
(!»lin•' •1!" km •'1"-'fl ltl &lt;&gt;fl (t/_ t~ ll t-&gt;lt

1Jf¥do'il ft&gt; ( lr'dlt'

rf't&lt;I\W r .n .\1'/'m d~sitrx wtd JAA:t~
1/ll'l'rik~t l&lt;liv&gt; -U fl.l f f)(' r lhl~ 1•• "' t!li

i, mt· Jr..tmr 1/i flh Srlltiti
D'fJ/riiJII'I r•r Gf./J n•quiff'1l. ~* tll\o
t't 'tllli•~ pr~ , mr!/')''"1(1// J rru( ·" rrtlfinl
tlll&lt; f ~ /1 J.RIIIUIIt f /}.lr\"l ,l ~ lll'l' 00 rtjJiiiJ
lll 'fJ.JnU/111\ r'lllflm~t~ MJu·J~Ifff' r.uJI.~
ho•ht~'t'll

plt'lnl 1'/'1.1(' '" f'l'll••t.

mainta1ned 4
house &amp; 2 br. cabin
200
acres close
Pomeroy, available
mediately,
Well

Opportumty
TDD• 419-526·0466
"This institution is an
Equal Opportunity.

Provider and Employer"

(740)992-4590
740-416-7538

Ph.

740·388·0000

5

&amp;

•••
3
740"'1NI01·851

740 ·245 •92 15

Even 1ngs

weekends

&amp;

Ph.
&amp;
&amp;

740-388-8017
740-245-9215

740·794·0460
area.

Pleasanl

pt ,

bank. owned double
wide on lg 1181 lot,
close 10 town $24.900
Brokers' Realty Mike

Slack

Broker

304 _542 _5888 .

740-446·3400 or
304·529-0055
EOE

with a goal dnven, team

oriented and growing
company, we offer.
Health, dental, and life
Insurance, presorlptton
card, bonus program,
paid vacation,
management apparel,
Bctvancement from

POST

OFFICE

NOW

HIRING avg Pay S20/hr
$57Kiyr,
tncludes

Fl!d.Ben, OT. Place ·by
adSource. not aff11iated
USPS who hires.

1-866-403-2582

HO!p W-.1· G-..1
AVON.! All Areas!

To

Buy or SeD Sh!ney
Spears 304-6751429

wtthin.

Apply In person at the
Auction

to

lm·

E111, 1(1 1 11\t'lll

hOOO

or

Acc:ovnting I Flnandal
home

medical

equipment company now

Tara

R

': '

"
=----~~~-

"""""""""""""""" seeking

~=-:"':'~-=-=::=-::'"'

Townhouse 2BR 1 bath at 3675 Bu·

Apartments
bath, back

2BA.

patio,

water

age.

$425/rent,

experienced

med&lt;al billing

.~•,

spec1al~t

customer seNice
Fax resume and

with

skills

1 5 Iaviiie Pk Must See! No 74()-44 1. 1648
salary requirements to
pool, Pets. 740·446·4234 or !!!;,;,;,;,;;;,;;;,..,!!!!!....,

pd )
$425/sec. 2BR

Admlnitlralin&gt;/
Profe
1
uiona

dep, Call740·367·0547

tratler

for

rent

367-7762

Auction

Large Detorated Stoneware Auction
Saturday, November 1, 2008 10:00 a.m.
Mood!spaugh's Auction House

Torch, Ohio

to left , turn and gb appr9x . I mile toT, turn
right and follow signs to Auction House.

We will be selling thts private collection of 130
d~corated jars and consist of: 20 gal. T.F.
Reppert Eagle, 20 gal. Jas. Hamilton EaRle,
12 gal. Williams &amp; Reppert Eagle, 1 gal. A.P.

DonaRhho eagle, Very rare .l/2aal. HamUton
&amp; Jones Eagle, Very rare Freehand 1871
and I 112 gal. Williams &amp; Reppert pitcher.
Mercbapt and Towg Iars; ln, .ll&amp;l:
Wheeling, Palaline. Morgantown, Shinnston,
Sisler.ville. Woodland. Moundsville, Stanlon,
A.P. Donaghho's and Excelsior ·pottery. lliWl
.!Ia; Clairington, Powhatlen, Barnsville,
Matamoras , and Zanesville. Pcpg Ian;
Will iams &amp; Reppert, Hamilton 's, and .T. F.
Reppert. We al~o have ~everal Freehand
decoraled jars such as C.J Merrill &amp; others;
New York. Red Wing -and Bennington.

Auctioneer: Todd Moodlspaugh
Ohio Lic.#OOOOI07
Licensed and bonded in favor of the state of
ohio. 'A nnoun.c ements day or sale take
precedence of printed material. Terms: Cash or
Good check wlproper ID: (5% buyerj premium

on all credit card sales). lnformalion: (740)
667 -0644 or 989-2623 or web site at:
www.moodispaugh.com
Auctigneer;5 Nore; Please go to our website
for great photo's. If you have questmns you
·il son i

Help Wanted

;==~====~--=-=-=-=-=-~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--~

0

PHYSICIAN PRACTICE
SERVICES COORDINAtOR
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time Physician
Practice . Services Coordinator. Bachelors
degree in business, nursing or other
applicable
healthcare
related
field
preferred. Previous physician practice
management
experience
preferred.
Previous billing , experience preferred.
Previous supervisory/management skills
preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human ResouKes
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(l04) 674-2417
Or fax: l04-675-6975
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

check

available March 1, 2009
Housing and administrative ElXpenence is preferred. Resume, experi·
ence and salary requirements should be sent to

Gallla MHA, 381 ' Buck
Ridge Road, Bidwell. OH

Jars. Ephem (very old) 8&amp;)' Ponery. McCoy. Ameru:an
Bh.que. Fu-eking. Pyre~. Colonial. smaJI .figurines, hand
pamted F~nto.n frog, H painted glassware. milk
bonles(,Meigs Strcet . Kanawha D- Gallipolis D· Home
D- Broughtons D· Imperial D· Parkersburg Creamery)
Depression glassware, rolling pins, Gramtcware, "Pure
Milk" Boule Caps. Sunshme btscu1t tm bucket. oil
lamps. pinoclio bank, Hazel Atlas Dishes. Callrrtablr:s
&amp; Sloneware: '"Lilughhsl Brothers Crock (Blue writing
Main St, Wheeling. WV), II.S crock.IIO crock, #IS
crock hd. #10 anchor crock. 14 clover crock. #3 crock.
There are numerous crock jars &amp; jugs. brown Coke
Cola boltle (UxingtOn. KY ). Big Chief Pop Bottle,
MtSc. Stratght razors {Butcher- Clauss-WesterWadswonh-Butcher Shefield), Accordians (Con tinental
Mark 3- Maggt Mamaua- Atlantl ~ Supreme- Salantt '
"Les") . Printers Block (Wood of Church), Prinrersi
Pumtm t-loral Block. Model A- Luagage iltcks, Very
old wall toat rack, cherry pitters. com shellm.largt"
selectmn or Crad:er Jack toy5, one or the must umque
coltectmns or buttons (alot of glass &amp; bakealitc).
Beautiful •lintage key Yoind clock. Porcelain face &amp;
Pendulum. bam lanterns. Mt. Jo y cherry p!Utr, old
wood spools, stone crock foot wanner, sad irons, gmin
scoop. arrowheads. p1pes. hghters, pedal car, Blenko
glass. Quilts &amp; {..iaens: Ornate Crazy quill (Made by a
lad)' who p11.'iSed away m 1889) Double ~1de Cmzy quih ,
sunshine star quill, 9 block quilts (3) plus orh~rs. alsc
have some quilt tops, knotled quilts. hand made lncC,
feed sacks. hankies Paper Items &amp; books: 1st Edilion
books, 1961 Athena year book (O.S.U), l'ornate
wooden w/clusp Bibles (1 872), masonic Bool:s.
Railroad/Lionel! Magazmes, Newport H.S. Yearbook,
(2) H1s1ory of Oh1o Books, 1912 by Randall &amp; Ryan
and 1 hy Galbreath, Post cards. scrap books. un type
pictures, Mary Margaret McBnde cookbook set, Coal
mining books, 1951 pk BG directory. 1906 Scribbers
mags. Parkersburg. V. dapers. large scl«tion 'of vmtagt
ch1ldrens books. tax stamps. noral painting (by
Edwanls). fiat &amp; Volkswa~on car manuals ( 19~~·1969)
Life &amp; Post mags &amp; others. Toys &amp;: Tools &amp; Fishing
[teau. (2) Wicker doll carnages, spa1.'C rocket spy glass
toy, tricycles (2). Tonka Camper, grator toy. Nylint
firetruck. "Cowboy" Cap gu,n Clicker gun. "Kilgore··
cap strain set, scat JUUJor cap amf, fishmg rods (Fly),
Reels (South Bend, PFlueger} Montique fish k11l fly rOLl ,
3 pr.:. fly rod, bolt cutters, loggmg hook; wood blod:.
planes, breas! drills, 2 old ringer bo11.es, capirul hush
pullmg tool. cheeny fulton iron black smith anv1l vice
#00, There are alot of m1sc. tools in rhis sak Fumltu~
&amp;: Mise: Lane cedar chest (w/quilted top seat) Pa1lor
srand, dresser w/mirror, si ngin[! bird in cage . white
hous~ vinegar 1!2 gallon JKil. Drs tool kll. porcelain
dQIJ,jewdcy, very old black cat &amp; pumpkin dcco, J:om
planters. RC Thermometer, metal pop signs. largl!
sellecl.ion of pens &amp; pencils (leader Rcstnurant
Mt~rietta. OH) elc. Cast iron kettle (Beverly. OH }. old
wicker p1cnic basket, #30 washboard, postal M'ales, old
paper flom hags. (Colonial flour, Blue Ribbon Flout,
Equ1ty RoHer M1lls. Pastery flour. Silverton Mills corn
meal) Triangle shaped s tonew~re foot warmer. All
annoum;emenls day of s11lc takes precedence over all
printed materiitJ . Home cooked food availabJe. Ccmlc
out and enJOt dinner &amp; auchon.lerms of ~ale- ull 0111 of
state checks requin!: pre-approval or bank nme (unkliS
we know you) Duections. Frum Belpre take ST Rt. 7 S
to Mtddteport ex1t. From Gall1polis take St. Rt 7N to
Middleport uit. From Athens tnk~ R1. 33 E 10 St Rr 7S
10 Middleport exil. Signs will be posted. Thtre are st tll
items coming in 1hat are not listed yet.
James Thylor· Auctlooeer 10014
Lk:ensed &amp; Bonded In ravorofslale otOH &amp; WV
We will be having a very large comic booklbookfpost
card sale soon. We have no1 SCI a date yet. Wntch the

Auction

Auction .

Albany IS 14 miles west of Athens, go to center or Albany nnd tum on West Clinton
Street, go almost to the end, house ts on the nght, watch for signs.

UIHt'CTION5.

REAl ESTATE sells at NOON · 2-smry. li ving room, dming area, kitchen, 4-bedrooms, 2-bathroom~. full
basement, 2 car garuge on two lots. built in 1966. TERMS; BUYERS PREMIUM-K%- 10% dowtfm
auction, balance m full at clnsing and delivery of deed Within 30 days Possession at closing. Sold with
owner's consent Scllmg as 1s in present condttion, financing ir needed must be made pnor to auction. as
well us any impections. Property sells wilh ~o contmgcnC1es . Call for appoin!ment1o sec this property

tl'1er

information

call

No Lease On Cosfl

$1.74

VEHICI:f.S BOAT. MQIQB HOME : 1989 Chevrolet Blazer 4 x 4 ( 138.000 mtles), 1987 Ford Ranger
&lt;98.154 m1 lcs), 1974 Ford Courier Tru~,;k, 1969 Evmrude Sportsman Boat, 196H Evinrude Motor, Boat
Traller, l977 Cru1sc Master Motor Home-rough (45 .000 miles}, 2 ~wheel trailer,

'AdJusted Weekly to •

ANTJOJJES &amp; cgu,ECTJBI ES; Silvertone Victrola style record player cabinet w/old records. se~eral
Femon dishes. old sled , library table, gateleg table, older dresser &amp; chest of drawers, 22-Collector belt

Protect Our Contractors

buckles. 12-em'pty GulfOtl cans.

• Business Training
Suppon
• Spouse Rider PI'Ogfam

Drivers: Real Truck Drivers, Apply hem. Owner
Operator&amp; that want to
average $4000 plus a
week. Willing to run
where the work Is, East

Coast, West Coast, Con-

ada. We have the work
and you can make ttte
mooey. All the porl&lt;s. luel
card, fieense, lire net·
work, direct depostt. Apply now or call Jack
White, liquid Transpor1
Corp
800-346-8301

.

HOJ!StfHOI 1D fJ !RNJSHINGS: newer oak dinmg table w/6 chairs, china cabinet, Rowe matching sofu.
loveseat &amp; lounge chair, newer oak end tables &amp; sora table, 4-pi«e sections of newer oak bookshelf units,
large gun cabinet, GE ponable TV, VCR, newer oak. roll top desk &amp; oak desk chair. computer desk,
several bookshelves, newer oak bedroom suite complete, oak Jewelry cabinet, che"al mirror, oak quilt
stand. queen size bed &amp; twin bed (m1 headboards) . lamps. GE fl11t top electric range, GE refrigerator.
M aytag portable dishwasher, miscellaneous dishes , poo, pans &amp; small' kitchen appliances. GE washer &amp;
dryer, microwave, stand, fans , stools,lawn bench. porch glider, Mustang wheel chair

RIDING MOWER. 110JS OF TOOLS &amp; MJSCt:ll ANFPJJS: Kubota GR 2100 Glide Steer Riding
Lawn Mower. Gravely 812 Tractor/Mower (no deck), Cub Cadet 1450 nding mower, lawn dump ciU't.
Truy Bill tiller, Cub Cadet .S22WE electric start Snow Blower, Lincoln 225 welder, ne LinC()In electCJc
SP-125 Plus wire welder. 2-Reddy heaters. small i:enerator, air compres~. 3-large v1ses, Craftsman tool
bo11. w/drawers full of sockets, wrenches, eJO:tensions, Snap On tap &amp; dye sel, Hydraulic Ponapower new
in case, Cuterpillcr Puller Adaptor in case, bench grinders, Craftsman drill press, tool boxes w/tools, open
&amp; box end wrenches, pipe wrenches. nut drivers , I" socket sci. pipe wrenches, tool belts, shop lights, log
chains. wheel barrow. yard/garden tools, lawn seedcr/fertililer,1251 anvil. Fisher wood stove, and mu~h

more .
TERMS: Cash or check w/posidn I.D. Checks ovrr SIOOO must have bank authorlulton or funds
ovallable. Food will be av.Uable. NOI responsible for looo or ocddenls.
OWNER: Carolyn 'K. BurriU by Ronel A. Burrill, POA

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
OHIO REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS, LLC
AUCTIONEERIRULTOR: John Potrklf"Pa1" Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan Boyd, Mike Boyd &amp; Brenl Kl111

$1000 Sign oo Bonus
$1000 Referral Bonus.
Seeking
driver
w/CDlJHazmat qualificatiOns for full ttme employ·
ment C propane busl·

We are hiring!!!

Recruft volunteers tor
non-profit organizations
SUCh as St. Jude

Chtldreri's Research
Hosprtal.
Get paid to mclke a
difference!

.r Full and Part-time
Positions
.I Day and Evemng

funds and renew
member:stups for the
National Rifle AssocistiM
RSI$6

."' Weekl)l Pay anc1Sonus
lnc6ntlvu!
o/ FuH and Part-time

Shifts

PositJons!
ol' Profes!IOIJSI Worlc

401K!
.I On-site

..1

Doctor

Email:

AVPERLINK ••mailto:ShamrockAuction@aol.rom" ShamrockAuctlon@aol.com
WEB: www..shamrock~auctions.eotO

PH: 740·592-4310 or IIOIJ..419·91Zl

ness. send resumes to:
Daily Sentinel, PO Box
729-23, Pomero~. 0t1

I

Apprentice

Environment!
,., MediC81, Denral. EAP.
4CtKI
.r On-s1te Doctor/

information

Whrt·Co

can

Trarmng

304-372-8346
':'!'~~~~~~=

Wanted Welder,
Iron
workers, P1pe Fitters, &amp;
crane
operators.
Top

CLASSIFIEDS!

Auction

Auction

Call TODAY! ,

BOnus lncenttves!

Coli TODAY!
lnlervlow
TOMORROWII

WOI1&lt; NEXT WEEKIII

1-181HM().PAVU
Ext 1M1
hHp:t~.lnlodtlon.com

We are getting ready
lor the 2008
ettctlona and wo
nHdYOUI
Help us make calls on

behalf of COnseNatlve

Polnlcal organ!zallons,
Canclk!ates and causes .
• Eam up to S8.5Miour

t Medical, Denial, EAP,

and 40tK
+On sl1e doctor!
+Full and part·Hme
schedules

Slart doing work you can
bo proud of, Start doing
work that makes a

dlfrerence. Start your
ne~ career todayf

contodorl
1oi77-48U247 Ext.
2331
~:fl)oba.lnlocllktn.com

Auction

ln1ervlow TOMORROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKtll
HI81HMC-PAYU
Exl2311

Marilyn

paclca~~&amp;

Overbrook

November ~3th, 2008

Center

IS

cepting appllcattons for
full time cool&lt; Posi1ion,

800·442-6101

Home
Health, Inc. hlnng Home
vaMey

Health Aides. STNA,
'CNA, CHHA. PCA may
apptf at 1480n Jackson
P1ke , Gallipolis, Ohio or
pflone 740-441·1393 lor
more tnfo. Competittve
wages, · mileage
retm·
bursement and benefit&amp;
Including
health
insur·
ance &amp; much more.

"TO ALL RESIDENTS
OF
PERRY
TOWNSHIP"
. The 21108 General
Election voting will
take place on Nov. 4,
~008 al Buckeye Rural
Coop., 5830 State
Route 325 South,
Patrlot, Ohio or you
may vote abHnlee

t::.

Complete tenns of sale and pictures coming
soon to . www .wisemanrealestate .com

2 houses for the price of 1 resting on 1.116
acres of land!!
Localed in Wellston, Ohio-less than 2 miles
from the Genreal MilL• Planl Excellent
invesbnent property. Minimum slarting bid
of $35,000!! 3% Buyer's premium. CaD Josh
Bodimer Aurtioneer/Realtor for more details
or questions. Watch newspaper and website
for open house date.
Call Josh Bodimer al Wiseman Real Estate
David Wiseman- Broker
For more mfo 740-446·SOLD
, 1. 1J _,

Col~ Octotier 5 28, 21108

structom
whopart-time
pqseBOS Inm;
Is
seeking

mastofs. degree in gen· ·
eral educatton
ar·
eas
such as:.subject
English,
Math. and Social Sciencos. E·mail resumes
10 idanlck!Ogallipollscareercollege.edu or call
800-2 14-()452
Auction

EsTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER I • 10 AM
GALLIPOLIS F.ERRY, WV
Selling 1he estate of the late Howatd ~nd Lida
Garland
Dlred!ons: From Pt . Pleasant, Take Rt 2
SoUih approx. 6 miles and tum left onto Blain
Lane, then follow signs. From Huntington,
take Route 2 North approx. 30+ miles and turn

righl Blain Lane after passing the Supresla
Planl, then follow signs.
AUTOMOBILES/MOWERS:
1978
Coachman Econoline 250 Camper Van With
57,000 Miles, May Need Minor Repairs,·
Always Garage Kept: Husqvama 25HP, 48"
cut riding mower; 2 Murray push mowers; 2

~ Ill
'
l!iliil !rM

NM
S!!

aluminum tea kettle; electric skillets: crock
po;cs; serving platters; dehumidifier; wooden

Q

able

transportation

and

valid auto 1nsurance
Patd tra1n1ng Hourly rate

Auction

Auction

MP3 player, Leman's b'g camera le.ns &amp; attachmems. Zenith Clear see thru
TV, P1oneer Equaltzer CD Player/2' speakers, brown bag wtth assorted
remotes , Delta portable drill press, Cmftsman handsaw, white Ready
Heater. gm HB Bench grinder, HR power washer, Stanley Bo'stiteh air
compressor w/hos~ Amencan wickKerusene heater, orange Firesrom1
sawsaw, Bostitch air nailer, Cambell air compressor, Horton crossbow
w/quiver 4 arrou.·s , new Cruftsman dnllgress in box, gry case 4
battcrics.circular saw. cordless drill, Master Me:chanic cordless drill,
Powercraft drill &amp; light , s~ars Cordless drill 3/8 w caselballcnes , Dewalt
sawsaw w/case, Bosch electric drill wlcase, Sears Cordless dnll wfl.
batteries. gm. ·Makito sawsaw, DeWalt sawsaw wfcuse , Stihl Force
crossbow w/4 arrows/quiver new Mustang trash pump w/Hondn motor,
Dewalt Electric drill. silver &amp; black. Skill circular ·saw , Black &amp; Decker
rotary saw • Clark woodworker table saw, Fisher dual cassel! tunner, amp
and disc charger. Tej;hnica equalizer, dual casseue deck. CD player &amp; amp,
new Frigidaire Washer in box. Sony pon~ble boom box w/CD player. box 5
d1sc CD changer, Panasonic DVD player Optimus dual cassette deck.
Passlode Nailgun. 2 Craftsman sander. New Dual Audto/video Multi Media
receiver, GE CD player w/remote, Hi Pressure Air spray gun, Microsoft box
containing HP Keyboard. 7 mise!. brand VCRs, grey HP monitor, silver
Kodak. Kodavision series 200. metal case Bosch I'' hammer drill wlbit,
silver X·WaveDVD player. Silver,venturer DVD home Theatre Systertt w/3

plus

Programm•ng,

Sm1ce I Bus
D~rectory

Conaete

Mantnactunng Eng1neer
Gallipolis. bH

ABSOLUTE
Real Estate AUCTION

Put your eJO:penence to
use wtlh El&amp;ctroCratt, a
global leader 1n motor
and motion comrol solutions Candidates will Independently
prov1de
techmcal leaderShip, dt·
rection and support lor

Al l types Mason ry bnck.

block.
Free

stone.

conc rete.
Estimate,

304·593-6421

All types Masonry br1ck:

block , stone. Free Estt:

740·416-7305
Manufac1Ur1ng
of mate,
A(:;IBLDC
moto rs 304-593·6421

the ·

Bacllelor's degree in MeIndustrial. or
Electrical Eng (eqUiva·
lent ekpenence w11t be

r-:;:::::;;;;;;;.;;;:;;:;;~~;;;~;;~====;-

Items from Shoemaker case 07·1034, Boll. assorted knives, HP ..:omputer
tower, box 99 DVD 's. 6 .. -oomputer towers, monitors . keyboards; Dell
computer tower, 9- Direct TV boll., Stiver Sanyo DVDIVCR player. 6Magnavm. tv!&gt;, 3- APEX DVD players. grey Wolfe Panaview projection
screen white. OPTIMA TV PROJECfOR. Ptoneer surrund sound with
speakers, blk. laptop PAD. bag of 5 .remote controls. Pro.,S.Wdlo stereo
system speak.cn, cassett deck, 5 Dtsc el\.changer (TeaKv.ood) stereo
TeakwOOd and stereo stand, Stiver RCA tv. black. Symphonic TV. black.
Micro Tech Oat St..'Teen TV, Reahshc pollee scanner . Dell COJTiputer tower
wlkeyboanJ, Coby DVD player, Play Stat1on 2, Pamtball equipment Trit1on
2 and Slmgray, silver HP laplop, Sony Playstal ion r. 2.Dura Brand portable
DVD, X·, Box 360 w/3 controllers. box DVD's +f- H7. SEGA Game gear
with assorted games , Game Boy Advanced wtth games/anachments.
Panrasonic surround sound w/Speak:ers, Lexmark P350 Portable printer.
Toshiba TV, black Sanyo tlatsc~n TV, Raptor pamlball gun in blk case,
10- Digital Cameras , SONY Hi-8 video camera, blk leather bag dell
Laptop, Playstation 2 slim, Radio Shack. 200 chnnnel scanner, roshiba tv.
black..Magnavox LCD IS" TV flut screen, bluck. Playstation 2 w/controller,
Bellringer B8ss Amp, MESAIBOOOlE speakers+ 2 Meso Boog1e speukers,

a

Setup and Operat10n of
CNC Stator V"llnd1ng an~
Balanc1ng
equ1pment;
Metal ·stamp1ng F1nar
Assembly proces~ and
techn1ques ConstructiOrt
and F n1sh1ng MatenaiS:
Lakin
WV,
Mo nday (Sieels
AI.
Plas!les:·
through Friday, 8:00 an Powder Coaling. Pa1nt.,
- 4 00 p m. Lakin Hospi- AMdiZinQ Platmg. eic ) "
tal IS an EEO/AA em- For 1mmet;~ 1ate cons10:
ployer . Lak1n Hosp1ta l erat1on please mall your'
conducts
pre-em pl oy · resume and cover letter
ment drugla l&lt;:~ test· to ElectroCratt - Humar\
1ng
EmploYe's m8y be Resources 250 McCorexposed to streamlme or miCk Rd Gallipolis OH
secondhand smoke
4563 1
or
fa~
to
740·441 ·6305. An Equ?J
Opporh.Jmty
Employer
Restaurants
Supp0r11ng D1verstty tri
Now H1nng Expenenced. tile WorKplace

Technical Tradts

Auction

SHERIFF'S S,t.LE OF FORFEITED GOODS
By Dan Smith, Auctioneer
The Melga County Sheriff's Office (Case 17-1034) will offer
for aale to the highest bidder at PUBLIC AUCTION,
Saturday, Nov. 1, 2008, at 10:00 am
behind the old Veteran's Memorial Hoaplta1 (old emergency
room antntnce), Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, OH the following
forfeited goods:

provement tecllnJQues 15
also
reQu ired
Experience wnh me tollow1ng 1s,

- - - - - - - - ------.,--.,---' Dog.s New Haven

:=======-========
Auction

ment Exp must also Included management ol
multiple
p10j€CIS Wll il
strC•'l9
communication
and problem . so v1ng
SkillS
Knowledge
Qf
Lean pr1nC1p1es as weH
as khowledge of the lat-

starting at $7-$8 00/hour wa1tstaff , ·cooks. dtshPlease
call
1
washers &amp; delivery dnv·
304·373·1"011 or toll tree ers apply in person
9000
at 1·877-373·1 011 .
Har!)''s
Famous
Hot

If

doors: Emerson VCR; fOOts1ool; American
flag; sewmg kil; crib bedding; toddler bed;
quilling and cross slitch hoops; marble top 3
piece coffee/end tables: gun rack; handmade
quilts; Bissell Upright powerforce bagless
vacuum: porch swing; porch furniture; child's 1 speaken, Spori:omatic pflic equalizer. black Optimus Equalizer, 3· Zenith
pool table Ping Pong table; office chairs, ·' VCRsJ- Emerson VCRs, gtey Samsung DVDNCR Combo black Optimus
dubbing slerco black-Kenwood. ampUfter, black Echo Sttir Dish Network
wooden magazine rack.
box, factory Pooitac .casSiitie p!aye1 bltKk Pioheer \0~ pla~er. Uniden CD.
TOOLS: Eager Beaver chain saw; Craftsman.
climbing hamllsswlspikc &amp; rope Skill saw 2- Crafbfuan ~lectric 'drill , no
blow torch; Craftsmao wet/dry vac; 40'
nameyeUow drill, Bfack &amp;.'lle&lt;ker sawslw, Skill clrtular saw. Makim saw.
alUminum extension ladder; aluminum step
Benchtop ellectric &lt;Ifill. Montgomery Ward Electric drill. Master Mechanic
ladder: galvanized pump sprayer; water
electric
drill , Troybill power washer 6 HP. II hp Honda motor. Clarke 13
regulators: pump oil can; several electrical
hp
generaiOr,
3- Weedeaters, acetelyne lanks &amp;. dolly /gauges, 6. Black &amp;
supply pieces; wooden carpenters tool box; C.Decker
Jig
saw,
12- chainsaws • 5 - Black &amp; Decker drills .. 6· Black &amp;
Ciomps; Yankee drill; log chain, floor jaclc; 2
Decker circular saws, Zenith big sc:reen TV, 2· Zeruth TV woodgrain
" ton jack; saw horses; shol table. 1 pipe
\\!/stand, 6- camcorders, white 220 volt air conditioner 3- microwaves,
wrenches; hand saws, oil cans~ tire chains; gas
black Symphonic TV, beach top circular saw with case. 2 ·Honda Trash
cans; roll around 1001 box; drop light: ban:ry
pumps,Oclagon poker table, Master Mechanic drill in box, McGraw Edison
ch!Ui"r: wheelbarrow; sev hand tools; mce
1/2" electic drill, All Pro Propane heater. blue Rhino propane·· lank
benchtop vise; plus moro. ,
wJheater, Air tower port hose, 3· leaf blowers, Panisonic DVD/CD player
COLLECTIBLES: Ntttchez whiskey boal
Clnevislon DVDNCR player,~- miter Saws. Skill saw table saw w:11and
decanter with 6 shot slasses: Radio Flyer
LVI TV, OB DVD player, Techniques 5 disc: DC chqer. A V con 11011
wagon; Uns, 8' bamboo fly rocl; comic books:
receiver '!Khniquts, I 112 1onChlin hoiS1, ·black Playsta1ion screen
Ben Pierson recurve bow: beer stein: lrllnk
a~U~Chment, Silver Portable DVD player w/2 moniton . Durabrand portable
iac:k; CISI iron rea kettle; wooden nail kes:
DVD player w/men. i'"Y Sony ploystation ""I conuoller, I 2- grey Sony
piayslllion w/memory' card, RCA ponable: DVD/CDIMP3 Player, Litcon
Navy Life preserver.
&amp;rtlppgr'• Note; Several nice clean 1Ultique
in box w/extension DVD ·RW drive, blk Kodak bag con1aining Pho1o Deck,
2· laitifl Portable DVD. ~n camera wlflash 2 exu-a lens, Minolila
pieces. All pieces are in great shape. Bring a
Camera w/2 flash/ 2Uens Nicon Camem wlfash, silver Mustck Digital
lawn chair and a friend. Hope 10 see you there.
camem wltripod, 2·W# players new in package Sony Walkman w/' m
Tcg grthc Sek; Cash or approved check
phones
Announcemen1s sale day take precedence over
Directions: Off Rt 7 Bypass Pomeroy. Take Hiland Road watch for aucuon
written material
signs.
Refu:sbments Available
Du Smllb, Auctlo...r Ohio 113449 ·
Joe Arrington Auctioneering
Re!....,_nls for sole- Cash and r)osltlve ID
1-161 (304) 811-8114
Not restlonsD&gt;Ie for ICddenls or loss of property. Anoooomnen1s day of
(304) 576-4009
sale lakes-precedence o•er printed mauers.

'•

1ndrv1duals with MR/DD
H~gh school diploma or
GED requ1red. No eJO:pe·
nence necessary. Cnm~·
nal background check reQUired Must have rel i-

~ •

Slihl weedeaters.
ANTIQUES: 1800's baby carnage; 1920's
dresser and vanity with stool; cast tron cook
silver MAGNAVOX DVD/VCR 4 HEAD, Black speaker boxPYRAMYD,
stove; buffet wilh mirror: glass daisy buner
black MITSUBISHJ TV . black RCA TV, Shurp TV, Sony DISc changer.
chum #40 #4 Dasher crook chu111 I, 2, 3
yellow/chrome lightning Audio Amp. woodgrain CAPEHART TV. black .
SANVO TV. blacR case TV, silvet CLASSIC DVD PLAYER ' 2- black
gallon jugs; wooden cotlee gnnder: egg crate
ORION
TV. black Audio CD recorder in box. Rca Home Stereo W/2
and basket; Hupson sprayer; Griswald g~Udle
Speakers: Black Rca Home Stereo. Pioneer Disc Changer W/5 Speakers.
#9; Gnswald .!teal grinder; Griswald skillets;
RCA 100 wt receiver. dual cassette deck., blue rechar.gcable drtll, blue case
Dutch oven; Wagner com pol; Mail Pouch
side grinder, sander. jig saw &amp; drill. Wood Lathe. black case wlpowerAC
Thermometer; Krau~ cutter; Washboards;
plus cordless drilrwlbatteries charger, black. case lmpact Wrench&amp;. Jumper
Cherry seeder; stone jars; wOOden bowls; Milk
.
Cables,
Aeo Cordless Drill &amp;. Driver Wlcharger &amp;. Ba Tterie. Black&amp;.
botlles: bucket and dipper; !'1'nile wash tub;
Decker
Wtzard
Rotary Tool, Homemcdlcs llac~ Massager , 18 Volt Dewalt
old school desk: favore cookware; several 1
Cordless
Drill
W
/2 Batteries&amp;. Chager. Red Power S1t0ke Homellle Chain
• assorted iron skillets; draw knife; wooden
Saw, Dewall Sk11l Circulat Saw. Coleman Cordless Circular Saw/drill
butter mold: wicker high chair: wooden sled
Ckarger , blk case Black &amp;. Decker cordless screwdriver/driiUjig saw &amp;
with steel runners; set of 3 Mason jars. pt. qt,
batter pack. gry case cordlells drill2 batteries&amp;. charger, Radio Shack 100
HQ- wood auger, ch1cken feeder: rapid hand
wan soldenng gun3 Sony CD players I Panasomc new in pkg, new Sony

1950's "the Workbasket" sewing ·books; set of
WV books: Hurricane lamps Biclrola horn;
wet slones, Mail Pouch and Southem State
thermometers, reel type push mower, 20-40
stamps, McCoy
·
. 1
HOUSEHOLD/FURNITURE: Canning Iars;
2 Piece Ltving Room Suile With Recliner:
China Cabinet; Chest And Dresser With
Mirror; huge wooden desk: potato bin: comet

res1dent1a tlcom·

skill trammg w1th

AUCTIONEER NG

---' ---- •
Auction

phor&lt;l calls .

J()811 BQD1MER

~~~~ - ~lhlpBoard
Gelllpollo1 Career

Pom! Pleasant. wv pro·

Wanted:
'Part
Time
Room Attendant at the
Gallipolis
Holiday Inn.
Must be willtng to wort&lt;
. Weekends and holidays.
Experience preferred but
we Will tratn. Apply in
person. Absolu1ely no

~

you,

flllllpart

'""'""'""'""-""'--= munity
vidmg

bty 1r'1 an electncal as
sembly and test enwon-

per year. 18 Clays stck est manufacturmg procCare leave and 12 plus pard esses and process lf'Tl-

Health
Inc

curren11y
seek1ng
lime staff for

IS

Maintenanc» /

Domellic:

Conducled for I he Estate of Leslie Rowland
Execulor Mark Dillon

Bam-1:30pm. Anyone interested plea$8 pick up
an app!lcahon at 333

~-~--~-- pant ol the Drug-Free
"32 people needed to lose Workplace Program
up to 30 lbs In 30 days
30 day money back
guarahtee.
Call ·lisa
Public Notice

"

6:00 pm Sharp Rain or Shine
House's will be open at 5:00 pin

Aehabtlitation
currently ac-

ABODE

ServiCes.
H1nng
holi days. healthlhfe rn·
Caregivers 1n. Leon, &amp; 1n
surance
IS
ava1lable
Mason
County
Salary
commensurate
304·586-9441 or toll free
w1t1'1 experience
Must
1-866-327-721;2
have a WV C ~A eertlfl&lt;ta5 North Park Ave
cabon to work m West
Wei!Sioo , OH 45692
Virg1ma. and must pos740·384·5611
sess either a GED or
.___E_o_EIS_F_ID_F_ _,~ Tra1ner 0 1)sttlons
high school diploma ApAre you tnterested 1n a plications may be p1ck. ed
"""""""""""""""' rewarding position? PAIS up at Lakm Hosp1tal

234 West 13th Slreel, WeUsloo, Ohio

304-675-4545.

Sentrce Aetrrem ent, earn
up to 15 days vacatron

·ExCeptiOnal
communication &amp;
people skills
"Interpersonal &amp;
organizational skills
To apply, viSit.
www.consulatemgtcareers com

Real Estate Auction

Oi~l MechaniC , tow ,
boat expenec:e desired,
good Waij&amp;S, exc. -

Pa~~&amp; Street. Middlei!Ort.
OH. E.O.E . &amp; a Pa11iCI·

Ohio

'2 yrs MDS
EKpenence

An ExceUent way to eam Pay.304·763·2694
money. The New AVon .

Call
304-1182-2645

in
MaSOfl lacrhty
FuiHrme emCOUilty 304·586-9441 or ployment ot1e rs an e ~ ­
toll tree t-866-327·7262
tensr ve benefit package
rnc ludtng
State
CMI

·RN

Page 05

TocMical Trodoo

progra ms

50 skilled bed Facility

THE

Modic:al

ABODE
Health
Care Ctlrtlfted Nursii'IQ AssrsServas, Inc Accepting tant tun t11ne and temponew cf1ents and transfers rary (9Q.day) wo\1&lt; r ~n 114
1or "A/D Waiver and VA bed long term ca re .State

MDS
COORDINATOR
Edgi'W Dcd Minor
oiWolloton

SHOP

80-hr. available Health care &amp;

Apprentice

U~round

Weekly Pay and

wv

45769 '

face

more

.t Professional Wof1(
Environment!

' .r Medical, Denial. EAP,

60-hr. EMT Miner Class SeMCe Manager &amp; 5eN·
&amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur- 109 Technlc6an positions

Retirument plans avatl·
16-hr
Tree
Clearing able. Please send re·
tq
No flxpflrisrK;e required/ Mine Underground For- some
.
man
Class.
Minor
Safety
LLCOCAREO
COM
or
No Crodft C.ra Sales/ No
Equipment Store
For fax to 740-446-9104
Cdteclionol

milk cans; metal milk crates: Avon bottles,

Up to 20011 per Yean

OUT'Ind BACK
FREIGHT
• 100% Fuel Surcharge

""' 5a!es!

, plow; slerling silver teapot with cups: lamps.

DRIVERS ATIENTION
OWNER OPERATOR
Our Average Current
Total Revenue
Mile loaded or Empty is

S?W
Sign On Bonual!

washer, 2 old trunks; several crpcks and
cllums, brass spiuune: aluminum milk
buckets ; whiskey decan.ters; antique potato

740-446-0251

Required
1-lln-4117-2120

our

We have Detn commissioned to stlltht: following items

45614 on or before November 3, 2008. For fur-

ApprovodC'""M

current job openings on the web at

wwwJaolgr,prg

Posttlon

COL A Tanker!Hazmat •

If you are Interested in a great
opportunity or a career change please
call Barb Peterson, Director of Human
Resoun:es for Long Terni' Care, at 740441-3401
or
email
me
at
or

Director.

LEASE PURCHASE
wHh $0 Down Wfth

Stop by and fill out tin application as
soon as possible for lhe Nurse Aide
Clasoes. We will review all of the
applications and sel,,,~p Interviews to
seled eight studenl•. .

peterw®holzer«g

tlve

Auction

1250 Sigft on llonua
Ten pooitionl need filod
by next-!
No Colle&lt;tions!

SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1REAL ESTATE
&amp; PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Saturday, November 1 _; 10:00 a.m.
Athens County, Albany; OH

pohtan Housing Authority

fill
position
of Execu1s the
taktng
applications
to

Old Glory Auction House
659 Pearl St. Middleport, OH
Friday, Oct. 31st6:00 pm
(740) 992-9553

;========-========:.:.:=:::=====:.========;
Auction

The Board ot Commls- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - sioners of Gallla Metro-

Help Wanted

Aotique- Colledable Alldlon

for our upcoming auction m W•lksvllle. Oh10 on Sal.,
November 8th
·
GLASSWARE &amp; HouitwaRS: F~nton. Carmval.
He•sy. Crystal. Large Ruby (fenton?) Basket, Cookie

or

with

M·di:d

Auction

at auction. For compl~te hsung and picture5 gO to
Aucltonzip.com or WVLocatorcom . Watch for our ad

Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
Services

br.
on

local

EEOC

j

Day

call304-675·2319.

Posstblllty of rental
assistance.
Equal Hous1ng

,,., j i/11:

l••tlti ~h/; lt/l'f/ l llft'd

Jeny's

ver, clean, no pets. 16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
mo. + dep. ofl st. 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage Parking. 446-0596
bath, 1 1999 16x80 2
Manor and
Riverside
bed 2 bath gas, 1 1997
Apts tn Middleport, from 3BR, 1 112 bath on Jack· 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
$327
to
5592. son Pike No pols. $675 1 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2
740·992·5064.
Equal per month + Deposit. bath. Priced delivered
740-446· 4051
Housing Opportunity.
blocked, leveled and an-

• Free of Charge
• State Certified
• Great Career Opportunity

Ill /11 1' !H'fiJ 11./f/1 •I

CIA, . 16J0:32

~....,.-~~--~ fum.
Gracious Living 1 and 2 $400

Holzer Senior Care Center will bt
conducting Nurse Aide Classes.
These classes are:

''•'11&lt;'/tl • ,m 1

PO Box2407
Huntington, WV 25725 or
fax resume to:

Localloh: From Pomeroy. OH follow Ohio Rt.
~~~~-....,.-~ Eureka.
Deposit
$400 Includes many upgrades,
7
north !hrongh Coolvtlle lo Co. Rd . 63 (By
3BA. 1000 sq ft. Hard· rent
$400
256-6408, delivery
&amp;
set-up. '
wood floors. WID. No 441-0583, 256·67t8
740-385-2434
rest area) lum nght, follow CR 63 to first road

!(,/hi c Ml t l'r ltl'lr Ill

1

Customer SatistactiOn
and team wont If you
have a desire to succeed

-2BR house for rent In from $214.36 per month,

call675-6679

A Rare Opportunity
r ll.f'tll\ Ill

Burger Klrtg

Fl·

applications for near Nqrth Gallia High Run
Ad.
$46,500
waiting list for HUD sub· School. $500 tent + $500 304-576·311 1
sidized, 1-BA apartment deposit. 446 .B495
for the elderly/disabled,
New 3, Bedroom homes

Help Wanted

" '· /t,/

to actlieve the "Besr in

AVAILABLE

3BR house on SA 160 Deck, 112 acre.

playground. (trash, sew· 740·208·7661
quotlllll..'a\uln~

mail resume Ia

Raclne,(740)949-2237

a

.Rcql lti L'ti

OWNER

Pleasant.

Gallipolis. Ohio ~eks

full tnnc- Human Resource~ Benefits
l'onrt.li!Mtot Rcspons1b1ltttes for thi s posttton
mdudc hut ~Ill' not lmutcll to: Conrdma11ng the
d.11l y l unc llllll~ ul the bent!fll plans as well as
;!d lltllll ~l l'llllg
a
~el f
funLied worker' ~
l'! llll i X' I l~ atum prtlgr.un.

2001 4BR • 2BA

(304)882·30 17

Ntce

·• Rosldenl Assislan1 - I'T

son City 304-675-2117

'2BR, 1 bath In Ga!t1pohs

~-'""!!~-'""!!~~

Holur Assisted Lh·inR- lackson;

at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma-

~-~~-~....,.~
Free
Rent
Special!l1
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hoOkup, tenant
pays electriC. EHO Elm

pets

' llrallh Carr CIH&gt;rdinator/RN FT

eluded, $37.000 located

PETS. 304·488-7946

cepting

11mur ('ars;;
LPN - 1--T- U,d llpnli-.

Help Wanted

NO

Twin Rivers Tower is ac·

~lnll.l'r

'

+ utilities,
446-0415

View

•

Burger Ktng Restaurant
65 Upper River Rd or

=$4001
•

Long Term CaR/ Homo C....

61Uibap l!:IIIUf ·6mtintl

chantcal,

ATTENTION Huntaral
ATV'ersll lnveatora II
Bat., Nov.15, 2008 10:00 AM

considered)

with

2-4

years of related exp 1n a
manufacturing
environment ts requtred prefera·

newspaper and learn

Auction

Auction

WH4 T AN OPPORTUNITY II
'

ROOd your

somethmg today!

358Acrea
Offered In

4Tracte

Rott Co. tcan6c

WI ,.

property

viMI, rklgea &amp; •
etrtam In thlt

W!lteyplua
hilltOp

plrtooul
Ill

_poilu_..
1100111'

oc.

wooded: TNOt fb.n M. (AFPr- :Ill - /

pootuno

a

-~

II

Troct U.148

IIC.

(A!tf&gt;row. 43 ~"'a 1oe .. - ):
Troct 1 4"""""'"'. 32 ... - • ·
-lrl
t' IIU6NW. •atarW.Go
l..t mllee 1 turn left on Porter Hollow. Rd; go
% - · tho lind layo on the righl
Open for viewing duri"ff doyflght houra or for
• prhMte vfewjng call 0.\lid P. PMtar, e:.ac,
(740) 851-7021.
S.tta al AlmJiute Aua--

r.,.,.,-

Uon to tM Mlghalt Bidder; no rqlnlmuma or
naHrv..;· Ofhrwd frt.a &amp; clur of lien• or mort- · prior to clotlng by 12•15400e; caompiM. fi,IIOO dowt) ,.r troct or f15,0GO
max. at tit'IM of ..atlorl tn Cllh or check. No
bu)IO&lt; conllogencln Ollftl. Buyer rurtl!or
118fM to pay ldJIU: Rll.780 per net to ftiehard John.on, Surveyor, Ia •M~.a aurvey upon~~. a.,... -lpoUan Oflon&gt;d.
S. PoNr.hlot. RCPC UOOT-1!-807

Old Winchesler Rilles and Shol guns.
Belgium Browning sholgun 12 &amp; 16 ga,
Remington 1100 112, 20, 26 410 ga. Colt
Revolvers and pislols. Smtih &amp; Wesson
Revolvers including Model 29 in nickle
and Blue, S&amp;W 22LR Model 16 and 22.
Gennan Lugers and P36 , Augers and
revolvers, BereHa and Bernellt shotguns,
Remtnglon 700 cal rifles.
Model 70's • pre-64 Ruger, Marlin and
Savage Rtfles, Military Rtfles and
Bayonets, many modem muzzle loaders ,
scopes, Rocky boots and more arriving
each day For more detatls on ~uns go lo
auct1onzip .com

Terms: Cash or local check. No out of
state personal checks. All slate and
federal laws apply

CALL /'Oft DETAILS .S BROCHURE
ST~NI.,EV &amp; SON, INC.

' (740) 775-3330
~llf)!lil

....,Ill

ON, MitE, O!'P.... CEI A~c..,..r.
ftlallltnt

....,..r , ,

WWW.IITAIILEI'AHDIOIII.COM

Real Estate

Real Estate

,

. T COLUMBUS

sountiAS

ALLilllY

MOOIL HOHI G ., ll.ds.• ""1t on
ey
, ...... Pil1l
Off US ll at the"d1-1\IVOi
ross from

"h···-

Basll Wesurn " " oo
....S4T•0)15
,
...,~_.,n•
Mon-Sat \Q.6. Sufi ll·,or ., .

kttov:com

�Page D-6- The Sunday Times Sentinel
'

Candidates spar with
9 days to go, As

Five generations, A3

•
Printed on roo%
Ne&gt;..sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
!i o C EN"I S • V ul. ;,H. 1'\ o. 7h

- Huge
Selection

:• Eagles fall to
So\Jihem. See Page Bl

STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COI\1

CHESHIRE ~ · Gallia
Meigs Coflliiiunity Action
Agenty's Emergency HEAP
Program begins on Nov. I
and will continue through
March 31, 2009, said Sandra
Edwards,
Emergency
Services director.
The agency will begin taking calls for appointments
on Friday, Oct. 31 at 8 a.m.
"However, an appointment may not extend a
scheduled utility shut-off," .
Edwards said.
HEAP provides financial
heating assistance for the
area's neediest residents,
who may be on a fixed
income or among the working poor. HEAP helps senior
citizens and families with

HONDA
DBA MMT
MOTORS, INC.
2008 HONDA ODYSSEY

Chamber
dinner to·
•
recogmze
'best'

0BUUARIES
Page AS
• Kenneth Cundiff, 84
• James L.Mohler, 71
NISSAN

FALLTENT EVENT

INSIDE
• Companies start
co~ting lor bailout
money. See Page A2
• Financial crisis
moves to Guff Arab ·
nations. See Page A2
.• First deer.
"See Page A3
• Garden club dines
out. See Page A3
· • Perspective: Ohio GOP
suit becomes sticky
issue. See_ Page ~
• Local Briefs. ·
See Page. AS
• Central Ohio dump
producing fuel lor cars.
_See Page AS
• Food allergies
-increasing in US. kids.
'See Page A6

q··

CM.I IY•L.••

WEATIIER

Detella on Page AS

INDEX
.
.

, a SBcrtoNs -

'

.

12 PAollS

AiJ.u,ie's Mailbox.
"

A3

&lt;;:alendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

tdit.OJ;ials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather
•

B Section

•

© 110011 Ohio Valley PubU.blntl Co.

I

:!-.

2ooK

"""''-lliJ

0

dail~"·nt itwl.t·um

Emergency HEAP program startS ~ov. 1

SPORTS

Huge _
Savings ·~'il- -

'I 0 :'\I I \\ . II( . Ill Ill·. R

Rt&gt;Cycled

children avoid the choice of disconnected, .face the threat
"heating or eating."
of disconnection or have 10
"People who need help days or less supply of bulk
should choose HEAP. Last fuel. The program allows a
year, over 467,549 Ohio · one-time payment of up to
households received HEAP $175 per heating season to
benefits," Edwards said.
restore or retain home heating
Eligible households will serviceSforAEPorColumbia
be at or below 175 percent · das and up . to $250 for
of lhe federal poverty BREC and Knox Energy.
guidelines this year as in
For propane and fuel oil
2006 and 2007.
clients , the payment may be
Most of the HEAP recipi- up to $750 (200 gallons) for
ents are our neighbors who propane/bottled gas and up
are living on fixed income lo $950 (200 gallons) for
or working for low wages·. fuel oil·, if budgeting
They are the elderly br sin- allows. Clients heating with
gle. parent household and wood or coal will be assi51·
,our disabled. HEAP gives ed up to $350.
them the extra help they
Homeowners or renters
need to make it through the may qualify if their total
cold Ohio winters.
household income is at or
Emergency HEAP pro- below 175 percent of federvides assistance to house- al poverty guidelines.
holds that have had utilities · The Regular HEAP pro-

gram offers heating assistance once per heating season to low income house-..
holds while defraying the
. high cost of home heating.
Regular HEAP pays a por·
tion of eligible households'
winter heating bills. The
amount of assistance is
determined by: total household income, the number of
people in the household and
the type of heatin~ fuel used.
The income gUJdelines for
both programs are the same.
However .. Regular HEAP
requires the previous 12
months' income while 'the
past three monihs Income is
acceptable for Emerg.;ncy
HEAP. The 12-month peri· od or three-month period
for the test is. determined
from date of application
making it possible for some

with decreased income during these periods to qualify
'tater in the program :
·
Examp les of these type
situations could occur from
layoff. strike. retirement,
disabi Iity or death of a
spouse or household member. Documentation verifying income must be provided wherr applying for .
HEAP. Also, a copy of ,the
applicant's recent electric
bill is required.
It is also suggested that
you provide a birth certificate or other form of citizenship for the primary applicant. This can be passport,
military service records,
voters registration, etc.
The following income
levels by hQusehold size
Please see HEAP, A5

Cancer survivor workshop
Speaker from 'The ] ames-'featured ·
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Dr.
Charles Shapiro, director of
BY BETH SERGENT
breast medical oncology
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM . and the survivorship center
of excellence at the Arthur
POMEROY
The G.James Cancer Hospital in
Meigs County Chamber of Columbus will be a featured
Commerce's .
Armual speak~r. at Wedoostla~·
Recognition is set ·to recog- Think Pink Cancer Survivor
nize the best in Meigs Workshop.
County when it comes to
The workshop is from 10
those giving back to their am. - 3 pm., Wednesday at
communities as individuals the Ohio Valley Christian
and · members of the local · As~embly
at
39560
business community.
Rocksprings Road direct! y
"Social time" begins at 6 off of US 33. There is no cost ·
p.m. and the dinner starts at to attend the workshop held
6:30p.m. on Thursday, Nov. by the Meigs County Cancer
13 at the former Millennium Initiative and Appalachia
Teleservices Building along Community Cancer Network
East Main Street. Tickets are and sponsored by the Susan
$30 per person with tickets G. Kamen for the Cure,
and sponsorships available Columbus affiliate. Call 1by
calling
Michelle 888-227-6446, ext. 2 folDonovan, chamber director, lowed by ext. 7 for more
at 992-5005 or e-.mailing information.
michelle.@meigscountyThe \YOrkshop hopes to
chamber.com.
address the following con'
This .year's ·featured '·cerns of breast cancer surspeaker is motivational vivors: Advances in surspeaker, author and enter·. vivorship issues , body
tainer Jon .Petz. Petz, a grad- image and sexuality, relax-uate of Ohio University, has ation and guide imagery,
· addressed audiences or per- role · of diet and exercise,
formed from venues such as learning to live again, comthe Sydney Opera House in munity resources.
Australia, Columbus' Crew
Dr. Shapiro earned his
Stadium and entertained in medical degree from the
Paris, London, Las . Vegas, State University of New
New ·York, Chicago for York. He completed his resigroups of 10 to over 25,000: denc~ at Temple University
"Bore No More!" is Hospital and his fellowship
Petz' . motto, literally. His in hematology and oncology
passion is to eliminate at the Dana-Farber Cancer
meffectiy,e
meeti~gs Institute. Before joining the ·
because he says bonng faculty at The Ohio State
meetings suck the life our University in 1998, Dr.
of an organization . In Shapiro held an assistant proSeptember, Petz was fessor of medicine position at
named as one of tlte top 40 Harvard Medical School.
business persons under the
Dr. Shapiro's ·research..
a~e of 40 from Business interests focus on developFtrst newspaper. He has ing novel therapies for the
appeared on ESPN, The treatment of breast cancer.
Food Network, Outdoor He.has several active protoChannel, Lifetime as w~;ll cols to advance the treatas regional affiliates of' ment of breast cancer
NBC, ABC; FOX and through innovative drug
CBS, He has been the therapies. Dr. Shapiro also
opening act or appeared has an active . clinical
with artists such as The research program which
American Idol Tour 2007 , focuses on treatment-related
The American Idol Tour toxicities of cancer therapy.
"2008, The Pointer Sisters,
An complete itinerary of
Tracy Lawr.ence, Charlie speakers for the workshop
Daniel~ Band, KC &amp; the includes: IO .a.m., welcome
Sunshfne Band, Wynona from Courtney Sim of
Judd, Kenny · Loggins, MCCI and Meigs County
Peter Cetera, Diamond Rio
and many others.
Petz is described as · a
motivational and · inspirational 'Speaker; author,
BY DIANE POITORFF
keynote speaker, motivation- DPOIIIM+OMY!YIILYAEGISTER.COM
al entertamer, live event specialist, profe&amp;Sionat audience
WEST
COLUMB IA ,
en gager, corporate entertain- W.Va,
Investigators
are
er, corporate magician and
continuing
their
search
for
'
Please .•ee Chamber, AS the cause of a late-night fire

Beth SergontlphotO:
Breast cancer survivors like Gwenda Swann (right) of Pomeroy will be the focus of
Wednesday's free Think Pink Cancer Survivor Workshop at the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly on Rocksprings Road. Swann is pictured with Janet Voinovich, advocate in the
fight against breast cancer and wife lo Sen. George Voinovich.
'

Health · Department; I0:15
a.m., "How l Survived
Breast Cancer: The good ,
the bad and the ugly" by
Johana Lampert of Holzer
Medical Center and breast
cancer survivor; "Breast
Cancer Survivors: Issues
and Progress" by Charles
Shapiro, . MD:
11 :10,
"Getting Your Groove
Back" by Anna Cluxton,
breast cancer survivor and
advocate, vice-president of
the national board of the
Young Survival Coalition,
research project manager

.

for The Ohio . Slate
University Comprehensive
Cancer Center: I T:35 a.m ..
"Relaxation Methods for
. Managing Stress During
and After Treatment" by
Sharon · .Stout Shaffer.
Capital University: noon.
lunch and displays.
12:45 p.m .. "Lcuming 'to
. Live Again" by Donna
Wilson. storyte ll er: 1:10
p.m., "The Role of Diet and
Exercise
.in
Cancer
Suvivorship" by Shirle y
Torrance, Mount Carmel
Woman' s Heajth Center:

I :45 p.m.. break and dis-:
plays; 2 p.m .. ··community
Resources" by Norma
TotTes. MCCI's Think Pink
Project , Kim Painter of the
American Cancer · Society,
Katie .Caner, Komen for the
Cure. Columbus Affiliate,
Sandy Cassell &lt;:;orbin,
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care,
Debbie
Butler.
Southeast Ohio ~reast and·
Cervical Cancer Project;
2:50 p.m., closing remarks
and evaluations.
Lunch will be provided
for all all~ndees.

Fire destroys sawmill building, equipment

,.

that happened Friday.
Severn! fire departments
responded to a working
structure fire at Bobb's
Sawmill and LumberCfJ.On
W.Va. 62 in West Columbia.
Firefighters with Mason ,

'

New Haven. Point Pleasant. Saturday morning.
Flatrock and Meigs County
The . butldmg_
was
fire departments responded destroyed along Wtth some
to the blaze that was appar- ol the lumber that was
ently in a building that inside_it. ,
housed a kiln. They were on
No lllJUnes were reported
the scene until early a,'!long the firefighters.

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