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•

Elect

ROGER
.
BRANDEBERRY
..... _....... SHERIFF
-- - .--T-.

ALONG THE RivER
•

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Breast cancer: A sorority

of survivorship, C1

un
..

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Me~ counties
tlll~t• \

Ill•·\ l' tddi ... !Jlll • ,

.SPORTS
•

.• New Lexington wraps
·up Meigs. See~ Bl

l ' ill tH'n'' • \ Jid dlt•ptwl•

(,alliJloh..,•

'\tJ\ ('I Illwr :.! .

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:!OOX

·Alleged in~ruder sh~t in robbery attempt
·" BY ELIZABETH RIGEL
ERIGELOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL - Bidwell
resident ·Ivan Hurt took
matters into his own hands
early Friday after two men
broke into his storage
shed, blasting one of the
thieves with low brass
. bird shot and keeping him
pinned down until law
enforcement arrived.

AMP permit
hearing over
in single day

At;cording to Hurt , he
waS awakened when his
building alarm sounded
a.round 3 a.m., prompting
him to load one of his
shot$uns and take a look
outstde. After seeing a
flashlight . on inside his
building, he waited outside the door until one of
the men came out.
Thinking the masked
- man had a weapon, Hurt

•

1

fired, spraying Ronald J.
Johnson of Vinton in the
arm and face with bird
.shot. He . then kept
Johnson pinried down with
the shotgun until Gallia
County sheriff's deputies
arrived.
.
A second man fled· .the
scene and is currently
being sought by authorities. ·
Hurt, who is retired and

lives alone, said that this
is the third break-in he has
had in two years, with
thieves stealing chainsaws, weed eaters, tools ,
and anything else that can
be traded or sold: The two
prior robberies prompted
· him to install the alarm in
his building.
"I didn't want to hurt
anybody, that's why I used
bird shot instead of some-

•

Anew be . .

thing more powerful,"
Hurt said , "but I knew
they ' d hit me before and
they'd probably got other·
people before . . I just
couldn't let them go with· out confronting · them ,
knowing they were there . I
didn't want to do it.''
Johnson was taken to St.
Mary's Medical Center in

Please see Robbery, Al

•

g
Fultz honored, remembered at Rio Center dedication

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILY!;EtmNELCOM

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

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·~

Gert@rat ...Et~cfio'tt ·2oos.

Page 16 •

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COLUMBUS
. The
adjudicatory hearing over
ROCKSPRINGS - The
American_Mun!cipal Bernard V. Fultz (:enter for
Power-OhiO's transmtsston Higher Education was dediline permit · with the Ohio cated Friday momi11g .at a
Power
Siting
Board ceremony attended by
OBITUARIES
wrapped up this past members of the Meig~
Monday, the same day it County
Community
began, according to OPSB Improvement Corporation,
Page-AS
spokesperson Matt Butler.
University
of , Rio
• Ellen L. Brooker
Unlike some of the other · Grande/Rio
Grande
. • Ellis Gray Moore
hearings surrounding the Community College, and
.• Ruth Caroline Schulze project, there were no inter- others .
The dedication was an
veners involved in this par; • Jlj8flila A. VanHoose
ticular permit. The only par- opportunity to honor the
• Paul Eugene Evans
ties attendinj: )ast Monday's memory and contributions
hearing were representa- of the late Pomeroy attor• Unda lou lmbodeR '
tives .from the Public . l)ey, Bernard V. Fultz, who
.• Evelyri Morrpw
Utilities Commission of provided a $200,000 cash
• ~S!),IIDCA[ . ..,. · - "6hi"'; "'the-efrio AttOrney · -gift·mward · constntction ··
General's Office and AMP- the center.
• Harry Bert Smith
Ohio.
A Rio Grande ·alumnus.
• Wilma 'Jean' Postle ·
At the hearing, the three F~ltz was always proud of
• Cameron Brown
parties came to an agree- hts alma mater, and dedtcatment that because there ed to the well-being of his
• Mariam G. Danner
were no interveners there fellow citizens . .
Pursley
will be no period for briefs
The center is located next
oneply briefs on the hear- to the ¥etgs Mtddle School
ing and all agreed on AMP- and Htgh School ~ampuses,
Ohio's preferred route for and has all~wed Rto Grande
the transmission line.
to expand us course offerHowever, despite . · the !ng~ and degree pr?grams.lt
agreement by the three par- ts sttuat~d there, m part, to
ties, this doesn't mean the serve htgh school students
OPSB will agree with the through the state's Postpreferred . rotile and it Secondary .
Education
reserves the right to make Optton, whtch allows htgh
school students to take
Plean see AMP, Al
courses for college credit in

WEATHER

. Charlie Wilson

•

Richard Stobbs

Statewide races, issues join district races on ballot
.

.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Tn addition to local races,
voters across Ohio will cast ballots for ·
president and vice president, Attorney
General and justices of the Ohio Supreme
Court. The ~tatewide ballot also includes
ballot issues, ra.n,!ling from regulating the
payday loan industry to allowing ca~ino
gambling in Clinton County.
The Meigs County ballot also includC~&gt;
races for ,the Ohio Senate, the Ohio House
of Representatives and the U.S. HouSe. All
are contested races. Those for Congress
and State Senate include candidates from
the Green Party.

I

.

by the Ohio Republican Party. Tl)e chaiIenger.; are Democrat-endorsed.

U.S. House of
Representatives

Freshman Congressman Charlie Wilson,
D-Bridgeport, and Republican Richard
.Stobbs are ,i&lt;!ined on the ballot by a Green
Party candidate, Dennis Spisak.
Wilson w~ .r:JISt electe(l two yea(S ago.
~ ' Sixt!I:-B_i~ is ,~ ~rly ~pre~
~nte1Lby tlov. 'l)d ,~irttklaiid. Prior to
$erving as CongressmB,n; Wilson W!IS an
Ohio Senator and a State Representative.
Stobbs is a native of. Belmont County,
where he served as sheriff. He later
worked with the U.S. Department of
Justice and other federal se.rilice. ;
. .. In ·addition to the Democratic ticket of Spisak is a Mahoning Count}' resident
;Senators Barack Obama and Joe Biden, running on a Green Party Platform. He is a
and Republican Senator John McCain and principal in Columbiana County.
AJaska Governor Sarah Palin, voters ~ave
other choices for the presidential race. Bob
Barr and his vice presidential candidate
Wayne Allyn Root represent the Lbertarian
The 20ih district Ohio Senaie seat is open
Party; Cynthia McKinney and Rosa A. this year, lw:anse Senator Joy Padgett, RCiemente represent the Green Party; Brian Coshocton, is not seeking re-election. State
Moore and Stewart Alexander are the Rep. Jimmy Stewart, R-Aibany and Morgan
Socialist Party candidates; Chuck Baldwin County Commissioner Rick Shriver, a
and Darrell L. Castle are candidates on the · Deinocrat, are seeking the position, along
Constitution Party ticket. · Richard with the Green Party's Thnolhy J. Kettler.
Duncan/Ricky Johnson and Ralph
··
Nader/Matt Gonzales also appear as presidential and vice presidential candidates,
respectively.

Presidential

c

Ohio Senate

Ohio House of
Representatives .

Statewide

Because Stewart is seeking election to.the
Ohio Senate, voters in the 94th House
t;;
With tbe resignation earlier this year of Disttict will also elect a new S!$e represenAttorney General Marc Dann, voters in tative. Athens City Councilwoman Debbie
Ohio will choose a new chief attorney for Phillips. a DeiiiOOiat, is making ·her second
tbe state. Treasurer Richard Cordray is the bid forlheofli&lt;?e,challengedl&gt;y RCJ1Ublican
Democratic candidate, and Mike Crites the JiiiThomplion, Athens County Auditor.
Republican. Robert M. Owens is an independent candidate.
-.,......,
Candidates for Ohio Supreme Court are
· ·non-partisan on the ballot. Candidates are
Five state issues appear on Thesday's

State ;_,......, .

incumbents, Maureen O'Connor and ballot.
~n
~.;and. I:; ~ and 'i-.,•m•:,J:, ~~~·~-=

deadlines for statewide ballot issues. The
amem:tmenr would change the deadline for
issues from 90 days or 60 days, depending
on the type of initiative, to 125 days,
before the election : A YES vote means
approval, a NO vOte means disapproval. .
• I~sue 2: A proposed ·constitutional·
amendment to authorize the state to issue
. bonds to continue the Clean Ohio Program
for .environmental revitalization and conservation purposes, Th~ iunendnient is
idell!ical to one ~ iii 2l)pO, and woUld
P!pYi4e . an !!¥itio!lal ·$400 miJ,lion in.
bOnds. A YEs.vote in!lBJls 'appro~al. a NO ,
vote nieaps disa!Jll:f9Val. ,
. • Issue .. 3: A proposed . constitutional·~
amendment to protect the private property
rights in ground water, lakes and other
watercourses. The amendment proposal is
a result of the legislature's passage of .the
Great Lakes Water Compact, which some
lawmakers feared .might limit private
water rights. A YES vote means' approval,
a NO vOte means disapproval.
.
• ls~ue 5: A refj:rendum on legislation .
making changes to payday lending prac- ·
tices. A YES vote -will cap the annual
interest rate on payday ·loaDs at28 percent,
and allow only the new regulations to
apply to payday lendet!i. It would also
limit the humber of loans annually for
each borrower to fou.r per year, at 25 per..
cent of monthly income or up to $500 per·
loan. It would also provide more re-payment time. A NO vote may allow payday
· lenders to charge up to 391 percent annu"
.a1 intetest for unlimited loans.
• Issue 6: A proposed ~onstitutional
amendment authorizing a casino in Clinton
County. Tbe private owner of the casino
would pay a tax of 30 percent of j!!'OSS
receipts in casino tax, a poltiop of whicti
would be distributed to all {)hio cpunties.
A YES vote means approval, a NO vote
means disapproval.
Edilor'iJ Note: JnforTIUltion about state
issues ,was referenced from the Ohio
League of Women Voters" 2008 Voters
Guide . . The guide includes additional
information about each issue, including

;;-~s~ta~te~me~nt~s~~~!~o~if~and~~~~~r,tof,e;a~c!~h::l:'

.. : . s~ora.The_i~U## . -~~ · tbi~odn!'b ' ~ - ~~:N&lt;.... ··;·:· ....::1.

••
tletalla on Page A6

Time for · cha:ng~

Brien J. RMdiphoto

Horace Karr of the Meigs County Commumity Improvement Corporation and architect
Jerry Goff of St. Albans, W.Va., unveil lthe plaque honoring those who participated in the
construction of the Bernard V. Fultz Center for Higher Education. The new building, which
houses the Rio Grande Meigs Center, was dedicated Friday.
school districts provide do,'' Sheets ·said. "Don't
transportation to the cam- you wish you could have
pus, and students, Sheets had this opportunity?"
Nqw that the building ))as
said, can graduate from high
school with &lt;111 associate's been completed and occupied by the Rio Grande
degree.
.
"This is just the beginning. We still have a lot to
PluM - Fultz. Al

their junior and senior
years.
Meigs
County
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said it is · important to
encourage local students to
participate in the program.
Buses from all three local

Election 2008:
3-way commissioner race tops Meigs ballot
J.

Bartrum of Pomeroy.
BREEDCIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
There is no Democratic
''
challenger in that race.
POMEROY
- Two
The only other contested
races
for
county
¢ommisrace
on the Meigs County
4 SECTIONS- 24.PAGI!8
sioner, including a three- ballot is that for clerk of
Around Town
A3
way race and two indepen- courts. T.he current clerk,
dent candidates, top the Marlene Harrison. will
Celebrations
C4
local 'ballot before Meigs retire at the end of the
County voters on Tuesday. y~ar. Her deputy, Diane
D Section
CJassifieds
The term of County Lynch of Middleport, .a
Commissioner
Jeffrey Republican, is challenged
insert
· Comics
Thornton, who has been ill by Democrat Brenda
and has not attended meet- Phalin,
also
of
Editorials
·
A4
.
ings for the past two. years, Middleport.
will end this year. That
Sheriff Robert Beegle,
cs
·Movies
seat is being pursued by
'
.
Republican Tom Anderson · Recorder
Kay
Hill.
Obituanes ·
As
and
Democrat
Tom
Coroner
Dr.
Douglas
!
. ' .
of Hunter, Engineer Eugene
Lowery,
both
B Section .
. and
Middlerort, nnd Bill . Triplett
an
independent
Probate/Juvenile
Judge
L.
Quicke
,
A6
Joy KocmoudlphotO · candidate from Pomeroy.
Scott
PoWell,
all
•
Commissioner
Jim Republicans, are unopCJ aoo8 Ohio V.U")' Publlebins Co.. The classic clock in the Gallipolis City Park glows in the
night as darkness begins to fall earlier every evening. Area Sheets of Reedsville, a posed in their bids for reresidents are reminded to turn their clocks back an hour on Republican, is challenged · election. ·
in his bid for re-election
Colleen Williams and
.Sunday as Daylight Savings Time ends.
by
independent
Mike
Peggy
Yost won their
•
BY BRIAN

REED

INDEX

..

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race.s 10 the March
Republican primary for '
prosecuting attorney and
treasurer, respectively, and·
are
also
unopposed
Tuesday.
Distnct races
The 94th Ohio House of
Represe.ntatives District
seat is op for grabs this
year, and the race bet ween
Athens County Auditor
Jill
Thom~son,
the
Republican , and Athens
City
Counc.ilwoman
Debbie
Phlihps.
a
Democrat , has been one of
the most heated of the season.
Phillips is making her
second bid for the seat.
having lost her election
against State Rep. Jimmy
Stewart. a Republican
from Albany , in 2006.
Stewart is a candidate

Please see Election Al

t. : ·It·P~ To Sa~ Again!

(,;-K ·
Free Oaecki11g +A Premium Savings Rate.

6X2.S FARME;;

SINer Frtenc~W fiiYt ~IIMU2.1aAI'Y ontavlnp
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REGIONAL

.::iunbap ltmt~ -itnttntl
~.Heating . assistance
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

' COLUMBUS - With
. winter fast approaching,
:{)hio is making sure at·risk families get the help
they need to heat their
. home during the winte r
-months .·
.
·. Lieutenant
Governor
: Lee ·Fisher announces that
$50 million in funding is
· available to assist quali fied , low-income , a nd
elderly Ohioans with winter heating costs throu gh
the
Home
Energy
·Assistance
Program
•(HEAP) Winter Cri ~ is
'Program, which begins
Nov . 3, 2008 and runs
through
March
31 ,
: 2009. Ohio will receive an
:estimated $245 million in
•total federal HEAP fund· :ing for the 2009 fei:leral
. :fiscal year. an increase of
: approximately $120 mil: lion in funding as com, pared to last year.
: "With cold tempera·
:tures setting in across
:Ohio , it is important that
'•Ohioans ·are able to adc·
:quately and safely heat
:their homes ," said Fisher.
:who ' al so serves as
· Director of the Ohio
: Department
of

available to eligible households

:Huntington, W.Va., fol; lowing the incident; he is
:listed in fair condition.
• According to Sheriff
:David Martin, Charges are
:pending in the prosecu-·
:tor 's office and tho~gh the
; second man ' s identtly has
• not yet been released,
:investigators do have a

: suspect.
: "People are tired of all
• these thefts and the sher: iff's department is tired of
:them too ,." Martin said .
:"We don ' t encourage peo•

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the public was permitted tjon for their proposed
to voice support or con - electric generation plant
cern over the proposal . . The new transmission
The overwhelming major- line would be connected to
ity of speakers spoke in the existing 345 kV Spornfavor of the transmission Mu skingum
River
lines being approved . with Transmission Line, located
Nachy Kanfer . of the to the north. The line
Sie rra
Club's National would be installed on selfCoal Campaign being the
d
lone person to raise (jues- supporte
stee 1
. structures. These
poles
tions about both the pre- would typically be approxferreq
an,d
alternate
routes.
imately 150 feet in height
According to the OPSB. and have conductor spans
AMP-Ohio plans to con- ranging from 750 feet to
struct approximately five 1,200
feet. The
line
.miles of double circuit 345 requires a 150-foot right·
kV transmtsston line , of-way_ to maintain reliaincluding related facilities , bility. An application was
to provide an interconnec- filed on Oct. 31 , 2007 .

Fultz from Page Al

; Meigs Center, promotin g
:and supporting the facility
:and the programs it offers
''must continue as the mission of the community.
speakers said .
Dr. Barbara Gellm ~rn ­
: Dailey, vice chan.cellor fo r
: academic affairs and systcni
: integration for the Ohio
: Board of Regents, and Rio
Grande Community College
President Or. Herman Koby.
echoed Sheets in encouragin~ .community use of ~he
center.
. "It is important to support
: the center, raise fund s and
: attract students here ,''
Gellman-Dailey said. "All
of you who worked to build
this facility are a part of the
· ownership of its success."
" We should all be gra!efu I
· to the trustees of Rio
. Grande Community College
for their dedication to this
community, their tenac ity.
and their down-home com. mitment to this project .'' she
added.
The program, howe ve r,
: was primarily a tribute to
· the center's namesak e .
Fultz 's daughters - Dr.
. Elizabeth Kellogg . Barbara
McManus
and
Becky
Parsons - attended the
. dedication ceremony and
-. unveiled a plaque to hang in
_: the center 's lobby.
Paul . Reed, president of
: the Meigs Count~ CIC ,
which took a lead m plan-

,.

Newspaper: Duplicate
absentee ballots sent out

ning and securing financing
for the center, honored Fultz
for his years of work toward·
improving the local business climate.
"This center is named in
honor of Bernard Fultz. not
just because of the mone y

he provided for its construction, but because it has been
touched by him - .by his
hands, his footsteps and his
love ."
"It is." Reed said, "a tribute to all he gave to this
community."

ea~michael

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. · Dear Annie: I have
;worked with "Gloria" for
-seve.ral years . I've always
:Cnjoyed looking at pho:lographs of her two kids ,
;but lately I've become
-uncomfortable with these
:snapshqts .
· Gloria's daughter jtH;t
.turned 12, and all the pic:tures show her in very
_provocative poses with
-arched .back, pouty lips ,
:heavy makeup and even
:cleavage. I am concerned
;that she is encouraging the
·girl to pose (n this seductive
:manner · because she shows
:the photos with tremendous
:pride to both male ana
;female co-workers.
· Others have mentioned
:the se,~&lt;.ual undertones of the
:pictures . Should !tell Gloria
;these photos make me
·uncomfortable and I don't
:think they should be shared .
:with others, especially men?
'I doubt she ' d take· it welL.Photographic Phriendship
· Dear Photo: It continues
.to amaze us that so many
otherwise caring parents
believe it is flattering to turn
their pre-adolescent children into sex objects. You
. can gently point out to
Gloria that these photographs make her daughter
look like a little tart and
people might get the wrong
idea. Gloria may scoff, but
it will make her think twice
about displaying these pictures at work : Other . than
that, compliment only the
more natural .photographs
and be visibly less interest·
'ed in the not-!jUite kiddie
·porn.
.
Dear Annie: My husband
has an office that doubles as

.
'

CLEV~LAND (AP)

ty's residents who received · pie who received two halRecord s reviewed by a two ballots are register~ d lots told the Plam Dealer
·
on Friday that they did not
newspaper show as many twice.
The county's elections vote twice. ·
as 100 voters in Cuyahoga.
Platten says the county is
(keye - u h - HOH '- guh) director Jane Platten says
County received multiple the mishap is likely the always trying to clear
absentee ballots in. the result of voter confusion or duplicate regi strari"ns out
clerical errors by election of its database of , . I milmail.
The (Cleveland) Plain workers. Platten says voter lion voters· and the patential · for operator error
Dealer reported Saturday fraud is highly unlikely.
that abo'ut half of the conn- · More than a dozen peo- always exists.

Election from Page At

.•

,
Gryphon Malachi
Happy 1st Halloween
We Love You Alwayz,
Nana &amp; PaPal

****************************
River Cities Military Family Support ;

*

Group extends a BIG THANK YOU
all who donated time, money, food,:
..:or)~·.~Jl)~· ~~y contrib~ted ~o the ;
success of our,Fall Fundra1ser: .

*
Clyde Evans, can~ladt,~~o~.St,~~ Representative
;
. Joe Browning, Candldafe for Gcillla County Sheriff' .*
* Steve McGhee, Candidate for Gallla County Treasurer *

).oger Brandeberry, Candidate for GoUla County Sheriff:
the Staff ofthe Athens VA Outpatient Clinic
: ··
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464
·
; .
Chris Manuel
1
•• ,
NormoSmlth
eren d a·eol.1n .
··; .. ·, i . · ;·1-.r.i\ t . ·
·~
~:~, ~. J. ·d u oaret E a·
l }•l ,J_., ·,:. u, ~~~·:~r
v ns
,!J.lb '\'~ Karen S~dmore
·
Charlene Carter
;
The Put-On Shop
;
Bu~keye Vine ;

*.
** ...'·:. .
* ,-·:· · :;' . . · · ·
* •.: ·,. ·
*
,*."' •·
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, ... ,r

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Sunday, November 2,

.,

Gallia.County Calendar
Community
events ·

a spare bedroom. Every hoi-- Patriot Day. The quote ,
iday season , . we have however, actually reads :.
Tuesdav, Nov. 4
overnight company and " We here highly resolve. that
GALLIPOLiS - Holzer
need extra sleeping space. . tbese dead shall not have
Clinic
Retirees will meet for·
In order to make room, l died in vain; that this nation ,
lunch
at
noon at the Golden
have to pick up papers from under God, shall have a new
under the desk, the comput- birth of freedom; and that Corral Restaurant.
Friday, Nov. 7
er, the floor, etc . Last year, I . this govemment of the peoGALLIPOLIS
carried 30 boxes of papers pl'e, by the people, for the Veterans Day Program and
·
·
to the basement.
Contest
at
My husband hates to sort people, shall not perish Foster
Washington
Elementary
through all this. I have set from the earth." ·
up two file cabinets , bookI am not about to specu- School, fO a.m. All veterans
shelves and a cubby with 24 late as to why "under God" and public welcome . For
slots. I'm trying to get him was missing. As a history information, contact Donna
to work with me on the teacher, however, I chal- DeWitt at '\46-3213 .
Tuesday, Nov. 11
boxes in the basement so I lenge my · students on the
GALLIPOLIS The
won't throw out something importance of accuracy in
Gallipolis
Christian
important, but he balks at quoting primary sources ·
the idea. I've asked 'him to and ·archaic texts. Thank Women 's Connection will
meet, noon, at Dave's
give me just one hour a day you for an apt quotation. American Grill, 323 Upper
(we are both retired), but it D.G. in Ohio
·
·
River Road behind the
is a struggle. lfhe lives to
Dear D.G.: It was not our · Super 8 Motel. Please call
be I 00, he could never read intent to 'leave . out any Linda at 446-4319 or Judy
all the old magazines he. is words. There are · often at 245-5181 to make resersaving. He tries to show me minor editing errors when vations. Special feature will
where things , are located , material is transcribed from be the An.nual Missions
but all I see is chaos. one source to another, and Auction . Please remember
Buried in Paper
Dear ·Buried: Your hus- although readers don't gen- to bring yonr items for this
band is a packrat, illld the erally notice, any time project; books can be sold
thought of going through "God" is left out. we hear too. Kathy Kenimer will be
his stuff is paralyzing , so about it. Our apologies to the speaker. Bring a friend
you will have to do the anyone who was accidental- and join us for fun and fel lowship.
lion's share of organizing : ly offended , along with our
Set a time for his assistance thanks for the opportunity
- say, right after breakfast to reprint the quote in its
- and make it 15 minutes entirety.
GALLIPOLIS
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
instead of an hour. Sort
Grieving
Parents Support
through some things in ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Group
meets
7 p.m. second
advance . Show him a pile of Marcy Sugar, longtime (ldiMonday
of
each
month at
magazines and tell him to tors of the Ann Landers
pick out what he wants column. Please e-mail your Holzer Medical Center.
People attending should
because the rest goes. (And questions to anniesmaildo . it.) Financial papers box@comcast.net, or write
should be arranged by year, to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
and trash should be shredded. If your husband sees Box 118190, Chicago, IL
that he can accomplish 60611. To find out more
.something in those 15 min- about Annie's Mailbox,
utes, he may be willing to and read features by other
do more.
·
Creators. Syndicat.e writers ·
Dear Annie: I appreciate · and cartoonists, · visit the
Uea\th Screenln.,
your including the quote Creators Syndicate Web
from Presid~nt Lincoln on page at www.creators.com.
Uea\th'Y Food

'

meet in the general lobby. Saturday, 7:30 p.m .. at Sr.
For information . call Jackie Peter's Episcopal Church .
POINT ,
PLEASANT'1
Keatley at 446-2700 or
W.Va.
Narcotics
Nancy Childs at 446-5446.
ATHENS - Survival of Anonymous Living Free
meets
every
Suicide support group Group
Wednesday
and
Friday
at 1
meets 7 p.m ., fourth
Thursday of ·each month at p.m. at 305 Main St.
VINTON - Celebrate
Athens Church of Christ,
,
Recovery
at Vinton Bapti*
785 W. Union St. , Athens.
Church
.
Small
groups look·
For information , call 593ing for freedom from addic7414 .
tions.
hurts, habits anjjl
GALLIPOLIS - Look
hangup;
every Wednesday
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday ot' at 7 p.m. For information;
· ·
the month at 6 p.m .. Holzer · call 388-8454 .
E-mail
community
ca/en•
Center for Cancer Care.
dar items to kke/ly@mydai·
GALLIPQLIS
F,ax
Alcoholics
An onymous lytribmre .com.
annourtcements
to
446·
Wednesday book study at 7
3008. Mail items to 825
p .m. and Thursday opi:n Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohi•
meeting at noon at St. 45631.
A nnouncementt
Peter's Episcopal Church , may also be dropped offal
541 Second Ave . Tuesday the Tribune office. ·
closed meeting is at 8 p.m .
at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church .
· GALLIPOLIS
Anonymous
· Narcotics
Miracles in Recovery meets
every
Monday
and

• FRU Mn' TJchnicllluPJIQft
• !MIMI UetNQin9 . kMp ~our bUddy btl
• 10 HlliiiCidrMMi ¥l1lh Wtbmaill
'• CUS10m Stan: Page · ~Wi , IW~flef &amp;1110fe!

Support groups

2nd Annual Turkey Trot
Fun Run/ Walk

.

. os

Meigs County Calendar
Department, new memRUTLAND - One Less
bers welcome, 992-6626. . Stone performing a variety
· RACINE - · R11cine of gospel music. at 10:3.0
Tuesday, Nov. 4.
Order 134, OES 7:30 p.m. a.m. at Rutland Church of
: ALFRED - · Orange
at the hall. Installation of the Nazarene.
Township Trustees, 7:30 officers.
Sunday, Nov. 9
. p.m . at the home of fiscal
Tuesday, Nov. 4
POMEROY - Revival
office, Osie Follrod.
POMEROY Drew · services
at the Mt.
Wednesday, Nov. 5
Webster Ladies Auxiliary Herman United Brethren
. REEDSVILLE - Olive
meeting.postponed to Nov. Church, each evening
:· Township T~u~tees, 6:30 18, I p:m. at the llall.
starting Nov. 9 continuing
p .m. , townshtp garage.
CHESTER - Chester through Nov. 12 with the
RACINE - Financial
:-Planning
Supervision Council, Daughters . of Rev. Clifford Coleman .
· Commission for Southern America, 7 p .m . at the Following the morning
·
service on Nov.'9, a carry: Local School District, reg- . hall .
Thursday,
Nov.
6
in dinner will be held.
: tilar meeting , 10:30 a.m.,
RACINE
Special
music
each
. high school media room.
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge evening .
:
Thursjlay, Nov; 6
#
164 special meeting.
· CHESTER Cheser
6p.m
., at lodge in Racine.
Township Trustees, 7 p.m .
Past Master's night with
· ·at the town hall.
in.
the
E.A.
work
Tuesday;.Nov. 4
degree . All Past Masters
SYRACUSE -Edward
encouraged·
to Wells, Syracuse, will celeare
attend. Chili dinner fol- brate his 92nd birthday on
org~nizations
lows. Call Randy Smith, Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards
508-0816 with questions.
may be sent to him at the
Monday,' Nov. 3
Ravenswood Villag~ • .200
POMEROY - Meigs
South
Ritchie · Ave.,
·county Cancer Initiative,
Ravenswootl,
. :W. · • Va.
'regular meeting, noon,
. ·. Sunday, Nov. 2
26164 .
·Meigs County Health

Public meetings

Soturday, November 15, 2008 11:00 am- 3:00pm
•
Located at the Pomeroy Parking Lot/Walking Trock
For more information,p/ease call the M~igs Wellness Center at (740) 992-2161, ext, 233

Birthdays

· Clubs and

Church events

November
.is Natlpnal Home Health
and
Month

It'sgocd to know that some things never change.
Espeei~lly when rl comes to your financial
·'

seCllll~

At Peoples Bank.\1\l'reproudto be the.

1\\CSI community bank that has not grown too big.

Ill take arespon$11Jie approachto the financial
. -'· . •$
•' ·;,, needs of each and every customerweserve.
. •·
M
' ~ We've lieen'filingou~ ness forover one hundred
j•

~-

'I ~

t

years rxj ~o can te assured that your money
is sate,sound and secure 1-nt11 us. We have a

srq recordof financial staoili~ andgrowth that .
has remained unshaken inthese uncertain and

: To all who attended and especially those people who have :
faithfully suppor.ted all four of our spring and fall
: '
fundraisers the past two years.
:

*

*
:
*
*
:
*

*

*
:
.*
*
:
*

Thanks for supporting the men and worrien of the
0 .S Military and their families. ·
Remember; vote Tuesday. November 4th ·
•Don't forget; Jhank a vet
TuessJay. Noyember 11th .

•

Continue to support our trOOP.S! .

**************~~******•********
..
••
.

•

-

.

•

200~

1'-Shirt~

.,

for Ohio Senate , 20th for five years.
District. He has two oppo•
• SCIPIO TOWNSHIP:
nents, Morgan .County Replacement tax · of two
Commissioner
Rick mills for fire protection
Shriver, a Democrat, and for five years.
Green Party Candidate
• COLUMBIA TOWNTimothy J. Kettler.
SHIP: Additional tax of
U .S.
Rep.
Charlie 1.5 mills for road mainteWilson,
D-Bridgeport , nance for five years . ·
also has two challengers,
•
POMEROY
VILRepublican
Richard LAGE: Ren.e wal tax of
Stobbs and Green Party , one mill for fire protection
Candidate .Dennis Spisak . for five y'ears.
Local issues
• SUTTON
TOWN - .
• LEBANON TOWN- SHIP: Replacement tax of
SHIP: Replacement tax of one mill for fire protection
one mill for fire protection for five years.

.

f

Photos may give the wrong idea
BY KATHY MITCHELL

pie · to take matters into person's occupied resi. their own hands because. dence or car is designated
·we don't want to see inni:J- . as a place where they are
cent .people get hurt , but protected from illegal tres- ·
we als o . understand that passing and violent attack.
Therefore, a person now
people are fed up. .
"Mr. Hurt had a right tu .lJas the legal right to use
, protect himself," the sher- deadly force to defend that
Iff added.
.
Jn fact, under the ·newly . place, his or her "castle,"
enacted Castle Doctrine front violent attack . or an
Law in Ohio . . Hurt did intrusion that may lead to
have a right to protect violent attack.
The law also made conh .lmse If .
•
.
· Under the law , whrch cealed. carry legislation in
became effective Sept. 9, a Ohio more "user friendly."

·modifications or suggeslions if approving the permit or. denying it.
,
The OPSB members were
not at the hearing and will
. rely on the administrative
·law judge who did pre. : side over
the
hearing
· to make a recommendation
on the case . The next meeting of the OPSB is tentatively scheduled for Nov .
. 24. though it's not known ··
.i f A M p . o h i 0 • s
: application for its transmis. sion line will be considered .
Last month, the nonadjudicatory hearing on
~ the transmission lines was
: held
at
Southern
:Elementary SchooL where

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

I

Development. "I encour- · - Up to $30 ,800 in yearly
age eligible citizens who income or $7.700 income
may l\)se their heating in the past three months .
source to ·seek assistance
• 4-member household
through the Winter Crisis -Up to $37,100 in yearly
Program ."
income or .$9,275 income
The
HEAP Winter in the past three months .
Cri sis Program. adminis• 5 - m~mber household
tered
by
the
Ohio - Up to $43,400 in yearly
Department
of , income or $10,850 income
D e v e I o p m e n t ' s in the pas t three months . ·
Community Development
• 6-member heusehold
Division , provides ~ssis - - Up to 549 ,700 in yearly
tance once pe r heating income or $12,425 income
season to eligible house - in the past three months.
hold s that have been djs• 7-member household
connected. are
being - Up to $56 ,000 in .yearly
threatened with discon- income or $14.000 income
nection, or have less than in the past three months.
a 10-day supply of bulk
• · 8, member household
fueL
· - Up to $62.300 in yearly
Qualifying for HEAP is · income or$15,575 income
dependent on the ~ize of ·in the past three months.
the househ.old and the
• For .households with
total gro ss household . more than eight members,
income over the past three ' add $6.300 per member to
months. which must be at the yearly income.
or below 175 percent of
Qualified Ohioans can
.the 2008-2009 federal · seek assistance at any of
'poverty guidelines listed Ohio's 53 local service
· below:
providers.
.
• !-member household
For more information ,
Photo courtesy of Ryan 'Grady
- Up to $ 18,200 in yearly · call the toll-free HEAP Gallipolis volunteer firefighters responded to this car fire on Grape Street near the
income or' $4 ,550 income . /wtline m 1-800-282-0880. Gallipolis Foodland Thursday. Firefighters were alerted to the blaze at 7:40p.m. Additional
, in. the past three months .
The hel~ring impaired may details were unavailable from the GVFD-as of Saturday.
• 2- member household dial 1-800-686 - 1557 jor
'- Up to $24,509 in yearly ani.ilance. Information i&gt;
income or $6 , 125 income al&gt;o available on the '
. in the past three month s.' HEAP
Website . at
• 3-membcr household . http://energyhelp.ohio.gov.

Robbery from Page At

•

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Car lire in citv

HEAP program begins Monday:

Page~

AROUND TOWN

PageA2

•

:fitestlonable.times Wecare at;i)ut our clients.
· ttl) by and see just how different we

are;

FDIC lnsllance Up to $250,000.
www.peaplesbancorp.com
1·800-374·6123

800.500.4850

888-225-1135
..

.
'

800-920-8860

•I

�'
I

REGIONAL

.::iunbap ltmt~ -itnttntl
~.Heating . assistance
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

' COLUMBUS - With
. winter fast approaching,
:{)hio is making sure at·risk families get the help
they need to heat their
. home during the winte r
-months .·
.
·. Lieutenant
Governor
: Lee ·Fisher announces that
$50 million in funding is
· available to assist quali fied , low-income , a nd
elderly Ohioans with winter heating costs throu gh
the
Home
Energy
·Assistance
Program
•(HEAP) Winter Cri ~ is
'Program, which begins
Nov . 3, 2008 and runs
through
March
31 ,
: 2009. Ohio will receive an
:estimated $245 million in
•total federal HEAP fund· :ing for the 2009 fei:leral
. :fiscal year. an increase of
: approximately $120 mil: lion in funding as com, pared to last year.
: "With cold tempera·
:tures setting in across
:Ohio , it is important that
'•Ohioans ·are able to adc·
:quately and safely heat
:their homes ," said Fisher.
:who ' al so serves as
· Director of the Ohio
: Department
of

available to eligible households

:Huntington, W.Va., fol; lowing the incident; he is
:listed in fair condition.
• According to Sheriff
:David Martin, Charges are
:pending in the prosecu-·
:tor 's office and tho~gh the
; second man ' s identtly has
• not yet been released,
:investigators do have a

: suspect.
: "People are tired of all
• these thefts and the sher: iff's department is tired of
:them too ,." Martin said .
:"We don ' t encourage peo•

,'

.

t

..

the public was permitted tjon for their proposed
to voice support or con - electric generation plant
cern over the proposal . . The new transmission
The overwhelming major- line would be connected to
ity of speakers spoke in the existing 345 kV Spornfavor of the transmission Mu skingum
River
lines being approved . with Transmission Line, located
Nachy Kanfer . of the to the north. The line
Sie rra
Club's National would be installed on selfCoal Campaign being the
d
lone person to raise (jues- supporte
stee 1
. structures. These
poles
tions about both the pre- would typically be approxferreq
an,d
alternate
routes.
imately 150 feet in height
According to the OPSB. and have conductor spans
AMP-Ohio plans to con- ranging from 750 feet to
struct approximately five 1,200
feet. The
line
.miles of double circuit 345 requires a 150-foot right·
kV transmtsston line , of-way_ to maintain reliaincluding related facilities , bility. An application was
to provide an interconnec- filed on Oct. 31 , 2007 .

Fultz from Page Al

; Meigs Center, promotin g
:and supporting the facility
:and the programs it offers
''must continue as the mission of the community.
speakers said .
Dr. Barbara Gellm ~rn ­
: Dailey, vice chan.cellor fo r
: academic affairs and systcni
: integration for the Ohio
: Board of Regents, and Rio
Grande Community College
President Or. Herman Koby.
echoed Sheets in encouragin~ .community use of ~he
center.
. "It is important to support
: the center, raise fund s and
: attract students here ,''
Gellman-Dailey said. "All
of you who worked to build
this facility are a part of the
· ownership of its success."
" We should all be gra!efu I
· to the trustees of Rio
. Grande Community College
for their dedication to this
community, their tenac ity.
and their down-home com. mitment to this project .'' she
added.
The program, howe ve r,
: was primarily a tribute to
· the center's namesak e .
Fultz 's daughters - Dr.
. Elizabeth Kellogg . Barbara
McManus
and
Becky
Parsons - attended the
. dedication ceremony and
-. unveiled a plaque to hang in
_: the center 's lobby.
Paul . Reed, president of
: the Meigs Count~ CIC ,
which took a lead m plan-

,.

Newspaper: Duplicate
absentee ballots sent out

ning and securing financing
for the center, honored Fultz
for his years of work toward·
improving the local business climate.
"This center is named in
honor of Bernard Fultz. not
just because of the mone y

he provided for its construction, but because it has been
touched by him - .by his
hands, his footsteps and his
love ."
"It is." Reed said, "a tribute to all he gave to this
community."

ea~michael

TRA/LI!FA/'1 .

.. W e h e lp do the Hauling in Your Wo.r ld "

~9• Oller~JJq
RV.Service
C ALL DAVE OR RENEE TODAY
TO SCHEDULE SERVICE
• 740- 446- 3825
Check out our complete line of trailers at

www.carmlchaeltrallers.eom
I

AND MARCY SUGAR

. · Dear Annie: I have
;worked with "Gloria" for
-seve.ral years . I've always
:Cnjoyed looking at pho:lographs of her two kids ,
;but lately I've become
-uncomfortable with these
:snapshqts .
· Gloria's daughter jtH;t
.turned 12, and all the pic:tures show her in very
_provocative poses with
-arched .back, pouty lips ,
:heavy makeup and even
:cleavage. I am concerned
;that she is encouraging the
·girl to pose (n this seductive
:manner · because she shows
:the photos with tremendous
:pride to both male ana
;female co-workers.
· Others have mentioned
:the se,~&lt;.ual undertones of the
:pictures . Should !tell Gloria
;these photos make me
·uncomfortable and I don't
:think they should be shared .
:with others, especially men?
'I doubt she ' d take· it welL.Photographic Phriendship
· Dear Photo: It continues
.to amaze us that so many
otherwise caring parents
believe it is flattering to turn
their pre-adolescent children into sex objects. You
. can gently point out to
Gloria that these photographs make her daughter
look like a little tart and
people might get the wrong
idea. Gloria may scoff, but
it will make her think twice
about displaying these pictures at work : Other . than
that, compliment only the
more natural .photographs
and be visibly less interest·
'ed in the not-!jUite kiddie
·porn.
.
Dear Annie: My husband
has an office that doubles as

.
'

CLEV~LAND (AP)

ty's residents who received · pie who received two halRecord s reviewed by a two ballots are register~ d lots told the Plam Dealer
·
on Friday that they did not
newspaper show as many twice.
The county's elections vote twice. ·
as 100 voters in Cuyahoga.
Platten says the county is
(keye - u h - HOH '- guh) director Jane Platten says
County received multiple the mishap is likely the always trying to clear
absentee ballots in. the result of voter confusion or duplicate regi strari"ns out
clerical errors by election of its database of , . I milmail.
The (Cleveland) Plain workers. Platten says voter lion voters· and the patential · for operator error
Dealer reported Saturday fraud is highly unlikely.
that abo'ut half of the conn- · More than a dozen peo- always exists.

Election from Page At

.•

,
Gryphon Malachi
Happy 1st Halloween
We Love You Alwayz,
Nana &amp; PaPal

****************************
River Cities Military Family Support ;

*

Group extends a BIG THANK YOU
all who donated time, money, food,:
..:or)~·.~Jl)~· ~~y contrib~ted ~o the ;
success of our,Fall Fundra1ser: .

*
Clyde Evans, can~ladt,~~o~.St,~~ Representative
;
. Joe Browning, Candldafe for Gcillla County Sheriff' .*
* Steve McGhee, Candidate for Gallla County Treasurer *

).oger Brandeberry, Candidate for GoUla County Sheriff:
the Staff ofthe Athens VA Outpatient Clinic
: ··
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464
·
; .
Chris Manuel
1
•• ,
NormoSmlth
eren d a·eol.1n .
··; .. ·, i . · ;·1-.r.i\ t . ·
·~
~:~, ~. J. ·d u oaret E a·
l }•l ,J_., ·,:. u, ~~~·:~r
v ns
,!J.lb '\'~ Karen S~dmore
·
Charlene Carter
;
The Put-On Shop
;
Bu~keye Vine ;

*.
** ...'·:. .
* ,-·:· · :;' . . · · ·
* •.: ·,. ·
*
,*."' •·
!
*
, ... ,r

*
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**
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,

Sunday, November 2,

.,

Gallia.County Calendar
Community
events ·

a spare bedroom. Every hoi-- Patriot Day. The quote ,
iday season , . we have however, actually reads :.
Tuesdav, Nov. 4
overnight company and " We here highly resolve. that
GALLIPOLiS - Holzer
need extra sleeping space. . tbese dead shall not have
Clinic
Retirees will meet for·
In order to make room, l died in vain; that this nation ,
lunch
at
noon at the Golden
have to pick up papers from under God, shall have a new
under the desk, the comput- birth of freedom; and that Corral Restaurant.
Friday, Nov. 7
er, the floor, etc . Last year, I . this govemment of the peoGALLIPOLIS
carried 30 boxes of papers pl'e, by the people, for the Veterans Day Program and
·
·
to the basement.
Contest
at
My husband hates to sort people, shall not perish Foster
Washington
Elementary
through all this. I have set from the earth." ·
up two file cabinets , bookI am not about to specu- School, fO a.m. All veterans
shelves and a cubby with 24 late as to why "under God" and public welcome . For
slots. I'm trying to get him was missing. As a history information, contact Donna
to work with me on the teacher, however, I chal- DeWitt at '\46-3213 .
Tuesday, Nov. 11
boxes in the basement so I lenge my · students on the
GALLIPOLIS The
won't throw out something importance of accuracy in
Gallipolis
Christian
important, but he balks at quoting primary sources ·
the idea. I've asked 'him to and ·archaic texts. Thank Women 's Connection will
meet, noon, at Dave's
give me just one hour a day you for an apt quotation. American Grill, 323 Upper
(we are both retired), but it D.G. in Ohio
·
·
River Road behind the
is a struggle. lfhe lives to
Dear D.G.: It was not our · Super 8 Motel. Please call
be I 00, he could never read intent to 'leave . out any Linda at 446-4319 or Judy
all the old magazines he. is words. There are · often at 245-5181 to make resersaving. He tries to show me minor editing errors when vations. Special feature will
where things , are located , material is transcribed from be the An.nual Missions
but all I see is chaos. one source to another, and Auction . Please remember
Buried in Paper
Dear ·Buried: Your hus- although readers don't gen- to bring yonr items for this
band is a packrat, illld the erally notice, any time project; books can be sold
thought of going through "God" is left out. we hear too. Kathy Kenimer will be
his stuff is paralyzing , so about it. Our apologies to the speaker. Bring a friend
you will have to do the anyone who was accidental- and join us for fun and fel lowship.
lion's share of organizing : ly offended , along with our
Set a time for his assistance thanks for the opportunity
- say, right after breakfast to reprint the quote in its
- and make it 15 minutes entirety.
GALLIPOLIS
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
instead of an hour. Sort
Grieving
Parents Support
through some things in ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Group
meets
7 p.m. second
advance . Show him a pile of Marcy Sugar, longtime (ldiMonday
of
each
month at
magazines and tell him to tors of the Ann Landers
pick out what he wants column. Please e-mail your Holzer Medical Center.
People attending should
because the rest goes. (And questions to anniesmaildo . it.) Financial papers box@comcast.net, or write
should be arranged by year, to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
and trash should be shredded. If your husband sees Box 118190, Chicago, IL
that he can accomplish 60611. To find out more
.something in those 15 min- about Annie's Mailbox,
utes, he may be willing to and read features by other
do more.
·
Creators. Syndicat.e writers ·
Dear Annie: I appreciate · and cartoonists, · visit the
Uea\th Screenln.,
your including the quote Creators Syndicate Web
from Presid~nt Lincoln on page at www.creators.com.
Uea\th'Y Food

'

meet in the general lobby. Saturday, 7:30 p.m .. at Sr.
For information . call Jackie Peter's Episcopal Church .
POINT ,
PLEASANT'1
Keatley at 446-2700 or
W.Va.
Narcotics
Nancy Childs at 446-5446.
ATHENS - Survival of Anonymous Living Free
meets
every
Suicide support group Group
Wednesday
and
Friday
at 1
meets 7 p.m ., fourth
Thursday of ·each month at p.m. at 305 Main St.
VINTON - Celebrate
Athens Church of Christ,
,
Recovery
at Vinton Bapti*
785 W. Union St. , Athens.
Church
.
Small
groups look·
For information , call 593ing for freedom from addic7414 .
tions.
hurts, habits anjjl
GALLIPOLIS - Look
hangup;
every Wednesday
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday ot' at 7 p.m. For information;
· ·
the month at 6 p.m .. Holzer · call 388-8454 .
E-mail
community
ca/en•
Center for Cancer Care.
dar items to kke/ly@mydai·
GALLIPQLIS
F,ax
Alcoholics
An onymous lytribmre .com.
annourtcements
to
446·
Wednesday book study at 7
3008. Mail items to 825
p .m. and Thursday opi:n Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohi•
meeting at noon at St. 45631.
A nnouncementt
Peter's Episcopal Church , may also be dropped offal
541 Second Ave . Tuesday the Tribune office. ·
closed meeting is at 8 p.m .
at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church .
· GALLIPOLIS
Anonymous
· Narcotics
Miracles in Recovery meets
every
Monday
and

• FRU Mn' TJchnicllluPJIQft
• !MIMI UetNQin9 . kMp ~our bUddy btl
• 10 HlliiiCidrMMi ¥l1lh Wtbmaill
'• CUS10m Stan: Page · ~Wi , IW~flef &amp;1110fe!

Support groups

2nd Annual Turkey Trot
Fun Run/ Walk

.

. os

Meigs County Calendar
Department, new memRUTLAND - One Less
bers welcome, 992-6626. . Stone performing a variety
· RACINE - · R11cine of gospel music. at 10:3.0
Tuesday, Nov. 4.
Order 134, OES 7:30 p.m. a.m. at Rutland Church of
: ALFRED - · Orange
at the hall. Installation of the Nazarene.
Township Trustees, 7:30 officers.
Sunday, Nov. 9
. p.m . at the home of fiscal
Tuesday, Nov. 4
POMEROY - Revival
office, Osie Follrod.
POMEROY Drew · services
at the Mt.
Wednesday, Nov. 5
Webster Ladies Auxiliary Herman United Brethren
. REEDSVILLE - Olive
meeting.postponed to Nov. Church, each evening
:· Township T~u~tees, 6:30 18, I p:m. at the llall.
starting Nov. 9 continuing
p .m. , townshtp garage.
CHESTER - Chester through Nov. 12 with the
RACINE - Financial
:-Planning
Supervision Council, Daughters . of Rev. Clifford Coleman .
· Commission for Southern America, 7 p .m . at the Following the morning
·
service on Nov.'9, a carry: Local School District, reg- . hall .
Thursday,
Nov.
6
in dinner will be held.
: tilar meeting , 10:30 a.m.,
RACINE
Special
music
each
. high school media room.
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge evening .
:
Thursjlay, Nov; 6
#
164 special meeting.
· CHESTER Cheser
6p.m
., at lodge in Racine.
Township Trustees, 7 p.m .
Past Master's night with
· ·at the town hall.
in.
the
E.A.
work
Tuesday;.Nov. 4
degree . All Past Masters
SYRACUSE -Edward
encouraged·
to Wells, Syracuse, will celeare
attend. Chili dinner fol- brate his 92nd birthday on
org~nizations
lows. Call Randy Smith, Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards
508-0816 with questions.
may be sent to him at the
Monday,' Nov. 3
Ravenswood Villag~ • .200
POMEROY - Meigs
South
Ritchie · Ave.,
·county Cancer Initiative,
Ravenswootl,
. :W. · • Va.
'regular meeting, noon,
. ·. Sunday, Nov. 2
26164 .
·Meigs County Health

Public meetings

Soturday, November 15, 2008 11:00 am- 3:00pm
•
Located at the Pomeroy Parking Lot/Walking Trock
For more information,p/ease call the M~igs Wellness Center at (740) 992-2161, ext, 233

Birthdays

· Clubs and

Church events

November
.is Natlpnal Home Health
and
Month

It'sgocd to know that some things never change.
Espeei~lly when rl comes to your financial
·'

seCllll~

At Peoples Bank.\1\l'reproudto be the.

1\\CSI community bank that has not grown too big.

Ill take arespon$11Jie approachto the financial
. -'· . •$
•' ·;,, needs of each and every customerweserve.
. •·
M
' ~ We've lieen'filingou~ ness forover one hundred
j•

~-

'I ~

t

years rxj ~o can te assured that your money
is sate,sound and secure 1-nt11 us. We have a

srq recordof financial staoili~ andgrowth that .
has remained unshaken inthese uncertain and

: To all who attended and especially those people who have :
faithfully suppor.ted all four of our spring and fall
: '
fundraisers the past two years.
:

*

*
:
*
*
:
*

*

*
:
.*
*
:
*

Thanks for supporting the men and worrien of the
0 .S Military and their families. ·
Remember; vote Tuesday. November 4th ·
•Don't forget; Jhank a vet
TuessJay. Noyember 11th .

•

Continue to support our trOOP.S! .

**************~~******•********
..
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200~

1'-Shirt~

.,

for Ohio Senate , 20th for five years.
District. He has two oppo•
• SCIPIO TOWNSHIP:
nents, Morgan .County Replacement tax · of two
Commissioner
Rick mills for fire protection
Shriver, a Democrat, and for five years.
Green Party Candidate
• COLUMBIA TOWNTimothy J. Kettler.
SHIP: Additional tax of
U .S.
Rep.
Charlie 1.5 mills for road mainteWilson,
D-Bridgeport , nance for five years . ·
also has two challengers,
•
POMEROY
VILRepublican
Richard LAGE: Ren.e wal tax of
Stobbs and Green Party , one mill for fire protection
Candidate .Dennis Spisak . for five y'ears.
Local issues
• SUTTON
TOWN - .
• LEBANON TOWN- SHIP: Replacement tax of
SHIP: Replacement tax of one mill for fire protection
one mill for fire protection for five years.

.

f

Photos may give the wrong idea
BY KATHY MITCHELL

pie · to take matters into person's occupied resi. their own hands because. dence or car is designated
·we don't want to see inni:J- . as a place where they are
cent .people get hurt , but protected from illegal tres- ·
we als o . understand that passing and violent attack.
Therefore, a person now
people are fed up. .
"Mr. Hurt had a right tu .lJas the legal right to use
, protect himself," the sher- deadly force to defend that
Iff added.
.
Jn fact, under the ·newly . place, his or her "castle,"
enacted Castle Doctrine front violent attack . or an
Law in Ohio . . Hurt did intrusion that may lead to
have a right to protect violent attack.
The law also made conh .lmse If .
•
.
· Under the law , whrch cealed. carry legislation in
became effective Sept. 9, a Ohio more "user friendly."

·modifications or suggeslions if approving the permit or. denying it.
,
The OPSB members were
not at the hearing and will
. rely on the administrative
·law judge who did pre. : side over
the
hearing
· to make a recommendation
on the case . The next meeting of the OPSB is tentatively scheduled for Nov .
. 24. though it's not known ··
.i f A M p . o h i 0 • s
: application for its transmis. sion line will be considered .
Last month, the nonadjudicatory hearing on
~ the transmission lines was
: held
at
Southern
:Elementary SchooL where

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

I

Development. "I encour- · - Up to $30 ,800 in yearly
age eligible citizens who income or $7.700 income
may l\)se their heating in the past three months .
source to ·seek assistance
• 4-member household
through the Winter Crisis -Up to $37,100 in yearly
Program ."
income or .$9,275 income
The
HEAP Winter in the past three months .
Cri sis Program. adminis• 5 - m~mber household
tered
by
the
Ohio - Up to $43,400 in yearly
Department
of , income or $10,850 income
D e v e I o p m e n t ' s in the pas t three months . ·
Community Development
• 6-member heusehold
Division , provides ~ssis - - Up to 549 ,700 in yearly
tance once pe r heating income or $12,425 income
season to eligible house - in the past three months.
hold s that have been djs• 7-member household
connected. are
being - Up to $56 ,000 in .yearly
threatened with discon- income or $14.000 income
nection, or have less than in the past three months.
a 10-day supply of bulk
• · 8, member household
fueL
· - Up to $62.300 in yearly
Qualifying for HEAP is · income or$15,575 income
dependent on the ~ize of ·in the past three months.
the househ.old and the
• For .households with
total gro ss household . more than eight members,
income over the past three ' add $6.300 per member to
months. which must be at the yearly income.
or below 175 percent of
Qualified Ohioans can
.the 2008-2009 federal · seek assistance at any of
'poverty guidelines listed Ohio's 53 local service
· below:
providers.
.
• !-member household
For more information ,
Photo courtesy of Ryan 'Grady
- Up to $ 18,200 in yearly · call the toll-free HEAP Gallipolis volunteer firefighters responded to this car fire on Grape Street near the
income or' $4 ,550 income . /wtline m 1-800-282-0880. Gallipolis Foodland Thursday. Firefighters were alerted to the blaze at 7:40p.m. Additional
, in. the past three months .
The hel~ring impaired may details were unavailable from the GVFD-as of Saturday.
• 2- member household dial 1-800-686 - 1557 jor
'- Up to $24,509 in yearly ani.ilance. Information i&gt;
income or $6 , 125 income al&gt;o available on the '
. in the past three month s.' HEAP
Website . at
• 3-membcr household . http://energyhelp.ohio.gov.

Robbery from Page At

•

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Car lire in citv

HEAP program begins Monday:

Page~

AROUND TOWN

PageA2

•

:fitestlonable.times Wecare at;i)ut our clients.
· ttl) by and see just how different we

are;

FDIC lnsllance Up to $250,000.
www.peaplesbancorp.com
1·800-374·6123

800.500.4850

888-225-1135
..

.
'

800-920-8860

•I

�OPINION

•••P
Cim~ ·&amp;tntind
.
.

. 6unbap
~imd -6entind
..
.
.
825 Third Avenue • Galllpolla, Ohio .
(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydally1rlbune.com

...,

Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Dan Goodrich

•

Publisher

Kevin Kelly

Diane Hill

Man~ging Editor.

Controller

Lel/ers to the editor ure we/rome. They shoultl be less
.than 300 words . A/1/ellers 11re .oubjectto editing arrd must
be signed and include addre.u and telephone 1111mber. No
unsigned tellers will he published. Lel/ers should be in
good taste, addressing issues. 1101 personalities.

.TODAY •IN HISTORY
: Today is Sunday; Nov: ·2. the 307th day of 2008. There
.are 59 days left in the year.
.· Tooay's Highlight in History:
·
· On Nov. 2, i948, President Truman surprised the experts
by winning a narrow upset over Republican challenger
Thomas E. Dewey.
On this date:
In 1783, Gen. George Washington issued his Farewell
Orders to the Armies of the United States near Princeton,
NJ .
In 1795, the 11th president of the United States, James
Knox Polk, was born in Mecklenburg County, N.C.
ln· I865, the 29th president ofthe United States, Warren
Gamaliel Harding, was born near Corsica, Ohio.
In 1889, North Dakota and South Dakota became the
39th and 40th states.
'
In 1947 , Howard Hughes piloted hi s huge wooden flying
boat, the Hughes H-4 Hercules (dubbed the "Spruce
Goose" by detractors), on its only flight, which lasted about
a minute over Long Beach Harbor in California.
In 1959, game show contestant Charles Van Doren admitted to a House subconunittee that he'd been given questions and answers in advance when he appeared on the
NBC-TV program "Twenty-One."
. In 1963, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dihn Diem
was assassinated in a military coup.
·
• In 1976, fanner Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter became the
firsi candidate from the Deep South since the Civil War to
be elected presiden! as he defeated incumbent Gerald R.
Ford.
In 1983, President Reagan signed a bill establishing a
federal holiday on the third Monday of January in honor of
civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Ten years ago: Central American officials estimated more
~han 7,000 people had died in floods and mud~lides trig~ered by Hurricane Mitch . Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
lOOk center stage at his company's antitrust trial, appearing
on videotape inside a federal courtroom in Washington.
: Five years ago: In Iraq, insurgents shot down a Chinook
helicopter carrying dozens of U.S. soldiers, killing 16. In
Durham, N.H., V. Oene Robinson Wruj consecrated as the
first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church. Kenyans
ruled the New York City Marathon, with Margaret Okayo
shattering the women's course record and Martin Lei earning his·first marathon victory.
.
: One year ago: Speaking at a graduation ceremony at Fort
Jackson, S.C., President Bush said U.S. military deaths had
fallen to their lowest levels in 19 months and the Iraqi people were slowly "taking back their country" in the wake of
the American troop buildup there . Michael Mukasey drew
closer to becoming attorney general after two key Senate
Democrats, Charles Schumer and Dianne Feinstein, said
they would vote for him despite his refusal to say whether
waterboarding was torture. Choreographer Igor Moiseyev,
who transformed folk dance into· a legitimate art, died in
Moscow at age 10 I.
· Today's Birthdays: Rhythm-and-blues singer Earl
"Speedo" Carroll (The Cadillacs; The Coasters) is 71.
Singer Jay Black (Jay and the Americans) is. 70.
Commentator Patrick J. Buchanan is 70. Actress Stefanie
Powers is 66. Author Shere Hite is 66.
Thouj;ht for Today: "Drop the question what tomorrow
may bnng, and count as profit every day that Fate allows
you ." - Horace, Roman poet (65 B.C.-8 B.C.)

'• '

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

· Letters to the edi!Or are welcome. They. should be
less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
:number. N(J unsigned letrers will be published. Letters
:6hould be in good, taste, addressing issues, not per:sonalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and indi;
:'fliduals
will not be accepted for publication.
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accurate. ll you know of an error in a
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Page A4
Sunday, November 2,

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Sunday, November 2,

&amp;unbap Qrimt$ -&amp;rntintl • Page~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

2008 .

Will 2008 bring a new realignment?
least 20 seats in the House told the Washington · Post:
Does 2008 resemble
and
fi ve in the Senate, "We're in this bad phtc:e as
1932 or 1968? Is it a
expanding
slim marjS ins a country because of the
"hinge" year that marks a
intO comfortable maJOr! - evangelical s, the neocons.
basic realignment of
Cokle
ties.
the nasty, bitter and mean
American politics for years
and
Demographic
shifts
also
... very clever. ideologtcal
or even decades to come?
Steven
seem to be happening . groups th:ll usc money.
History shows that three
Roberts · starting with young voters. technology. fear and bt g.~
factors are necessary for a
realignment to occur. A
- - - - A poll of thousands of col- . o)ry to lead people around .
What the Democrats arc
lege student s in four swing
party has to sweep into .
power with a popular pres·
states by CBS found lacking .is the thii:d i'ngrcdi 1dent and strong margins in their party's support for · Obama winning by roughly ent for realignment : a clear
Congress. That victory has c1v1
.. 1-ng hts 1egts
· 1auon
about govet·nt·ng . philosopiJV.
. and two to one. Onl
- yOb
·
to be reinforced .by under- "hard hat" Northerners dis· three out of hve
amu Qbama is essentially runlying demographic changes tur'?ed by th~ C\lltural tur- voters said lhheir parents ning oti the idea that "I'm
that solidify the party's mml of the Vtelnam years. were votmg t e same way. not George Bush, and John
long-tenn dominance. And
In 1980, Ronald Reagan a sign that bodes well for McCain is." Change and
the party has to stand for a completed the transforma- future
Democratic hope might be great politi set of clear ideals that tion, cementing the aile- prospects.
·
but they do not
Hispanics are a second ca 1s 1ogans:
.
guide and govern its use of
g:~:rats'~~ith
:·s~:U~gg~~
key
group
.
Obama
leads
amount
to
a
substantive
power.
John McCain by 70 percent program.
·
In the nine elections
simple
message
of
lower
to
in
the
latest
To
the
extent
that
Obama
percent
26
starting
with
1932,
taxes,
smaller
government
Washington
Post trucking has put fort~ spec ific idc:t s,
Democrats won seven of · and stronger defense. Like
he wou· 11' be s11a rply cc1n •
oil , and Hispanic.s .are
them. Franklin Roosevelt FOR, he profited from a
· d
by
~ avi.ng an outsi:ted impact strame
real1·ty ·
captured 57 percent of t~e
popular vote and all but SIX basic demographic shift, as in many critical swin g Withdrawing from Iraq
center of gravity in states.· from New Mex.ico wili take far more time than
states while Democrats . the
American holitics. shifted to Florida.
his antiwar followersr
piled ur large majorities on to the Sout , the West and
Moderate Republicans in demand . and a lot o
Capito Hill.
.
the right.
d
·
FOR's personal appeal
The seven GOP winners the Northeast and Mi · resources would be divertwas buttressed by two over 40 years represented Atlantic are starting to ed
to
,Afghani stan .
buildin~ only two states: Texas and mimic
demographic
the slogan of Domestic. spending initiablocks: a "solid . South ' California . And those Southern Democruts who ti ves, such as extending
w]lere few Republicans demographic
changes deserted their party a gener- coverage to the 46 million
survived and an urban helped the Republicans ation agO! "I dtdn 't leave my Americans without health
working class centered in win the Senate in 1980 and party: my party left me." In insurance, would run
the rising industrial areas achieve working .control of en9orsing Obama, Colin smack into a httge b'udget
of the Northeast and the House.
·
Powell denounced the GOP deficit : atleast·$500 billion
Middle West . In addition,
So what about 2008? · for moving "even further 10 this year ~ nd probably
the president espoused .a While the race seems to be the right" on social issues much larger.
strong central government tightening a bit, as of this like abortion. gay rights ami
So \Viii 2008 bring a new
stem-cell
research
.
to check the excesses of
0
These moderates feel political era? The answer is
capitalism and aid the dis- writing, Barack · bama
holds.
a
lead
of
6.3
percent
increasingly
uncomfm able a clear, resoundi-ng maybe.
advantaged.
in an average of all nation- in a party dominated1 by
(C oKte
'· · Rob e,.,,.
· /(tte'r
"
·
In the 10 elections start- al polls. If he wins all the
buo k· I·S "Lad'1es OJ·~'L t'bel·t)''·
evangelical
Christians,
ing, in 1968, Republicans states now trending his
Tl '"
WI w S'l 1ape(I
~~
have won seven, but their way, he would garner at symbolized . by McCain's 0 1e ""~~~~
N
·
" ( "~'//
'
ur
CIIIOII
"' tam
realignment took place in least 306 electoral votes, vice-presidential nominee,
2008 ). 5'ret•e wzd
two ~tages. Richard Nixon 36 more than he· needs. Sarah Palin. Rep. Wa)'ne Morrow,
·
started. the shift by peeling · Moreover,
Democrats Gt'lchrest , a Marylund Cokie Roberts can be
away
· conservative seem certai.n to pick up at Rereublican who· was ·l'l'(I C/r ed · @
(/(
1
· de eated in the primary. · .srevecokie gmai .com .)
Southerners disaffected by

Obituaries .

' '

Ellen L Brooker

Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday, Nov. 2,
2008, from 3 to 5 and 6 to 8 p.m.
The family would also like lo invite everyone back to the
Ellen L. Brooker, 55 , of New Philadelphia, passed away lth Day Adventist Church for a luncheon after the commion Thursday, Qct. 30,2008 , in Aultman Hospital at Canton. tal service at the cemetery.
Ellen \liaS the daughter of Harold and Marjorie
In lieu of tlowers, donatipns may be made to Pleasant
(Standley), the wife of An,dy Brooker, the mother of Ashley Valley Hospice, 2520 Valley Drive, ·Point Pleasant, W.Va.
(Jason) Schmachrenberger and grandmother of Jason 25550.
Cameron Schmachtenberger.
registry
is
available
at
On-line ·
Fri,ends may call on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008, from 1 .to 3 www .andersonmcdaniel .com.
and 5 to 7 p.m. in th,e Linn-Hert-Geib Funeral Home and
Crem~tory a.t New Philadelphia.
·
A funeral service celebrating Ellen's life will be held on
Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, at II a.m. in New Pointe
Cornmunit:~ Church at Dover with ~astor Chad Stutzman
Linda Lou Imboden, 63 , of Racine , passed away on
offi-:iating. A memorial reception will follow the service at Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008 , at her residence.
the church.
·
She was born on March 29, 1945, in South Charleston,
·A committal service will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 4; W.Va., daughter of Mary 'Copenhaver Hayes and the late
2008, at 1 p.m. in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
James Hayes .
.
She was employed .as a secretary, and attended the
A complete obituary may be viewed on the funeral home
website, www.geibcares .com.
.
Church of the Open Door in Cleveland.
In addition to her father, she was preceded by her husband, Calvin Imboden; and several aunts and uncles .
She is sul'\'ived by her children , lmthony Shamblin Sr.
and Chrys Stout-Shamblin of Pomeroy, and Greg Shamblin
Ellis Gray Moore, 66, qf Vinton, passed away unexpect· of Ashville •. Ohio; grandchildren, Anthony Shamblin Jr. ,
edly Wednesda:y, Oct. 29 , 2008.
.
·Frank Shamblin and Stephanie Shamblin, all ,of Racine,
He was born July 5, 1942 , in Richmond, Va., son of the and Caitlin and Randy Yonkins of Pomeroy: her mother,
late Toby and Lula Mae Stanley Moore . ·
'
Mary Hayes of Chester: brothers and sister, James Hayes
'fie retired from Harris Paper Craft of Columbus, where Jr. of Millfield , Johnny Hayes of Athen ~ . Susie Caldwell of
he was employed as a die cutter, and was a proud member Tuppers Plains, and William Hayes of Athens; and several
of the NRA.
·
aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
He is survived by his fiance, Ella Mann of Vinton; two
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008, at the
sons, Kevin William Moore of Kentucky and Bobby Lee Anderson
McDaniel
Funeral
Home
in
(Christine Ward) Moore of Vinton; a daughter, Carolyn Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Robert Robinson .
(William) Igo of Newark; three stepsons, Joseph (Darleqe) Burial will follow in the Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may
Varney, Danny Varney and Dennis (Wilma) Varney, all of call at the funeral home on Tuesday.• Nov. 4, 2008 , from 6
Portsmouth: four grandchildren; two great grandchildren; to 8 p.m.
five step grandchildren; three step great"grandchildren; oqe
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcbrother; and six sisiers.
. daniel.com.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in death by his
wife , Wanda Harris Moore.
Services will be noon Monday,. Nov. 3, 2008 , in the
Harvest Tiine Worship Cen1er, 222 Main St., Vinton. Burial
Eveiyn Morrow,' 78 , of Kanauga, went home to be with
will follow in the Harris Family Cemetery near Vinton.
the
Lord on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008 .
.
Friends may call at the Harvest Time Worship Center from
She was bom July 18, 193.0, in Pembroke, N.C., daugh·
3 to 6 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008 .
Arrangements are by the McCoy-Mowe Funeral Home ter of the late William and Mayola Johnson Mercer.
She was a well-respected fanner business owner, a beauin Vinton.
tician and also was very active in her community. serving
as head of th.e· Neighborhood Watch, a volunteer beautician
at the Gallipolis Dev"lopmen!al Center, and had run for
·Gallia County commissioner.
·
·
Ruth Caroline Scbulze, 89, died Wednesday, Oct. 29,
Evelyn is survived by two children , Linda. Lanham of
2008, in Scenic Hills Nursing Center at Bidwell.
Kanauga; and Danny C. Morrow of Gallipolis .
· She was retired from Ohio Federal Savings, and was a
Also surviving are eight grandchildren, J9dy Lanham,
membe~ of the Washington Avenue United Methodist . Adeanna Schoonover, Cherlyn Lawrence, Dawn Lanham,
· Bethany Morrow, Danielle Ryan, Leah Morrow and Jay
Church .
S.he was preceded in death by her husband, Carl Schulze, Karr; and 14 great-grandchildren, Cody, Telia, Carl,
and niece, Alice Niday. ·
Wayne, Tasha, Kasey, Savannah, Colton, Peyton, Kaleb,
She is survived by Wayne Niday of Gallipolis.
Donivan, Logan , Briley and Lilly.
Services will be II a.m: Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, in the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
Evan~ Funeral Home at 4171 E. Livingston Ave ., her husband , Carl Morrow; one granddaughter; and two
Columbus, where friends may cal) one hout prior to ser- brothers, Alvin and John Mercer.
·
vice . The Rev. Jeremy Scott and the Rev. Nathan Adams
Services will be 6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 3. 2008 , in the
will officiate. Interment will follow in Greenlawn . McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel in
Gallipolis , with Pastor Gary Revel officiating. Friends may
. Cemetery at Columbus.
To send condolences, go to www.evansfuneralhome.net. call at the funeral hom.:: from 4 to 6 p.m , Monday, Nov. 3,
. 2008.
In accordance with her wishes, interment will follow at
the convenience of the family.
Juanita A. VanHoose, 77, went home to be with the Lord
on Oct. 29,2008, at her residence in Ashland, Ky.
She was born Dec. 28, 1930, the daughter of the late
Boone and Susie (Allen) Arnett.
· Letta· Spen~er, 91, of Pomeroy, passed away on
Juanita is survived by two sons, Mike (Becky Baer) Wednesday Oct. 29, 2008 , at Overbrook Center in
VanHoose of Pomeroy, and Tim (Carolyn) VanHoose of Middleport.1 ·
.
.
Ashland; two sisters , Ru.th (Orville) Stephens and Donna
'She was born Jan. 22. 1917, in Minersville , daught.er of
Moore, both of Ashland; and two brothers, R.C. (Winnie) the late Seth and Mabel.(Bowers) Thomas.
Arnett of Ashland, and Boone Arnett of Mansfield, .Ohio;
She start.ed working for Jakes Restaurant, which was
sis~ers-in-law, Karen Arnett of Ma~sfield, Ohio, and _Doris owned by her aunt and uncle, Edith and Jake Ament.
· Gilbert of St. Petersburg, Fla. ; and several, nteces,
S]le was a~o ~Jnployed by the Meigs County Recorder's
nephews, step-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren. office, the·former Crow, Crow and Porter Law Office, and
· Besides her parents, she ~as preceded iri death by her she retired from the Coinmon Pleas Court.
husband, George E. VanHoose; three brothers, Joe Amen,
She loved working !Nith her flowers and reading. Most of
Larry Arnett and George (Bub) Arnett; sister-in-law, Helen aU, she was a loving mother, grandmother and great-grandArnett; brother-in-I.aw Richard Moore; and nephew, Ron mother.
··
Arnett.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by br~thers ,
A memorial service was held Saturtlay, Nov. 1, 2008, at 2 Seth, Melvin, Jacob, Edward and fack Thomas: and s1sters,
p.m. at the Miller Funeral Home in Ashland, Ky.
Mildred Hawk and 'Edith Schwab.
She is survived by lier daughter. Judith King; grandson,
Kevin King and fiance Renee Murdock; granddaught~r,
Kristin •(Jason) Utt; .and great-grandsons, I,.ucas and
Nicholas
Utt, .and Sage and Hunter fV!urdock.
. ,
Paul Eugene Evans, 74, of Racine, entered into rest on
At
M~s.
Spencer's
re~uest,
she
was
cremated
and
at
thts
Oct. 30, 2008 .
·
.
·
time,
there·
will
no·servtces.
He was born Oct. 27, 1934, in Chester, to William and
Arrangements were handled by the Anderson McDaniel
Nora Evans. He served.in the U.S. Army, and was logger
Home in Pomeroy.
Funeral
and avid outdoors man.
On-line
condolences may be sent to www.andersonmcHe is survived by ·his loving wife, Avonell Aleshire·
Evans; son , Paul Dean (Norma) Evans of Portland; daniel.com.
ste{K=hildren, Rick (Cathy) Aleshire of Brooklyn Heights,
Oh1o, Garland Aleshire of Mobile, Ala., and Tanya (Jim)
Aleshire-Liddy of Brunswick, Ohio; sisters, Della Coleman
of Reedsville, Ruth Ann (Charliet} Long of Reedsville , and
Harry Bert Smith left this life on Tuesday, Oct. 28,2008,
Janet (Walter) Lunger of East Liverr.ool; sister-in-law, Faye at his home in Ellenton, Fla.
Eyans of Long Bottom; grandchildren, Holly and Paul • He was born Feb. 6, )938, in Kentucky, preceded in
Evans ; step-grandchildren , Diana, Jason, . Rebecca , death by father, George P. Smith, and mother, Martha
Clayton , Amber, Eric, Ashle'y, Keith and Joshua; and a Washington McGueire-Smith.
.
great-~randson , Justen . . .
This beloved husband, father, grandfather and friend is
, Bestdes hts parents, Wtlbam and Nora, he was preceded survived by his wife; Doris Smith; sons, Scott (Jennifer)
in death liy brothers, William, Donald, Raymond, Norman Smith and Sean "Bo" Smith; daughter, Kimberly Elcess;
and Harold (John) Evans; sisters, Virginia Evans and stepdaughters, Chauntee and Cierra; brothers, Bluford
Minnie Pullins; and step-grandsons, Garland j.ee Aleshire "Buddy" (Helen) Smith, Bob (Shirley) Smith , Delman
Jr.• Daniel Aleshire and David Aleshire.
.
(Imogene) Smith, and Frank Smnh; stster, Nell Caudtll;
Services will be I p,,m. Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, at the · grandsons, Blayne, Spenser and Carrnello, granddaught~rs,
Anderson
McDaniel
Funeral
Home
m Jenesi and Tyra; a beloved mece, Dawn Chance Fraz1er;
Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Robert and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.
Robinson . Burial will follow in Beech Grove Cemetery.
He will sadly be missed by his best friend of many years,

Linda Lou Imboden

Evelyn·MoiTOW

Ruth caroline Schulze.

Juanita A. VanHooSe

Letta Spencer

Barack Obama for president
invest every bent of my · We want a country strong
When Sen. Barack
heart in hoping , but it is at home and respected .
Obama launched his presiwith a hopeful heart that I, abroad . We want peace and
dential campaign two years
unreservedly,
endorse prosperity, justice and free·
- and seemingly two lifeObama for president of the dom . We want a leader who
times - ago, pollsters
United States of America. speaks to our best selves,
asked whether America
Donna
President of the United who inspires us to do more
was ready to elect a black
Brazile
States, Barack 'Obama . Oh , and be more and give more .
president. Given our country 's relatively recent histo- _
- - - - · how I love . the way it We want Barack Obama.
sounds!
I know I do. For the first
ry of dismantling racial
Obama·'s
history
cannot
time
in far too long , I
barriers and legal restrictions , both de jure and de sus John Kerry. Actually, it be separated from his . believe in the possibility of
facto , the answer was not could have been George w. future. It is his experience a country far greater than
readily apparent, not even Bush versus pretty tnuch as a poor, mixed-race child the one we now · know and
to us. Yet throughout this anyone, the right choice born to a father who desert- even greater than it ever
long journey, our country . seemed that obvious to ed him and a young mother was.· And it is possible. If
turned its focus away from Democrats. We all know forced by hardship io relin- Obama is elected on Nov. 4,
the old barriers ·and, as . a what should have hap- quish him to his gnmdpar- then anything will.be possi·
people, began to see with pened. And we all know ents to raise that enables ble from N,ov. 5 forward .
Obama to empathize with
We have a choice . This
hopeful eyes a new possi- why it didn't.
·
those
who
suffer
today.
,
time,
I choose to hope. I
bility. Today, we have the
No, my heart couldn't
His past private struggles choose to hope that we
opportunity ·to vote our take another ache of that
his present public have not become so jaded,
inform
. hopes and not .our fears.
magnitude . So I focused on
policies.
It is why his eco- disillusioned and hardened
If hope were helium , the phenomenal accomDenver's lnvesco Field sta- plishment Obama had nomic policy doesn't cater that we prove cynics right
dium would have levitated already achieved: the nom- to the rich on the backs of by proving ourse lves
a mile high off its moorings ination. I focused ·an the the poor and the struggling wrong . We can elej.:t
the evening Obama deliv- importance of the moment, middle.class. It is why his Obama. but only if we tell
ered his speech accepting for our nation and all its health care policy covers ourselves we cmJ.
.We are ready. We ache
the Democratic nomination minoJ;ities in the lower half 20 million more people
than
John
McCain
's.
It
is
for
change. We yea rn for
for president. That night, of America 's financial and
hope was floating so high social strata, disenfran- wh~ his Iraq policy honors progress.
In the specifics 3nd the
and strong that it might 'chised by a federal goverri- act1ve military as well as
those
who
have
.already
generalities,
in the practical
have taken the entire .Mile ment that increasingly
·
served
or
retired
.
It
is
why,
and the visceral. in practice
. Highcitywithitonitsjour- doesn't listen to their cries
across the spectrum of and in theory. Obama
ney across America and or care about their tears .
around the world . Yet, I
To steel myself a~ainst issues , his policies show offers the future I want for
know I wasn't the only one the seemingly inev1table profound respect for peo- my country. Obama is the.
in the audience trying des- · disappointment of a far- ple ,'as a group and as indi- best we' ve seen 'in far too
perately not to be dragged away Election Day, I viduals. Everyone matters. long. lf he can 't get elected,
Democrat s, Republicans, what hope zs there for us? ·
down by a nagging doubt reminded myself that sueIndependents
and those
Vote Obama!
that the stakes were too big cess is in the journey, nor
and the obstacles · too the destination. And no who choose to go without a
I Dmma Bm~i!e is u polirdaunting for hope to ever matter what happened on label are of equal moral ical commentmor on CNN
make her fli~ht. •·
Nov. 4, I told myself. this weight, to be respected and ABC mtd NPR ; l·omribm:
Two crushmg elections in · · country had taken the first served . He speak s to a ing columnist to Roll Call,
a row left me afraid . leg ofan incredible journey nation , not a party, and , tlu; newspaper of Capito/
knits' us together as a fa'mi - Htll; and former campai1111
George W. Bush versus AI together.
Gore . George W. Bush verI'm still too scared to ly by linking our destinies. manager f or A/.Gore .)

Michael F. Moran and famil ~. along with hundreds of
other friends and colleagues (rom LDM companies and
affiliates.
Family and friends will gather to celebrate Bert's life
from 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday . Nov. 4, 2008, at Schoedinger
North Chapel , 5554 Karl Road. Columbus, where a memorial service will be held at I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008 .
Donatiqns may be made in honor of Bert to the cause he
was most supportive and passionate about - Free Speech
Coalition, contributions in memory of H. Bert Smith, P.O .
Box 10480, Canoga Park , Calif. 91309 .

Paul Eugene EYa.ni·

a

Hany Bert Smith

Re-Elect
Clyde Evans
State Representative
Will worli. to:

oStimulate the economy • Brln91obs to our community
· •Improve our chHdren's educofton

Thanks for your vote and support on November 4.
I really appreci!lle it.

Clyde Evans
\

State Representative
87th House District

Wilma 'Jean' Postle
Wilma "Jean" Postle , 79, of Westerville , passed away
Oct. 31, 2008, at Ohio State Umversity East
•
Hospllal in Columbus.
She was retired from the Southeastern Ohio Correctional
Facility and was a member of Central College Presbyterian
Church.
Postle +tas preceded in death by her husband, Frank C. ,
and sisters, Virginia Sims and Eloise Murtaugh .
She is survived by her loving children , Terri (Rick)
Myser, Jim (Trina) Postle and Nancy (Tony) Eller; six
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and a Sister.
Janet Jones. ·
·
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday. Nov. 3, 2008,
at the Hill Funeral Home , 220 S. State St., Westerville . A
memorial service will be held at 10 a .m. Tuesday, Nov. 4,
2008, at the Richard Ellsworth Chapel at Central Colle~ .
Presbyterian Church, 975 S. Sunbury •Road , Westerville,
with Pastor Charles Myser officiating.
There will be a private family interment.
Friends may, if they wish. contribute in her memory to
Komen Columbus Race for the Cure. P.O. Box 16842,
Columbus, Ohio 43216, or the National Kidney Foundation
of Ohio, 1373 Grandview Ave ., Suite 200, Columbus, !)hio
43212-2804.
Frida~.

Deaths
cameron Matthew Brown
Cameron Matthew Brown. 9, Guysville , died Thursday,
Oct. 30, 2008, in Children's Hospital, Columbus.
•
He was the son of Eric and.Lori Brown of Guysville .
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Coolville Elementary
School , with the Rev. Craig Holler officiating. Burial wiU
be in the Stewart Cemetery. Visitation was held Saturday
from 2 to 6 p.m. in the White-Schwarzel Funeral Home;,
Coolville.

Mariam G. Danner ~ursley
Mariam G. Danner Pursley. 95 , Gallipolis, died Friday,
Oct. 31, 2008, at the Scenic Hills Care Center.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Willis Funera1
Home , with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating , Burial will
follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
··
A complete obituary will be appear in a later edition of
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
·

Last-minute appeals on ·"
radio by Obama, McCain:
BY NEDRA PICKLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO - Ta.king to
the airwaves Saturday,
Barack Obama said h1s
election would mean global change while John
McCain said he has the
experience needed to tackle terrorism and the faltering economy.
"If you give me your
vote on Tuesday, we won't
just win this election toj;ether, we · will change
thts country and chan~e
the world." Obama sa1d
during the Democrats'
weekly radio address .
The Illinois senator
noted the economic crisis
that has affected people's
jobs, home values , pensions, wages. health care

and college costs.
.
"At a moment like this.,
with so much at stake, we
can't afford four more
years of the tired, old,
trickle-down , on your own·
philosophy thai got us into
this mess ," he · saiq.
Obama said Republican
McCain was too · closecy
aligned with Presidel\1
Bush.
·:
McCain told radio lis,
teners he would steer the
U.S. through the economi~
troubles ·but said the crisi&amp;
should not divert attention
from the international
threats the country faces .
· The Arizona senator said
Obama lacked experience
in standing up to such ·
challenges.
•

APCO
Public Safety Telecommunicator 1
6th Edition
911 Dispatch Training
November 17th, 18, 19, 20, 21

Evening Classes - 5 pm to 9pm
Location

·

SOUTHEAST OHIO EMS DISTRICT
3240 State Route 160
GaiHpolis, Ohio
740-446-9840
Cost: $175
~interested please call by November 6th, 2006

November 8th • 9-4
Eastern Elementary School

Food , Raffles ~ Music

The P5n, 6th Edition course blends the knowledge, and
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on the Technology that is surrounding Ieday's public
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The PSTl, 6th Edition Course may be used lor new hire
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l

�OPINION

•••P
Cim~ ·&amp;tntind
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..
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(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
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...,

Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Dan Goodrich

•

Publisher

Kevin Kelly

Diane Hill

Man~ging Editor.

Controller

Lel/ers to the editor ure we/rome. They shoultl be less
.than 300 words . A/1/ellers 11re .oubjectto editing arrd must
be signed and include addre.u and telephone 1111mber. No
unsigned tellers will he published. Lel/ers should be in
good taste, addressing issues. 1101 personalities.

.TODAY •IN HISTORY
: Today is Sunday; Nov: ·2. the 307th day of 2008. There
.are 59 days left in the year.
.· Tooay's Highlight in History:
·
· On Nov. 2, i948, President Truman surprised the experts
by winning a narrow upset over Republican challenger
Thomas E. Dewey.
On this date:
In 1783, Gen. George Washington issued his Farewell
Orders to the Armies of the United States near Princeton,
NJ .
In 1795, the 11th president of the United States, James
Knox Polk, was born in Mecklenburg County, N.C.
ln· I865, the 29th president ofthe United States, Warren
Gamaliel Harding, was born near Corsica, Ohio.
In 1889, North Dakota and South Dakota became the
39th and 40th states.
'
In 1947 , Howard Hughes piloted hi s huge wooden flying
boat, the Hughes H-4 Hercules (dubbed the "Spruce
Goose" by detractors), on its only flight, which lasted about
a minute over Long Beach Harbor in California.
In 1959, game show contestant Charles Van Doren admitted to a House subconunittee that he'd been given questions and answers in advance when he appeared on the
NBC-TV program "Twenty-One."
. In 1963, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dihn Diem
was assassinated in a military coup.
·
• In 1976, fanner Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter became the
firsi candidate from the Deep South since the Civil War to
be elected presiden! as he defeated incumbent Gerald R.
Ford.
In 1983, President Reagan signed a bill establishing a
federal holiday on the third Monday of January in honor of
civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Ten years ago: Central American officials estimated more
~han 7,000 people had died in floods and mud~lides trig~ered by Hurricane Mitch . Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
lOOk center stage at his company's antitrust trial, appearing
on videotape inside a federal courtroom in Washington.
: Five years ago: In Iraq, insurgents shot down a Chinook
helicopter carrying dozens of U.S. soldiers, killing 16. In
Durham, N.H., V. Oene Robinson Wruj consecrated as the
first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church. Kenyans
ruled the New York City Marathon, with Margaret Okayo
shattering the women's course record and Martin Lei earning his·first marathon victory.
.
: One year ago: Speaking at a graduation ceremony at Fort
Jackson, S.C., President Bush said U.S. military deaths had
fallen to their lowest levels in 19 months and the Iraqi people were slowly "taking back their country" in the wake of
the American troop buildup there . Michael Mukasey drew
closer to becoming attorney general after two key Senate
Democrats, Charles Schumer and Dianne Feinstein, said
they would vote for him despite his refusal to say whether
waterboarding was torture. Choreographer Igor Moiseyev,
who transformed folk dance into· a legitimate art, died in
Moscow at age 10 I.
· Today's Birthdays: Rhythm-and-blues singer Earl
"Speedo" Carroll (The Cadillacs; The Coasters) is 71.
Singer Jay Black (Jay and the Americans) is. 70.
Commentator Patrick J. Buchanan is 70. Actress Stefanie
Powers is 66. Author Shere Hite is 66.
Thouj;ht for Today: "Drop the question what tomorrow
may bnng, and count as profit every day that Fate allows
you ." - Horace, Roman poet (65 B.C.-8 B.C.)

'• '

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

· Letters to the edi!Or are welcome. They. should be
less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
:number. N(J unsigned letrers will be published. Letters
:6hould be in good, taste, addressing issues, not per:sonalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and indi;
:'fliduals
will not be accepted for publication.
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Page A4
Sunday, November 2,

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Sunday, November 2,

&amp;unbap Qrimt$ -&amp;rntintl • Page~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2008

2008 .

Will 2008 bring a new realignment?
least 20 seats in the House told the Washington · Post:
Does 2008 resemble
and
fi ve in the Senate, "We're in this bad phtc:e as
1932 or 1968? Is it a
expanding
slim marjS ins a country because of the
"hinge" year that marks a
intO comfortable maJOr! - evangelical s, the neocons.
basic realignment of
Cokle
ties.
the nasty, bitter and mean
American politics for years
and
Demographic
shifts
also
... very clever. ideologtcal
or even decades to come?
Steven
seem to be happening . groups th:ll usc money.
History shows that three
Roberts · starting with young voters. technology. fear and bt g.~
factors are necessary for a
realignment to occur. A
- - - - A poll of thousands of col- . o)ry to lead people around .
What the Democrats arc
lege student s in four swing
party has to sweep into .
power with a popular pres·
states by CBS found lacking .is the thii:d i'ngrcdi 1dent and strong margins in their party's support for · Obama winning by roughly ent for realignment : a clear
Congress. That victory has c1v1
.. 1-ng hts 1egts
· 1auon
about govet·nt·ng . philosopiJV.
. and two to one. Onl
- yOb
·
to be reinforced .by under- "hard hat" Northerners dis· three out of hve
amu Qbama is essentially runlying demographic changes tur'?ed by th~ C\lltural tur- voters said lhheir parents ning oti the idea that "I'm
that solidify the party's mml of the Vtelnam years. were votmg t e same way. not George Bush, and John
long-tenn dominance. And
In 1980, Ronald Reagan a sign that bodes well for McCain is." Change and
the party has to stand for a completed the transforma- future
Democratic hope might be great politi set of clear ideals that tion, cementing the aile- prospects.
·
but they do not
Hispanics are a second ca 1s 1ogans:
.
guide and govern its use of
g:~:rats'~~ith
:·s~:U~gg~~
key
group
.
Obama
leads
amount
to
a
substantive
power.
John McCain by 70 percent program.
·
In the nine elections
simple
message
of
lower
to
in
the
latest
To
the
extent
that
Obama
percent
26
starting
with
1932,
taxes,
smaller
government
Washington
Post trucking has put fort~ spec ific idc:t s,
Democrats won seven of · and stronger defense. Like
he wou· 11' be s11a rply cc1n •
oil , and Hispanic.s .are
them. Franklin Roosevelt FOR, he profited from a
· d
by
~ avi.ng an outsi:ted impact strame
real1·ty ·
captured 57 percent of t~e
popular vote and all but SIX basic demographic shift, as in many critical swin g Withdrawing from Iraq
center of gravity in states.· from New Mex.ico wili take far more time than
states while Democrats . the
American holitics. shifted to Florida.
his antiwar followersr
piled ur large majorities on to the Sout , the West and
Moderate Republicans in demand . and a lot o
Capito Hill.
.
the right.
d
·
FOR's personal appeal
The seven GOP winners the Northeast and Mi · resources would be divertwas buttressed by two over 40 years represented Atlantic are starting to ed
to
,Afghani stan .
buildin~ only two states: Texas and mimic
demographic
the slogan of Domestic. spending initiablocks: a "solid . South ' California . And those Southern Democruts who ti ves, such as extending
w]lere few Republicans demographic
changes deserted their party a gener- coverage to the 46 million
survived and an urban helped the Republicans ation agO! "I dtdn 't leave my Americans without health
working class centered in win the Senate in 1980 and party: my party left me." In insurance, would run
the rising industrial areas achieve working .control of en9orsing Obama, Colin smack into a httge b'udget
of the Northeast and the House.
·
Powell denounced the GOP deficit : atleast·$500 billion
Middle West . In addition,
So what about 2008? · for moving "even further 10 this year ~ nd probably
the president espoused .a While the race seems to be the right" on social issues much larger.
strong central government tightening a bit, as of this like abortion. gay rights ami
So \Viii 2008 bring a new
stem-cell
research
.
to check the excesses of
0
These moderates feel political era? The answer is
capitalism and aid the dis- writing, Barack · bama
holds.
a
lead
of
6.3
percent
increasingly
uncomfm able a clear, resoundi-ng maybe.
advantaged.
in an average of all nation- in a party dominated1 by
(C oKte
'· · Rob e,.,,.
· /(tte'r
"
·
In the 10 elections start- al polls. If he wins all the
buo k· I·S "Lad'1es OJ·~'L t'bel·t)''·
evangelical
Christians,
ing, in 1968, Republicans states now trending his
Tl '"
WI w S'l 1ape(I
~~
have won seven, but their way, he would garner at symbolized . by McCain's 0 1e ""~~~~
N
·
" ( "~'//
'
ur
CIIIOII
"' tam
realignment took place in least 306 electoral votes, vice-presidential nominee,
2008 ). 5'ret•e wzd
two ~tages. Richard Nixon 36 more than he· needs. Sarah Palin. Rep. Wa)'ne Morrow,
·
started. the shift by peeling · Moreover,
Democrats Gt'lchrest , a Marylund Cokie Roberts can be
away
· conservative seem certai.n to pick up at Rereublican who· was ·l'l'(I C/r ed · @
(/(
1
· de eated in the primary. · .srevecokie gmai .com .)
Southerners disaffected by

Obituaries .

' '

Ellen L Brooker

Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday, Nov. 2,
2008, from 3 to 5 and 6 to 8 p.m.
The family would also like lo invite everyone back to the
Ellen L. Brooker, 55 , of New Philadelphia, passed away lth Day Adventist Church for a luncheon after the commion Thursday, Qct. 30,2008 , in Aultman Hospital at Canton. tal service at the cemetery.
Ellen \liaS the daughter of Harold and Marjorie
In lieu of tlowers, donatipns may be made to Pleasant
(Standley), the wife of An,dy Brooker, the mother of Ashley Valley Hospice, 2520 Valley Drive, ·Point Pleasant, W.Va.
(Jason) Schmachrenberger and grandmother of Jason 25550.
Cameron Schmachtenberger.
registry
is
available
at
On-line ·
Fri,ends may call on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008, from 1 .to 3 www .andersonmcdaniel .com.
and 5 to 7 p.m. in th,e Linn-Hert-Geib Funeral Home and
Crem~tory a.t New Philadelphia.
·
A funeral service celebrating Ellen's life will be held on
Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, at II a.m. in New Pointe
Cornmunit:~ Church at Dover with ~astor Chad Stutzman
Linda Lou Imboden, 63 , of Racine , passed away on
offi-:iating. A memorial reception will follow the service at Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008 , at her residence.
the church.
·
She was born on March 29, 1945, in South Charleston,
·A committal service will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 4; W.Va., daughter of Mary 'Copenhaver Hayes and the late
2008, at 1 p.m. in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
James Hayes .
.
She was employed .as a secretary, and attended the
A complete obituary may be viewed on the funeral home
website, www.geibcares .com.
.
Church of the Open Door in Cleveland.
In addition to her father, she was preceded by her husband, Calvin Imboden; and several aunts and uncles .
She is sul'\'ived by her children , lmthony Shamblin Sr.
and Chrys Stout-Shamblin of Pomeroy, and Greg Shamblin
Ellis Gray Moore, 66, qf Vinton, passed away unexpect· of Ashville •. Ohio; grandchildren, Anthony Shamblin Jr. ,
edly Wednesda:y, Oct. 29 , 2008.
.
·Frank Shamblin and Stephanie Shamblin, all ,of Racine,
He was born July 5, 1942 , in Richmond, Va., son of the and Caitlin and Randy Yonkins of Pomeroy: her mother,
late Toby and Lula Mae Stanley Moore . ·
'
Mary Hayes of Chester: brothers and sister, James Hayes
'fie retired from Harris Paper Craft of Columbus, where Jr. of Millfield , Johnny Hayes of Athen ~ . Susie Caldwell of
he was employed as a die cutter, and was a proud member Tuppers Plains, and William Hayes of Athens; and several
of the NRA.
·
aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
He is survived by his fiance, Ella Mann of Vinton; two
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008, at the
sons, Kevin William Moore of Kentucky and Bobby Lee Anderson
McDaniel
Funeral
Home
in
(Christine Ward) Moore of Vinton; a daughter, Carolyn Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Robert Robinson .
(William) Igo of Newark; three stepsons, Joseph (Darleqe) Burial will follow in the Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may
Varney, Danny Varney and Dennis (Wilma) Varney, all of call at the funeral home on Tuesday.• Nov. 4, 2008 , from 6
Portsmouth: four grandchildren; two great grandchildren; to 8 p.m.
five step grandchildren; three step great"grandchildren; oqe
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcbrother; and six sisiers.
. daniel.com.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in death by his
wife , Wanda Harris Moore.
Services will be noon Monday,. Nov. 3, 2008 , in the
Harvest Tiine Worship Cen1er, 222 Main St., Vinton. Burial
Eveiyn Morrow,' 78 , of Kanauga, went home to be with
will follow in the Harris Family Cemetery near Vinton.
the
Lord on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008 .
.
Friends may call at the Harvest Time Worship Center from
She was bom July 18, 193.0, in Pembroke, N.C., daugh·
3 to 6 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008 .
Arrangements are by the McCoy-Mowe Funeral Home ter of the late William and Mayola Johnson Mercer.
She was a well-respected fanner business owner, a beauin Vinton.
tician and also was very active in her community. serving
as head of th.e· Neighborhood Watch, a volunteer beautician
at the Gallipolis Dev"lopmen!al Center, and had run for
·Gallia County commissioner.
·
·
Ruth Caroline Scbulze, 89, died Wednesday, Oct. 29,
Evelyn is survived by two children , Linda. Lanham of
2008, in Scenic Hills Nursing Center at Bidwell.
Kanauga; and Danny C. Morrow of Gallipolis .
· She was retired from Ohio Federal Savings, and was a
Also surviving are eight grandchildren, J9dy Lanham,
membe~ of the Washington Avenue United Methodist . Adeanna Schoonover, Cherlyn Lawrence, Dawn Lanham,
· Bethany Morrow, Danielle Ryan, Leah Morrow and Jay
Church .
S.he was preceded in death by her husband, Carl Schulze, Karr; and 14 great-grandchildren, Cody, Telia, Carl,
and niece, Alice Niday. ·
Wayne, Tasha, Kasey, Savannah, Colton, Peyton, Kaleb,
She is survived by Wayne Niday of Gallipolis.
Donivan, Logan , Briley and Lilly.
Services will be II a.m: Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, in the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
Evan~ Funeral Home at 4171 E. Livingston Ave ., her husband , Carl Morrow; one granddaughter; and two
Columbus, where friends may cal) one hout prior to ser- brothers, Alvin and John Mercer.
·
vice . The Rev. Jeremy Scott and the Rev. Nathan Adams
Services will be 6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 3. 2008 , in the
will officiate. Interment will follow in Greenlawn . McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel in
Gallipolis , with Pastor Gary Revel officiating. Friends may
. Cemetery at Columbus.
To send condolences, go to www.evansfuneralhome.net. call at the funeral hom.:: from 4 to 6 p.m , Monday, Nov. 3,
. 2008.
In accordance with her wishes, interment will follow at
the convenience of the family.
Juanita A. VanHoose, 77, went home to be with the Lord
on Oct. 29,2008, at her residence in Ashland, Ky.
She was born Dec. 28, 1930, the daughter of the late
Boone and Susie (Allen) Arnett.
· Letta· Spen~er, 91, of Pomeroy, passed away on
Juanita is survived by two sons, Mike (Becky Baer) Wednesday Oct. 29, 2008 , at Overbrook Center in
VanHoose of Pomeroy, and Tim (Carolyn) VanHoose of Middleport.1 ·
.
.
Ashland; two sisters , Ru.th (Orville) Stephens and Donna
'She was born Jan. 22. 1917, in Minersville , daught.er of
Moore, both of Ashland; and two brothers, R.C. (Winnie) the late Seth and Mabel.(Bowers) Thomas.
Arnett of Ashland, and Boone Arnett of Mansfield, .Ohio;
She start.ed working for Jakes Restaurant, which was
sis~ers-in-law, Karen Arnett of Ma~sfield, Ohio, and _Doris owned by her aunt and uncle, Edith and Jake Ament.
· Gilbert of St. Petersburg, Fla. ; and several, nteces,
S]le was a~o ~Jnployed by the Meigs County Recorder's
nephews, step-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren. office, the·former Crow, Crow and Porter Law Office, and
· Besides her parents, she ~as preceded iri death by her she retired from the Coinmon Pleas Court.
husband, George E. VanHoose; three brothers, Joe Amen,
She loved working !Nith her flowers and reading. Most of
Larry Arnett and George (Bub) Arnett; sister-in-law, Helen aU, she was a loving mother, grandmother and great-grandArnett; brother-in-I.aw Richard Moore; and nephew, Ron mother.
··
Arnett.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by br~thers ,
A memorial service was held Saturtlay, Nov. 1, 2008, at 2 Seth, Melvin, Jacob, Edward and fack Thomas: and s1sters,
p.m. at the Miller Funeral Home in Ashland, Ky.
Mildred Hawk and 'Edith Schwab.
She is survived by lier daughter. Judith King; grandson,
Kevin King and fiance Renee Murdock; granddaught~r,
Kristin •(Jason) Utt; .and great-grandsons, I,.ucas and
Nicholas
Utt, .and Sage and Hunter fV!urdock.
. ,
Paul Eugene Evans, 74, of Racine, entered into rest on
At
M~s.
Spencer's
re~uest,
she
was
cremated
and
at
thts
Oct. 30, 2008 .
·
.
·
time,
there·
will
no·servtces.
He was born Oct. 27, 1934, in Chester, to William and
Arrangements were handled by the Anderson McDaniel
Nora Evans. He served.in the U.S. Army, and was logger
Home in Pomeroy.
Funeral
and avid outdoors man.
On-line
condolences may be sent to www.andersonmcHe is survived by ·his loving wife, Avonell Aleshire·
Evans; son , Paul Dean (Norma) Evans of Portland; daniel.com.
ste{K=hildren, Rick (Cathy) Aleshire of Brooklyn Heights,
Oh1o, Garland Aleshire of Mobile, Ala., and Tanya (Jim)
Aleshire-Liddy of Brunswick, Ohio; sisters, Della Coleman
of Reedsville, Ruth Ann (Charliet} Long of Reedsville , and
Harry Bert Smith left this life on Tuesday, Oct. 28,2008,
Janet (Walter) Lunger of East Liverr.ool; sister-in-law, Faye at his home in Ellenton, Fla.
Eyans of Long Bottom; grandchildren, Holly and Paul • He was born Feb. 6, )938, in Kentucky, preceded in
Evans ; step-grandchildren , Diana, Jason, . Rebecca , death by father, George P. Smith, and mother, Martha
Clayton , Amber, Eric, Ashle'y, Keith and Joshua; and a Washington McGueire-Smith.
.
great-~randson , Justen . . .
This beloved husband, father, grandfather and friend is
, Bestdes hts parents, Wtlbam and Nora, he was preceded survived by his wife; Doris Smith; sons, Scott (Jennifer)
in death liy brothers, William, Donald, Raymond, Norman Smith and Sean "Bo" Smith; daughter, Kimberly Elcess;
and Harold (John) Evans; sisters, Virginia Evans and stepdaughters, Chauntee and Cierra; brothers, Bluford
Minnie Pullins; and step-grandsons, Garland j.ee Aleshire "Buddy" (Helen) Smith, Bob (Shirley) Smith , Delman
Jr.• Daniel Aleshire and David Aleshire.
.
(Imogene) Smith, and Frank Smnh; stster, Nell Caudtll;
Services will be I p,,m. Monday, Nov. 3, 2008, at the · grandsons, Blayne, Spenser and Carrnello, granddaught~rs,
Anderson
McDaniel
Funeral
Home
m Jenesi and Tyra; a beloved mece, Dawn Chance Fraz1er;
Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Robert and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.
Robinson . Burial will follow in Beech Grove Cemetery.
He will sadly be missed by his best friend of many years,

Linda Lou Imboden

Evelyn·MoiTOW

Ruth caroline Schulze.

Juanita A. VanHooSe

Letta Spencer

Barack Obama for president
invest every bent of my · We want a country strong
When Sen. Barack
heart in hoping , but it is at home and respected .
Obama launched his presiwith a hopeful heart that I, abroad . We want peace and
dential campaign two years
unreservedly,
endorse prosperity, justice and free·
- and seemingly two lifeObama for president of the dom . We want a leader who
times - ago, pollsters
United States of America. speaks to our best selves,
asked whether America
Donna
President of the United who inspires us to do more
was ready to elect a black
Brazile
States, Barack 'Obama . Oh , and be more and give more .
president. Given our country 's relatively recent histo- _
- - - - · how I love . the way it We want Barack Obama.
sounds!
I know I do. For the first
ry of dismantling racial
Obama·'s
history
cannot
time
in far too long , I
barriers and legal restrictions , both de jure and de sus John Kerry. Actually, it be separated from his . believe in the possibility of
facto , the answer was not could have been George w. future. It is his experience a country far greater than
readily apparent, not even Bush versus pretty tnuch as a poor, mixed-race child the one we now · know and
to us. Yet throughout this anyone, the right choice born to a father who desert- even greater than it ever
long journey, our country . seemed that obvious to ed him and a young mother was.· And it is possible. If
turned its focus away from Democrats. We all know forced by hardship io relin- Obama is elected on Nov. 4,
the old barriers ·and, as . a what should have hap- quish him to his gnmdpar- then anything will.be possi·
people, began to see with pened. And we all know ents to raise that enables ble from N,ov. 5 forward .
Obama to empathize with
We have a choice . This
hopeful eyes a new possi- why it didn't.
·
those
who
suffer
today.
,
time,
I choose to hope. I
bility. Today, we have the
No, my heart couldn't
His past private struggles choose to hope that we
opportunity ·to vote our take another ache of that
his present public have not become so jaded,
inform
. hopes and not .our fears.
magnitude . So I focused on
policies.
It is why his eco- disillusioned and hardened
If hope were helium , the phenomenal accomDenver's lnvesco Field sta- plishment Obama had nomic policy doesn't cater that we prove cynics right
dium would have levitated already achieved: the nom- to the rich on the backs of by proving ourse lves
a mile high off its moorings ination. I focused ·an the the poor and the struggling wrong . We can elej.:t
the evening Obama deliv- importance of the moment, middle.class. It is why his Obama. but only if we tell
ered his speech accepting for our nation and all its health care policy covers ourselves we cmJ.
.We are ready. We ache
the Democratic nomination minoJ;ities in the lower half 20 million more people
than
John
McCain
's.
It
is
for
change. We yea rn for
for president. That night, of America 's financial and
hope was floating so high social strata, disenfran- wh~ his Iraq policy honors progress.
In the specifics 3nd the
and strong that it might 'chised by a federal goverri- act1ve military as well as
those
who
have
.already
generalities,
in the practical
have taken the entire .Mile ment that increasingly
·
served
or
retired
.
It
is
why,
and the visceral. in practice
. Highcitywithitonitsjour- doesn't listen to their cries
across the spectrum of and in theory. Obama
ney across America and or care about their tears .
around the world . Yet, I
To steel myself a~ainst issues , his policies show offers the future I want for
know I wasn't the only one the seemingly inev1table profound respect for peo- my country. Obama is the.
in the audience trying des- · disappointment of a far- ple ,'as a group and as indi- best we' ve seen 'in far too
perately not to be dragged away Election Day, I viduals. Everyone matters. long. lf he can 't get elected,
Democrat s, Republicans, what hope zs there for us? ·
down by a nagging doubt reminded myself that sueIndependents
and those
Vote Obama!
that the stakes were too big cess is in the journey, nor
and the obstacles · too the destination. And no who choose to go without a
I Dmma Bm~i!e is u polirdaunting for hope to ever matter what happened on label are of equal moral ical commentmor on CNN
make her fli~ht. •·
Nov. 4, I told myself. this weight, to be respected and ABC mtd NPR ; l·omribm:
Two crushmg elections in · · country had taken the first served . He speak s to a ing columnist to Roll Call,
a row left me afraid . leg ofan incredible journey nation , not a party, and , tlu; newspaper of Capito/
knits' us together as a fa'mi - Htll; and former campai1111
George W. Bush versus AI together.
Gore . George W. Bush verI'm still too scared to ly by linking our destinies. manager f or A/.Gore .)

Michael F. Moran and famil ~. along with hundreds of
other friends and colleagues (rom LDM companies and
affiliates.
Family and friends will gather to celebrate Bert's life
from 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday . Nov. 4, 2008, at Schoedinger
North Chapel , 5554 Karl Road. Columbus, where a memorial service will be held at I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008 .
Donatiqns may be made in honor of Bert to the cause he
was most supportive and passionate about - Free Speech
Coalition, contributions in memory of H. Bert Smith, P.O .
Box 10480, Canoga Park , Calif. 91309 .

Paul Eugene EYa.ni·

a

Hany Bert Smith

Re-Elect
Clyde Evans
State Representative
Will worli. to:

oStimulate the economy • Brln91obs to our community
· •Improve our chHdren's educofton

Thanks for your vote and support on November 4.
I really appreci!lle it.

Clyde Evans
\

State Representative
87th House District

Wilma 'Jean' Postle
Wilma "Jean" Postle , 79, of Westerville , passed away
Oct. 31, 2008, at Ohio State Umversity East
•
Hospllal in Columbus.
She was retired from the Southeastern Ohio Correctional
Facility and was a member of Central College Presbyterian
Church.
Postle +tas preceded in death by her husband, Frank C. ,
and sisters, Virginia Sims and Eloise Murtaugh .
She is survived by her loving children , Terri (Rick)
Myser, Jim (Trina) Postle and Nancy (Tony) Eller; six
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and a Sister.
Janet Jones. ·
·
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday. Nov. 3, 2008,
at the Hill Funeral Home , 220 S. State St., Westerville . A
memorial service will be held at 10 a .m. Tuesday, Nov. 4,
2008, at the Richard Ellsworth Chapel at Central Colle~ .
Presbyterian Church, 975 S. Sunbury •Road , Westerville,
with Pastor Charles Myser officiating.
There will be a private family interment.
Friends may, if they wish. contribute in her memory to
Komen Columbus Race for the Cure. P.O. Box 16842,
Columbus, Ohio 43216, or the National Kidney Foundation
of Ohio, 1373 Grandview Ave ., Suite 200, Columbus, !)hio
43212-2804.
Frida~.

Deaths
cameron Matthew Brown
Cameron Matthew Brown. 9, Guysville , died Thursday,
Oct. 30, 2008, in Children's Hospital, Columbus.
•
He was the son of Eric and.Lori Brown of Guysville .
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Coolville Elementary
School , with the Rev. Craig Holler officiating. Burial wiU
be in the Stewart Cemetery. Visitation was held Saturday
from 2 to 6 p.m. in the White-Schwarzel Funeral Home;,
Coolville.

Mariam G. Danner ~ursley
Mariam G. Danner Pursley. 95 , Gallipolis, died Friday,
Oct. 31, 2008, at the Scenic Hills Care Center.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Willis Funera1
Home , with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating , Burial will
follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
··
A complete obituary will be appear in a later edition of
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
·

Last-minute appeals on ·"
radio by Obama, McCain:
BY NEDRA PICKLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHICAGO - Ta.king to
the airwaves Saturday,
Barack Obama said h1s
election would mean global change while John
McCain said he has the
experience needed to tackle terrorism and the faltering economy.
"If you give me your
vote on Tuesday, we won't
just win this election toj;ether, we · will change
thts country and chan~e
the world." Obama sa1d
during the Democrats'
weekly radio address .
The Illinois senator
noted the economic crisis
that has affected people's
jobs, home values , pensions, wages. health care

and college costs.
.
"At a moment like this.,
with so much at stake, we
can't afford four more
years of the tired, old,
trickle-down , on your own·
philosophy thai got us into
this mess ," he · saiq.
Obama said Republican
McCain was too · closecy
aligned with Presidel\1
Bush.
·:
McCain told radio lis,
teners he would steer the
U.S. through the economi~
troubles ·but said the crisi&amp;
should not divert attention
from the international
threats the country faces .
· The Arizona senator said
Obama lacked experience
in standing up to such ·
challenges.
•

APCO
Public Safety Telecommunicator 1
6th Edition
911 Dispatch Training
November 17th, 18, 19, 20, 21

Evening Classes - 5 pm to 9pm
Location

·

SOUTHEAST OHIO EMS DISTRICT
3240 State Route 160
GaiHpolis, Ohio
740-446-9840
Cost: $175
~interested please call by November 6th, 2006

November 8th • 9-4
Eastern Elementary School

Food , Raffles ~ Music

The P5n, 6th Edition course blends the knowledge, and
skill building information needed for a Basic
Telecommunicatar with the most up-to-date information
on the Technology that is surrounding Ieday's public
safely communications cenler.
The PSTl, 6th Edition Course may be used lor new hire
training. All students successfully passing the final exam
receive valuable APCO lnslitute Certification
demonstraHng completion of a training course that.meets
and exceeds industry accepted national basic training
standards.

l

�,
.'

OHIO

6unbap It me~ ·ienttnel

. 2 sunk~n ships
found in Lake Erie

founder and former chief Poulsen fabricated data .
executive
officer
o,f moved money between
National
Century · accounts to hide shortfalls
Financial Enterprises. He and mi sled the investors
has been on trial on multi- who funded his business
pie
corporate
fraud model.
charges for the past . . Poulsen says he never
month .
committed a crime and
Prosecutors
allege argues fraud was impossi·-

NFL Weekend, Page B4
9utdoors, Page BS .

·3 Ohio firefighters ·hurt_
.in adult bookstore blast

Jarrett said she was a something the library w~s
high school sophomore getting rid of. or my Latin
when she signed out the teacher had given me or if
book 61 years ago at what I just kept it ," she said.
was then Holland Hall
In a note sent with the
School for Girls .
book , she included the
She recently found it check to pay any fines .
while cleaning out her
School offidals said
other home in Rome in
southern Ohio 's Adams they were n~t sure. what
they will do with the $250
County.
because
there is no specif"It was just "there, with
the things I enjoy and my ic overdue-book fund, but
it might be put toward stukids don't," Jarrett said .
"I don 'I know if il' was dent scholarships.

•

ble because the suburban
Columbus company was
monitored by major. auditin£ firm s. law !,lffices and
banks.
Five other National
Century executives were
convicted of corporate
fraud charges in March.
'

•

Sunday, November 2, 2008 :

etlk- U Results

.~:.

·!J,

·K~epin(.~· ,

~

~.

.

' ironton 41, w..W.u 31

.'

~

Point
hammers
Huskies .

Nov. 1·

.,,,,,,.,..._,
,
.
,
I
,
~c.u.on.

,f ,~~ UJ'~~ ··1 Nti110nv1f~·Yo'llc ·

t W!li)&amp;rlll11

,.,. "

... ''.
,. '. ~·· . l.lonlolllll
.'
' . ./

BY RICK .SIMPKINS

Football stats
needed
for AP
.
district, OVP
nominations

l

• GALLIPOLIS ~ With
the end of the football reguI'ar season ·coming this
~eekend, it is time to start
compiling shlts for the
apeoming AP district selection meeting and also the
(.lhio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team.
: All head varsity football
~caches are requested to
!lend individual nominations
(rom their respective teams
- along with regular season
Slats - to Bryan Walters of
Ole sports department · in
~allipolis.
.
- Stats may l;&gt;e faxed to 446"
3008 or emailed to bwalfilrs@mydailytribune .com
: Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
stats' as well as special
teams for any individual
Qominated.

•Stabbing at Toledo college
campus leaves 2 hurt
TOLEDO
(J\P)
The stabbings took place
Officials at the University on the school's Scott Park
of Toledo say two students campus, which is just of
have been injured in a Toledo's main campus .
The two men injured
stabbing on campus.
. University spokesman were stabbed just in~ide
Larry Burns says neither the entrance ·of a classof the studen1s suffered room building . They are
life threatening injuries. ·•'1b'eing treated · at the
Police are looking for four l!niversity of Toledo
suspects who fled the area. Medical Center.
':· '·: •::,, ;

;

: 'i:..\- SAT\ilfoAvl
'
'
' ·,~ If:
•·
'
' . :. ' (Lete~--·
' 'i
:. .
I. .Oblp Pleygtt• ,
.
1'Otlnal Wine~...., 11 Ch1411oothl' ·

Gallia • 4,46-2~ ~ ' .·
Meigs • 992-2155 #'1·
Mason • 675-1333. "~

.

Qb&amp;g ,....,.. ...

co.

' ~·~rt,;

• ' I (.

.

.

'i

,Pt, Pie- 41, Herbon fioovor.15
, ~ · .SIIoOnYIIIe 48, l'oeil 28
: ·" ~Ynt. 28, Chapmanville 13

·Time§-Se~#~J.;
.

- •.

m~ "· caf&lt;lwlt r
i,: ' ,...
,.....

·sUnday,. .
'.

Ocr. 31 .

;

• ·14...0 ltxlngtor&gt; A2, Melgo 14

&amp; Maso.IJ. ·"
informed.
.
.
'·

· .j:RI!)AY,

: f Lot•• 23, t;lublln Jerome 7

•·

Galha, Mea~

'

Bl

6unbap Qtime• -6enttntl

~ore Images from Meigs game, Page 82
friday Night Scoreboard, Page B3 •

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Long overdue library book returned from Ohio

· COLUMBUS (AP) - An
explosion at an adult book
store in Columbus knocked
three firefighters from the
building's entrance to the
street and started a fire that
led to the structure 's coltapse .
· Battarion Chief Doug
Smith says Pat Malone was
·taken to Ohio State
University MediCal Center
with second- and third degree burns on his hands
· and face after the Friday
afternoon blast· on West
Broad Stre~t. He was in
serious but stable condition.

·Inside

Jury ·begins deliberating in $1. 9B Ohio fraud case

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
federal jury in Ohio has
begun deliberating in the
case of a former health
schooner built in 1847 in care financing executive
Huron, Ohio, that sank June accused of masterminding
.9 billion .in corporate
22, 1852 . about 25 miles $1
fraud.
north of Lorain.
Lance Poulsen is the
Investigators · will try to
confirm ihe names by looking for a number assigned
by the government and
carved into a midship beam .
TULSA, Okla. (AP) The d1 scovery by the A library book checked
Cleve land
Underwater out from a school library
Explorers was an~ounced in 1947 has turned up in
Thursday in COnJUnCtiOn Ohio and been returned with the Great Lakes with a $250 check to cover
Historical Society · in overdue fees .
Vermilion .
Librarian Betty Niver
says the book "New Word
Amllysis: Or School
Etymology of English
Derivative Words" was
mailed to Holland Hall
. School by Martha McCabe
Jarrett of Venice, Fla .
Smith says Barb Capuana
and Dan Whiteside were
taken to Mount Carmel
West hospital with concussion-type injuries, scrapes
and bruises.
Firefighters were called to
the Cherry Box. book store
after construction workers
putting in a water line hit a
natural gas line. The explosion knocked down a wall
and blew off part of the
roof.
Smith says the fire is contained and a Columbia Gas
spokesman says the leak has
been stopped.

VERMILION (AP)
Two · 19th cenrury sh•ipwrecks have been found at
the bottom of Lake Erie.
they
. Explorers
say
believe the . first wreckage
belongs to the Riverside, a
133-foot, ·
two-masted
schooner built in 1870 in
Oswego, N.Y., that was lost
Oct. 13, 1893, about 25
miles north of Cleveland.
· A second schooner also
was found . Dive team member Dave VanZandt says
said it could be the
Plymouth, a
101-foot

PageA6

SPORtS CORRESPONDENT

gave the Panthers good field
position at the Mei~s 39,
Cannon took it the distance
on .the first play to increase
the New Lexmgton lead.
Spring added . the extra
points for a 21-0 lead with
9:23 left in the half.
New Lexington drove to
the Meigs 12 late in the fii'St
half, by Cannon fumbled .on
first down and Gabe Hill
pounced on the loose ball for

CLENDENIN, W.Va. Chase Liptrap, Clay Krebs ,
Matt Thompson, Eri&lt;; Veith ,
Kenny Longwell, Cody
Durst, Chase . Daughtery,
Robbie Swift, Casey Hogg,
Derry Osborne and Gabe
Starcher.
Not one of the young men
whose names arpear above
carried the bal even once
for Coach D11ve Darst's
team during the game. Not
one of them even touched
the ball as an offensive
player for the Big Blacks as
they secured their sixth win
of the season, a 41-15 beatdown
of
Cardinal
Conference foe Herbert
Hoover.
So o/,ho are they? .
The first five mentiOned
make up the interior offen-.
sive line starters for the Red
and Black. The next name
is the starting tight end:
The final five were players.
who also saw action in the
"trenches" for · the Big
Blacks tast night.

....... _MIIP.82

PIHH- Point. 82

.

Bryan Wlllterllphoto

Meigs running back Jeremy Smith is wrapped up by New Lexington defenders John Robinson (46) and Kyle Bush (33)
on a third quarter carry during Friday night's Division IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game at Jim Rockwell Stadium in
New Lexington.

New Lexington wraps up Meigs, 42-14
BY

DAVE

HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

NEW LEXINGTON New Lexington's high powered spread offense rolled up
423 total y8flls C&lt;nroute to a
42.-14 win over Meigs in
Division IV State Football
playoff. acti?n Friday night
at New Lexmgton.
Junior quarterback Clint
~annon, wbo rushed for 118
yards in IS carries and four
t(/uchdowns,
led
the

Panthers. Senior fullback
R.J .·Starkey added Ill in 16
tries, as New Le.xington
rolled up 346 yards on the
ground.
.
The Panthers will now
advance to the second round
aitd will piay the Ironton
Tigers. Ironton defeated
Westfall 41-31 Friday
evening at Tank Stadium in
Ironton. The game will take
place on Friday evening at a
location to be decided this
weekend.

The . Panthers took a 7-0
lead when Starkey ran one in
from 34 yiU'ds out with 2:30
left in the period. Kyle
Spring tacked on the extra
points ano to give New
Lexington the 7-0 lead after
the first period. ·
·cannon capped off a 60
yard; seven play drive by
calling his own number from
nine yards out. Spring made
ita 14-0~ead with 10:181eft
in the first half.
After a short Meigs punt

:

False
. alarm means

.

decontamination of students
NEWARK (AP)
Fifteen students and eight
adults were showered by
fire hose and a central
Ohio hi gh school 's music
building was locked down
after a suspicious package
was delivered to the band
room.
And it was all a false
alarm .
A hazardou s materials
un it was sent to Newark
High School Friday afternoon after it was reported .
that an envelope containing white . powder had
been delivered to a band
director. The director and
a secretary who carried .the

envelope both complaineq
of itching.
But Licking County
Emergency Management
Agency Director Jeff
Walker says there never
was any powder. He says
the envelope held a photocopy of a textbook page
on World War I. '
U.S. Postal Inspector
Alejandro Almaguer says
there was an initial miscommunication .
The. students and adults.
in the building were quarantined and eventually
given decontamination
showers outdoors.

•

.

GOALS

AEP (NYSE) - 32.63
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 42
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 21.98
Big Lots (NYSE) - 24.43
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.90
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 22.47
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 12.57
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.27
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 1.10
City Holding . ·(NASDAQ)
41 .84
Collins (NYSE) - 37.13
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.04
US Bank (NYSE) - 29.81
Gannett (NYSE) - 11
General Electric (NYSE)
19.51
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
24.48
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.25
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.46
l:lmlted Brands (NYSE)
11.118
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 59.94

carreat llllllf.

IIICI'e&amp;W 1n'lillblllty !l patnJI and blvatlptM 1111111 by
rullcallllg ennui flmdlng, _, well as, seeklag fede:al
faadblg to 0011nter 1 ilJ'OWing drug problem aad a1m11181
Ktni!y.

Create wurttlag relllllaaslllps with otber law eaforcement
0011aty deplll'tmeats, · 111d mental I baltllcare
fadlltlel to lllet1Me 111 uti dllt owercrowdlng problem Ia oar
jaiL
.
ll(lelldei

60s.

Local Stocks

FREE SHIPPING

• flflfd1 0 BILIT V - ATT. CO M/ WI REL ESS- VISI'1 A :,fOill:

-------------- _
' 11 EM.ii in 51., S((•. 6, t740128a-1606
+The /.one. 73 f' Huron S1.. iJ 41)&lt; 166-I'J(tiJ6

MW I ot In"""
,.... tlottmnlci 106 N lncl A~&gt;e.
1I.W) '192-l Sll

•

.Open Sund·JY
+ High Speed h\lerne1 Sold He~

......., ,.,..,...

JNliY• II Sprlqfteld Towaablp wtUI bl1
wlfl. Dltm1 two IOU1 Mlclllll I'ICI Ktbl1, ud

Seek state aad federal falldl~£: ladllde GIIU. C011nty Ia a
-lt,eallem Olllo Dna &amp; C
Tlllt Force.

•.leadership/ot Positive ehange
"As your fheriff I wUl use my 20 years in law enforceTMnt as a supervisor and
a trainer to mllh sure thtll everyone .in our community has the highest quality
Public Su,fety Protection.

..• '

.

Working together we can nroJw our community
a sqfer pl4ce for everyone."
.

~
~

.

-Joe Browning
."

\)

I believe bt falrD• ..
Treatbtg aD persons fairly and Impartially.

lac- tnlnlnl oa topics IKiadlag Crl8ls lateneatloll
Team (Crf), to rccopla proiJiems Ia our - • l t y ud
llelp our Depades better pnltect 011r C.aty.

..

+tacbon Commu,nicalion!; ( omt'(hOO

I believe bt _l'llpect ••
Treatbtg all people with tolerance and dignity
while behaving professionally at all times.

Work wldl ov l)!om:lniaHrs to faad lrillllft a fall senlce
jllll to deter aime •d rebllllllltafe aft'tlldm. The current
QllaD • IIIIC worllag.' We aeed to raardl al anlllllble
fandln1 n~~~~~~n:es, llldadlll1 slate ud federal falldlllg'ud
pilllll, 110 tile tu payers do not 111M tile ftni"'W bardal.

ns~

w•

I believe in llltepity ••
Holdbtg oursel'ftS accountable to the highest
8tandard5 ol moral and ethical conduct.

Wurk with our Coamluloaen on flulcllllilelltll l8sna 111da
· · .; jub tuk ·1 easJp-11 (ul.... control all!, ud
eawronmentalud property complalats dowtag more time
tur Deputlet to combat aim.

•
ATIT It the ofllc:t.l
t' ... SF
of Ohio State AtiiiMica.
.
TOJCt ·osu- to 12545 to s1gn up to&lt; bfwldng ,_spec~~~~ ll!ld ecW!M lluc:llljt- sent sllatght to 'fO'X phonol
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19
BBT (NYSE) - 35.84
Peoples (NASDAQ) - t9.1 5
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.0t
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.44
Rockwell (NYSE) - 27.67
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
4.15
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.10
Sears Holding (NASDAQ}
57.74
Wai-Mart (kYSE) - 55.81
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.62
WesBanco (NYSE} - 26.41
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.07
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transacUono for Oct. 31, 2008,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
In Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

• Tough on crime
.
• Strong on crime prevention
.
• Committed to keepbtg criminals behind bars.
• Dedicated to keeping our elderly safe and our
. kids off drugs

Use IIIJ' kaowled~t ucl eJpllrlellce to Imp owe -me to tile
dtbeas by dewloplng efl'edhoe.ealotce-t opllolls fur our

clear. Highs in the lower
70s. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thursday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper ·
Thursday night and
cloudy
Friday: .. Mostly
. with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Lows around 50.
Highs in the upper 50s.

.Joe Browpjng js:

for the Gallia County Sheriff's Office

Local Weather . ·
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s,
Southeast winds around 5
mph.
.
Sunday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
· 4os. Southeast winds 5 to 10
mph .
Monday
through
Wednesday night ...Mostly

~.browning4sheriff.cot'l"l
.

•

---.:.........

'
-------

�,
.'

OHIO

6unbap It me~ ·ienttnel

. 2 sunk~n ships
found in Lake Erie

founder and former chief Poulsen fabricated data .
executive
officer
o,f moved money between
National
Century · accounts to hide shortfalls
Financial Enterprises. He and mi sled the investors
has been on trial on multi- who funded his business
pie
corporate
fraud model.
charges for the past . . Poulsen says he never
month .
committed a crime and
Prosecutors
allege argues fraud was impossi·-

NFL Weekend, Page B4
9utdoors, Page BS .

·3 Ohio firefighters ·hurt_
.in adult bookstore blast

Jarrett said she was a something the library w~s
high school sophomore getting rid of. or my Latin
when she signed out the teacher had given me or if
book 61 years ago at what I just kept it ," she said.
was then Holland Hall
In a note sent with the
School for Girls .
book , she included the
She recently found it check to pay any fines .
while cleaning out her
School offidals said
other home in Rome in
southern Ohio 's Adams they were n~t sure. what
they will do with the $250
County.
because
there is no specif"It was just "there, with
the things I enjoy and my ic overdue-book fund, but
it might be put toward stukids don't," Jarrett said .
"I don 'I know if il' was dent scholarships.

•

ble because the suburban
Columbus company was
monitored by major. auditin£ firm s. law !,lffices and
banks.
Five other National
Century executives were
convicted of corporate
fraud charges in March.
'

•

Sunday, November 2, 2008 :

etlk- U Results

.~:.

·!J,

·K~epin(.~· ,

~

~.

.

' ironton 41, w..W.u 31

.'

~

Point
hammers
Huskies .

Nov. 1·

.,,,,,,.,..._,
,
.
,
I
,
~c.u.on.

,f ,~~ UJ'~~ ··1 Nti110nv1f~·Yo'llc ·

t W!li)&amp;rlll11

,.,. "

... ''.
,. '. ~·· . l.lonlolllll
.'
' . ./

BY RICK .SIMPKINS

Football stats
needed
for AP
.
district, OVP
nominations

l

• GALLIPOLIS ~ With
the end of the football reguI'ar season ·coming this
~eekend, it is time to start
compiling shlts for the
apeoming AP district selection meeting and also the
(.lhio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team.
: All head varsity football
~caches are requested to
!lend individual nominations
(rom their respective teams
- along with regular season
Slats - to Bryan Walters of
Ole sports department · in
~allipolis.
.
- Stats may l;&gt;e faxed to 446"
3008 or emailed to bwalfilrs@mydailytribune .com
: Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
stats' as well as special
teams for any individual
Qominated.

•Stabbing at Toledo college
campus leaves 2 hurt
TOLEDO
(J\P)
The stabbings took place
Officials at the University on the school's Scott Park
of Toledo say two students campus, which is just of
have been injured in a Toledo's main campus .
The two men injured
stabbing on campus.
. University spokesman were stabbed just in~ide
Larry Burns says neither the entrance ·of a classof the studen1s suffered room building . They are
life threatening injuries. ·•'1b'eing treated · at the
Police are looking for four l!niversity of Toledo
suspects who fled the area. Medical Center.
':· '·: •::,, ;

;

: 'i:..\- SAT\ilfoAvl
'
'
' ·,~ If:
•·
'
' . :. ' (Lete~--·
' 'i
:. .
I. .Oblp Pleygtt• ,
.
1'Otlnal Wine~...., 11 Ch1411oothl' ·

Gallia • 4,46-2~ ~ ' .·
Meigs • 992-2155 #'1·
Mason • 675-1333. "~

.

Qb&amp;g ,....,.. ...

co.

' ~·~rt,;

• ' I (.

.

.

'i

,Pt, Pie- 41, Herbon fioovor.15
, ~ · .SIIoOnYIIIe 48, l'oeil 28
: ·" ~Ynt. 28, Chapmanville 13

·Time§-Se~#~J.;
.

- •.

m~ "· caf&lt;lwlt r
i,: ' ,...
,.....

·sUnday,. .
'.

Ocr. 31 .

;

• ·14...0 ltxlngtor&gt; A2, Melgo 14

&amp; Maso.IJ. ·"
informed.
.
.
'·

· .j:RI!)AY,

: f Lot•• 23, t;lublln Jerome 7

•·

Galha, Mea~

'

Bl

6unbap Qtime• -6enttntl

~ore Images from Meigs game, Page 82
friday Night Scoreboard, Page B3 •

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Long overdue library book returned from Ohio

· COLUMBUS (AP) - An
explosion at an adult book
store in Columbus knocked
three firefighters from the
building's entrance to the
street and started a fire that
led to the structure 's coltapse .
· Battarion Chief Doug
Smith says Pat Malone was
·taken to Ohio State
University MediCal Center
with second- and third degree burns on his hands
· and face after the Friday
afternoon blast· on West
Broad Stre~t. He was in
serious but stable condition.

·Inside

Jury ·begins deliberating in $1. 9B Ohio fraud case

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
federal jury in Ohio has
begun deliberating in the
case of a former health
schooner built in 1847 in care financing executive
Huron, Ohio, that sank June accused of masterminding
.9 billion .in corporate
22, 1852 . about 25 miles $1
fraud.
north of Lorain.
Lance Poulsen is the
Investigators · will try to
confirm ihe names by looking for a number assigned
by the government and
carved into a midship beam .
TULSA, Okla. (AP) The d1 scovery by the A library book checked
Cleve land
Underwater out from a school library
Explorers was an~ounced in 1947 has turned up in
Thursday in COnJUnCtiOn Ohio and been returned with the Great Lakes with a $250 check to cover
Historical Society · in overdue fees .
Vermilion .
Librarian Betty Niver
says the book "New Word
Amllysis: Or School
Etymology of English
Derivative Words" was
mailed to Holland Hall
. School by Martha McCabe
Jarrett of Venice, Fla .
Smith says Barb Capuana
and Dan Whiteside were
taken to Mount Carmel
West hospital with concussion-type injuries, scrapes
and bruises.
Firefighters were called to
the Cherry Box. book store
after construction workers
putting in a water line hit a
natural gas line. The explosion knocked down a wall
and blew off part of the
roof.
Smith says the fire is contained and a Columbia Gas
spokesman says the leak has
been stopped.

VERMILION (AP)
Two · 19th cenrury sh•ipwrecks have been found at
the bottom of Lake Erie.
they
. Explorers
say
believe the . first wreckage
belongs to the Riverside, a
133-foot, ·
two-masted
schooner built in 1870 in
Oswego, N.Y., that was lost
Oct. 13, 1893, about 25
miles north of Cleveland.
· A second schooner also
was found . Dive team member Dave VanZandt says
said it could be the
Plymouth, a
101-foot

PageA6

SPORtS CORRESPONDENT

gave the Panthers good field
position at the Mei~s 39,
Cannon took it the distance
on .the first play to increase
the New Lexmgton lead.
Spring added . the extra
points for a 21-0 lead with
9:23 left in the half.
New Lexington drove to
the Meigs 12 late in the fii'St
half, by Cannon fumbled .on
first down and Gabe Hill
pounced on the loose ball for

CLENDENIN, W.Va. Chase Liptrap, Clay Krebs ,
Matt Thompson, Eri&lt;; Veith ,
Kenny Longwell, Cody
Durst, Chase . Daughtery,
Robbie Swift, Casey Hogg,
Derry Osborne and Gabe
Starcher.
Not one of the young men
whose names arpear above
carried the bal even once
for Coach D11ve Darst's
team during the game. Not
one of them even touched
the ball as an offensive
player for the Big Blacks as
they secured their sixth win
of the season, a 41-15 beatdown
of
Cardinal
Conference foe Herbert
Hoover.
So o/,ho are they? .
The first five mentiOned
make up the interior offen-.
sive line starters for the Red
and Black. The next name
is the starting tight end:
The final five were players.
who also saw action in the
"trenches" for · the Big
Blacks tast night.

....... _MIIP.82

PIHH- Point. 82

.

Bryan Wlllterllphoto

Meigs running back Jeremy Smith is wrapped up by New Lexington defenders John Robinson (46) and Kyle Bush (33)
on a third quarter carry during Friday night's Division IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game at Jim Rockwell Stadium in
New Lexington.

New Lexington wraps up Meigs, 42-14
BY

DAVE

HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

NEW LEXINGTON New Lexington's high powered spread offense rolled up
423 total y8flls C&lt;nroute to a
42.-14 win over Meigs in
Division IV State Football
playoff. acti?n Friday night
at New Lexmgton.
Junior quarterback Clint
~annon, wbo rushed for 118
yards in IS carries and four
t(/uchdowns,
led
the

Panthers. Senior fullback
R.J .·Starkey added Ill in 16
tries, as New Le.xington
rolled up 346 yards on the
ground.
.
The Panthers will now
advance to the second round
aitd will piay the Ironton
Tigers. Ironton defeated
Westfall 41-31 Friday
evening at Tank Stadium in
Ironton. The game will take
place on Friday evening at a
location to be decided this
weekend.

The . Panthers took a 7-0
lead when Starkey ran one in
from 34 yiU'ds out with 2:30
left in the period. Kyle
Spring tacked on the extra
points ano to give New
Lexington the 7-0 lead after
the first period. ·
·cannon capped off a 60
yard; seven play drive by
calling his own number from
nine yards out. Spring made
ita 14-0~ead with 10:181eft
in the first half.
After a short Meigs punt

:

False
. alarm means

.

decontamination of students
NEWARK (AP)
Fifteen students and eight
adults were showered by
fire hose and a central
Ohio hi gh school 's music
building was locked down
after a suspicious package
was delivered to the band
room.
And it was all a false
alarm .
A hazardou s materials
un it was sent to Newark
High School Friday afternoon after it was reported .
that an envelope containing white . powder had
been delivered to a band
director. The director and
a secretary who carried .the

envelope both complaineq
of itching.
But Licking County
Emergency Management
Agency Director Jeff
Walker says there never
was any powder. He says
the envelope held a photocopy of a textbook page
on World War I. '
U.S. Postal Inspector
Alejandro Almaguer says
there was an initial miscommunication .
The. students and adults.
in the building were quarantined and eventually
given decontamination
showers outdoors.

•

.

GOALS

AEP (NYSE) - 32.63
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 42
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 21.98
Big Lots (NYSE) - 24.43
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.90
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 22.47
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 12.57
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.27
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 1.10
City Holding . ·(NASDAQ)
41 .84
Collins (NYSE) - 37.13
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.04
US Bank (NYSE) - 29.81
Gannett (NYSE) - 11
General Electric (NYSE)
19.51
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
24.48
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.25
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.46
l:lmlted Brands (NYSE)
11.118
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 59.94

carreat llllllf.

IIICI'e&amp;W 1n'lillblllty !l patnJI and blvatlptM 1111111 by
rullcallllg ennui flmdlng, _, well as, seeklag fede:al
faadblg to 0011nter 1 ilJ'OWing drug problem aad a1m11181
Ktni!y.

Create wurttlag relllllaaslllps with otber law eaforcement
0011aty deplll'tmeats, · 111d mental I baltllcare
fadlltlel to lllet1Me 111 uti dllt owercrowdlng problem Ia oar
jaiL
.
ll(lelldei

60s.

Local Stocks

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• flflfd1 0 BILIT V - ATT. CO M/ WI REL ESS- VISI'1 A :,fOill:

-------------- _
' 11 EM.ii in 51., S((•. 6, t740128a-1606
+The /.one. 73 f' Huron S1.. iJ 41)&lt; 166-I'J(tiJ6

MW I ot In"""
,.... tlottmnlci 106 N lncl A~&gt;e.
1I.W) '192-l Sll

•

.Open Sund·JY
+ High Speed h\lerne1 Sold He~

......., ,.,..,...

JNliY• II Sprlqfteld Towaablp wtUI bl1
wlfl. Dltm1 two IOU1 Mlclllll I'ICI Ktbl1, ud

Seek state aad federal falldl~£: ladllde GIIU. C011nty Ia a
-lt,eallem Olllo Dna &amp; C
Tlllt Force.

•.leadership/ot Positive ehange
"As your fheriff I wUl use my 20 years in law enforceTMnt as a supervisor and
a trainer to mllh sure thtll everyone .in our community has the highest quality
Public Su,fety Protection.

..• '

.

Working together we can nroJw our community
a sqfer pl4ce for everyone."
.

~
~

.

-Joe Browning
."

\)

I believe bt falrD• ..
Treatbtg aD persons fairly and Impartially.

lac- tnlnlnl oa topics IKiadlag Crl8ls lateneatloll
Team (Crf), to rccopla proiJiems Ia our - • l t y ud
llelp our Depades better pnltect 011r C.aty.

..

+tacbon Commu,nicalion!; ( omt'(hOO

I believe bt _l'llpect ••
Treatbtg all people with tolerance and dignity
while behaving professionally at all times.

Work wldl ov l)!om:lniaHrs to faad lrillllft a fall senlce
jllll to deter aime •d rebllllllltafe aft'tlldm. The current
QllaD • IIIIC worllag.' We aeed to raardl al anlllllble
fandln1 n~~~~~~n:es, llldadlll1 slate ud federal falldlllg'ud
pilllll, 110 tile tu payers do not 111M tile ftni"'W bardal.

ns~

w•

I believe in llltepity ••
Holdbtg oursel'ftS accountable to the highest
8tandard5 ol moral and ethical conduct.

Wurk with our Coamluloaen on flulcllllilelltll l8sna 111da
· · .; jub tuk ·1 easJp-11 (ul.... control all!, ud
eawronmentalud property complalats dowtag more time
tur Deputlet to combat aim.

•
ATIT It the ofllc:t.l
t' ... SF
of Ohio State AtiiiMica.
.
TOJCt ·osu- to 12545 to s1gn up to&lt; bfwldng ,_spec~~~~ ll!ld ecW!M lluc:llljt- sent sllatght to 'fO'X phonol
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19
BBT (NYSE) - 35.84
Peoples (NASDAQ) - t9.1 5
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.0t
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.44
Rockwell (NYSE) - 27.67
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
4.15
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.10
Sears Holding (NASDAQ}
57.74
Wai-Mart (kYSE) - 55.81
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.62
WesBanco (NYSE} - 26.41
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.07
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transacUono for Oct. 31, 2008,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
In Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

• Tough on crime
.
• Strong on crime prevention
.
• Committed to keepbtg criminals behind bars.
• Dedicated to keeping our elderly safe and our
. kids off drugs

Use IIIJ' kaowled~t ucl eJpllrlellce to Imp owe -me to tile
dtbeas by dewloplng efl'edhoe.ealotce-t opllolls fur our

clear. Highs in the lower
70s. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thursday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper ·
Thursday night and
cloudy
Friday: .. Mostly
. with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Lows around 50.
Highs in the upper 50s.

.Joe Browpjng js:

for the Gallia County Sheriff's Office

Local Weather . ·
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s,
Southeast winds around 5
mph.
.
Sunday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
· 4os. Southeast winds 5 to 10
mph .
Monday
through
Wednesday night ...Mostly

~.browning4sheriff.cot'l"l
.

•

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Sunday, November 2,

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiJipolis

2008

. --- ... -

...

I'

ScoREBOARD

iunbap limes ·itntinel

Photos by Bryan Walters·

..

PREP FOOTBALL

'

Friday'S" Boxscores

'

:New Lexington 42, Mliga 14
&lt;Meigs
;New Le•

0 0 7 7 7 t4 14 7 -

· ~··~

:comp-att-int
·fumbles-lost
.Penahie:s-yards

.·

~embers of the Meigs band ~rform following
Division IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game

the Marauders' final score during the fourth .quarter of Friday night's
against New.Lexington at Jil"!l Rockwell Stadium in New Lexington .

Meigs running back Gabe Hill (20) delivers a stiff arm to
New Lexington defender Drew Brown (14) during a fourth
quarter run Friday night at Jim Rockwell Stadium.

; :: i!-244 :

:fl3.

,· ~ , ~ . ;..

._.teo

' · · ·~ ··· · , · ·3t1 ..~
' ' (' ·""' ·- ..311 , . .22.

..., ..J-I .. ;.t73

. o3o14

:

41·346

77
423 .
7-tO.()
2· t

• 1. .

Benton (10.0); (6) Archbold .(8·2) at (3)
Clevetand
Liberty Cenler (9-l); (5) Bucyrus Wyntord '
Cincinnati
(1Q.O) at (4) Sherwood Fairview (9· t l

.284
•.278
••318

.i

!

Rosecrans 7
"Malvflrn 49, Bridgeport 14
Shi!dyslde 14, BeallSville 3
DIYIIIOR 6 Region 24

Mechanicsburg 42, Hamilton New
Miami 0
Sidney Lehman 42, Ansonia 7,
Sprin2. Calh . Cent 28, F»ortsmouth
I· Sciotoville 19

Point Pleasant 41,
Herbert Hoover 15
0 21 13 7 7 o 0 8 -

Rushes-yards ·
Passing yards
41 Total yards
15 Comp-att-int
Fumbles lost
I Penalties-yards
i

9
21-81
155
236 '
8-23-3
0
7·53

I

Mayfield 27, Kent Roosevelt 7 ·
Tallmadge 24, Parma _
Padua ~7

Scoring oummary
Firat Quarter
;HH-James Miller 67 pass from
;.
Individual Statlatlco
.Palrick Ryan (Josh Armstrong kick) · Rushing: PP-Aiten Wasonga 28·
·10:35
270, Derek Mitchett· 8·92 , Nathan
:.
Second Quarter
Roberts 9·37, Tyler Austin 4· 16,
·PP-AIIen Wasonga 4 run (kick
JaWann Williams 3-10, Chris
:blocked) 9:03
Blankei!Shlp 4-6, Eric Roberts 1·(·
PP-Wasonga 1 run (Wasonga
1), B.J. Lloyd 2-(-16).
HH-Robbie Kidd 2;46, ·Matthew
:pass from B.J. Lloyd) 3:25
.PP-Wasonga 13 run (Justin
Rector 5-32, Dusti n Belcher 6-4,
yYeaver kick)! :32
Patrick Ryan 8·( -1 ).
•
Third Quortor
Pautng: PP-B.J. Lloyd 2-5-0 11.
·PP-Wasonga 65 run (Weaver
HH-Patrlck Ryan 8·23-3 155.
:kick) t0:36
RKelvtng: PP-Oerek M~chell 1·
·PP-Nathan Roberts 5 rlln (kick
7, Allen Wasonga t-4.
:blocked)6:26
H~amas Miller 2·87, Josh Hart
2·40, · Michllel Keiffer 1-30, Josh
Fourth Ouortor
.PP-Oerek Mitchell 35 run (!Neaver Jordan 2·15, Robbie Kldd 1-3.
kick) 11 :50
HH-Michael Keiffer 30 pass from · ·
OHIO St;QBES
"Ryan (Keiffer pasS ,trom Ryan) 1:27
Flldly'o ScorM
pp . HH
,PREP FOCff(IALl

Dlvloton 2 Region 6

Quartertlnel
lexington 28 , lodi Cloverleaf 10
Medina Highland 35, Avon L.ake 23 •
Powell Olentangy Liberty 34, Tol. Cent.

Dlvlalan ,_"-elan I ·
· · OYIII'terfin.l

7

Cin. Anderson 55. Trenton Edgewood

Carolina

George Washington 42, Woodrow

2): '6) Macedonia Nordonla (7-3) at (3)
Brunswick (9-1); (5) Amherst Steele (8·2)
et (4) Twinsburg (8·2)

Magnolia 42, Oak Glen 23

1

Field

(8·2) at

PF
196
194
154

-

ttS
t45
ta-t
t31
PA

PA '
t50.

112 201
171 231i

Manday'• Gwne

"'

Pittsburgh at Washington, 8:30p.m. • .

Thurtdly'l Game

Denver at Cleveland, 8:15 p.m.

•

C:::h....,roi••.L aulck ..

•

Cur...,.nt- piU•

,...ntlac_..

·

f1••

.nod•l• Y*Oor•

- 6o.ooo
•

~MC:

au~.-- •

Tenn88Me at Qh~go . 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Detroit, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Atlanta. 1 p.m.
Buffalo at New England. 1 p.m.
Battimore at Houston , 1:01 p.m.

rnfl•• or ••••

M•••• Mechonic;:~q_l and
app•orqne.e quollry
atondorcl•
·

--

lncfianapolls at Pittsburgh, 4:15p.m. ,
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
N.Y. Giants. at Philadelphia, 8: 15p.m. ~
Open: Dellae, Weei'Hngtan, Tampa SSJ

BahlmOre'

· ·
· •
. Mondoy, - - 10
san Francisco at Arlzc:ma, 8:30 p.pt -.

D

po-•r

••~..-l~g,

. •u•p•n.a lan,. brak•a
fro.-n d•n••• ~·~e•
.-.oaonabl• ,...,_ from teara,.

...

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_.........
-·--

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from PageBl
::Meigs to end the threat and
; the two teams went into the
; locker room with the home
•team on top 2 1-0.
; · Meigs took the second
:half kickoff and put togeth;er a nine play, 67-yard drive
::to cut into the Panther lead.
:Jacob Well hit Jeremy
;:Smith in the right corner of
' the end zone on fourth and
goal from the three fo r the
•score. Mason Metts added
:the extra points to cut the
:Panther lead to 21-7 with
::S:02 left in the period .
::Smith set up the score with
; 11 24 yard run to the Panther
::15-yard line .
.
~ But New Lexington came
~right back and Cannon
:capped off a nine play-73
~~~lid drive by di ving over
·;from a . yard out. Brett
i;Wyc,inski had a 39-yard run
; to set up the score to the
'Meigs 10-yard line.
: The Panthers all but
:ended 111lY hopes for Meigs
::when John Robins. recov.;ered a Marauder fumble at
' maroon ·and · gQld 32. On

i

.

~

.

.·

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'

.

from Page Bl ··

•

•Meigs head coach Mike Chancey talks to his players during a timeout in Friday night's
:pivision IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game against New Lexington at Jim Rockwell
: ~tadium in New Lexington.
·
·

Meigs

Point.-·~,.
.

. f

The Point. Pleasant Big
Blacks rushed for. 414 yards
last night and averaged just
first down 'Cannon hooked whole game. I love them over 7 yards per carry en
up with Wyci nski lor a 32 all, and I'm p_rou~ of them route to a methodical 4[-15
yard scori ng pa" Spri ng and the1r dedicallon to the · win over Herbert Hoover
tacked on the extra points Meigs football program."
Friday night.
for a 35-7 New Lexin~ton
Cannon led all rushers
It would be an under· lead . which is the
ii with 118 yards in 15 tries ; statement to sa~ that Point's
stood headi ng into the Starkey added 111 in 16.. offense could riqt have put
to unh period.
Cannon was seven of I0 in . 'up over 400 yar'ds of fi.\Sh·
Cannon
;,cored
the the air for 77 yards, ing without the big boys up
. Panthers fin al six pointer of Wycinski caught three for front. It wasn't just Friday
the night Oil the first play of . 47, and Matt Etherly two night either. These . guys
the fo urth period on a on~ ­ for 15 ·
have been doing that alrsea. yard keeper: Spring closed
Jere!lly ~mith led Meigs son. While you are at it~
out the Panther scoring by with 22 carries for 91 tough add the name of· Nathan
making it ~ ix for six on yards; Gabe Hill added Roberts to the list. He is the
extra points and a 42-7 four carr1es for 25 yards.· fullback who · led the way
Panther lead. The score was Well was II of 24 for 126 . for running backs Allen
set up whe n Kyle Bu sh yards, Clay Bolin caught Wasonga
and . Derek
returned a Jacob Well punt fi ve passes for 51 yards, Mitchell as they' put u~ big
71 yards, before Well made Gabe .Hill and Cameron
a touchdown saving tackle. Bolin each had one for 15, numbers against the orne
Meigs closed out the Smith one for eight and standing Huskies,
scoring when Well kept in ·. Caleb Davis one for four.
Wasonga enjoyed another
from three yards out , Metts
Seniors playing thelr .big night to add to his big
tacked on the extra points to final game m the maroon year. The speedy sorhomake the final score 42• 14 . and gold were Clay Bolin, more carried the bal 28
Well 's run capped off a 15 Gabe.
Hill ,
Brandon times for 270 yarl!s and
play 67 yard drive.
Han nin g, Cory Hutton , scored four touchdowns .
" I would like to thanks Maso n Metts. Crockett Mitchell nearly topped the
these kids for all their hard Crow and Ernie Welch . The I00 yard mark with 92
work," Mike Chancev said seven helped lead the yards on just eight carries
after th e contest . ·''The Marauders to the school 's and a touchdown . Roberts
seniors provided great lead- first
football
playoff ·also tallied a touchdown ,
ership , we have nothing to appearance in the schools while picking up 37 yards
be ashamed about. We got 40-year history. They have on nine carries.
beat by a· reall y good team started a new tradition at
The Big Blacks, who suftonight. But th~ kids hung . Meigs High School for oth- fered a heartbreaking loss
in, and played hard ' the ers to follow.
the last time out two weeks

way

- -\! - -

ago at Ravenswood. began .
this game like they began
and ended their last one watching the other team
move the football down
field and score. Hoover
neect.ed just a 'minute and
twenty seconds and three
plays to cover 73 yards on
·lis initial possession of the
game to grab the early lead .
Patrick Ryan found James
Miller behind the Point secondary and connected with
the senior split end for a 67, yard tol)chdo\)ln pass. Josh
Armstrong's kick made it 70 before roost people had
settled in their seats.
. It took the locals a little
while to get untracked
offensively, · as they were
forced to punt on their first
two possessions. But, they
finally ~ave their loyal fans
somethmg to cheer about on
their third.possession of the
contest. After forcing a
· Husky pUnt from deep in
their own territory. the Big
' Blacks took over at the
Herbert Hoover 45 yard
line. It took the locals eight
plays to cover the necessary
yardage to get their first
touchdown of the game.
Wasonga picked up 34 of
those yards , . including the
final four when he scored
his first touchdown of the
night. Justin Weaver 's PAT
was blocked, however, and
·Hoover clung to a 7-6 lead.
After the two teams traded punts , Eric Veith set up
· the Big Blacks' 'next score

when he intercepted a
Patrick Ryan · pass and
returned it to the Huskie 21
yard line. It took the locals
just two plays to reach paydirt - with Wasonga rushing once to the one yard line
and then punching it over
from there on the next pla;Y
to give the Big Blacks thm
first lead of ·the night.
Qu~rterback B .J . Lloyd then
connected with Wasonga on
the two-point conversion
pass to make it 14-7.
. .
Point's defense forced a
three and out on the next
Hoover possession and
Derek Mitchell stepped up
big on the .ensuing punt . He ·
took the ball from tbe
Blacks' 45 yard line all the
way down to the Huskie 13.
One play later, Wasonga
had h1s third touchdown of
the eveninj!, and after
Weaver's pomt after kick, it
was a-21 -7 ball game.
In the second half that
trend
continued
witlt
Wasonga adding another
touchdown run of 65 yards
while Roberts and Mitchell
tacked on a sco.re apiece' tq
give the Big Blacks a 41-7
lead early in the fourth
quarter.
- Herbert Hoover tacked on
its final score of the night
with a little over a minute
left in the game when Ryan
found Michael Keiffer oo a
30-yard strike and Keiffer
then 'cattght the two·poil\t
con\'ersion throw to se~l tile
seating at 41-15.

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Meigs' defense tries to block a kick during Friday night's Division IV, Region 15 quarterfl·
nal playoff game against
New Lexington at Jim Rockwell. Stadium
in New Lexington .
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· Carolina at Oakland, 4:05p.m.

COVIIR • .V.Nf IHING.
••••ring

•Y•'•'"•

(
.,

Saath Qt Miami, 1 p .m .
St LOula II N.Y. Jell , 1 p.m.

C•rl'ified Ua•d Vehicle.
VIIHICUa 'f'Ha'W' CAN TllUaT..

15~
16~

114 212

2 5 0 .286

-O""N
HICL

..,..., . wc::»rries_

PA' ,

Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m. ·
Houston at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
N.Y. JetS at Buffalo. 1 p.m.
Arizona at St. Louis. 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Cleveland , 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 1 p.m .
Jacksonville at Cincinnati. 1 p.m.
Miami at Denver, 4 :05 p.m.
Dallas at NY Giants, 4:15p.m.
Atlanta at Oakland, 4 :15p.m.
. ·Philadelphia at Seattle , 4:15p.m.
New England at Indianapolis, 8:15 P-"10p•n : S'!ln ·Diego, Carolina, N~
Orleans, San .Francisco
1:

Spnng Valley 20. Hurricane 19
Sl. Marys 54, Doddridge County 13
Summers County 46, Richwood 14
Tolsio 24. Wlnfiokl21
Tucl&lt;er CoUnly '52, l'etersburv,B
Tug Valley 50. WilliamSon 18
Tygarts Valley 26. Hundred 14

c

..

107

99

PF PA '• ·
· W.L T !=Jet
4 3 0. .571 , 200 171
2 '5 0 .286 t44 taJ

St. Louis

ROberl C. Byrd 21, L.awis County 18

Western Brown 21
at (31 Hubbard (8·2); (51 Chagnn Falls (7Dlvlolon 4 Roglon 13
3) at (4) \~lungs. Uberty (8·2)
•
Ootrlalllnot
· Rogton 10
Massillon Tuslaw ,28, leavittsburg . (8i Oe1ianco(B-2) ol (1) Avon (10-Q); (7)
laBrae 0 ·
Sunbury Big waJnut (&amp;-2) al' (2) Clyde (9Perry 41, WOosterTrlway 7
1); '(61 St. Marys Memo&lt;lal (8-2) al (3j
Steubenville 61, Coshocton 29
TiPP ity Tippecanoe (9·11; (5) Tiltln

~Cer&amp;l.fted
us•o -v.. .1c:a..s

224

San Ffancisco2 ·6 0 . 250:

Cuyahoga Fans Walsh JeslJit (7-2): {7) .. Scott 25. Sherman 13
Chardon Notre Dame Cathedral-latin (5Slssonvi!Je 48, Poca 28
5) at (2) Aurora (8·2) : (6) Ravenna (7·3) 1 South Harrison 28. Lincoln 21

111iiiiiii11

PF
H3

Sunday'• Game•

Man 14, Buffalo 6
Martinsburg 36. Musselman 7
Matewan 57, Mount View 12
Midland Trall37, Valley Fayette 12
Moorefietd 22, Pendleton County 14 .
Morgantown 27, University 14
Mount Hope 58, Meadow Bridge 23

(t )

4 3 0 .571
3 4 0 .429
0 7 0 .000

Seattle

(8) Cin. Archbishop Moe~er (6-4) at {1)
F»aden City 22 , Van~wetzel14
Cin. Colerain (9·1 )~ (7) Kettering Fairmont
Parkersburg 24,' Ripley 23
(7·3) at (2) Clayton Northmont (9-1) ; (8)
Pkrkersburg'South 22 , East F8l[mont 13
Centerville (7--3) at (3) Cln. Eldtr (9--1); · Pocahonta&amp;County.158,WebaterCounty
{5) Cln. W()(Mjwarfl (1Qo.O) at 11(4) HW.r • 13
•
Hte. Wl.yne (7~3)
Polnl Pleuant 41, Herbert Hoover 15
•IVISION Ill
Preston 35, Buekhannon-Upshur 20
Region a
Ravenswood 49. logan 20
Mogadore

Green Bay

, ArizOna

l No"h Marton ~. El~ns 35, OT
1
1

4 3 0 .571

·I

Wilson 12

Gilbert 34, Wlrt County 19
Grafton M, liberty Harrison 7
Greenbrier East 24, Princeton 17
Hampshire 14, Washington 13
Huntington 35, Nitro 20
Jetferson 33, Greencastle, Pa. 27
Keyser 61 , Frankfort a
Madonna 43, Bishop Donahue 0

Chicago
Detroit

'

at (2)' Strongsville (9-1) ; (6) Willoughby

(8)

1:M 11(J '
115 t 23
tOol 2t7

I .6 0 .143

Minne sota

Capital 37, Riverside 3
Easl Hardy 42, Cameron '4 1
F~tteville 48, Greer]brier West 21

Cin. Winton Woods 58, Day. Dunbar 12
Kings Mil~ Ki~s 27, Cin. Turpiri 24
New Carlisle Tec~seh 44, MI. Orab

165 tt

t 70 120
153 154
216 19&amp;

Calhoun County 46, Braxton County 13

(4)

PAJ

PF

Tampa Bay 5 3 0 .625
Atlanla
4 3 0 .571
Friday's Score•
New Orlean s 4 4 0 .500
PREP FOOTBALL
North
Ber~a ley Springs 10, Manassas Park·, ·
WLTPct

Region 1 •
(8) Lal&lt;ewoQd Sl. Edward (6-4) at (1)
Cleve. St. Ignatius (9-1 ); (7) Euclid (7-3)

Region 4

Logan 23, Dublin Jerome 7
Louisvil• 60, Cola. Independence 24

W L TPct
5 2 0 .714
4 3 0 .571

141 151.
149 t~:f
175 t 8~

174 127

Cabell Midland 28, Sl. Albans 13

1

Quartlrftnal
Cols. De Sales 20, Cols. Watterson 17
Cots . · Marlo·n·Franklln . 34 , Cots.
Beec:hcroft28, 20T

-

340 .429

PA-l
180 87 .

PF

PREP FOOTBALL

(5)

•j

PF

W L T Pet

S.turdey'l Gamet (late)

Region 3
(8) Grove C1ty (6·4) at (1) Hilliard
I Davidson (9·~). (7) Marysville (7·3) at {2)
Upper Arlington (9·1 ): (B) Delaware
Cath.olt'
1 Hayes (7·3) at (3) P1ckenngton Cent (1()..
Sytvan1a Southview 28. Lewis Center 0) ; (5) Worthlng1on Kilbourne (8-2) at {4)
Olentangy 14
Cols. Brookhaven (9--1}
Dlvlolon 2 Region 7

WLTI'CI
7 0 0 1.000
34 0 .429
3 4 0 .429

WLTPct
4 3 0 571
3 5 0 .375
2 5 0 .28ti

Oakland
Kansas City

14~

6 2 0 .750

Big Creek 43, Burch 6
Bluefield 34, James Monroe 21
Bridgeport 28, Fai rmont Se"ior 21

Region 2
(8) Massillon Washington (6-4) at (1)
North Canton Hoover (9-1); (7) Canton
' McKinley (6·4 ) at (2) Canton GlenOak (8·

Quarterfinal
Akr. Hoban 21, Warren Howland 10
Madtson 35, E. Cle. Shaw 0

145

o .429

South

080000

San Diego

va:7
1

Cleve. GtenvHie (10-Q)

Dlvlllon 2 Reolon 5

4 3 0 .571-

3 4

I

DIVISION I

25
59·414
11
425
2·5-0
0
6-60

t53 tJZ

165 ,.,.
182 17~

3 4 0 .429

Denver

1

WEST VIRGINIA SCORES

Quomrtlnel

I Soulh 18·2) al (31 Montor (8·2);
·I· Brecksville Broadvtew-Hts. (7-3) at

f&gt;F PA J

5 2 0 .714
5 2 0 ,714

~rPct

1

..
•

iEitt

W'L T Pet

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Region 20
:
.
(6) Lees Creek .East Clinlon (7·3) at (1) 1
W
PF
Cln . Hills Christian Acad. (10·0); (7)
N.Y.·Giimts . 6 1 0 .857 191
Marfu Stein Marion Local (8-2) at (2)
waShington 6 2 0 750 t6~
Anna {9·1); (6) West Liberty-Salem (9-1) j Dallas
5 3 0 625
2()2
at (3) Waynesville (8·2); (5) Casstown j Philadelphia 4 3 0 .57t
t94
Miami East (9·1) at (4) West Jefferson (8· 1
SOuth
2)

1 Covington ~6 . Lockland 12

.,

Bahirilore

(8) Wes! Lafayette Ridgewood (8·21 at
(1) Portsmouth West (10.0); (71 Minford
(8:2) at (2) Wheeters~urg (9 •11: (B)
Baltimore .Liberty UniOn (9·t) al (3) .
Nelsonvllle·ll&gt;rk (8·21: (51 Cots. Ready l
(6-2) at (4) Johnstown-Monroe (8-2)
.

Dlvlolon 6 Region 23
Quarterfinal

&lt; :

1

Region 19

••155 I Glouster Trimble 26, Caldwell 7
183 • •1 .202
Hannibal · Rive r
38,
Zanesvi lle

1 First Downs

.

Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game aoa.inst

McDonald 21. Berlin ~Ntr Western
Reserve 7
.
Mogadore 30. Leetonia 14
Norwalk SL Paul 56. E. Cen. 7
Dlvlolon 8 Region 22
.Qulrterllnot
Ada 56. W. Unity Hilltop 8
Carey 35. McComb-28
Delphos Sl. John's 24, Arl&lt;ngton 7
Pandbra-Gitboa 49, Mt~ Blanchard

.

-Pt. Pleasanl
;New Lex

IV,

Jefferton (9- t ) at (2) Findlay Uberty-

...162

:!!-!! :·""·

Pittsburgh

Cblumbtana 14

RiverdBie 0

. '

'('PA

3·40

I

1

&lt;If .f.'~

" .I • .G-o9 ... I

Notlonalf-L.Mgue

1

.. -i ·+f •.• 231) .. 304

NL
14

.

·Meigs football fans cheer on their team during Friday night's f)ivisic1n
Lexington at Jim Rockwell Stadium in New Lexington.

JB)

·).,

AMERICAN CONFEIIENCE

Canal Winchester (9-1) at (3) Chlfllcothe

Ironton ..1. WIUiamsport WesttaH 31
(7·3); (5) Germantown ValttV View (7-3) 1
Martins Ferry 20 •.Cols. Hartley 6
at (4) Cola. EUtmoor Acad. (!HI
[
New Englarid
New Lll&lt;ington 42, Pome1011 Melge 14
V
Dlvlolot14 Rogton II
Roglon 17
· Buffalo
N.Y. Jets
Quort.rllnot .
Cuyahoga,Hts. (9·1) at (1 ) \l&gt;unga.
Miomt
ColdWaler.42. Ctn . N. College Hill 0
. nmttno (10.0) ; (7 1 App le Creek
Dey. Oa~ 12, Plaln-&lt;:lty Jonathan 1 Wayneda le H~-2) at (2) Columbiana '
Alder 10
.
., Grasrvtew (9-1 ); (6) North Lima South ·
TennesSee
,HS.mihon Badin 33, Clarksville Clinton- Range (&amp;-2j at (3) Kirtland (1D-0); {5)
Jaduionville
Ma!sie 27
·
Creston Norwayne (8-2} at (4) Gates
Indianapolis
Kenering Aher 35 , Brookville 7
Mils GHmour AcarJ. {9-1)
Houston
Dlvlolon 6 Region 21
Region 18
Ou1rtert1na1
(8) Ashland Crestview {9-1) at (1)
Bas~;:om
Hopewell-Loudon
41, Hamler Patrtct&lt; Henry (10..{)); (7) Delphos

'

. ·NL'-Ciint Cannon 7-fo-o 77.
:Receiving : M-Clay Botiri 5·5 1,
•Gabe Hill t-20,' Cameron Bolin 1·
'15 •. Jeremy Smith 1-8, Caleb Davis
•1-4.
;NL-Brett Wycinski 3-47, Mall
.E1herly 2-15, Kyle Bush 1·9, Kyle
-spring 1-8. ·
·

The Meigs cheerleaders pose during Friday night's Division
IV, R$gion 15 · quarterfinal playoff game . against New
Lexington at Jim Rockwell Stagium in New Lexington.

Belmont Union Local25, St. Clairtville 6

.~....
, . .271
.. , .t-tl ... .tOT . .271

... .'.f-41' ..238

PRoFoomALL

I

.•

Individual Stottotlci
.Rushing: M-Jeremy SmHh 22-91,
Gabe Hill 4-25, Jeffery Roush 2-5,
Cory Hutton 1-0. Jacob We113-(-4).
NL-Ciinl Cannon 15· 118, R.J.
Starkey 16-111 , Tony lakeski 2-46,
Brett
Wycinski
4-45,
Joe
· :Hollingshead 2-18, Drew Brown 1·
o5, Spencer Huffman t -4 .
;Passing : M-Jacob Well 11·24-0
.126.

I

.:

... ,.w :..

e

..first Downs
:Rushes-yards
.Passing yards
·Total yards

· au.toon,..

..1
" "' .20Z •. 1

: ;~:

l'

Columbian (8·2) Ill t4) Bellevue t&amp;-2)
Tytlf COOl!oildatod 54, Clll)l County7
11og1on 11
Wayne 25, Chapmolnvllto 13
.I
(8) Now Phlladolpllla (&amp;-2) al (1) DOYtr
Weir 28, Brooke 21
(tH ); (7) Rl-;land 8ud&lt;oye Locol (7-3) at
Wootslde 33, ' - 20
(2) Newark Licking Valley (D·1); (6)
Wheeling (:enlnll 49, Unsly 20
GIOnvllla 18-2) al (3) Poland seminary (8· 1 Wheeling Park 1!0, John Marshall 3
2); (5) canol Fulton N0r111west (8·2) at
Williamstown 59, Ritchie County 0
(4) Canton Soutl1 (7·3)

14, Cuyahogt Falla

F-la 33, Sparta Hlghloind 12
Genoa Area 47, Huron 21
Morton Pleaunl 20, l'emborvillo I
EaolWOOd 7
Ollawo-Glondorl 58. Lorain Claorview 1
lloglon 12
·
12
18) Franklin (6-41 at (11 Thornville I
Dlvloton 4 Region 15
. Sheridan (1 0.0); (1) Cots. Bexley (7·3) at
Qullrlorflnot
(2) Circleville Logan Elm (10-()1 : (6)

'

l ...

• .. • .

Sunday, November 2, 200~

Dlvlelon 4ltoglan 14

..... ,~., . II

· SCoring aummery
.
Firat Quarl8r
~L-R . J. Staikey 32 run (Kyle
:spring kick) 2:30
Second Ouorl8r
;NL-Ciint Cannon 9 run (Spring .
·kick) t 0:18
•
NL -Cannon 39 run (Spring kick) ·
9;15
.
Third OUartor
'M-Jeremy Smitlt pass from
Jacob Well (Mason Metts kick) 8:07
'NL-Cannon 1 run (Spring kick)
3:25
NL-Brett Wycinskl32 pass from
Cannon (Spring kick) 2:21
. Fourth Quortor
:NL-Cannon 1 run·(Spring kick)
·11 :58
"'-Well 1 run (Metts kick) 2:01

M
1t
32-117
126
243
-11-24-0
2-2
2·10

}

••~t• ~ ··

14
42

Moonov

'lbtM1ge.
CVCA 6

Pag~B:)

·

' I

�··- -- ~-

.'

'

Sunday, November 2,

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiJipolis

2008

. --- ... -

...

I'

ScoREBOARD

iunbap limes ·itntinel

Photos by Bryan Walters·

..

PREP FOOTBALL

'

Friday'S" Boxscores

'

:New Lexington 42, Mliga 14
&lt;Meigs
;New Le•

0 0 7 7 7 t4 14 7 -

· ~··~

:comp-att-int
·fumbles-lost
.Penahie:s-yards

.·

~embers of the Meigs band ~rform following
Division IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game

the Marauders' final score during the fourth .quarter of Friday night's
against New.Lexington at Jil"!l Rockwell Stadium in New Lexington .

Meigs running back Gabe Hill (20) delivers a stiff arm to
New Lexington defender Drew Brown (14) during a fourth
quarter run Friday night at Jim Rockwell Stadium.

; :: i!-244 :

:fl3.

,· ~ , ~ . ;..

._.teo

' · · ·~ ··· · , · ·3t1 ..~
' ' (' ·""' ·- ..311 , . .22.

..., ..J-I .. ;.t73

. o3o14

:

41·346

77
423 .
7-tO.()
2· t

• 1. .

Benton (10.0); (6) Archbold .(8·2) at (3)
Clevetand
Liberty Cenler (9-l); (5) Bucyrus Wyntord '
Cincinnati
(1Q.O) at (4) Sherwood Fairview (9· t l

.284
•.278
••318

.i

!

Rosecrans 7
"Malvflrn 49, Bridgeport 14
Shi!dyslde 14, BeallSville 3
DIYIIIOR 6 Region 24

Mechanicsburg 42, Hamilton New
Miami 0
Sidney Lehman 42, Ansonia 7,
Sprin2. Calh . Cent 28, F»ortsmouth
I· Sciotoville 19

Point Pleasant 41,
Herbert Hoover 15
0 21 13 7 7 o 0 8 -

Rushes-yards ·
Passing yards
41 Total yards
15 Comp-att-int
Fumbles lost
I Penalties-yards
i

9
21-81
155
236 '
8-23-3
0
7·53

I

Mayfield 27, Kent Roosevelt 7 ·
Tallmadge 24, Parma _
Padua ~7

Scoring oummary
Firat Quarter
;HH-James Miller 67 pass from
;.
Individual Statlatlco
.Palrick Ryan (Josh Armstrong kick) · Rushing: PP-Aiten Wasonga 28·
·10:35
270, Derek Mitchett· 8·92 , Nathan
:.
Second Quarter
Roberts 9·37, Tyler Austin 4· 16,
·PP-AIIen Wasonga 4 run (kick
JaWann Williams 3-10, Chris
:blocked) 9:03
Blankei!Shlp 4-6, Eric Roberts 1·(·
PP-Wasonga 1 run (Wasonga
1), B.J. Lloyd 2-(-16).
HH-Robbie Kidd 2;46, ·Matthew
:pass from B.J. Lloyd) 3:25
.PP-Wasonga 13 run (Justin
Rector 5-32, Dusti n Belcher 6-4,
yYeaver kick)! :32
Patrick Ryan 8·( -1 ).
•
Third Quortor
Pautng: PP-B.J. Lloyd 2-5-0 11.
·PP-Wasonga 65 run (Weaver
HH-Patrlck Ryan 8·23-3 155.
:kick) t0:36
RKelvtng: PP-Oerek M~chell 1·
·PP-Nathan Roberts 5 rlln (kick
7, Allen Wasonga t-4.
:blocked)6:26
H~amas Miller 2·87, Josh Hart
2·40, · Michllel Keiffer 1-30, Josh
Fourth Ouortor
.PP-Oerek Mitchell 35 run (!Neaver Jordan 2·15, Robbie Kldd 1-3.
kick) 11 :50
HH-Michael Keiffer 30 pass from · ·
OHIO St;QBES
"Ryan (Keiffer pasS ,trom Ryan) 1:27
Flldly'o ScorM
pp . HH
,PREP FOCff(IALl

Dlvloton 2 Region 6

Quartertlnel
lexington 28 , lodi Cloverleaf 10
Medina Highland 35, Avon L.ake 23 •
Powell Olentangy Liberty 34, Tol. Cent.

Dlvlalan ,_"-elan I ·
· · OYIII'terfin.l

7

Cin. Anderson 55. Trenton Edgewood

Carolina

George Washington 42, Woodrow

2): '6) Macedonia Nordonla (7-3) at (3)
Brunswick (9-1); (5) Amherst Steele (8·2)
et (4) Twinsburg (8·2)

Magnolia 42, Oak Glen 23

1

Field

(8·2) at

PF
196
194
154

-

ttS
t45
ta-t
t31
PA

PA '
t50.

112 201
171 231i

Manday'• Gwne

"'

Pittsburgh at Washington, 8:30p.m. • .

Thurtdly'l Game

Denver at Cleveland, 8:15 p.m.

•

C:::h....,roi••.L aulck ..

•

Cur...,.nt- piU•

,...ntlac_..

·

f1••

.nod•l• Y*Oor•

- 6o.ooo
•

~MC:

au~.-- •

Tenn88Me at Qh~go . 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Detroit, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Atlanta. 1 p.m.
Buffalo at New England. 1 p.m.
Battimore at Houston , 1:01 p.m.

rnfl•• or ••••

M•••• Mechonic;:~q_l and
app•orqne.e quollry
atondorcl•
·

--

lncfianapolls at Pittsburgh, 4:15p.m. ,
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
N.Y. Giants. at Philadelphia, 8: 15p.m. ~
Open: Dellae, Weei'Hngtan, Tampa SSJ

BahlmOre'

· ·
· •
. Mondoy, - - 10
san Francisco at Arlzc:ma, 8:30 p.pt -.

D

po-•r

••~..-l~g,

. •u•p•n.a lan,. brak•a
fro.-n d•n••• ~·~e•
.-.oaonabl• ,...,_ from teara,.

...

•

- et.or .....

_
.
_.
...........
_.........
-·--

...,,-....

.

'

'

I

•

from PageBl
::Meigs to end the threat and
; the two teams went into the
; locker room with the home
•team on top 2 1-0.
; · Meigs took the second
:half kickoff and put togeth;er a nine play, 67-yard drive
::to cut into the Panther lead.
:Jacob Well hit Jeremy
;:Smith in the right corner of
' the end zone on fourth and
goal from the three fo r the
•score. Mason Metts added
:the extra points to cut the
:Panther lead to 21-7 with
::S:02 left in the period .
::Smith set up the score with
; 11 24 yard run to the Panther
::15-yard line .
.
~ But New Lexington came
~right back and Cannon
:capped off a nine play-73
~~~lid drive by di ving over
·;from a . yard out. Brett
i;Wyc,inski had a 39-yard run
; to set up the score to the
'Meigs 10-yard line.
: The Panthers all but
:ended 111lY hopes for Meigs
::when John Robins. recov.;ered a Marauder fumble at
' maroon ·and · gQld 32. On

i

.

~

.

.·

.

'

.

from Page Bl ··

•

•Meigs head coach Mike Chancey talks to his players during a timeout in Friday night's
:pivision IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game against New Lexington at Jim Rockwell
: ~tadium in New Lexington.
·
·

Meigs

Point.-·~,.
.

. f

The Point. Pleasant Big
Blacks rushed for. 414 yards
last night and averaged just
first down 'Cannon hooked whole game. I love them over 7 yards per carry en
up with Wyci nski lor a 32 all, and I'm p_rou~ of them route to a methodical 4[-15
yard scori ng pa" Spri ng and the1r dedicallon to the · win over Herbert Hoover
tacked on the extra points Meigs football program."
Friday night.
for a 35-7 New Lexin~ton
Cannon led all rushers
It would be an under· lead . which is the
ii with 118 yards in 15 tries ; statement to sa~ that Point's
stood headi ng into the Starkey added 111 in 16.. offense could riqt have put
to unh period.
Cannon was seven of I0 in . 'up over 400 yar'ds of fi.\Sh·
Cannon
;,cored
the the air for 77 yards, ing without the big boys up
. Panthers fin al six pointer of Wycinski caught three for front. It wasn't just Friday
the night Oil the first play of . 47, and Matt Etherly two night either. These . guys
the fo urth period on a on~ ­ for 15 ·
have been doing that alrsea. yard keeper: Spring closed
Jere!lly ~mith led Meigs son. While you are at it~
out the Panther scoring by with 22 carries for 91 tough add the name of· Nathan
making it ~ ix for six on yards; Gabe Hill added Roberts to the list. He is the
extra points and a 42-7 four carr1es for 25 yards.· fullback who · led the way
Panther lead. The score was Well was II of 24 for 126 . for running backs Allen
set up whe n Kyle Bu sh yards, Clay Bolin caught Wasonga
and . Derek
returned a Jacob Well punt fi ve passes for 51 yards, Mitchell as they' put u~ big
71 yards, before Well made Gabe .Hill and Cameron
a touchdown saving tackle. Bolin each had one for 15, numbers against the orne
Meigs closed out the Smith one for eight and standing Huskies,
scoring when Well kept in ·. Caleb Davis one for four.
Wasonga enjoyed another
from three yards out , Metts
Seniors playing thelr .big night to add to his big
tacked on the extra points to final game m the maroon year. The speedy sorhomake the final score 42• 14 . and gold were Clay Bolin, more carried the bal 28
Well 's run capped off a 15 Gabe.
Hill ,
Brandon times for 270 yarl!s and
play 67 yard drive.
Han nin g, Cory Hutton , scored four touchdowns .
" I would like to thanks Maso n Metts. Crockett Mitchell nearly topped the
these kids for all their hard Crow and Ernie Welch . The I00 yard mark with 92
work," Mike Chancev said seven helped lead the yards on just eight carries
after th e contest . ·''The Marauders to the school 's and a touchdown . Roberts
seniors provided great lead- first
football
playoff ·also tallied a touchdown ,
ership , we have nothing to appearance in the schools while picking up 37 yards
be ashamed about. We got 40-year history. They have on nine carries.
beat by a· reall y good team started a new tradition at
The Big Blacks, who suftonight. But th~ kids hung . Meigs High School for oth- fered a heartbreaking loss
in, and played hard ' the ers to follow.
the last time out two weeks

way

- -\! - -

ago at Ravenswood. began .
this game like they began
and ended their last one watching the other team
move the football down
field and score. Hoover
neect.ed just a 'minute and
twenty seconds and three
plays to cover 73 yards on
·lis initial possession of the
game to grab the early lead .
Patrick Ryan found James
Miller behind the Point secondary and connected with
the senior split end for a 67, yard tol)chdo\)ln pass. Josh
Armstrong's kick made it 70 before roost people had
settled in their seats.
. It took the locals a little
while to get untracked
offensively, · as they were
forced to punt on their first
two possessions. But, they
finally ~ave their loyal fans
somethmg to cheer about on
their third.possession of the
contest. After forcing a
· Husky pUnt from deep in
their own territory. the Big
' Blacks took over at the
Herbert Hoover 45 yard
line. It took the locals eight
plays to cover the necessary
yardage to get their first
touchdown of the game.
Wasonga picked up 34 of
those yards , . including the
final four when he scored
his first touchdown of the
night. Justin Weaver 's PAT
was blocked, however, and
·Hoover clung to a 7-6 lead.
After the two teams traded punts , Eric Veith set up
· the Big Blacks' 'next score

when he intercepted a
Patrick Ryan · pass and
returned it to the Huskie 21
yard line. It took the locals
just two plays to reach paydirt - with Wasonga rushing once to the one yard line
and then punching it over
from there on the next pla;Y
to give the Big Blacks thm
first lead of ·the night.
Qu~rterback B .J . Lloyd then
connected with Wasonga on
the two-point conversion
pass to make it 14-7.
. .
Point's defense forced a
three and out on the next
Hoover possession and
Derek Mitchell stepped up
big on the .ensuing punt . He ·
took the ball from tbe
Blacks' 45 yard line all the
way down to the Huskie 13.
One play later, Wasonga
had h1s third touchdown of
the eveninj!, and after
Weaver's pomt after kick, it
was a-21 -7 ball game.
In the second half that
trend
continued
witlt
Wasonga adding another
touchdown run of 65 yards
while Roberts and Mitchell
tacked on a sco.re apiece' tq
give the Big Blacks a 41-7
lead early in the fourth
quarter.
- Herbert Hoover tacked on
its final score of the night
with a little over a minute
left in the game when Ryan
found Michael Keiffer oo a
30-yard strike and Keiffer
then 'cattght the two·poil\t
con\'ersion throw to se~l tile
seating at 41-15.

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Meigs' defense tries to block a kick during Friday night's Division IV, Region 15 quarterfl·
nal playoff game against
New Lexington at Jim Rockwell. Stadium
in New Lexington .
. .. '
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· Carolina at Oakland, 4:05p.m.

COVIIR • .V.Nf IHING.
••••ring

•Y•'•'"•

(
.,

Saath Qt Miami, 1 p .m .
St LOula II N.Y. Jell , 1 p.m.

C•rl'ified Ua•d Vehicle.
VIIHICUa 'f'Ha'W' CAN TllUaT..

15~
16~

114 212

2 5 0 .286

-O""N
HICL

..,..., . wc::»rries_

PA' ,

Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m. ·
Houston at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
N.Y. JetS at Buffalo. 1 p.m.
Arizona at St. Louis. 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Cleveland , 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 1 p.m .
Jacksonville at Cincinnati. 1 p.m.
Miami at Denver, 4 :05 p.m.
Dallas at NY Giants, 4:15p.m.
Atlanta at Oakland, 4 :15p.m.
. ·Philadelphia at Seattle , 4:15p.m.
New England at Indianapolis, 8:15 P-"10p•n : S'!ln ·Diego, Carolina, N~
Orleans, San .Francisco
1:

Spnng Valley 20. Hurricane 19
Sl. Marys 54, Doddridge County 13
Summers County 46, Richwood 14
Tolsio 24. Wlnfiokl21
Tucl&lt;er CoUnly '52, l'etersburv,B
Tug Valley 50. WilliamSon 18
Tygarts Valley 26. Hundred 14

c

..

107

99

PF PA '• ·
· W.L T !=Jet
4 3 0. .571 , 200 171
2 '5 0 .286 t44 taJ

St. Louis

ROberl C. Byrd 21, L.awis County 18

Western Brown 21
at (31 Hubbard (8·2); (51 Chagnn Falls (7Dlvlolon 4 Roglon 13
3) at (4) \~lungs. Uberty (8·2)
•
Ootrlalllnot
· Rogton 10
Massillon Tuslaw ,28, leavittsburg . (8i Oe1ianco(B-2) ol (1) Avon (10-Q); (7)
laBrae 0 ·
Sunbury Big waJnut (&amp;-2) al' (2) Clyde (9Perry 41, WOosterTrlway 7
1); '(61 St. Marys Memo&lt;lal (8-2) al (3j
Steubenville 61, Coshocton 29
TiPP ity Tippecanoe (9·11; (5) Tiltln

~Cer&amp;l.fted
us•o -v.. .1c:a..s

224

San Ffancisco2 ·6 0 . 250:

Cuyahoga Fans Walsh JeslJit (7-2): {7) .. Scott 25. Sherman 13
Chardon Notre Dame Cathedral-latin (5Slssonvi!Je 48, Poca 28
5) at (2) Aurora (8·2) : (6) Ravenna (7·3) 1 South Harrison 28. Lincoln 21

111iiiiiii11

PF
H3

Sunday'• Game•

Man 14, Buffalo 6
Martinsburg 36. Musselman 7
Matewan 57, Mount View 12
Midland Trall37, Valley Fayette 12
Moorefietd 22, Pendleton County 14 .
Morgantown 27, University 14
Mount Hope 58, Meadow Bridge 23

(t )

4 3 0 .571
3 4 0 .429
0 7 0 .000

Seattle

(8) Cin. Archbishop Moe~er (6-4) at {1)
F»aden City 22 , Van~wetzel14
Cin. Colerain (9·1 )~ (7) Kettering Fairmont
Parkersburg 24,' Ripley 23
(7·3) at (2) Clayton Northmont (9-1) ; (8)
Pkrkersburg'South 22 , East F8l[mont 13
Centerville (7--3) at (3) Cln. Eldtr (9--1); · Pocahonta&amp;County.158,WebaterCounty
{5) Cln. W()(Mjwarfl (1Qo.O) at 11(4) HW.r • 13
•
Hte. Wl.yne (7~3)
Polnl Pleuant 41, Herbert Hoover 15
•IVISION Ill
Preston 35, Buekhannon-Upshur 20
Region a
Ravenswood 49. logan 20
Mogadore

Green Bay

, ArizOna

l No"h Marton ~. El~ns 35, OT
1
1

4 3 0 .571

·I

Wilson 12

Gilbert 34, Wlrt County 19
Grafton M, liberty Harrison 7
Greenbrier East 24, Princeton 17
Hampshire 14, Washington 13
Huntington 35, Nitro 20
Jetferson 33, Greencastle, Pa. 27
Keyser 61 , Frankfort a
Madonna 43, Bishop Donahue 0

Chicago
Detroit

'

at (2)' Strongsville (9-1) ; (6) Willoughby

(8)

1:M 11(J '
115 t 23
tOol 2t7

I .6 0 .143

Minne sota

Capital 37, Riverside 3
Easl Hardy 42, Cameron '4 1
F~tteville 48, Greer]brier West 21

Cin. Winton Woods 58, Day. Dunbar 12
Kings Mil~ Ki~s 27, Cin. Turpiri 24
New Carlisle Tec~seh 44, MI. Orab

165 tt

t 70 120
153 154
216 19&amp;

Calhoun County 46, Braxton County 13

(4)

PAJ

PF

Tampa Bay 5 3 0 .625
Atlanla
4 3 0 .571
Friday's Score•
New Orlean s 4 4 0 .500
PREP FOOTBALL
North
Ber~a ley Springs 10, Manassas Park·, ·
WLTPct

Region 1 •
(8) Lal&lt;ewoQd Sl. Edward (6-4) at (1)
Cleve. St. Ignatius (9-1 ); (7) Euclid (7-3)

Region 4

Logan 23, Dublin Jerome 7
Louisvil• 60, Cola. Independence 24

W L TPct
5 2 0 .714
4 3 0 .571

141 151.
149 t~:f
175 t 8~

174 127

Cabell Midland 28, Sl. Albans 13

1

Quartlrftnal
Cols. De Sales 20, Cols. Watterson 17
Cots . · Marlo·n·Franklln . 34 , Cots.
Beec:hcroft28, 20T

-

340 .429

PA-l
180 87 .

PF

PREP FOOTBALL

(5)

•j

PF

W L T Pet

S.turdey'l Gamet (late)

Region 3
(8) Grove C1ty (6·4) at (1) Hilliard
I Davidson (9·~). (7) Marysville (7·3) at {2)
Upper Arlington (9·1 ): (B) Delaware
Cath.olt'
1 Hayes (7·3) at (3) P1ckenngton Cent (1()..
Sytvan1a Southview 28. Lewis Center 0) ; (5) Worthlng1on Kilbourne (8-2) at {4)
Olentangy 14
Cols. Brookhaven (9--1}
Dlvlolon 2 Region 7

WLTI'CI
7 0 0 1.000
34 0 .429
3 4 0 .429

WLTPct
4 3 0 571
3 5 0 .375
2 5 0 .28ti

Oakland
Kansas City

14~

6 2 0 .750

Big Creek 43, Burch 6
Bluefield 34, James Monroe 21
Bridgeport 28, Fai rmont Se"ior 21

Region 2
(8) Massillon Washington (6-4) at (1)
North Canton Hoover (9-1); (7) Canton
' McKinley (6·4 ) at (2) Canton GlenOak (8·

Quarterfinal
Akr. Hoban 21, Warren Howland 10
Madtson 35, E. Cle. Shaw 0

145

o .429

South

080000

San Diego

va:7
1

Cleve. GtenvHie (10-Q)

Dlvlllon 2 Reolon 5

4 3 0 .571-

3 4

I

DIVISION I

25
59·414
11
425
2·5-0
0
6-60

t53 tJZ

165 ,.,.
182 17~

3 4 0 .429

Denver

1

WEST VIRGINIA SCORES

Quomrtlnel

I Soulh 18·2) al (31 Montor (8·2);
·I· Brecksville Broadvtew-Hts. (7-3) at

f&gt;F PA J

5 2 0 .714
5 2 0 ,714

~rPct

1

..
•

iEitt

W'L T Pet

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Region 20
:
.
(6) Lees Creek .East Clinlon (7·3) at (1) 1
W
PF
Cln . Hills Christian Acad. (10·0); (7)
N.Y.·Giimts . 6 1 0 .857 191
Marfu Stein Marion Local (8-2) at (2)
waShington 6 2 0 750 t6~
Anna {9·1); (6) West Liberty-Salem (9-1) j Dallas
5 3 0 625
2()2
at (3) Waynesville (8·2); (5) Casstown j Philadelphia 4 3 0 .57t
t94
Miami East (9·1) at (4) West Jefferson (8· 1
SOuth
2)

1 Covington ~6 . Lockland 12

.,

Bahirilore

(8) Wes! Lafayette Ridgewood (8·21 at
(1) Portsmouth West (10.0); (71 Minford
(8:2) at (2) Wheeters~urg (9 •11: (B)
Baltimore .Liberty UniOn (9·t) al (3) .
Nelsonvllle·ll&gt;rk (8·21: (51 Cots. Ready l
(6-2) at (4) Johnstown-Monroe (8-2)
.

Dlvlolon 6 Region 23
Quarterfinal

&lt; :

1

Region 19

••155 I Glouster Trimble 26, Caldwell 7
183 • •1 .202
Hannibal · Rive r
38,
Zanesvi lle

1 First Downs

.

Region 15 quarterfinal playoff game aoa.inst

McDonald 21. Berlin ~Ntr Western
Reserve 7
.
Mogadore 30. Leetonia 14
Norwalk SL Paul 56. E. Cen. 7
Dlvlolon 8 Region 22
.Qulrterllnot
Ada 56. W. Unity Hilltop 8
Carey 35. McComb-28
Delphos Sl. John's 24, Arl&lt;ngton 7
Pandbra-Gitboa 49, Mt~ Blanchard

.

-Pt. Pleasanl
;New Lex

IV,

Jefferton (9- t ) at (2) Findlay Uberty-

...162

:!!-!! :·""·

Pittsburgh

Cblumbtana 14

RiverdBie 0

. '

'('PA

3·40

I

1

&lt;If .f.'~

" .I • .G-o9 ... I

Notlonalf-L.Mgue

1

.. -i ·+f •.• 231) .. 304

NL
14

.

·Meigs football fans cheer on their team during Friday night's f)ivisic1n
Lexington at Jim Rockwell Stadium in New Lexington.

JB)

·).,

AMERICAN CONFEIIENCE

Canal Winchester (9-1) at (3) Chlfllcothe

Ironton ..1. WIUiamsport WesttaH 31
(7·3); (5) Germantown ValttV View (7-3) 1
Martins Ferry 20 •.Cols. Hartley 6
at (4) Cola. EUtmoor Acad. (!HI
[
New Englarid
New Lll&lt;ington 42, Pome1011 Melge 14
V
Dlvlolot14 Rogton II
Roglon 17
· Buffalo
N.Y. Jets
Quort.rllnot .
Cuyahoga,Hts. (9·1) at (1 ) \l&gt;unga.
Miomt
ColdWaler.42. Ctn . N. College Hill 0
. nmttno (10.0) ; (7 1 App le Creek
Dey. Oa~ 12, Plaln-&lt;:lty Jonathan 1 Wayneda le H~-2) at (2) Columbiana '
Alder 10
.
., Grasrvtew (9-1 ); (6) North Lima South ·
TennesSee
,HS.mihon Badin 33, Clarksville Clinton- Range (&amp;-2j at (3) Kirtland (1D-0); {5)
Jaduionville
Ma!sie 27
·
Creston Norwayne (8-2} at (4) Gates
Indianapolis
Kenering Aher 35 , Brookville 7
Mils GHmour AcarJ. {9-1)
Houston
Dlvlolon 6 Region 21
Region 18
Ou1rtert1na1
(8) Ashland Crestview {9-1) at (1)
Bas~;:om
Hopewell-Loudon
41, Hamler Patrtct&lt; Henry (10..{)); (7) Delphos

'

. ·NL'-Ciint Cannon 7-fo-o 77.
:Receiving : M-Clay Botiri 5·5 1,
•Gabe Hill t-20,' Cameron Bolin 1·
'15 •. Jeremy Smith 1-8, Caleb Davis
•1-4.
;NL-Brett Wycinski 3-47, Mall
.E1herly 2-15, Kyle Bush 1·9, Kyle
-spring 1-8. ·
·

The Meigs cheerleaders pose during Friday night's Division
IV, R$gion 15 · quarterfinal playoff game . against New
Lexington at Jim Rockwell Stagium in New Lexington.

Belmont Union Local25, St. Clairtville 6

.~....
, . .271
.. , .t-tl ... .tOT . .271

... .'.f-41' ..238

PRoFoomALL

I

.•

Individual Stottotlci
.Rushing: M-Jeremy SmHh 22-91,
Gabe Hill 4-25, Jeffery Roush 2-5,
Cory Hutton 1-0. Jacob We113-(-4).
NL-Ciinl Cannon 15· 118, R.J.
Starkey 16-111 , Tony lakeski 2-46,
Brett
Wycinski
4-45,
Joe
· :Hollingshead 2-18, Drew Brown 1·
o5, Spencer Huffman t -4 .
;Passing : M-Jacob Well 11·24-0
.126.

I

.:

... ,.w :..

e

..first Downs
:Rushes-yards
.Passing yards
·Total yards

· au.toon,..

..1
" "' .20Z •. 1

: ;~:

l'

Columbian (8·2) Ill t4) Bellevue t&amp;-2)
Tytlf COOl!oildatod 54, Clll)l County7
11og1on 11
Wayne 25, Chapmolnvllto 13
.I
(8) Now Phlladolpllla (&amp;-2) al (1) DOYtr
Weir 28, Brooke 21
(tH ); (7) Rl-;land 8ud&lt;oye Locol (7-3) at
Wootslde 33, ' - 20
(2) Newark Licking Valley (D·1); (6)
Wheeling (:enlnll 49, Unsly 20
GIOnvllla 18-2) al (3) Poland seminary (8· 1 Wheeling Park 1!0, John Marshall 3
2); (5) canol Fulton N0r111west (8·2) at
Williamstown 59, Ritchie County 0
(4) Canton Soutl1 (7·3)

14, Cuyahogt Falla

F-la 33, Sparta Hlghloind 12
Genoa Area 47, Huron 21
Morton Pleaunl 20, l'emborvillo I
EaolWOOd 7
Ollawo-Glondorl 58. Lorain Claorview 1
lloglon 12
·
12
18) Franklin (6-41 at (11 Thornville I
Dlvloton 4 Region 15
. Sheridan (1 0.0); (1) Cots. Bexley (7·3) at
Qullrlorflnot
(2) Circleville Logan Elm (10-()1 : (6)

'

l ...

• .. • .

Sunday, November 2, 200~

Dlvlelon 4ltoglan 14

..... ,~., . II

· SCoring aummery
.
Firat Quarl8r
~L-R . J. Staikey 32 run (Kyle
:spring kick) 2:30
Second Ouorl8r
;NL-Ciint Cannon 9 run (Spring .
·kick) t 0:18
•
NL -Cannon 39 run (Spring kick) ·
9;15
.
Third OUartor
'M-Jeremy Smitlt pass from
Jacob Well (Mason Metts kick) 8:07
'NL-Cannon 1 run (Spring kick)
3:25
NL-Brett Wycinskl32 pass from
Cannon (Spring kick) 2:21
. Fourth Quortor
:NL-Cannon 1 run·(Spring kick)
·11 :58
"'-Well 1 run (Metts kick) 2:01

M
1t
32-117
126
243
-11-24-0
2-2
2·10

}

••~t• ~ ··

14
42

Moonov

'lbtM1ge.
CVCA 6

Pag~B:)

·

' I

�•

~iu11Up ltllld·6tntiul

PageB4

NFL WEEKEND

Sunday, November 2,

2008

PageBs

OUTDOORS

iunba~ limd ·itnttntl

Sunday, November 2,

•

,,

.OiiiO

2008

Gavin .Wildlife Are~
becomes a reality ·~

..

••
Signs have been going up
marking the new AEP~
Gavin Wildlife Area in
&lt;
Meigs and Gallia counties,
which will certainly be welcome news for hunters who
make the annual trek to
southeastern. Ohio to hunt
·
~
·whitetail deer and wild
Open ~
turkey.
..
. The AEP-Gavin Wildlife
'"
Area consists of 6,885 acres
located · in Salem and
::
Rutland townships in Meigs
::
County
and .· Cheshire
A partnership betwetill
Township in Gallia County. AEP and
the
Ohio
Much of the wildlife area 1s Department of Naturai
associated with property Resources' Division , Qf
connected to the abandoned Wildlife makes good senst::
coal conveyor belt that ran In ·the past few years, or itt
from around Salem Center least since the conveyor beti
to the . {Iavin Plant at . has been closed, many peoCh;:shire.
' pie have been trespassing on
This is somethinll that is the propeny with four..
greatly needed in th1s part of wheelers and other vehicl~
the state. Hunting IS big for . various reasons. The
business. and a source of partnership
will
help
tourism; Meigs County, in address that issue by adding
particular, lacks public 'lands a law enforcement presence
that can be used for hunting, to the property.
so partnerships like this are ·The Meigs SWCD is holdcrucial iii providing hunting er of a conservation ease-=
opportunities. · .·.
,.. · ment on almost 1.000 acres
I am curious to s~ how of the pro.peny, which is
local
businesses
and located mostly along Parker
landowners take adv.antage Run Road. This partnership
of . this new source of will. help protect that land by
tourism
dollars. addmg a law enforcement
Carnpgroupd•anyone?
presence to enforce wildlife
The plan is to have this laws, prevent illegal trash
area up and running by and tire dumps, and to pre;
youth guil season, which vent the use of off-road
starts. No~. 22, but as is the vehicles.
.case with any endeavor,
There will definitely be
there are bound to be some wildlife officers patrollin!l
growing paiJis, so be patient. the area this deer season, so
Sportsmen who want to don't even think about riding
hunt, trap or fish on the your four-wheeler on the
property must first obtain a propeny, hunting without
free ~rmit which will be the proper license or tags, or
available from deer check deer hunting with an
stations and other local busi- unplugged shotgun or n0t
nesses. A permit can also be wearing enough hunttt
:.'. obtained via l,t.merican orange. . ·~
·
..
Electric Power's website at
The •'AEP-Gavin · Wildlife
http://www.aep.com/em:i- . Area can be accessed vill
ronmentaVrecreation/reclan state Routes 124 and 325 iR
d/permit.aspx.
•. Meigs County, and State
The permit authorizes the Route 554 in Gallia County,
holder to hunt, fish and trap and by various county and
on the l?roperty in accor- township roads in both
dance With state laws and counties. More information
·regulations; the exception is and maps should be coming
tl)at beaver trappers wi II out in the next few weeks. :
need a special beaver trap- ' If you go, make sure t6
ping permit. The rules and respect
nei~hboring
regulations are written on limdowners, and take along
the back of the permit. Not a youngster to share the
all AEP property in the two experience.
•
counties is included in the
Jim Freeman is wildlife
agreement, includin~ the
property associated With the specialist for the Meigs Soi1
now-closed Southern Ohio and Water Conservation
CQal Company mines and District. He can be contacted
the coal prep plant . weekdays at 740-992-4282
Unfortlinately, maps of the or at jimfreeman@oh.nacd'
area are not yet available.
net.net
~

In the··

Jun' Freeman

··

APphoto

Jacksonville Jaguars kicker Josh Scobee, left, grabs Cleveland Browns kick-returner Josh Cribbs to make the iackle during a second-quarter kickoff-return in an NFL football game, Sunday In Jacksonville, Fla,
.

N~w looks for

Browns, Ravens

· Kellen Winslow for dis- think, ·'Aw, maybe this isn't
On the first two plays,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
paraging comments and going to be good, then Smith took the snap and ran
behavior; a decision to you're going to throw like between the tackles. He then
, CLEVELAND - If they rescind the penalty the night hell."
.
went outside and pitched to
didn't know each. other So before the game; andgenerAnderson should get a rookie . running back Ray
well, being di~tant NFL al manager Phil Savage's boost from the return of Rice for a 21-yard gain.
cousins and · all, the vague postgame assertions Winslow, who wants to Smith, the Cleveland native
Baltimore Ravens and that there was more to the move · on following his and Ohio State Heisman
Cleveland Browns· might story.
strange standoff with Savage Trophy winner. who proba11.01 recognize each other.
Other than the orange hel- . over his hospitalization for a ·bJy would have opened the
,; Although
the teams mets, the Ravens expect to staph infection. .
season as Baltimore's starter
played a little more than a see a brand new Browns
The Browns, too, might be if not for a serious tonsil
tnonth ago, the AFC North team.
·
better served by Anderson infection, then rolled right
rivals - linked by history
"They're playing . with a simply turning and handing and threw back to Fiacco for
and Ohio ·roots - are vastly lot of confidence, a lpt of the ball to Jamal Lewis, who a 43-yard gain .
different from their first swagger," Baltimore line- after carrying just 12 times
Ravens
coach
John
meeting.
backer Terrell Suggs said. against the Ravens last Harbaugh has jokingly
~ Back on Sept. 21 , the "They're not the same guys month called Cleveland's referred to .the .double QB
Ravens scored -three touch- that showed up in the begin- play-calling
"pathetiC ." formation as the "Suggs
downs, two $Ct .up. by inter- ning of the season."
Lewis regrets what he said, Package," after the lineceptions of Derek Anderson
Anderson certainly · has but he's adamant about backer pushed for Smith to
in a 50-second span of the changed. Only a few weeks wanting the football aS. much start. Whatever . it's name,
.
it's been .good so far for the
third quarter, to beat the ago, the rocket-armed · QB as possible. ·
Browns 28-10. With the was in jeopardy of losing his
"I'm ready to roll," said Ravens.
·
win, Baltimore improved to , starting job to backup Bnidy Lewis, • now closing in on
"It's a good way to get
Harassed
by 10,000 career yards.
Troy on the 'field," wide
a surprising 2-0, while Quinn.
Cleveland dropped its third Baltimore's pass rush,
In Lewis' 22 games in receiver Derrick Mason
straight to start the season, Anderson completed just 14 . Cleveland, the Browns are said. "Troy has proven that
nearly dashing sky-high of 37 passe, for a season- Il-l when· the 29-year-old he can play, that he is a very
e.xpectations.
low 125 yards and the three has 20 or more c31Ties.
good quarterback . in this
• · ~unny what a few weeks picks. one of which safety
Coincidence?
league not just with gimwdl do.
Ed Reed ran back for a TO.
"I had the same stats in mick plays. But if he had to
,. ·Since then, the .Ravens (4Anderson's !lbysmal per- Baltimore," said Lewis, who line up under cenier, he's a
J) have gone 2-3 and last formartce '-- he had a 22.9 · spent seven seasons with the -very good quarterback.
week the team best known QB rating promfted Ravens. "I don't know what You've got to put the guy in
for smothering, smash- coach Romeo Crenne to effect that has on us as far as because he's so good at what
mouth defense unveiled a suggest a switch. to Quinn winning the game: It's not as he does. The package is
two-quarterback, single- was
imminent.
But simple as just linin~ up and good for him, the package is
wing formation that stunned Anderson responded by raJ- running the ball 20 t1mes . At good for us.
Oakland. With rookie quar- lying Cleveland to a win at · the S31De time, once you get
"I don't know what wt!'re
terback Joe Fiacco flanked Cincinnati the following h1omentum going, get .your going to do thig week with
wide and backup QB Troy week, and in the four games offensive line going, estab- Troy, but I'm pretty sure
Smith in the shotgun, the since facing the Ravens , he !ish that !'hysical ballgame · Troy will get his opportunisuddenly tricky Ravens has thrown five TDs and just - bein~ m the AFC North ty."
- you ve got to run the · The Browns, who . have
pickj:d up 75 yards in four one interception.
plays and rolled to a 29-10
While his stats have suf- football ."
revi~ed their season and can
· fered and some passes have
Or, as the Ravens proved. get back to . .5&lt;X;l with a V.:in,
win.
. · iii,:;) .
Meanwhile, the &gt;Browns wobbled mstead of sp1raled, ·last · week, keep 'em guess- spent · extra time gettmg
(3-4) have won three of four Anderson insists he never ing.
ready for whatever the
and are coming off an lost his confidence.
The Raiders didn't know Ravens may throw - or run
impressive 23-17 win at
"Personally, I think everr, what to do when the Ravens - .at them.
.
''They~re not the same
Jacksonville . The victory ball's going to be perfect,' wel}t to their funky Fiaccoconcluded a chaotic week he said .. "Maybe 1t's not. Smith formation, which they te31D as five weeks ago,"
that fe11tured the club's om:- Maybe the receiver has to wo~ked on during minic31DJ? linebacker· Wilije McGinest
game suspensiOn o.f outspo- make a· great catch. But if monlhs ago but waited untJl said. "We' ve had to study
. them all over qgain."
ken Pro Bowl light end you drop back there and Week 8 t&lt;l uncork .
BY TOM WITHERS

~ampbell
puts
pick-free
run
on·
line
.
..

•
••

'

BY JOSEPH WHITE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LANDOVER. Md.- Ben
Roethlisberger has nothing
llut admiration for the · big
lero that still sits on Jason
J:ampbell 's row of stats
~alfway through the season.
i "It's impressive in this
league," Roethlisberger said,
!'not to throw an interception ."
.
: It's impressive , surprising
hnd even a bit.tlukey, but the
tourth-year
Washington
Redskins quarterback who
this year had to learn a new
bffense has had all 230 of his
passes land either in ·a teammate's hands or on the
ground.
The streak faces its bigllcst
purdle to date Monday mght
· ~o~~hen ·the Redskins host the
Pittsburgh Steelers, who
' !lave the -league's toy-rated
overall defense as wei as the
iop-rated pass defense.
; "It's unbelievable that he
j!asn't thrown a pick ,"
~edskins tight. end Chris
t:ooley said, "based on the
_ l:hance that somebody's
going to droJ? a ball, tip a ball
bp in the a1r. It's not only
~ying that Jason is smart,
jt's saying that you have a lot
· of luck on your side as well .
br all of our receivers are
just cak:hing the ball.

l

.•

· "But weird things happen
in football games. I don't
want to jinx him or jinx us,
but it's a huge credit to the
way he's playing that he's
protecting the ball like that.
It'd be really cool to say he
went through tlie whole year
without a pick."
That would certainly be a
first. In fact, no NFL team
has ever made it ihrough an
entire season throwing fewer
than five mterceptions.
Campbell is only 56 attempts
away froin Bernie Kosar's
record of 286 pick-free passes to stan a season.
"That is a bit of a novelty,
not
planned
out,"
Washington coach Jim Zorn
said. "I don't know how
many games in a row he can
contmue to do that. But to
his credit, he has tried to
make good decisions. He has
thrown the ball away in good
spots, when necessary. We
had some balls batted, like

every .quarterback, and they Roethlisberger has never
fall into the ground."
thrown fewer than nine interThe Redskins as a team ceptions in a full season. He
have set a league record with already has seven ~his year,
360 throws without an inter- including four last week in a
ception, with their last regu- · 21-14 loss to the N11w York
·Jar-season pick coming on Giants.
·
Dec. 2, 2007. Todd Collins, That loss· dropped the
promoted afte~ Campbell Steelefll to 5-2, with. both
~~nt down, ~1th a kn~e losses coming against ~C
mjury, d1dn t throw one m . East teams. Monday night
the final four regular-season presents another test against
g~es last year, although he the best ·division in the NFL,
d1d have two m the playoff with the Redskins (6-2) only
loss at Seattle.
.
one-half game behind the
C3;111pbell says he tnes not Giimts for best record In the
to thmk about the streak, that NFC
he's only trying to manage
"The
NFC
East,"
the g31De as best he can. p· b h
·
H'
Those who know him well Ills urg receiver
mes
Ward said, "that's a hard
aren't surprised.
division ."
"He's a very, very poised
quarterback," said Steelers
Campbell's streak has
safety Ryan Clark, who was remained intact ~n J?art
Campbell's teammate , in because. of the Redskms'
wash'm~ton he~ore s•gmng
· ·
ability to run the ball .
Cl1'nto·n Pon•·s leads the
wilh Pittsburgh in 2006.
"
"He's one of those . guys league in rushing with 944
who's like an old spirit. He yards and has at least 120
was, like, 30 years old when yards in five straight g31Des.
he got there. He had the full
But the Steelers haven't
mustache , I mean , young allowed a 100-yard rusher all
kids don't wear just a mus- season. Campbell might be
tache and no goatee; it's pret- forced to throw more often
ty funny looking. But he's · was usual Monday night.
"Something's got to give,"
always been really poised .
You cal) see him going Campbell said . "Because
throu~h so many offensive they're a tremendous rush
coordmators and still being defense, and we're second in
able to produce."
the NFL in rushing . Thai's
For comp~rison's sake, where it starts - up front."

AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals ru-nning back Cedric Bensop (32) runs
past Pittsburgh Stealers defenders Lawrence Timmons, top
right, and James Farrior, bottom right, in the second half of
an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. t 9 in Cincinnati.
Pittsburgh won the game 38-10.

Jagars don't want to
be Bengals' first.victim
Bv Joe KAY

are 2-2 in that stretch . They
have to get their running
game going - and fast - if
CINCINNATI - Drop all they want to keep thinking
the talk about 0-16 . From about the playoffs.
receiver
T.J .
"Hopefully,- we have
per- pressed the reset button and
Houshmandzadeh 's
spectiYe, there's no chance it try to chiar all thai out," said
will happen.
running back Fred Taylor,
·Not with his winless who had 24 yards on eight
Cincinnati Bengals. anyway. carries against Cleveland.
Half~ay through the sea- "We know what it is."
son. the Bengals (0-8) are at
The Jaguars have won :
the bottom of the NFL and their last four games ag;1inst
their fans are s'tarting to the Ben gals and nine of their
wonder if there's ·even a last 10'. If the trend coolinsmidgen of opportunity for a ues, the Bengals would fall
win during a tough second- to 0-9 overall for only the
half stretch of the schedule. second time in franchise his" Never crossed my mind ," .tory; the 1993 Bengals
Houshmandzadeh said, dis- opened 0-10. They're commissively. "We're not going ing off their most lopsided
to lose every game. It's just back-to-back losses in frannot going to happen. I don't h'
h' t
38 10 t0
mean to sound like this · or c ISe IS ory - . .Pittsburgh and 35-6 at
that , but that 's' just not going Houston .
A loss on Sunday would
to happen· Every g~me
you've played? Nah."
drop them to 0-9 for only the
No ·team has ever gone 0- second time in franchise his16, finding someone. some- twy; the 1993 Bengals
where along the way to
d 0 10 Th •
knock off. The Jacksonville opene - · ey re cornJaguars (3_4) can't afford to ing off their most lopsided
back-to-back losses in franh'
h'
38 0
let it be them on Sunday.
While the Bengals have. c •se
•story: · -I
to
played far below even their Pittsburgh and 35-6 at
I&lt;
Houston .
owest expectations, the
On the surface , it seems
Jaguars have been losing they ' ve . checked out .on
close games and fading coach Marvin Lewis.
away. They're four games
"Does it look like this
behind ·
undefeated
Tennessee in . the AFC locker room is lost?" recei\1South. and . approach the er Chad Och9 Cinco. said.
midpoint of their season "Everybocly is upbeat. If
feelmg like underachievers. anyone was going to lose a
"Guys are definitely upset team, the tirst pers~n that
and disappointed ," quarter- . :-vould hav~ been lo,stm here
back David Garrard said. IS me. Ser,LOusly: I d, be. t~e
"We definitely had bigger .first one. I d be, hke, Th1~ IS
hopes for ourselves, other blah blah blah; Uh-uh. I v_e
than where we are right ~en upbeat. I ve been pos•.
,,
.
ttft~
•
now.
.
Well, at least they're not When the Bengals slipped
0-8.
·
to 7-9 last season, players
·"No, we're not," Garrard openly 1 ~roused all·out the
said. "but sometimes it feels play calhng and Ocho Cinco
that way."
· berated quarterback Carson
Their
challenge
on Palmer on the field. The losSunday is to nol let a down- ing this year is coming with
lind-out team get up and run- more equanimity.
ning.
That's the dan~er for the
The Jaguars are the only Jaguars, who cant afford to
team in the league that's had become this year's version
every game decided by of the Baltimore Ravens.
seven points or less . The last Last year. the Dolphins
one, a 23- 17 loss to started 0-13 before running
Cleveland in Jacksonville , into the self-destructive
took a lot out of them. · Ravens and pulling off a 22- ·
Garrard had another impres- 16 win in overtime.
.
"A team without a win, I
sive game, accounting for
342 of the Jaguars' 380 total g11ess they have notiling to
yan;ls . All it proved was that lose ," Taylor said. "You can
a one-man show closes .try new stuff. YoH can try
down pretty fast.
. things that are somewhat
· Garrard hasn't thrown an unorthodoK , considering
interception in the last four that it might not be on film
games, a streak of 150 pass- - surprise attacks , sneak
e~ . He has thrown at least 30 attacks·, whatever you want
.p: tsses in , each of the last to call it . You can do anyfour games. He led the thing.
Jaguars with 59 yards' on . "Another part of that is if
scrambles
agains t . they beat you, that's a terri.
Cleveland.
. ble feeling."
Despite the qu arterback's
One they don't wantto get
consistent play. the Jaguars to know .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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PageB4

NFL WEEKEND

Sunday, November 2,

2008

PageBs

OUTDOORS

iunba~ limd ·itnttntl

Sunday, November 2,

•

,,

.OiiiO

2008

Gavin .Wildlife Are~
becomes a reality ·~

..

••
Signs have been going up
marking the new AEP~
Gavin Wildlife Area in
&lt;
Meigs and Gallia counties,
which will certainly be welcome news for hunters who
make the annual trek to
southeastern. Ohio to hunt
·
~
·whitetail deer and wild
Open ~
turkey.
..
. The AEP-Gavin Wildlife
'"
Area consists of 6,885 acres
located · in Salem and
::
Rutland townships in Meigs
::
County
and .· Cheshire
A partnership betwetill
Township in Gallia County. AEP and
the
Ohio
Much of the wildlife area 1s Department of Naturai
associated with property Resources' Division , Qf
connected to the abandoned Wildlife makes good senst::
coal conveyor belt that ran In ·the past few years, or itt
from around Salem Center least since the conveyor beti
to the . {Iavin Plant at . has been closed, many peoCh;:shire.
' pie have been trespassing on
This is somethinll that is the propeny with four..
greatly needed in th1s part of wheelers and other vehicl~
the state. Hunting IS big for . various reasons. The
business. and a source of partnership
will
help
tourism; Meigs County, in address that issue by adding
particular, lacks public 'lands a law enforcement presence
that can be used for hunting, to the property.
so partnerships like this are ·The Meigs SWCD is holdcrucial iii providing hunting er of a conservation ease-=
opportunities. · .·.
,.. · ment on almost 1.000 acres
I am curious to s~ how of the pro.peny, which is
local
businesses
and located mostly along Parker
landowners take adv.antage Run Road. This partnership
of . this new source of will. help protect that land by
tourism
dollars. addmg a law enforcement
Carnpgroupd•anyone?
presence to enforce wildlife
The plan is to have this laws, prevent illegal trash
area up and running by and tire dumps, and to pre;
youth guil season, which vent the use of off-road
starts. No~. 22, but as is the vehicles.
.case with any endeavor,
There will definitely be
there are bound to be some wildlife officers patrollin!l
growing paiJis, so be patient. the area this deer season, so
Sportsmen who want to don't even think about riding
hunt, trap or fish on the your four-wheeler on the
property must first obtain a propeny, hunting without
free ~rmit which will be the proper license or tags, or
available from deer check deer hunting with an
stations and other local busi- unplugged shotgun or n0t
nesses. A permit can also be wearing enough hunttt
:.'. obtained via l,t.merican orange. . ·~
·
..
Electric Power's website at
The •'AEP-Gavin · Wildlife
http://www.aep.com/em:i- . Area can be accessed vill
ronmentaVrecreation/reclan state Routes 124 and 325 iR
d/permit.aspx.
•. Meigs County, and State
The permit authorizes the Route 554 in Gallia County,
holder to hunt, fish and trap and by various county and
on the l?roperty in accor- township roads in both
dance With state laws and counties. More information
·regulations; the exception is and maps should be coming
tl)at beaver trappers wi II out in the next few weeks. :
need a special beaver trap- ' If you go, make sure t6
ping permit. The rules and respect
nei~hboring
regulations are written on limdowners, and take along
the back of the permit. Not a youngster to share the
all AEP property in the two experience.
•
counties is included in the
Jim Freeman is wildlife
agreement, includin~ the
property associated With the specialist for the Meigs Soi1
now-closed Southern Ohio and Water Conservation
CQal Company mines and District. He can be contacted
the coal prep plant . weekdays at 740-992-4282
Unfortlinately, maps of the or at jimfreeman@oh.nacd'
area are not yet available.
net.net
~

In the··

Jun' Freeman

··

APphoto

Jacksonville Jaguars kicker Josh Scobee, left, grabs Cleveland Browns kick-returner Josh Cribbs to make the iackle during a second-quarter kickoff-return in an NFL football game, Sunday In Jacksonville, Fla,
.

N~w looks for

Browns, Ravens

· Kellen Winslow for dis- think, ·'Aw, maybe this isn't
On the first two plays,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
paraging comments and going to be good, then Smith took the snap and ran
behavior; a decision to you're going to throw like between the tackles. He then
, CLEVELAND - If they rescind the penalty the night hell."
.
went outside and pitched to
didn't know each. other So before the game; andgenerAnderson should get a rookie . running back Ray
well, being di~tant NFL al manager Phil Savage's boost from the return of Rice for a 21-yard gain.
cousins and · all, the vague postgame assertions Winslow, who wants to Smith, the Cleveland native
Baltimore Ravens and that there was more to the move · on following his and Ohio State Heisman
Cleveland Browns· might story.
strange standoff with Savage Trophy winner. who proba11.01 recognize each other.
Other than the orange hel- . over his hospitalization for a ·bJy would have opened the
,; Although
the teams mets, the Ravens expect to staph infection. .
season as Baltimore's starter
played a little more than a see a brand new Browns
The Browns, too, might be if not for a serious tonsil
tnonth ago, the AFC North team.
·
better served by Anderson infection, then rolled right
rivals - linked by history
"They're playing . with a simply turning and handing and threw back to Fiacco for
and Ohio ·roots - are vastly lot of confidence, a lpt of the ball to Jamal Lewis, who a 43-yard gain .
different from their first swagger," Baltimore line- after carrying just 12 times
Ravens
coach
John
meeting.
backer Terrell Suggs said. against the Ravens last Harbaugh has jokingly
~ Back on Sept. 21 , the "They're not the same guys month called Cleveland's referred to .the .double QB
Ravens scored -three touch- that showed up in the begin- play-calling
"pathetiC ." formation as the "Suggs
downs, two $Ct .up. by inter- ning of the season."
Lewis regrets what he said, Package," after the lineceptions of Derek Anderson
Anderson certainly · has but he's adamant about backer pushed for Smith to
in a 50-second span of the changed. Only a few weeks wanting the football aS. much start. Whatever . it's name,
.
it's been .good so far for the
third quarter, to beat the ago, the rocket-armed · QB as possible. ·
Browns 28-10. With the was in jeopardy of losing his
"I'm ready to roll," said Ravens.
·
win, Baltimore improved to , starting job to backup Bnidy Lewis, • now closing in on
"It's a good way to get
Harassed
by 10,000 career yards.
Troy on the 'field," wide
a surprising 2-0, while Quinn.
Cleveland dropped its third Baltimore's pass rush,
In Lewis' 22 games in receiver Derrick Mason
straight to start the season, Anderson completed just 14 . Cleveland, the Browns are said. "Troy has proven that
nearly dashing sky-high of 37 passe, for a season- Il-l when· the 29-year-old he can play, that he is a very
e.xpectations.
low 125 yards and the three has 20 or more c31Ties.
good quarterback . in this
• · ~unny what a few weeks picks. one of which safety
Coincidence?
league not just with gimwdl do.
Ed Reed ran back for a TO.
"I had the same stats in mick plays. But if he had to
,. ·Since then, the .Ravens (4Anderson's !lbysmal per- Baltimore," said Lewis, who line up under cenier, he's a
J) have gone 2-3 and last formartce '-- he had a 22.9 · spent seven seasons with the -very good quarterback.
week the team best known QB rating promfted Ravens. "I don't know what You've got to put the guy in
for smothering, smash- coach Romeo Crenne to effect that has on us as far as because he's so good at what
mouth defense unveiled a suggest a switch. to Quinn winning the game: It's not as he does. The package is
two-quarterback, single- was
imminent.
But simple as just linin~ up and good for him, the package is
wing formation that stunned Anderson responded by raJ- running the ball 20 t1mes . At good for us.
Oakland. With rookie quar- lying Cleveland to a win at · the S31De time, once you get
"I don't know what wt!'re
terback Joe Fiacco flanked Cincinnati the following h1omentum going, get .your going to do thig week with
wide and backup QB Troy week, and in the four games offensive line going, estab- Troy, but I'm pretty sure
Smith in the shotgun, the since facing the Ravens , he !ish that !'hysical ballgame · Troy will get his opportunisuddenly tricky Ravens has thrown five TDs and just - bein~ m the AFC North ty."
- you ve got to run the · The Browns, who . have
pickj:d up 75 yards in four one interception.
plays and rolled to a 29-10
While his stats have suf- football ."
revi~ed their season and can
· fered and some passes have
Or, as the Ravens proved. get back to . .5&lt;X;l with a V.:in,
win.
. · iii,:;) .
Meanwhile, the &gt;Browns wobbled mstead of sp1raled, ·last · week, keep 'em guess- spent · extra time gettmg
(3-4) have won three of four Anderson insists he never ing.
ready for whatever the
and are coming off an lost his confidence.
The Raiders didn't know Ravens may throw - or run
impressive 23-17 win at
"Personally, I think everr, what to do when the Ravens - .at them.
.
''They~re not the same
Jacksonville . The victory ball's going to be perfect,' wel}t to their funky Fiaccoconcluded a chaotic week he said .. "Maybe 1t's not. Smith formation, which they te31D as five weeks ago,"
that fe11tured the club's om:- Maybe the receiver has to wo~ked on during minic31DJ? linebacker· Wilije McGinest
game suspensiOn o.f outspo- make a· great catch. But if monlhs ago but waited untJl said. "We' ve had to study
. them all over qgain."
ken Pro Bowl light end you drop back there and Week 8 t&lt;l uncork .
BY TOM WITHERS

~ampbell
puts
pick-free
run
on·
line
.
..

•
••

'

BY JOSEPH WHITE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LANDOVER. Md.- Ben
Roethlisberger has nothing
llut admiration for the · big
lero that still sits on Jason
J:ampbell 's row of stats
~alfway through the season.
i "It's impressive in this
league," Roethlisberger said,
!'not to throw an interception ."
.
: It's impressive , surprising
hnd even a bit.tlukey, but the
tourth-year
Washington
Redskins quarterback who
this year had to learn a new
bffense has had all 230 of his
passes land either in ·a teammate's hands or on the
ground.
The streak faces its bigllcst
purdle to date Monday mght
· ~o~~hen ·the Redskins host the
Pittsburgh Steelers, who
' !lave the -league's toy-rated
overall defense as wei as the
iop-rated pass defense.
; "It's unbelievable that he
j!asn't thrown a pick ,"
~edskins tight. end Chris
t:ooley said, "based on the
_ l:hance that somebody's
going to droJ? a ball, tip a ball
bp in the a1r. It's not only
~ying that Jason is smart,
jt's saying that you have a lot
· of luck on your side as well .
br all of our receivers are
just cak:hing the ball.

l

.•

· "But weird things happen
in football games. I don't
want to jinx him or jinx us,
but it's a huge credit to the
way he's playing that he's
protecting the ball like that.
It'd be really cool to say he
went through tlie whole year
without a pick."
That would certainly be a
first. In fact, no NFL team
has ever made it ihrough an
entire season throwing fewer
than five mterceptions.
Campbell is only 56 attempts
away froin Bernie Kosar's
record of 286 pick-free passes to stan a season.
"That is a bit of a novelty,
not
planned
out,"
Washington coach Jim Zorn
said. "I don't know how
many games in a row he can
contmue to do that. But to
his credit, he has tried to
make good decisions. He has
thrown the ball away in good
spots, when necessary. We
had some balls batted, like

every .quarterback, and they Roethlisberger has never
fall into the ground."
thrown fewer than nine interThe Redskins as a team ceptions in a full season. He
have set a league record with already has seven ~his year,
360 throws without an inter- including four last week in a
ception, with their last regu- · 21-14 loss to the N11w York
·Jar-season pick coming on Giants.
·
Dec. 2, 2007. Todd Collins, That loss· dropped the
promoted afte~ Campbell Steelefll to 5-2, with. both
~~nt down, ~1th a kn~e losses coming against ~C
mjury, d1dn t throw one m . East teams. Monday night
the final four regular-season presents another test against
g~es last year, although he the best ·division in the NFL,
d1d have two m the playoff with the Redskins (6-2) only
loss at Seattle.
.
one-half game behind the
C3;111pbell says he tnes not Giimts for best record In the
to thmk about the streak, that NFC
he's only trying to manage
"The
NFC
East,"
the g31De as best he can. p· b h
·
H'
Those who know him well Ills urg receiver
mes
Ward said, "that's a hard
aren't surprised.
division ."
"He's a very, very poised
quarterback," said Steelers
Campbell's streak has
safety Ryan Clark, who was remained intact ~n J?art
Campbell's teammate , in because. of the Redskms'
wash'm~ton he~ore s•gmng
· ·
ability to run the ball .
Cl1'nto·n Pon•·s leads the
wilh Pittsburgh in 2006.
"
"He's one of those . guys league in rushing with 944
who's like an old spirit. He yards and has at least 120
was, like, 30 years old when yards in five straight g31Des.
he got there. He had the full
But the Steelers haven't
mustache , I mean , young allowed a 100-yard rusher all
kids don't wear just a mus- season. Campbell might be
tache and no goatee; it's pret- forced to throw more often
ty funny looking. But he's · was usual Monday night.
"Something's got to give,"
always been really poised .
You cal) see him going Campbell said . "Because
throu~h so many offensive they're a tremendous rush
coordmators and still being defense, and we're second in
able to produce."
the NFL in rushing . Thai's
For comp~rison's sake, where it starts - up front."

AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals ru-nning back Cedric Bensop (32) runs
past Pittsburgh Stealers defenders Lawrence Timmons, top
right, and James Farrior, bottom right, in the second half of
an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. t 9 in Cincinnati.
Pittsburgh won the game 38-10.

Jagars don't want to
be Bengals' first.victim
Bv Joe KAY

are 2-2 in that stretch . They
have to get their running
game going - and fast - if
CINCINNATI - Drop all they want to keep thinking
the talk about 0-16 . From about the playoffs.
receiver
T.J .
"Hopefully,- we have
per- pressed the reset button and
Houshmandzadeh 's
spectiYe, there's no chance it try to chiar all thai out," said
will happen.
running back Fred Taylor,
·Not with his winless who had 24 yards on eight
Cincinnati Bengals. anyway. carries against Cleveland.
Half~ay through the sea- "We know what it is."
son. the Bengals (0-8) are at
The Jaguars have won :
the bottom of the NFL and their last four games ag;1inst
their fans are s'tarting to the Ben gals and nine of their
wonder if there's ·even a last 10'. If the trend coolinsmidgen of opportunity for a ues, the Bengals would fall
win during a tough second- to 0-9 overall for only the
half stretch of the schedule. second time in franchise his" Never crossed my mind ," .tory; the 1993 Bengals
Houshmandzadeh said, dis- opened 0-10. They're commissively. "We're not going ing off their most lopsided
to lose every game. It's just back-to-back losses in frannot going to happen. I don't h'
h' t
38 10 t0
mean to sound like this · or c ISe IS ory - . .Pittsburgh and 35-6 at
that , but that 's' just not going Houston .
A loss on Sunday would
to happen· Every g~me
you've played? Nah."
drop them to 0-9 for only the
No ·team has ever gone 0- second time in franchise his16, finding someone. some- twy; the 1993 Bengals
where along the way to
d 0 10 Th •
knock off. The Jacksonville opene - · ey re cornJaguars (3_4) can't afford to ing off their most lopsided
back-to-back losses in franh'
h'
38 0
let it be them on Sunday.
While the Bengals have. c •se
•story: · -I
to
played far below even their Pittsburgh and 35-6 at
I&lt;
Houston .
owest expectations, the
On the surface , it seems
Jaguars have been losing they ' ve . checked out .on
close games and fading coach Marvin Lewis.
away. They're four games
"Does it look like this
behind ·
undefeated
Tennessee in . the AFC locker room is lost?" recei\1South. and . approach the er Chad Och9 Cinco. said.
midpoint of their season "Everybocly is upbeat. If
feelmg like underachievers. anyone was going to lose a
"Guys are definitely upset team, the tirst pers~n that
and disappointed ," quarter- . :-vould hav~ been lo,stm here
back David Garrard said. IS me. Ser,LOusly: I d, be. t~e
"We definitely had bigger .first one. I d be, hke, Th1~ IS
hopes for ourselves, other blah blah blah; Uh-uh. I v_e
than where we are right ~en upbeat. I ve been pos•.
,,
.
ttft~
•
now.
.
Well, at least they're not When the Bengals slipped
0-8.
·
to 7-9 last season, players
·"No, we're not," Garrard openly 1 ~roused all·out the
said. "but sometimes it feels play calhng and Ocho Cinco
that way."
· berated quarterback Carson
Their
challenge
on Palmer on the field. The losSunday is to nol let a down- ing this year is coming with
lind-out team get up and run- more equanimity.
ning.
That's the dan~er for the
The Jaguars are the only Jaguars, who cant afford to
team in the league that's had become this year's version
every game decided by of the Baltimore Ravens.
seven points or less . The last Last year. the Dolphins
one, a 23- 17 loss to started 0-13 before running
Cleveland in Jacksonville , into the self-destructive
took a lot out of them. · Ravens and pulling off a 22- ·
Garrard had another impres- 16 win in overtime.
.
"A team without a win, I
sive game, accounting for
342 of the Jaguars' 380 total g11ess they have notiling to
yan;ls . All it proved was that lose ," Taylor said. "You can
a one-man show closes .try new stuff. YoH can try
down pretty fast.
. things that are somewhat
· Garrard hasn't thrown an unorthodoK , considering
interception in the last four that it might not be on film
games, a streak of 150 pass- - surprise attacks , sneak
e~ . He has thrown at least 30 attacks·, whatever you want
.p: tsses in , each of the last to call it . You can do anyfour games. He led the thing.
Jaguars with 59 yards' on . "Another part of that is if
scrambles
agains t . they beat you, that's a terri.
Cleveland.
. ble feeling."
Despite the qu arterback's
One they don't wantto get
consistent play. the Jaguars to know .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Sun: By appoinrmenr

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�Sunday, November 2, 2008

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

Page 86 • Sunday Times- Sentinel

6unbap (B;fmd -&amp;rnttnel

•

Sunday, November 2, 2oo8

•

The audience
the recent Breast Cancer Survivor Wol'l!shop listens to Sharon StoutShaffer speak .about rel~atlon techniques usad tOr patients dealing with bre,st cancer
both before ~nd after a diagnosis.
·

Breast ·cancer
A sorority if survivorship
STORY AND. PHOTOS BY
BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRINGS
Breast cancer survivors
in &lt;me of the best and
most unique sororities
.with one of the worst initilltions ever, this accotding
to Anna Cluxton, speaker
at the recent Breast Cancer
. Survivor's Workshop in
Meigs County.
. The workshop attempted
to shed light on all the ·
issues
women
face
!lefore, during and after a
clignosis
of
breast
cancer. The event was
~onsored by ,thQ · Meigs Sto'jfn4111~r .Donna Wilson Interjects some humor .at

are

0/
70

APR**
.

For Qualified .
Buyers

·

For 36 Months

---OR.,.---.----.---1

$5,000 ~~!~
0

ApR
/0

0'

l:i~~~. App I ~iii~~· -~~=~~/t~l~e1~~r~.&amp;'{.W£~~'"P&gt;,:~.!l~JAI,ea,..bqut

Cancer·
Community
·Network . imd funded by It ·luck.• Lampert calJs it it, it was that promise to
the Susan G. Komen ·For Divine intervention that my young granddaughter
Cure
Columbus the cancer had not spread that kept me going.~· ·
the
Affiliate.
beyond her breast during
As many of the women
Fittingly enough, the the year it lived 'inside her iri the audience connected
first speaker ·was 10-year · body. . Still, because the to
those
pro'mises,
breast cancer sur;vivor, canc.er was there for a year Lampert then talked about ·
Johanna
Lampert. and the tumor had grown the nausea and anergic
Lampert began her. speech, into a aggressive form, reaction to the chemo, but
titled "Surviving the Lampert's treatment was managed to find a little
aggressive, humor looking back at the
Good, the Bad and the ~qually
Ugly" by saying: "For !hcludmg ~urgery, four · time her hair feU out. "To '
those of you who have not rounds of che.mother!IPY this day, I think a :bad hair
had breast cancer,.I'm sure and a series of radiation day" always beats a 'no
the word survivor has a treatments.
hau' day." ·
·
different meaning than for . She took the audience
Like for so many
those of us who have from 'the time she h,eard women, getting a clean
the words "breast cancer" bill of health doesn't mean
experienced it." · ·
Wiih no risk factors and !;rom her doctor, ~e11ing ·breast · cancer · stops
uo family history, Lampert them "the overwhelming impacting their lives,
found herself with a breast impact of the words often eluotionaJly
or
cancer diagnosis a year in makes it impossible for a physicaJly. For Lampert ;
the making thanks to ·poor woman to hear anything she
took the drug
communication
via ·else said to her,..•to the Tamoxifen for five years
her.orginal
physican's time she told Her 15- and Femara after that, and
~taff. Lone. story short, - lllonth-ol~ granddaughter like most women, the
was ·thought of a reoccurance
thanks to that miscommu- . Delaney she
nication, she. Jived with • · · not goi!lg to die.:· . ..
is in the back of her mind
lump she was told
·~~··~ ~pen explamed:. On but
she doesn't dweJI
benign for neatly a year. :'~;,'l!Qioi~~ I was so stck I
PIHH . . . CIIIICII', C2
Though some might call · Clfatl~ thmk I would make

Back1

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For Qualified
Buyers

For 72 Months#

----OR _ ____:_._

$6,000 ~~!~

2008 GMC Yuko.n ·

wu

Back1

And ea~ comes with the best coverage in •. ......;..,.
Transferable 100,000-mile/?-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistance/Courtesy Transportation Programs.
Whichever comes first. S'ee dea ler for details.

i

1. ·n,·~~~l!t:;.'

,.. The Number One Volume Buick - Pontiac - 'GMC Dealer

111 the ar ea lo1 8 consecutive 111onllts.

.

•

.

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

_ __. Open Extended Hours ..___
Sundays: 10/19,, 10/26
and 11/2
l•Spm'

304-485-4418
WWW.MAT.HE NYMOTORS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON-FRI9AM-7:30PM • SAT 9AM·6:30PM • SUN 1PM-5PM
'EPA-est. MPG hwy (lWD): Sierra with available 5.3L VB 20 vs. Tundra with available 5.7l VB1B. •• Monthly payment is S27.7B for every S1 ,000 finan ced. 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 1113/08. See dealer lor details. ttf 0 A-est. MPG
hwy (2WD): Yukon with available 5.3LV8 20 vs. Sequoia with available 5.7l VB 19. #Monthly payment is S1l89 for every S1,000 financed. EKample down payment 7,5%. Some customers
will not qualify. Take delivery by 111310B. Not available ,with some other offers. See~ealer for details.
02008 GM Corp. All rights reserved. The marks of General Motors and its divisions are registered trademarks of General Motors Corporation.

I .

•

· Cl .

Dr. Charles
Shapiro, director of
Breast Medical
Oncology and
director
•
of Survivorship
Center of
.
Excellence at Ohio
State University's
Arthur G. James
Caricer Hospital,
speaks at the
recent Breast
Cancer Survivor
Workshop in Meigs
County.

�Sunday, November 2, 2008

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

Page 86 • Sunday Times- Sentinel

6unbap (B;fmd -&amp;rnttnel

•

Sunday, November 2, 2oo8

•

The audience
the recent Breast Cancer Survivor Wol'l!shop listens to Sharon StoutShaffer speak .about rel~atlon techniques usad tOr patients dealing with bre,st cancer
both before ~nd after a diagnosis.
·

Breast ·cancer
A sorority if survivorship
STORY AND. PHOTOS BY
BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRINGS
Breast cancer survivors
in &lt;me of the best and
most unique sororities
.with one of the worst initilltions ever, this accotding
to Anna Cluxton, speaker
at the recent Breast Cancer
. Survivor's Workshop in
Meigs County.
. The workshop attempted
to shed light on all the ·
issues
women
face
!lefore, during and after a
clignosis
of
breast
cancer. The event was
~onsored by ,thQ · Meigs Sto'jfn4111~r .Donna Wilson Interjects some humor .at

are

0/
70

APR**
.

For Qualified .
Buyers

·

For 36 Months

---OR.,.---.----.---1

$5,000 ~~!~
0

ApR
/0

0'

l:i~~~. App I ~iii~~· -~~=~~/t~l~e1~~r~.&amp;'{.W£~~'"P&gt;,:~.!l~JAI,ea,..bqut

Cancer·
Community
·Network . imd funded by It ·luck.• Lampert calJs it it, it was that promise to
the Susan G. Komen ·For Divine intervention that my young granddaughter
Cure
Columbus the cancer had not spread that kept me going.~· ·
the
Affiliate.
beyond her breast during
As many of the women
Fittingly enough, the the year it lived 'inside her iri the audience connected
first speaker ·was 10-year · body. . Still, because the to
those
pro'mises,
breast cancer sur;vivor, canc.er was there for a year Lampert then talked about ·
Johanna
Lampert. and the tumor had grown the nausea and anergic
Lampert began her. speech, into a aggressive form, reaction to the chemo, but
titled "Surviving the Lampert's treatment was managed to find a little
aggressive, humor looking back at the
Good, the Bad and the ~qually
Ugly" by saying: "For !hcludmg ~urgery, four · time her hair feU out. "To '
those of you who have not rounds of che.mother!IPY this day, I think a :bad hair
had breast cancer,.I'm sure and a series of radiation day" always beats a 'no
the word survivor has a treatments.
hau' day." ·
·
different meaning than for . She took the audience
Like for so many
those of us who have from 'the time she h,eard women, getting a clean
the words "breast cancer" bill of health doesn't mean
experienced it." · ·
Wiih no risk factors and !;rom her doctor, ~e11ing ·breast · cancer · stops
uo family history, Lampert them "the overwhelming impacting their lives,
found herself with a breast impact of the words often eluotionaJly
or
cancer diagnosis a year in makes it impossible for a physicaJly. For Lampert ;
the making thanks to ·poor woman to hear anything she
took the drug
communication
via ·else said to her,..•to the Tamoxifen for five years
her.orginal
physican's time she told Her 15- and Femara after that, and
~taff. Lone. story short, - lllonth-ol~ granddaughter like most women, the
was ·thought of a reoccurance
thanks to that miscommu- . Delaney she
nication, she. Jived with • · · not goi!lg to die.:· . ..
is in the back of her mind
lump she was told
·~~··~ ~pen explamed:. On but
she doesn't dweJI
benign for neatly a year. :'~;,'l!Qioi~~ I was so stck I
PIHH . . . CIIIICII', C2
Though some might call · Clfatl~ thmk I would make

Back1

'

For Qualified
Buyers

For 72 Months#

----OR _ ____:_._

$6,000 ~~!~

2008 GMC Yuko.n ·

wu

Back1

And ea~ comes with the best coverage in •. ......;..,.
Transferable 100,000-mile/?-year powertrain limited warranty.
Plus Roadside Assistance/Courtesy Transportation Programs.
Whichever comes first. S'ee dea ler for details.

i

1. ·n,·~~~l!t:;.'

,.. The Number One Volume Buick - Pontiac - 'GMC Dealer

111 the ar ea lo1 8 consecutive 111onllts.

.

•

.

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

_ __. Open Extended Hours ..___
Sundays: 10/19,, 10/26
and 11/2
l•Spm'

304-485-4418
WWW.MAT.HE NYMOTORS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON-FRI9AM-7:30PM • SAT 9AM·6:30PM • SUN 1PM-5PM
'EPA-est. MPG hwy (lWD): Sierra with available 5.3L VB 20 vs. Tundra with available 5.7l VB1B. •• Monthly payment is S27.7B for every S1 ,000 finan ced. 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 1113/08. See dealer lor details. ttf 0 A-est. MPG
hwy (2WD): Yukon with available 5.3LV8 20 vs. Sequoia with available 5.7l VB 19. #Monthly payment is S1l89 for every S1,000 financed. EKample down payment 7,5%. Some customers
will not qualify. Take delivery by 111310B. Not available ,with some other offers. See~ealer for details.
02008 GM Corp. All rights reserved. The marks of General Motors and its divisions are registered trademarks of General Motors Corporation.

I .

•

· Cl .

Dr. Charles
Shapiro, director of
Breast Medical
Oncology and
director
•
of Survivorship
Center of
.
Excellence at Ohio
State University's
Arthur G. James
Caricer Hospital,
speaks at the
recent Breast
Cancer Survivor
Workshop in Meigs
County.

�'

..

YouR HoMETOWN
'

-COMMUNITY CORNERBringing back memories on th~ river
When the River Blend
Quartet was invited to sing
on the Explorer during a trip
,from Point Pleasant to
:Cincinnati recently, member
Gerald "Gig" Powell dido 't
know he was about to experience a trip down memory
lane.
. When the Explorer turned
-to dock after arriving in
Cincinnati , there in full
view was the old Majestic
which for many years traveled the Ohio River.
. Just the sight of the
. Majestic took Gig back to
·the 1950s and the Big Bend
:Minstrel Association's per'formances on the showboat
which took place when it:
was docked at Point
Pleasant.
He said in his mind he
could see the performei'!i in
colorful costume lined lip
:on the gang plank singing
·their hearts ·out to the music
of banjoist Bill Clark.

•••

Steve Badgley has just
·released two historic iic·tion/romantic mystery nov- ·
·els set in the Letart Falls
area where he was born
. which are sure to be of
·interest to history buffs who
don't mind a little fiction
.enhancement for a good
read .
. They are Arcadia , which
·lakes the reader back in
time to the Letart Falls era,
·pre-Civil War up to the turn
of the century. The second
novel, The Lilies Cry is also
-set in the Letart · Falls area,
:and he describes it as "his. toric fiction , but more fact

~ When

be happy to share a copy.

•••

Cftarlene

Hoeflich

than fiction ." It tells lhe
story of the family of James
Letart during the pre-French
and Indian war em up to the
~xpulsion of the . Indians
from Ohio.
-Both of the novels are
available at the Meigs
District Library in Pomeroy
or can be purchased directly
f
r
o
m
WWW.BadgleyPublishing
Company.com.

...

Those of us who are collectors of anything and
everything. can appreciate
Shirley · Hunnell Miller's
enthusiasm when' she
recently discovered in ·her
stash of· Stuff, an article
about Condor Street written
many years ago by Fred W.
·
Crow.
Having grown up on that
street, she said it brought
back lots of memorie's when
she read Mr. Crow's
"Portrait of . Pomeroy's
Condor Street," telli:ng·
things, some of which she
had forgotten , about the
school and fire department
on the street, the generations of families who lived
there, . and the industries
which operated there. She'll

The Enterprise Church on
Route ·33 damaged about
three years ago has now been
tom down following removal.
of the stained glass windows,
and the land has been sold.
The congregation, after
meeting in several places
since the church damage,
has now settled in with the
United Methodists at the
Pomeroy Church. To reflect
the uniting of the two congregations , the church, pastared by Brian Dunham, has
been
renamed
New
Beginnings. A ·celebration
of the ·change is being
planned for later this month.

...

Kathy McDaniel's heiut is
with the Partners in Care
program at the · Senior
Citizens
Center
for
Alzheimers and others suffering memory loss.
Sometimes she finds it dif' ficult to keep the program
afloat financially and then
someone comes along with a
generous donation. This happened last week and Kathy,
the coordinator, wanted to
· publicly express appreciation to the pefson who asked
to n:main anonymous .

...

· Don't. forget this is the
,weekend foi: the time
change. Remember - in
the s~ng we "spring -forward; ' in the fall we "fall
back."

Bv JAMES SANDS
The UPJ headline for Oct.
II, 1943 read, "Rio Grande
Shares Glory With O.S.U.:'
The Buckeyes got the glory
by losing to Great Lakes
·Naval Training College
:(composed of former college
stars who were studying to
·llecome naval officers). But
the Buckeyes lost by seven
points to one of the best
·teams in the country and Rio
-G~ got glory for finally
-winnmg a game. Fritz
Howell wrote: "The state's
smallest school ended the
country's longest losing
:streak
by
, beating
:Muskingum, 7 to 6, the first
:win for the Gallia County
'kids since 1937 ."
:: A few weeks later, UP!
·Writer Grant Dillman wrote:
."Rio Grande Just Ahead Of
Ohio State In . Buckeye
: Colle~iate,
Football
:Standings. At that pomt m
:the season Rio Grande was 2·
:3 and Ohio State was just 2·5.
·Oddly, the team with the best
:record in Ohio in 1943 was
Oberlin.
: Rio Grande took a 7-0 lead
:at Wellston against the ·
· ~Muskies when Bill Ball
:returned a punt all the way to
:Muskingum 20-yard line.
·'Three runs by Gilliland and a
· pass from Ball to Gilliland
~ covered the. 20 yards to pay·
·dut and then a pass from
:Gilliland to Ball netted the
:extra point . Muskingum
:finally scored with nine min- .
:JJteS left in the game but they
.fwled on a conversion run
:with Rio Grande breaking a
:25-game Josmg streak. The
;Redmen had gone 35 games
:without a win as they had tied
:Alfred Holbrook 0-0 in 1939.
: Ironically, the coach of
·)'\I fred Holbrook both in ·
··1939 and in 1937, when Rio
:Grande had won their last
'game, was Mendel Beattie,
:the coach at Rio Grande in
: 1943. The PA announcer for
:the game was Will Thomas,
:!he founder of the SEOAL
·who said, "The final score
:Rio
Grande
7 and
: Muskingum 6 and that gen!tlemen, ladies and children, is

said. "If the game has educational value, it.should be
continued regardless. If it
hasn't, it should be dropped
altogether."
In a rematch with
Muskingum in 1943 , the
Black and Magenta beat the
Redmen easily 39-0 in New
Concord. Ironically, while
football was suspended at
many Ohio colleges in 1944,
Rio Grande continued · to
play through World War II,
but then had football
removed for good a few
years after the war, following the 1949 season.
Rio
Grande
and
Muskingum had an interesting series of games over the
years. The first time the two
combatants tangled was in
1921 , with Muskingum winning 27-14. Rio had only 13
players making the trip, but
long runs by Boster kept it
close.
•
In 1925, Rio Grande was
chosen as the opponent for
the first game played in
Muskingum's .new stadiull),
now called McGonagha
Stadiull). Nearly 3,000 people saw Rio Grande stun the
home team early in the game
when the Muskies' punter
Todd fumbled the snap and
Rio's Boyd picked it. up and
ran 10 yards for a touchdown.
Lewis then kicked the extra
point. Rio protected that 7-0
lead until late in the fourth

quarter when Muskingum
lied the game, whi~h js where
it stayed at 7-7.
In 1930, Rio Grande was
invited. to New Concord to
play in the first nig)lt game in
thiir
part · of
Ohio.
Unfortunately, the lights did·n't work and the game was
played in the late afternoon
with Rio being beaten 60-0.
Tben came the two games .
in 1943. The .last time the two
schools met was in 1945 and
that game was notewOrthy
because it was Ed She11IIIin's
fli'St game ·as head coach 'o f
the Muskies. ffio Grande lost
25-0 but had a small .hand i,n
launching a career that lasted
22 years and garnered a
record of 141 wins and only
43 losses with seven ties,
leadipg to induction to the
College Football Hall Qf
Fame in I 996. Sherman's
teams won six Ohio
Conference titles, witli the
1955 and 1960 teams being
unbeaten.
By the .way, the longest col7
lege football losing streak. is
80, held by Prairie View. The
Ohio dubious distinction
winner is Oberlin, which
about a decade ago went 40
games without a win or tie.
(James Sands is a speciol
correspoiule,.t for the
Sunday Times-Senti~l. He
can be conUU:ted by writing
to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio

Sunday, Navember 2, 2008

SUNDAY PUZZLER.
18 Hold on to lighUy
Kind of orange

~~

22 Citified
23 French composer
24 Spead
·
· 25 Waary
26 Fisll organs ' ··
. 27 Form of quartz
28 Find repugnant
29 Crete's Mount30Rondorsenset.,.
31 Corlain vote
33 Crowbar
35 Be wrong
3e Honor with a party
38 'Minoral
39 Fond duo4ll 'Superman· ~Ualn lulhor
41 f&lt;mament
42 Wet In a wo.y
44 Sure
48 callornia wine areo
51 Farnastic aeature
. 54 Adore
55 Ship part
57 Proust or Marceau
61 -numeral
62 wash against
63 Giant god
55 Pilerod
66 Arab VIP
67 Requost NrnOIII)'
70 Passover feast
72 Farrow the ICIIIIB
73 o~.S: o1 wine
74 T
kUn
75 Lillie island
n -Pan ..
79 Soft food for boblos
80 Detergent
82 Spaooshlp (abb&lt;.)
83 Whora ~rid Is, In

100 Lubricata
tOt Brute
104 Had a snack
105 - acx:ompli
106 Ste~te
107 Kimooo sash
.
108 Storage suuctures for
grain
110 Pressing Importance
112 Hoop
.. .
113 River ol!orgollulno&amp;s
116 Gannent part
t t 8 Be \\fthout
119 AqUillc blid

120 Moll cunning
122 OiSlance measure
t23 Ootimlstic
124 O!fk:lal seal
125 Aeput
127 Un0ll1verllonal
t29 Co an ol!ica job
130'That !tllow's
133 Kind o1 cab~
135 llo&lt;:trlna
136 Wire measure un~
137. Diplomacy
t4t Psvcltic'aability
(abbr.)
142.1/eke poirtt1
t44 Summ~
145 Baskelball shot
146 HumbU(l l
147 lnlhur
149 Human trunk
151 Ellace
153 l)oposlng anny
1~ Vaiiely ol tea
.
155 French m~al wa1ar
t57 Apple dnnk
158 Oregon's cap!al
t58 Pr"'1iPitout .
180 Fonclir mishaps
181 S)'c:ophant
182 Engraved pillar

Madrid

85 $ummer month

DOWN

.

t t.llsical lheme
2 Stage w!li&amp;par •
3 Gem weight unrt

4 Mature

~ rt'tard candies

7 Jackpot
8 Competent
9 Heatmeas.
10 Trap
11 Bay grace
12 Cloth lor cleaning
13 R~cerack shape
14 Popper plant
15 Foottall taam
t8 Burn
17 Chemist's room, lor
ahor1
18 Flreresldue
19 Wading bird ·
20 TV ~..,..r Mason
·to-earth
32 Perlorm
34Test
37 - Rica Bu~oughs
39 Wattr barrier
43 Long, lona lime
· 44 Wish torthat ol aneth·
er ..
45 Ukely .
46 Eye part
47 TabOI
49- de deux
50 Skill
51
""""""j0111Qiover
.
.
52 Trag~
S3 Frlendllnlos
54 Lanat
56 Walk through water
56 Atlhme)lc red&lt;onlng
58 Inventor - Howil
60 Jumped
62 Uke a cabboge
64 Alter deductions
67 Spolngs bock
68 Melon Vlilety
69 'Wih,ll'
71 Faot. not fiction

ao-

91
92
93
95
96
98

Adobe

·

Loses wannlh

Delame
AC powar unl (abbr.)
Ornate
Wash l~ htty
99 Sire
t 02 Feel sicl&lt;ly ·

103 Slender
105 Elaboratt meal
109 The ' I'
111 TI\;Nght. poetically .
112 Thesaurus name
114 -and haw
115 Oir. letlers
117 Game official, for
short
1t9 Hodges ol boooball
121 Soapstone
123 Esteem
124 Shiny fabric
126Piun128 U!e &amp;lory,.lor short
129 Sunday best ·
130 Plies
131 11ny island
132 Orated
134 Smell wooded area
136 Pondorad
136 Wlite poplar
139 caravan animal
1o4ll Flavoring plant
142 Pace
143.'- go bragh!'
144 Lots and klls
145 Art movement
148 Advorsary
150 Perched
152 - de Jareiro
153 Aloiter
154 - King Cole .

78H~

87 Baby rabbit

78 R~Qrll
81 Ploy on 1110rds
83 Wllltnoy or Wal~h
64 Bon! (Fr.)

8li Wing

90Direded
91 Shoop's cry
92 Hoalthoare.facllly
!14 Eat a IIIII o1
96 Calendar abbr.
97 Sharp projer:tlon

86 Cllatter
88'!'enp~nt

89 VIvaldi or Stradivarl ·

43767.)

: The win over the

Mus~ ie&lt;

194I I•&gt;
:Otterbein and West \'i r~i1 11,1
·'l"ech. After the Otid&gt;cJ n
the AP told h"" R'"
:· Grande had 17 player' ""d
=ttwt there were only 26 hovs
the entire college.
·
: Sollje people in Gallia
:County thought that foot· j)all should be abandoned at
· Rio Grande. But Beattie

:game,

'

covered
by
FDIC?
.

•

STAFF REPORT
. NEWSOMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM •·

Dane Black, right, of
JACKSON - Visitors
Gallipolis took first place
enjoyed a weekend' s
honors in Photography at
I recently had the occasion to look at the coverage rules worth of arts activities are
Foothills Art Festival i
the
offered by the FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance underway during the 27th
·t
currently underway at
.Corporation) when a chent was unsure of the extent to Annual Foothills · Art
Canter's Cave, 5 miles
which her bank accoun(s were' in sured . I had always Festival at Canter's Cave
north of Jackson . At left artl
thought of the FDIC coverage rules as being relatively sim4-H
Camp
,
5
miles
nor.th
·
Dr.
Morgan Paul and Ross ·l'
ple and stratghtfor.ward. but I soon realized that there was
of
Jackson
.
Matlack,
President and
much more to unde~standin g lhe coverage rules than mereNearly
600
works
of
art
CEO of Holzer Medical · .
·Iy knowmg t~e magtc coverage amount of $100,000 (which
by
146
artists
in
seven
difCenter-Jackson.
Holzer is a
has temporanly been changed to $250,000 while the econ'
ferent
categories
were
dismajor sponsor of the event ,
omy is struggling) . I found that, in the case of this particuwhich is free to the public. l·
lar chent, there had been some confusion as to the different played. Among the top
Submitted photo
.;
types of accounts and the rules applied to those different winners is Dane Black, of
Gallipolis , for his "Water
account types. ·
'
Unfortunately, this client had been somewhat misled by Calligraphy" photograph.
the bank. as to the extent ofcoverage available to her, and Dane and · hts brother,
nu &lt;.: unstderatiOn. had been given to the effect that her Logan, as well as his par'accounts had on the coverage available to her daughter 's ents, Michele and Dan Michael of Jackson, Mary Dale Lear of Gallipolis , Jed Elkins of Jackson,
accounts since her daughter was a joint account ho.lder on Black , all entered work in Lynn Vititoe of Jackson, Sandra Coli of ·Jackson, Michele Black of Gallipolis,
several of the CDs. It's my goal with thi s article to set forth the exhibition .•
Jack Park of Point Pleasanti
Local award winners Amy Landrum of Jackson, . Janey Shipman of Oak Hill. W.Va., and Gerry Enrico cf
many of the basic rules governing FDIC coverage so that
confusion in regards to your own account coverage can be . include: Barbara Sheriff Danny Carter of Vinton, Logan Black of Gallipolis, Point Pleasant.
I
avoided .The FDIC is an independent agency of the United Kostohryz of Athens. Phyllis Aaron Apsley of Jacksor , 'Jernifer Ash of Gallipolis,
'
States government that protects you against the loss of your
.deposits if an FDIC-insured bank or savings 'association
fail s. FDIC insurance covers all deposit accounts at 'insured
.banks. including checking, NOW, and savings accounts,
money market deposit accounts and certificates of deposit
STAFF REPORT
with a stone . The grave had nation . The stone replaced area with few if any marked
{COs) up to the insurance limit.
NEWSOMYDAtLYTRISUNE.COM
been unmarked for 94 one which had toppled over graves remembering th&lt;t
years, but Paul Morehouse and split several years ago . truly unique individual;
The FDIC does not . insure money invested in stocks,
GALLIPOLIS - With knew where hi s great, great Dr. Larry
.bonds, mutual fund s, life insurance policies, annuities or
Morehouse interred beneath the sur·
the
cooperation
pf
municipal securities, even if you purchased these products
grandmother wa s buried donated the stone and sent face. "
Morehouse family mem - because !)is grandfath~r had ' greetings ·to all and regrets
from ·an insured bank or savings association .
Members of the Gallit
FDIC insurance is backed by the full faith and credit of bers and the donations of shown him over forty years that he could not attend.
County
Genealogic~
the United States government . Since the FDIC 's creation in many, two tombstones were ago.
At both cemeteries Rev. Society also were invited td
1933, no depositor has ever lost even one cent of fDIC - recent! y placed to mark the
Margaret was born in Candy 'Nuce offered open· attend and meet the family
insured funds . With a track record like that, it's easy to see burial site of their ances- 1838, married in 1855 and ing ·and closing prayers. A members.
Attendin.
'why the memorable FDIC logo is a hallmark of bank lob- tors' graves in Gallia at a time when women had wreath was also placed by besides Morehouse wer1
bies across the country. If you and ·your family have County. Heading up the few rights , she was a major each stone, and the markers Kathie ana Gary Evanst
$250,000 or less in all of your deposit accounts at the same project were Dr. Larry property owner in Galli a were unveiled by family Sharon · and David Daue~
insured bank, you do not need to worry about your insur- Morehouse of Columbia. County, at one time owning members after appropriate all of Columbus, Teresi
ance coverage-your deposits are fully insured (though this Missouri
and
Paul as many as fifty parcels of remarks were made by Paul Huseman of Waldorft
amount has been adjusted upward from $100,000 on a tem- Morehouse of Akron.
land . She died in 1914 . Morehou se, President of Maryland , Bruce and
porary basis). A depositor can have more than $250,000 at
Planning the event on the Paul was able to poi11t out the Ohio Genealogical Elaine Shearer of Paxton,
one insured entity and still be fully insured .provided the same day as the Gallia to the family other markers Society.
Ill. , Kenneth Kent of
-accounts meet certain requirements. In addition, federal County Genealogical OGS and their relationships to
Paul said. "It i' my hope Rutland, Kenneth Kent. J~
)aw provides for insurance coverage of up to $250,000 for Banquet, a large numbe• of one another. It is important that other families will take of Brandywine: ·Md .j
):ert·ain retirement accounts which amount has not been family members were ab'le that others share this in for- in spiration from our actions Pamela Burdett of Florida
adjusted due ·ro the economic downturn and should not be to attend both the grave mation in order to pass it on here today and will decide Julie and Dot Campbell of ·
6ubject to future readjustment when the economy markings and the lineage from one generation to the to rededicate the graves of Point Ple~sant, W.Va.;
improves.
banquet. The family -first next.
their loved ones in this old- Bryan Oskey and Bett)l
: For joint accounts , each co-owner's share of every mel at Fairview Cemetery · At .Pine 'Street a marker est section of Pine Street Davis of Ft. Wayne, an4
ilccount that is jointly held at the same insured bank is in Springfield Township was placed in honor of Cemetery. It would truly be · Henny Evans , Mariaq
·added together with the co-owner 's other shares, and the where the grave of Rebecca Cob Sisson Hill ' a shame for this memorial Scho(mover, Ann Browl
iota! is insured up to $250,000. The FDIC assumes that all Margaret Ward Morehouse who died in 1825 and was to generation s past to and Linda Criner o
:Co-owners' shares are equal unless the deposit account Worthington was marked born the same year as our become simply a grassy Gallipolis .
.
re.cords state otherwise. For example , a husband and wife
•
could have up to $500,000 in one or more joint accounts at
lhe same insured bank and the deposits would be fully
Insured. The husband's ownership share is insured up to
.I
:&amp;250,000 and the wife's ownershtp share is insured up to _
·WASHINGTON (AP) ':- guest'is' singer David Cook. May, after clinching the singer Barbra Streisand'~
' .
.
.
...
'!&amp;250,000.
When McCain's running nomination and while the political advocacy by per;
: Insurance coverage of joint accounts is not increased by My friends, 'it's John
rearranging the owners ' names or by changing the styling McCain, live from New mate , Alaska Gov. Sarah Democratic primary contin- fanning a medley of he(
72-year-old songs.
'
pf their names. Alternating the use of "or," "and" or York, just three days before Palin. appeared on the show ued. The
beL
18,
"Saturday
Night
the
election.
·
·
Arizona
senator
joked
about
Obama
appeared
o
l'and/or" to separate 'the names of co-owners in a joint
'Aides to the Republican . Live" earned its best ratings his age, saying: "I ask you, "Saturday Night Live;
account title also does not affect the amount of insurance
pr~sidential
candid~te sa.id in 14 years . Forn1er star and what should we be looking briefly last season but c
:Covemge provided. In addition, using different Social
Fnday
th~t.
McCam wtll head writer Tina Fey, &amp; for in our next president? celed a return for its seaso
:&gt;ecurity numbers on multiple accounts held by the same
make a detour from battle- Palin lookalike, has been at Certainly, someone who is opener in September, citin
·
co-owners will not increase insurance coverage.
the devastation: brought tO:
: A revocable trust account is a deposit owned by one or ground states to appear on the center of the show's very, very, very old ."
·
recent
parodies
of
the
cam"Saturday
Night
Live
,"
the
· When McCain hosted parts of the country
)nore persons that indicates an intention that the deposits
·
"SNL" in 2002 . he mocked Hurricane Ike.
:Will belong to one or more named beneficiaries upon the late-night show that has paign.
"SNL" regular Darrell
death of the owner(s) . A revocable trust account can be been a must-watch for many
revoked (or terminated) at the discretion of. the owner. during the political season . Hammond impersonates
. Hosting the show t)1is McCain. on the late-night
:There are both informal and formal revocable trusts.
;Informal trusts, often called "payable-on-death" (POD), · Saturday is . actor Ben show, now in .its 34th sea:
.!'Totten trusts," or "in trust for" (ITF) 1\CCounts, are created Affleck, a supporter of son.
candidate • McCain last appeared on
:when the account owner signs an agreement-usually part of Democratic
the bank's signature card-stating that the deposits are Barack Obama. The musical "Saturday Night Live" in
payable to one or more beneficiaries upon the &lt;;&gt;wner's
death..
· '
·
·
·
· · ·
: Formal -revocable trusts-lmown as "living" or "family"
trusts, are 'written trusts created for estate planning purpos~s . All deposits that an owner has in both informal and formal trusts are .added together for insurance purposes , and
the insurance limit is applied to the combined total. Each
owner of these accounts is insured up to $250,000 for each
bene.ficiary.A common mistake that depositors make in cal. ~ulating coverage for revocable trust accounts is assuming
that every person named on·a revocable trust account, both
owners and beneficiaries, have up to $250,000 in coverage.
'fhis is not correct , Each owner of a revocable trust may be
entitled to coverage up to $250,000 for each be.neficiary
that the account owner designates in the . revocable trust
:acco.unt. Instead, coverage is available for each owner
times the number of beneficiaries, not the number of owners plus the number of beneficiaries.
.
; In other words, a husband and wife who hav~ three chil):lren as benefici'IJ'ies would have coverage ,o f up to $1.5
;million' dollars as a result of each owner have $250,000 of
coverage for each beneficiary. The trust agreement itself is
:Oot entitled to l\n additional $250 ,000 of coverage.
Available to anyone with a physician order at
:Contingent or alternative trust beneficiaries are not considO'Bieness Memorial Hospital's convenient radiology service
)!ted to have an interest in the trust deposits and other assets
as long as the primary or initial beneficiaries are still living,
in the Meigs Medical Center.
:with the exception of revocable living trusts with a life
'
.:estate interest.
. ·.
.
No appointment is needed for our imaging service.
• ·For those owning businesses, it is important to remember
that sole proprietorships are insured as the single ownership
aeposits of the pe~son wh~ owns the bu~m.e·ss . .
Corporations, partnership~ and umncorporated associatiOns
~an qualify as a separate msured enttty so long as they are
The X-ray service is also utilized by physician specialists who see patients in the Center:
engaged in an "independent activit;y," meaning that the
entity is operated primarily for some purpose other than to
• Cardiology - Mitchell Silver, DO, FACC
• Internal Medicine
increase insurance coverag~ . The number of partners or
• Podiatry - Earl Driggs. DO
• Gastroenterology • Steven Carin, DO .
· ~embers does not atfect the amount of coverage available
for the entity, _w~ich a~ount is capped ~t $250,000.1f you
• Obstetrics and Gynecology_· Jane Broecker, MD
·ere interested m mcreasmg the total sum of money msured,
:¥ou rna)" want to exJ?1ore the ide_a of pl~cing some money
with different banks 111 order to take advailtage of the FDIC
:coverage available by each bank. Yo.u lllBY also want to
.consider diversifying your investments among other guar:anteed options such as fixed anl)Uities; which offer the
:guarantees of the insurance company ~d the state's ~nsur:ance guaranty fund (which acts tnuch hke FDIC for msur. itnce investments).
,

Bv JAMES HENRY

Morehouse family marks two ·graves.in Gallia County~

)\JcCain set for 'Saturday Night Live' cameo

Your

Choice

.: (James Henry is an a'!orney and ~ns'!r~;~nce ~!gent
. ticensed in the states of Oh10 and West V1rgmm. He JS the
' founder of French City Estate Planning Solutions, LLC,
·with offices located in Gallipolis and Columbus, Ohio.
&gt;ne can be contacted at attyjamesrhenry@hotmail.com, or'
) 11ww.OiiwEstateP/anningSolutions.com.)
·
.

.:m

•

Sunday, November 2, 20.;;,

O'l;lleness X-ray service coming soon!

~ news !"

:i:ame after losses in

'

Page C:-1

Are your bank accounts Local youth takes top honors at Foothills Festiv~ (

on that
possibility, ance," Swann said of her ship
he
said:
or worry about what she situation at the time she "Survivorship is different
can't change . Instead, was diagnosed, but thanks for all ... each path to surshe acts to change what to free programs which vivoship is different ."
she
can. She
quoted were · brought to Meigs
He then spoke about the
Eleanor Roosevelt to her County in part by MCCI importance of physicians
audience of sorority sis- member Norma Torres, and patients promoting
ters: "You gain strength, who was then Meigs "overall health." Part of
courage and confidence by County health commis- that "overall health", is a
each experience in which soner, Swann caught her low-fat diet and exercise ,
you really stop to look cancer early.
according to Shapiro.
"My oncologist said
"Reducing fat intake is
fear in the face . You are
able to say to yourself, I . 'how did .you catch this so achievable and as physihave lived through this _early?' " Swann .said . "I cans we need to make peahorror. l can take the next said, 'I didn't, I J'ust had pie aware of what they can
thing that comes along." . my mammogram one."'
do for themsevles for betAs for many of her
Swann's story · went tei' health · maintenace,"
sorority sisters, the next hand-in-hand with the . Shapiro allded.
thjng tliat bas come along · speakers encouraging all
As for getting exercise ,
for Lampert has been to be wpmen to not only get he told the ·audience: "We
positive abOut her experi- their mammograms but .to need to rearrange our
ence and share it with oth- tell a friend, citing· early . think.ing in terQlS o( nlak•
ers in appreciation Of all . detection is !heir best ing ,'exercise a : priority.
Even the busiest o( us din
the support she received w~apon of defense.
during her ordeal. .
"We've seen death rates
. &gt;&lt;
•·
"Today, when I awoke, I ,f#e steadily going down · have thl;ee hou.~~~; a,wr:ek
realized that. this is the because of eariy dectec- · for phy.stcal actlVlty.
·
Dr.
Charles . Shapiro also · touched
· best day of my life, ever," tion,"
she said. "There were Shapiro told the audience . ~pon the p_h~.nomena of
times when I wondered if I "They're also going down chemo bram and bone
would make it to today but because of improved treat- loss for breast cancer
I did .. . And tomorrow ment and another com· p~ttents but wr~pped u.p
when I wake up, I know poent to lowering death hts
spe~ch Wllh
hts
that is gain~ to be the best rates is we're smarter hoJ?e phystc~~s
and
day of my hfe, ever."
about treating breast can- patients can not only s~e
Lampert's story connect- .cer. Breast cancer is not the tree but t~e . forest m
ed to several members of just one disease but at terns of exerctse and .~ro­
the audience, including least five or more sub-can- motmg overall health. .
Gwenda . · Swann
of cers."
The workshop attempted
Pomeroy, ·who herself is
Shapiro is d'irector of to do just that with discusalso a IO~year breast can- Breast Medical Oncology sions on diet, intimacy
cer survivor. Swann cred- and
direcior issues and relaxation techits her survival in part to of Suvivorship ·Center of · nicques and a few enterannual mammograms pro- Excellence at The Ohio taining stories about keepvided to her though vari- State University's Arthur ing hope alive when !hat
ous women's health pro- ·G.
James
Cancer diagnosis comes and
Hospital.
thankfully goes for a spegrams in Ohio.
"I had nothing, no insurOn the issue of survivor- cia! sorority of sisters.

ACROSS
1 Colorful parrot
e Room
1t lnvesligalion

.iunbap limt• ·ientintl

.
COMMUNITY

.

Cancer rrom Plige ct

(Charlene Hoeflich is
general manager .of The
in
Daily · . Sentinel
Pomeroy.)

Rio got ·glory for winning a game

PageC2

•

'·

•

,.
•

•

�'

..

YouR HoMETOWN
'

-COMMUNITY CORNERBringing back memories on th~ river
When the River Blend
Quartet was invited to sing
on the Explorer during a trip
,from Point Pleasant to
:Cincinnati recently, member
Gerald "Gig" Powell dido 't
know he was about to experience a trip down memory
lane.
. When the Explorer turned
-to dock after arriving in
Cincinnati , there in full
view was the old Majestic
which for many years traveled the Ohio River.
. Just the sight of the
. Majestic took Gig back to
·the 1950s and the Big Bend
:Minstrel Association's per'formances on the showboat
which took place when it:
was docked at Point
Pleasant.
He said in his mind he
could see the performei'!i in
colorful costume lined lip
:on the gang plank singing
·their hearts ·out to the music
of banjoist Bill Clark.

•••

Steve Badgley has just
·released two historic iic·tion/romantic mystery nov- ·
·els set in the Letart Falls
area where he was born
. which are sure to be of
·interest to history buffs who
don't mind a little fiction
.enhancement for a good
read .
. They are Arcadia , which
·lakes the reader back in
time to the Letart Falls era,
·pre-Civil War up to the turn
of the century. The second
novel, The Lilies Cry is also
-set in the Letart · Falls area,
:and he describes it as "his. toric fiction , but more fact

~ When

be happy to share a copy.

•••

Cftarlene

Hoeflich

than fiction ." It tells lhe
story of the family of James
Letart during the pre-French
and Indian war em up to the
~xpulsion of the . Indians
from Ohio.
-Both of the novels are
available at the Meigs
District Library in Pomeroy
or can be purchased directly
f
r
o
m
WWW.BadgleyPublishing
Company.com.

...

Those of us who are collectors of anything and
everything. can appreciate
Shirley · Hunnell Miller's
enthusiasm when' she
recently discovered in ·her
stash of· Stuff, an article
about Condor Street written
many years ago by Fred W.
·
Crow.
Having grown up on that
street, she said it brought
back lots of memorie's when
she read Mr. Crow's
"Portrait of . Pomeroy's
Condor Street," telli:ng·
things, some of which she
had forgotten , about the
school and fire department
on the street, the generations of families who lived
there, . and the industries
which operated there. She'll

The Enterprise Church on
Route ·33 damaged about
three years ago has now been
tom down following removal.
of the stained glass windows,
and the land has been sold.
The congregation, after
meeting in several places
since the church damage,
has now settled in with the
United Methodists at the
Pomeroy Church. To reflect
the uniting of the two congregations , the church, pastared by Brian Dunham, has
been
renamed
New
Beginnings. A ·celebration
of the ·change is being
planned for later this month.

...

Kathy McDaniel's heiut is
with the Partners in Care
program at the · Senior
Citizens
Center
for
Alzheimers and others suffering memory loss.
Sometimes she finds it dif' ficult to keep the program
afloat financially and then
someone comes along with a
generous donation. This happened last week and Kathy,
the coordinator, wanted to
· publicly express appreciation to the pefson who asked
to n:main anonymous .

...

· Don't. forget this is the
,weekend foi: the time
change. Remember - in
the s~ng we "spring -forward; ' in the fall we "fall
back."

Bv JAMES SANDS
The UPJ headline for Oct.
II, 1943 read, "Rio Grande
Shares Glory With O.S.U.:'
The Buckeyes got the glory
by losing to Great Lakes
·Naval Training College
:(composed of former college
stars who were studying to
·llecome naval officers). But
the Buckeyes lost by seven
points to one of the best
·teams in the country and Rio
-G~ got glory for finally
-winnmg a game. Fritz
Howell wrote: "The state's
smallest school ended the
country's longest losing
:streak
by
, beating
:Muskingum, 7 to 6, the first
:win for the Gallia County
'kids since 1937 ."
:: A few weeks later, UP!
·Writer Grant Dillman wrote:
."Rio Grande Just Ahead Of
Ohio State In . Buckeye
: Colle~iate,
Football
:Standings. At that pomt m
:the season Rio Grande was 2·
:3 and Ohio State was just 2·5.
·Oddly, the team with the best
:record in Ohio in 1943 was
Oberlin.
: Rio Grande took a 7-0 lead
:at Wellston against the ·
· ~Muskies when Bill Ball
:returned a punt all the way to
:Muskingum 20-yard line.
·'Three runs by Gilliland and a
· pass from Ball to Gilliland
~ covered the. 20 yards to pay·
·dut and then a pass from
:Gilliland to Ball netted the
:extra point . Muskingum
:finally scored with nine min- .
:JJteS left in the game but they
.fwled on a conversion run
:with Rio Grande breaking a
:25-game Josmg streak. The
;Redmen had gone 35 games
:without a win as they had tied
:Alfred Holbrook 0-0 in 1939.
: Ironically, the coach of
·)'\I fred Holbrook both in ·
··1939 and in 1937, when Rio
:Grande had won their last
'game, was Mendel Beattie,
:the coach at Rio Grande in
: 1943. The PA announcer for
:the game was Will Thomas,
:!he founder of the SEOAL
·who said, "The final score
:Rio
Grande
7 and
: Muskingum 6 and that gen!tlemen, ladies and children, is

said. "If the game has educational value, it.should be
continued regardless. If it
hasn't, it should be dropped
altogether."
In a rematch with
Muskingum in 1943 , the
Black and Magenta beat the
Redmen easily 39-0 in New
Concord. Ironically, while
football was suspended at
many Ohio colleges in 1944,
Rio Grande continued · to
play through World War II,
but then had football
removed for good a few
years after the war, following the 1949 season.
Rio
Grande
and
Muskingum had an interesting series of games over the
years. The first time the two
combatants tangled was in
1921 , with Muskingum winning 27-14. Rio had only 13
players making the trip, but
long runs by Boster kept it
close.
•
In 1925, Rio Grande was
chosen as the opponent for
the first game played in
Muskingum's .new stadiull),
now called McGonagha
Stadiull). Nearly 3,000 people saw Rio Grande stun the
home team early in the game
when the Muskies' punter
Todd fumbled the snap and
Rio's Boyd picked it. up and
ran 10 yards for a touchdown.
Lewis then kicked the extra
point. Rio protected that 7-0
lead until late in the fourth

quarter when Muskingum
lied the game, whi~h js where
it stayed at 7-7.
In 1930, Rio Grande was
invited. to New Concord to
play in the first nig)lt game in
thiir
part · of
Ohio.
Unfortunately, the lights did·n't work and the game was
played in the late afternoon
with Rio being beaten 60-0.
Tben came the two games .
in 1943. The .last time the two
schools met was in 1945 and
that game was notewOrthy
because it was Ed She11IIIin's
fli'St game ·as head coach 'o f
the Muskies. ffio Grande lost
25-0 but had a small .hand i,n
launching a career that lasted
22 years and garnered a
record of 141 wins and only
43 losses with seven ties,
leadipg to induction to the
College Football Hall Qf
Fame in I 996. Sherman's
teams won six Ohio
Conference titles, witli the
1955 and 1960 teams being
unbeaten.
By the .way, the longest col7
lege football losing streak. is
80, held by Prairie View. The
Ohio dubious distinction
winner is Oberlin, which
about a decade ago went 40
games without a win or tie.
(James Sands is a speciol
correspoiule,.t for the
Sunday Times-Senti~l. He
can be conUU:ted by writing
to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio

Sunday, Navember 2, 2008

SUNDAY PUZZLER.
18 Hold on to lighUy
Kind of orange

~~

22 Citified
23 French composer
24 Spead
·
· 25 Waary
26 Fisll organs ' ··
. 27 Form of quartz
28 Find repugnant
29 Crete's Mount30Rondorsenset.,.
31 Corlain vote
33 Crowbar
35 Be wrong
3e Honor with a party
38 'Minoral
39 Fond duo4ll 'Superman· ~Ualn lulhor
41 f&lt;mament
42 Wet In a wo.y
44 Sure
48 callornia wine areo
51 Farnastic aeature
. 54 Adore
55 Ship part
57 Proust or Marceau
61 -numeral
62 wash against
63 Giant god
55 Pilerod
66 Arab VIP
67 Requost NrnOIII)'
70 Passover feast
72 Farrow the ICIIIIB
73 o~.S: o1 wine
74 T
kUn
75 Lillie island
n -Pan ..
79 Soft food for boblos
80 Detergent
82 Spaooshlp (abb&lt;.)
83 Whora ~rid Is, In

100 Lubricata
tOt Brute
104 Had a snack
105 - acx:ompli
106 Ste~te
107 Kimooo sash
.
108 Storage suuctures for
grain
110 Pressing Importance
112 Hoop
.. .
113 River ol!orgollulno&amp;s
116 Gannent part
t t 8 Be \\fthout
119 AqUillc blid

120 Moll cunning
122 OiSlance measure
t23 Ootimlstic
124 O!fk:lal seal
125 Aeput
127 Un0ll1verllonal
t29 Co an ol!ica job
130'That !tllow's
133 Kind o1 cab~
135 llo&lt;:trlna
136 Wire measure un~
137. Diplomacy
t4t Psvcltic'aability
(abbr.)
142.1/eke poirtt1
t44 Summ~
145 Baskelball shot
146 HumbU(l l
147 lnlhur
149 Human trunk
151 Ellace
153 l)oposlng anny
1~ Vaiiely ol tea
.
155 French m~al wa1ar
t57 Apple dnnk
158 Oregon's cap!al
t58 Pr"'1iPitout .
180 Fonclir mishaps
181 S)'c:ophant
182 Engraved pillar

Madrid

85 $ummer month

DOWN

.

t t.llsical lheme
2 Stage w!li&amp;par •
3 Gem weight unrt

4 Mature

~ rt'tard candies

7 Jackpot
8 Competent
9 Heatmeas.
10 Trap
11 Bay grace
12 Cloth lor cleaning
13 R~cerack shape
14 Popper plant
15 Foottall taam
t8 Burn
17 Chemist's room, lor
ahor1
18 Flreresldue
19 Wading bird ·
20 TV ~..,..r Mason
·to-earth
32 Perlorm
34Test
37 - Rica Bu~oughs
39 Wattr barrier
43 Long, lona lime
· 44 Wish torthat ol aneth·
er ..
45 Ukely .
46 Eye part
47 TabOI
49- de deux
50 Skill
51
""""""j0111Qiover
.
.
52 Trag~
S3 Frlendllnlos
54 Lanat
56 Walk through water
56 Atlhme)lc red&lt;onlng
58 Inventor - Howil
60 Jumped
62 Uke a cabboge
64 Alter deductions
67 Spolngs bock
68 Melon Vlilety
69 'Wih,ll'
71 Faot. not fiction

ao-

91
92
93
95
96
98

Adobe

·

Loses wannlh

Delame
AC powar unl (abbr.)
Ornate
Wash l~ htty
99 Sire
t 02 Feel sicl&lt;ly ·

103 Slender
105 Elaboratt meal
109 The ' I'
111 TI\;Nght. poetically .
112 Thesaurus name
114 -and haw
115 Oir. letlers
117 Game official, for
short
1t9 Hodges ol boooball
121 Soapstone
123 Esteem
124 Shiny fabric
126Piun128 U!e &amp;lory,.lor short
129 Sunday best ·
130 Plies
131 11ny island
132 Orated
134 Smell wooded area
136 Pondorad
136 Wlite poplar
139 caravan animal
1o4ll Flavoring plant
142 Pace
143.'- go bragh!'
144 Lots and klls
145 Art movement
148 Advorsary
150 Perched
152 - de Jareiro
153 Aloiter
154 - King Cole .

78H~

87 Baby rabbit

78 R~Qrll
81 Ploy on 1110rds
83 Wllltnoy or Wal~h
64 Bon! (Fr.)

8li Wing

90Direded
91 Shoop's cry
92 Hoalthoare.facllly
!14 Eat a IIIII o1
96 Calendar abbr.
97 Sharp projer:tlon

86 Cllatter
88'!'enp~nt

89 VIvaldi or Stradivarl ·

43767.)

: The win over the

Mus~ ie&lt;

194I I•&gt;
:Otterbein and West \'i r~i1 11,1
·'l"ech. After the Otid&gt;cJ n
the AP told h"" R'"
:· Grande had 17 player' ""d
=ttwt there were only 26 hovs
the entire college.
·
: Sollje people in Gallia
:County thought that foot· j)all should be abandoned at
· Rio Grande. But Beattie

:game,

'

covered
by
FDIC?
.

•

STAFF REPORT
. NEWSOMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM •·

Dane Black, right, of
JACKSON - Visitors
Gallipolis took first place
enjoyed a weekend' s
honors in Photography at
I recently had the occasion to look at the coverage rules worth of arts activities are
Foothills Art Festival i
the
offered by the FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance underway during the 27th
·t
currently underway at
.Corporation) when a chent was unsure of the extent to Annual Foothills · Art
Canter's Cave, 5 miles
which her bank accoun(s were' in sured . I had always Festival at Canter's Cave
north of Jackson . At left artl
thought of the FDIC coverage rules as being relatively sim4-H
Camp
,
5
miles
nor.th
·
Dr.
Morgan Paul and Ross ·l'
ple and stratghtfor.ward. but I soon realized that there was
of
Jackson
.
Matlack,
President and
much more to unde~standin g lhe coverage rules than mereNearly
600
works
of
art
CEO of Holzer Medical · .
·Iy knowmg t~e magtc coverage amount of $100,000 (which
by
146
artists
in
seven
difCenter-Jackson.
Holzer is a
has temporanly been changed to $250,000 while the econ'
ferent
categories
were
dismajor sponsor of the event ,
omy is struggling) . I found that, in the case of this particuwhich is free to the public. l·
lar chent, there had been some confusion as to the different played. Among the top
Submitted photo
.;
types of accounts and the rules applied to those different winners is Dane Black, of
Gallipolis , for his "Water
account types. ·
'
Unfortunately, this client had been somewhat misled by Calligraphy" photograph.
the bank. as to the extent ofcoverage available to her, and Dane and · hts brother,
nu &lt;.: unstderatiOn. had been given to the effect that her Logan, as well as his par'accounts had on the coverage available to her daughter 's ents, Michele and Dan Michael of Jackson, Mary Dale Lear of Gallipolis , Jed Elkins of Jackson,
accounts since her daughter was a joint account ho.lder on Black , all entered work in Lynn Vititoe of Jackson, Sandra Coli of ·Jackson, Michele Black of Gallipolis,
several of the CDs. It's my goal with thi s article to set forth the exhibition .•
Jack Park of Point Pleasanti
Local award winners Amy Landrum of Jackson, . Janey Shipman of Oak Hill. W.Va., and Gerry Enrico cf
many of the basic rules governing FDIC coverage so that
confusion in regards to your own account coverage can be . include: Barbara Sheriff Danny Carter of Vinton, Logan Black of Gallipolis, Point Pleasant.
I
avoided .The FDIC is an independent agency of the United Kostohryz of Athens. Phyllis Aaron Apsley of Jacksor , 'Jernifer Ash of Gallipolis,
'
States government that protects you against the loss of your
.deposits if an FDIC-insured bank or savings 'association
fail s. FDIC insurance covers all deposit accounts at 'insured
.banks. including checking, NOW, and savings accounts,
money market deposit accounts and certificates of deposit
STAFF REPORT
with a stone . The grave had nation . The stone replaced area with few if any marked
{COs) up to the insurance limit.
NEWSOMYDAtLYTRISUNE.COM
been unmarked for 94 one which had toppled over graves remembering th&lt;t
years, but Paul Morehouse and split several years ago . truly unique individual;
The FDIC does not . insure money invested in stocks,
GALLIPOLIS - With knew where hi s great, great Dr. Larry
.bonds, mutual fund s, life insurance policies, annuities or
Morehouse interred beneath the sur·
the
cooperation
pf
municipal securities, even if you purchased these products
grandmother wa s buried donated the stone and sent face. "
Morehouse family mem - because !)is grandfath~r had ' greetings ·to all and regrets
from ·an insured bank or savings association .
Members of the Gallit
FDIC insurance is backed by the full faith and credit of bers and the donations of shown him over forty years that he could not attend.
County
Genealogic~
the United States government . Since the FDIC 's creation in many, two tombstones were ago.
At both cemeteries Rev. Society also were invited td
1933, no depositor has ever lost even one cent of fDIC - recent! y placed to mark the
Margaret was born in Candy 'Nuce offered open· attend and meet the family
insured funds . With a track record like that, it's easy to see burial site of their ances- 1838, married in 1855 and ing ·and closing prayers. A members.
Attendin.
'why the memorable FDIC logo is a hallmark of bank lob- tors' graves in Gallia at a time when women had wreath was also placed by besides Morehouse wer1
bies across the country. If you and ·your family have County. Heading up the few rights , she was a major each stone, and the markers Kathie ana Gary Evanst
$250,000 or less in all of your deposit accounts at the same project were Dr. Larry property owner in Galli a were unveiled by family Sharon · and David Daue~
insured bank, you do not need to worry about your insur- Morehouse of Columbia. County, at one time owning members after appropriate all of Columbus, Teresi
ance coverage-your deposits are fully insured (though this Missouri
and
Paul as many as fifty parcels of remarks were made by Paul Huseman of Waldorft
amount has been adjusted upward from $100,000 on a tem- Morehouse of Akron.
land . She died in 1914 . Morehou se, President of Maryland , Bruce and
porary basis). A depositor can have more than $250,000 at
Planning the event on the Paul was able to poi11t out the Ohio Genealogical Elaine Shearer of Paxton,
one insured entity and still be fully insured .provided the same day as the Gallia to the family other markers Society.
Ill. , Kenneth Kent of
-accounts meet certain requirements. In addition, federal County Genealogical OGS and their relationships to
Paul said. "It i' my hope Rutland, Kenneth Kent. J~
)aw provides for insurance coverage of up to $250,000 for Banquet, a large numbe• of one another. It is important that other families will take of Brandywine: ·Md .j
):ert·ain retirement accounts which amount has not been family members were ab'le that others share this in for- in spiration from our actions Pamela Burdett of Florida
adjusted due ·ro the economic downturn and should not be to attend both the grave mation in order to pass it on here today and will decide Julie and Dot Campbell of ·
6ubject to future readjustment when the economy markings and the lineage from one generation to the to rededicate the graves of Point Ple~sant, W.Va.;
improves.
banquet. The family -first next.
their loved ones in this old- Bryan Oskey and Bett)l
: For joint accounts , each co-owner's share of every mel at Fairview Cemetery · At .Pine 'Street a marker est section of Pine Street Davis of Ft. Wayne, an4
ilccount that is jointly held at the same insured bank is in Springfield Township was placed in honor of Cemetery. It would truly be · Henny Evans , Mariaq
·added together with the co-owner 's other shares, and the where the grave of Rebecca Cob Sisson Hill ' a shame for this memorial Scho(mover, Ann Browl
iota! is insured up to $250,000. The FDIC assumes that all Margaret Ward Morehouse who died in 1825 and was to generation s past to and Linda Criner o
:Co-owners' shares are equal unless the deposit account Worthington was marked born the same year as our become simply a grassy Gallipolis .
.
re.cords state otherwise. For example , a husband and wife
•
could have up to $500,000 in one or more joint accounts at
lhe same insured bank and the deposits would be fully
Insured. The husband's ownership share is insured up to
.I
:&amp;250,000 and the wife's ownershtp share is insured up to _
·WASHINGTON (AP) ':- guest'is' singer David Cook. May, after clinching the singer Barbra Streisand'~
' .
.
.
...
'!&amp;250,000.
When McCain's running nomination and while the political advocacy by per;
: Insurance coverage of joint accounts is not increased by My friends, 'it's John
rearranging the owners ' names or by changing the styling McCain, live from New mate , Alaska Gov. Sarah Democratic primary contin- fanning a medley of he(
72-year-old songs.
'
pf their names. Alternating the use of "or," "and" or York, just three days before Palin. appeared on the show ued. The
beL
18,
"Saturday
Night
the
election.
·
·
Arizona
senator
joked
about
Obama
appeared
o
l'and/or" to separate 'the names of co-owners in a joint
'Aides to the Republican . Live" earned its best ratings his age, saying: "I ask you, "Saturday Night Live;
account title also does not affect the amount of insurance
pr~sidential
candid~te sa.id in 14 years . Forn1er star and what should we be looking briefly last season but c
:Covemge provided. In addition, using different Social
Fnday
th~t.
McCam wtll head writer Tina Fey, &amp; for in our next president? celed a return for its seaso
:&gt;ecurity numbers on multiple accounts held by the same
make a detour from battle- Palin lookalike, has been at Certainly, someone who is opener in September, citin
·
co-owners will not increase insurance coverage.
the devastation: brought tO:
: A revocable trust account is a deposit owned by one or ground states to appear on the center of the show's very, very, very old ."
·
recent
parodies
of
the
cam"Saturday
Night
Live
,"
the
· When McCain hosted parts of the country
)nore persons that indicates an intention that the deposits
·
"SNL" in 2002 . he mocked Hurricane Ike.
:Will belong to one or more named beneficiaries upon the late-night show that has paign.
"SNL" regular Darrell
death of the owner(s) . A revocable trust account can be been a must-watch for many
revoked (or terminated) at the discretion of. the owner. during the political season . Hammond impersonates
. Hosting the show t)1is McCain. on the late-night
:There are both informal and formal revocable trusts.
;Informal trusts, often called "payable-on-death" (POD), · Saturday is . actor Ben show, now in .its 34th sea:
.!'Totten trusts," or "in trust for" (ITF) 1\CCounts, are created Affleck, a supporter of son.
candidate • McCain last appeared on
:when the account owner signs an agreement-usually part of Democratic
the bank's signature card-stating that the deposits are Barack Obama. The musical "Saturday Night Live" in
payable to one or more beneficiaries upon the &lt;;&gt;wner's
death..
· '
·
·
·
· · ·
: Formal -revocable trusts-lmown as "living" or "family"
trusts, are 'written trusts created for estate planning purpos~s . All deposits that an owner has in both informal and formal trusts are .added together for insurance purposes , and
the insurance limit is applied to the combined total. Each
owner of these accounts is insured up to $250,000 for each
bene.ficiary.A common mistake that depositors make in cal. ~ulating coverage for revocable trust accounts is assuming
that every person named on·a revocable trust account, both
owners and beneficiaries, have up to $250,000 in coverage.
'fhis is not correct , Each owner of a revocable trust may be
entitled to coverage up to $250,000 for each be.neficiary
that the account owner designates in the . revocable trust
:acco.unt. Instead, coverage is available for each owner
times the number of beneficiaries, not the number of owners plus the number of beneficiaries.
.
; In other words, a husband and wife who hav~ three chil):lren as benefici'IJ'ies would have coverage ,o f up to $1.5
;million' dollars as a result of each owner have $250,000 of
coverage for each beneficiary. The trust agreement itself is
:Oot entitled to l\n additional $250 ,000 of coverage.
Available to anyone with a physician order at
:Contingent or alternative trust beneficiaries are not considO'Bieness Memorial Hospital's convenient radiology service
)!ted to have an interest in the trust deposits and other assets
as long as the primary or initial beneficiaries are still living,
in the Meigs Medical Center.
:with the exception of revocable living trusts with a life
'
.:estate interest.
. ·.
.
No appointment is needed for our imaging service.
• ·For those owning businesses, it is important to remember
that sole proprietorships are insured as the single ownership
aeposits of the pe~son wh~ owns the bu~m.e·ss . .
Corporations, partnership~ and umncorporated associatiOns
~an qualify as a separate msured enttty so long as they are
The X-ray service is also utilized by physician specialists who see patients in the Center:
engaged in an "independent activit;y," meaning that the
entity is operated primarily for some purpose other than to
• Cardiology - Mitchell Silver, DO, FACC
• Internal Medicine
increase insurance coverag~ . The number of partners or
• Podiatry - Earl Driggs. DO
• Gastroenterology • Steven Carin, DO .
· ~embers does not atfect the amount of coverage available
for the entity, _w~ich a~ount is capped ~t $250,000.1f you
• Obstetrics and Gynecology_· Jane Broecker, MD
·ere interested m mcreasmg the total sum of money msured,
:¥ou rna)" want to exJ?1ore the ide_a of pl~cing some money
with different banks 111 order to take advailtage of the FDIC
:coverage available by each bank. Yo.u lllBY also want to
.consider diversifying your investments among other guar:anteed options such as fixed anl)Uities; which offer the
:guarantees of the insurance company ~d the state's ~nsur:ance guaranty fund (which acts tnuch hke FDIC for msur. itnce investments).
,

Bv JAMES HENRY

Morehouse family marks two ·graves.in Gallia County~

)\JcCain set for 'Saturday Night Live' cameo

Your

Choice

.: (James Henry is an a'!orney and ~ns'!r~;~nce ~!gent
. ticensed in the states of Oh10 and West V1rgmm. He JS the
' founder of French City Estate Planning Solutions, LLC,
·with offices located in Gallipolis and Columbus, Ohio.
&gt;ne can be contacted at attyjamesrhenry@hotmail.com, or'
) 11ww.OiiwEstateP/anningSolutions.com.)
·
.

.:m

•

Sunday, November 2, 20.;;,

O'l;lleness X-ray service coming soon!

~ news !"

:i:ame after losses in

'

Page C:-1

Are your bank accounts Local youth takes top honors at Foothills Festiv~ (

on that
possibility, ance," Swann said of her ship
he
said:
or worry about what she situation at the time she "Survivorship is different
can't change . Instead, was diagnosed, but thanks for all ... each path to surshe acts to change what to free programs which vivoship is different ."
she
can. She
quoted were · brought to Meigs
He then spoke about the
Eleanor Roosevelt to her County in part by MCCI importance of physicians
audience of sorority sis- member Norma Torres, and patients promoting
ters: "You gain strength, who was then Meigs "overall health." Part of
courage and confidence by County health commis- that "overall health", is a
each experience in which soner, Swann caught her low-fat diet and exercise ,
you really stop to look cancer early.
according to Shapiro.
"My oncologist said
"Reducing fat intake is
fear in the face . You are
able to say to yourself, I . 'how did .you catch this so achievable and as physihave lived through this _early?' " Swann .said . "I cans we need to make peahorror. l can take the next said, 'I didn't, I J'ust had pie aware of what they can
thing that comes along." . my mammogram one."'
do for themsevles for betAs for many of her
Swann's story · went tei' health · maintenace,"
sorority sisters, the next hand-in-hand with the . Shapiro allded.
thjng tliat bas come along · speakers encouraging all
As for getting exercise ,
for Lampert has been to be wpmen to not only get he told the ·audience: "We
positive abOut her experi- their mammograms but .to need to rearrange our
ence and share it with oth- tell a friend, citing· early . think.ing in terQlS o( nlak•
ers in appreciation Of all . detection is !heir best ing ,'exercise a : priority.
Even the busiest o( us din
the support she received w~apon of defense.
during her ordeal. .
"We've seen death rates
. &gt;&lt;
•·
"Today, when I awoke, I ,f#e steadily going down · have thl;ee hou.~~~; a,wr:ek
realized that. this is the because of eariy dectec- · for phy.stcal actlVlty.
·
Dr.
Charles . Shapiro also · touched
· best day of my life, ever," tion,"
she said. "There were Shapiro told the audience . ~pon the p_h~.nomena of
times when I wondered if I "They're also going down chemo bram and bone
would make it to today but because of improved treat- loss for breast cancer
I did .. . And tomorrow ment and another com· p~ttents but wr~pped u.p
when I wake up, I know poent to lowering death hts
spe~ch Wllh
hts
that is gain~ to be the best rates is we're smarter hoJ?e phystc~~s
and
day of my hfe, ever."
about treating breast can- patients can not only s~e
Lampert's story connect- .cer. Breast cancer is not the tree but t~e . forest m
ed to several members of just one disease but at terns of exerctse and .~ro­
the audience, including least five or more sub-can- motmg overall health. .
Gwenda . · Swann
of cers."
The workshop attempted
Pomeroy, ·who herself is
Shapiro is d'irector of to do just that with discusalso a IO~year breast can- Breast Medical Oncology sions on diet, intimacy
cer survivor. Swann cred- and
direcior issues and relaxation techits her survival in part to of Suvivorship ·Center of · nicques and a few enterannual mammograms pro- Excellence at The Ohio taining stories about keepvided to her though vari- State University's Arthur ing hope alive when !hat
ous women's health pro- ·G.
James
Cancer diagnosis comes and
Hospital.
thankfully goes for a spegrams in Ohio.
"I had nothing, no insurOn the issue of survivor- cia! sorority of sisters.

ACROSS
1 Colorful parrot
e Room
1t lnvesligalion

.iunbap limt• ·ientintl

.
COMMUNITY

.

Cancer rrom Plige ct

(Charlene Hoeflich is
general manager .of The
in
Daily · . Sentinel
Pomeroy.)

Rio got ·glory for winning a game

PageC2

•

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•

,.
•

•

�•

CELEBRATIONS

· PageC4
Sunday, November·2, 2008

COMMUNI1'Y

.iunbap lim~·6tntinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PITISBURGH - Shorter days. Cooler nights. And more
- lots more - beers to pick from.
.
The advent of autump \jnd the holidays that folio~ bnngs
a flood of seasonal beers to market, from pumpkm spice
ales to Oktoberfest and yuletide brews. This, of course, follows a long hot season of wheat. blueberry and other summer beers.
· But it turns out seasonal beers. the latest popular offshoot
of the craft and mifro-brew phenomenon, isn't all that new.
"Christmas beer is a tradition that actually predates
Christmas, frankly. It goes back to the earliest days of
brewing," says Don Russell, a b.eer writ~r who's just written "Christmas Beers: The Cheeriest, Tastiest and Most
. Unusual Holiday Brews."
"Whatever holiday was going on, brewers would have
made special beers for that holiday," he says. "You wanted
·to mark the occasion with something special."
But in recent years, brewer.ies large and small have rolled
out seasonal beers.
"About a year ago is where we saw seasonals pass pale
Seth Fallon and Amy Hamblin
ales as the number-one growth in craft beers," said Paul
Gatza, director of the Brewers Association, a trade association in Boulder, Col., with about 1.100 brewer members . ·
Seasonal beer sales.grew about 23 percent in the first half
POINT PLEASANT - Along with their parents, Amy of this year compared to the same period last year, he said.
Michelle Hamblin of Parkersburg and Seth Avery Fallon of
'"What can I try that I haven 't tried before?' is really driPoint Pleasant announce their engagement.
ving a lot of the sales in the caregory," Gatza said. "The
The ,bride-to-be is the daughter of Lloyd and Barbara craft beer drinker tends to like to have different beers m ·
Hamblm of Parkersburg.
·
.
.
.
fridges from different brewers on different occasions."
She is a 2001 graduate of Glenville State College and their
Just
as wine drinkers vary their selections by season and
currently is employed with the. Department of Treasury what they
are eating. a growing number of beer dnnkers
Bureau of Public Qebt : ·
want
their
beverage
to work with ~hat and when they e~t_.
The prospective groom is the son of Todd and Darlene
"It's
a
great
marketing
idea. You can call1t a ploy, but 11 s
Fallon of Point Pleasant.
·
·
·
He is a 2006 graduate of Asbury College in Wilmore, great to have the variety," Ru ssell says.
Wheat
beers
for
summer,
for
example.
"In
the
lasl
two
Ky., and is the pastor of Small Groups and Discipleship at
years,
wheat
beer
has
been
the
hott~st trend in craft beer,".
South Parkersburg Baptist Church.
.
·
The couple is set to wed in an open church ceremony says Russell. "Everybody, it seems, is offering a wheat beer."
Though fall and winter appear to have the most seasonal
Saturday, Nov. 8 at l :30 p.m . at South Parkersburg Baftist
beer
offerings, Russell says summer wheat beers "might be
Church. A reception will follow in the family center o the
reaching, if not outstripping. seasonal beers as a style .' ~
church .
For the breweries, it just makes good business sense. Besides
giving consumers more choice in shops, at bars seasonal beers
often land their own special taps. This is a move mastered by
The.Boston Beer Company, the maker of Samuel Adams: .
· Company founder Jim Koch has been a pioneer in the
seasonal beer niche. But it hasn't always been easy. ·
"For 15 years, .consumers and retailers struggled·with the
idea" he says. "At this point, you've even got Bud, Miller
and Coors jumping on the bandwagon·."
.
Koch first began making seasonal beers in the fall of
1987, when he offered a double bock followed by an
Oktoberfest.
'
.
.
"In New Engl~nd, we have v.ery definite seasons, each of
· which has its own unique character and appeal," Koch says.
"I wanted to reflect the character ofeach season in a beer."
"People feel the holidays as a special time of the year:·
They're rooted ·in primitive instincts, that life changes
when the.seasons change,'~ Koch said, "We forget that we .
are natural beings in a physical world."
.
Something to reflect on, perhaps, over a seasonal brew.
. So if you're ready to add some seasonality to your beer
drinking, here are some tips of what to look for:
·
• SPRING
The trees are budding. Birds are chirping. Life begins
anew. Try Dogfish Head's Aprihop, which is brewed with
·apricots. Or try a bock, a German beer originally brewed by
monks for the spring. Strong and malty, bocks provided
sustenance during Lenten fasts. Try Ayinger Maibock from
Germany.
·
•SUMMER ·
Tla Pratt and John Hysell
It's hot, you're thirsty and beer quenc.hes like nothing
else. Try a wheat beer, perhaps a . Blue Moon,. or Sam
Adams' Summer Ale. From Germany, seek out
Franziskaner Hefe-Weissbier. Froin Belgium, try
POMEROY - MiChael ·and Debbie Pratt of .Pomeroy · , Hoegaarden 's Witbier, perhaps with an orange,
announce the engagement an~ upcoming marriage of their
• FALL .
.
.
Harvest time. Oktoberfest for sure. But what better way
daughter, Tia Ashley,.to John Andrew Hysell, son of David
andAiberta Hysell of Pomeroy. . .
to ~ar~ ;he season than wuh perh~ps lts s1g~a~ure tlavor,
T1a IS the granddaughter of David and Ruthann Pratt of pu~pkm. Try M1clugan . B,rewmg s . Scream In Pumpki,n
Athens, and of Nancy and the late Char~es Giannotti of Sp1~ed Ade. &lt;;&gt;r Buffalo Bills Pumpkm )\Je. Pumpkm: Its
Buxton, N.C . Andy is the grandson of Milford. and Polly not JUSt for p1e.
Hysell' of Middleport and of the late Albert and Faye
• WINTER
.
.
,
.
Schultz of Pomeroy.
Get rea~y for senous choices . Anchor Steam s Chnstmas
The bride to be is a 2004 graduate of Eastern High Ale and S1erra Nevada Celebra!mn ~le are good bets. From
,School and a 2008 graduate of the Ohio University's across the pond, Samuel Smith s Wmter Warmens a stellar
i:ollege of Business with a bachelor of business adminis- example.
.
,
.
.
.
tration degree in human resource management. She is curFrom·BelgiUm, try Corsendonk s Chnstmas b~er, one of
rently employed with Ohio University in Athens.
Russell's fa;ontes . And If you can get 11, Troeg s the. Mad
The groom-¢lect is a 2003 graduate o!' Eastern Hi!!h Elf, Russ~ll s fav~nte Chnstmas be_er, a _potent otlenng
School and a 2006 graduate of the Umversity of B.•o brewed With chemes and balanced with spicy yeast.
Grande/Rio Grande Community College with an associ•••
ate's degree in plant maintenance technology. He is curOn The Net:
rently employed with American Electric Powers River
·Brewers Association's searchable seasonal beer site:
Operations Division in Convent, La.
·
http://www.beertown.org/seasonal/index.html
T~e couple will be married in a ceremony in Racine on
Joe Sixpack: http://www.joesixpack.net
Saturday:Dec . 6, 2008.
Sam Adams: http://www.samueladams.com
•

Hamblin-FalZon engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Johnston

:Adams-Johnston wedding
, MIDDLEPORT - Jamie Lynn Adams and Scott Alan
Johnston were united in marriage on Friday, Oct. 4, 2008 .
.. The ceremony took place ·at Scarlet Oaks Resort in Poca,
W.Va., with Minister Eugene Brooks Jr. officiating.
·
· " The bride is the daughter of Robert and Lena Williamson
of Vincent, Ohio. and Donna and Danny Fink · of
Charleston, W,Va. She is a graduate of Hocking College
and works as a registered nurse at Cabeii-Huntington
Hospital. ·
The groom is the son of Timothy Johnston and Sherrie
and Scott Bryant, all of Winfield, W.Va. He is a graduate of
Winfield High School and works full-time at the Rite-Aid
Warehouse in Institute, W.Va .
The bride was given in marriage by her sons, Grant and
Cole Adams.
; Matron of honor was Allison Richie, sister of the bride .
~aid of honor was Stacy Will'iamson. sister of the bride .
ilridesmaids were Jennifer Chasteen , Carly Marshall, .and
banielle Caruthers.
·
: The flower girl was Emma Sparks and ring bearer was
Zeke Richie, nephew of the bride.
·
.
: Serving as best man was Tony Johnston, brother of the
groom . Groomsmen were Justin Johnson, Shane Mains.
Billy Short, and Jake Richie, brother-in-law of the bride.
: Serving as ushers were Daniel Thornton, cousin of the
l&gt;ride , and Adam Sparks, a friend of the couple.
: Music. for the ceremony was provided by Patrick Ross of
6ou.ndsation Entertainment.
: The reception followed at Scarlet Oaks Resort.
~ The couple honeymooned in Pigeon Forge, Tenn . They
pow reside in Middleport.

Pratt-Hysell engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Steven McCullough

Hannan-McCullough
wedding
POMEROY - Hglly Leighann Hannan and Steven
James McO.\IIough were united in marriage on Saturday.
Aug . 16, 2008 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy. The Rev. Father ,Walter Heinz officiated at the
wedding.
. The bride is the daughter of Jack Hannan of Syracuse and ·
Paula Hart of Azle, Texas. Ken and Carol McCullough of
Pomeroy are the groom 's parents.
Matron of honor was Cara Bullington , and maid of honor
was Brandy Graham . Bridesmaid was Ashley Hannahs and
the junior bridesmaid was Carolann Stewart. niece of the
groom . Pumpkin and watermelon were the colors carried
out in the wedding.
· A.J. Vaughan served as best man and the groomsmen
were Chad Hanson , Joe Hill and John Hill. Ringbearer was
Isaiah Bullington and the flower girl was Alexis Birthi.sel,
cousin of the groom.
·
John Anderson, organist, and Bernadette Anderson and ·
the Sacred Heart Choir provided music for tlie wedding .
• The wedding guests were welcomed by April Baker,
Amorette Salser, niece of the groom. and Laum Stewart,
.
l'ister of the groom.
·;; A reception foflowed at the Riverside Golf Club. .
.
:· · After a honeymoon in Las Vegas, the couple resides m
bedford, Ohio.
.
~ The bride is a 200 I graduate of Meigs High School and
ittends Cuyah'?ga"Community CoUege. McC:ullou~h is a
~uate ofMe1gs H1gh , class of 1998 , and Oh1o Umvers11y
tn 2003, artd is employed by Progressive Insurance Co. in
Vleveland:
•

NOW ACCEP!IIG
. PA71ENTS!
Subhash Kumar M.D.

Sunday, November 2, 2008
,

SIP: Season~ beers ---:- a
beer for every season
BY DAN NEPHIN

PageCs

Home is Where the heart is ~
Marilynne Robinson 's
novel , Home, has recently
been nominated for the
National Book Award.lt is a
companion piece to her
PulitLcr Prize winning
Gilead. Both books have
the same location. a little .
Iowa town called · Gilead,
and the time is 1956.
Gilead ·is home to two
elderly ministers, friends
from childhood. Gilead was
a letter from Rev. John ·
Ames to his young son,
· telling him stories .of his
ancestors and family which
the father knows he will not
Submitted photo
live to impart to his son.
Suzy Parker of Syracuse and Rutland in Meigs Courity, Master Director Lynn Hartmuth of
Home features Rev.
West Chester, and Nan Thompson Heiskell of Cheshire In Gallia County prepare,to per- Robert Boughton, father of
form wHh Cincinnati Sound in the Sweet Adellnes International.Competition to be held Nov. eight, now in poor health.
·6 in Honolulu, Hawaii.
· ·
His 'youngest daughter,
Glory, has returned to care
for him. She was an English
teacher, now recovering
from the break-up of a longtermrelatim ;hip. At 38 she
is coming to terms with giving up her dream of marGALLIPOLIS - Meigs and Galli a half hour trip weekly for practices and per- riage and children -and her
singers from the Sweet Adelines chorus and formances.
own home.
quartet will compete in the International
Parker said the experience has been
Jack, who has been absent
Chorus and Quartet Competition to be held · incredibly educational, as t~e Cincinnati for so.me 20 years , the
in Honolulu, Hawaii this week.
.
group of over 100 members,.can afford to "prodigal son," is also
Groups .from arouild .the·.world will gath- fly in renowned coaches from across the returning. At first, Glory
er to compete for honors of the best of the country 'to teach the members better vocal . resents this. Jack left in disbest in wome!l's barbershop style singing. production and visual presentation. Master grace after fathering a child
While a truly American art form, four part · Faculty Shardn Babb of Colorado, Kathy by an underage girl, and lie
acapella barbershop music has spread with Carmody of Arizona, Carla Stevens and Joe has been a source of despair·
great popularity to countries as .far as China, Connolley serve as coaches. building on the to his loving father.
.
Japan, Australi~. Great Britain, and the basics already learned.
·
This is a quiet book, a
Scandanavian areas, said Suzy Parker, pubParker spoke of ihe enjoyment of singing gentle book. and if you long
licity chairman for the local group.
with a large and accomplished chorus as for action and thrills, this is
Nan Thompson Heiskell of Cheshire and adding to the joys of being members of a not for you . The writing is
Parker of Syracuse and Rutland, will appear 25-30 member Gallipolis chorus .
so beautiful and careful and
Some of the Cincinnati Sound members poetic, there are lines you
with the Cincinnati Sound Chorus, champions of Region Four of SAl. Having won they have met have Meigs and Gallia ties. will probably cho?se to read
. the regional contest previously, competing Nancy Riley, former president gf .CSC, is at least a .second time.
with choruses in· Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana the daughter of the former Joy Boggs and · Here's the description of
and West Virginia, Cincinnati Sound won granddaughter of Mary Lu Boggs, · of an oak tree. "And there was
the honor to represent the region on the Middleport, and niece of Mary Boggs an oak tree in front of the
International level. They will compete as Arnold , who teaches at Meigs Elementary
one of 33 choruses worldwide, on with Parker. Boggs has attended several
Thursday, Nov. 6, at the Hawaii Convention recent performances Another CSC member
Center in Honolulu.
.
·
is Kim Nestor, who lived in the Gallipolis
Heiskell is a retired nurse and public area and worked at the Middleport
.
health educator, who now runs a goat farm Terminal.
Locals attending attending the competioperation in the rural Gallia County area
outside Cheshire. She still teaches courses lion will' include Sasan Russell, director of
in CPR and first aid, is active in church and French Colony Chorus, and Amy Sprague,
community activities. A tenor, 'She is the another charter member of FCC who also
team manager/p~sident o~ French Colony serves_ on •the- management team•. Both . ·
Chorus m · Galhpohs and has served on Parker an Heiskell a credit Russell, a long
· show teams.
· ·. .
.
time member Of River Magic Chorus in
Parker teliChes second gfl\ders at Metgs . Huntington, with starting the local Sweet
Elf~menllii'Y, School near Rut,Iand, and also ·.- Adelines group and introducing them to the
does Prax1s ass.es~m~nts of entry y~ar joys of ·barbershop singing.
The
teache~s for the Oh1o Department o~ Huntington c~oru8 is· ~cted by Beverly
Edu~a,t.Jon. S~e has _appeared tn many P.t:O Wilcox Miller, , a Me1gs graduate and
ducllon&amp; ofRiv~r. 9'Y Players ~ommuruty daughter of Butch and Marilyn Wilcox of
theater group, and IS an accred1te.d !'lower
fru
: .
.
shOw judge• for the Ohio Association of Rut and area..
··
.. 'th th ·
Garden Clubs, and long time member of the
;Also travehng to Hawau WI
e gro~C
Rutland Friendly Gardeners. Parker sings w11l be Rut~and gra~uates, Robe~a Smu
baritone, and serves as publicity !lirector for M~yer, a retired mus1c teacher hvmg m the
French Colony CholiJS, ,writing articles for M_1ddletown an~a. an~ Sabra ~anad~y
.li:Jcal media, and fo~ SAl publications. She G_lbS?n·. a musiC maJOr who lives .10
resides in Syracuse ·with husband, Tom C1ncma1.1.
...
. .
. .
H sell
·
.·
The compellti~ms can tune m on their
·~otb Heiskell and Parker are chartrr computers for a hvesimulcast from Hawan.
members of the Gallipolis Sweet Adelines The 9uartet contest IS on Wednesday Nov. 5
chapter, the French Colony Chorus, and s~mg at 3:45 EST and the chorus competheir uartet, Th~; French Chorde(S, along l.l~o~ st~ 'f!lursday at ~:45 EST. The ·
with ~ev Alberchinski and Su.e Priest. Cmcmnatt Sound Chorus 1s s_cheduled to
About a year ago, Lynn Hartmuth, Master appear at ~bout 5:15 p.m. Ohio t1m~. The
Director of Cincinnati Sound Chorus, and Simulcast IS free, althoug~ thoiiC loggmg on
Education Faculty for' SAl, came to cO'ach may be asked for-a donation to' SAl to help
the local chorus .in · preJ)aration for a fund the broadcast, Those'. planmng to
regional contesL She invited s0me of the watch sho~ld go·.to. the webs1te at least 24
French Colony Chorus members to also .ho~rs ~arher t? -sign up for the event. For
'oin her Cincmnati group .as du.al mem- log!n mstruc~u;ms, go to. www.sweetadebers. P,adrer and Heiskell df~cided to take . lineintl.org to ..get set to enJoy the contest
on the challenge, making the .three ~n:d a hve.

Local singers appearing
in international competition

.

Beverly
Gettles

house, much older than the
neighborhood or the town ,
which made rubble of the
pavement at its. foot and
flung its imponderable
branches out over the road
and across the yard, branches whose girths were greater
than the trunk of any ordi·
nary tree. There was a torsion iri its body which made
it look like a giant dervish to
them . Their father said if
they could see as God can ,
in geological time , they
would see it leap out of the
ground and tum in the sun
and spread its arms and
bask in the joys of being an
oak tree in Iowa."
It seems
the Rev.
Boughton's chldren have all
turned out .well , except for
Jack. He bears the "black
sheep" burden~ .and nov; he
need~ reconci!Iatwn and
blessmp fro'? h1s fath~r. .
Jack s misspent hfe IS
gradually revealed to us . We
already know about the first
child from Gilead. He also
met ·another lady and has a
son. His many letters to
Della in Memphis 'are
returned unopened. He had
hoped to bring her and the
boy here, to Gilead.
Jack is charming and dis-

arming and always just at
the edge of trouble . It is :a
small town, and the people
afe suspicious of him. H~
tries his best to reclaim tht
house and the land whicb
have long been neglecte&lt;t.
He also tries to , reclaim ·a
te)ationship with his fatl:tot,
With whom he has always
been at odds.
.
~
I am reminded of the linci
from a poem my mothel
read to us. "It takes· a heap
of livin' in a liouse to mak~
it home ..." "Home ," espe7
ciaHy the place where ~e
grew up , if we are 'iuckj
enough to have that one
place we keep in our heart . .
is the place we someho""
·always long to return t&lt;i
Mother, at the beginning of
her Alzheimer 's, would lay
her clothes and her shoe$
out on the bed and prepar~
to go "home" to Harrisoft
County. My cousin, Nancy,
told me of my Aunt
Bernadine's last days, when
she also packed her suitcase
to return to Jockey Hollow,
where she had lived as a
child, though she spent ,the
, last 70 years of her life in
Auburn , N.Y.
Home is a nearly perfectly
written story of people woo
are less than perfect, in need
of forgive.ness and understanding and God's grace.
Please keep writing, Mrs .
Robinson . I'll be waiting for
your next c·arefully crafted.
excellent work.

.

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Nursing and Rehabllitatioli Center
Providing

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.
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�•

CELEBRATIONS

· PageC4
Sunday, November·2, 2008

COMMUNI1'Y

.iunbap lim~·6tntinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PITISBURGH - Shorter days. Cooler nights. And more
- lots more - beers to pick from.
.
The advent of autump \jnd the holidays that folio~ bnngs
a flood of seasonal beers to market, from pumpkm spice
ales to Oktoberfest and yuletide brews. This, of course, follows a long hot season of wheat. blueberry and other summer beers.
· But it turns out seasonal beers. the latest popular offshoot
of the craft and mifro-brew phenomenon, isn't all that new.
"Christmas beer is a tradition that actually predates
Christmas, frankly. It goes back to the earliest days of
brewing," says Don Russell, a b.eer writ~r who's just written "Christmas Beers: The Cheeriest, Tastiest and Most
. Unusual Holiday Brews."
"Whatever holiday was going on, brewers would have
made special beers for that holiday," he says. "You wanted
·to mark the occasion with something special."
But in recent years, brewer.ies large and small have rolled
out seasonal beers.
"About a year ago is where we saw seasonals pass pale
Seth Fallon and Amy Hamblin
ales as the number-one growth in craft beers," said Paul
Gatza, director of the Brewers Association, a trade association in Boulder, Col., with about 1.100 brewer members . ·
Seasonal beer sales.grew about 23 percent in the first half
POINT PLEASANT - Along with their parents, Amy of this year compared to the same period last year, he said.
Michelle Hamblin of Parkersburg and Seth Avery Fallon of
'"What can I try that I haven 't tried before?' is really driPoint Pleasant announce their engagement.
ving a lot of the sales in the caregory," Gatza said. "The
The ,bride-to-be is the daughter of Lloyd and Barbara craft beer drinker tends to like to have different beers m ·
Hamblm of Parkersburg.
·
.
.
.
fridges from different brewers on different occasions."
She is a 2001 graduate of Glenville State College and their
Just
as wine drinkers vary their selections by season and
currently is employed with the. Department of Treasury what they
are eating. a growing number of beer dnnkers
Bureau of Public Qebt : ·
want
their
beverage
to work with ~hat and when they e~t_.
The prospective groom is the son of Todd and Darlene
"It's
a
great
marketing
idea. You can call1t a ploy, but 11 s
Fallon of Point Pleasant.
·
·
·
He is a 2006 graduate of Asbury College in Wilmore, great to have the variety," Ru ssell says.
Wheat
beers
for
summer,
for
example.
"In
the
lasl
two
Ky., and is the pastor of Small Groups and Discipleship at
years,
wheat
beer
has
been
the
hott~st trend in craft beer,".
South Parkersburg Baptist Church.
.
·
The couple is set to wed in an open church ceremony says Russell. "Everybody, it seems, is offering a wheat beer."
Though fall and winter appear to have the most seasonal
Saturday, Nov. 8 at l :30 p.m . at South Parkersburg Baftist
beer
offerings, Russell says summer wheat beers "might be
Church. A reception will follow in the family center o the
reaching, if not outstripping. seasonal beers as a style .' ~
church .
For the breweries, it just makes good business sense. Besides
giving consumers more choice in shops, at bars seasonal beers
often land their own special taps. This is a move mastered by
The.Boston Beer Company, the maker of Samuel Adams: .
· Company founder Jim Koch has been a pioneer in the
seasonal beer niche. But it hasn't always been easy. ·
"For 15 years, .consumers and retailers struggled·with the
idea" he says. "At this point, you've even got Bud, Miller
and Coors jumping on the bandwagon·."
.
Koch first began making seasonal beers in the fall of
1987, when he offered a double bock followed by an
Oktoberfest.
'
.
.
"In New Engl~nd, we have v.ery definite seasons, each of
· which has its own unique character and appeal," Koch says.
"I wanted to reflect the character ofeach season in a beer."
"People feel the holidays as a special time of the year:·
They're rooted ·in primitive instincts, that life changes
when the.seasons change,'~ Koch said, "We forget that we .
are natural beings in a physical world."
.
Something to reflect on, perhaps, over a seasonal brew.
. So if you're ready to add some seasonality to your beer
drinking, here are some tips of what to look for:
·
• SPRING
The trees are budding. Birds are chirping. Life begins
anew. Try Dogfish Head's Aprihop, which is brewed with
·apricots. Or try a bock, a German beer originally brewed by
monks for the spring. Strong and malty, bocks provided
sustenance during Lenten fasts. Try Ayinger Maibock from
Germany.
·
•SUMMER ·
Tla Pratt and John Hysell
It's hot, you're thirsty and beer quenc.hes like nothing
else. Try a wheat beer, perhaps a . Blue Moon,. or Sam
Adams' Summer Ale. From Germany, seek out
Franziskaner Hefe-Weissbier. Froin Belgium, try
POMEROY - MiChael ·and Debbie Pratt of .Pomeroy · , Hoegaarden 's Witbier, perhaps with an orange,
announce the engagement an~ upcoming marriage of their
• FALL .
.
.
Harvest time. Oktoberfest for sure. But what better way
daughter, Tia Ashley,.to John Andrew Hysell, son of David
andAiberta Hysell of Pomeroy. . .
to ~ar~ ;he season than wuh perh~ps lts s1g~a~ure tlavor,
T1a IS the granddaughter of David and Ruthann Pratt of pu~pkm. Try M1clugan . B,rewmg s . Scream In Pumpki,n
Athens, and of Nancy and the late Char~es Giannotti of Sp1~ed Ade. &lt;;&gt;r Buffalo Bills Pumpkm )\Je. Pumpkm: Its
Buxton, N.C . Andy is the grandson of Milford. and Polly not JUSt for p1e.
Hysell' of Middleport and of the late Albert and Faye
• WINTER
.
.
,
.
Schultz of Pomeroy.
Get rea~y for senous choices . Anchor Steam s Chnstmas
The bride to be is a 2004 graduate of Eastern High Ale and S1erra Nevada Celebra!mn ~le are good bets. From
,School and a 2008 graduate of the Ohio University's across the pond, Samuel Smith s Wmter Warmens a stellar
i:ollege of Business with a bachelor of business adminis- example.
.
,
.
.
.
tration degree in human resource management. She is curFrom·BelgiUm, try Corsendonk s Chnstmas b~er, one of
rently employed with Ohio University in Athens.
Russell's fa;ontes . And If you can get 11, Troeg s the. Mad
The groom-¢lect is a 2003 graduate o!' Eastern Hi!!h Elf, Russ~ll s fav~nte Chnstmas be_er, a _potent otlenng
School and a 2006 graduate of the Umversity of B.•o brewed With chemes and balanced with spicy yeast.
Grande/Rio Grande Community College with an associ•••
ate's degree in plant maintenance technology. He is curOn The Net:
rently employed with American Electric Powers River
·Brewers Association's searchable seasonal beer site:
Operations Division in Convent, La.
·
http://www.beertown.org/seasonal/index.html
T~e couple will be married in a ceremony in Racine on
Joe Sixpack: http://www.joesixpack.net
Saturday:Dec . 6, 2008.
Sam Adams: http://www.samueladams.com
•

Hamblin-FalZon engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Johnston

:Adams-Johnston wedding
, MIDDLEPORT - Jamie Lynn Adams and Scott Alan
Johnston were united in marriage on Friday, Oct. 4, 2008 .
.. The ceremony took place ·at Scarlet Oaks Resort in Poca,
W.Va., with Minister Eugene Brooks Jr. officiating.
·
· " The bride is the daughter of Robert and Lena Williamson
of Vincent, Ohio. and Donna and Danny Fink · of
Charleston, W,Va. She is a graduate of Hocking College
and works as a registered nurse at Cabeii-Huntington
Hospital. ·
The groom is the son of Timothy Johnston and Sherrie
and Scott Bryant, all of Winfield, W.Va. He is a graduate of
Winfield High School and works full-time at the Rite-Aid
Warehouse in Institute, W.Va .
The bride was given in marriage by her sons, Grant and
Cole Adams.
; Matron of honor was Allison Richie, sister of the bride .
~aid of honor was Stacy Will'iamson. sister of the bride .
ilridesmaids were Jennifer Chasteen , Carly Marshall, .and
banielle Caruthers.
·
: The flower girl was Emma Sparks and ring bearer was
Zeke Richie, nephew of the bride.
·
.
: Serving as best man was Tony Johnston, brother of the
groom . Groomsmen were Justin Johnson, Shane Mains.
Billy Short, and Jake Richie, brother-in-law of the bride.
: Serving as ushers were Daniel Thornton, cousin of the
l&gt;ride , and Adam Sparks, a friend of the couple.
: Music. for the ceremony was provided by Patrick Ross of
6ou.ndsation Entertainment.
: The reception followed at Scarlet Oaks Resort.
~ The couple honeymooned in Pigeon Forge, Tenn . They
pow reside in Middleport.

Pratt-Hysell engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Steven McCullough

Hannan-McCullough
wedding
POMEROY - Hglly Leighann Hannan and Steven
James McO.\IIough were united in marriage on Saturday.
Aug . 16, 2008 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy. The Rev. Father ,Walter Heinz officiated at the
wedding.
. The bride is the daughter of Jack Hannan of Syracuse and ·
Paula Hart of Azle, Texas. Ken and Carol McCullough of
Pomeroy are the groom 's parents.
Matron of honor was Cara Bullington , and maid of honor
was Brandy Graham . Bridesmaid was Ashley Hannahs and
the junior bridesmaid was Carolann Stewart. niece of the
groom . Pumpkin and watermelon were the colors carried
out in the wedding.
· A.J. Vaughan served as best man and the groomsmen
were Chad Hanson , Joe Hill and John Hill. Ringbearer was
Isaiah Bullington and the flower girl was Alexis Birthi.sel,
cousin of the groom.
·
John Anderson, organist, and Bernadette Anderson and ·
the Sacred Heart Choir provided music for tlie wedding .
• The wedding guests were welcomed by April Baker,
Amorette Salser, niece of the groom. and Laum Stewart,
.
l'ister of the groom.
·;; A reception foflowed at the Riverside Golf Club. .
.
:· · After a honeymoon in Las Vegas, the couple resides m
bedford, Ohio.
.
~ The bride is a 200 I graduate of Meigs High School and
ittends Cuyah'?ga"Community CoUege. McC:ullou~h is a
~uate ofMe1gs H1gh , class of 1998 , and Oh1o Umvers11y
tn 2003, artd is employed by Progressive Insurance Co. in
Vleveland:
•

NOW ACCEP!IIG
. PA71ENTS!
Subhash Kumar M.D.

Sunday, November 2, 2008
,

SIP: Season~ beers ---:- a
beer for every season
BY DAN NEPHIN

PageCs

Home is Where the heart is ~
Marilynne Robinson 's
novel , Home, has recently
been nominated for the
National Book Award.lt is a
companion piece to her
PulitLcr Prize winning
Gilead. Both books have
the same location. a little .
Iowa town called · Gilead,
and the time is 1956.
Gilead ·is home to two
elderly ministers, friends
from childhood. Gilead was
a letter from Rev. John ·
Ames to his young son,
· telling him stories .of his
ancestors and family which
the father knows he will not
Submitted photo
live to impart to his son.
Suzy Parker of Syracuse and Rutland in Meigs Courity, Master Director Lynn Hartmuth of
Home features Rev.
West Chester, and Nan Thompson Heiskell of Cheshire In Gallia County prepare,to per- Robert Boughton, father of
form wHh Cincinnati Sound in the Sweet Adellnes International.Competition to be held Nov. eight, now in poor health.
·6 in Honolulu, Hawaii.
· ·
His 'youngest daughter,
Glory, has returned to care
for him. She was an English
teacher, now recovering
from the break-up of a longtermrelatim ;hip. At 38 she
is coming to terms with giving up her dream of marGALLIPOLIS - Meigs and Galli a half hour trip weekly for practices and per- riage and children -and her
singers from the Sweet Adelines chorus and formances.
own home.
quartet will compete in the International
Parker said the experience has been
Jack, who has been absent
Chorus and Quartet Competition to be held · incredibly educational, as t~e Cincinnati for so.me 20 years , the
in Honolulu, Hawaii this week.
.
group of over 100 members,.can afford to "prodigal son," is also
Groups .from arouild .the·.world will gath- fly in renowned coaches from across the returning. At first, Glory
er to compete for honors of the best of the country 'to teach the members better vocal . resents this. Jack left in disbest in wome!l's barbershop style singing. production and visual presentation. Master grace after fathering a child
While a truly American art form, four part · Faculty Shardn Babb of Colorado, Kathy by an underage girl, and lie
acapella barbershop music has spread with Carmody of Arizona, Carla Stevens and Joe has been a source of despair·
great popularity to countries as .far as China, Connolley serve as coaches. building on the to his loving father.
.
Japan, Australi~. Great Britain, and the basics already learned.
·
This is a quiet book, a
Scandanavian areas, said Suzy Parker, pubParker spoke of ihe enjoyment of singing gentle book. and if you long
licity chairman for the local group.
with a large and accomplished chorus as for action and thrills, this is
Nan Thompson Heiskell of Cheshire and adding to the joys of being members of a not for you . The writing is
Parker of Syracuse and Rutland, will appear 25-30 member Gallipolis chorus .
so beautiful and careful and
Some of the Cincinnati Sound members poetic, there are lines you
with the Cincinnati Sound Chorus, champions of Region Four of SAl. Having won they have met have Meigs and Gallia ties. will probably cho?se to read
. the regional contest previously, competing Nancy Riley, former president gf .CSC, is at least a .second time.
with choruses in· Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana the daughter of the former Joy Boggs and · Here's the description of
and West Virginia, Cincinnati Sound won granddaughter of Mary Lu Boggs, · of an oak tree. "And there was
the honor to represent the region on the Middleport, and niece of Mary Boggs an oak tree in front of the
International level. They will compete as Arnold , who teaches at Meigs Elementary
one of 33 choruses worldwide, on with Parker. Boggs has attended several
Thursday, Nov. 6, at the Hawaii Convention recent performances Another CSC member
Center in Honolulu.
.
·
is Kim Nestor, who lived in the Gallipolis
Heiskell is a retired nurse and public area and worked at the Middleport
.
health educator, who now runs a goat farm Terminal.
Locals attending attending the competioperation in the rural Gallia County area
outside Cheshire. She still teaches courses lion will' include Sasan Russell, director of
in CPR and first aid, is active in church and French Colony Chorus, and Amy Sprague,
community activities. A tenor, 'She is the another charter member of FCC who also
team manager/p~sident o~ French Colony serves_ on •the- management team•. Both . ·
Chorus m · Galhpohs and has served on Parker an Heiskell a credit Russell, a long
· show teams.
· ·. .
.
time member Of River Magic Chorus in
Parker teliChes second gfl\ders at Metgs . Huntington, with starting the local Sweet
Elf~menllii'Y, School near Rut,Iand, and also ·.- Adelines group and introducing them to the
does Prax1s ass.es~m~nts of entry y~ar joys of ·barbershop singing.
The
teache~s for the Oh1o Department o~ Huntington c~oru8 is· ~cted by Beverly
Edu~a,t.Jon. S~e has _appeared tn many P.t:O Wilcox Miller, , a Me1gs graduate and
ducllon&amp; ofRiv~r. 9'Y Players ~ommuruty daughter of Butch and Marilyn Wilcox of
theater group, and IS an accred1te.d !'lower
fru
: .
.
shOw judge• for the Ohio Association of Rut and area..
··
.. 'th th ·
Garden Clubs, and long time member of the
;Also travehng to Hawau WI
e gro~C
Rutland Friendly Gardeners. Parker sings w11l be Rut~and gra~uates, Robe~a Smu
baritone, and serves as publicity !lirector for M~yer, a retired mus1c teacher hvmg m the
French Colony CholiJS, ,writing articles for M_1ddletown an~a. an~ Sabra ~anad~y
.li:Jcal media, and fo~ SAl publications. She G_lbS?n·. a musiC maJOr who lives .10
resides in Syracuse ·with husband, Tom C1ncma1.1.
...
. .
. .
H sell
·
.·
The compellti~ms can tune m on their
·~otb Heiskell and Parker are chartrr computers for a hvesimulcast from Hawan.
members of the Gallipolis Sweet Adelines The 9uartet contest IS on Wednesday Nov. 5
chapter, the French Colony Chorus, and s~mg at 3:45 EST and the chorus competheir uartet, Th~; French Chorde(S, along l.l~o~ st~ 'f!lursday at ~:45 EST. The ·
with ~ev Alberchinski and Su.e Priest. Cmcmnatt Sound Chorus 1s s_cheduled to
About a year ago, Lynn Hartmuth, Master appear at ~bout 5:15 p.m. Ohio t1m~. The
Director of Cincinnati Sound Chorus, and Simulcast IS free, althoug~ thoiiC loggmg on
Education Faculty for' SAl, came to cO'ach may be asked for-a donation to' SAl to help
the local chorus .in · preJ)aration for a fund the broadcast, Those'. planmng to
regional contesL She invited s0me of the watch sho~ld go·.to. the webs1te at least 24
French Colony Chorus members to also .ho~rs ~arher t? -sign up for the event. For
'oin her Cincmnati group .as du.al mem- log!n mstruc~u;ms, go to. www.sweetadebers. P,adrer and Heiskell df~cided to take . lineintl.org to ..get set to enJoy the contest
on the challenge, making the .three ~n:d a hve.

Local singers appearing
in international competition

.

Beverly
Gettles

house, much older than the
neighborhood or the town ,
which made rubble of the
pavement at its. foot and
flung its imponderable
branches out over the road
and across the yard, branches whose girths were greater
than the trunk of any ordi·
nary tree. There was a torsion iri its body which made
it look like a giant dervish to
them . Their father said if
they could see as God can ,
in geological time , they
would see it leap out of the
ground and tum in the sun
and spread its arms and
bask in the joys of being an
oak tree in Iowa."
It seems
the Rev.
Boughton's chldren have all
turned out .well , except for
Jack. He bears the "black
sheep" burden~ .and nov; he
need~ reconci!Iatwn and
blessmp fro'? h1s fath~r. .
Jack s misspent hfe IS
gradually revealed to us . We
already know about the first
child from Gilead. He also
met ·another lady and has a
son. His many letters to
Della in Memphis 'are
returned unopened. He had
hoped to bring her and the
boy here, to Gilead.
Jack is charming and dis-

arming and always just at
the edge of trouble . It is :a
small town, and the people
afe suspicious of him. H~
tries his best to reclaim tht
house and the land whicb
have long been neglecte&lt;t.
He also tries to , reclaim ·a
te)ationship with his fatl:tot,
With whom he has always
been at odds.
.
~
I am reminded of the linci
from a poem my mothel
read to us. "It takes· a heap
of livin' in a liouse to mak~
it home ..." "Home ," espe7
ciaHy the place where ~e
grew up , if we are 'iuckj
enough to have that one
place we keep in our heart . .
is the place we someho""
·always long to return t&lt;i
Mother, at the beginning of
her Alzheimer 's, would lay
her clothes and her shoe$
out on the bed and prepar~
to go "home" to Harrisoft
County. My cousin, Nancy,
told me of my Aunt
Bernadine's last days, when
she also packed her suitcase
to return to Jockey Hollow,
where she had lived as a
child, though she spent ,the
, last 70 years of her life in
Auburn , N.Y.
Home is a nearly perfectly
written story of people woo
are less than perfect, in need
of forgive.ness and understanding and God's grace.
Please keep writing, Mrs .
Robinson . I'll be waiting for
your next c·arefully crafted.
excellent work.

.

·. Arbors at GallipoliS
Nursing and Rehabllitatioli Center
Providing

·Rehabilitation Back To Home!

.
I

Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio

•

9!00A
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Safurday

Following back surgery, I came to Arbors at ·
Gallipol.is for Rehabilitation. I am

so impressed with the efficiency of the staff.
When I first arrived at Arbors at Gallipolis

...

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I did not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now, thanks to the wonderful

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OPEN tb :4LL'ADULT HOLZER CLINIC P~TIENTS

WE WILL BE PROVIDING
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·
·Referrals Welcome
Call today for an appointmrnt at
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•

PLEASANT VALLEY DIALYSIS, LLC
3683 ()hio River Road • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Jtr60rs at {Ja[CiJ!ofis
Skilled Nursing &amp; RehabUitation Center
u· 170 Pinecrest Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631

. 740-446-7112

"~"'

~

'.

�.

'

.

•

.

•

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT

Sunday, November 2, 2ooP .

INSIDE

6unba!' Cime• -6tntinel

Down on the Farm, Pqe Dl

Dl

Let us Light the _Way
to a Better Holiday..:.

PROUD TO BE.APART OF YOUR LIFE.
. Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

•

Sunday, November 2, 2oo8 ' ·

'

Flavors .of the 'l*ek ---...;..___
..,
•
'.

'

~.

. ..;,,.,

'. ..·,~. --~:.~

:·
\.,1

}'~

: Broaoli can
make healthy,
jlavoiful pesto

-·

.

'I'

'

:-.

0

FUSILUIN
BROCCOU
AND PINE
NUT SAUCE

lntere'st Rate . .r

·. 9.~98.o/o
,'

"

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0}¥ OHIO VALLEY BANK
446-2631
1-800-468-6682

Now Acceptinl New Patients

. 740.Ma.5401
·
c ,._.,,OM, ,.
, . . , ~ • H)t

I

A.P.R:
. . .

MaXImum tenn of 36 mornl1a and minimum new loan amount ol $5,000.00 available wilh etedlt app1011al.
(EKamplo: Amount flnanc:e&lt;l $5,000.00 at 7.75%. 36 monU1Iy payments ol $161 .05. Loan proceaslng leo
ol $159.00- 9.98% A.P.R.) A.P.R. = Annual Percentage Rate . RATE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
'
.

ed

•

Servlnga: 4

.

wdcomtt Board Cerdfttd Onhopedlc Sul)tOII .
: Dr. Bnau Haupt, formertr of Motlataln Pride OrtbopccUa
: Ia Chultttoa, West VfrPnla. Dr. Hallpt specializes In
: all upecU of Orthopedic Suqery, iadudiDa bone
; fracaua aa4 tOtal joint rer,Jutmelit. He Ia
.
: accomplltbed Ia Sporta Medidne, .Computer Nnlpted
; Total Jotat leplacemeat Sutpy
Limb
· ·
: llmulatnar:tln SlltJtiJ ladadlna the .llizaro• Bone
: l.eqtlalna Tedutlquc. He Is now acceptlq aU
: Ortbepcdlc p&amp;tieats at Holler Cliafc Ia GalllpoUa
: u.d Holm Cllalc Soath Charlestoa.

..•

Start to tlnlah: 40 mlnutee

.

.

I

'

: 1 head broccoli (about 1
•
114 pounds)
· ·
3 cloves gar{ic
114 teaspoon salt
1 112 cups water
114 cup pine nuts
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil .
J2. oun.ces whole-whF.at
fusilli pasta
APphoto
114 cup chopped fresh
' , basil/eaves
· Fusllli In Broccoli and Pine Nut Sauce is seen in this
Sunday, July 20 photo. Nutrient rich broccoli helps create a
. Ground black pepper, to full flavor and healthy pesto for this dish.
laste
.
. Separate the broccoli flo- . ., T111nsfer the broccoli ing until the pasta and broc-·
rets from the slalks. Chop stalks, garlic and cooking coli are tender, about anoththe florets into small pieces liquid to a food processor. er 5 minutes. Drain and
lind set aside. Using a veg- ~dd the pine nuts and olive.. transfer to a sel'Ving boiiJI.
. etable peeler; remove the otl, then proc~ss until Add the sauce and chopped
t~:~h outer skin from the •IIIOO!h (use cau.lion when basil, then toss well. Season
s s. Cut the peeled slalks ~g hot hqutds).
with black pepper.
into ·l-inch chunks.
Bnng a large ·saucepan of
N. . . . . .~
.
. Iri a medium saucepan, lightly salted water to a boil.
~trrtiOn mJor:natzon per
combine the garlic , salt and Cook the pasla according to servz~g: 483 C" orres; 140
y;ater. Place over high heat package directions until calorzesfromfat, 1_6 gfat (1
and bring to a boil. Add the nearly telnder, about 5 min- g saturated; 0 g trans fats) ;
6roccoli stalks , reduce heat, utes.
0 mg cholesterol; 74 g carcover and simmer until very
Add the reserved broccoli bohydrate; 15 g protein; 12
tender, 15 to 20 minutes ..
and continue cook- g fiber; 208 mg sodium .

(The Shoebox Ministry)
Big Country 99,
WBGS the Ministry Station~
K-92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88.1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses,
Inc .
~ Invite

you to participate in
an opportunity to make a
difference in the lives of
. young boys and girls throughout
the world in war tom countries. .

.

We thank all who

.participated in 2007 that · ·
enabled the Tri·Countq to
send over 2.400 boxes!
DROP-OFF LOCATIONS:

* WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
in Point Pleasant, WV ·
* WVYK/WMPO on
*

Bradbury Road in
Middleport, Ohio
Bob's Market in

&gt;

Apply for the Holiday L~an Special
at an office or online at www~ovbc.com

......

It's Time To Gear Up For... .
· OperationChristmas Child

, ',

In the P.ast monttis I~ talked to many·of you abOut my Ideas for
Improving the Gallle .Col.mtY Sheriff's Qepartment. I know there are many
of you that I have not r.lke4 to yet, so I will use this space to answer
· some
.
.. of the qUe•i!i I have bien asked. ·

What Ia the _bl. .at law enforcement problem we face In

Galli• Cou~ ..

Without question It IC the O!lQOing drug problem. I'm talking about
cocaine, crack, meth, heroin, and the abuse of prescription pain killers,
all addictive dn,ags. SOme would argue that thefts are the biggest
P.roblem, but what you must' understand is that thefts are driVen by the
drug problem. Statiltlcs ten us that 80% ol all crime Is drug relate(j.
easlcally the P8&lt;;)Pie·who steal from you are funding a drug habit.

,.,._t

dr'll probl•m?

·.
going after drug dealers a priority. I
fo drug enforcement and I Will work
· crimes task force. The · .
drugs Is that all tips and
can then coordinate
are. I will encourage
into their patrol routine. In my
in several hundred drug cases ·
of drug enforcement training. I will
exp1erie,nce to oear and you will see results. ·

wiU

Under
will
With

How will you aftord to do,thla without more taz d~lar•?

Spine ·. Evalva~on.

·at Holzer edical Center .

ana·

. ' '
'

'

Linda D. Alston,.D.O ·~·
.
. HeurosiJrgeon ·, ·~
. .

~

#)
~.

•

The starting place IS realignment. Our sheriff's department Is top heavy
with admlnrstratoiS. Curreilt!Y there are four administrators (sheriff,
majo~l.captain, &amp; lle~nantt Under my administration there will be two
(sherm &amp; ChieT deo\ltvrWJth the 88vll1gs from these two administrative .
positions we wlh til al:lle .tp haVe a dep~ to work drugs, as I already
talked about, and at least another full time and one part time deputy to
put on patrol serving the P.Ubllc. .We will always look for ways to cut costs
and be more efficient,
we will pursue opportunities for grants. I also
anticipate an Increase in d!llg dollars being· forfeited to the aepartment
as we steP. up d~ enforcement. Rememller, I have 13 years experience
, .running a law enfOrcement agency. I understand budgets and I've never
gone over budget and never cut services. to the public.
·

_ ..........
•.

They are already Nrel

.I

'

~--

.........,

.

have a tore group of ,dedicated deputies who
are there ~1.181'' ~ · . to serve their communitY. I'll take that as a
starting p&lt;?lnt any ttrnlt. rtalnly there are Issues thal need to be
addreSsed. In some cases theo{just need to be allowed to do their jobs,
but It is a leader's JOt! to provide the training, motivation, discipline, and
equn:ment th~ n8ecll9 i:to a great ~b. It Is a leader's job to utilize his
em
s talents to 1\elr ~tentlal. I am an ~rlenCed leader and I
have
e this btl!n'. The bottom line Is we'll get trained up and
· motivatE!(~ and
we will serve
the
public
with excellence!
.
.
t;
.
•

"I'm sick of seeing the good
people of Galli a County being .
victimized by thieves and I'm
fed up with the drug problem.
. If elected I will make real
changes at your sheriff's
department, and I will do
something .about these · ·
problems. No excuses,
I will get results."

· Roger Brandeberry
Candidate ·For SheriH
, _ , It ..... ltHt, eelllpolle, OH 41nt

I

t

'

!·---~\'----·"----"--'-----~--------··----

- -·-

-------·---·- - ..

._.,_ ..

�.

'

.

•

.

•

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT

Sunday, November 2, 2ooP .

INSIDE

6unba!' Cime• -6tntinel

Down on the Farm, Pqe Dl

Dl

Let us Light the _Way
to a Better Holiday..:.

PROUD TO BE.APART OF YOUR LIFE.
. Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

•

Sunday, November 2, 2oo8 ' ·

'

Flavors .of the 'l*ek ---...;..___
..,
•
'.

'

~.

. ..;,,.,

'. ..·,~. --~:.~

:·
\.,1

}'~

: Broaoli can
make healthy,
jlavoiful pesto

-·

.

'I'

'

:-.

0

FUSILUIN
BROCCOU
AND PINE
NUT SAUCE

lntere'st Rate . .r

·. 9.~98.o/o
,'

"

.

0}¥ OHIO VALLEY BANK
446-2631
1-800-468-6682

Now Acceptinl New Patients

. 740.Ma.5401
·
c ,._.,,OM, ,.
, . . , ~ • H)t

I

A.P.R:
. . .

MaXImum tenn of 36 mornl1a and minimum new loan amount ol $5,000.00 available wilh etedlt app1011al.
(EKamplo: Amount flnanc:e&lt;l $5,000.00 at 7.75%. 36 monU1Iy payments ol $161 .05. Loan proceaslng leo
ol $159.00- 9.98% A.P.R.) A.P.R. = Annual Percentage Rate . RATE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
'
.

ed

•

Servlnga: 4

.

wdcomtt Board Cerdfttd Onhopedlc Sul)tOII .
: Dr. Bnau Haupt, formertr of Motlataln Pride OrtbopccUa
: Ia Chultttoa, West VfrPnla. Dr. Hallpt specializes In
: all upecU of Orthopedic Suqery, iadudiDa bone
; fracaua aa4 tOtal joint rer,Jutmelit. He Ia
.
: accomplltbed Ia Sporta Medidne, .Computer Nnlpted
; Total Jotat leplacemeat Sutpy
Limb
· ·
: llmulatnar:tln SlltJtiJ ladadlna the .llizaro• Bone
: l.eqtlalna Tedutlquc. He Is now acceptlq aU
: Ortbepcdlc p&amp;tieats at Holler Cliafc Ia GalllpoUa
: u.d Holm Cllalc Soath Charlestoa.

..•

Start to tlnlah: 40 mlnutee

.

.

I

'

: 1 head broccoli (about 1
•
114 pounds)
· ·
3 cloves gar{ic
114 teaspoon salt
1 112 cups water
114 cup pine nuts
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil .
J2. oun.ces whole-whF.at
fusilli pasta
APphoto
114 cup chopped fresh
' , basil/eaves
· Fusllli In Broccoli and Pine Nut Sauce is seen in this
Sunday, July 20 photo. Nutrient rich broccoli helps create a
. Ground black pepper, to full flavor and healthy pesto for this dish.
laste
.
. Separate the broccoli flo- . ., T111nsfer the broccoli ing until the pasta and broc-·
rets from the slalks. Chop stalks, garlic and cooking coli are tender, about anoththe florets into small pieces liquid to a food processor. er 5 minutes. Drain and
lind set aside. Using a veg- ~dd the pine nuts and olive.. transfer to a sel'Ving boiiJI.
. etable peeler; remove the otl, then proc~ss until Add the sauce and chopped
t~:~h outer skin from the •IIIOO!h (use cau.lion when basil, then toss well. Season
s s. Cut the peeled slalks ~g hot hqutds).
with black pepper.
into ·l-inch chunks.
Bnng a large ·saucepan of
N. . . . . .~
.
. Iri a medium saucepan, lightly salted water to a boil.
~trrtiOn mJor:natzon per
combine the garlic , salt and Cook the pasla according to servz~g: 483 C" orres; 140
y;ater. Place over high heat package directions until calorzesfromfat, 1_6 gfat (1
and bring to a boil. Add the nearly telnder, about 5 min- g saturated; 0 g trans fats) ;
6roccoli stalks , reduce heat, utes.
0 mg cholesterol; 74 g carcover and simmer until very
Add the reserved broccoli bohydrate; 15 g protein; 12
tender, 15 to 20 minutes ..
and continue cook- g fiber; 208 mg sodium .

(The Shoebox Ministry)
Big Country 99,
WBGS the Ministry Station~
K-92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88.1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses,
Inc .
~ Invite

you to participate in
an opportunity to make a
difference in the lives of
. young boys and girls throughout
the world in war tom countries. .

.

We thank all who

.participated in 2007 that · ·
enabled the Tri·Countq to
send over 2.400 boxes!
DROP-OFF LOCATIONS:

* WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
in Point Pleasant, WV ·
* WVYK/WMPO on
*

Bradbury Road in
Middleport, Ohio
Bob's Market in

&gt;

Apply for the Holiday L~an Special
at an office or online at www~ovbc.com

......

It's Time To Gear Up For... .
· OperationChristmas Child

, ',

In the P.ast monttis I~ talked to many·of you abOut my Ideas for
Improving the Gallle .Col.mtY Sheriff's Qepartment. I know there are many
of you that I have not r.lke4 to yet, so I will use this space to answer
· some
.
.. of the qUe•i!i I have bien asked. ·

What Ia the _bl. .at law enforcement problem we face In

Galli• Cou~ ..

Without question It IC the O!lQOing drug problem. I'm talking about
cocaine, crack, meth, heroin, and the abuse of prescription pain killers,
all addictive dn,ags. SOme would argue that thefts are the biggest
P.roblem, but what you must' understand is that thefts are driVen by the
drug problem. Statiltlcs ten us that 80% ol all crime Is drug relate(j.
easlcally the P8&lt;;)Pie·who steal from you are funding a drug habit.

,.,._t

dr'll probl•m?

·.
going after drug dealers a priority. I
fo drug enforcement and I Will work
· crimes task force. The · .
drugs Is that all tips and
can then coordinate
are. I will encourage
into their patrol routine. In my
in several hundred drug cases ·
of drug enforcement training. I will
exp1erie,nce to oear and you will see results. ·

wiU

Under
will
With

How will you aftord to do,thla without more taz d~lar•?

Spine ·. Evalva~on.

·at Holzer edical Center .

ana·

. ' '
'

'

Linda D. Alston,.D.O ·~·
.
. HeurosiJrgeon ·, ·~
. .

~

#)
~.

•

The starting place IS realignment. Our sheriff's department Is top heavy
with admlnrstratoiS. Curreilt!Y there are four administrators (sheriff,
majo~l.captain, &amp; lle~nantt Under my administration there will be two
(sherm &amp; ChieT deo\ltvrWJth the 88vll1gs from these two administrative .
positions we wlh til al:lle .tp haVe a dep~ to work drugs, as I already
talked about, and at least another full time and one part time deputy to
put on patrol serving the P.Ubllc. .We will always look for ways to cut costs
and be more efficient,
we will pursue opportunities for grants. I also
anticipate an Increase in d!llg dollars being· forfeited to the aepartment
as we steP. up d~ enforcement. Rememller, I have 13 years experience
, .running a law enfOrcement agency. I understand budgets and I've never
gone over budget and never cut services. to the public.
·

_ ..........
•.

They are already Nrel

.I

'

~--

.........,

.

have a tore group of ,dedicated deputies who
are there ~1.181'' ~ · . to serve their communitY. I'll take that as a
starting p&lt;?lnt any ttrnlt. rtalnly there are Issues thal need to be
addreSsed. In some cases theo{just need to be allowed to do their jobs,
but It is a leader's JOt! to provide the training, motivation, discipline, and
equn:ment th~ n8ecll9 i:to a great ~b. It Is a leader's job to utilize his
em
s talents to 1\elr ~tentlal. I am an ~rlenCed leader and I
have
e this btl!n'. The bottom line Is we'll get trained up and
· motivatE!(~ and
we will serve
the
public
with excellence!
.
.
t;
.
•

"I'm sick of seeing the good
people of Galli a County being .
victimized by thieves and I'm
fed up with the drug problem.
. If elected I will make real
changes at your sheriff's
department, and I will do
something .about these · ·
problems. No excuses,
I will get results."

· Roger Brandeberry
Candidate ·For SheriH
, _ , It ..... ltHt, eelllpolle, OH 41nt

I

t

'

!·---~\'----·"----"--'-----~--------··----

- -·-

-------·---·- - ..

._.,_ ..

�---

'-

·--·--

uabap limt1·6tntintl
I

DOWN ON THE FARM

Ohio prison farms teach skills

'

'

Bv BEN SUTHERLY
f

DAYTON DAILY

.

N~WS

· LEBANON ' (AP)
Brian Campbell grew up on
a dairy farm and worked as
-a herdsman before beCOI11·
1ng a corrections officer.
· In 2004, after rising
through
the
Lebanon
Correctional Institution 's
ranks, he became manager
'of its farm.
: It's a far cry from what
Campbell knew growing

-pp.

· "Farming for the state
tprison system) is totally
oifferent than farming on
;the outside," he said .
: On the Lebanon farm,
:rehabilitating
inmates
-tomes before making a
profit. The prison farm
makes do with aging farm
_equipment - some of it
·more than 30 years old .arid with some unmotivated
:workers .
~- "It's hard to understand
how many stumbling blocks
you have to overcome to get
the simplest of tasks done,"
:Campbell said. "You actually have to teach some of
:these inmates how to work.
:You have to push them.
'Some of them end up being
great workers, and some of
them never get it."
. The differences don't end
·there.
: Many of Ohio 's for-profit
:farms today are highly specialized operations that
focus on one area of production, such as grain ol' ·
cattle or hogs .
·
But the Lebanon farm and
·other Ohio prison farms still
raise a range of crops and
livestock, much as farms
did in the 1940s and 1950s.
When prisoners were bused
to the farm from London
·Correctional Institution.
..
And the Lebanon farm's ·
'products stay within the
prison system, defraying

food costs. oi'Kcials claim.
The 1.57 million pounds
of milk collected each year
from 86 cows at the
Lebanon dairy, for example,
are shipped to the Pickaway
County prison.
There, the milk is pooled
with that from other prison
farms at a dairy processi~g
plant 'that supplies the
state's
nearly' 5'1 ,000
inmates with a pasteurized,
homogenized product . .
While prime cuts of beef
raised at the prison farms
have been served at the governor's mansion, inmates
don't get steak, in part out
of concern that an inmate
might fashion the leftover
bones into weapons.
Some of the biggest contrasts between the prison
fanns and those ia the outside world are seen in the
workaday lives of the
LebaQon prison farm's 43
inmate-workers .
The inmates, typically
nonviolent offenders convicted of drug- or theftrelated felonies, do not wear
monitoring devi9es. And the
II correctional farm coordinators who assist Campbell
and two assistant farm man·agers working · with inmates
are not armed.
. But the perimeter patrols
who occasionally drive
through the farm pack both
a sidearm and a shotgun.
are
Farm
supervisors
required to lay eyes on each
inmate once every 30 minutes to help prevent "walk-aways. "
A prisoner's daily routine
comes before farming . An
-inmate often . spends much
of an 8-hour workday shut"
tling back and forth from
the farm to the prison for
various reasons - lunch
and afternoon inmate
counts, family visits. or
school and church functions .

' al

.f 1

:Sh

"They don't put in a
straight eight hours,"
Campbell said.
Inmates inexperienced
with the prison farm's
machinery might cause a
breakdown. Some may do
so purposely to get out of
work, while others take
pride in their jobs ,
Campbell said.
Except under supervision.
offenders have no access to
tools, which hang in a
locked case. Outlines on the
board on which the tools
hang help . prison staff
quickly spot if something is
missing. Keys to farm
machinery also are locked
up, available only to certain
. inmates.
Such precautions, as well
as routine observations of
the inmates, require reams
of paperwork, Campbell
said.
·
Security measures are not
foolproof. Ten offenders
have walked away from the
state's prison farm operations since 2000; three of
those were Lebanon prison
farni workers, all of whom
wert' ~ caught.
·
Prison staff must be careful not to place too. much
faith in even the most
devoted farmhand.
"They are con vic ted
.felons ..They'll dupe you,"
said Tim Brunsman, who as
warden
oversees
the .
Lebanon prison's more than
2,500 inmates.
"You just never know
what somebody's thinking."
Other than the occasional
family reunion at a farm in
Kentucky, Darrell Martin
had little exposure to farm
life until he joined a crew of
"tractor shed inmates," who
operate equipment at the
·
Lebanon prison farm.
"It's a lot of hard work in
running a farm," said
Martin, 33, of Cincinnati,
convicted , of having a

·

ASSOCIATED PRess WRITER

DERBY, Vt , - This sumtner, Steve Sanford had to .
~ell 106 dairy farmers in
rural northern Vermont he
could no longer treat their
·cows.
: Battling · degenerative
arthritis, the 56-year-old
large animal veterinarian
can·~ do the physically chal·,
lenglng work any more ~
Worse, ~e can't.find anyone·
h w II hav1 g already
;tied to ~~ruit a bovine vet'erinarian to join h~s _pracnee. He has advertised for
help and tramed.new graqulites - only .to have them
leave after short stays.
.
. Now, three vet trucks sat
ad!~ m has parkin~ lot.
Beheve me, I ve looked
under every sto~~· there as
.no one out there, he saad..
The shortage ·of large anamal veterinarians isn't.lil)lited to Vermon~. In New
England. t~er~ Wtll be 1,0~6
:vet vacancaes .m the next stx
·years, accordmg to. a ~une
study by the Cummmgs·,
School
of · Vetennary,
Medicine ,
at
Tufts
Umvers1ty. In the same lime
penod, over a quarter of the ·
more than 100 specialized
·food animal veterinarians
will reach retirement age,
the study found.
Fewer people are interested in large animal veterinary medicine, said David
Kirkpatrick , a spokesman
:for the American Veterinary
Medical Association . With a
decline in the number of
family farms , fewer children are getting exposed to
agriculture, he said.
The first years on the job,
too, can be daunting.
:Saddled with an average of
· $106,000 in school debt and
· an average starting salary of
$53,000 , large animal vets
don't make what small animal doctors do - about
· $60,000 a year to start.
. Last year, 60 percent of
·vet school graduates went
into private practice, with
just 5 percent in large animal veterinary medicine
eJ(clusively and 41 percent
·in small animal practice ,
according to Kirkpatrick .
The trend isn 't just · bad
·news for farmers . It's potentially bad for consumers as
well .

.,

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

.Sunday, November 2, 2oo8

I

GALLIPOLIS
United Producers Inc.
market report from
Gallipolis for-sales conducted on Wednesday,
Oct. 29, 2008.

$85;
750-850
lbs:,
Steers,
$75-$85,
Heifers , $65-$82.

$770; Baby Calves, $10$135; Goats, $17-$87;
Hogs , $45-$56.

Cows-Steady

Upcoming
specials:

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us .
ctassifiedc!~:r~:~,ibune.com ·REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
"

~

www.myd(!ilytribune.com
www:mydailysentinel.com .
www.mydailyregister.com

·To Pl~ce
,Sentinel
\!tribune
ll\egf~ter
Your Ad, . (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 ·(304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax · 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
or Fax To (304) 675·5234
·
~.

Oeatflflrec

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

· Ohio Valley
Publlllhllig mervea
the right to odll,
roject Ill' Cl~ lny
ad at any time.

Error•

....,orted

Mull
on lho II

ay of publica
nd tho Trlbu
llnei·Regllter wll
responsible for n
ore than the COlt.
ill lpiCI occu
y the error end 0111

first Insertion. W
aU not bo lloble I
ny loao or txpon
1111 reaulta ~om lh
ublli:atlon
minion of

•

AU Dl•play: · 12 fll,oon. 2

• Start Vour Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dacriptlon • Include A ~ce • Avoid Abbnlvlttiaftt
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needad
• Ads Shltuld Run ·7 Days

• All ads .musi be prepaid•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlllhlng rtiMVIII tiHt right to .cllt, Nteet, or canMIMy ad Many time. Error a rndf be 111portMI on the flrtl dly of publl~ tnd 1M
Tribu,...Sentl'*""-- itter will be retpontUMior no lnOfll ltuln the eo.t of tM e.p~~ce occupied by tttt .. ror and only t~ flrtt lnMrtlon. Wt shall not bt lltlblt for
any loll or ••penN that ret uta from the publication or omlhtOn of an 8dvei11Mment, Correction Will bt mldt In the flrtt avtlllbla «iltlon. ·~:,-:::.~:I
1111 alwr(l conlkttntlat. · Curr.nt ,.It ea«&lt; applies. ·All rtal .. tlte td'4r1•rnents tre lub]ect to tM Fedtrtl Ftlf Houalng Act Of 1181. · ThiS
ICctptt only Mlp wantld Mil meeting EOE 1t1ndard1. WI wm not knowlng,ly IICctpt tny ldYirtlslr\g In vlolltiOn or thlltw. Will not be rnpon1lbte rot
..-ron In an ld liken

Prol.uional s.m-

•POLICIES*

How you con have borders and 9raphlcs
~
added to your Classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perod'
l!,iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Monday-Frlda'V for Insertion . Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
In Next Day•• Paper
PubllcBtlon
sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m. sunday Dl:::~r~,,!,'!':.•~:;:;.!:
fri•Oay For Sund•y• Paper
Thun:day ror

I .

Should Include
Items
To Help Get Response ...

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

ptsplay Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00 • .m.

Fan~~

Pels

EquipoMnl

MiJCOII..,oaus
Holiday Baking . Now
available; Coating chacolates, glazed fruit. nuts,
etc. Buy bUlk and save.
Trickling Spring Country
Store.
Camdus
Ad.

Lost &amp; Found
Found on At 35, Jim Hilt
Ad lg. cream color dog,
&gt;Jery

friendly

Found· . In

Monday.
well

TNT

lemale

Ide

In 'tho

vollabla edition.

CUrrent rail
ppllto.

Mollohan
Special. 20
cial Carpet
several
740·446-7444.
Low Pr~esl

740·379-9110

304-1175·5580.

'l•

area
dog,
ualned

I

304-674~679.

Lost· MiSsing in Ambco·
sla area At 62 Scottish
Highland Bun if found call
30H58·1727.

Nalicoo

Long Tonn Can/ Homo C...
OMs ion

trtfltmenl.
otrecllons \¥111

::;~ ;ar:g~~w~~r::~~~rd~~ r!~t..~~t~~~is~ai~~ ~~~~

Do you want to make a difference? If you

NO.TICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. roc·
ommends that you do
business with people yoU
know, and NOT to send
' money through the mall
· until .you have InveSt! gat·

':I-re

compassionate

and

committed

t

providing Quality Care come and be a part ·
of our Long Term Care/Home Care team . I
We have the following positions available:

log the otlenng.

*Personal Care Aides- Per Diem:.".
Hourly rate and paid mileage
1- Gallia County
1- Jackson County

Home Heallh Aide .06 FfE- Jackson
Physical1herap is1 - F'r
Occupational Therapist- Ff
Speech Therapist· Per Diem
Holzer ScnWr Care Cegter;

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

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

i

WElDERs ·
NEEDED
Localftlanufacturer
looklnc for EXPERIENCED
ftllc Welders.
...... ipply In p111101111t

:uso Eastem An.
Help Wanted

·Jet

Aeration Motors repaired, new &amp; rebu ilt in
stock. · Call Ron Evans,
1·800·537-9528.

• Heallh Care Coordinator/RN Ff
(evenings)
* LPN- Ff
* STNA· Ff
*STNA· Yf
• Dietary Aid- Yf
Aooliqgts for NyqipB AHi5lMpl CIMS'

l.iyipg- GBIIiooli§j .
' Resident Coordinator t'T
• Resident asslstanl· Yf

Holzer A§Sis*cd

For Sale WOOd Bumer.
$350.00 Call740·2370.

For delaib please give Barb Pelerson, Director
of Human Resources for our Long Term Care/
For 5ale· top llg/11 curio Home Care division a catl a1740-441-3401 or
74'H-30'W·18' 0, 4 glass
shelves
$150.00 email me at J?eterson@bolzer.org or visit us on
the web at www .bo!zer org.
304-675-3325.

Giveaway • maple stereo
with radio 304·675-1i65.

Equal Opportunily Employer

Gllllpoiis. OH
· Help Wanted

R
LIVING

•'
,I

'
f

A Vroble

Certified Occupational

· ~~ant's

'Resident Coordinator
If you are _inleresled in becoming a part of
our A.~sisted Living Community we are
seeking a Resident Coordinator.
This is a Full Time position thai requires
good public relation skills. knowledge of·
Residem Admissions, billing , and payroll. A
background in Assisted Living is preferred .
. .
..
tl\ d [
We offier compet1Uve wages an emp oyment
benerns.

For more information please stop by and see
Peggy Williams. Executive Director al 300
Martham Drive. Gallipolis Ohio or
call/email Barb Peterson. Director of Human
Resources for Holzer Long Tem1 Care
Division al740-441-3401.
octernon®holzer org or look us up on the
web at www.holzer.org .
Equal Opportunily Employer

Back To The
Farm:

.••.

•

to

l

~
' LPN - F'r- Gallipolis

•' .

W
e
I
I
Muscled/Fles hed , $45$55.
·Sale lit 10 a.m. on
Medium/Lean, $35 ~ Wednesday, Nov. 5.
$45.
There will be no sale on
275-415 lbs .; Steers,
Thin/Light, $10-$35.
Nov. 26 for
$75~$ 116 , Heifers, $70Bulls, $55-$72.
Thanksgiving.
$98;
425-525
lbs.,
For .more information,
Steers,
$75 -$112,
call
DeWayne at (740)
Heifers , $70-$94; 550339-0241 or Stacy at
625 lbs., Steers, $75I
304) 634-0224. Visit
$105, Heifers. $70--$87;
website
m
Cow/Calf Pairs, $450- the
650-725 lbs .. Steers,
575-$90, Heifers , $70- $750; Bred Cows , $300- www.uproducers .tom. ·

Feeder CattleLower

«aaaa-ltmtlad • Page D3

CLASSIFIED

·
il rich.source of fertilizer to r11dish \14iJ.l.gerrninate and.be
"With the critical role that Major said more recent many days of milk that you . feed
our
plants," harvested· in about 20 to 25
food animal veterinarians graduates are simrly seek- could've put in the tank," he Ruppenthal said.
. d;lys, leaving room behind
play in protecting the ing to balance wor and life. said.
.
. Sprouts are a great source . for the later-maturing carnation's 'food. supply, this
Many new graduates are
He thinks technicians , . of fresh food_, especially fqr l'llts/' .
shortage is ' especially older than their con_tempo- .. perhaps farm hands, could people !ac~mg m garden . • Start small, eSM~ially if
alarming," the Cummings ranes were when they start· · be trained to do these exams sp~ce, h~ .satd r
. .·yoq don't._have .a lot of_tame
study said.
·
ed ~~eir' careers and have '·and other conimon proceNutnllonally, they re for plantmg and mamteThe American. Veterinary famahes.
dures to alleviate the short- power pa!)ked. And ~hen nance. "A small garden is
Medical Association and
"They may actually have age.
· you grow other small thmgs often a friendlic;r .and less
As sociation of American other things to do,'' said
When Westfield dairy like salad greens, you can intimidating place for the
Veterinary
Medical Major. owner. of Green farmer Jacques Couture got get a lot more producllo_n new garden.er," Stack said.
Colleges · have
urged · Mountain Qovine and the letter . from Sanford per .spa.ce t~an you can ,!f "It also will allow you to
Congress to pass bills aimed . Equine · Clinic in West
.
h' h
ld
you re growmg tomatoes.,
become mo're com~ortable
t bo t. th
be 0 f Ches\erfield, JII.H. "'"e, as te11 mg •m e cou no
Ch k b ~
1
''
anew vets
os mg
e num
r
P antmg, wa'tl) your gardena'ng .skt'lls."
through
a loanfor· employers , need to"''keep longer serve ha's cows • he h · ec . e. ore ak
·
&lt; ·· h
that 1·n m' m
· d, to allow for called the other· vet in the
ow,ever,. to m . e sure . • Above all, he practical.
~~~n~~rk0i~ra:ad~{s!~:~ other f,.cets of )jfe, days off county to ask if he could you re not breakn~g any You' re doing this primarily
areas and a competitive and weeken~soff."
take in Couture's cows. He laws or any p~ovtsao;,s of tokeepfoodcostsdownand
grant program for colleges · To lessen the load or couldn't, and referred ~fa~edp~:te:~~s : ; . ql!Biityup.pf?w·ofp.klyfoodth
· s
to bring in more students.
make up' for shortages, Couture to a practice in be a safety hazard, and gar- that YC?Ur .a~uly. t ~s. at
At least 13 states - most some practices are collabo- Enosburg; which is about 30 dens 00 balconies could, are pnced hagh&gt;~,m grocery
rating with neighboring vets miles away.. .
. exceed load limits.
stores , that don t take . all
recenily New Hampshire are starting or have staf!ed to share 'emergency and
Couture's grateful he
Here's how 10 ·get more ·sum,mer I~ npen, anc;l that
loan forgive~ess p(ograms.· weekend duties, he said.
found someone, but worries production ·from · small don t :requare ~ )ot of room
But Kirkp·atrick says
In Derby and Greensboro, about his new veterinarian's .spaces:
1.
and dtrect s~nhght . .
without a federal program, where Sanford practices, · ability to get to his farm in
• Succession planting is
It also nught help_af you
the improvements will be there:s just one vet in the winter, when snow and road important if you hope to converted a . few neaghbol:li
incremental.
county besides him.
conditions can make travel . enjoy a cpntinuous harvest ... mto g;~rd~ners, RUppenthal
Sanford thinks there's
Farmers are having to difficult.
"Always be thinking .about satd . . ~ncourage them to
more to it. Since 2000, he's look farther away for a vet
Sanford, who col}tinues to the next crop and get it start- ·use .tlietr own spaces pronoticed a change in attitude and that could be a problem treat backyard animals and ed
somepla&lt;:e . else," ductavely, and you ~an trade
and work ethic of new grad- if there's an emel'gency like- pets. said .giving up on his Ruppenthal smd. ~Cycle · ·or barter for the thulgs you
uates be's hired.
·difficulL ,c;dving or a cpw
.
h · be h
these .things into the _grow-', ,linn'~. have., and ~¥t;}'OIIJ'~
''The reality is that the :;with 'a twisted . stomach. cow,pauents as · en eart ing garden." ,, · : " .
·~lf. 1
.
. , .,., "&lt;i
.
romanticism -of James They may also 'chose to wrenching.
.
• Take advantage of '
•••
Herriot no longer exists,'' he forego things like pregllan- fe;;I~~!:~~~~pos~~~~~~~ ·reflected or artificial light .
On the ,Net:
said, alluding to the late cy checks, whach could be
"That doesn't. mean pu!ting
University of Illinois
English veterinarian who costly later, Sanford said.
ity, I overworl&lt;:ed myself, it up alumiri.um foil as much Extension fuct
sheet:
wrote "All Creatures Great
During the last two · was a stress on my family," as it does taking advantage http:/lweb.extension.uiuc.ed
and Small" about life as a months of pregnancy, a cow Sanford said. "Now, finally, of the sunlight that reflects u/statelnewsdetail.cfm?New
country veterinarian.
is dried off or not milked, he I've come to a point where off windows and south fac- siD9586
Kirkpatrick has heard said.
·
I'm at peace with my deci- ing. walls," he said. "Also,'' · You can contact Deal)
similar laments.
"If you dry her off too sion, because It's not my when there's been a porch Fosdick
at' ·
But veterinarian Stephen_ early, then you lose that fault."
light or patio light ~eft on at ,deanfosdick(at)netscape.net. .

-LivESTOCK -REPORT

ltllllbap

t[rtbune - Sentinel -

With planning, tight areas
can produce high yields

weapon under disability.
When Martin wrote home
night I'm always amazed at
BY DEAN FOSDICK
to tell his sister and his girlFOR THE ASSOCI~TED PRESS
how ~uch that contributed
friend that he was working
to plant growth at places
on a farm at the prison, he
Urban dwellers short of where I've lived."
said he was teased about garden space have options . • Include some companwhen trying to stretch the ion plants , which can be as
"turning into a ~ow boy:"
Not all of the inmate family food dollar by grow- attractive as they are edible.
laborers have urban back' ing their own produce. And "If you add flowers, that
grounds . Steve Bailey, 43, it's not ~uch a bad thing that might attract bees !O ~elp
with vegetable polhnauon.
said he farms with his .father they must think small.
Large
yields
can
be
had
·
The
right varieties might
in Preble County. He:snearfrom
tight'~as
.
lt
justt~kes
also
repel
some of the bad
ly nine months into a three- .
insects."
year sentence for .manufac- some plannmg.
The
darkest
closet
,
for
• Consider growing
turing methamphetanfuie.
can
serve
as
an
berries
or small fruits that
instance,
As he hammered staples, 'indoor mushroom patch. can cope
with cramped
or U-shaped metal . loops , Kitchen countertops can be spaces and low light.
into a fence post, Bailey used for growing culinary "People might not normally
was asked to compare faim, herbs. Strawberries thrive think of growing a raspbering in prison with farming when planted in multitiered ry plant or lemon tree. i,n
back home.· ·
pots near south,facing win- their apartments, but 11 s · ·
"The pay .ain't !)ear as dows. ·
amazing how much one
good," quipped Bailey, who
Leafy salad greens will small bush or tree can proreceives .$20 per month in mature quickly and repeat- duce
over
time,"
"state pay" that he may use edlydespite subdued indoor . Ruppenthal said. "You'~e
to buy personal hygiene lighting. And family-size talking about a month s
·
items.
orchards can produce. fruit worth of fresh fruit for an
''Three hots and a cot, for a 'month ·or more .onh entire family."
though," a prison staff patios or rooftops wat
_ Self-watering boxes
trees bred to -tolerate
member said, reminding · dwarf
c&lt;lntainers.
· '· .
are great for urban gardenBailey of his cell and board:
·"I know of. people who ers. "Tomatoes and carrots
. Inmate John Alexander; have bought starter kits for just go wild in those things,
37, of Dltyton, sai.d feeding growing mushroom~ in their which keep plams warmer
more than 20 calves at the bathtubs," . said
R.J. and wetter than when
dairy farm 'and ' checking RuppenthBI, . author of they're grown ·in the
their stools for signs of ill- "Fresh Food from Small ground ," Ruppenthal said.
ness· has worked on his dis- Spaces: The Square:lnch
- Direct some plants
cipline.'.'
Gardener 's Guide to Year- straight up or down .
"It's always good to learn Round
Growing, "Thinking vertical is a must
something else in life," said Fermenting and Sprouting" if you~ re hoping for some
Alexander, who said he's a (Chelsea Green Pllblishinl;l, cucumbers or pumpk'ins or
mason by trade. Serving a November). "No space as squash," said Greg Stack, a
four-year sentence for drug too small or too dark to pro- University of Illinois extension horticulturist who
possession, assault and car- duce food ."
and
works with gardeners in the
Ruppenthal,
a
lawyer
rying a concealed weapon,
he's grown to like the calves college instructor from San Chicago area. "You also can·
Bruno, Calif., said he has grow beans and peas, grapes
for which be cares.
·gardened
productively and berries on trellises, bat"They're . just playful,''
Alexander said. "They like despite living in apartments cony rails, hanging baskets,
or condominiums most of on supports or along fences.
to headbutt you."
Plant them in pots, and then
Prison officials said ·ani- his adult life.
"We
have
managed
to
train them to climb."
mill husbandry helps prisoners learn not to be abusive . . . raise a sizable chunk of our . • Inter-planting. Plant two
"It builds work ethic and own fresh food from bal- crops iii the Same row at the
integrity in these guys," cony and windowsill veg- same time. One will mature
etable gardens, a kitchen- before the other and, when
Campbell said.
based sprouting operation , harvested, leaves room for
yogu11 and kefir (cultured the second crop to develop.
.C:
milk drink) fermentation , · "An example would be to

. ortage o arge arum vets taxes tarmers
BY LISA RATHKE

. PageD2

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{1 Full~Thne &amp; 1 Ptirf.'/Ime
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• fleiPble sdlecUing •T1!1111CA ialted

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I

DOWN ON THE FARM

Ohio prison farms teach skills

'

'

Bv BEN SUTHERLY
f

DAYTON DAILY

.

N~WS

· LEBANON ' (AP)
Brian Campbell grew up on
a dairy farm and worked as
-a herdsman before beCOI11·
1ng a corrections officer.
· In 2004, after rising
through
the
Lebanon
Correctional Institution 's
ranks, he became manager
'of its farm.
: It's a far cry from what
Campbell knew growing

-pp.

· "Farming for the state
tprison system) is totally
oifferent than farming on
;the outside," he said .
: On the Lebanon farm,
:rehabilitating
inmates
-tomes before making a
profit. The prison farm
makes do with aging farm
_equipment - some of it
·more than 30 years old .arid with some unmotivated
:workers .
~- "It's hard to understand
how many stumbling blocks
you have to overcome to get
the simplest of tasks done,"
:Campbell said. "You actually have to teach some of
:these inmates how to work.
:You have to push them.
'Some of them end up being
great workers, and some of
them never get it."
. The differences don't end
·there.
: Many of Ohio 's for-profit
:farms today are highly specialized operations that
focus on one area of production, such as grain ol' ·
cattle or hogs .
·
But the Lebanon farm and
·other Ohio prison farms still
raise a range of crops and
livestock, much as farms
did in the 1940s and 1950s.
When prisoners were bused
to the farm from London
·Correctional Institution.
..
And the Lebanon farm's ·
'products stay within the
prison system, defraying

food costs. oi'Kcials claim.
The 1.57 million pounds
of milk collected each year
from 86 cows at the
Lebanon dairy, for example,
are shipped to the Pickaway
County prison.
There, the milk is pooled
with that from other prison
farms at a dairy processi~g
plant 'that supplies the
state's
nearly' 5'1 ,000
inmates with a pasteurized,
homogenized product . .
While prime cuts of beef
raised at the prison farms
have been served at the governor's mansion, inmates
don't get steak, in part out
of concern that an inmate
might fashion the leftover
bones into weapons.
Some of the biggest contrasts between the prison
fanns and those ia the outside world are seen in the
workaday lives of the
LebaQon prison farm's 43
inmate-workers .
The inmates, typically
nonviolent offenders convicted of drug- or theftrelated felonies, do not wear
monitoring devi9es. And the
II correctional farm coordinators who assist Campbell
and two assistant farm man·agers working · with inmates
are not armed.
. But the perimeter patrols
who occasionally drive
through the farm pack both
a sidearm and a shotgun.
are
Farm
supervisors
required to lay eyes on each
inmate once every 30 minutes to help prevent "walk-aways. "
A prisoner's daily routine
comes before farming . An
-inmate often . spends much
of an 8-hour workday shut"
tling back and forth from
the farm to the prison for
various reasons - lunch
and afternoon inmate
counts, family visits. or
school and church functions .

' al

.f 1

:Sh

"They don't put in a
straight eight hours,"
Campbell said.
Inmates inexperienced
with the prison farm's
machinery might cause a
breakdown. Some may do
so purposely to get out of
work, while others take
pride in their jobs ,
Campbell said.
Except under supervision.
offenders have no access to
tools, which hang in a
locked case. Outlines on the
board on which the tools
hang help . prison staff
quickly spot if something is
missing. Keys to farm
machinery also are locked
up, available only to certain
. inmates.
Such precautions, as well
as routine observations of
the inmates, require reams
of paperwork, Campbell
said.
·
Security measures are not
foolproof. Ten offenders
have walked away from the
state's prison farm operations since 2000; three of
those were Lebanon prison
farni workers, all of whom
wert' ~ caught.
·
Prison staff must be careful not to place too. much
faith in even the most
devoted farmhand.
"They are con vic ted
.felons ..They'll dupe you,"
said Tim Brunsman, who as
warden
oversees
the .
Lebanon prison's more than
2,500 inmates.
"You just never know
what somebody's thinking."
Other than the occasional
family reunion at a farm in
Kentucky, Darrell Martin
had little exposure to farm
life until he joined a crew of
"tractor shed inmates," who
operate equipment at the
·
Lebanon prison farm.
"It's a lot of hard work in
running a farm," said
Martin, 33, of Cincinnati,
convicted , of having a

·

ASSOCIATED PRess WRITER

DERBY, Vt , - This sumtner, Steve Sanford had to .
~ell 106 dairy farmers in
rural northern Vermont he
could no longer treat their
·cows.
: Battling · degenerative
arthritis, the 56-year-old
large animal veterinarian
can·~ do the physically chal·,
lenglng work any more ~
Worse, ~e can't.find anyone·
h w II hav1 g already
;tied to ~~ruit a bovine vet'erinarian to join h~s _pracnee. He has advertised for
help and tramed.new graqulites - only .to have them
leave after short stays.
.
. Now, three vet trucks sat
ad!~ m has parkin~ lot.
Beheve me, I ve looked
under every sto~~· there as
.no one out there, he saad..
The shortage ·of large anamal veterinarians isn't.lil)lited to Vermon~. In New
England. t~er~ Wtll be 1,0~6
:vet vacancaes .m the next stx
·years, accordmg to. a ~une
study by the Cummmgs·,
School
of · Vetennary,
Medicine ,
at
Tufts
Umvers1ty. In the same lime
penod, over a quarter of the ·
more than 100 specialized
·food animal veterinarians
will reach retirement age,
the study found.
Fewer people are interested in large animal veterinary medicine, said David
Kirkpatrick , a spokesman
:for the American Veterinary
Medical Association . With a
decline in the number of
family farms , fewer children are getting exposed to
agriculture, he said.
The first years on the job,
too, can be daunting.
:Saddled with an average of
· $106,000 in school debt and
· an average starting salary of
$53,000 , large animal vets
don't make what small animal doctors do - about
· $60,000 a year to start.
. Last year, 60 percent of
·vet school graduates went
into private practice, with
just 5 percent in large animal veterinary medicine
eJ(clusively and 41 percent
·in small animal practice ,
according to Kirkpatrick .
The trend isn 't just · bad
·news for farmers . It's potentially bad for consumers as
well .

.,

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

.Sunday, November 2, 2oo8

I

GALLIPOLIS
United Producers Inc.
market report from
Gallipolis for-sales conducted on Wednesday,
Oct. 29, 2008.

$85;
750-850
lbs:,
Steers,
$75-$85,
Heifers , $65-$82.

$770; Baby Calves, $10$135; Goats, $17-$87;
Hogs , $45-$56.

Cows-Steady

Upcoming
specials:

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us .
ctassifiedc!~:r~:~,ibune.com ·REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
"

~

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·To Pl~ce
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ll\egf~ter
Your Ad, . (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 ·(304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax · 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
or Fax To (304) 675·5234
·
~.

Oeatflflrec

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

· Ohio Valley
Publlllhllig mervea
the right to odll,
roject Ill' Cl~ lny
ad at any time.

Error•

....,orted

Mull
on lho II

ay of publica
nd tho Trlbu
llnei·Regllter wll
responsible for n
ore than the COlt.
ill lpiCI occu
y the error end 0111

first Insertion. W
aU not bo lloble I
ny loao or txpon
1111 reaulta ~om lh
ublli:atlon
minion of

•

AU Dl•play: · 12 fll,oon. 2

• Start Vour Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dacriptlon • Include A ~ce • Avoid Abbnlvlttiaftt
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needad
• Ads Shltuld Run ·7 Days

• All ads .musi be prepaid•

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlllhlng rtiMVIII tiHt right to .cllt, Nteet, or canMIMy ad Many time. Error a rndf be 111portMI on the flrtl dly of publl~ tnd 1M
Tribu,...Sentl'*""-- itter will be retpontUMior no lnOfll ltuln the eo.t of tM e.p~~ce occupied by tttt .. ror and only t~ flrtt lnMrtlon. Wt shall not bt lltlblt for
any loll or ••penN that ret uta from the publication or omlhtOn of an 8dvei11Mment, Correction Will bt mldt In the flrtt avtlllbla «iltlon. ·~:,-:::.~:I
1111 alwr(l conlkttntlat. · Curr.nt ,.It ea«&lt; applies. ·All rtal .. tlte td'4r1•rnents tre lub]ect to tM Fedtrtl Ftlf Houalng Act Of 1181. · ThiS
ICctptt only Mlp wantld Mil meeting EOE 1t1ndard1. WI wm not knowlng,ly IICctpt tny ldYirtlslr\g In vlolltiOn or thlltw. Will not be rnpon1lbte rot
..-ron In an ld liken

Prol.uional s.m-

•POLICIES*

How you con have borders and 9raphlcs
~
added to your Classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perod'
l!,iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Monday-Frlda'V for Insertion . Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
In Next Day•• Paper
PubllcBtlon
sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m. sunday Dl:::~r~,,!,'!':.•~:;:;.!:
fri•Oay For Sund•y• Paper
Thun:day ror

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Should Include
Items
To Help Get Response ...

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

ptsplay Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00 • .m.

Fan~~

Pels

EquipoMnl

MiJCOII..,oaus
Holiday Baking . Now
available; Coating chacolates, glazed fruit. nuts,
etc. Buy bUlk and save.
Trickling Spring Country
Store.
Camdus
Ad.

Lost &amp; Found
Found on At 35, Jim Hilt
Ad lg. cream color dog,
&gt;Jery

friendly

Found· . In

Monday.
well

TNT

lemale

Ide

In 'tho

vollabla edition.

CUrrent rail
ppllto.

Mollohan
Special. 20
cial Carpet
several
740·446-7444.
Low Pr~esl

740·379-9110

304-1175·5580.

'l•

area
dog,
ualned

I

304-674~679.

Lost· MiSsing in Ambco·
sla area At 62 Scottish
Highland Bun if found call
30H58·1727.

Nalicoo

Long Tonn Can/ Homo C...
OMs ion

trtfltmenl.
otrecllons \¥111

::;~ ;ar:g~~w~~r::~~~rd~~ r!~t..~~t~~~is~ai~~ ~~~~

Do you want to make a difference? If you

NO.TICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. roc·
ommends that you do
business with people yoU
know, and NOT to send
' money through the mall
· until .you have InveSt! gat·

':I-re

compassionate

and

committed

t

providing Quality Care come and be a part ·
of our Long Term Care/Home Care team . I
We have the following positions available:

log the otlenng.

*Personal Care Aides- Per Diem:.".
Hourly rate and paid mileage
1- Gallia County
1- Jackson County

Home Heallh Aide .06 FfE- Jackson
Physical1herap is1 - F'r
Occupational Therapist- Ff
Speech Therapist· Per Diem
Holzer ScnWr Care Cegter;

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

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

i

WElDERs ·
NEEDED
Localftlanufacturer
looklnc for EXPERIENCED
ftllc Welders.
...... ipply In p111101111t

:uso Eastem An.
Help Wanted

·Jet

Aeration Motors repaired, new &amp; rebu ilt in
stock. · Call Ron Evans,
1·800·537-9528.

• Heallh Care Coordinator/RN Ff
(evenings)
* LPN- Ff
* STNA· Ff
*STNA· Yf
• Dietary Aid- Yf
Aooliqgts for NyqipB AHi5lMpl CIMS'

l.iyipg- GBIIiooli§j .
' Resident Coordinator t'T
• Resident asslstanl· Yf

Holzer A§Sis*cd

For Sale WOOd Bumer.
$350.00 Call740·2370.

For delaib please give Barb Pelerson, Director
of Human Resources for our Long Term Care/
For 5ale· top llg/11 curio Home Care division a catl a1740-441-3401 or
74'H-30'W·18' 0, 4 glass
shelves
$150.00 email me at J?eterson@bolzer.org or visit us on
the web at www .bo!zer org.
304-675-3325.

Giveaway • maple stereo
with radio 304·675-1i65.

Equal Opportunily Employer

Gllllpoiis. OH
· Help Wanted

R
LIVING

•'
,I

'
f

A Vroble

Certified Occupational

· ~~ant's

'Resident Coordinator
If you are _inleresled in becoming a part of
our A.~sisted Living Community we are
seeking a Resident Coordinator.
This is a Full Time position thai requires
good public relation skills. knowledge of·
Residem Admissions, billing , and payroll. A
background in Assisted Living is preferred .
. .
..
tl\ d [
We offier compet1Uve wages an emp oyment
benerns.

For more information please stop by and see
Peggy Williams. Executive Director al 300
Martham Drive. Gallipolis Ohio or
call/email Barb Peterson. Director of Human
Resources for Holzer Long Tem1 Care
Division al740-441-3401.
octernon®holzer org or look us up on the
web at www.holzer.org .
Equal Opportunily Employer

Back To The
Farm:

.••.

•

to

l

~
' LPN - F'r- Gallipolis

•' .

W
e
I
I
Muscled/Fles hed , $45$55.
·Sale lit 10 a.m. on
Medium/Lean, $35 ~ Wednesday, Nov. 5.
$45.
There will be no sale on
275-415 lbs .; Steers,
Thin/Light, $10-$35.
Nov. 26 for
$75~$ 116 , Heifers, $70Bulls, $55-$72.
Thanksgiving.
$98;
425-525
lbs.,
For .more information,
Steers,
$75 -$112,
call
DeWayne at (740)
Heifers , $70-$94; 550339-0241 or Stacy at
625 lbs., Steers, $75I
304) 634-0224. Visit
$105, Heifers. $70--$87;
website
m
Cow/Calf Pairs, $450- the
650-725 lbs .. Steers,
575-$90, Heifers , $70- $750; Bred Cows , $300- www.uproducers .tom. ·

Feeder CattleLower

«aaaa-ltmtlad • Page D3

CLASSIFIED

·
il rich.source of fertilizer to r11dish \14iJ.l.gerrninate and.be
"With the critical role that Major said more recent many days of milk that you . feed
our
plants," harvested· in about 20 to 25
food animal veterinarians graduates are simrly seek- could've put in the tank," he Ruppenthal said.
. d;lys, leaving room behind
play in protecting the ing to balance wor and life. said.
.
. Sprouts are a great source . for the later-maturing carnation's 'food. supply, this
Many new graduates are
He thinks technicians , . of fresh food_, especially fqr l'llts/' .
shortage is ' especially older than their con_tempo- .. perhaps farm hands, could people !ac~mg m garden . • Start small, eSM~ially if
alarming," the Cummings ranes were when they start· · be trained to do these exams sp~ce, h~ .satd r
. .·yoq don't._have .a lot of_tame
study said.
·
ed ~~eir' careers and have '·and other conimon proceNutnllonally, they re for plantmg and mamteThe American. Veterinary famahes.
dures to alleviate the short- power pa!)ked. And ~hen nance. "A small garden is
Medical Association and
"They may actually have age.
· you grow other small thmgs often a friendlic;r .and less
As sociation of American other things to do,'' said
When Westfield dairy like salad greens, you can intimidating place for the
Veterinary
Medical Major. owner. of Green farmer Jacques Couture got get a lot more producllo_n new garden.er," Stack said.
Colleges · have
urged · Mountain Qovine and the letter . from Sanford per .spa.ce t~an you can ,!f "It also will allow you to
Congress to pass bills aimed . Equine · Clinic in West
.
h' h
ld
you re growmg tomatoes.,
become mo're com~ortable
t bo t. th
be 0 f Ches\erfield, JII.H. "'"e, as te11 mg •m e cou no
Ch k b ~
1
''
anew vets
os mg
e num
r
P antmg, wa'tl) your gardena'ng .skt'lls."
through
a loanfor· employers , need to"''keep longer serve ha's cows • he h · ec . e. ore ak
·
&lt; ·· h
that 1·n m' m
· d, to allow for called the other· vet in the
ow,ever,. to m . e sure . • Above all, he practical.
~~~n~~rk0i~ra:ad~{s!~:~ other f,.cets of )jfe, days off county to ask if he could you re not breakn~g any You' re doing this primarily
areas and a competitive and weeken~soff."
take in Couture's cows. He laws or any p~ovtsao;,s of tokeepfoodcostsdownand
grant program for colleges · To lessen the load or couldn't, and referred ~fa~edp~:te:~~s : ; . ql!Biityup.pf?w·ofp.klyfoodth
· s
to bring in more students.
make up' for shortages, Couture to a practice in be a safety hazard, and gar- that YC?Ur .a~uly. t ~s. at
At least 13 states - most some practices are collabo- Enosburg; which is about 30 dens 00 balconies could, are pnced hagh&gt;~,m grocery
rating with neighboring vets miles away.. .
. exceed load limits.
stores , that don t take . all
recenily New Hampshire are starting or have staf!ed to share 'emergency and
Couture's grateful he
Here's how 10 ·get more ·sum,mer I~ npen, anc;l that
loan forgive~ess p(ograms.· weekend duties, he said.
found someone, but worries production ·from · small don t :requare ~ )ot of room
But Kirkp·atrick says
In Derby and Greensboro, about his new veterinarian's .spaces:
1.
and dtrect s~nhght . .
without a federal program, where Sanford practices, · ability to get to his farm in
• Succession planting is
It also nught help_af you
the improvements will be there:s just one vet in the winter, when snow and road important if you hope to converted a . few neaghbol:li
incremental.
county besides him.
conditions can make travel . enjoy a cpntinuous harvest ... mto g;~rd~ners, RUppenthal
Sanford thinks there's
Farmers are having to difficult.
"Always be thinking .about satd . . ~ncourage them to
more to it. Since 2000, he's look farther away for a vet
Sanford, who col}tinues to the next crop and get it start- ·use .tlietr own spaces pronoticed a change in attitude and that could be a problem treat backyard animals and ed
somepla&lt;:e . else," ductavely, and you ~an trade
and work ethic of new grad- if there's an emel'gency like- pets. said .giving up on his Ruppenthal smd. ~Cycle · ·or barter for the thulgs you
uates be's hired.
·difficulL ,c;dving or a cpw
.
h · be h
these .things into the _grow-', ,linn'~. have., and ~¥t;}'OIIJ'~
''The reality is that the :;with 'a twisted . stomach. cow,pauents as · en eart ing garden." ,, · : " .
·~lf. 1
.
. , .,., "&lt;i
.
romanticism -of James They may also 'chose to wrenching.
.
• Take advantage of '
•••
Herriot no longer exists,'' he forego things like pregllan- fe;;I~~!:~~~~pos~~~~~~~ ·reflected or artificial light .
On the ,Net:
said, alluding to the late cy checks, whach could be
"That doesn't. mean pu!ting
University of Illinois
English veterinarian who costly later, Sanford said.
ity, I overworl&lt;:ed myself, it up alumiri.um foil as much Extension fuct
sheet:
wrote "All Creatures Great
During the last two · was a stress on my family," as it does taking advantage http:/lweb.extension.uiuc.ed
and Small" about life as a months of pregnancy, a cow Sanford said. "Now, finally, of the sunlight that reflects u/statelnewsdetail.cfm?New
country veterinarian.
is dried off or not milked, he I've come to a point where off windows and south fac- siD9586
Kirkpatrick has heard said.
·
I'm at peace with my deci- ing. walls," he said. "Also,'' · You can contact Deal)
similar laments.
"If you dry her off too sion, because It's not my when there's been a porch Fosdick
at' ·
But veterinarian Stephen_ early, then you lose that fault."
light or patio light ~eft on at ,deanfosdick(at)netscape.net. .

-LivESTOCK -REPORT

ltllllbap

t[rtbune - Sentinel -

With planning, tight areas
can produce high yields

weapon under disability.
When Martin wrote home
night I'm always amazed at
BY DEAN FOSDICK
to tell his sister and his girlFOR THE ASSOCI~TED PRESS
how ~uch that contributed
friend that he was working
to plant growth at places
on a farm at the prison, he
Urban dwellers short of where I've lived."
said he was teased about garden space have options . • Include some companwhen trying to stretch the ion plants , which can be as
"turning into a ~ow boy:"
Not all of the inmate family food dollar by grow- attractive as they are edible.
laborers have urban back' ing their own produce. And "If you add flowers, that
grounds . Steve Bailey, 43, it's not ~uch a bad thing that might attract bees !O ~elp
with vegetable polhnauon.
said he farms with his .father they must think small.
Large
yields
can
be
had
·
The
right varieties might
in Preble County. He:snearfrom
tight'~as
.
lt
justt~kes
also
repel
some of the bad
ly nine months into a three- .
insects."
year sentence for .manufac- some plannmg.
The
darkest
closet
,
for
• Consider growing
turing methamphetanfuie.
can
serve
as
an
berries
or small fruits that
instance,
As he hammered staples, 'indoor mushroom patch. can cope
with cramped
or U-shaped metal . loops , Kitchen countertops can be spaces and low light.
into a fence post, Bailey used for growing culinary "People might not normally
was asked to compare faim, herbs. Strawberries thrive think of growing a raspbering in prison with farming when planted in multitiered ry plant or lemon tree. i,n
back home.· ·
pots near south,facing win- their apartments, but 11 s · ·
"The pay .ain't !)ear as dows. ·
amazing how much one
good," quipped Bailey, who
Leafy salad greens will small bush or tree can proreceives .$20 per month in mature quickly and repeat- duce
over
time,"
"state pay" that he may use edlydespite subdued indoor . Ruppenthal said. "You'~e
to buy personal hygiene lighting. And family-size talking about a month s
·
items.
orchards can produce. fruit worth of fresh fruit for an
''Three hots and a cot, for a 'month ·or more .onh entire family."
though," a prison staff patios or rooftops wat
_ Self-watering boxes
trees bred to -tolerate
member said, reminding · dwarf
c&lt;lntainers.
· '· .
are great for urban gardenBailey of his cell and board:
·"I know of. people who ers. "Tomatoes and carrots
. Inmate John Alexander; have bought starter kits for just go wild in those things,
37, of Dltyton, sai.d feeding growing mushroom~ in their which keep plams warmer
more than 20 calves at the bathtubs," . said
R.J. and wetter than when
dairy farm 'and ' checking RuppenthBI, . author of they're grown ·in the
their stools for signs of ill- "Fresh Food from Small ground ," Ruppenthal said.
ness· has worked on his dis- Spaces: The Square:lnch
- Direct some plants
cipline.'.'
Gardener 's Guide to Year- straight up or down .
"It's always good to learn Round
Growing, "Thinking vertical is a must
something else in life," said Fermenting and Sprouting" if you~ re hoping for some
Alexander, who said he's a (Chelsea Green Pllblishinl;l, cucumbers or pumpk'ins or
mason by trade. Serving a November). "No space as squash," said Greg Stack, a
four-year sentence for drug too small or too dark to pro- University of Illinois extension horticulturist who
possession, assault and car- duce food ."
and
works with gardeners in the
Ruppenthal,
a
lawyer
rying a concealed weapon,
he's grown to like the calves college instructor from San Chicago area. "You also can·
Bruno, Calif., said he has grow beans and peas, grapes
for which be cares.
·gardened
productively and berries on trellises, bat"They're . just playful,''
Alexander said. "They like despite living in apartments cony rails, hanging baskets,
or condominiums most of on supports or along fences.
to headbutt you."
Plant them in pots, and then
Prison officials said ·ani- his adult life.
"We
have
managed
to
train them to climb."
mill husbandry helps prisoners learn not to be abusive . . . raise a sizable chunk of our . • Inter-planting. Plant two
"It builds work ethic and own fresh food from bal- crops iii the Same row at the
integrity in these guys," cony and windowsill veg- same time. One will mature
etable gardens, a kitchen- before the other and, when
Campbell said.
based sprouting operation , harvested, leaves room for
yogu11 and kefir (cultured the second crop to develop.
.C:
milk drink) fermentation , · "An example would be to

. ortage o arge arum vets taxes tarmers
BY LISA RATHKE

. PageD2

./

{1 Full~Thne &amp; 1 Ptirf.'/Ime
·Pn!vlauslllngTennCneq~e~lea,ICepttWUed
• Ysy .tM l!hlb dept w/ ftj.Tinf
• fleiPble sdlecUing •T1!1111CA ialted

Thei4Jii1S
IJIIIIUid•

available)

il•

disciplines

We Offer:
·Cull¥ dtlw .... linltplllllll ......... hlltfiEfllf pldl.

•IIKmtluniMie- lltdl191 • NdYaaltlu 1•4f11

•••iewlins:Mai.,· ftldlrhm101io4p

A/¥Y in ptMJ:Sclnic .._llln:T""' FRII Auldl ..
3118uck llltlgt llold. tiNct OH 45614

()-fm1j/ whr;~ nlt'Malt.elllll IX~ or:

.com

i

�Pomeroy • .Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
own._..._~ ""Oiiii!T~OW!IhouMo~§~-

"""""'ing

Now
applicatloos at
Valley View Apartments
800 State floute 325
Tllunnan, Ohio 45685
74CI-245-9170
t-2 Bedroom Apartments
with appliances rumlslled
On ~telaundly lacility.
Call lor detalli or pict up

Clip this AD and take it
with you when you vi911
OUf community to get
lt\i&amp; speclal discount.
Move-in in Nov and get
StOO.OO all your ZBR
Apt ~ Dec. Cu•ent~
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spacious flOOr plans,
3 Bed, 2 Bath HUD
Homes\ Only $19,900 for

:lluylng tools sell or trade listings 800-620--'946 ex
-mechaniC-Carpenter lawn R019
garden power tools. 4 bed 2 bath &amp; office in
i:&amp;H 740-388·15t6 or cell tOwn . hw &amp; tile floOrs,
740-2QI!.j)320
updated kitchen &amp; baths,
privacy fence &amp; above
'!'!"'"!"~'!""'~~--,:- grouod
pool,
security
~Absdu19 Top Dollar - sil- system, much more. 130
:'verlgold
coins,
any Bastiani Or. $129,(X)()For
"' 10K/14Kif8K gold jew· pies and intormation go
d8ntat gold, pre to.
www.orvb.com
:--J935
US
currency. 446·2923
-proo1/mint
sets,
dia- .,..,--~---=--:-:~
MTS
Coin
Shop.
2-3 bedrooms,
t dwood
bath,
......;..,,
' ··~root ·ldli hhar
.a 51 2nd Avenue , Galli· new
d
r.nn
go S
tloors•
.t.46-2842
" .... . '
fenced in yard. 1 · acre.
Ad .,
Rocksprings
Pomeroy,
Oh,(740)992· 2355
•iijiii!iiiii!iiiii!ii~;,;;;;;;;,"""
01
Clayton: 3 br, 1990,
14x70
wlappliances.
ATIIs
must
be
mov~.
Kawasaki 300 Bayou 4x4 $13,000, (7401992·5924
Can be seen at 403 4th
··S1.
New
Haven Extraordinary l'nlporly:
•
......_
304-882 2069
Spec1ec:ulor
:·;!!;!!;!!;";!!;;!;,:""'""':"""' Ohio
River view "' ·~
• Cantpen RVs &amp;
Pnvate drive off . Lincoln

:&amp;

::..,Y,

Tralen

~-~;;;;;;;::=~=~~:':'
'- RV

Service

at Carmi·

Cnael
Trailers
.:;74D-446-!!!!,.;;;36;;;2;;;5,.,,.,;,~
=
Molorcydes

~ 2007

Kawasaki
Ninja
• 250 under 1500 miles
: red helmet and tank bag

A.~.

Hill.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
woods on three sides
{4+)acres, to a historical
home. Circa 1900, 5
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
lull balhs, 2 staircases.
beautirul onglnal · wood·
work., .,any picture .win·
dow'S, mostly ·new windows, 18rge kl tchen l and.
breaklas t room, beaut'·
tully landsca"""
~ with In
ground pool ' Sit on
h .thed
wrap around pore an
~njOy the spec1acular
·view of the Ohio River. 2
car detached garage and

-:'-:":~:-"-:;;;;~~~ 2 out buildings. would
""-N

: 0'2 Honda Accord V6. make a wondertut family
""loaded,
92.000 miles. home or bed &amp; breakfast.
• Call 740-245-5526
Private and Picturesque

applcation at rental
olliat.

ranch &amp; townhorne style
liVing, playground &amp;
baSketball court. on-site
laundry facility. 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet c~untry \o·
catiOn close to major
medical
facilities.
phannacles, grocery
slore...just minutes
away trom other major
shopping tn the area.

for

..
,rp--' Full and Part·time

· Apllrtmants ·
26fi Colonial Drive #1 13
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
. 740·446-3344
~.Hours
M. '''·
F
...,.. _
''

"'

EAP, 401KI
,{ On-sl1e DO&lt;lc&lt;
.r Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

For Rent
Mobile homes &amp; lots ,
(no pets) in Ashton WV
304·576·2942

•
Con,...c:ial

~ bay serviCe station
Jackson
Pike.
lease
required. Call 446-3644
for more info.

$.

HouiU For Rent
L-------'

S2J~Imo!

4 bed. 2 bath.

Sunl. Repo!

(~~

down.

I~

tBR Apt,. WJD hOQ kups, ,, .. -,~ , ••• ArR) for li&gt;tio..
v
satellite TV incl. wlrent, 8011-620-4940" R027
close lo hospital. Call 1600
Chelnut
Street,

.r Woekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

t1811MC PAYU
Ex1.231t

http:/Jjobf..Wodlton.CGM

Apply Online:
httf':,ll t llltocllieln.ggm

ORCAU

1 888 IIIC4'AYU
En 11101 •

oonditlon. 4 bedroom, 2
bath, all appHances ineluded, $37,000 located Overbrook RehabtHtation, '!"--:-.;."":'":":~~
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· Center is pp1·
currently
ac~
.
lor 27 ~ needed to lose
son City 304·675·211 7
cepting a ICatiOOS
~"""~'""
lull ,.me cook position, up to 30 lbs in 30 days,
h
da
back
Brand new 3bed 2bat Gam·t .~ . •·yone In- 30
'( money
·
o.IV''"' ,.,
Call
Ll
on + -half acre in Pt. terested pleas&amp; pick up guarantee.
sa
F
800-..2~•tot
Pklasant. OWNER
I· an appl.._lion at 333
......
NANCE
AVAILABLE Page Slreet. Middleport,
(740) 446·3570
· OH. E.O.E. &amp; • Pa•icl·
1996 · Mobile
Home pant ot the Drug-Free
16x80
2854
GeOrges Wor11.place' Program.
Creek Rd. MUST BE ~~-'!":".......":"":~
MOVED, new heat pump So Ice M nager &amp; 5erv
e
. •
3BR, 2 bath ,stovetre Ir Icerv Technician
positions
$15,000. Call 446-4743 available. Health care 8

Bedroom
2 Bath. bath,
Carport,
Heat Govemment funds availGreen
School
area. pump, Retridge &amp; Stove ·able for home buyers
um. C8tl740·441-1124
included. $500 mo, $300
~
1 &amp; who own land. $0 down.
deposit. No Pets, Re
Call
tOll
tree
2 BR Apartmont &amp; 2 BR secunty Ck. Required 877-3t0·2577 lor pre-apHouse . on 5th St. PI 304·593·2021
proval.
Pleasant
·304-812-4350 1BR, House
...~h~ome~s
348 Urt- ~N~ew,;;;;;::-:~ed':'room
~k for Don
coin,
Middleport,
OH from $214 .36 ·par month,
:...~~~~=~~
':'Apartment
avail.able now 304-675-3753
.
or includes many upgrades,
Riverbend
Apts. New 740-416-9725
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
Haven wV. Now accept- 2br on the R'iver Jn Ma- '740-385-2434
.ng
appl'·at,·ons
lor son. $500.00 a . mop.
· ~~:::;;~~'"::"":::~
1
"'
Prices Reduced 2 2006
HUD-subsidized,
one Relerences
. 16x80 2 bed 2 bath, t
e~room Apts. Utilities 304 ""2 3512
or
be&lt;l I
""'
-vu •
2000 16x70 2
included. Based on 30% 304-468-7946
bath, 1 1999 16•80 2
of adt"usted income. Call
97
2br. House. $300 montt'l, bed 2 bath gas, 1 19
304-882·3121,
available plus UtilitieS, Deposit &amp; 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
for Senior and Oisabt9d References
1 2002 1611.80 3 bed 2
people.
~
304·675-4874
bath. Priced
delivered

3 8

~

~~r:· teve~y

plans available. Ple8se send re·
sume
to
LLCOCAREO.COM
or
04
tax. to 740-446-91
-------Card of Thankl

~~-

PUBLIC

AUCTION
f
The
•ur.Uitl
Ctnler
OR
Rt. i2 n.•
n
w.u. OIUIIers hl"t sold their htlllt In

t:::~lll

•

011. and ere lllOUing to Rorlda and we
lit selllll!llhe folloW~.
. Furnilure
'Ciaytt&gt;n House Sofa. Flex Steel Leather Sofa-

~~~~~~~~ I'

Kenmore Microwave, Lexi11gton
· 5 pc. poster, B .r~ Su'le
Size ' B .r. 5. uue.
l '
Ginny Lynn D ay Bed . B enc h., Q Ul'It

Hulch

·o

' 1poo1 ryer
Kenmore Was h.er, Wh tr
· FurniiUre ·
R oc'kers. pauo
· Se1• pa110
Table &amp; More.
Gl
&amp; Ml

assware

fUr·e~t,

Sel

Tools-Mnr~ila

'R·ubtreflma·id Lawn Cart,

1

s

1

2· Golf

~;:;;:,;:~~""":::"'"":::::' ~..,..--..,..--.~~

'

e:~~perience.

~

Submit re-

svme &amp; salary require·
ments to: Gallpolis C.M.,
Gorsucll Mgt., P.O. BoK
190, Lancaster OH
43130-0190 or email to;
kdasbury,ambarqmall.com ·
EOE

~Ca;;rs;;,;;T~ruc~ks;o;.~an~d~G~M~C.

J.

Leaves.

W /indian

Heads,

#3,8.9,

Don' t Want To Miss This

Need

One ..·.

1950 · Popcorn

Of 1930's Swirl Graniteware ,

Green Graniteware, Keen K~tter Adv. Box,
Arrowheads •. Navy Uniforms And Other,
Military llem~. 1907 Framed. jr. O.V.A.M.
Poster Oak Tool Box, Victorian Bird Cage
·Aladdin

Lamp,

25

Adv.

Thermometers (7up, Cok~. Pepsi, Rc , Teem,
Double Cola, Qlhers), Mobil Oil Adv. Box,
Sev.

Pes.

Akro-agate.

Stoneware

Decoruled), Adv. Tins (coffee.

(some

()il, Otbers),

· Wooden Sled. Local Ad lleQIS, Vogue Picture
Records,. Childs Records, Old Tools , Comic
Book's. Ohio An Toys, Back Bar Whiskey
Boltles,

Red,

Black

w/white

Graniteware, Cast Iron llems, 1935- 1950's
Coke

Trays

Plus

Others.

52

Pes.

La

Francaisc China w/windmill Scene, Beer
Trays, 1970-il Wahama While Falcon Band
Record, Barber.ihop llems, 1948 Babe Rulh
Magazine, Many, Many Quality Smalls .... :

AUCTIONEER:
LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740-388-8115 OR 740-441-7355
• Cash/check Approved By Auctioneer Only!!'

l:~it' '

.iht¢~~-

P••••-••---••-••••-•••----------

I
I

letter .of credit

n:i.

unle.ss

Musl have
known tO

Auction

LICensed

.'

I

Real Estate AUCTION

: City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
I

Phone __________~

ABODE

Heallt\
Care
Accepting
new cHent&amp; and transfers
for AID Waiver and VA
programs
ln
Mason
County 304·586·944t or
tolll!ee 1·686-327·7262

Services, Inc

Mail or drop off this coupon along .
with a copy of your photo ID to.
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

ABOOE

Health
Care
Inc.
Hlnng
CAreg!vers .Jn Leon, &amp; In
· Mason
County.
304·586-944t • or toll tree'
t-686·327-7262
I'I'~....J
Sorvlces,

ABSOLIJTE

'Address--,----------

•

Box 489 ProctorviHe, OH
4~

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
co. #66

OWNERS: RICHARD &amp; DONNA KERN
1·304-1l3-5441 OR 1·304·113·5785
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM

Subscriber's. Name _______

1.

'lllereplst.
Send resumes to P.O.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BV:

ITI~RI.tS: Cash or check W/

OhiO

------------------------------Vlll!lge ot' Cheshire woi.lid like to extend
much appreciated thank you to ou

BULLETIN BOARD
·'

· r---------------~-----,
O'Dell True Value Lumber

WHAT AN · OPPORTUNITY II

Truckload Paneling Sale
· Many Different Styles
Starting at $7.99

3M Acres
Offered In
4T111Cta

We Rent RUG DR Carpet
Cleaners
Call740·446-1276 to ReseiVe
O'Dell True Valve Lumber.
6t, VIne St., M·F 713. SolB-q, Sun. tb-1

Rose Oo. .aenkl.
PI ap1rty WI ,....
Vhtea. ridge• &amp; a
In 11.wllllypluoo

..,..m

paet"re

.

pWooul TI'IICt 111·
. . Ill:. ,MooU,
.
.
:XC Ddad; Trect 12-77 Ac. (Appfw. 31 -~
puturo &amp; ill woodo,; TI'IICt N-148 110o
(Appro•. &lt;13 un.blolpaoluro &amp;105 .. _ ,,
TNCt f4•AppnN1. S2 eo. Woodo . /IIi M

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
. 1·800-942·9577

--· "..wt..,,. ..... .,.w.Oogo,
8.4&amp; min, tum
ort Porter Hollow Rd;
llpPFOX. % mile, 11.- lllnd loyo on lhe right.
Open lor -~~~~ duriflg dltyiiOht ._,. or for
• -prlv.te viewing oall David P. Portar, lbeo,

Home D_ecorating Sale
Most items 75% and more oft
Slit Nov. 8 8am-5prn
Gloria Oiler
31645 St. At. 325 Langsville, OH
.
74Q-742·2076
'

..,.., ortpll!&gt;OO .

••~at

.

·
GALLERY at 4D9

· special Reception
. for

Limited Time HoUday
··
offer
Individual and Family

ROU$h

PVH Volunteer
oftheYear,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
•
West. VIrginia State
Volunteer ot the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2 pril to 4 pm

Buxton Conference
Room (Downstairs)
Public is cordially lnvltedl

(740) 1!1-70211. T.moo;- at - 1 0 AuoUOI'I to tiMI HJghett lkklerj no minimum• or
~-rvw: etr.red Me &amp; o...r of llent or mort·
...,.. prktr 'to CIIOtlnt by12· 11-20111i a•w•t
emplor. ,9,100 down per triiOI or St5,000
o1 ....- In - h or check. No
bu~r oontlngenole• eKIII. 8uytr f\lrtMr
..,.. tot)ay adtlltlomll.710,...tratto fUch-

•rd Johnun, Surwyor, to

.

'

Jean

61 Vine St. M-F 7-6, Sol. 8-5, Sun. 10.4

O'Dell True Value Lumber

hHttop

.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

.ATTENTION Hunters!
ATV'erall Investors II
Sat., Nov. 16, 2008 10:00 AM

.junior

5 Pes.
Cream •&amp;

· x·,·

Massage

All

Childs Popcorn Machine (all Orig.),

W/sl..;d.

1

'

Gal. Red Wing Crock

Wapak

.The_Daily Sentinel .
&amp;unbap tltbnt' ·i&gt;entinel

'

I

Is Ready For Your Hoine.

From Cols., Ohio Hotel, Foster Laundry
Wfbeech

'

I
I

ANTIQUES&amp;
CQLLECTIBLES AUCTION
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7fH

S1ove (lronlon , Oh), 2

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or ma·n it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I
I

6:00PM

~~------~~~

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

d•

Salary OOpendent upon

Pull Cans.

a

--~=~:=~;;;;;~ ~~""':To~w~~ii'i::':UIO~I-:"::::;

-Senior Discount*

~oint ~lea•ant 1\.egh~ter

~~~':~~~nA~ Very Super Clean

q

il!

trS

If so; you qualify for a

-======-

Medloal

JOSH ·BQDftiDR·
~

cmI'LSman.plpe
·

le Boat ." Campbell Hud sfe ld Air
IC&lt;&gt;mf&gt;res.sor,, &amp; Much- More .• ·
. Tractor &amp; Lawn Tl'actor
IKiJbota B 7100 4 W Dr. 3 Pt Hit~h - Rops 60"
Diesel ... 574 Hr~ .- Hydrostatic ,
IGt'l]Vely 16- G Pi'o Lawn Tractor 50" Cut 619

;;;,:;;,,.,,.,!!!!!!!!!!!":"'"'!'

~

&amp;

Wrenches . 3/4 Ton Come Along, Sm. Air
Compressor, 3500 Psi 5 H.p. Power Wu.sht:r, l
Home lite Pump OnCart , Electric Lea( Paule
, -Stihl Fs 36 W~edeater &amp; Fs81. Dr
·mm er Mower 6.5. Lawn Seeder,

45 0031

!!!!!!""':'

'1

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet?

P.t COmmunity Manager needed·for local
apartment cornmu~l~ lo·
catec In Clal!lpolla, Ohio.
Ideal candidate will have
previous e•Pfnence In
property management at
a Rural Developri,ent
property, eKcellent communiCatiOn.and organizational akllls and be depen&lt;llble. Healih ln$ur·
ance &amp; 40t k available.

u

008

.l n.,.:lo.,."!"'-.~ -.~
Tsxeo

WAITRE· year ol
Full·1ime em- SES,' .
AND
A produc1
pbyment ofters an ex- SECURITY/DOOR MAN, ment in a
lenslve benefit pod&lt;age, MUST HAVE GREAT environment. Prior
including
Staee
CMI PERSONALITY,
AND sure 1o
Service Retirement, eam DRIVE
TO
MAKE cal devices or
up to 15 days vocation GREAT
MONEY.APPLY mo1or industry
per year, t8 days sick AT t22 B HUNTINGTON PnA:Ie&lt;~y in
leave and t2 plus paid AD (RT2,, NEXT TO appl~ as wall
llolidays; hea!IMilo in- THE LOCKS AND DAM . 20 &amp; 30 CAD' design
surance
18
available. IN GALLIPOUS FERRY qulred, Aulodesk
Salary
commenStJrate WV.304 576·2220 ASK ware a ptus. Car1didllleol
with experience.
Must FOR JOHN G, GOOD must alSo have
have a WV CN+ certlfi- PAY, AND FUN.WORK.
communication,
cation to worto; lh West
.
solving,
and
Vlrglllla, a:nd must pos- ' Now H1ring Experienced,' mgmt skills as well
sess either a• GED or waitstaff, cooks, dish· , the ability to trave l
high school diploma. Ap- washers &amp; ~Ivery drill· _ night (25% IT18lC)
pllcations may be picked ers apply In peroon necessary. Travel will
l4l at Lakin HOspital, Harry's
Famou9
Hot requlr9d more lr"'!1uent'YII
LakJn
WI/,
Monday Dog,s New Haven
initially for
through, FOday, 8:00 a.m.
poses. For
• 4:00 p.m. Lakin HospiSales
consideration,
tal Is an EEO/AA em·
mail your
player.
lakin HO$Pital Salesperson
Wanted: cover lener to:
conducts
pre-employ- Experience in building Craft
ment . drug/alcohol test- materials
preferred. sources
in".
Employes may be Please
appty
within DesigrVApplications
exposed to streamline or store. Thomas Do It Cen· Eng.,
250 Mc&lt;~O ri•icl
secondhand smot&lt;e.
ter, · 176 McConnlck Rd., Ad, Gallipolis, OH
. Gallipolis, OH.
or tax to 740•·44t·6:305.
~~~~...- - An
Equal
Trainer Posttions
Technical Trodtt
Are you interestecl in ·a
rewarding posHio&lt;l? PAIS Daolgn
EngiRMr
Is
currently
seeking Anoc.,
~lc;.tlonl,
fu!Vpart lime atafl lot GoiUpolla, OH. Put your ·
Poin1 Pleasant, WlJ pro- experience to use with
vkllng
residential/com· ElectroCraft,
a
glObal
munlty ~ill training with teader in motor and molndi'Muals with MRIDD. tion
control
solutions . ~~=~==~~
High school diploma or Candidates will design, AU types Masonry,
GED required. No expe- develop, test, and i'e- block, stone. c~:~~:::
rlence necessary. Crimi· kJase products to meet Free
E
nal background check re- or exceed the require- 304 ·593•6421
qlllred. Must have reli- ments of customer appli·
able transportatlory and cations. Candktates will
valid
ayto
insurance. also provide .technical
Pakt tnUning.' Hourly rate support to mfg. In order
siarting at $7·S8.00111our. 1o resolve production isPlease ·
call
1. sues.
Musl have a
304-373-1011 or toll free Bachelor's
Degree
In
at 1-en-373-1011.
Mechanical or Electrical

cfallipoli• JBafl!' t!trtbune

Property ManBQIIN!Dt

Sotws. sears 8'' 3 Speed Drill
112 . . Ben··h Grinder, Craftsman Tool
'
• Ski I 10" Band Saw. Craftsm.M·m 16"PScroll
. Rockwdl 9" Tabl e Saw,
yer ump.
se·ars · Craftsntan Shre·•der 9 ll .p .. SocketS·,

November 13th, 2

=

reyou
or older?

~~~==~~

bod long term care State TENDER'S

laclllty.

·St• 1nilary

W /t r ansformer Type Z 250 Watt
A Good One, Toy's Not (:)ld,

Tools

Real Estate Au"ti'on

P;~.

'

MCII.ag-d I

Trm:k &amp; More.

3

~~~;:".;.,

Tedtitleal Trodeo

Glass. Blenko BoHle . Pitcher

beautiful music provided by Forgiven Four
and Virginia Stapelton. A special thanks to
linda Lou, our special frie!1-d . Thank you to

1an~ N~rses

w•

sc.

&amp; Bowl ,
·
Of
Jars , Aladin LamR , Collecllon
Hallmark Barbie Ornaments Never Used. Snn1a
. Collection, Sel Of Rodgers Flatware,
Ware. Bunn Coffee Maker, Lionel Train

put up by Rev. Curtis.Sheels. Rev. James
Hall. and Rev. Burkley Sanders. The

c

~~~-:--....~~~

&amp; OuanJen. Glider Rocker, Rcdiner. 2
B ack Chairs, M.t. Table, Oak Hall Tree .
Center, Roll Top Desk &amp; Chair,
Cabinet, Counlry Table &amp; 4 Chairs. 2

We would like to thank all. of our family,
frl'ends·. neo'gh~rs.
vu and area churches for the
'ood,
c"""'",
1'
aa\UI flowers . and lhe love and
kin,..""ess
shown for-.us during the sickness
~,,.
and sudden death of our loved one. Barbara
Cline. The beautiful and powerful messages

SPECTACULAR VIEW I
2br. house in .Mason
and
Clhle Doc todrC
s
atllodlzerfriC
Serious inquires
ony. :::::"::::':~~::""-~ $3.25.00
a mon. +
·
·
eve 1an
m1c. ,oourwon e u 1 I ·
· 03 cavalier, 2DA, 4 cyl. please call740·992·3678
CONVENIENTLY
LQ- $325.00 dep. , no pets 740·386·0000
&amp;
Willis Funeral Home, thank you for a great
· ·
740-388·8513
&amp;
: auto, AC, power locks,,
~ remote entru, CD, 72K, For Sb le .2 ~tory at 2413 Mt GATED &amp; AFFORD· 304·882-3652.
740~245-9215 . Evenings
job. To the ladies who fixed and served our
·r
ABLE! Townhouse apart· '2BR house for rent on
meal, 1hank you so much . May God bless
VernOn Ave Pt . Plt!asam.
dl
mall
&amp;
weekends
llh.
: clean. $4300 379·2748
mente,
an or
s II . Ga"1'eld.
Oepos1·1 $450 740·388-8017
"d. ev ery one
of you
..
4br.. lbll .. 112 blt!le. a~kin~
II
&amp;
eac h au
.
' .
' ·..,..-~~-.,...""":~ SiO.OOO J04-675 -2fi9J.
houses tQr rent.
a rent
$450.
256-6408, ·
t
11
740·245-9215
&amp;
Camara
Z28
740·441'· 111· 1or app · 441·0583, 256-6718
: 1999
23,:JXJ miles, V-8, 6
Land (Aonago)
-'"~tio~n-&amp;""i-nl-or_m_a~tlon~.~::' ~:0:bd~.;::h~ou:;s~e;.;l~o~r':'re~n::'t"::in 740-794-0460
speed, T Top. $12,500. ---"~"-~;!-;i;;;;;;;;
Pt.
Pleasant · area,
Auction
AUction
' 740·258-6989
~ExceptlonaI 200 acre 28R garage
Apartment, Mlddlepon on river, $B50 bank owned double
$425 th
t mo. plus dep. includes
cankl _lann In Galla Co.
NOm
water. sewer, trash , elec· wide on lg !!at lot,
· 9'7 Dodge Intrepid auto· OH.
60+
acres 44 6-04 15
tric &amp; 2 rooms direct TV, closeto town$24.900
\...
: matic V6 $1800 080. well-drained
bonomk!nd
call
(740)992·5620 lor Brokers Realty Mike
234 WeSt 13th Street, Wellston, Ohio
c256-l652or256·1233
along Raccoon Creek, Free
Rent
Spectallll . appl.
Slack
Broker
,
60+ acres pasture, bal- 2&amp;3BR and up, Central ;::;;..-:'':'00'~~::-':::' 304·542·&gt;868
'
Trvc:b
on L,lncoln
Pt. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
ance wooded · Stadt; wa• Air, WID hookup, tenant 3br.
Pleasanl
$525.00Ave.
a man
6:00pm Sharp Rain or Shine
ter pond. 2 springs, well. pays electric. EHO Elm
.
Apts. +dep. 304 -755-874,4 8\leHouse's will be open at S:OO pm
1985 Ford
F·250. 4 Farm has carried 40·45 View
: wheel dr. new eng., cows · w/calves. Modem , (:30 4)882 _3017
ntngs.
Conducted ·for the Estate of Leslie Rowland
· maCh. sound· $2000.00 brick ranch . style house
Church parsonage. 3BA,
Executor Mark Di110it
: 304-458·1727.
wf finished
walk-out Spring
~lley · Green 2 bath. full basement, 2
1
basement 937-596-6774
Apartments 1BR lor rent car
garage.
Includes
Complete t~rms of sale and pictures com ng
"'!""'-~~:-=:..-~~
$375
month. WID. new fridge . ancl
soon to: www .wisemanrealestate.com
~For public bid: The Meigs Melg• Co. 5 acres on _74~Q-""44~6~·,.t5""9-9~::"'~~ range. Sits on neany 2
2 houses for the pri&lt;e of I resting on t.116
: senior Center will be ac- Landaker or Cook Ads. :- '
acreS. $700 plus sec.
·
fl d"
'. ceptlng sealec bids for St9 900
Danville
8 Twin Rivers Tower is acDrivln &amp; Deltvwy .
acres o an ··
.
·
dep. For info or inspec·
2 rnU
· the purchase ol our old acres, co. water $22,500. cepting· applications for lion caH ~ _
.
Seetl.ing
driver
Located in Wellston, Ohio-less than
es
meal trucks. Each truck Reedsville 13 acres, co waiting list fOr HUD subfrolil the .Genreal MUis Plant Excellent
is equipped with a hot- water $~9,999! Salem sidized,_ t -BR apartment New 2BA, 2 bath, "fridge, ~~~~%~~~me~=: investment.property. Minbn.um •, tartlng btd
shot utility truck bed. Ctr. t 8+ acres, pol1d for the elderly/disabled, stove, dishwasher inCl.
CaliJ h
, t999 Dodge Dakota with $4 9,900 _ Gllllle co. 6 or call675-6679
WID hookup. $600 mo + ment Cl propane bust· of$35,000!! J% Buyer's premium.
os
~ 147,940 miles, needs 1o· acres $12,500! we fi·
$600 dep. 740·446·7029
ness, send resumes to: Bodimer Auctioneer/Realtor for more details
New Haven furnished 1
·$400 Dalh• Senllnel, PO Box
;.new head gaskets. 2001 nancel
Catl
Small 2br House,
''
or quesdons. Watch newspaper on d websl te
•,-•-·· s tO
·th 63 94!
I
Bd. Apt.,
WID,
No
th
N
Pets
No
729·23,
Pomeroy,
Oh
_...... ..,., •
wt
.
740-441·1492 or maps
mon ,
o
•
for open house date.
45769
. miles, won't start, prooob- or
\lisit pets,dep.Aef:,992-0165
Smoking 304·n3r9192
Call Josh .Bodimer al Wiseman Real Estate
lem unknown and 2 1 www.hwnertand.com
3BR , 1000 sq ft HardGovernment &amp;.Federol
. · Chevy -S·tO good lor
wood floors, W/0. No pet
JCL.
David Wiseman· Broker
.: parts. we reserve ~ Trade· 19 ~5 Chevy · ~0 ~ 6somnt
74Q-59t-5174
uua
For more info 740·446-SOLD
right to reject any bid tor version
an,
e~~:ce e or441-0110
~;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;,,.,,.,,.,~ POST OFFICE NOW
.
· ·-~·\11 i
·
~· .
~ tJ.froJ reason. For addi· conditlon~
~asy ~n , g~s .;...-.~~~---~~ =
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
~
~ tl I
i.nfo
call also
er.
76 x16, BeauiHul Ap1s. at JackRentals
7
: 7:'992-2161 ·
2-3500*
•85 • 2 wheel son Estates. 52 West- ~!::!!~~~=:-:=: or
$S Kiyr,
inc6udes
...
brakes w/ramp lor 5 WOOd Dr., from 5365 to 1. 2BA, Trailer also 1BR Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
U.'Y.~.£~_
acres in Meigs County, $ 560 _
_
•
.
Apartment
PleeBe
Call
adSourr;e,
not
affiliated
AUCTIONEERING
.
740 446 2566
White 95 GMC Sierre. 4 ~C7=4~0):99:2:·0:1:74i::::=== Equal Housing Opportu- 304-593-6197 for more with USPS wtlo hires.
~
WO, high miles, runs
nity. This institution Is an
....
;,1·,;;86;;,;6;,
·4;,;0;;;3·;;;256!!;!2...
rl]
.kj.
.
· good, ext cab, ladder
Equal Opportunity ProTwo Bedroom Mo- Help Wont.d- General
...
' racks, CD player; 350
vider and Employer.
bile , 2 full 'Baths, Out• V-8
motor,
$2500,
-~~-~~":"~-.:: building, Porch, Excellent AVON! All Areas! ~•O uy
2969
~
Auction
Auction
(740)416·
Apari!Mrm/
Gracious Living I and 2 Cond!Oon. Fairview Rd. or Sol! Shlney Spears
VOIII
ho
Bedroom Apts. at Village 304 -5 95-3129
304-675·1429
Manor
and
Aiveflilde
A
. M'ddl
rt f om 2BA trailer for rent. Ohio . valley
Home
Ot Oldsmobile Silhpuette 2BR APT. CIA . (740) pts. tn
I epo · r
'98000 mile, 1 owner, 441 _0194
$327
to
$592. 36;::7;,:·7.:;76:::2~"":'-:''::'"::" Health, Inc. hiring Home
OVD player, greal cond. -~--~~00:::"':: 740-992·5064. .
Equal Federal Funds just re- Health
Aides.
STNA,
~
'th 2 Housing Opportunity.
leased for Land Owners. CNA, · CHHA, PCA may
$5495. 74D-441·9322
Brand new duplex Wl
~--.~~--=::: No closing cost and apply at 1480n Jackson
BR. 1.5 baths , allached Nice
Clean
Ground ZERO DOWN! Will do Pike, Gallipolis, Ohkl Of
Want T0 Bl1'f
gar. front / .back .porches. Floor, 2br, W/D hOokup, land
Improvements. phone 740-441-1393 for
Land for your tlowers 1 References/Deposit/No
BanknJPlcy &amp; ·sad Credit more info. Competitive
AM VETS BLDG. OFF BIJRNETIE RD.
__
·6-75-·-51~6~2---~ OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed· wages, mileage relm: Saturn, Buick SUV's with garQen, fully equipped '!'Pe_ts_304
(KA_NAUGA) GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
rooms
avallabl e. bursement and be natl'ts
· warranty. Visit us at (no- kitchen, wheelchair ac•
'ble
Mt'dway
~.._ Tara
Townhouse
coookmotors .oom)
cesS! ·
IJU""
740-446·3384
including health
insur- Early Olerry 1 Drawer Stand, Mahogany
Cook Motors 328 Jack- tween Jackson and Galli- Apartments - 2BR, 1.5
ance &amp; much more.
Stand: Victorian Walnut Bed, Primative
pol1·s on H1'ghway 35 bath, back patio, pool, 2 br., 2 bath in Syracuse,
son Pike. 740-446-0103
•
Rent $600. Call for app!i· playground, {trasn, sew· all electric, 5400 a mo. · An Ex:Ce~ent way to eam Table W /o ld Paint, Iron Bed, Baby Cradle
cation to 74D-236·1872 age,
water
pd.) plus dap. &amp; utilities: 2 br, money. The New AVon.
or
a-mail
to
southohio·
$425/rant,
5425/sec.
1
bath,
14~70, Call
Marilyn W /old Blue Paint,"White Graniteware Bath
: Want 1o buy Jl.lflk Cars,
dE&gt;p. C811740·367·0547
(740)992-7660
304·682•2645
Thb, Drop Leaf Ta~le, Shoe Shine- Sland
llvingllgma!l.corn
·call 740-388-0884

,

Auction

Auction

_740-~33~9-~0362~-::-~~ Galllpolis,OH 3 Bdnn, 1 ;;or.;2;;45::.·;.;504~5~~:-":~ Retirement

2

•

On-site Doctor

SEE WHAT WE CAN
OFFER YOU AT

we
nave a benefits ~
available. StS.ClOihr Ap-

Full-;..,.
EJCI)OI1enced CNA Po.U:
lions &amp; 1 ExpeOeoced plicafions can be obDietary Helper. Apple lained 1rom 1t1e Mason
cents That EnioY Tha County EMS 911 EmerHealttlcate lnWstry &amp; gooey Driw, Point Pleas·
WCM1&lt;1ng Wrll1 The Eld- ant, W&gt;l 25550 or onh
erly May Apply. Competi- at masoncountyoos.corn,
live Wages, Paid Vaca- lollow lt1e EMS link.
lion, Paid Melle Dll!eren·
tial Pay Olecounts, No :;::::=~:::::~~~~
Dues, Como &amp; Expen- Berger Health System In
ence Wonc.hg In A scenic Circleville, , Otllo
Pleasant, Homelike At· has an opening for an
mosphere. CaH For Your 9)(perienced
Pulmonary
Confidential
Interview , Function Tech. Work diTc:x;iay. Vou'H Be Glad rectly with a pulmonoloYou
Dld!IIJQ4·273-5693 gist in out new lung cenOr Stop In &amp; Soe Us 0 ler opening neKI month
1113
washington
St., in our modem Medical
. Ravenswood, WI/. Ref- Office Building. Get in on
~
Required . the ground floof of this
E.O.E. ·
excttlng opportunity. Ex~=--:~~":':',._.. perience in an academic
Youth
C8se .Manager settlng and certification
'needed for wor1dorce de- are desired. Will consider
velopmer:Jt program In two years of pulmonary
West Virginia . Duties In- function lab experience
~~~ ~roup presenta- ·with wiltingness to get
nons,
·de\lelopirtg
re- certification
witt'lin
six
sources,
facilitating months of employment.
meetings and wort&lt;shops Qualified
candidates
assessments, data entry, should forward their refile
management
and sumes to: Berger Health
progrM$11e case man- System, Attn.: HR
al
agemenl
Must ' enjoy 600 N. Pickaway St. Cir·
worldng with 1t1e youlh ci!MIIe, OH 43t13 or appopulatlont
Travel re- ply ~line at: www.bergqulred. Position requires erheaHh.com
a BAIBS and at least t
years experience in ldentlfylng, de\leloping and ~M~Idd~l:":el~on-"":'Es~ta~te-s-~&amp;
securing resources for ResCare Home Care Is
diverse population , Ex- 'accepting
appllc.!1tions
cellen1 tull-time opportu- for Direct Care Staff. Innlty
Wlttl
benefits. terested
persona
may
Please Fo!Watd Cover contact Rhonda Harrison.'
Letter and Resume · to at 740-446·4&amp; 14· 8)(1. 26
wmonteroBSOirQsspro~.
Monday through Friday
com Equal Opportunity 9a·5p or e-men a lesume
Empk&gt;yer/Program
to
A4XIIIary Aids an,d SeiV- rharrisonOrescare.com
ices are available upo~
requesl

Environment!

InTOMORROW!!
Worl&lt; NEXT WEEKI!!

I I

&lt;kted · FO&lt;

,{ Medical. Dental,
EAP, 401KI
.t

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

C N A's I OIETARY Aaleptlng
appl~ Cartifted NurslnQ ~Is- GOOOTIMES BAR IS
HELPER lntorviewt Are lor lull &amp; part time EMT, tant lull time and temPO- NEEDING
ENERGETIC, e1&lt;p. will
CUrrenUy Being
Con· and Pa&lt;Omedlca.
rary (~) wor1&lt; in 114 PROFESSIONAL.BAR·
willl a minimum

.r Prolesslooal WCM1&lt;

Coli TODAY!

2004 Ooublewide in new

gAM. SPM

.t FuN and Pan-time
PositionS
.r Day and Evening
Shilts

,{ ftlodloal, Dental,

rent M&lt;ldlepart,all elec· ·
tric,c/a,no inside
pets,
$&lt;150 month ,plus OOp.
74D-4t6·t354o&lt;9926068

:~~;~~~;,

•

Eowlronmen;

,

3 Br. Mobl~ Home lor

Possibility ol rental
asslsta!1&lt;e.
Equal Housing
Oppo&lt;tunilj' ·
TDD1419-526'0466
"'This institution is an
,. Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

No Soteel

Sunday, November 2, 2008

(

ANew Home?
TrY the
·Classifieds!!

No~!

.r Day and e...rnng •

rent.

For.

V-TOPFIYE"'warttlnOitlol
c-s..Whyl

No Credit Card Soleal
No Collectioosl

Shills

..

$250 Sign«~ Bonull

""'"o
No experienc8 required!

nome

Honey~kla 'Hilt•

==

I

14X7o newly rernodolod
mobile
3BR $&lt;150
+ utilities. Fief/security
deposit, excellent loea·
oon. 446-6380 betw;een
6-9PM
2 Bedroom trailer T...,.·
run Rd. 446-4555
Mot;le home
74().446-.4234
740-208-71161

Ho1pW~-Go

on-··

'*tf II tlaM'II/

•

tight refreshments
will be .served.

Memberships at the art
gallery are being paired
with a
HIGHLY COLLECTIBLE
Special Edition Cobalt

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Great Rates
Personal Service
Call for a quote

The Lynch Agency
322 Secorid Avenue

community for a great tum out to the annua
picnlc/fall tesliva1 Sat. , Oct. f8 , .2008
· Great to have our special Queen of th
Village, Gladys RHe. for the day. Also.
Special thank you to all who helped with th
setting up of the tables and decoraling
serving food, bingo, registration, parking an.
, ail the small jobs, cleaning, trash pick up an
supervision ol the bounce houses, pfe
cake makers lor lhe auction. Special than
VOL!
lo
Pastor
BOb Thompson
coinmiasloners and Delegates and thos
running tor office. Siloam Lodge Cheshire
lor their S4PPort emf donations. Our auctio
proceeds came to $6t0 to be sent to St
Jude's Chlldrens Research Hosprtal. Than
you to ParX Front Cat9rer service, Pa
Barn {JCK), OVEC Credit Union , Cheshir
Food Mart, Triple B's Pizza , G&amp;G Mart
Pepsi
Co.,
Post
Office,
Council
Maintenance, Police Dept.
Buckey
Sanitanon." To all the many who gave of thai
time..and help in any way. Words canno
axpross all the lun we had with alt. Ther
were over 200 in attendnce and the one
that brought their Ote cars, etc. Thank yo
also. Thank you an~ hOpe to iee an in 2009

Blue BLENKO Glass
Vase.
Individual Memberships
&amp; Vase ($120)
Family Membership &amp;
Vase ($150)
Perfect holiday gift I
For more Information or
place order please call,

812·4625

Gallipolis, Ohio

446·8235 .
800·44 7·8235

turvey tx-

8 - Br&lt;&gt;Mr PartlclpaUan Ollorod,

Alloe B. P-r !!a- RCPQ 12007~·:107

CALL FOR DETAILS .I BROCHURE
STANLEY &amp; BON, INC.
(740) 775-3330
a.
•

. . . , . . . . . .. Itt

CAl' , . , ., 0 ...... Cfl .&amp;.Ia....._.. •
..l!lllwt. .........

www.erANUYAIIDIOH.COM

www.auctionzip.com

'

•c__
l _

_

_

_

'•

,.

�Pomeroy • .Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
own._..._~ ""Oiiii!T~OW!IhouMo~§~-

"""""'ing

Now
applicatloos at
Valley View Apartments
800 State floute 325
Tllunnan, Ohio 45685
74CI-245-9170
t-2 Bedroom Apartments
with appliances rumlslled
On ~telaundly lacility.
Call lor detalli or pict up

Clip this AD and take it
with you when you vi911
OUf community to get
lt\i&amp; speclal discount.
Move-in in Nov and get
StOO.OO all your ZBR
Apt ~ Dec. Cu•ent~
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spacious flOOr plans,
3 Bed, 2 Bath HUD
Homes\ Only $19,900 for

:lluylng tools sell or trade listings 800-620--'946 ex
-mechaniC-Carpenter lawn R019
garden power tools. 4 bed 2 bath &amp; office in
i:&amp;H 740-388·15t6 or cell tOwn . hw &amp; tile floOrs,
740-2QI!.j)320
updated kitchen &amp; baths,
privacy fence &amp; above
'!'!"'"!"~'!""'~~--,:- grouod
pool,
security
~Absdu19 Top Dollar - sil- system, much more. 130
:'verlgold
coins,
any Bastiani Or. $129,(X)()For
"' 10K/14Kif8K gold jew· pies and intormation go
d8ntat gold, pre to.
www.orvb.com
:--J935
US
currency. 446·2923
-proo1/mint
sets,
dia- .,..,--~---=--:-:~
MTS
Coin
Shop.
2-3 bedrooms,
t dwood
bath,
......;..,,
' ··~root ·ldli hhar
.a 51 2nd Avenue , Galli· new
d
r.nn
go S
tloors•
.t.46-2842
" .... . '
fenced in yard. 1 · acre.
Ad .,
Rocksprings
Pomeroy,
Oh,(740)992· 2355
•iijiii!iiiii!iiiii!ii~;,;;;;;;;,"""
01
Clayton: 3 br, 1990,
14x70
wlappliances.
ATIIs
must
be
mov~.
Kawasaki 300 Bayou 4x4 $13,000, (7401992·5924
Can be seen at 403 4th
··S1.
New
Haven Extraordinary l'nlporly:
•
......_
304-882 2069
Spec1ec:ulor
:·;!!;!!;!!;";!!;;!;,:""'""':"""' Ohio
River view "' ·~
• Cantpen RVs &amp;
Pnvate drive off . Lincoln

:&amp;

::..,Y,

Tralen

~-~;;;;;;;::=~=~~:':'
'- RV

Service

at Carmi·

Cnael
Trailers
.:;74D-446-!!!!,.;;;36;;;2;;;5,.,,.,;,~
=
Molorcydes

~ 2007

Kawasaki
Ninja
• 250 under 1500 miles
: red helmet and tank bag

A.~.

Hill.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
woods on three sides
{4+)acres, to a historical
home. Circa 1900, 5
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
lull balhs, 2 staircases.
beautirul onglnal · wood·
work., .,any picture .win·
dow'S, mostly ·new windows, 18rge kl tchen l and.
breaklas t room, beaut'·
tully landsca"""
~ with In
ground pool ' Sit on
h .thed
wrap around pore an
~njOy the spec1acular
·view of the Ohio River. 2
car detached garage and

-:'-:":~:-"-:;;;;~~~ 2 out buildings. would
""-N

: 0'2 Honda Accord V6. make a wondertut family
""loaded,
92.000 miles. home or bed &amp; breakfast.
• Call 740-245-5526
Private and Picturesque

applcation at rental
olliat.

ranch &amp; townhorne style
liVing, playground &amp;
baSketball court. on-site
laundry facility. 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet c~untry \o·
catiOn close to major
medical
facilities.
phannacles, grocery
slore...just minutes
away trom other major
shopping tn the area.

for

..
,rp--' Full and Part·time

· Apllrtmants ·
26fi Colonial Drive #1 13
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
. 740·446-3344
~.Hours
M. '''·
F
...,.. _
''

"'

EAP, 401KI
,{ On-sl1e DO&lt;lc&lt;
.r Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

For Rent
Mobile homes &amp; lots ,
(no pets) in Ashton WV
304·576·2942

•
Con,...c:ial

~ bay serviCe station
Jackson
Pike.
lease
required. Call 446-3644
for more info.

$.

HouiU For Rent
L-------'

S2J~Imo!

4 bed. 2 bath.

Sunl. Repo!

(~~

down.

I~

tBR Apt,. WJD hOQ kups, ,, .. -,~ , ••• ArR) for li&gt;tio..
v
satellite TV incl. wlrent, 8011-620-4940" R027
close lo hospital. Call 1600
Chelnut
Street,

.r Woekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

t1811MC PAYU
Ex1.231t

http:/Jjobf..Wodlton.CGM

Apply Online:
httf':,ll t llltocllieln.ggm

ORCAU

1 888 IIIC4'AYU
En 11101 •

oonditlon. 4 bedroom, 2
bath, all appHances ineluded, $37,000 located Overbrook RehabtHtation, '!"--:-.;."":'":":~~
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· Center is pp1·
currently
ac~
.
lor 27 ~ needed to lose
son City 304·675·211 7
cepting a ICatiOOS
~"""~'""
lull ,.me cook position, up to 30 lbs in 30 days,
h
da
back
Brand new 3bed 2bat Gam·t .~ . •·yone In- 30
'( money
·
o.IV''"' ,.,
Call
Ll
on + -half acre in Pt. terested pleas&amp; pick up guarantee.
sa
F
800-..2~•tot
Pklasant. OWNER
I· an appl.._lion at 333
......
NANCE
AVAILABLE Page Slreet. Middleport,
(740) 446·3570
· OH. E.O.E. &amp; • Pa•icl·
1996 · Mobile
Home pant ot the Drug-Free
16x80
2854
GeOrges Wor11.place' Program.
Creek Rd. MUST BE ~~-'!":".......":"":~
MOVED, new heat pump So Ice M nager &amp; 5erv
e
. •
3BR, 2 bath ,stovetre Ir Icerv Technician
positions
$15,000. Call 446-4743 available. Health care 8

Bedroom
2 Bath. bath,
Carport,
Heat Govemment funds availGreen
School
area. pump, Retridge &amp; Stove ·able for home buyers
um. C8tl740·441-1124
included. $500 mo, $300
~
1 &amp; who own land. $0 down.
deposit. No Pets, Re
Call
tOll
tree
2 BR Apartmont &amp; 2 BR secunty Ck. Required 877-3t0·2577 lor pre-apHouse . on 5th St. PI 304·593·2021
proval.
Pleasant
·304-812-4350 1BR, House
...~h~ome~s
348 Urt- ~N~ew,;;;;;::-:~ed':'room
~k for Don
coin,
Middleport,
OH from $214 .36 ·par month,
:...~~~~=~~
':'Apartment
avail.able now 304-675-3753
.
or includes many upgrades,
Riverbend
Apts. New 740-416-9725
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
Haven wV. Now accept- 2br on the R'iver Jn Ma- '740-385-2434
.ng
appl'·at,·ons
lor son. $500.00 a . mop.
· ~~:::;;~~'"::"":::~
1
"'
Prices Reduced 2 2006
HUD-subsidized,
one Relerences
. 16x80 2 bed 2 bath, t
e~room Apts. Utilities 304 ""2 3512
or
be&lt;l I
""'
-vu •
2000 16x70 2
included. Based on 30% 304-468-7946
bath, 1 1999 16•80 2
of adt"usted income. Call
97
2br. House. $300 montt'l, bed 2 bath gas, 1 19
304-882·3121,
available plus UtilitieS, Deposit &amp; 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
for Senior and Oisabt9d References
1 2002 1611.80 3 bed 2
people.
~
304·675-4874
bath. Priced
delivered

3 8

~

~~r:· teve~y

plans available. Ple8se send re·
sume
to
LLCOCAREO.COM
or
04
tax. to 740-446-91
-------Card of Thankl

~~-

PUBLIC

AUCTION
f
The
•ur.Uitl
Ctnler
OR
Rt. i2 n.•
n
w.u. OIUIIers hl"t sold their htlllt In

t:::~lll

•

011. and ere lllOUing to Rorlda and we
lit selllll!llhe folloW~.
. Furnilure
'Ciaytt&gt;n House Sofa. Flex Steel Leather Sofa-

~~~~~~~~ I'

Kenmore Microwave, Lexi11gton
· 5 pc. poster, B .r~ Su'le
Size ' B .r. 5. uue.
l '
Ginny Lynn D ay Bed . B enc h., Q Ul'It

Hulch

·o

' 1poo1 ryer
Kenmore Was h.er, Wh tr
· FurniiUre ·
R oc'kers. pauo
· Se1• pa110
Table &amp; More.
Gl
&amp; Ml

assware

fUr·e~t,

Sel

Tools-Mnr~ila

'R·ubtreflma·id Lawn Cart,

1

s

1

2· Golf

~;:;;:,;:~~""":::"'"":::::' ~..,..--..,..--.~~

'

e:~~perience.

~

Submit re-

svme &amp; salary require·
ments to: Gallpolis C.M.,
Gorsucll Mgt., P.O. BoK
190, Lancaster OH
43130-0190 or email to;
kdasbury,ambarqmall.com ·
EOE

~Ca;;rs;;,;;T~ruc~ks;o;.~an~d~G~M~C.

J.

Leaves.

W /indian

Heads,

#3,8.9,

Don' t Want To Miss This

Need

One ..·.

1950 · Popcorn

Of 1930's Swirl Graniteware ,

Green Graniteware, Keen K~tter Adv. Box,
Arrowheads •. Navy Uniforms And Other,
Military llem~. 1907 Framed. jr. O.V.A.M.
Poster Oak Tool Box, Victorian Bird Cage
·Aladdin

Lamp,

25

Adv.

Thermometers (7up, Cok~. Pepsi, Rc , Teem,
Double Cola, Qlhers), Mobil Oil Adv. Box,
Sev.

Pes.

Akro-agate.

Stoneware

Decoruled), Adv. Tins (coffee.

(some

()il, Otbers),

· Wooden Sled. Local Ad lleQIS, Vogue Picture
Records,. Childs Records, Old Tools , Comic
Book's. Ohio An Toys, Back Bar Whiskey
Boltles,

Red,

Black

w/white

Graniteware, Cast Iron llems, 1935- 1950's
Coke

Trays

Plus

Others.

52

Pes.

La

Francaisc China w/windmill Scene, Beer
Trays, 1970-il Wahama While Falcon Band
Record, Barber.ihop llems, 1948 Babe Rulh
Magazine, Many, Many Quality Smalls .... :

AUCTIONEER:
LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740-388-8115 OR 740-441-7355
• Cash/check Approved By Auctioneer Only!!'

l:~it' '

.iht¢~~-

P••••-••---••-••••-•••----------

I
I

letter .of credit

n:i.

unle.ss

Musl have
known tO

Auction

LICensed

.'

I

Real Estate AUCTION

: City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
I

Phone __________~

ABODE

Heallt\
Care
Accepting
new cHent&amp; and transfers
for AID Waiver and VA
programs
ln
Mason
County 304·586·944t or
tolll!ee 1·686-327·7262

Services, Inc

Mail or drop off this coupon along .
with a copy of your photo ID to.
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

ABOOE

Health
Care
Inc.
Hlnng
CAreg!vers .Jn Leon, &amp; In
· Mason
County.
304·586-944t • or toll tree'
t-686·327-7262
I'I'~....J
Sorvlces,

ABSOLIJTE

'Address--,----------

•

Box 489 ProctorviHe, OH
4~

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
co. #66

OWNERS: RICHARD &amp; DONNA KERN
1·304-1l3-5441 OR 1·304·113·5785
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM

Subscriber's. Name _______

1.

'lllereplst.
Send resumes to P.O.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BV:

ITI~RI.tS: Cash or check W/

OhiO

------------------------------Vlll!lge ot' Cheshire woi.lid like to extend
much appreciated thank you to ou

BULLETIN BOARD
·'

· r---------------~-----,
O'Dell True Value Lumber

WHAT AN · OPPORTUNITY II

Truckload Paneling Sale
· Many Different Styles
Starting at $7.99

3M Acres
Offered In
4T111Cta

We Rent RUG DR Carpet
Cleaners
Call740·446-1276 to ReseiVe
O'Dell True Valve Lumber.
6t, VIne St., M·F 713. SolB-q, Sun. tb-1

Rose Oo. .aenkl.
PI ap1rty WI ,....
Vhtea. ridge• &amp; a
In 11.wllllypluoo

..,..m

paet"re

.

pWooul TI'IICt 111·
. . Ill:. ,MooU,
.
.
:XC Ddad; Trect 12-77 Ac. (Appfw. 31 -~
puturo &amp; ill woodo,; TI'IICt N-148 110o
(Appro•. &lt;13 un.blolpaoluro &amp;105 .. _ ,,
TNCt f4•AppnN1. S2 eo. Woodo . /IIi M

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
. 1·800-942·9577

--· "..wt..,,. ..... .,.w.Oogo,
8.4&amp; min, tum
ort Porter Hollow Rd;
llpPFOX. % mile, 11.- lllnd loyo on lhe right.
Open lor -~~~~ duriflg dltyiiOht ._,. or for
• -prlv.te viewing oall David P. Portar, lbeo,

Home D_ecorating Sale
Most items 75% and more oft
Slit Nov. 8 8am-5prn
Gloria Oiler
31645 St. At. 325 Langsville, OH
.
74Q-742·2076
'

..,.., ortpll!&gt;OO .

••~at

.

·
GALLERY at 4D9

· special Reception
. for

Limited Time HoUday
··
offer
Individual and Family

ROU$h

PVH Volunteer
oftheYear,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
•
West. VIrginia State
Volunteer ot the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2 pril to 4 pm

Buxton Conference
Room (Downstairs)
Public is cordially lnvltedl

(740) 1!1-70211. T.moo;- at - 1 0 AuoUOI'I to tiMI HJghett lkklerj no minimum• or
~-rvw: etr.red Me &amp; o...r of llent or mort·
...,.. prktr 'to CIIOtlnt by12· 11-20111i a•w•t
emplor. ,9,100 down per triiOI or St5,000
o1 ....- In - h or check. No
bu~r oontlngenole• eKIII. 8uytr f\lrtMr
..,.. tot)ay adtlltlomll.710,...tratto fUch-

•rd Johnun, Surwyor, to

.

'

Jean

61 Vine St. M-F 7-6, Sol. 8-5, Sun. 10.4

O'Dell True Value Lumber

hHttop

.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

.ATTENTION Hunters!
ATV'erall Investors II
Sat., Nov. 16, 2008 10:00 AM

.junior

5 Pes.
Cream •&amp;

· x·,·

Massage

All

Childs Popcorn Machine (all Orig.),

W/sl..;d.

1

'

Gal. Red Wing Crock

Wapak

.The_Daily Sentinel .
&amp;unbap tltbnt' ·i&gt;entinel

'

I

Is Ready For Your Hoine.

From Cols., Ohio Hotel, Foster Laundry
Wfbeech

'

I
I

ANTIQUES&amp;
CQLLECTIBLES AUCTION
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7fH

S1ove (lronlon , Oh), 2

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or ma·n it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I
I

6:00PM

~~------~~~

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

d•

Salary OOpendent upon

Pull Cans.

a

--~=~:=~;;;;;~ ~~""':To~w~~ii'i::':UIO~I-:"::::;

-Senior Discount*

~oint ~lea•ant 1\.egh~ter

~~~':~~~nA~ Very Super Clean

q

il!

trS

If so; you qualify for a

-======-

Medloal

JOSH ·BQDftiDR·
~

cmI'LSman.plpe
·

le Boat ." Campbell Hud sfe ld Air
IC&lt;&gt;mf&gt;res.sor,, &amp; Much- More .• ·
. Tractor &amp; Lawn Tl'actor
IKiJbota B 7100 4 W Dr. 3 Pt Hit~h - Rops 60"
Diesel ... 574 Hr~ .- Hydrostatic ,
IGt'l]Vely 16- G Pi'o Lawn Tractor 50" Cut 619

;;;,:;;,,.,,.,!!!!!!!!!!!":"'"'!'

~

&amp;

Wrenches . 3/4 Ton Come Along, Sm. Air
Compressor, 3500 Psi 5 H.p. Power Wu.sht:r, l
Home lite Pump OnCart , Electric Lea( Paule
, -Stihl Fs 36 W~edeater &amp; Fs81. Dr
·mm er Mower 6.5. Lawn Seeder,

45 0031

!!!!!!""':'

'1

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet?

P.t COmmunity Manager needed·for local
apartment cornmu~l~ lo·
catec In Clal!lpolla, Ohio.
Ideal candidate will have
previous e•Pfnence In
property management at
a Rural Developri,ent
property, eKcellent communiCatiOn.and organizational akllls and be depen&lt;llble. Healih ln$ur·
ance &amp; 40t k available.

u

008

.l n.,.:lo.,."!"'-.~ -.~
Tsxeo

WAITRE· year ol
Full·1ime em- SES,' .
AND
A produc1
pbyment ofters an ex- SECURITY/DOOR MAN, ment in a
lenslve benefit pod&lt;age, MUST HAVE GREAT environment. Prior
including
Staee
CMI PERSONALITY,
AND sure 1o
Service Retirement, eam DRIVE
TO
MAKE cal devices or
up to 15 days vocation GREAT
MONEY.APPLY mo1or industry
per year, t8 days sick AT t22 B HUNTINGTON PnA:Ie&lt;~y in
leave and t2 plus paid AD (RT2,, NEXT TO appl~ as wall
llolidays; hea!IMilo in- THE LOCKS AND DAM . 20 &amp; 30 CAD' design
surance
18
available. IN GALLIPOUS FERRY qulred, Aulodesk
Salary
commenStJrate WV.304 576·2220 ASK ware a ptus. Car1didllleol
with experience.
Must FOR JOHN G, GOOD must alSo have
have a WV CN+ certlfi- PAY, AND FUN.WORK.
communication,
cation to worto; lh West
.
solving,
and
Vlrglllla, a:nd must pos- ' Now H1ring Experienced,' mgmt skills as well
sess either a• GED or waitstaff, cooks, dish· , the ability to trave l
high school diploma. Ap- washers &amp; ~Ivery drill· _ night (25% IT18lC)
pllcations may be picked ers apply In peroon necessary. Travel will
l4l at Lakin HOspital, Harry's
Famou9
Hot requlr9d more lr"'!1uent'YII
LakJn
WI/,
Monday Dog,s New Haven
initially for
through, FOday, 8:00 a.m.
poses. For
• 4:00 p.m. Lakin HospiSales
consideration,
tal Is an EEO/AA em·
mail your
player.
lakin HO$Pital Salesperson
Wanted: cover lener to:
conducts
pre-employ- Experience in building Craft
ment . drug/alcohol test- materials
preferred. sources
in".
Employes may be Please
appty
within DesigrVApplications
exposed to streamline or store. Thomas Do It Cen· Eng.,
250 Mc&lt;~O ri•icl
secondhand smot&lt;e.
ter, · 176 McConnlck Rd., Ad, Gallipolis, OH
. Gallipolis, OH.
or tax to 740•·44t·6:305.
~~~~...- - An
Equal
Trainer Posttions
Technical Trodtt
Are you interestecl in ·a
rewarding posHio&lt;l? PAIS Daolgn
EngiRMr
Is
currently
seeking Anoc.,
~lc;.tlonl,
fu!Vpart lime atafl lot GoiUpolla, OH. Put your ·
Poin1 Pleasant, WlJ pro- experience to use with
vkllng
residential/com· ElectroCraft,
a
glObal
munlty ~ill training with teader in motor and molndi'Muals with MRIDD. tion
control
solutions . ~~=~==~~
High school diploma or Candidates will design, AU types Masonry,
GED required. No expe- develop, test, and i'e- block, stone. c~:~~:::
rlence necessary. Crimi· kJase products to meet Free
E
nal background check re- or exceed the require- 304 ·593•6421
qlllred. Must have reli- ments of customer appli·
able transportatlory and cations. Candktates will
valid
ayto
insurance. also provide .technical
Pakt tnUning.' Hourly rate support to mfg. In order
siarting at $7·S8.00111our. 1o resolve production isPlease ·
call
1. sues.
Musl have a
304-373-1011 or toll free Bachelor's
Degree
In
at 1-en-373-1011.
Mechanical or Electrical

cfallipoli• JBafl!' t!trtbune

Property ManBQIIN!Dt

Sotws. sears 8'' 3 Speed Drill
112 . . Ben··h Grinder, Craftsman Tool
'
• Ski I 10" Band Saw. Craftsm.M·m 16"PScroll
. Rockwdl 9" Tabl e Saw,
yer ump.
se·ars · Craftsntan Shre·•der 9 ll .p .. SocketS·,

November 13th, 2

=

reyou
or older?

~~~==~~

bod long term care State TENDER'S

laclllty.

·St• 1nilary

W /t r ansformer Type Z 250 Watt
A Good One, Toy's Not (:)ld,

Tools

Real Estate Au"ti'on

P;~.

'

MCII.ag-d I

Trm:k &amp; More.

3

~~~;:".;.,

Tedtitleal Trodeo

Glass. Blenko BoHle . Pitcher

beautiful music provided by Forgiven Four
and Virginia Stapelton. A special thanks to
linda Lou, our special frie!1-d . Thank you to

1an~ N~rses

w•

sc.

&amp; Bowl ,
·
Of
Jars , Aladin LamR , Collecllon
Hallmark Barbie Ornaments Never Used. Snn1a
. Collection, Sel Of Rodgers Flatware,
Ware. Bunn Coffee Maker, Lionel Train

put up by Rev. Curtis.Sheels. Rev. James
Hall. and Rev. Burkley Sanders. The

c

~~~-:--....~~~

&amp; OuanJen. Glider Rocker, Rcdiner. 2
B ack Chairs, M.t. Table, Oak Hall Tree .
Center, Roll Top Desk &amp; Chair,
Cabinet, Counlry Table &amp; 4 Chairs. 2

We would like to thank all. of our family,
frl'ends·. neo'gh~rs.
vu and area churches for the
'ood,
c"""'",
1'
aa\UI flowers . and lhe love and
kin,..""ess
shown for-.us during the sickness
~,,.
and sudden death of our loved one. Barbara
Cline. The beautiful and powerful messages

SPECTACULAR VIEW I
2br. house in .Mason
and
Clhle Doc todrC
s
atllodlzerfriC
Serious inquires
ony. :::::"::::':~~::""-~ $3.25.00
a mon. +
·
·
eve 1an
m1c. ,oourwon e u 1 I ·
· 03 cavalier, 2DA, 4 cyl. please call740·992·3678
CONVENIENTLY
LQ- $325.00 dep. , no pets 740·386·0000
&amp;
Willis Funeral Home, thank you for a great
· ·
740-388·8513
&amp;
: auto, AC, power locks,,
~ remote entru, CD, 72K, For Sb le .2 ~tory at 2413 Mt GATED &amp; AFFORD· 304·882-3652.
740~245-9215 . Evenings
job. To the ladies who fixed and served our
·r
ABLE! Townhouse apart· '2BR house for rent on
meal, 1hank you so much . May God bless
VernOn Ave Pt . Plt!asam.
dl
mall
&amp;
weekends
llh.
: clean. $4300 379·2748
mente,
an or
s II . Ga"1'eld.
Oepos1·1 $450 740·388-8017
"d. ev ery one
of you
..
4br.. lbll .. 112 blt!le. a~kin~
II
&amp;
eac h au
.
' .
' ·..,..-~~-.,...""":~ SiO.OOO J04-675 -2fi9J.
houses tQr rent.
a rent
$450.
256-6408, ·
t
11
740·245-9215
&amp;
Camara
Z28
740·441'· 111· 1or app · 441·0583, 256-6718
: 1999
23,:JXJ miles, V-8, 6
Land (Aonago)
-'"~tio~n-&amp;""i-nl-or_m_a~tlon~.~::' ~:0:bd~.;::h~ou:;s~e;.;l~o~r':'re~n::'t"::in 740-794-0460
speed, T Top. $12,500. ---"~"-~;!-;i;;;;;;;;
Pt.
Pleasant · area,
Auction
AUction
' 740·258-6989
~ExceptlonaI 200 acre 28R garage
Apartment, Mlddlepon on river, $B50 bank owned double
$425 th
t mo. plus dep. includes
cankl _lann In Galla Co.
NOm
water. sewer, trash , elec· wide on lg !!at lot,
· 9'7 Dodge Intrepid auto· OH.
60+
acres 44 6-04 15
tric &amp; 2 rooms direct TV, closeto town$24.900
\...
: matic V6 $1800 080. well-drained
bonomk!nd
call
(740)992·5620 lor Brokers Realty Mike
234 WeSt 13th Street, Wellston, Ohio
c256-l652or256·1233
along Raccoon Creek, Free
Rent
Spectallll . appl.
Slack
Broker
,
60+ acres pasture, bal- 2&amp;3BR and up, Central ;::;;..-:'':'00'~~::-':::' 304·542·&gt;868
'
Trvc:b
on L,lncoln
Pt. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
ance wooded · Stadt; wa• Air, WID hookup, tenant 3br.
Pleasanl
$525.00Ave.
a man
6:00pm Sharp Rain or Shine
ter pond. 2 springs, well. pays electric. EHO Elm
.
Apts. +dep. 304 -755-874,4 8\leHouse's will be open at S:OO pm
1985 Ford
F·250. 4 Farm has carried 40·45 View
: wheel dr. new eng., cows · w/calves. Modem , (:30 4)882 _3017
ntngs.
Conducted ·for the Estate of Leslie Rowland
· maCh. sound· $2000.00 brick ranch . style house
Church parsonage. 3BA,
Executor Mark Di110it
: 304-458·1727.
wf finished
walk-out Spring
~lley · Green 2 bath. full basement, 2
1
basement 937-596-6774
Apartments 1BR lor rent car
garage.
Includes
Complete t~rms of sale and pictures com ng
"'!""'-~~:-=:..-~~
$375
month. WID. new fridge . ancl
soon to: www .wisemanrealestate.com
~For public bid: The Meigs Melg• Co. 5 acres on _74~Q-""44~6~·,.t5""9-9~::"'~~ range. Sits on neany 2
2 houses for the pri&lt;e of I resting on t.116
: senior Center will be ac- Landaker or Cook Ads. :- '
acreS. $700 plus sec.
·
fl d"
'. ceptlng sealec bids for St9 900
Danville
8 Twin Rivers Tower is acDrivln &amp; Deltvwy .
acres o an ··
.
·
dep. For info or inspec·
2 rnU
· the purchase ol our old acres, co. water $22,500. cepting· applications for lion caH ~ _
.
Seetl.ing
driver
Located in Wellston, Ohio-less than
es
meal trucks. Each truck Reedsville 13 acres, co waiting list fOr HUD subfrolil the .Genreal MUis Plant Excellent
is equipped with a hot- water $~9,999! Salem sidized,_ t -BR apartment New 2BA, 2 bath, "fridge, ~~~~%~~~me~=: investment.property. Minbn.um •, tartlng btd
shot utility truck bed. Ctr. t 8+ acres, pol1d for the elderly/disabled, stove, dishwasher inCl.
CaliJ h
, t999 Dodge Dakota with $4 9,900 _ Gllllle co. 6 or call675-6679
WID hookup. $600 mo + ment Cl propane bust· of$35,000!! J% Buyer's premium.
os
~ 147,940 miles, needs 1o· acres $12,500! we fi·
$600 dep. 740·446·7029
ness, send resumes to: Bodimer Auctioneer/Realtor for more details
New Haven furnished 1
·$400 Dalh• Senllnel, PO Box
;.new head gaskets. 2001 nancel
Catl
Small 2br House,
''
or quesdons. Watch newspaper on d websl te
•,-•-·· s tO
·th 63 94!
I
Bd. Apt.,
WID,
No
th
N
Pets
No
729·23,
Pomeroy,
Oh
_...... ..,., •
wt
.
740-441·1492 or maps
mon ,
o
•
for open house date.
45769
. miles, won't start, prooob- or
\lisit pets,dep.Aef:,992-0165
Smoking 304·n3r9192
Call Josh .Bodimer al Wiseman Real Estate
lem unknown and 2 1 www.hwnertand.com
3BR , 1000 sq ft HardGovernment &amp;.Federol
. · Chevy -S·tO good lor
wood floors, W/0. No pet
JCL.
David Wiseman· Broker
.: parts. we reserve ~ Trade· 19 ~5 Chevy · ~0 ~ 6somnt
74Q-59t-5174
uua
For more info 740·446-SOLD
right to reject any bid tor version
an,
e~~:ce e or441-0110
~;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;,,.,,.,,.,~ POST OFFICE NOW
.
· ·-~·\11 i
·
~· .
~ tJ.froJ reason. For addi· conditlon~
~asy ~n , g~s .;...-.~~~---~~ =
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
~
~ tl I
i.nfo
call also
er.
76 x16, BeauiHul Ap1s. at JackRentals
7
: 7:'992-2161 ·
2-3500*
•85 • 2 wheel son Estates. 52 West- ~!::!!~~~=:-:=: or
$S Kiyr,
inc6udes
...
brakes w/ramp lor 5 WOOd Dr., from 5365 to 1. 2BA, Trailer also 1BR Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
U.'Y.~.£~_
acres in Meigs County, $ 560 _
_
•
.
Apartment
PleeBe
Call
adSourr;e,
not
affiliated
AUCTIONEERING
.
740 446 2566
White 95 GMC Sierre. 4 ~C7=4~0):99:2:·0:1:74i::::=== Equal Housing Opportu- 304-593-6197 for more with USPS wtlo hires.
~
WO, high miles, runs
nity. This institution Is an
....
;,1·,;;86;;,;6;,
·4;,;0;;;3·;;;256!!;!2...
rl]
.kj.
.
· good, ext cab, ladder
Equal Opportunity ProTwo Bedroom Mo- Help Wont.d- General
...
' racks, CD player; 350
vider and Employer.
bile , 2 full 'Baths, Out• V-8
motor,
$2500,
-~~-~~":"~-.:: building, Porch, Excellent AVON! All Areas! ~•O uy
2969
~
Auction
Auction
(740)416·
Apari!Mrm/
Gracious Living I and 2 Cond!Oon. Fairview Rd. or Sol! Shlney Spears
VOIII
ho
Bedroom Apts. at Village 304 -5 95-3129
304-675·1429
Manor
and
Aiveflilde
A
. M'ddl
rt f om 2BA trailer for rent. Ohio . valley
Home
Ot Oldsmobile Silhpuette 2BR APT. CIA . (740) pts. tn
I epo · r
'98000 mile, 1 owner, 441 _0194
$327
to
$592. 36;::7;,:·7.:;76:::2~"":'-:''::'"::" Health, Inc. hiring Home
OVD player, greal cond. -~--~~00:::"':: 740-992·5064. .
Equal Federal Funds just re- Health
Aides.
STNA,
~
'th 2 Housing Opportunity.
leased for Land Owners. CNA, · CHHA, PCA may
$5495. 74D-441·9322
Brand new duplex Wl
~--.~~--=::: No closing cost and apply at 1480n Jackson
BR. 1.5 baths , allached Nice
Clean
Ground ZERO DOWN! Will do Pike, Gallipolis, Ohkl Of
Want T0 Bl1'f
gar. front / .back .porches. Floor, 2br, W/D hOokup, land
Improvements. phone 740-441-1393 for
Land for your tlowers 1 References/Deposit/No
BanknJPlcy &amp; ·sad Credit more info. Competitive
AM VETS BLDG. OFF BIJRNETIE RD.
__
·6-75-·-51~6~2---~ OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed· wages, mileage relm: Saturn, Buick SUV's with garQen, fully equipped '!'Pe_ts_304
(KA_NAUGA) GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
rooms
avallabl e. bursement and be natl'ts
· warranty. Visit us at (no- kitchen, wheelchair ac•
'ble
Mt'dway
~.._ Tara
Townhouse
coookmotors .oom)
cesS! ·
IJU""
740-446·3384
including health
insur- Early Olerry 1 Drawer Stand, Mahogany
Cook Motors 328 Jack- tween Jackson and Galli- Apartments - 2BR, 1.5
ance &amp; much more.
Stand: Victorian Walnut Bed, Primative
pol1·s on H1'ghway 35 bath, back patio, pool, 2 br., 2 bath in Syracuse,
son Pike. 740-446-0103
•
Rent $600. Call for app!i· playground, {trasn, sew· all electric, 5400 a mo. · An Ex:Ce~ent way to eam Table W /o ld Paint, Iron Bed, Baby Cradle
cation to 74D-236·1872 age,
water
pd.) plus dap. &amp; utilities: 2 br, money. The New AVon.
or
a-mail
to
southohio·
$425/rant,
5425/sec.
1
bath,
14~70, Call
Marilyn W /old Blue Paint,"White Graniteware Bath
: Want 1o buy Jl.lflk Cars,
dE&gt;p. C811740·367·0547
(740)992-7660
304·682•2645
Thb, Drop Leaf Ta~le, Shoe Shine- Sland
llvingllgma!l.corn
·call 740-388-0884

,

Auction

Auction

_740-~33~9-~0362~-::-~~ Galllpolis,OH 3 Bdnn, 1 ;;or.;2;;45::.·;.;504~5~~:-":~ Retirement

2

•

On-site Doctor

SEE WHAT WE CAN
OFFER YOU AT

we
nave a benefits ~
available. StS.ClOihr Ap-

Full-;..,.
EJCI)OI1enced CNA Po.U:
lions &amp; 1 ExpeOeoced plicafions can be obDietary Helper. Apple lained 1rom 1t1e Mason
cents That EnioY Tha County EMS 911 EmerHealttlcate lnWstry &amp; gooey Driw, Point Pleas·
WCM1&lt;1ng Wrll1 The Eld- ant, W&gt;l 25550 or onh
erly May Apply. Competi- at masoncountyoos.corn,
live Wages, Paid Vaca- lollow lt1e EMS link.
lion, Paid Melle Dll!eren·
tial Pay Olecounts, No :;::::=~:::::~~~~
Dues, Como &amp; Expen- Berger Health System In
ence Wonc.hg In A scenic Circleville, , Otllo
Pleasant, Homelike At· has an opening for an
mosphere. CaH For Your 9)(perienced
Pulmonary
Confidential
Interview , Function Tech. Work diTc:x;iay. Vou'H Be Glad rectly with a pulmonoloYou
Dld!IIJQ4·273-5693 gist in out new lung cenOr Stop In &amp; Soe Us 0 ler opening neKI month
1113
washington
St., in our modem Medical
. Ravenswood, WI/. Ref- Office Building. Get in on
~
Required . the ground floof of this
E.O.E. ·
excttlng opportunity. Ex~=--:~~":':',._.. perience in an academic
Youth
C8se .Manager settlng and certification
'needed for wor1dorce de- are desired. Will consider
velopmer:Jt program In two years of pulmonary
West Virginia . Duties In- function lab experience
~~~ ~roup presenta- ·with wiltingness to get
nons,
·de\lelopirtg
re- certification
witt'lin
six
sources,
facilitating months of employment.
meetings and wort&lt;shops Qualified
candidates
assessments, data entry, should forward their refile
management
and sumes to: Berger Health
progrM$11e case man- System, Attn.: HR
al
agemenl
Must ' enjoy 600 N. Pickaway St. Cir·
worldng with 1t1e youlh ci!MIIe, OH 43t13 or appopulatlont
Travel re- ply ~line at: www.bergqulred. Position requires erheaHh.com
a BAIBS and at least t
years experience in ldentlfylng, de\leloping and ~M~Idd~l:":el~on-"":'Es~ta~te-s-~&amp;
securing resources for ResCare Home Care Is
diverse population , Ex- 'accepting
appllc.!1tions
cellen1 tull-time opportu- for Direct Care Staff. Innlty
Wlttl
benefits. terested
persona
may
Please Fo!Watd Cover contact Rhonda Harrison.'
Letter and Resume · to at 740-446·4&amp; 14· 8)(1. 26
wmonteroBSOirQsspro~.
Monday through Friday
com Equal Opportunity 9a·5p or e-men a lesume
Empk&gt;yer/Program
to
A4XIIIary Aids an,d SeiV- rharrisonOrescare.com
ices are available upo~
requesl

Environment!

InTOMORROW!!
Worl&lt; NEXT WEEKI!!

I I

&lt;kted · FO&lt;

,{ Medical. Dental,
EAP, 401KI
.t

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

C N A's I OIETARY Aaleptlng
appl~ Cartifted NurslnQ ~Is- GOOOTIMES BAR IS
HELPER lntorviewt Are lor lull &amp; part time EMT, tant lull time and temPO- NEEDING
ENERGETIC, e1&lt;p. will
CUrrenUy Being
Con· and Pa&lt;Omedlca.
rary (~) wor1&lt; in 114 PROFESSIONAL.BAR·
willl a minimum

.r Prolesslooal WCM1&lt;

Coli TODAY!

2004 Ooublewide in new

gAM. SPM

.t FuN and Pan-time
PositionS
.r Day and Evening
Shilts

,{ ftlodloal, Dental,

rent M&lt;ldlepart,all elec· ·
tric,c/a,no inside
pets,
$&lt;150 month ,plus OOp.
74D-4t6·t354o&lt;9926068

:~~;~~~;,

•

Eowlronmen;

,

3 Br. Mobl~ Home lor

Possibility ol rental
asslsta!1&lt;e.
Equal Housing
Oppo&lt;tunilj' ·
TDD1419-526'0466
"'This institution is an
,. Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

No Soteel

Sunday, November 2, 2008

(

ANew Home?
TrY the
·Classifieds!!

No~!

.r Day and e...rnng •

rent.

For.

V-TOPFIYE"'warttlnOitlol
c-s..Whyl

No Credit Card Soleal
No Collectioosl

Shills

..

$250 Sign«~ Bonull

""'"o
No experienc8 required!

nome

Honey~kla 'Hilt•

==

I

14X7o newly rernodolod
mobile
3BR $&lt;150
+ utilities. Fief/security
deposit, excellent loea·
oon. 446-6380 betw;een
6-9PM
2 Bedroom trailer T...,.·
run Rd. 446-4555
Mot;le home
74().446-.4234
740-208-71161

Ho1pW~-Go

on-··

'*tf II tlaM'II/

•

tight refreshments
will be .served.

Memberships at the art
gallery are being paired
with a
HIGHLY COLLECTIBLE
Special Edition Cobalt

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Great Rates
Personal Service
Call for a quote

The Lynch Agency
322 Secorid Avenue

community for a great tum out to the annua
picnlc/fall tesliva1 Sat. , Oct. f8 , .2008
· Great to have our special Queen of th
Village, Gladys RHe. for the day. Also.
Special thank you to all who helped with th
setting up of the tables and decoraling
serving food, bingo, registration, parking an.
, ail the small jobs, cleaning, trash pick up an
supervision ol the bounce houses, pfe
cake makers lor lhe auction. Special than
VOL!
lo
Pastor
BOb Thompson
coinmiasloners and Delegates and thos
running tor office. Siloam Lodge Cheshire
lor their S4PPort emf donations. Our auctio
proceeds came to $6t0 to be sent to St
Jude's Chlldrens Research Hosprtal. Than
you to ParX Front Cat9rer service, Pa
Barn {JCK), OVEC Credit Union , Cheshir
Food Mart, Triple B's Pizza , G&amp;G Mart
Pepsi
Co.,
Post
Office,
Council
Maintenance, Police Dept.
Buckey
Sanitanon." To all the many who gave of thai
time..and help in any way. Words canno
axpross all the lun we had with alt. Ther
were over 200 in attendnce and the one
that brought their Ote cars, etc. Thank yo
also. Thank you an~ hOpe to iee an in 2009

Blue BLENKO Glass
Vase.
Individual Memberships
&amp; Vase ($120)
Family Membership &amp;
Vase ($150)
Perfect holiday gift I
For more Information or
place order please call,

812·4625

Gallipolis, Ohio

446·8235 .
800·44 7·8235

turvey tx-

8 - Br&lt;&gt;Mr PartlclpaUan Ollorod,

Alloe B. P-r !!a- RCPQ 12007~·:107

CALL FOR DETAILS .I BROCHURE
STANLEY &amp; BON, INC.
(740) 775-3330
a.
•

. . . , . . . . . .. Itt

CAl' , . , ., 0 ...... Cfl .&amp;.Ia....._.. •
..l!lllwt. .........

www.erANUYAIIDIOH.COM

www.auctionzip.com

'

•c__
l _

_

_

_

'•

,.

�Page D6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday. November 2, 2008

·Southem.seniors ··
learn about
'the real world,' As

GCC names new
director of
admissions, Aa

c

•

•

'.

~

l'rlllted 011 100%
R.. yclod Newsprlnl ~..-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; ( I (

.

L :\' I s

• \ "I.

.
SPORTS

,,,...

; l-1. "

•• Crusaders Iaiiy
~ wahama,.37·34.

I

' )( ) '\ II \ \ .

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BAEEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

See

TacoMa

II. ){

POMEROY - The Ohio
Eleclions Commission has
scheduled a probable cause
hearing· for Monday morning on 1wo complainls filed
by
Debbie
Phillips,
Democratic candidate for
the 92nd Ohio House
District. One of those complaints is against the Meigs

DonWoodFordLM.com
E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO
ISaiiBS Hotline 888·286·8325

"tI\ I' '\ 1111 ){ :I ·

County Republican Party.
· Phillips alleges !hat information included in a newspaper advertisement purChSSCld by the Meigs county
ReP,ublican Party in The
Da1ly · Senlinel, endorsing
Phillips' Republican opponent, Athens County Aud1tor
Jill Thompson. is false.
Republican
Party
Chairman David Warner and
· Treasurer Marjorie Fetty are

:! " " H

· also named in the complaint
filed against the local GOP.
A second complaint
against the Ohio Republican
Party will also be . considered today. Respondents in
the second complaint
include Athens County
Republican Chairman Pete
Couladis, Denni~ Normile,
whose voice is on the radio
ad, and Thompson .
Phillips said the probable

\\\\ "

cause hearing set for 8:30
today will be before select
members ·of the Ohio
Elections Commission. If
the members find probable
cause that the ads contained
false information, the matter
would go to a full hearing
before lhe Commission.
Phillips is challenging the
newspaper ad's alle~~tions
thai she was m oppos1tton to
the construction of U.S. 33

DonWoodHyundai.com

Il l\

d . II h "

II I II "

I • " I"

from Darwin 10 Alhens, and
is opposed to lhe proposed
AMP-Ohio ·power plan! in
Meigs County. She denies
both allegations, and said
Friday she was supportive
of both projects.
She said she was asked to
sign a petition years ago in
opposition 10 the pror.sed
alignment of U.S. 3 , but
said she never opposed the
road's construction.

Southern .
renewal
levy 'crucial'

E. STATE ST., ATHENS, 0"10.
Sales Hotline 888·286·9451

District deemed
academically effective,
operating in ·'black'
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMY!li\ILYSENTINELCOM

OurruARIFS
Page AS
• Gayle Price, 98
. • David A. Slater, 84
· ~Delbert H. Steams, 93
. 'r

~~ ......

-··

·~.

,"

INSIDE
• Campaigns unoork
get-out·the-~te

· QPerations, See Page A2
: ~ Iraq expects answer
·on security deal after US
· ~te. See Page A2
·• OB TraceVue
monitoring system

showCased.

,,

.1ca.n xD'

RoleQM S•riot 1.0, AutO.,
Air, CO Player, CruiM,
Pioneer 160 watt Radio,
Modo16232

com

900 E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO .
-~

· DonloodAutornotlve.corn

Sales Hotline 888·286·8291

12916 St. Rpute 664 South, LOGAN
Sales Hotline 888·284·8230

COitl

OHIO

SeePageAJ
• Past Co!Jncilors Club
meets. See Page A3
• • Bazaar planned.
. See Page A3
• Meigs County Clerk
of Courts candidates.
See Page A6

WEA1HER

Ohio State
.~epre'sentative,
State Senate are
open seats ·
BY BRIAN

RACINE - With 1he
entire dislrict earning an
"effe_ctive" academic rating
from the state of Ohio for
the first time ; a five-year
financial forecast that has
been certified to show the
district operating in "the
black" and a tentative plan
to be released from fiscal
emergency on Wednesday,
the Southern Local School
District has learned to do
more with less for several
years. though one cpnstant
has been funds from an
operating levy up for
renewal tomorrow.
The four-mill renewal
levy asks for no new addilional funds and will run for
a period of five years, bringing in an annual , estimated
The Middleport Community Association's
income of $232,519.34 used
Pumpkinport Halloween party offered many activi- to meet current .expenses in
ties for children, including a bounce house and
the district.
inflatable slide, a fishing pond and games, like this
"We still managed to hit
football toss sponsored by the Middleport Church
an effeclive raring while at
of the Nazarene. Dave Diles Park and the freight
a
staffing
minimum
depot were busy Saturday afternoon, as families
according to slate guideenjoyed free refreshments, too. The weather could lines, we've shown fiscal
not have been nicer, with sunny skies and warm
responsibility but we still
breezes In what might be one of the last warm
need lhe voters' help to
continue our progres s,"
weekends before aulumn and winte.r temperaSoulhern Superimendent
tures arrive lor good.
Tony Deem said.
·
Brion J. Reed/photos
Deem said if the renewal
levy is defeated, it will not
lower the taxes of a resident
paying to fund the school
district but will eliminate the
.business/industrial taxes the
district receives from the
renewal levy which amounts
to the $232,000. As such. a
•"
PluH ... Southern, AS

Early start
..~·

•

'

1.."'

'i

.

J. REED

Toney
Dingess was
one of the
POMEROY - Meigs
Pomeroy
Counly voters will help
merchants
elecl
.a
new
Slate
getting a
Representative and a new
jump
start on
Stale Senator as part of
decorating
Thesday's general election.
downtown ·
,The Stale Representative .
Pomeroy
seat is open because State
for the
Rep. Jimmy Stewart, RChrlstmas
Albany, is a candidate for the
shopping
State Senale. Phillips lost to
Slewart in 2006. Senator Joy
season
Padgett, R-Coshocton, is not
Sunday
seeking re-election.
afternoon.
The race for the 92nd
With the
House District spot has been
sun shining
contenlious at times, an~ the
above and
candidates go into Election temperatures
Day under the shadow of an in the 70's, it
eleetions complaint filed by
might be
the Democratic candidale.
hard to
The complaint, however,
believe that
does
not name · the
Christmas Is
Republican candidate. (See so close, but
relaled story.)
·
there are
Debbie Phillips, a memonly45
bet of Athens City Councif
shopping
and a second-time candidays left!
date, has filed separate complaints with the Ohio
INn J.
Eleclions
Commission
Reed/photo
againsl the Meigs County
R ~publican Party and Ohio
kepublican Party. The complain! against
local GOP

98 ~r OrM H611761J."' 12Jhlo .......... 5,999
00 Nisson Ma•ima 211521J,bloo, 0o1o1 ........ 5,490

01 ~~~~kRegal LS 2901D114 ,..., mo~o.. ..

6, 999

01 VW Jelta 110472M. . .. .. . .... ,........ 6, 999
01 PonliacGrondPri•Gll90DilJA. ~ . .. 8,999
02 Ch~r PT Crui11r FI19D915.. ,,, .. ,........ 6:999
03 Mazda MP'I F61171,. . . . . .. ........ 7,999
04 Jeep Grand Cheroku 290011~ '""'· 111"" . 5,999
o4 Hvlindai Elanlra Gts H611622J ... lholo .. .
04 Chvy MonJe Carl!) H61161111,,..tio. , .. , ,j
04!Wnda CMc Hybrid 11619151JA. go~~ .. .. .. . 9, 9.
04PanliacGrondMII161teOIA,.M.,JI\'"" .. 1,999 ·

l·m

. 05~1mpalal90111M.FIL ............. 10,999
05 ~ Cabalt H61912M.,.,,vo:.o. .... . .. 10,~

07 ~ Sf!o!toge IX H617MW. "' 21loloo ..... 14,
07 HyunGai Acctftl H61164MA. ""'·Ill,.; .. .. ,
07
Elantra H61167AI.W.. l!lolo ...... ,
07 HYun&lt;!ai Sonata GlS M11D7W.
!J.999
07 Hyundai Azera H61106M.,~i, llolo ........ 17,950
08 Hyundoi Tucson H6177W,llolo,. ....... 15,000

~

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It~

00 F'!fd Ra!'ifr F61714. .. .. .. ............. "$ ,
01 N~n X1im1 XE F6111611, olio,"' .. . . .. .. . ,
02 Da4ge Dakoia SXT F6109SI,ko .. .. .. . .. . . . . ,
oJ J"ll !.k1Y F61527JA. .... ............... ·s .
03flllil Crown V&lt;laria IID1211M, ....... , .. . . . ,

'
.... ..... ,

·~~~~l=17"'.
05 ~J,; Sonia Fe 1111125, ~·ii·:··f

n.,I!IMoo,;,i .. \

osfl.:l'llsoXlllmlu.IOs~

06§~AerlaF611915,3n• ............... ,

~~

1um

l:l~s 'i6i6i7M4 M. iii • . :

07 M l5 F6U44oll4"'*'"' ". .. .. . ..
07
MZ61TM114WA....._ll ... .... .
07 ~ Spamae IX Mll131M
. ....Ja • ....
07 9Jt!Y Motu IS F611051U. Pi lil• .. ..
07 Paolioc G6 F61HOI,n• .. .. . .. .. ...
07
07

=Faw•
ru sF6171WA. n..m• ...
louivs ~l ~.:'"' Ill- .. "

oa !IYM...;,.
ft.I201M. 1!1 .... ..
oa Ford Eipodilian MIN .... . .... ....

,

,

,

,

INDEX
2 SI!CI10N8 -

l2 PAGES

A3
A3

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds

B2~4

Comi~

Bs

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports
Weather

..

8 Section

. ·As

e - Ohio vo~~oy Publloldni eo.

.IL
.~

.

me

,. ....... state.~

i,

'The Refuge'
from addiction

'

BREEDOMY!li\ILYSENTINEL.COM

Delllll• on Pip AS

~·

I

BY

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMY!li\ILYSENTINELCOM

..
''

•

---

McARTHUR
In
Vinton County sits a small
. farm where men who struggle with alcohol and drug
addiction are given the
opportunity to not only
reflect on but change their
lives by participaling in a
free program called ·'The
Refuge ."
','The Refuge" has been
featured in "The Columbus
Dispalch" and is a Christian
ministry that serves men 18
years old or over who are
searching for answers.
slruggling with drug and
alcohol addictions or just
feel hopeless and lost . Now
in it's ninth year of exislence , "The Refuge" was
founded by Pastor Tom
Thompson who had a vision
about I0 years ago to quit
his high-paying job, sell his
business , home and car and
moved to Vinton County to
begin the program.
to
Bob .
According
Holycross , an elder on "The

PIMH ... Refu... AS
..•

•

�</text>
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