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BoB EvANs FARM

ALONG THE RIVER

FESTIVAL VISITOR'S GUIDE

Students, teachers and the community
hold South Gallia High School's tenth
homecoming close to their hearts, Cl

INSIDE TODAYS
EDmON
'

'

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un a·

tmt.

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"'

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs cotinties
I lhio \ allc') l'uhli,hin~ ( ·...

Contractor to perform smoke test on sewer system

SPORTS
• Fnday's high school
football action.
SeePageB1 '

effort to locate and repair iions of the sewer system and
leaks.
filling them with smoke to
The tests will take ']Jlace determine where we might be
GALLIPOLIS - Where between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., having infiltration or inflow
there's smoke, there' s not weather permitting.
issues," LaPrise said. · "It is
necessarily fire.
Some of the smoke might important that people know
Beginning Oct. 17 and con- enter residents' homes during because smoke might sudtinuing through Nov. 18, con- the testing, said Pau!LaPrise, denly appear in their gutters
tractors for the city of .project
manager
for or in their basement."
·
Gallipolis will . conduct Ameresco Energy, the firm
Normally, if the plumbing
smoke tests on the samtary overseeing the project.
in a building is working propsewer system as part of an
"We w· e pressuring sec- erly, no smoke will appear
BY PAUL DARST

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

J£omecoming rogaft:J
Jessica Hupp,
escorted by Mark
Guess, was
named the 2005
Homecoming
Queen at Eastern
High School on
Friday evening.

OBITUARIES

,_.

Page 24 •

Senior Quarterly

Friday, October 7, 2005

8t.:;o • \'ol. :~9- :'l;o. :l-

l'onJ&lt;'l'O) • \liddlcpm1 • (;allipolis • Odoher &lt;), :.!oo:;

Page AS
• Paul Basim Jr.
. • Lorena Davidson
• John T. Hoff
• William J. Moore
• Celestine North
• Audrey Hunt Stewart
• Kevin Lee Williams

B~an

J, Reed/photo

inside . .according 10 a press
release. from LaPri se. In mosl
cases when smoke does enter
a building, it is through
drain s that are not used often:
To help prevent that from
happening, Wool per, Inc., the
contractor who actually will
do the te sting, recommends
pouring a gallon of water
down each drain in 1he house .
That will ensure that I he traps

are filled with water, which
should prevent smoke from
coming through.
Smoke should only be visible at roof vents and utility
hole covers. Smoke that
appears an}'place else could
be a sign of a leak, and will
be investigated, LaPrise said.
Those who experience
Please see Sewer, Al

Racine's main lock ch;unber reopens
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The main lock
chamber at the Racine Locks and
Dam is up and. running again after
five weeks of routine maiRtenance
on the chamber's lock gates.
The main lock chamber closed
on Aug. 22 and reopened Sept. 26,
nearly a week ahead of schedule
thanks to a crew of 100 from the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that
performed around-the-clock mai"ntenance on the main lock chamber's 190-ton gates.
The maintenance caused delays
in river traffic. though that t~affic
kept moving. Boats were navigaled
through the auxiliary ' chamber,
which is half the size (600 feet) of
the main chamber. This required
some barges to break their loads
and essentially lock through twice.
Racine Lockmaster Larry Circle
. estimated that the delay time per

boat was around 12 hours during
the . scheduled maintenance. but
added .that all the crews showed
palience and worked together.
Kim Johnson, navigation project
assistant with the Racine L&amp;D, estimates that boats waiting to lock
through lost $450 an hour .in revenue
because of the delays, which added
up to $2 million in losses over the
five-week period in which the necessary maintenance was performed.
The figures are a testament to the
economic impact the Ohio River
and more specifically its system of
navigational locks have on the area.
Racine has 5,200 lockages with
commodit.ies totaling over 53 million tons pass through its operation
on a yearly basis.
·
One lockage of 15 loaded barges
of coal is equal to 870 semi-trucks.
The last time the main lock
chamber was drained for routine
Please see Racine. A1

INSIDE
• First Gallia flu
vaccine clinic Oct. 29.

Senior Amy
Haffelt was
crowned the
2oos Gallia
Academy High
School
Homecoming
Queen prior to
the Blue Devils'
football game
Friday Night
against Jackson.
GAHS principal
Bruce Wilson.
right, adorns
Haffelt with her
crown. Haffelt's
escort. Justin
Saund~rs. is
picture~ in •back
with the ·
umbrella.

SeePageA2
• MSWCD honors Jeffers
Farm operators at annual
meeting. See Page A2
. • OVB's Miller graduates
in top 5%. See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
SeePage A~
• For the Record.
SeePage AS
.

.

WEATIIER

'~

B~an J. Roed/(llloto

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern High School alumni Bill and Martha Durst ('60), the old football
team captain and lead majorette, led the Eastern High School marching
and alumni band onto the field at homecoming on Friday night.

A True Homecoming: Dursts step
back onto EHS field after 45 years

Detallo on P•l• AI

Senior Miranda
Merry was
crowned the
2005 South
Gallia High
School
· Homecoming
Queen prior to
· SGHS' football
game Friday night
against Wahama.

. INDEX

1t S Time You Got A Good NightS Sleep
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPJTAL is proud to announce the opening of its Sleep Disorders Center.
·The Sleep Disorders Center can effectively treat disord~rs like a partner's snoring, gasping for air or kicking in the
middle of the night. Maybe you're having difficulty falling asleep or are 9xcessivdy fatigued during the daytime. .
The Center can help you get back to your nonnal cycle. Now accepting appointments with a physician referral.

4 SECilONS -

ll4 PAGES

·Around Town·
A3
Celebrations
C4
.D Section
Classifieds
Comics·
insert
·Editorials
A4
Obituaries
{\5
Regional
A2
Sports
.B Section
Weather
A6

len McNemar/photo

© aoos Ohio Valley Publt.hiDa Co.

•We Would Like To ·metcc:)me
New Pati'en~s To. Otu: Off'~ ,
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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ~
304-675-2551
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Members of the Class of 1960,
the Dursts have never really left
Easter.n. They married shonly after
REEDSVILLE - He was the .graduation, and stayed in the discaptain of the football team . #35, trict to rai se their family, sending
with records that have yet to be four children of their own broken. She was the lead majorene Debbie. Dee, Dennis and David in the high school band. They were to follow I hem at E.H.S. In Friday
high school sweethearts, and 45 night's game against Federal
years later, they marched on to the Hockin g. their grandson, Terry,
field again, together.
was making his granddad proud as
Friday night, Bill and Martha a member of the Eagle squad. ,
Coleman Durst led the Eastern. High
All together, Martha estimates
School band and .alumni band on to that 30 members of her family have
the football field for the half-time been Eastern Eagles, and she and
homecoming show, sparking memories for them, and they hope. encour- Bill are proud to be, too. The alumaging other EHS alumni to join in ni band they led onto the field, .
the homecoming fun 9ext year.
Please see Dursts. A1
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

�•

.REGIONAL
First Gallia flu vaccine clinic Oct. 29

PageA2

6unba, m:tmtt -i»tntintl

BY JUDY ltNDER, BSN, RN

number of residents requestDIRECTOR OF NURSING
ing the vaccine that day, t~ere
· GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
will be at least seven nmses
DEPARTMENT
to administer the vaccine.
With additional · starting for
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia the clinic, the waiting time
County
Health fur vaccination should be
Commissioner Dr. Gerald · minimal.
Vallee has announced that
Res idents are e1ico'uraged
Saturday, Oct. 29, will be the to take advantage of the Oct.
first day that flu vaccine will 2.9 clinic. The vaccine will be
be available at the health available daily · beginning
department.
Munday, Oct. 31.
The flu vaccination clinic
Flu vaccination clinics are
will be held from 8:30 a.m. also being, . scheduled in
until li:30 p.m. that day in every township. The schedthe conference room located ule will be published when
at the rear of the Gallia finali zed.
County Service Center at 499
The flu vaccine is recomJackson Pike (health depart- mended for the following
ment location).
persons:
In anticipation of the large
• Aged 65 and older.

POMEROY - Honored as
the
2005
Outstand ing
Cooperators of the 'Year at
the recent Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District's annual meeting and
banquet were Robert and
Marco Jeffers and family.
·They were presented with
a plaque and were recognized as third generation
cooperators with the Meigs
SWCD. It was noted that in
the SWCS office farm plans
developed for their father
and grandfather dated back
to 1945.
Dairy
farmers
with
approximately 50 Holsteins
in their cuqent milking oper- ·
ating. the two plan to
increase their operation to
between I 00 and 120 head of
cattle in the near future.
Along with their. father they
manage around 900 acres of
pasture, hayland, row crops
and woodland in Columbia
and Scipio townships in
Meigs County. .
In 2003 they 'worked with
several government agencies and the Meigs SWCD
to develop a conservation
plan that will enable them to
meet their farm goals, be
better farm managers, and
conserve the resources on
the farm.
Also recognized and presented a plaque. was Roy
Holter, the first place winner in-the hay show held at
the Meigs County Fair.
Holter won in all three cate- .
gories with Cindy Koblentz
placing second in all three
~ategories. ·
Each year the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District sponsors a county
wide soil judging contest for
Vocational Agriculture students. This year's contest was

Racine
from PageA1
maintenance was 15 years
ago, though divers are annually sent down to check the
gates' condition.
The four gates, which are
60 feet wide and 60 feet high,
had been hit by boats over the
years, and the hinges and rubber seals required routine
.
repl acement.
Both Johnson and Racine's
WOII Lock and Dam
Equipment Mechanic Leader
Ralph Bales expressed their
happiness at the main lock
chamber being reopened and
river traffic resu.miqg at a
normal pace.
"I'm ~lad we' re back to
normal; tt's a lot nicer for the
towing industry." Bales said.
"We've had really good
cooperation out of the tow
boat companies. Everything
went really w_ell."

Dursts
from PageA1
directed by another alumnae,
Cris Kuhn, has become an
annual tradition at Eastern
homecoming, and after
watching for several years
From the sidelines, Martha
decided to join in. And while
Bill's interest in the band
always stopped at the pretty
majorette in the lead, he
decided to take the walk with
her, for old time's sake.
Martha hopes classmates
from their era will join them

• Aged 6 through 23
months.
• Aged 2 to 64 years and
have a chronic medical condition/weakened· immune
system.
• Pregnant women.
• Aged 6 months to 18
years on chronic aspirin therapy.
• Household contacts of
children less than 6 months.
• Anyone wishing to avoid
getting the flu.
Th e health department
ordered 3,800 doses of flu
vaccine for the coutity from
two sources, the Ohio
Department
of
Health
(ODH) and directly from
the manufacturer, Aventis.
The order was based on the

Above: Joe Bolin. mid-

dle, on behalf of the
MSWCD bQard of
supervisors, presented
the 2005 Outstanding
Cooperative Award to
Robert Jeffers. left.
and Marco Jeffers,
who ·operate a family
farm in Scipio and
Columbia Townships.
Left: Roy Holter displays the plaque he
received for taking first
places in all three cat·
egories of the hay
show staged by the
MSWCD at the Meigs
County Fair.
Submitted

held in Athens County on
Carpenter Road in Albany
with students from Meigs and
Southern
Vocational
Agricultural
Departments
participated in the contest.
High scoring individuals in
the Agricultural Judging contest were
Sarah Engle,.
Meigs. first place, $25; Chris

p~otoa

Runyon, Meigs, second
place, $15 ; Nathan Cook,
Southern, third place, $10.
The top scoring team was
from Meigs and included
Sarah Engle. Chris Runyon,
Kyle Hoover, and Ashley
Savage. They were presented
with a trophy.
High scoring individuals

LaPrise said. It will have a
slighi odor similar to burning
paper, but it is not a fire hazfrom PageA1
ard, leaves no residue, will
not damage food and is nonsmoke •n their buildings toxic.
should open windows for
Those who breathe the
ventilation and notify the per- smoke for an extended period
sonnel who are conducting .of time mi ght experi ence
the tests, the press release minor
throat
irritation.
states.
Woolpert
and according to the press
Gallipolis utility department release. Those with respiraUJ'
crews will be in the neighborry. vision or mobility probhoods during the tests.
lems
should contact the city
LaPrise said that he has
or LaPri se to arrange for
·contacted the Gallipolis
assistance if necessary.
Volunteer Fire Departinent
LaPrise can be reached at
and Gallia County 9- 1-1 to
(6 14)
58 1-8679.
The
alert them about the tests . .
Gallipolis
Muni cipal
Testin g th e sewer system
Building can be reached at
IS ·important
be cause 446-1789.
unwanted !lows into the
The sewer-system testing is
system mea n increased
part
of an overall energy savwater to treat at the city
sewage plant. That will. use mgs plan. Unde r the plap ,
up the plant's capacity and Ameresco projects $4.7 million 111 savings during the
increase costs.
The smoke used in the test- next 10 years. The savings
mg will be white or gray, detailed · in the plan will be

Sewer

on the field next year - in
fact, she challenga:l them to.
And her sparkling gold costume helped her make a statement about a recent controversy: She thin ks gold should
be included with the green
and white on Eastern unifomns. as it was intended in
the early days.
Tpe Class of '60 at Eastern
had entered their new high
school in the middle of their
sophomore year, and by the
time Bill Durst retired his
football helmet, he had set
records yet to be beat: 36 single tackles in one game, for
example. Martha had been a
member of the high school

marching band since she was
in the sixth grade at Chester
Elementary School. Her first
band memory is of marching
in the C~ester Memorial Day
Parade in May, 1955.
So it was appropriate. then,
that these two early Eagles
led their fellow alumni onto
the field again on a cool
October evening. The band
was made up of graduates
from the 1960's all the way to
the 21 st century, and they
sounded good, but for Bill
and Martha Durst, the sweetest sound must have been the
sound of the ir names on the
loudspeaker again .. . after all
these years.

number of doses of flu vaccine given to county residents last year. The health
department will not ·place
any re strictions on who may
receive the vaccine thi s
year.
.
County · tax dollars were
used to buy the vaccine. The
health tax levy in Gallia
County allows the health
department to provide flu
vaccine to county residents at
no out of pocket expense;
however, persons
with
Medicare Part B or the medical card are asked to present
their card at the time of service.
. If you need additional
information, call the nursing
section at 441-2950.

in the urban judging contest
were Gary Hess, Meigs,
first place, $25; Dakota
Arms, Meigs; second place,
$15 ; Sarah Lantz. Meigs,
third place, $10. The top
scoring team was from
Meigs and included Gary
Hess, Dakota Arms, Sarah
Lantz, and Steven Adkins.
They were also presented
with a trophy.
This year's big tree contest
winner was Linda Gillilan
who was presented a $50 savings bond., The winning
Weeping Willow had a total
point value of 227.45.
During the busin'ess meeting, Pauline Atkins was reelected to the board of supervisors and Edward ·Gibbs
was elected to fill a second
opening on the board, both
for three year terms beginning on Jari. I, 2006. Atkins
owns and operates a 300 acre
farm in Rutland and Scipio
Townships where, she raises
about 40 head of Angus
Hereford beef cattle and
grows hay and pasture forage. Gibbs as years of experience in planting and harvesting crops, and curr,ently
operates 30 I acres in the
Bashan area; nas 25 head of
beef cattle and grows hay
and pasture forage ..
Speaker for the banquet
. was Dr. Randy James of
Ohio State University,
author of the book "Why
Cows learn Dutch and other .
Secrets of Amish Farms ."
For over 25 years he has
been the Agricultural Agent
for Geauga County where
· he works daily with farm- .
ers in the fourth largest
Ami sh settlement in the
world. He shared the Amish
view of farm life, society,
.and values.

Sunday, October 9, 2005

GRADUATES IN TOP 5%

Larry E. Miller II
19 years. He is also a graduate
of Cedarvi lie College, the
Ohio School of Banking, and
the Bank Leadership Institute.
Ohio Valley Bank is a subsidiary of Ohio Valley Bane
Corp. The financial holding
company owns .Ohio Valley
Bank, with 16 offices in Ohio
and West Virginia, and Loan
Central, with five consumer
finance company offices in
Ohio. Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
common stock is traded on
the NAS'oAQ Stock Market
under the symbol OVBC.

Transmission feed
failure spurs outage
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO
GRANDE
Thousands of Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative consumers were without power
Thursday afternoon w~en the
transmission feed to two sub· ·
stations Was lost.
Circuits in piu-ts of Jackson ,
Gallia, Scioto and Lawrence
counties were affected by the
12:43 p.m. outage, caused
when BREC's power supplier·
experienced a failure on its
transmission line in the
Franklin Furnace area.
The transmission line fed
BREC's Echo Valley substation (1,160 consumers) and
the South Webster substation
(1,099 consumers).
co: op personnel found the
problem on the transmission
line - a broken wooden

· structure- while responding
to the outage. They notified
the power supplier pf location and extent of damage ,
but they could not work on
the line and had to await the
arrival of a repair crew from
American Electric Power. ·
BREC linemen opened
switches to back-feed part of
the outage area from the new
Milton substation south of .
Wellston, restoring power to
238 of the. over 2,259 residences and businesses without electricity after the transmission failure . Power to
another 596 consumers came
back on when BREC was
able to feed additional circuits
from a different direction.
Transmission service was
restored to Echo Valley substation at 3:25 p.m . and to
South Webster at 5: 15 p.m.

I~'S

1\lliiY
SIJIU•t..lJS
(Formerly of Gallia County)

BAS )fOVIm '1'0

200 w. 2Nn s·•·umn·
POIII~IlOY,

used to secure bonds that will
be sold to financial institutions. Money from' the bonds
will be used for the city .
improvements, and the savings will be used to repay the
bonds.

0(~'1'.

08

OPEN INC;
!IONU1\Y
I O'I'H 1\'1' I 0 1UI

WE LOOK FORWARD TO SERVING YOU!

"IT'S HABIT SEASON!"
Fellowship or Faith, the church usually found in
the Spring Valley Cinema 7 mo vie theater, is
launching a new worship series this Sunday called
"IT'S HABIT SEASON : A Looney Look At
Spiritual Maturity." During the exciting renovations

Fello•vsltip of Faith's Lead Pastor, Greg Scott
With Some Looney Friends
·
ror the un ~dlurch~d and the dechurched." says Pastor Scott. "We may,_ get the

Tweety and Granny.

" We are a church

Greg Scou, Founding and Lead Pastor of the two
year o ld, three-hundred person church, says ..The
Worship Experiences both fo r the adults and the
Kingdom Kids worship time ~i ll .kick off each week
with a funny skit involving the various Looney
Toon s characters to bring laughter and joy to the
kids and the kid in all of us." Over seventY of the
thrce· hundred regular attendees of Fellowship of
Faith are children and teenagers.

message across a little differe ntl y th an most
churches. but the message we arc teach ing i~ :-.Iill
straight from the Word of God. We're stilltelliTlg the
old, old story. We 're just telli ng it in a new. new
wa'y! To m:.~ke Chri:-.Li;mit y more access ible. we
incorporate a casual dress code, modern mu~ic,
multi-media and dmma prescnt mions. pop cu hurc ·
references and relevant messages that help people
cope with the real-life issues they face every day:·

But the skits wi II t~: l so have a .serious point as
well . Pastor Scott says "Each week, we'll highlight
one or more of the 'five habits necessary for spiritual
maturity : A Daily Quiet Time With God , Prayer,
Bible Stud y, Fellowship With orher Christians and
Serving in Mini stry."

Fellowship of Failh currently meets at t069

Looney Toons and the use of humor have been key
to Fellowship of Faith 's success in reaching people
without a church background as well as people who
.have been turned off by traditio,nal church settings.

Jackson Pik e in Gallipoli s. Their worship
experiences are offered at 8:30 and 10:15 a. m. each
Sunday and they ofrer childcare. children · ~ wor.-,hip
and discipl~ship concurrently with adu lt wur:-.hip.
Many · adult sma ll ·groups and studi es mee t
throughout the week . The church plans tu build on
their 42 acre property on Highway 35 in Rio Grande
in the Spring of 2006. For more information about
FCIIowship of f&lt;1ilh und their minislries, you can go
to their website at www. YGOD.org or call thei r
offices at 44 t -(YGOO) 9463.

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School events
Thursday, Oct. 13
RACINE - Send off for
Southern High School Golf
Team, I0 a.m., school parking lot. The team is competing in the state golf tournament at Lockbourne.

Clubs and
org·anizations
Tuesday, Oct. 11
RACINE
Bethany Dorcas Sonshine Circle will
be held at 7 p.m. at the
Bethany-Dorcas
United
Methodist Church. Silent
auction will be held. All area
women are invited to attend.
Thursday, Oct. 13
CHESTER - Wildwood
Garden Club will have . an

open meeting at I p.m. at ihe Jor the observance of the
Chester Counhouse with church \ history.
Frank Porter to speak on
TUPPERS PLAINS
native wildflowers. The pub- Homewming
will
be
lic is invited.
observed at St. Paul United
CHESTER ·- Shade River Methodist Church in Tuppers
Lodge 453 will hold its · Plains. Carry in dinner will
momhly stated meeting at be at 12:30 p.m. and there
7:30 p.m at the hall. will be special music at 2
Refreshments.
p.m. by Rogie Bissell and
"Ju st for Now".
MIDDLEPORT ·- Revival
services at Hope Baptist
Sunday, Oct. 9
Church in Middleport II a.m.
REEDSVILLE _ Just 4 and 6 p.m. Sunday, and 7
'Now wil be singing at 7 p.m. p.m. Monday, Tuesday and
at. tne Reedsv ille United Wednesday. Tim Stephens
will be the evangelist.
Methodist Church.
Monday, Oct. 10
RUTLAN D
REEDSVILLE - Revival
Homecoming at ~utland at Eden United Brethren
Church of Christ with war·
0 30
Church, 7 p.m. eac h evening,
.
sh1P semce at I : a.m., a with Rev. Charles Martindale
carry-in dinner at noon with
meat, Jrinks and tableware officiating. Special music
provided, and an afternoon · nightly.
service at 2 p.m. with music . ·
Thursday, Oct. 13
BIDWELL - Revtval serby Dayspring.
vices will be held 7 p.m. Oct.
ROCKSPRINGS - The
13, 14 and 15 at the Popar
Rocksprings United Methodi st
Ridge
. Free Will . Baptist
Church will host the southern
Church.
Harold Flanders of
oguspcl quartet. Believer 's
Buffa
lo,
W. Va. will be
, Voice of Columbus, at the I0
speakin g and there will be
a.m. service. Sunday school
for all ages at tlte church are special singing each night.
held at 9 a.m.
REEDSV!LLLE - Music
by "Just in Time," 7 p.m.,
Reedsville United Methodi st
Wednesday, Oct. 12
TUPPERS ' PLAINS Church.
POMEROY - Forest Run Dorothy M. Warner will
United Methodi st .Church observe her 89th birthday on
homecoming/rail y day with Oct. 12. Cards may be sent to
worship at 9 a.m. , Sunday her at P.O. Box 132. Tuppers
school at I0 a.m. and a carry- Plains , 45783 .
·
Thursday, Oct. 13
in dinner at 12: 30 p.m.
Special mu sic by Joann
CHESTER
- Thelma
Robinson and Roy Jenkins, Hayes will celebrate her 93rd
speaking by the Rev. Bob birthday on Oct. 13. Cards may
Davi s, director of · Jackson be sent to 48238 S.R . 248,
Area Ministries and a time Long Bottom, Ohio 45743 .

Church events.

Birthdays

Community
events
Monday, Oct. 10
VINTON - . River Valley
Junior High Athletic Boosters
meeting, 7:15 p.m., Vinton
Elementary School.
GALLIPOLIS - Bossard
Memori al Library closed fu r
Columbus Day.
VINTON - Meetin g of
· the board for Galli a Guarding
An gels, . 6 p.m. . Vinton
Bapti st Church, to disc uss the
community facilit y grant.
Anyone interested in this project is encouraged to attend.
Tuesday, Oct. II
CHESHIRE
Kyger
Creek Middle School PTO
meeting, 6 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Di strict' Library
Board of Trustees, 5 p.m..
Bossard Memorial Library.
GALLIPOLIS
Riverside Study Club meeting, II :30 a.m., Holiday Inn .
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Health Department
will provide free immunizalions at the health department, 499 Ja&lt;:ksun Pike, from
4 to 6 p.m. Children in need
of immunizations must be
accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian and bring a
current immunization record
with them.
Thursday, Oct. 13
GALLIPOLIS - Green
Elementary PTO Carnival,
5:30 p.m. The Red Dot for
Kids Committee will conduct
old-fashioned tractor and
wagon hayride tours of the
·new high school site on prop-

erty adjacent to Green 45685 . '
GALLIPOLIS -- Sa lli e
Elementary. The public "
invited for th e free tours.
Kirby will celehrate her 88th
Saturday, Oct. 15
birthday on Oct. 16. Cards
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia mav be ·sent to her at 959
Co unty
Genealogical Kemper Holtow Road.
Society. OGS Chapter will Ga llipolis. Ohio 45631 .
CROW N CITY - Miriam
have its First Families and
Neal will ce leDoughman
Civil War lineage induction
banquet at Grace United brate her 97th birthday on
Methodi st C hurch. Socia l Oct. I0. Cards may be SG nl to
ho ur at 6 p.m., dinner at 7 her at 201 Gallia St., Crown
p. m. Everyone welcome. City, Ohio 45623.
GALLIPOLIS - Bobby
Reservat ions mu st be made
Cottrell
will be celebrating
by Oct. 10. Guest speaker is
Shari Liule-Crcech, with her 93rd birthday on Oct. 14.
music by the French Colony Cards may be sent to her at
Briarwood
Road,
Chorus and Civil War arti- . 300
Ga
llipolis.
Ohio
45631.
fa cts displayed by Henry
CROWN CITY - · Hazel
Myers. Conta&lt;:t any board
will celebrate her 80th
White
member for reservatio ns.
birthday
on Oct. 17. Cards
Sunday, Oct. 16
may
.be
sent
to her at P.O.
PATRIOT - 150-year celebration of Bethesda United Box 94, Crown City, Ohio
Methodist Church at State 45623.
GALLIPOLJS - ,Gladys
Route 775 and Hannan Trace
Brucker
will be cele\lrating
Road . 2 p.m. Public welher
99th
birthday
on Oct. 24.
come .
(::ards may be sent to her at
204 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
E-mail community calenBIDWELL - M~ry C. dar items to kkelly@mydaiDobbins celebrated her 92nd lytribune.com.
Fax
birthday on Oct. 7. Cards announcements to 446may be se nt to he r at 1474 3008. Mail items to 825
Campaign Road, Bidwell , Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Ohio 45614 .
4563 J. Announcements may
CROWN CITY - Virginia also be .dropped off at the
" Katie" Tribune office.
Kathleen
Montgomery will celebrate
her 80th birthday on Oct. II .
Cards may be sent to her at
973 · Eblin Hollow Road.
Crown City, Ohio 45623.
THURMAN
Laura
Crews will celebrate her 94th
birthday on Oct. 12. Cards
may be sent to her at P.O.
Box 31, Thurman , Ohio

Card shower

• Instant M&amp;sS8!Jing • KHp your buddy IIJtl

Time has come to put a stop to schoolboys ~ daily brawl
DEAR ABBY: The bus stop
instill compassion and genfor the elementary school stuerosity in our dau ghter.
Furthermore, these comdents .in otir neighborhood is
ments can be especially hurtright in front of my driveway.
I rarely sit outside and wait for
ful to those who are physically unable to have more than
my children to get on the bus,
Dear
one child.
but the other day I did. Two
Abby
I would deeply appreciate
neighbor boys, fifth- and tl\indit if you could help me ·get the
graders, got into a fight on my
word out that dictating how
front lawn. I refuse to tolerate
lighting, so I went over and
many children others should
have is highly presumptuous,
broke it up . The next two
mornings, the same thing hap· However, because your and it's nobody's business
pened. My daughter told me daughter is a witness, the two but the parents '. Thanks a
they tight all the time, and it's of you should pay a call on bunch. Abby. - LORNA IN
been going on for over a year. the school principal and FULLERTON
I want to put a stop to it, explain what's going on.
DEAR LORNA: If you have
but I'm not sure how. I don't Some schools have zero tol- read my column for any length
want to have to sit there erance for bullying , and of time, I'm sure you are
ever~ morning and break up
because one boy is two years already aware that there is no
the fight, but is it t;ny duty to older, their fights could be end of personal questions and
"tattle" to the parents? . Both considered as such. Both sets rude observations that people
families have lived in the of parents shou!d _also be address to each other. I think
neighborhood for years, and notified. Both families seem that most people raise the topic
both have expressed verbally to have self- esteem issues- of children because they see it
that they never felt accepted. and the boys might be in need as a common denominator Both families also have the of counseling as well as an easy way to establish rapattitude thin their children are mediation.
port with strangers.
all,vays right and the rest of
DEAR ABBY: My husband
Because I have no statistics
the neighborhood is always and I have one child and are that either prove or di sprove
wrong. Bringing this up to nrt planning on havin g any the cliche that only children
either one could really cause more. While I have no prob- mu st be spoiled or self-cenan uproar.
lem with people asking when tered, I won 't comment about
I have spoken to both boys, we'll be having another one it. However, if someone told
but it clearly isn't helping. (this is the most common me lhat I wasn't a · "real "
Please advise me before question), I am offended mother because I didn' t have
someone gets hurt. - BUS- when some people - usually more than one child, I would
the parents of more than one reply that nowhere is it writSTOP MOM IN UTAH,
DEAR BUS-STOP MOM : - insi st on telling me that I ·ten that in order to be a real
mother'] have to have a litter.
Put a stop to this immediate- · "must" have a nother child.
Some people have even gone
Dear Abby is written by
ly. Not only could one of
so
far
as
to
tell
me
that
if
I
don't
Abigail
Van Buren, also
those boys be seriously
injured, but if it happens on . have another; my daughter will · known as jeanne Phillips, and
· your property, you could be group up to be self- centered was founded by her mother,
and sellish, or that I'm not a Pauline PhiUips. mite Dear
liable.
"'real"
mother until I've had Abby aJ www.DearAbby.com
You should have docuor P.O. Box 69440, Los
mented these lighting . inci- . more than one child.
We have worked hard to At~geles, CA 90069.
dents when they occurred.

2005-2006 Valley Artist Series
THE ODD COUPLE
October 14th, 15th, 16th

• 10 .mall addr""' with W1bmalll
• FREE Techn ical Suppa"
• Cut~om Star! Page · News, Wei.ther &amp; more!

(1:;:;-;:6X tas!Pr0
JU:# J3 mors

Friday B! Saturday 8 pm; Sunday 2:3D pm

, Fine and Performing Arts Center
University' of Rio Grande
caii74Q-245-7364
Tickets $10 at the door

Slgn Up Online! www.LocaiNel.com

740-446·4665

1-888-488-7265
Reliable \n\ctl\ctt&gt;.ccc&lt;;":&gt; S11'CC 1~94

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
Plabalea 's upport Group

,, ;

Sunday, October 9 from 2:0opm - 4:00 pm In the Hot:tir Medical O.nter French 500 Roo.!,. Guestspeaker
will be Nancy Childs, RN. BSN, CtC, Director,of Emptoyell Heatlhllnflkitlon Control at HMO, wh9 wilt discuss
Hu and pneumonia vaccines, and community Issues with lnfecUon COI\trol. Call (740) 441--8080 to reglater or
,x

for more information.

·

p!abetes Salf-Management C!aaaaa lGaiJipo!la)

.-

·

.- ,

October 111, 11 and 12 (Monday· Wednesday) from 4:00pm · 7:00pm In the, Hospttat's French sdo Room.
Call ~740) 446-5080 to register or for more information abOut these free·classes. Please
from your physician to attend.
·

httve a prescription

Parents Who Haye LQst a Child Syppqd:Grqup

Monday, October 10 at 7:00pm. New Lffe Lutheran Church on Jackson Pika In Oatl~~lll.
public. Facilitated by Nancy Childs and Jackie Kealley.
to thg mg@tjng For·mom information, tall Nancy

I

(evening), Jackie Keatley at (740j 441-2700, or the Lutheran Churoh at
Elbromvalg!a Syppprt Groyp

,

Tuesday, October 11 frorn5:30 pm until8:00 pm in the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference
Center Room A. Topics discussed include pain control. e~ercise. relaxation, fatigue, depression and
doctor/patient relationship. For more Information or to register, please call Mise! Ross -at the Holzer Medical
Therapy Center at (140) ~121 or toll-free at 1-800-316·5131. .
·

Mnt &amp;

Gnutf Lync;hem

Wednesday, October 12 from 11:30 am· 1:00 pm In the Hospital's Educatton &amp; Conference Center Rooms
AB. The Meet &amp; Greet will foeus on faith communilles and the Holzer Center for Cancer Care staff. and is
sponsored by the Hospital's Chaplaincy Services Department. To reserve a seat. please contact Pam
Hankinson at (740) 448-11155.
·
•
Hplllf' Hnplc;e Qlnotr wHb Frltnda ~ Ganti Cpyoiv .

Friday, October 14 from 8:00am - 9:00 am in the HMC Education and Conference Center. Holzer Medical
Center Invites all to an informal and ongoing community coffee promoting conversation between area leaders
In business, community service, education, government and private enterprise. Sponsored by the HMC
Chaplaincy Services Department For more _infonnation, pleaso call (740) 446-5053 .

and you can see they have gone all out for this
special October worship series. The room has been

Th e pastor says pop culture references like

Monday, Oct. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m.,Meigs County
C,ourthouse.
Tuesday, Oct. 11
POMEROY . Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 · p.m.,
town hall.
· ·
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Elections, ·
8:30 a.m., at oftlce.
Wednesday, Oct. 12
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m ., conference room of
Meigs
County
Health
Department.
RUTlAND
Rutland
Village Council will meet at
6:30p.m. on council chambers.

Gallia County calendar

Cgmmynlty Cpffae

One look a1 their new transitional worship center

Porky Pig. Bugs Bunny, Sylvester,

Publ_
ic meetings

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Thursday, October 13 at 6:00pm at the Golden Corral in Gallipolis. For more information, call locally at
(740)448-5074 or iot~lree ai1-80D-II00-41i50.

of Spring Valley Cinema, Fellowship of Faith is
tcmp.orari ty renting the old CVS building next to
Foodtand at 1069 Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.

tra nsformed into the town of "Loonipolis."
decora ted with cartoon element s like Elmer 's
Hunting LOOge, Yosemite Sam''s Pirate Ship, caslles.
trees. parks and more. In addition .. you can pose for
a family picture with Elmer.

AROUND TOWN

Meigs County calendar ·

OVB's MILLER
GALLIPOLIS Ohio
Valley Bank Executive Vice
Pre~ident Larry E. Miller II
has graduated . the Graduate
School of Banking at the
University of WisconsinMadison with high honors.
High honors were bestowed
upon his graduation for placing in the top 5 percent of the
2005 graduating class.
"Achieving top 5 percent in
a class made up of the industry's experts is no small task.
We at Ohio Valley Bank are
extrem.ely proud of Larry's
accomplishment, an endeavor that has positioned him at
the top of his field," commented OVB President and
. Chief Executive Officer
Jeffrey E. Smith.
The Graduate School of
Banking is widely recogniled ·
as the · nation 's leading
advanced bank management
school. It counts more than
17,000 bankers and bank regulatory officials as alumni.
These alumni occupy positions of leadership in banks
of all sizes and in all areas of
the United States and in several other countries.
Miller has been part of the
Ohio Valley Bank family for

6unbap ltmtl·&amp;tntinel

PageA3

-···-·-

•

Btapl[ltoN Sympptlum
Friday, October 14 from 8:00am

- 4:30pm in the HMC Education &amp; Conference Center. A variety of
respiratory related topics will be discussed.· This year's Symposium registration is full, but the date has been
set for next year's Respriatllf)l Symposium-. October 27. 2006. Call Sandy Moore at (740) 446·5919 for
more Information;

·

.sanjor Cjtizens Pinner at' Holzer 's Assjsted Uy!nq Community
Friday, OctOber 14·"a"t 4 :30pm. Holzer's Assisted living C'6mmunity in Ga llipolis will sponsor a special
'
.
dinne( for any senior who is interested. Please meet at the Gallia County Resource Center on Route 160 in
Gallipolis at 4:00pm . Transportation will be provided to the Holzer Ce nter for Cancer Care, where a tour will
be conducted before a complimentary dinner at Holzer' s A ssisted Living Community an 'sriarwood Dri~Je in

Gallipolis. For more information. please-call Holzer's Assisted Living Com,l'{lunily at (7401441-9633 or the
Ga~ia G.ounty S~~ior R~~6urce Center at l740) 446·7000.
Tuooers Plajns Harvestfast

Saturday, October 15 from 10:00 am-2:00pm at the Amazing Grace Community Church in Tuppers Plains.
The Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Department will be providing non-fasting
cholesterol and glucose , blood pressure and bone. density screenings.

[A;e;yiCowu~aidii8bi!tT,cppaaitihle!in1tt"iwvth1co;-;sii:uiiiff;;ier;rs~f'r.ro);mniiniUuiTmitbiiiniee:SssS:.~piiaiiiln~.i
bumlng and other discomforts in the feet , legs and hands?
~olzer

Med1ca1 Therapy Center is here to help with the

Neuropathy Care Program
In a clinical study, 100% of patients with 1he same d1scoml orts
witnessed sig'nificant imp rovementS in sensation.
740 44&amp;-5121 or toll-free at 1-800-816-5131

�OPINION

iunba~ ltmet·ientinel ~

VVho~
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
· (740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
0

Jim Freeland

Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin .Kelly
Managing Editor

Leu en to I he editor ar~ welcome. Thev should he less than
300 wonls. All letters are subject to editing and must .be

signed · and include address and telephone numb" No
lmsigne&lt;l lellers will be published Letters should be In good

taste, addressing issu.es, not personalities,

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of2005. There are
83 days left in the. year.
Today's Highlight in Hi story: On Oct. 9, 1888, the public
was first admitted to the Washington Monument.
On this date: In 1635, religious dissident Roger Williams
was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
In 170 I, the Collegiate School of Connecticut - later Yale
University - was chartered.
In 1776, a group of Spanish missionaries settled in presentday San Francisco.
In 1930, Laura Ingalls became the first woman to fly across
the United States as she completed a nine-stop journey from
Roosevelt Field, N.Y., to Glendale, Calif.
·
In 1936, the titst generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam
began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles.
In 1958, Pope Pius the XII died. (He was succeeded by
Pope John XXIII.)
In 1962, Uganda won autonomy from British rule.
In 1967, Latin American guerrilla leader Che Guevara
was executed ·while attempting to incite revolution · in
Bolivia.
In 1975, Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1985, the hijackers of the Achille Lauro cruise liner sur- ·
rendered after the ship arrived in Port Said, Egypt.
Ten years ago: ~aboteurs pulled 29 spikes from a stretch of
railroad track, causing an Amtrak train to derail in Arizona;
one person was killed and about I00 were injured. An earthquake with a magnitude of 7.6 shook the west coast of .
Mexico, killing 51 people. Americans ' Edward B. Lewis and
Eric F. Wieschaus and German .Christiane Nuesslein-Volharo
won the Nobel Prize for medicine for studies of how genes
control early embryo development.
Five years ago: Arvid Carlsson of Sweden, and Americans
Paul Greengard and Eric Kandel won the Nobel Prize in medicine:
One year ago: A tour bus from the Chicago area !lipped in
Arkansas, killing 15 people headed to a Mississippi casino.
Afghanistan's first direct presidential election began.
Australia's Prime Minister John Howard won a historic fourth
tenn in national elections.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Fyvush Finkel is 83 . Sen. Trent .
Lott, R-Miss., is 64. Singer Jackson Browne is 57. Actor Gary
Frank is 55. Actor Richard Chaves is 54. Actor Robert Wuhl
is 54. Actress-TV personality Sharon Osbourne is 53. Actor
Tony Shalhoub is 52. Actor Scott Bakula is 51 . Musician
James Fearnley (The Pogues) is 5t: Actor John O'Hurleyis
51. Actor Michael Pare is 46. Rock singer-musician Kurt
Neumann (The BoDeans) is 44. Country singer Gary Bennett
is 41. Singer P.J . Harvey is 36. Country singer Tommy Shane
· Steiner is 32. Actor Steve Bums is 32. Sean Lennon is 30. .
Actor Randy Spelling·is 27. Actor Brandon Routh is 26. Actor
Zachery Ty Bryan is 24. Actor Tyler James Williams
("Everybody Hates Chris") is 13.
ThtJugbt for Today: "The world is divided into people who
think they are right." -. Anonymous.

LETTERS TO .THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be iess
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters
of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be
accepted for publication.

.~unba!' m:tmes -~enttnel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main concern in all stories is to b&amp;
accurate. If you knoW of an error in a
story. ~ease call one of our newsrooms.

Our main numbers are:
ll:nbunt • Gallipolis, OH

(7401 446-2342
Sen tinel• P·omeroy, OH
(740) 992·2155
lriJudrr • Pt Pleasant, WV
(3041 675-1333
Our webSite&amp; are:
ttnbunr • Gallipolis, OH

www.mydallytrlbune.com
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www.mydallysentlnel.com
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www.mydallyreglller.com

Our e-mail addresm are:
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newaCimydallyreglater.com
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

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Poslmaster: Send address corrections to the Gallipolis Daily
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Gallipolis, OH ~5631 .

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Supreme Court nominee
Hamel Miers reminds me of
June Cleaver, who birthed
Beaver and Wally in 1960's
sitcom land. Standing next
to President Bush, I kept
envisioning Harriet holding
a tray of cookies for the
President ani! any Senator
who might want one.
Now I realize this portray·
al of Ms. Miers is immature
and possibly offensive to
pqople Who resent this kind
of foolishness when profes·
sional women are involved.
But trust me, my daydream
about Harriet Miers is not
nearly as offensive as what
is going on in some media
precincts. Many conservative pundits don't like
Harriet because she's not
"right" enough. And some
· lefties believe she's not qualitied to serve her country
because she's a ·practicing
Christian.
Writing in t~e
ec ar temple that is Th
ew York
Times, cq.l!r_mn · Maureen
Dowd states: ' [President
Bush] is asking for a triple
· leap of faith. He has faith in
Ms. Miers as his lawyer and
as a woman who shares his

Sunday, October 9,

Sunday, October 9,

2005

Obituaries

looking·out for the Christians?
Bill
O'Reilly

faith. And we're expected to
have faith in his f~ith and her
faith that cou.ld change the
balance of the court and .
affect women's rights for the
next generation."
Of course Ms. Dowd worships at the altar of Roe v.
Wade, and any person who
might be pro-life is automatically unsullable in her
mind to hold a decision·
making position. But the
truth is, Harriet Miers has
not publicly stated her posi'
tion on abortion and probably will never do so. Thus,
Ms. Dowd is objecting to
Ms. Miers because she
attends an .evangelical
Christian church in Texas,
and we can't have those
kinds of people on the
Court, can we?
Some liberal journalisls

and politicians are clearly
saying
conservative
Christians need not apply to
serve their country. This, of
course, is outrageous and
unconstitutional. If that kind
of bias was directed at any
other American group, there
would . be hell to pay. But
Christians are. fair game for
media scorn, mockery, and
dismissal.
A recent Gallup survey
puts. the
number of
Americans who call themselve s Christians at 84% ,
and that kind of majority is
dangerous to the goals of the
secular-progressive movement. The main opposition
to things like· gay marriage,
. euthanasia, legalized drugs
and all kinds of abortion on
demand for any girl or
woman are faith-based peopte who form judgments
about behavior and object to
a society that does not. If
you eliminate people of faith
from positions of power in
the USA, well, heHo
Holland.
It is worth ,noting that
· according to the American
Society of Newspaper
Editors, journalists are

She was born Jan . 3, 192 f , in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Birchfield of Gallipolis Ferry, Elizr1beth (Ken) Sperry of
Joseph and Norma Swatzel Chapman.
Ci ncinnati , Tammy Stewart of Templeton. Te,as; Arvilla
She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School. She was a (Ron) Nickell of Cincinnati. Tonya (Buddy) Birtchcr, James
Celestine North, 88, of
·homemaker.
Melvin Stewart and Bradley Stewart. al l of Gallipoli s; 16
Gallipolis, went to be with the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by her husband . · grandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren; . IO brothers and sisLord on Friday, Oct. 7, 2005,
Daniel James Davidson, in 1976; a grandson, Timothy Eugene · ters , Betty Queen of Gallipoli .,, John Jackson Hum of
at her residence.
Davidson; a sister, June Chapman; and a son-in-law, William Jacksonville, Fla ., Clyde Hum Jr. of Gall ipoli s. Emily
She was born Sept. 15,
(Harold) Stewart, Mary (James) Speaks and Dorothy -(Bori s)
Pettit.
191 7. daughter of the late
She is survived by a daughter, Nancy Pettit of Middleport; a Jones, all of Cincinnati. Diana (James I Rubenstahl of North
Charles and Odna Sergent
grandson, Jeffery Davidson of Louisville, Ky.; great-grand- Carolina, Richard (Peggy) Hunt and Willi:un (Margaret) Hunt
Duncan.
children,
Rachael ano Robert Connor of Colu!u s, Carolyn all of Ci ncinnati.
She attended the First
Lynn Davidson, Lucas, Timothy Daniel
avidson .of
Funeral serv ices will be at I p.m. Tuesday. Oct. I I. 2005 , at
Church of God' at Gallipolis.
Columbu s, and Dakota Matthew Bennet of sf. enton, Fla.: the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial will follo w in
, Celestine is survived by two
great-great-grandchildren; Ashley Delan Davi son, Miriah Old Mercerv ille Cemetery. Friends may call al the funera l
sons, Larry North of
Danielle Davidson and Callie Nicole Connor o Columbus; a home 5-7 p.m. Monday. To send cvndolences please visit
" Gallipolis, and David North
brother and sister-in-law, Eugene and Audrey Chapman of www.timeformemory.com/whw.
of Gallipolis; three daughters,
Columbus; and a sister-in-law, Lavada Wheeler of Pomeroy.
Carol Sue (David) Stahl of
Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Monday, Oct. I0. 2005, at
Celestine North
Columbus, Sonja (Eddie)
Lee
Rocksprings
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m.
Conner of Morgantown,
Oct. 9, 2005, at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher
Kevin Lee Williams 49, of Vinton went 10 be with the Lortl
W.Va., and Tanya (Mike) Fulks of Gallipolis; 12 grandchil - Sunday,
Funeral
Home
.
on Friday, Oct. 7, 2005 at Pleasant Valley Hospi tal in Point
dren, David W. North Jr. of Waco, Texas, Pam (Bruce)
On-line condolences may be sent to www.tisherfuneral- Pleasant. W.Va.
Blackston of Pomeroy, Crystal North, Amanda (Richard) homes.com.
·
Cooper of Roanoke, Va., Lorri (Steve) Palterson of Gallipolis,
He was born March 16, 1956 in Gallipolis, Ohio .
Larry North II of Steamboat S·prings, Colo., Celestina (Mark)
Kevin was in the Air Force in Goldsboro, N.C. He worked
as an electrician and was employed by Wai -Mart in Jackson,
Combs of Morgantown, W.Va., Elizabeth (Julian) Thomas of
· Ohio. He attended End of time Harvest Church in Jackson .
Morgantown , W.Va., Samuel (Christy) Stahl ofColumbus,
He was preceded in dt:ath by hi s father Leonard William s;
Benjamin (Shelia) Stahl of Alabama, Christopher (Johnni)
William J. Moore, 72, of Crown City, died Friday, Oct. 7,
both sets of grandparents ; and aunts and uncles.
Fulks of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Jonathan Fulks of 2005, at St. Mary's Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife, Denise Williams; daughter,
Gallipolis: and eight great-grandchildren:
He was born July 25, 1933; in Ironton, son of the' late
Christiana (Joey) Likens of Henderson, W.Va.; sons, Kevin M. '
She is al so survived. by a brother, Talmadge Duncan of Ferman William Moore and Louise Christine Martin Moore.
Cummings. Ga.; two nieces, Ann ·Beaver of Winfield, W.Va. ,
He was a retired employee of the U.S. Army Corps of Williams of Gallipoli s, James and Jetf Williams of Gallipoli s
and Sally (Eddie) Stout of Hilliard; and a nephew, Phillip Engineers. He was a member of BPOE No. 177 and was a and Cordell and Nicky Williams of Seaman , Ohio: stepchil dren, Jason (Kristen) Miller of Lexington, Ky., and Tonya
Duncan of Cummings, Ga.
U.S. Marine Corps veteran of the Korean War.
She was preceded in death by her beloved husband,
In addition to hi s parents, he was preceded in death by an Miller of Bedford Ky.; mother, Edilh (Bill) Basham of Vinton,
Ohio; sister Octavia (Gale) McGuire of Jackson; brother.
Woodrow North, who passed away on Oct. 16, 2001; and her infant daughter.
sister, Dreama Parrish, on Nov. 7, 2001.
·
He is survived by his wife , Jeanette Rose Moore of Crown Keith (Jodi) Williams of Vinton; half-sister and brother
Services will be 1 p.m. Monoay, Oct 10, 2005, with the. City; three daughters and sons-in-law, Christie and Mack Brandy and Charlie Williams of Jackson; grandchildren.
.
.
Rev: Mark Combs officiating, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Anderson of Ironton, Carla and Rich Blankenship of Ironton, Bailey, Jordan , Levi and Katlyn.
Services
will
be
11
a.m
.
Tuesday,
Oct.
11.
2005.
m
the
Home Wetherholt Chapel, 420 First Ave.• Gallipolis. Burial and Chana and John Moritz of Gallipolis; and 10 grandchil-.
will follow in the Pine Street Cemetery at Gallipolis. Friends dren; Autumn McFann, Brigham Anderson, Brooke Vass, Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with the Rev. Dr.
may call at the funeral home from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9, Layla Bea, 'Austin Thomas, Joel Blankenship, Emma David T. Rahamut officiating. Burial will follow in Reynolds
Blankenship, Sydnie Moritz, Madison Moritz and Makenzie Cemetery in Addison, Ohio. Friends may call on Monday
.
2005.
Oct. 10, 2005 from 5-8 p.m. at the funeral home . Online copCondolences may be e-mailed to mccoymoore@charter.net Moritz.
He is also survived by two brothers, James E. Moore of dolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com .
or www.timeformemory.com.
Florida, and Richard L Moore of Cincinnati; two sisters,
Nancy Neal of Ironton, and Karen Coburn of Ironton; and his
mother-in-law, Bea Rose of Iron ron and her late husband, Carl
E. Rose.
Paul Basim Jr., 52, of Long Bottom, died Wednesday, Oct.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Monday, Oct. 10, 2005, at
5, 2005, at the Ohio State University Hospital in Columbus.
the Woodland Cemetery in Ironton, with the Rev. Steve
He was born Jan. 21, 1953, in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of the Harvey officiating. Friends may call at the Tracy Brammer
late Paul Sr. and Opal Wyers Basim.
Funeral H,ome, 518 S. Sixth St.,. Ironton, from 6 to 9 p.m.
John T. Hoff, 39, Gallipolis, died Friday, Sept. 30, 2005 .
1
He is survived by a brother, George Basim; four sisters, Sunday, Oct. 9,2005.
Arrangements will be announced at a later date by the Willi's
Donna Rupe, Patty Tabler, Bonnie Battin and Nora Williams;
Funeral Home .
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides hi s parents, he was preceded in death by three sisters, Marlene, Bertha Ann and Martha Marie.
Audrey Helen Hunt Stewart, 66, of Gallipolis died Friday,
Services will be I p.m. Monday, Oct. 10, 2005, at the
Elect
Oct.
7, ~005, at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati.
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, with Robert
She was born April 26, 1939, in Gallia County, she was the
Niley officiating. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory
daughter
of the late Clyde and Mabel Glover Hunt.
Gardens at Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home
Audrey
wa~ a homemaker and did hosuekeeping for severfrom 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9, 2005.
al families.
Green Township Trustee
In ·addition to her parents, she was preceded by her tirst husband, Calvin Eugene Stewart, who she married in 1955 and
Full time tru~1ee
who preceded her in 1967. Also preceding her were a brother,
Lorena Davidson, . 84, of Middleport, passed away · Jaines Franklin Glover:
Thursday, Oct. 6, 2005, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
She is survived by her hl!sband, Melvin Kirby of Gallipolis, ·
Paid for by the Candidate; 5527.Sl. Rl. 58B, Gallipoli~. OH 45631
·
who she married in 1969; seven children, Helen (Don)
Pleasant, W.Va.

Kevin

Paul Basim Jr.

Deaths

JohnT. Hoff

CLOONEY
SHOULD HAVE
HAD THAT
PART.

Audrey Helen Hunt Stewart

Jack Swain

Lorena DaVidson

Local Briefs
READERS'
informed choice conie elec-.
Get candidate tion
time.
cStephen E. Popper
input on issues . Gallipolis

Dear Editor:
To my knowledge, there
will be no opportunity to
"meet the candidates" running for the school boards.
Two years ago, both city and
local candidates had the
opportunity to talk about
how they were going to
make
a
difference.
Unfortunately;.,..this event,
held at the University of Rio
Grande, was poorly auended
by the community.
· This year, there are
tremendous stakes involved
with the school bond issue
being part o( the election in
November. I support the
bond, but I would like to
hear the candidates address
this issue; to include why
should individuals want to ·
pay higher taxes, especially
if they have no children in
the system. How are candidates going to take advantage of these new facilities
(if it passes) and what else
are lhey going to do to better
educate our children? New
facilities are important, but it
is not the only thing that drives excellence in education.
What will they do if the
bond does not pass?
It would be a great community service for some
organization to sponsor a
"city/county meeting" to get
·to know the school board
candidates. Have them present their "platform" and
then answer a number of
questions from the community and/or organization.
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
would be a good · choice to
host such an event being that
they are community oriented. They could also publish
the candidates' views from
this forum to ensure as many
people as possible had the
opportunity to know. what is
going on and to roake an

Education is
first priority
Dear Editor:
The children of Gallia
County deserve no less than
any other child in the state of
Ohio.
I
attended
Southwestern from 1961 to
1967 and what I saw as a
student was disgracefuL
We were using text books
outdated and were told the
school board didn't have.
money for new books but
they had money for polikcs.
The once in a lifetime
opportunity. This county had
that in the 1950s. They
chose to build schools with
flat roofs that didn' t serve
the purpose for 40 years:
Secondly, they ·purchased
excessive amounts of land
for the schools that were
never utilized efticently.
We as taxpayers are now
providing school student
transportation I am sure is
against state law because of
the length of time some students spend in transit. Again
at the students' expense and
sacritice.
Oallipolis graduated 157
in 2005 but needs almost
I00 acres to build a new
schooL I say it is time to take
loc'!ll politics out of our
school system and stop
using the children.
The school buildings are
in need of repair and I am
sure the equipment is some·
what outdated, but we as
taxpayers are burdened to
escessive extents.
My solution to the school
and education program is
bring in the state school
board and we wi II get some
state assisiance. The buildmg will be designed with
state approval and the sys-

Water meter
replacement
to resume

VIEWS

tem would be educationaly Meigs County residents.
efficent.
Now suddenly this facility is
. The past 40 years has no longer fit for use, even
taught me what to expect in . though I am sure there are
the future and it hasn 't lied. other agencies who would
'
Almost 100 acres to build a be interested in it.
I have nothing against
school that graduates 157
O'Bleness Hospital, but I do
students.
feel that if they want to operMichael Smith
ate in Meigs County, that
BUlwell
they should pay for building
the1r own hospital just as
they did in Athens County.
Holzer and Pleasant Valley
have expanded into· several
counties and they always
Dear Editor:
·seem to provide lheir own
Certainly there can be lit- tinancing for construction of
tle doubt about our real need their facilities .
for new schools and contin.Meigs County apparently
ued interest in their well- cannot alford to pay for the
being. There may have been operation of the sheriff's
mistakes made and many department and other county
guilty of not devoting otfices. How qtn they afford
enough time to school to ·pay for a hospital which
needs; b.ut, not to vote for will never be used to the
the bond issues would be a extent that it would be selfreal mistake.
sufficient? Why not use the ·
It may mean real sacrifice facilities we already have?
for many, .but sacritice has
It would also appear that
been a large part of the commissioners feel they
.America's history. Our stu· can establish and operate a 9dents need us. We can' t "let 1-1 system for an additional
them Oown!"
$50,000 or $60,000 additional a year. I feel that 9-1-1 is
Bobbie Holzer.
Gallipolis !;J
ne.eded in the county, but I
also feel that if all you are
going to do is change the
phone number we call and
the dispatcher who answers
the phone. then leave it
alone. If yoll can't do it right
Dear EditoF:
with an updated modem sysJ was really surprised tem, then leave it alone.
when I read in the paper that
The commissioners have
the
Meigs
Courtly always said that they want
Commissioners have decid- the citizens of Meigs County
ed that they have enough to decide on everything. Let
money to pay .for bonds to the Meigs County voters
build a new hospital. I would decide if they want to spend
think that the first priority county money for a hospital
would be to provide funds to be operated by 0 ' Bleness
for law enforcement for the or anyone else for that matter.
protection of Meigs county
Quit saving the sales tax
residents.
idea for a hospital which
The commissioners were doesn't exist and use it for a
certainly very anxious to get modem 9- 1-1 system which
the old Veterans Memorial woul~ benctit all of Meigs
Hospilal away from Holzer county.
even though they were still
l'aulilre Hojjma11
using it for other services for . Middleport

bread, dessert and drinks for
a small fee. Serving starts at 4
p,m. The auction will follow
at 5 p.m. Entertainment will
be provided after the auction.
For information or to
donate an item for the auction, contact Robin Caudill at
(740) 245-5919.

GALLIPOLIS
Ameresco Energy Inc . will
re sume replacing water
meters in Gallipoli s on
Monday.
Streets scheduled \to be
affected the week of Oct. I0
are . Hedgewood, Oakwood,
Highpoint, Glendale, Henkle,
RIO GRANQE - Gallia- .
Plum , Elm, Chillicotl)e, Vinton Educational Service
Texas, Burkhart, Edgemont, Center Governing Board's
Holcomb and. Evans Heights. regular monthly meeting is
Workers will knock on · Wednesday, Oct. 19 at 5 p.m.
each door prior to beginning in Room 131 of Wood Hall
work, and leave a tag on the on the campus of the
door when they are finished. University of Rio Grande/Rio
The interuption to water. ser- Grande Community College. ,
vice 'is ex pected to take an
hour or less for each residence.

Board meeting
. slated Oct. 19 ·

Our students
need our help ·

Coat drive
set at church

Revival begins
tonight

KANAUGA - A revival
begin s tonight at 6 p.m. at
Silver Memorial Church,
PATRIOT - The congre- Rand Avenue, and runs each
gation at Salem Baptist succeeding night until Oct.
Church, 4423 Nebo Road , is 15 at 7 p.m.
inviting the public to a coat
Preaching 1s by the·
drive on Saturday, Oct. 22 , Johnson brothers, Donnie,
from 9 a.m. until noon .
Darrell and Truman.
Invite a friend or a fami .ly
in need of a winter coat. For
information, contact Pastor
Phil Taylor at (740) 379. 2410.
MARIETTA - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODOT) District 10 Deputy
Director George M. Collins
announced Friday that two
RODNEY - An auction official public hearings have
and bean dinner will be held be~n scheduled to present
discuss
upcoming
at Rodney United Methodist and
Church Community Center changes to the state trans(old Rodney school building) portation system.
The changes result from
on Saturday. Oct. 22. at 4
p.m. to rai se funds to help the permanent closure of porwith the building's remodel- tions of existing State Routes
124 and 144 in the
ing and operating expenses.
The building is currently Hockingport area. The tirst .
used as a comm unity center meeting is slated for Tuesday,
and youth center for the sur- at Coolville Elementary
School located just off U.S.
rounding area.
There will be beans, com- 50. The meeting will begin

· ODOT to hold
public hearings

.Let voters

make decision

..

Benefit auction,
bean dinner set

with a presentation from
ODOT ofticials at 6:30 p.m.
The second meeting will be
held Wednesday at Little
Hocking School, also located
just off of U.S. 50. ,The meeting will begin with a presentation at 6:30 p.m. The purpose of the hearings is to pre~
sent the official changes to
the state transportation system. Since portions of State
Routes 124 and 144 will be
abandoned as part of the '
long-term plan for the area,
ownership of some sections
of these routes and alternative routes will be altered.
ODOT approached the
public in late March with preliminary alternatives to
restoring the highway system
in the vicinity. A second pub·
lie meeting· was held in June
to present refined plans and
to answer property-specific
questions. Since that· time,
public comment has been
received and considered and
environmental and geotechnical studies have· continued.
The real estate acquisition
process will be under way
throughout the winter and
early spring.

Watershed tour
planned
POMEROY
- Annual
Leading Creek Watershed
Tour and public oftlcials tour
will take place at 10 a.m. on
Oct. 22. Vehicles will leave
from [~e Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
oftice , 33101 Hiland Road,
Pomeroy.
The tour is free , open to the
public and includes a ccimplmentary lunc Stop on the tour
will include sites of hi storical
interest , natural beauty and
environmental restoration.
Children will enjoy a demonstration of fish and bugs in
Leading Creek. Those who
wish to participate should
RSVP ,in advance at 9924282.

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. . DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND THIS OFFER HAS HEEN
EXTENDED THROUGH FRIDAY OCT. 14TH

ADVANCED HEARING CENTER
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(740) 441 -1 971 or (800) 4a4-4194
Don't miss this opportunity to make a
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.

Williams

William J. Moore

THE GUY PLAYING MURROW
WASN'T HANDSOME ENOUGH
TO &amp;E A NEWS ANCHOR-

GOOD LUCK

'

Celestine·North

much less "Christian" than
the country as a whole. A
1997 study says 59% of.
newspaper people call ·
them selves Catholic or
Protestant and 20% say
they don 't believe in God at
all. According to Gallup,
just 9% of I he American
population is atheist or
agnostic.
Mark my words, in the
weeks to come you will
hear all kinds a·nti-Chri stian'
stuff in the media when
Harriet Miers is being discussed. Some of it will be
subtle, bu.t not all. This is a
clip-and-save moment. The
secular media knows Ms .'
. Miers will ' be confirmed to
the Supreme Court, · but.
they will get their antiChristian digs in during the
process.
As a Christian, · I have
already forgiven my misguided peers for what they
will inevitably . do. Also,
after 12 years of Catholic
school, I know a thing or
two about demons. The
demonization of Harriet
Miers will be very instructive to watch. And she looks
like such a nice woman.

GOODNIGHT

.~unb&lt;l!' 1!rimrs -~rnlinrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2005

_______ ____

----.,.

..

�6unba~ t:tmes ·itntiuel

OHIO

.No foul play suspected in death
STAFF REPORT
. -NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY - Gallia
County sheriff's investigators
·are awaiting autopsy results
and completion of their
investigation before placing
the cause of death for a
Centenary-area man.
Foul play· is not suspected
in the death of John T. Hoff.
39, . who was located in a
wooded area abou t a halfmile from where he Iived
along Ohio 141 , past Graham

School Road. said sheri l'f's
Detective Chad Wallace.
Hoff. who lived alone in a
mobOc home. was found by
neighbors shortly before 5
p.m. Wednesday. Neighbors
had not seen him in several
days. and cbncerned about his
we lfare, went searching the
area for him, Wallace said.
anq . Dr.
Investigators
Daniel Whiteley, Gallia
County coron er, believe Hoff
died within I0 days before he
was found.

The body was sent to
Dayton for an autopsy,
Wallace said.
··we don't suspect any foul
play, but we are following
standard operating procedure
with a full investigation,"
Wallace said. "Evidence has
been collected, and a search
of his residence has not
revealed anything suspi-

.•

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Local Stocks

For the Record
Sheriff's Office

City Police

CHESHIRE - The theft of
about 600 feet of telephone
cable/wire from poles at the
water tower on Gravel Hill
Road was reported to the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Department by SBC.
The theft is believed to
have occurred sometime
•
••
CIOUS.
early Thursday. It left about
Willis Funeral Home will 275 customers without telebe handling arrangements _for phone service, SBC said.
The ·incident is under
Hoff.
investigation.
Martin L. Spangler, ~818
Jessie. Creek Road, Cheshire,
informed deputies that 60
feet of electrical aluminum
wire was removed from an
outside electric meter box on
his
property sometime
between 12:30 and 9 a.m.
Wednesday.
Placed in jail Friday by
deputies was Joseph · W.
.Lewis, 19, 897 Lewis Road,
GallipoJ.is, for obstructing
official business, prohibitions
under 21 and failure to
appear-bail.
Lodged in jail Thursday by
. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highwa&gt;' Patrol were
Travis G. Th1vener, 26, 32
Hubbard Ave., Kanauga, for
domestic violence and failure
to appfllltbail, .and· Chad R.
Wise, 26':1 Middleport, for
failure to appear-bail.

Parents help run Islamic school

CLEVELAND (AP) - An
Islamic day school has found
"'JUIJ'!IiiJi' '*{li''
a way to rise above suspicions cast on it when its volunteer administrator was
indicted on federal charges of
money laundering.
"There was only one way
to do it," Principal Loretta
Abbasi said. "Open the
doors. Empower the parents
to run their school. And reach
out to the community and put
a human face on Islam."
School olficials say parents
look to Al-lhsan School of
Excellence, which began its
fifth year of classes last month
for 84 students, to provide
both a greater understanding
of their faith and traditional
academics from kinderganen
through seventh grade.
Boys and girls at the
school, some of whom wear
head coverings, leave their
classrooms each day to enter
the prayer hall when they hear
the Athan, the call to prayer.
"Our parents wan( their
children 'to learn the Athan
and hear the Athan so it is
second nature to them.:
Abbm;i sai~
'
The
. chool's
former
adminislrat r, Abrar' Haque,·
resigned in February following an FBI.investigalion, He
was indicted in April on
AP Photo/Tho Plain Deater, Lynn tochay
charges connected to hi s Lena Zeniddin; 5, carefully writes · Asslaamu 1\lekum in her
accounting business.
notebook Sept. 13, in her kindergarten class at Al-lhsan
Althou~h the indictment did School of Excellence, Cleveland's only Islamic day school. ·
not ment1on the school. par- School officials say parents look to the school, which began
ents knew they might be its fifth year of'classes"last month for 84' stt:Jdents, to provide
looked at with suspicion. So · both a greater understanding of their faith and traditional acathey created a new board to demics from kindergarten through seventh grade.
run the organization and began . · •· , . •.
.
. .. . ... . . _ .. . ~•. reaching out to neighbors.
wide,
said
Karen
Keyworth,
But many Muslim schools
1
Al-lhsan started sponsoring national director of education face prejudice, Keyworth saiq.
opeh houses and other events at the Islamic School League
"After 9/11, it became clear
in its west side neighborhood, of America.
that our schools have a critiincluding a health and fitness ·
Asma Yazici of the cal role in helping Americans
day. Administrators sought Cleveland suburb of Parma . understand Islam," she said.
advice from other religious · Heights said she sends her
Board members are now
groups that run schools, such daughter to the .school looking for a new location,
as the Roman Catholic because of its small classes hoping to move out of the ·
Diocese of Cleveland .and and acceptance of her culture. space ·they rent from the
Jewish educators.
.
' At Al-lhsan, "no one will Islamic Mosque. Three years
AI-Ihsan is one of six pri- look at her just because her ago, a member of the mosque
vate Islamic day schools in mother wears a head cover- pleaded guilty in a case involvOhio and about 220 nation- ing," she said.
ing a terror-financing plot.

GALLIPOLIS -The t~eft
of four cans of' smokeless
tobacco from Speedway, 80 I
Second Ave., Gallipolis, was
·report~d
Thursday
to
Gallipolis City Police.
The
store
manager
informed officers the theft
occurred at 9:48 a.m. when a
white male was observed
leaving the store with the
items, · according to the
report.
'

Fire
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department was dispatched
to Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, 311 Buck Ridge
Rqad, Gallipolis, at 8:07a.m.
Friday -for what proved to be
a false alarm.
One truck and 13 firefighters responded, and cleared
the scene at 8:22 a.m.
One truck and eight firefighters were sent to GKN
Sinter Metals, 2160 Eastern
Ave. , Gallipolis, at 10:27
a.m. Thursday for what
proved to be a smoke scare
caused by a blocked smokestack.
Firefighters cleared the
scene at 10:3 1 a.m.

Proud to be apart of your life.

'

t

PageA6

.

Sunday Times-Sent)nel _• Subscribe today • 446-2342

ACI- 64.72
AEP -38.43
Akzo- 44.24
Ashland Inc. - 54.50
AT&amp;T -18.90
BLI-11.59
Bob Evans - 22.53
BorgWamer - 56.28
CENX- 21
'
Champion - 4.21
Charming Shops - · 10.57
City Holding ..:... 34.51
cot- 47.62
DG -19.05
DuPont- 37.88
Federal Mogul - .57
USB- 27.88
Ganne~- 67.13
General Electric - 34.22
,GKNLY- 5.25
Harley' Davidson - 45.04
JPM- 33.90
Kroger - 20.06
Ltd. -19.93
NSC -40.38 :
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 29.36
OVB-25
BBT-38.59
Peoples - 26.58
Pepsico - 57.47
Premier - 12.80
Rockwell - 51.76
Rocky Boots - 30.23
RD Shell - 62.80
SBC- 22.82
Sears - 120.50
Wal-Mart - 44.03
Wendy's - 45.60
.worthington - 19.13
-'Dally stock reports are the ·
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

'·.

Tri-County High School Football Sco.res

--

Local Weather

Helping the

,.'

..

'

-

rNP Schedule
GALLIPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting &amp;Yents lnvolvlnQ
teamalrom Gallie.. Meigs and Mason ctlunlias.
Mondly'l QIIDII

Volloyt)all
Minfortl'Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Athens at River Valley. 5:15p.m . .
Scccer
Ohio Valley Christian at South Point, 5 p.in.
DHtsdgy'a games
VoMoyball
Federal Hocking at Southern, 5:55 p.m. ·
Trln'tlle at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.

Athens at AiverValley, 5:15p.m .
SOuth Gallia at Coal GroVe, 5:30p.m.
01/CS at Grace Christian, 5:30 p.m.

Soccer
Marietta at GaMia AcaOOmy, 5 p.m.
CNCS at Grace Christian, s p.m
Glr1t Socoer
Pt. Pleasan1 at Chartes1on Catholc, 5:3Q p.m.
Colloge Soccer

Rio Grande at CedarviUe. 7 p.m.
Wadneadav'a ggmas

Volloyt)all
Hannan at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m
JhurJdiN'I CIII!JIS

Volloyt)all
Nelsonville-'rork at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southam at Trimble, 5:55 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6 p.m. •
River Valley at South Point. 5:30 p.m.
Marietta at Galfia Academy, 5:15p.m
Ohio Valley Ct1ristian at Hannan, 6 p.m.

Soccer
Point Pleasant al Gaaia Academy, 5:30p.m.
-Qhio Valley Christian at Teays Valley
Christian, 3:30p.m.
Women's Coll;ege Soccer
Rlo'Gmrde at Ml Vemoo Nazarene, 3:30pm.
College Volloyball
Mou'ltain State 'at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.

WOI!'~

~

.

.

-

w

Fitness Center

.

Bl

~tmes -~enttntl
)

•

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Devils break Jackson's heart again
Gallia Academy scores twice in
final 27 seconds to pull out wm
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy sure knows how
to host an entertaining party,
especially when it shows up
fashionably late.
The Blue Devils scored 13
points in the final 30 seconds Friday to secure a 20·
I0
victory
· over
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League rival Jackson on
Homecoming at Memorial
Field.
Galli a Academy (6-1, 2-0
SEOAL), which extended
its winning streak over the
lronmen (4-3, 0-2) to eight
games in a seven year span,
never led until 26:7 seconds
remained in the contest.
Jayme Haggerty 's nineyard touchdown reception

from Jeff Golden propelled
GAHS to its first lead at 14l 0, then eight seconds later,
Dustin Winters returned an
interception back 26 yards
for paydirt.
Those consecutive s~ores
capped 20 unanswered
points and allowed the hosts
to double-up the Red and
White on Homecoming
weekend.
Afterward, GAHS coach
Matt Bokovitz spoke of his
squad's late game heroics;
particularly in that final
minute.
" We've been a second half ·
team all year, and there at'
crunch time, we got it
done," he said. "Our kids
Mike Bracolphoto
finished the game real
strong and it was a big team Gallia Academy's Dustin Winters (32) runs past the Jackson defense during Friday's ~ey
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League football game at M~morial Field. The Blue Devils came back
Please see Break, Bl
from 10 points down to win 20-10.

Bucks
outlast
Meigs

hear better
Sunday
5·9 p.m.
Monday
6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday
6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday
6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday · ·' -··Cloud .. -~ . ·
SaturdaY
· Closed

1

Harts 14, Hannan 6
Point Pleasant 23, Poca 22 OT
Check inside for more scores

--

- -~

•

Also in lhis issue: ·
Box scores, Page B2
Prep football standings, Page 02
Ohio/W.Va. football scores, Page B4

Date

Pool
Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed

BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

NOTES:

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Hearing Days. This week, Tue., Oct. 11 &amp; Wed., Oct. 12

During Beltone Better Hearing Days, simply come in to any
one of our convenient locations for our exclusive Personalized
Hearing Health Assessment. First, we'll sit down with you and
· evaluate your hearing health. Next, we'll determine if a reduction in hearing is really hearing loss or just something as simpl~
as wax buildup. Finally, in the event you do ha:ve a loss, we
will custom design an affordable, hearing solution based on
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Bryan Walterl, Sport• Writer

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Hear sing roday's advanced
technology in
an environment

, , _ IN wtarW MM' NI-"L

GALLIPOLIS 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District is
forming a women's volleyball league.
Entry deadline is Oct.ll
and all games will be played
at the GDC Activities
Center.
There will be open gym
practice for all players Oct.
4-11 and games . begin
Oct.l8. The league will play
on Tuesday evenings from 7
p.m. to 10 p.m.
All players must be at
least 18 years old.
For more information, call
740:446-4612.

· (740) 446-2342. eit. 23
bwalters 0 mydallytrlbune .com

· Test Drive .

\

Following a scoreless first quarter,
Wahamaj.umped in front by a 7-0 margin when Cll1rk connected with Ord on
a 26-yard scoring toss with 3:34
remaining in the half. Derek Veazy
tacked on the point after kick to ,give
WHS a sl im 7-0 edge at the halfway
mark.
The White Falcons increased their
lead to 14-0 on its first possession of the
third quarter after marching 67 yards in
five plays with Veazy weaving his way

Ple11e see Needed, B:S

Please see Outlast. 85

Sports . Briefs

currently forming

At Beltone, there is an easy and comfortable way to see if you
are hearing all life ha!i to offer.

n·s that aasv to start hearing better.

BUCHTEL
Jay
Edward s' 85-yard punt
return in the third period
broke a 7-all tie and gavt;
Nelsonville-York a 13-7 win
over Meigs in TVC football
action Friday night.
The' defensive struggle
between the
two teams
took place in
a
steady
drizzle that
fell ·
the
whole game.
Despite the
slippery
Casey
conditions
both teams
held on to the football with·
out any turnovers.
Meigs played without .the
services of sophomore quarterback Aaron Story, who sat
out with an ankle injury suffered last week at Wellslon.
Senior Eric VanMeter moved
over from his wide receiver
spot and did an excellent job
for the maroon and gold.
After an exchange of punts
to start the game, the
Buckeyes took advantage of
a Meigs miscue to draw first
blood. A low snap from center on a punt; allowed the
Buckeyes to apply pressure
to Brandon Goble , whose
punt was partially . blocked
giving the Buckeyes the ball
at the Marauder 19 .
Three plays later, David
Jolley sc0red from nine
yards out. Edwards added
the extra point and the
Buckeyes held a 7-0 lead
with 7:15 left in the first

• A Lyne Cenler Membtlrship is required
to use the facilities. Faculty, staH, students
and administration are admitted tree with
10 card.
• Racquetball court reservations can be
made one day in ad'Vance by calling {740)
245-7495 or tolllrea at 1-800-282·7201,
ext. 7495.
• All guests need to be accompanied by
a Lyna Center Membership holder.

Volleyball leaglie

Personal service lor personalized solutions.

.

cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday
through
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s. Lows
in the lower 50s.
Wednesday night and
Thursday... Partly
cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the upper
40s ..Highs in the lower 70s.
~hursday
night and
Fnday... Mostly cloudy with
a '40 percent chance of showers. Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday... Partly 'cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s. Highs
in the upper 60S.

6unba!'

Rock Hill rolls over Raiders, B3
Federal Hocking beats Eastern, B4
Miller earns first victory, 85
Hannan still winless,.B6

--

Week 7

Wahama 32 I South Gallia 12

Toledo Zoo making changes suggested by task force
its animal care committee,
which now · will investigate
animal deaths, sometimes
with help from the Humane
Society. Previously, the committee had no authority and
seldom met.
The zoo board also committed to making quarterly
reports to the task force for at
least a year.
County commissioners said .
they have been pleased with
the zoo's effort. "They've
taken this challenge seriously," Commissioner Pete
Gerken said.

~-

'

Inside:

·.
1

TOLEDO (AP) - Toledo ommendations) that were
Zoo officials will implement implemented we're very,
115 of 123 recommendations very happy with."
made by a citizens task force
In response to the finding .
that reviewed operations fol- that minorities accounted for
lowing the deaths of several less than one-tenth of one
percent -of the zoo's full -time
animals.
The review included the employees, the zoo board
zoo's internal investigations · said it would work with the
Ohio
Black
· of the animals' deaths. The Northwest
task force, appointed by Chamber of Commerce to
Lucas County commission- create a plan to increase
ers, began its work after the diversity. The zoo board also
February firing of the zoo's said it would increase the
chief veterinarian of 22 years, number of minority suppliers
which prompted questions and co.ntractors it hires.
The zoo also restructured
about animal care and other
problems.
The panel's recommenda·
tions, ·announced in July,
included the development of
a strategic plan for the zoo
Sunday... Mostly cloudy. A .
and personnel changes. The
task force also recommended chance of drizzle or a slight
installing a· video camera in chance of showers in the
the hippopotamus enclosure morning ... Then a chance of
to watch its automatic door, drizzle in the afternoon.
l;lighs in the lower 60s.
near where an animal died.
"We' re turning over a page Northeast winds around 5
in the long history of the zoo," mph . Chance of rain 20 perboard President Stephen ·cent.
Sunday
night... Moslly
Staelin said Friday. "We are
cloudy. A slight chance of
starting a new chapter."
The zoo rejected some task shoWers after midnight.
force recommendations that Lows in the lower 50s.
were in confli~ t with. labor Northeast winds around 5
contracts or standards of the mph. Chance of rain 20 perAmerican Association of Cf:nt.
Columbus Day... Mostly
Zoos and Aquariums, zoo
cloudy
with a 20 percent
officials said. The zoo also
of
showers. Highs in
chance
rejected. a recommendation
the
mid
60s.
North winds
that its new chief veterinarian
arq,und
5
mph.
•
be hired from outside the zoo.
Monday
night ... Mostly
Task
force
chairman
Martin SkeJdon said he was
satisfied with the zoo board's
· explanation of why some recommendation's wouldn't be
implemented.
"I think it's a good start,"
he said. "The number (of rec -

a

Galli-- Academy 20, Jackson 1o
Wahama
32, South Gallia
12
' - . .
Rock Hill 44, River Valley 0

Nelsonville-York 13, M~igs 7 ~
_federal Hocking 40, Eastern 6
- -Miller 14, Southern 6

-

J

·,. _o~- ~~iL~ 2~ ~~.5- _;

lan McNemar/photo

South Gallia's Dustin McCombs (1) tries to avoid the tackle of Wahama's Chase Ord during Friday's non-league footba·ll
game in Mercerville. Wahama snapped a three-game losing skid with a 32-12 victory over the Rebels.

Falcons get much-needed win
BY GARY

CLARK

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

MERCERVILLE - Brenton Clark
tossed a pair of touchdown passes to
Chase Ord Friday eveni\}g to lead the
Wahama White Falcons past South
Gallia by a 32-12 score.
.
Ord caught two scoring passes for the
White Falcons in addition to coming up
big on the defensive side of the football
with a couple of interceptions as
Wahama snapped a three-game losing
skid and spoiled the South Gallia

homecoming festivities. The Bend Area
team improved to 3-4 on the year fol lowing the win while the Rebels
dropped their second straight outing to
fall to 4-3 on the season.
The·contest was a defensive st rugg le
for the better pan of three quarters
before the two teams exploded for five
fourth period touchdowns. Wahama
scored three times in the final canto to
seal the Falcon victory before South
Gallia avoided the shutout with two
touchdowns in the games final two
minutes.

UROL()(;y SERVICtJ~
.
;tfe!' P. timolf, ;110
·
te-~v-l!fj tie- L~eal Ar-ea fo~ Ov-ef' 10 tfeaf'~
.

1312 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-1744

·

CALL 1-800-634-5265 FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT!
CALL FOR SATURDAY
&amp; EVENING HOURS!
•

llillcrcst lJrologicul Clinir
256 Pinecrest Drive . •Gallipolis, OH

Appointments:

i40-44Ci·C,O~ I

PLEASANT
. VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageB2

PREP FOOTBALL

- 6unbap m:tmt~ -itntinel

Break

Sund~y,

SEOAL

Gallia-Academy
Logan
Athens
Marietta
Jackson

GalliaAcad

0

7

o-

PA
17

2-0
H

35
27
46
17
30

18
60
33
34
55

1-1

W-l
6-1

PF
209

PA
105

5-2 111
3-4 167
1·6 81
4·3 120
1-6 101
Fridoy, Oct. 14
Logan a1 Athens

137
23 1
179
78
191

Warren at GaUia Academy
Jackson al Marietta

Ohio Valley Con-ference
·ovc
W-L PF PA
W-L
2-0 41
12
4·3
2-0 87
56
6·1
2-0 77 6
6·t
·1-6
0·2 50 ' 80
0-2 6
79
1·6
0·2 18 46
3·4

cn esapeake
Coal Grove
Rock Hill
Fairland
River Valley
Soutn Point

Friday's results
Chesapeak.e 13. S. Point 12
Coal Grove 52. Fah1ar'ld 50
Aoclo; H~l 44, River Valley 0

I

HONDA

152
239
245
145

137
163
80
234

drive was kept alive three
plays earlier when, facing a
third-and" 14, Golden sc.rambled from a collapsing pocket
and tried to pick up the first
down.
'
The lronmen hit Golden
after he went out of bounds
and were penalized 15 yards
from the spot of the foul.
GAHS now had the ball on
Jackson's 24 with 57 .6 seconds remaining. Two plays
later, Gallia Academy had the
lead for good.
Winters sealed the deal on
the next play from scrimmage with hi s 26-yard pick
. and subsequent score.
Haggcrty picked off another Boggs' pass attempt with
under I{) seconds remaining.
· Bokovitz, who is now 4-0
against Jackson , was really
proud of his defense's colleclive effort.
"Our defense liung in there
all night. I thought our
defense was pretty stellar for
the most part," said Bokovitz.
"We never gave up the big

.- run, maybe a I 5-yarder at the
most, and we did exactly
what we needed to do:"
GAHS held Jackson to just
60 yards of total offense in ·
the second half, and amassed
129 during that same span,
In all, Jackson had 15 more
yards of total offense (199184) than Galli a Academy
-and . also had one more
turnover. The Devils scored
14 points off of five JHS
turnovers, while the guests
managed just seven points off
of four opportunities.
Winters had a game-high
I 02 yards on 17 carries for
GAHS, while Seth Haner followed.with seven totes for 22
yards.
Haggerty, who is Gallia
Academy's top rusher on the
season, was held to zero
yards on five attempts. He
did lead GAHS with four
catches for 43 yards.
Golden finished with 50 .
yards on 5-of-14 passing
after a subpar 1-of-6 first half
start.

-----

Baird t-2, No. 35

3-(-~).

Bryan

Overtime

Morrow 6-(-15).
Poca-Jenkins 15 pass from
RH - K.C. Christian 6-69, Derek 1 Barnhart (Ragan kick) OT

10

7 t3-20

w
13
38-222
69
Total yards
291
Comp-atl-in1
4-9-0
5-3
Fumbl~s-lost
Penalties-yards 5-45
Punts-avg
3-29.6
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards ·

·1

Robinson 8-55, T.J. Blagg 4-40, Josh PP-Warner 2 run (Stouffer pass

. Moore 1-36 , Shane Bostic 4-36,
Jarrod Casey 2-27, Dustin Harper 3-

from Casto) OT

Second Quarter
Mullins 24 field goal :44 .2 22, Zach Zornes 3-t7, Cory Bamer
4 - 16, Rob. Barnet1 2-16, Ad8m
Third Quarter
James
2-11, Chris Howard 1-6, Zach
J-George LOwery 20 pass from
Nelson 2-5, Justin Casey 2-4.
Marcus Boggs (Mullins kick) 10:26 Stephen
Littlejohn 2-1.

Total yards

Esmaeili kick) 3:20

Comp-att-int

pp
First Downs
Rushes-yards

Passing yards

1

GA-Dustin Winters 5 run (Joe

Boggs paced Jackson with
.77 yards on 21 carries, but he
had only five yards on eight
second half attempts.
Erwin finished with 58
yards on 19 carries, while
Jesse Adams rounded out the
rushing attack with 34 yards
on eight tries.
Lowery led JHS with two
grabs for 18 yards.
"My hat's off to Jackson, I
thought they played their guts
out," Bokovitz said. "They
definitely gave us everything
,
they had."
Bokovitz also wanted to
thank a lot of people who
made this latest triumph possible.
•
"Players, the coaching
staff, and the tremendous fan
support all deserve credit. It's
a great team win all the way
around,"
complimented
Bokovitz.
Gallia Academy returns to
Memorial Field Friday when .
it hosts Warren on Senior
Night. Kick-off is slated for
7:30p.m.

70

266

134

195

Passing: RV-: Bryan Morrow 5-8-1 · Fumbles-lost

'

POCA
17
t8
51-235 42-226
50
48
285
274
3-8-1 4-9-1
0-0
0-Q
3-40
7-45

1

34
85
39
30
6
19

13
25
48
27
50
50

2-0
2-0
1-1
1-1
0·2
0-2

Federal Hocking
Trimble
Miller
Waterford
Soutnem
Eastern

ALL
PF

4·3
4-3
4·3
1-6
2·5
4·3

165
186
192
70
103
170

13t
137
154
137
150

W-L

PF

PA

p·2 136
207
1-6 32
4·3 137
2·5 67
0·7 80
7-0

' Pena.lties-yafds

~~-._;IN,_ _

4·0 207 78
3·1 128 51
3-1 95 88
2-2 70 65
2-2 57
77
2-2 75
104
0-5 46 159

Poe a
Pt. Pleasant
Sissonville

PF
6·Q "2 78
6·1 264

4·2 129
4·3 157
3·4 112
2·5 120
0·6 46

PA
84

90

112

Brad Sherman/photo

152
129
207

Rock Hill's K.C. Christian (3) fights for extra yardage as a host of River Valley tacklers try to
bring him down Friday in Pedro. It was one of only six carries for the Redmen's leading rusher,
who gained 69 yards and scored three touchdowns total. Rock Hill won 44-0.
'

187

Friday, Opt. 14
Raven swood at Point Pleasant
Logan at Sissonville
Poca at Winfield
Tolsia at Wftojne

Friday's results
Point Pleasant 23, F'oca 22. OT
Herbert Hoover44. Sissonville 14
Logan 35, Wyoming East 8
Winfield 30. Gratton 13

Non-League
ALL
PF
PA

W-L

BY BRAD SHERMAN

4-3 156 164
3-4 137 130
0.7 52 278

South Gallia

Wahama
Hannan

Frlday'a,...n.

Friday, Oct. 14

. Wat1ama 32, South Gallla 12
Harts 14, Hannan 6

I

.

G. Beckley Christian at Hannan
South Gallia at Hamlin

----

Josh Buzzard 3-15, David Poole 6- : E - Terry Durst 22- 75 , Jordan
t 2, Cornelius English f -1, Eric i Plerc~ &gt;-3, Chadd Whitlach 2-2, Alex

SG
10
47-147
37
t84
4-11-2
8-2
6-50
6-31 .1

VanMeter 5-(-24)..
.
'i'
NY - David Jolley 13-57, Beaft
Lewis 1t-51, Jay Edwards 10-2.
..
·
Passing: M~ Eric VanMeter 3-8-0
56.
NY- Jay Edwards 2-7-0 t t.

Kuhn 11-2, Nick Kuhn 1-3.
·.
Ppf~ing: FH - A.J. Smith 2-4;0 8.
Er,.cory Shaffer 3,10-0 58. Jordan
Pierce 1-2-0 4.
.

Receiving: FH - Ty[er Jarvis t -5,
Grady Dalzelll-3. E - Terry Durst 1Recolvlng: M- Josh Kimes 2-20, 4, Derek Young 3-53.

tndlvtdual Statistlca

Jared Casey 1-36. NY -

Jolley 1-7, David Wagner 1-6.

·· Rushing: W - Brandon Fowler 786, Derek Veazy 12-79, Brenton

David

59 , Steven Workman 1-7 .
Lambert

Christian Estep 1-(-3).

·
1- 14,

RH-Moore 70 interception return

(kick failed) 5:31
RH-Derek Robinson 39 run (kick
failed ) 4:23
Firat Downs

RV
RH
12
t4
40-121 46-361

Rushes-yards
Passing yards 63.
Total yarda
t84
Comp-an-lnt
5-9-2
Fumblaa-loet
1-1
Penalties-yards 5-36 •-

Point Pleasant 23,
Poca 2.2, OT
Pt. Pleasant 0 8 7 0 8 - 23
Poca
07067-22
Scoring aummery

Second Quartor
0
Poco-Derek McClure 3 run (Tyler
361
Ragan kick) 10:15
0-1-0
PP~ames Casto t run (Mark
3-0
Fooce pass from Casto) 6:55
9-60 .
. Third Quarter
PP-Brandon
Warner 4 run (Dewey
Individual Stattotlco
Wroten
klckl
:29
Ruahlng: RV - l'yler Canaday 11-Fourth Querter
31, Jordan Deal 7-25, Ryan Henry 5- Poca~osh
Jenkins 7 pass from

TRI-COUNTY SPORTS
COVERAGE
'

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The
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-~-- -~ ··

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

Our next clinic date Is Friday, Oct 21.
Call (61.4) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement

Rock Hill rolls past RV
BSHE'RMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

1

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Miller 14, Southern 6
' Southern
0 0 6 0- 6
Miller
6 8 o o - 14

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•

ALL
W-L

1

Second Quarter

006~~

Vinton County at Belpre
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
Eastern at Miller
Triinble at Federal Hqcking
Water1ord at Southern

1

RH-Duslin Harper 11 run (kick
failed) 7:31

' 42 mo\. lease S298 mo. t lox. 12,COO miles per )'001 S1,500 drrte oH col! wi!h OPPfD'o'ed credit AHFC

Friday, Oet. 14

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plus. tax•

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6disc in·doshCD chonger

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Wayne
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Winfield
Logan

$1 ,91Xl dnve oH co1r .,.dj, OPPJO'Ied credit AHfC

l!l~ 12,00') mile1 per yeor S1, 1'99 dri-.e oU cosI wi,j., oppro'led credrl AHFC

77

1

I

t

59
176
93
1t4
327

Clark 7-48, Nathan Stafford 5-11 ,
Fed-Hock 40, Eastern 6
GA~ayme Haggerty 9 pass from
RH- Jarrod Casey 0-1-0 0.
Jacob Roach 5-10, Brandon Flowers Fed Hock 21 13 6 0- 40
Jeff Golden (Esmaeili kickl :26.7
Individual Statistics
1-(-3), Kyle Zerkle t-(-9).
Eastern
0 6. 0 0- . 6
Scoring summary
. GA-Winters 26 interception return
Receiving:
AVMichael
Cordell
2Rushing:
PP-Brandon
Warner
20SG
Curt
Waugh
12-71
,
Bernie
.
First Quarter
(kick failed) :18.4
39, Ryan Henry 3-24.
1101, James Casto 15-67, Travis Fulks t 5-33, Tyler Duncan 5-49 ,
Scoring summary
M-Jordan Gotke 1 run (kick failed)
Riffle 11-50, Jarod Stouffer 5-17.
Derrick Beaver 1-2, Dewey Cantrell
Firat Quarter
t:07
Harts 14, Hannan 6
Poca- Nathon Patton 20-t42, Heath 2-1. Seth Williamson 9-(-16).
FH-Tyler Jarvis 2 run (kick good)
Second Quarter
J
GA
9:23
.
Harts
6 a 0 B - 14
Barrett 4-35, Derek McClure 7-26,
M-Zach Osborne 1 run (Jared
First Oowi)S
t2
10
o 6 o o - 6 Ryan Vanney 4-25, Cody (loggs 5-0, Passing: W- Brenton Clark 4-9 69, FH-Tyler Chadwell 25 run (kick
Bolyard pass from Gotke) 10:06
RuShes-yards
48-169 32-t 34 Hannan
Jamie Barnhart 2-(-2).
Oerek Veazy 0-1 0.
good) 3:1 t
Third Quarter
Passing yards
30 ' 50
Seth Williamson 2-9-2 26, FH~arvis 3 run (kick good) :31
I SG Scoring· summary
S-Butch Marnhout 7 pass from
Total yards
t99
184
Passing: PP~ames Casto 3-8-1 Tyler Duncan 2-2-0 11.
Second Quarter
First Quarter
.
. Josh Papa (pass.tailed), 3:27
Comp-atHnt
3- t 0-2 5- t 5-3
50.
. .
.
FH~arvis 0 fumble return (kick
Har-Ryan Vance 20 run (Pass fail)
Fumbles-lost
3-2
0-0
Poca-Jamie B~rnhart 3-8- 38, I Racelvlng: W- Chase Ord 2-51 , good) 9:20
10:16
Penalties-yards 6-55
7-50
5
M
Heath Barren t-t-0 to.
1 Gabe Roush 1-15, Brandon Fowler FH-Adam·Tate 44 run (conversion First Downs
Second Quarter
11
3
1-3. SG - Dernck Beaver 1-14, failed) , 3:14
Individual Statistics
Han-Alan Dye fO run (run fail)
Rushing yards 68
188
Receiving: PP-Tray Leport 1-30, ! Dustin· McCombs 1-12, Robert E-Derek Young 26 pass from
Rushing: J~Marcus Boggs 21-77, ' 2:11
Passing yards
67
3
Shaffer (conversion failed) :05
Dewey Wroten t-18, Travis Riffle t- Coury 2-t1 .
·
Dusty Erwin 19-58, Jesse Adams B·
Total yards
135
191
Third Quarter
2.
I
Fourth Quarter
34.
Comp-att-int
5-t3-1
1-8-1
GA- Dus1in Winters 17-102 , Seth Har..:_Aickey Thomas 59 pass from 1 Poca-Josh Jenkins 3-32, DreW ' Nelsonvllle-York 13, Meigs 7 FH--Jarvis 45 run {conversion
Fumbles-lost
3-2
3-0
Nutter 1-16.
Meigs .
o 7 o 0 - 7 fa1ied) 1:02
Haner 7-22, Todd Saunders 1-5, Jeff Aaron Bailey (Bailey pass) 4:48 ·
Penalties·yards 8-65
5-35
Nelsonville 7 0 6 o - t 3
Golden 2-5, Jayme Haggerty 5-0.
· Punts -avg .
4-17.5
4-31
FH
E
Wahama 32, South Ga111a 12
Har
Han
First
Downs
9
7
Wahama
0
7.
7
t832
Scoring
summary
First
Downs
13
5
Passing: J-Marcus Boggs 3-1 0-2Individual Statistics
Rushes-yards
40-237
3t-85
I
SouthGellia
0
0
0
12-12
First
Quarter
Ru,shes-yards
47-192
32-96
30.
Rushing:
S ~ Butch Marnhout 8Passing yards
8
62
N'i-Oavid Jolley 9 run (Jay
Passing yards
66
1.1
GA~eff Golden 5-14-3·50.
43, Weston Counts 10-25 .
Total
yards
242
147
Scoring summary
Edwards kick) 7:t5
Total yards
258
t07
Comp-alt-int
t-2-0 4-10-0 M- N/A.
Second Quarter
Second Quarter
2-6-0 2-5-1 I
Receiving: J-George Lowery 2-18, , Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
6-4
4-2
W-chase Ord 26 pass from
M~ared Casey 36 pass from Eric
Justin Erwin 1-12.
Fumbles-lost
1-0
3-1
Passing: S -Josh Pape 5-13-1 67.
Penalties-yards 3-40
2-25
, Brenton Clark (Derek Veazy kickl
VanMeter (Josh Buzzard kick) :47
GA-Jayme Haggerty 4-43, Chris Penalties-yards 4-40
6-40
· M ~ Jordan Gotker 1:a-1 3 .
3:34
Third Quarter
I
McCay 1-7.
Individual Statistics
NY-Edwards 85 punt return (pass
Individual Stetis11cs
Third Ouarter
Rushing:
FH -Tyler Jarvis t 2-t 38, Receiving: S - Buddy You~g 2-56.
failed) 4:23
Rock H111 44, River Valley 0 Rushing: Har-Ryan Vance 6-77. W-Veazy 23 run (Veazy kick)
I
Zach
Burke
9-54, Tyler Chadwell 7- Jesse McKnight 2-4, Butch
River Valley o 0 0 0- 0 1 Joe Browning 22-64 , Rick13y Thomas 10:41
Marnhout 1-7. M- N/A.
37.
Fourth Quarter
M
NY
· Rock Hill
26 18 0 0 - 44 3·44~ Chris Workman 2-14,
9
•
9
First Downs
' Anthonoy Dalton 3-(-1 ), Steven W-Ord 25 pass from Clark (kick
Rushes-yards 39,134 34-1t0
Workman 2-(-3), Aaron Bailey 6-(·5). la1ied) 11 :31
Scoring summary
56
11
I Han-Christian Estep 4·35, Alan ; w.-CI~y Roush 25 fumble rec.overy Passing yards
First Quarter
. Total yards
t90
12t
RH-T.J. Blagg 12 run (k1ck failed) Dye 15-31, Steven Lambert 4-12, (kiCk failed) 6:10
Comp-an-int
Wes Gue 6·9, Aaron Payne 3-9
w .- Brandon Fowler 32 run (pass
3-8-0 2-7 '0
7:35
fa1ied) 5:13
Fumble·s-lost
1-0
1-0
RH-K.C. Christian 24 run (J.C .
Penalties-yards 4-25
2-to
Passing : Har- Aaron Bailey 2-6-0 SG-Robert Coury 8 pass from
Murnahan k1ck) 5:21
·
Tyler Duncan (run failed ) 1:41
66.
RH-Christian 29 run (kick failed)
SG-Vance Fellure 24 fumble
Individual Statistics
Han-A,Ian Dye 2-5-1 11 .
4:03
recovery
(run
failed)
:41
Rushing:
M-Jared Casey 24-135,
RH--Josh Moore 36 run (Murnahan
Rec.elvlng: Har-R1ckey Thomas 1kick) 3:03
63, Jordan Deal 0 - 1- 1 0.

'42 mos Ieese S269 mo

11 6

I AlelCander at Meigs

CARDINAL
W-L PF . PA

+ IQJc._ 12,COO mile! per yeor

Auklmotic, 4x4, power window•, kxks, mirrors, key~~~ enlry, crui.e, CD ployer, A/C
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I

1

'42 ~ leo1e $163

· Model .vfi 846EW

65 6
46 13
14 39
40 14
6 39
72
12

Friday's results
Vinton County 24, Alexander 6
Wellston 48, Belpre 13
Nelsonville-York 13, Meigs 7
Federal Hocking 40, Eastern 6
Miller 14, Southern 6
Tr~e 14, Waterford 7

pl us tax•

·

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W-L

.-Hocking Division
W-L PF PA

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

Jamie Barnhart (Patton run) 5:59

2-0
2-0
1-1
1-1
0-2 '
0-2

Nelsonville-York
WellSton
Belpre
Vinton County
Alexander
Meigs

Bryan Walters/photo
Gallia Academy coach Matt Bokovitz addresses his Blue Devils after defeating the Jo;~ckson
lronmen Friday at Memorial Field.

1

I•

2005

s263/mo.

Model KM567CIW

Friday, Oct. 14
Chesapeake at Coal Grove
Rock Hill at Fairland
River Valley at South Point

TVC
PF PA

W-L

J~ustin

~~

2006 ACCORD EX

ALL
PF
PA

Ohio Division

Scoring summary

I•

Sunday, October 9,

TAYLOR HONDA
740-59HONDA

Tri-Valtey Conference

22, No. 49 2-9, Scott Hunt 5-3, Zach

Fourth Quarter

PF
62

Frlday'a resultt
Athens 20. Wallen 18
Gallia Academy 20, Jaclo:son 10
Logan 21 , Marietta 11

Gallla Academy 20,
Jackson 10
3
0

PREP FOOTBALL

ALL

W-l
2-0

0-2
0-2

Warren

Friday's Boxscores
o

iunbap .limes -ientjnel

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

win."
The Blue and White may
have finished strong. but
early on, Jackson appeared to
be in a spoiling mood. ·
The Ironmen amassed a
I 39-55 advantage in total
offense during the opening
24 minutes, but only a 24yard · field goal by Justin
Mullins with 44 seconds left
in the second quarter could
crack · the scoreless tie.
Jackson led 3-0 headed imo
the break.
The visitors also held a
sizeable 127-48 r~shing edge
and tripled-up GAHS by a 93 count in first downs.
JHS continued its aggresive ways in the third quarter,
coaxing Golden into an interception just 20 seconds out of
intermission. It was the second of th,ree picks thrown by
the sophomore signal-caller.
Three plays later, JHS
capped a 23-yard scoring
drive when George Lowery
came away with a contested
ball for a 20-yard touchdown
catch.
That disputed score gave
Jackson a 10-0 lead with
10:26 left in the third quarter.
Gallia Academy finally got
on the board at the 3:20 mark
of the third when Winters
capped a three-play, 32-yard
drive with a five-yard jaunt.
Winters' score trimmed the
deficit to 10-7.
After exchanging punts
twice deep into the fourth
quarter, Jackson manufac tured an eight-play, 21-yard
drive that chewed up more
than 4:27 of valuable clock.
TIJ.at eighth play also
· pr9x.e,d ' to b.e costly for
Jacks'on ,", as Dusty Erwin's
fumble at the 2:28 mark gave
GAHS the ball at its own 38.
Nine plays and 62 yards
later, Golden found Hagge~
for the winning score. That

Jackson

2005

Expanded Glance

from Page Bl

...

October 9,

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PEDRO - Rock Hill has
arguably the nicest .track and
field facility in Southeastern
Ohio. And although it's not
·spring, the Redmen were
content to turn Friday's football game into a track meet.
Rock Hill's stable of runners amassed 361 yards on
the ground en route 10 a lopsided 44-0 Ohio Valley
Conference victory over vi siting River Valley.
Rock Hill, which attempted
just one pass, averaged eight
yards per carry on the
evening. A balanced and bigplay attack helped put the
game away early, as the winners scored all 44 of their
points by the 4:23 mark or the
second quarter.
The team's leading rusher,
K.C. Christian, only carried
the ball six times, but broke
two long touc-hdown runs and
finished with a team-best 69
yards. Derek Robinson added
55 and T.J. Blagg gained 40
on just four totes.
A total of 15 runners
packed the football in the victory. which was Rock Hill's
sixth in seven tries, as the red
and white continue to chase
its first playoff berth since

200} and third in school history.
It also kept the Redmen
perfect in the OVC at 2-0
along with fellow front-runners Chesapeake and Coal
Grove.
.
River Valley (t-6), on the
other hand, dropped its sixth
in-a-row a(ld is winless· in
two league tilts. The offensive frustrations coniinued
for the Raiders, who had just
54 ·yards in the first half and
184 for the game.
The silver and black have
now been held below 200
yards of total offense for four
straight games.
Tyler Canaday was the
leading ground gainer for
River Valley with 3 I yards on
II carries·. Jordan Deel added
25 and Ryan Henry 22 .
. Bryan Morrow threw for 63 ·
yards, completing two passes
to Michael Cordell for 39
yards and Scott Hunt grabbed
·
three for 24.
Explosive Rock Hill had no
problems moving the foolball, though , as it scored on
all six of it s first half possessions. Four times, the scoring
drives lasted four plays or
less.
Slags used two big gainers
to igmle the first Redmen
touchdown, as he broke runs

of 17 and 12 yards to cap a
short six-play drive less than
five minutes into the contest.
After forcing a · second
River Valley punt, Christian
ran 24 yards for a score on his
team's ensuing drive on just
the second play from scrimmage.
River Valley then turned
the ball over on consecutive
possession s, and lhe Redmen
again took little time negotiating the short fields .
·Following an interception,
Christian struck again on a
29-yard rumble that made it
19-0. On their next possession, the Raiders fumbled the
ball way at their own 36' and
Rock Hill's Josh Moore needed one play to find paydirt
and pad the cushion further at
26-0.
The home team tacked on
three more touchdowns in the
second quarter.
Dustin
Harper scor~d on an 11-yard
run, Christian returned an
interception 70 yards for' a
touchdown and Robinson
found the end zone on ,a 39yard .sprint to round out the
scoring:
Rock Hill is at Fairland
next Friday, while River
Valley will pay a visit to
Chris Smith and company at
South Point .

2005 DODGE DURANGO SXT
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.2005..10DGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB 414 .
Auto, air, mots, STK#2504980
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2005 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB
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Discounts &amp;Rebates $8,267
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MSRP ... . .. . .$23,950
Discounts &amp;Rebates $2,955

Sale Price

2005 JEEP LIBERTY RENEGADE 414

Tow pa~k, auto, ,air, lilt, cruise, power locks &amp; windows STK#2505700
MSRP ........ $25 ,625
Discounts &amp;Rebates $4,261

,$ 21,364

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Auto, air, tilt, cruise, power locks &amp; windows, remoie keyless
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1 61709 Sale Price ·
2005 DODGE CARAVAN SE

Power' locks, windows, mirrors, remole keyless entry, air, STK#2505720

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$

1 6, 7 0 9

2005 CHRYSLER TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

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fromPageBl
through the South Gallia
defense on a 23-yard touchdown gallop. Veazy also
added the point after kick to
give the Mason County team
a 14-0 advantage with I0:41
left in the quarter.
Clark connected with Ord
on a 25 -yard scoring strike in
the tina! period's first minute
in the first of three successive ·
touchdowns by the Bend Area
II . Clay Roush would later
pick up a Rebel fumble and
race 25 yards to paydirt midway through the stanza be(ore
Brandon Fowler concluded
the Falcons scoring activity Wahama's Derek Veazy (34)
witl1 a 32-yard run at the 5:13 South Gal lia defender.
mark to make it a 32-0 affair.
Fowler led Wahama on the
South Gallia would elude
ground
with 86 yards in seven
the shutout late in the contest
when Tyler Duncan set up the carries while Veazv added 79
Rebel's first touchdown with yards in 12 tries for lhe,White
a 41 -yard run. Duncan later Falcons. Clark completed 4,
found Robert Coury with an · of-9 aerials on the evening for
eij:ht-yard touchdown pass 69 yards and two ~cored with
Ord .catching both scoring
w1th I :41 to play.
Following the ensuing tosses for 51 yards.
South Gallia was led on the
ki ckoff, Wahama fumbled
ground
by Curtis Waugh
the ball away with Vance
Fellure pouncing on the with 71 yard s in 12 attempt s
loose pigskin and returning with Duncan coming on late
the fumble recovery 24 to fini sh with 49 yards in five
yards ,for a touchdown to carries. Bernie Fulks added
make it a 32-12 conte st, but 33 yards in 15 tries for the
that wa s as close as the Rebel s. Seth Williamson
South Gallia ·gridders got as connected on 2-of-9 passes
Wahama picked up the 32-1 2 for 26 yards with two interceptions while Duncan comtriumph.

$19,681

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MSRP . &amp; Rebates
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Discounts
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·
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· leather, healed seats, 6 disc CD
MSRP . .. .. .. .$29,970
Discounts &amp; Rebates $8,000
1

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2005 CHRYSLER
SEBRING CONVT GTC
. Auiomatic, red w/beige top
MSRP ........ $28,515
Discounts &amp;Rebates $4,702

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'I,AfJA)Il·MAJ)E IJSEJ) (;All J)J~L~·
lan McNemarlphoto

tries to avoid the tackle of a

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DiMel;.crew cob, 4x.4.i XLT

pleted two of two for II
yards and a score. Derrick
Beaver had one reception for
14 yard s and
Du stin
McCombs caught one pass
for '12 yards with Coury
hauling in two passes fo r II
yards and a score .
Wahama will experience a
much-needed open date_next
week before closing out the
season with three consecutive home date s ag ain&gt;!
Tol sia, Parkersburg Catholic
and Moorefield.
South
Gallia will visit Haml in ne xt
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•Athens•

�PageB4

·6unbap Otimr• -ienttnel

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Ohio/W.Va . High School Football Scores ---·
'

Ohio High School Football Scortt
Friday '• R..ultt
Akr. Ellet 35. Akr. E 0
Akr Hoban 28, Garfield Hts Tr1n1ty 1
Akr N. 31, Akr Ktnmore 6
Akr SVSM 47, Cots St. Charles 0
Amhersl 14, Westlake 0

Anna 60 New P.ans Nattonat Trail 0
Ansonta 14 lew•sburg Tn-County N 7
Arlmgton 28, McComb 21
Ash land
Crestvtew
20,
Ashland
Mapleton 6
Ashtabula Edgewood 58, Conneaut 35
Ashtabuta'Lakes•de 9 . Jefferson Area 6

20T
Ashvtlle Teays Valley 24, Bloom-Carroll

10
Athens 20. Vtncent Warren 18
Aurora 28, Chagrin Falls 22
Avon 57, Oberlm Flrelands 7
Avon Lake 28 N Olmsted 21
Balttmore Uberty Union 34. Mtllersport 7
Barnesvttle 41 Cadtz Hamson Cent 20
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 3 1, N
Baltimore 6
Bedford 12. Warrensville His 6
Bella1re 53, Belmont Union Local 6
Bellbrook 40, Day. Oakwood 7
Bellefontaine 15 Lew1stown lnd1an Lake

14

12

Belhfllle Clear Fork 16, Mansfield
MadiSOn 7
8fllo1t W Branctl17, Alliance 14
Blanchester 45, Clermont NE 7
Bloomdale Elmwood 53 Gibsonburg 7
Bowling Green 34, Sylvama Southv1ew 7
Brecksville 36, Berea 14
Bucyrus 28, N Robison Col Crawford

20
Bucyrus Wynford 54 , Mt Blanchard
Rwerdale 7
Burton Berksh1re 55 , A1chmond His 6
Byesv1lle
Meadowbrook
20,
Gnadenhi.Jtten lnd1an Valley 12
Caldwell 28, New Matamoras Frontier 8
Caledoma R1ver Valley 6, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 0 '
Cambr1dge 62, Coshocton 12
Can Cent. Cath 28, Youngs Ursuline 6
Can GlenOak 21 Umontown Lake 0
Can S 40 Minerva 6
Canfield 38, Salem 9
Carrollton 28, Alliance Marhngton 13
Centerburg 41 . Fredericktown 20
Centerville 28, Beavercreek 0
Chagnn Falls Kenston 27, Wickliffe o
Chesterland W Geauga 26, Pepper P1ke
Orange 0
C1n Anderson 35, Harrison 14
C1n Colerain 62, Sycamore 7
C1n, Country Day 13, C1n Christian 0
Cm Harmony 24, Pnnce Avenue Prep

(S.C.) 13

Berne Union o
Leavittsburg La Brae t 4, Hubbard 13
Lees Creek E. Clmton 32, Bltl't'll 6
Leipsic 28 Pandora-Gilboa 0
Lew1s Center Olentangy 21 , Westerville
Cent. 1:J
liberty 2t . Cortland Lakeview 6
Liberty Center 33, Whiteford {M1ch ) 6
Uma Cent Cath. 37, Bluffton 20
Lisbon Beaver 24. Chardon 16
Lod1Cloverleal 40, Medina Htgntand 7
Logan 21 , Manella 11
LOlJISVIIIe 14, Canal Fulton NW 0
Loveland 39, Batliv1a Amelia 0
Lucas 14, New Washington BucKeye
Cent 8
Lucasvtlle Valley 41 , Willow Wood
Symmes Valley 0
Lyndhurst BrliSh 24, Twinsburg 16
Macedoma Nordonla 21, CuyahogA
Falls 0
Mantua Crestwood 42, Akr Spring 20
Maple Hts 25, E Cle Shaw 13
Mana Stem Marlon Local 64, Ft
Recovery 13
'
Marion Elgin 41 , Cardington-Lincoln 0
Manon Pteasant42, Sparta Highland 7
Mason 14, C1n Glen Este 7
Massillon Jackson 38, Massillon Perry

•

Cm Hills Chnst1an Academy 62, Cm
Summ1t Country Day 6
C1n lnd1an Hill 52 Cm Made1ra 6
C1n Manemont 20 Reading 7
Om Moeller 45, Cm, Elder 30
C1n Oak Hills 42, Cm Pnnceton 21
Crn St Xav1er 28, C1n La Salle 0
Cm. Taft 36, Crn A1ken 8
Cln. Turpin 24. C1n NW 0
Cm Winton Woods 62, C1n. Walnut H1lls
6
C1n Woodward 14, Day JeHerson 12
Cm Wyommg 47, F1nneytown 8
CirCleville 19, Amanda-Ciearcreek 7
C1rcle11111e Logan Elm 10, Cols. Hamr/lon
Twp. 7
Clarksville
Cllnton-Massie
44,
Greenfield McClam 0
Clayton Northmont 28 Miamisburg 14
Cle Benedictine 28, Youngs Mooney 13
Cle Collinwood 14, Cle. E Tech o
Cle, G\env1lle 52. Cle. S 14
Cle. JFK 48, Cle John Marshall 0
Cle Rhodes 16, Cle, Lmcoln·West 0
Clyde 16, Huron 13, OT
Coldwater 48, Minster 7
Collins Western Reserve 42, Plymouth 6
Cots. Beechcroft 42, Cola Centenmal 0
Cols Bexley 3a Granville 14
Cots Brookhaven 41, Cols E. 0
Cots . Crusaders 44 Chatham (Ontar1o)
Ursuline 6
Cols Eastmoor 41, Cots. Independence

30
Cols Hartley 14, LOUISVIlle AqUinas 10
Cots. Linden 14 Cols Northland 6
Cots Marion · Franklln 62, Cols. Bnggs

12
Cols. Mifflin 6, Whetstone 0
Cols S 27, Cots W 10
Cots Walnut R1dge 25, Cots. Atncentnc

0
Co1s Walterson 22, Cots DeSales 3
Columbul 26, Brooklyn 6
Columbiana 28, Lisbon 7
Convoy Crestview 25, Columbus Grove

19
Copley 47, Wadsworth 15
Corn1ng Miller 14, Rac1ne Southern 6
Cory-AawsGn 52, Vanlue 27
Cov1ngton 30. Arcanum 28
Crestline 25, Ontar1o 14
Crooksville 30, Pll1lo 18
Cuyahoga Fa\ls CVCA 28, Navarre
Fairless 7
Cuyanoga Hts 18, Mlddlefreld Cardrnal

10
Oanv1Ue 41, Ut1ca 7
D.ay Carroll 21, Middletown FenwiCk 0
Day Chammade·Jullenne 30, Cin.
McNrcholas 14
Day. Col. Wh1te 28, Cm Western H1lls 14
Deer Park 28, N Bend TaylorS
Defiance 38, Elida 29
Della 26, Archbold 7
Data Hardin Northern 56, Van 'Buren 13
Dover 41, Uhnchsvrlle Claymonl2
Doylestown Chippewa 37, Jeromesville
Hillsdale 13
Dublin CoHman 41 , Galloway Westland

Massillon Tuslaw 28, Can Timken 8
Massillon Wash1ngton 54, Youngs
W1lson 0
·
McArthur Vrnton County 24, Albany
Alexander 6
McConnelsville Morgan 42, Dresden Trr·
Valley o
McDonald 28. Lowellville 27
Mechanicsburg
55,
Jamestown
Greenev1ew 0
Medina Buckeye 38, Sullivan Black River
6
Mentor 31 Cle. His 22
Middletown Madison 33. New Lrbanon
DIXIe 14
·
Milan Edison 35 , Port Clinton 7
Milford 7, Hamilton 0
Millersburg W Holmes 28, Mansfield 21
Mogadore 50, Streetsboro 14
Mogadore Field 28, Norton 7
Monroe 34, Oxford Talawanda 0
Monroeville 48, New London 22
Morral Ridgedale 35, Mt G1lead 0
Mt Healthy 32, Morrow Little M1aml 8
Mt. Crab Western Brown 40, Washrngton
C H. 14
N Can Hoover 19, Youngs Austintown Fitch 14
N College Hill 40, Day Chrlst1an 7
N L1ma S Range 28, Mineral Ridge 7
N Ridgeville 42, Verm1l1on 9
N Royalton 12, Parma Valley Forge 7
Napoleon 23, Sandusky 14
Nelsonville-York 13, Pomeroy' Meigs 7
New Albany 28, Heath 0
New L8111ngton 38, Portsmouth 20
New Middletown Spring 24, N Jackson
Jackson·MIIton 7
New Philadelphia 28, Warsaw River
V1ew 0
New Rtchmond 47, Williamsburg 0
Newark Licking Valley 55, Whitehall·
Yearling 0
Newcomerstown 20, New Philadelphia
Tuscarawas Cent Cath 19
Niles 21, Warren Howland 7
Northwood 38, Lakes1de Danbury 14
Oak Harbor 27, Castalta Margaretta 13
Olmsted Falls 37, Mlddlebllrg Midpark 8
Orrville 42, Ashland 21'
Ohawa·Giandor126, Van Wert 0
Pa1nesv111e Harvey 27, Geneva 13
Pa1nesville Riverside 14, Madison 0
Parma Normandy 17, Medma 14, OT
Pataskala Watkins Memorial '1,
Sunbury B1g Walnut 16
Pauldlog 4t, Delphos Jefferson o
Pemberville Eastwood 21, Elmore
Woodmere 14
Plain Crty Jonathan Alder 45, Cols.
Ready 14
Pola nd 27, Struthers 20
Portsmouth Sc1otovdle 14, Oak Hill 6
Powell
Olentangy
L1berty
13,
Ptckerington N 7
Ravenna 47, Kent Roosevelt 21
Ravenna, se 47, Akr. Coventry 6
Richfield Revere 31, Green 14
A1dgeway R1dgemont 33, Marion Cath. 8
R1ttman 26, Apple Creek Waynedale 6
Rocky River 21, Bay Village Bay 19
Rocky River Lutheran W 54, Oberlin 7
Rootstown 23, Atwater waterloo t 3
Rossford 14, PerrySburg 9
Sc1oto McDermott NW 15, Minford 12
Shadyside 52, Zanesv1lle Rosecrans 7
Shetf1eld
Brookside
53,
Lorain
Ctearv1ew 0
Shelby 21, Bellevue 20
Stlerwood Fairview 32, Hicksville 14
Sidney Lehman 36, Troy Christian 15
Sm1thv111e 7, Dalton 6
Solon 35, Stow 7
Spring. Cath Cent 30, N LeWisburg
Triad 6
Spnng Kenton Ardge 45, Casstown
M1am1 E. 7
Spring NE 27, Cedarville 7
Spnng. S. 34. Trotwood-Madison 7
Spring Shawnee 33, New Carlisle
Tecumseh 15
Spnngboro 14, Lebanon 9
St Henry 35, Rockford Parkway 0
St. Marys Memorial 28. L1ma Shawnee

12
St Pans Graham 34, Spnng. NW 3
Steubenville 41, Zlfnesvllle 7
Steubenville Cath Cent 21, Wheehng
Cent Ca!h 7

Stewart Federal Hocking 40, Reedsville
Eastern 6 ·
Strasburg-Franklin 40, Malvern 6
StrongS'o'llle 30, Elyna 20
Sugs.rcreek Garaway 2B, Magnoha
Sandy Valley 6
Summtt Statton Lrcking Hts 15, Cols
Harvest Prep 6
Sycamore Mohawk 41 Carey 0
Sylvania Northview 40, Maumee 0
Tallmadge 69, Barberton 14
Thompson Ledgemont 34. Ashtabula
Sis John and Paul 6
Thornville Shendan 48, Zanesville
Maysville 7
T1ffin Columbian 48 Norwalk 0
Tipp C1ty Bethel 41 , Umon C1ty
M1ssissinawa Valley 20
Tol Cent. Cath. 24, Tot. St. Franc1s 13
Tol Christian 23, Edon 20
Tol Ottawa Hills 27, W. Umty Hilltop 20
Tol St Jonn's 29. Tol Start 12
Tol Waite 34, Oregon Clay 27
Tol. Whitmer 31 , To I Bowsher 12
Tontogany Otsego 43, Millbury Lake 14
Upper Arlmgton 21 , Newark 17
Upper· Sandusky 56, Gallon 0
Versailles 34, New Bremen 6
Vtenna Mathews 35, Cle Cent Cath t 6
W Carrollton 23, Trenton EC\Qewood 20
W. Jefferson 34, Ft. Loramie 18
W Lafayehe Ridgewood 39, Bowerston
Conotton Valley 6
W. Liberty-Salem 24, S Charleston SE 6
W Milton Milton·Un1on 54, Germantown
Valley View 21
W Salem NW 35, Creston Norwayne 7
Washmgton C H M1am1 Trace 42,
London 0
Wauseon 30, Montpelier 8
Waynesfield-Goshen 42, Lima Perry 0
Waynesvr/le 28, Day Northridge 0
Wellington 24, LaGrange Keystone 21
Wellston 48, Belpre 13
Weste rville N. 23, Thomas Worth1ngton
7
Westerville S. 40, Ml Vernon 8
Wheelersburg 41, Waverly 6
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 21. Holland
Sprmg. 7
W1llard 6, Fostona o
W1111amsporl Westfall 20, Ch1ll1cothe
Huntington 18
Willoughby S. 28. East!a~e N. 24
Wilmington 35, Norwood 14
Wllldham 21, E. Can 6
Woodsf1eld
Monroe
Cent
12,
SarahSVIlle Shenandoah 7
Wooster 26, Lexington 7
Worthington Kilbourne 35, Marysvtlle 0
Youngs Chaney 22, Wooster Triway 14
Youngs. Rayon 24, Campbell 7
Zanesville W. Musk1ngum 14, New
Concord John Glenn 7
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 33, Akr.
Manchester 14

Frlday'a W.Va. a corea
Allegany, Md 41, Hampshire 13
Beall, Md'. 62 Moorefield 0
Beallsville, Oh1o 53, Paden Crty 6
Berkeley Springs 31, Sidwell Fnends.

O.C. O
Bluefield 34, Snady Spnng 7
Bridgeport 35, lrncoln o
Buckhannon-Upshur 27, Fairmont
Sen1or 24
Buffalo 28, Midland Trall13
Cabell Midland 45, Spnng Valley 7
Cameron 25, Hundred 0 ~
Capital 42, Riverside 21
East Fairmont 57, Lewis County 18
Frankfort 26. Petersburg 12
Gilbert so, Williamson 14
Greenbrier West12, Webster County 0
Herbert Hoover 44, Sissonville 14
Hurricane 23 N1tro 21
Independence 16, Summers County 14
James Monroe 40, L1berty Rale1gh 6
John Marshall 21 , Hedgesville 7
Uberty Hamson 14. South Hamson 7
Logan 35, Wyom1ng East a
Man 28, Chapmanville 14
Mart1nsburg at Park View-Sterling, Va .•
ppd to Oct. 8th.
Matewan 50, Tug Valley 6
Meadow Bridge 41. Montcalm 24
Morgantown 65, North Manon 14
Mount Hope 51 , Valley Fayette-.Q
Mount View 41, Iaeger 12
Musselman 17, Keyser 14
Nicholas County 16, Robert C Byrd s
Notre Dame 26, Tygarts Valley 0
Oak Glen 2a. Tyler Consolidated 20
Parkersburg South 15, Parkersburg 3
Ph1llp Barbour 41, Elk1ns 12
Point Pleasant 23, Poca 22, OT
Preston 45, Oakland Sollthern, Md 22
Ravenswood 53, Sherman 18
Richwood 20, Braxton County 0
Ripley 33, Huntington 12
Roane County 14, Clay County 6
Scott 12, Oak H1ll 0
South
Charleston
a1
George
Washmgton, ppd to Oct a
St Albans 27, Greenbrier East 7
Staub Cath. Cent., Oh10 21, Wheelmg
Central 7
,
Stonewall Jackson-Mt Jackson Va at
P8ndleton County, ppd to Oct 10'
Un1verslty 20. Brooke 19
Van 13, R1tchie County 7
.
Wahama 32 South Gallla, OhiO 12
We1r 42, Magnolia 7
Wests1de 28, PikeV!ew 8
Williamstown 55 Doddndge County 15
Winfield 30. Grafton t3
Wirt COunty 39, Valley Wetzel 6

13
Dublin Jerome 35, Cols, Franklin His 7
E. Palestine 28, Wellsville 12
Eaton 40, Preble Shawnee 0
Elyrra Cath. 24, Parma Padua 14
Euclid 40, Lakewood Y
Fairfield 35, w Chester Lakota W. 13
Fmdlay 40, Manon Hardmg 7
F1ndlay liberty-Benton 60. Arcadia 0
Frankfort Adena t9, Piketon 15
Franklm 14, Day Stebbins 9
Franklin Furnace Green 26, Portsmolllh
Notre Dame o
Ga(lanna Cols. Academy 41 : Hebron
Lakewood S
Gallon Northmor 40 Richwood N Un1on

26
Ga!Upol{s Galha 20, Jackson 10
Gart1eld 28, Penmsula Woodridge 0
Garfield Hts 45, Loreln Southview 8
Genoa 14, Kansas Lakota 7
Glouster Tnmble 14, Waterford 7
Goshen 46, Bethel-Tate 7
Grafton Mldv1ew 57. Fairview Park
Fairview 3
Grovt'l Ctty 12, P1ckenngton Cent. 6, OT
Grove City Cent Crossmg 20, Delaware

14. 20T
Hamilton New M1amt 7, Lockland 6
Hamler Palnck Henry 43 Bryan 14
Hanoverton UOII&amp;d 27 Salinevrlle
Soutnern t 2
·Haviland Wayne Trace 15, De!1ance
Ayersvtlle 12
Hilliard Darby 19 .•Gahanna 14
Hilliard Davidson 13, Reynoldsburg 6
HillsbOro 22, London Madtson Plains 13
Howard E Knox 4 t , Johnstown·Monroe

26

- Huber His. Wayne 30, Kettering
Fairmont 12
Hudson 17, Mayheld 14, OT~
Hunting Valley Umversily 57, Wheeling
(W.Va.) Linsly 13
Independence 43. Newbury 0
Ironton 27, Portsmouth w, 13
Johnstown Northridge 47 , Loudonville

16
Kenton 41 , Wapakoneta 6
Kattermg Alter 21, Cln, Purcell Marian 6
Kmgs Mills Kings 4a Hamilton Ross 3
Kirtland 35, Fairport Harbor Hard1ng 0
Lafayette AllenE 17, Spencerville 13
Lakewood St Edward 41 , Cle E 6
La.ncaster 40. Groveport 21
Lancaster Fa1rf1eld Union 7, Canal
Wmchester 0
Latle8ster Fisher Calh. 61 , Sugar Grove

Winterize Your Car
Now And Save At

$f9.99+TAX

TIRE ROTATION ANV
BALANCE
All4 TIRES

COMPlETE
TRANSMISSION
FLUSH

FREE BIIA~E IN&gt;PfCTION

F1ltt r E.xrra 1jRrqu1~d +tax

f-.L... -.bu/A .. "" -

.

Don Tate Motors
East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH

740·992·6614 • 1·800·837·1094
llil
'GMC.
~·
...... .. . •
'flol&gt;ooT&gt;too
""..:.-.. ~
a.,,.,..

I

SERVICE HOURS:
&amp;-5 Mon .. Frl

~
OU!IIlN'.IIIJ~cii'
....

pur l hd&lt;:.P

;o-;;= GP:ANiiO~~~-t=~~:;;;:: 80FW AT AC T1LTCME PW PL PWR SEATS CO SPRTWHLS
05 JEEP UBERTY .1289518,000 MLS BOFW AT AC TilT SPORT WHEEL CD, PW PL........................................ $20,995
04 PONTIAC AZTEC 11'1297325.000 W.S BOFW AT AC !,'W PL CD ALLOY MLS................................................................ . $16,900

04 HONDA ELEMENT EX 1127111 KEYLESS ENT. PW' PLCD AU.OVWHLS 4 CYLAWI;J ATTlLTCl=ISE 8UNOOOF 31,000 MLS s18.995
04 JEEP UBERTY RENEGADE f1771029,11110 MLSBOFW AT ACTITLTCRSI! PW PLPWRSEAT COSPfiT~LS SUNROOF
$20.665
"04 SUBARU BAJA AWDI12722AT AC TILTC:RSE PW PlPWA SEAT CO SPAT WHI.S PWR SUN ROOF BOfW ------- $18.900
"04 SUBARU IMPREZZA OUTBACK

sW 112&amp;58 1,1100 MLS 90FW AT ...c TILT CRSE PW PL Awo co 8f&gt;RT WHLS 5 SPD

st&amp;.49s

02 FORD EXPLORER SPAT TRAC 112DIAT AC Tll.T CRSE PW PLLOW MLS SPATWHLS TAN COVEll AMI1'WCO -0200DGE DURANGO SLT PLU moeo AT AC T1LT CASE PW PL- ···-- ·-.... --· -· ···-- ·-· _ -··- ·- -·-·
02 CHEV BLAZER ZR2t121114X42DRATAC1LTCRSEPNPLCDSPRTWHLS. ,_,.., M,.. ,...,_,,.,MM .... M,.,_,,. _,.,., .. -..
01 FORO EXPEDITION Xll 112810 57,000 MLS AT AC TILT CASE PW PL PWR LTtiR SEAl$ REAR AC SPAT WHLS
01 SUBAAU FORESTER lt12918AWD PW PLSPRTWHL.SROOFRACKAT AC.. ,.,_,,_ --- .._..................., ......,_
OOFOADEXPLOAER4X4112988ATACT11..TCRSEPWPLPWRSUNROOFPWRLniRSEATSSPRTWHLSV8

$17.995
S1 6.890

S28 9
$269

$13.900
S16.995
S12.t95
$7,995

$221
$2 7 5

OOGMCENVOYt129754X4ATACTILTCRSEPWPLPWRSEATSLniRSUNROOFSPRTWHLS ................... - ... $11.995
OOJEEPGRANOCHEROKEE1129074X4ATACl1LTCRSEPWPlSPRTWHLSCD.... __ ...................... _ ..,. $11,995

$199
$119
$199
$199

00 JEEP GRD CHEROKEE lOREDOmm ............................ .................... - ............_, ................... ............ ,111.800

$199

OONISSANXTERRA#127144X4V6ATACTILTCRSEF¥WPLSPATWHLS ................... - .......... " ...
99 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4t1299'1 AT ACTILTCRSE PWPL...................................................... __ .. _ ... .......... ..... , ..

$23
$13
$11

M

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

$13,900
$8,995

99FORDEXPLORERSPRT1129744X2ATACl1LTCRSEPWPLCOSPRTWHL.S.................................... . ...... $7.995

99DODGE DURANGOSLT#12969 .......... ....................................................._.................. .......... ...... • ..... . $8.495
99 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4X4 112965 ......................................,_ ............. _..c............. .. .. .. .... . ... . .. .. .. . $10.300
99 CHEVSUBURBAN 4X4t12964AT ACTILTCRSE PW PLSPRTWHLS .. _ .............................. _ ............ _ ... .. ... .. . $11.915

-e9 DODGE DURANGO SLT 4X4 PLUS 112M2 AT AC TILT C:RSE 3RD SEAT REAR PW Pl PWR LTHR SPRT WHLS.. ..
::=E~DU~RA~NGO!!Ql'!:4~X~4112720ATACT1LTCRSEF'NPLV8 .......................,__, .. ,............................ ... .. • .. .. .

sI 0,800

$1
$ 16
$J
$I 7
$1

"04 FORD F1504X4 SC 112867 26,000 MLS BOFW...................- ••'::...............................................................,. $20,950
04 DODGE'DAKOTA QUAD CAB 4X4 11285210,000 ML.S BOfW AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL co....... ........ ... 520.995
04 CHEV S10 CREW CAB 4X4 11279511000MLSAT ACTLT CASE PWPL.PWR LfltRSE.m&gt;t£ATEOSEAT99Pfwt;l.IIDL.N!fl $19,995
03 FORD RANGER ~T SC 4X4 f12848 Y6 24,000 MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CASE PW PL. CD AUOY WHLS.. , 516,960

03 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 112809 41,000 MLS BOFW...........................- ....... - ........ - .....................- ..... .'.........._..
03 FORDF150SC4X4 112111425,000MLSBOFWATAClLTCRSE.PWPLSPRTWHLS .••.• ·- ...... - ...
-o1 GMC SONOMA SUPER CAB 112591 ZR2 4X4 3RDAT ACl1LT CRSE PW LSPRT WHLS CD .............."............
*'"'DO TOYOTA TUNDRASR5112486X.CAB4X4 YBAT ACl1LT CRSEPW P\.SPRTWHlSCD.........._ ......................
99 FORD F150 FLARESIDE 4X4 112793...._................ - ........"""..................... __........ - ... ................-................_ .. ,
119DODGE RAM 4X4.12912 REG CAB AT /&gt;£T1LTCRSE PW PL .................... - .........- ............................-...
98 CHEV K1500 X.cAB 4X4•12943AT AC T1LTCRSE PW PLSPRTWHLS._...... ........... - ...........................
98GMC K15004X4112921 SUPERABAT ACTILTCRSESLESPRTWHLS.-..........-...................................
98 CHEV SUPER CAS 4X4&gt;12800 AT ACT1LT ......-............................................-....................- ..........-..'................

$16.900
119.995
S 14,600·

$2 S9
$310

516.995

$298

Sl 1.900
112.895
112.300
$13.800
511.800

$199
$261
$249
$281
$249

05 DODGE MAGNUM 012978 27,000 MLS BOFW AT AC T1LT CRUISE P SEAT, PW PL CD.................................
05 CHEV IMPALAI12977 AT AC T1LTCRSE PW PL PWRSEAT27.000MLS BOFW........................-.................
05 BUICK LESABRE112962 15,000 MLSBOFW AT AC TILTCRSE PW PL PWR SEAT... ....- ........................:-.
05 CHEV CAVAUER *12885 4 DR 21,000 MLS BOFW AC CD-........................................................-......
'":Q5 PONTlAC GRAND AM GT2 DR .ti'D'¥7 AT ACT1L.TCRSE PWPLCDSPATWHlS 19,1Xll MLS BOfW -- ....
"05FORDFOCUSZX4SU1275619,000MLSBOFW AT ACTILTCRSEPWPLCDSPRTWHLS
"05 CHEV MT CARLO 112851 1!5,000-.sBOFWAT M;TV..TCR&amp;EPWPLCASSSPRT'Mt.SPWRsurn ..· ~ -~ ~ __
"05 PONTlAC BONNEVLLE 112633 18,000 MLS BOFW AT ACl1LT CASE PW PL P'Mt SEATS SPAT WHLS CD
04 CHRYSLER 300M f1211114AT AC11LTCRSE PWPLPWR LntRS!ATSSPRTWHLS PWR suNROOF.. .. .• ... ... ..

II 9,900 $299
115,995 $236
118.300 $214
113.300 $19 9
SlUSS $229
112,980 $199
Sl5.495 $229
$16,900 $2 4 7
$15,695' $229

$22 7

1Cil:oo r;r.l.,Ciiif#. Nf!,~.DM...o;taww; t~m...c;m~

......- - ..............

-

...

·- .. "

...

04 NISSAN SENTRA 112971 AT AC PW PL BOFW ........... .............. - .............._ ........-.. ... • .. •. .• ... .... ... ..... .. •
04 BUICK LESABRE112952ATAC TU CRSEPW PL PWR ........ - ............. - - - ......................,_
04CHEVMAUBUCLASSICI129&lt;7ATACT1LTCRSE ............. - ...................- ........ - .--..·-· ........................
04 BIJICK LESABRE 112878ATAClLTCRSe PWPLPWRSEAn. .................................................... ; • ... ..
04 DODGE NEON 'SXT 112760 211XIJ LtLS BOFW AT AC TILT CASE PW PL- ........~........ --......- ...... ,..._. .................
M04 CHEVY CAVAUER 4 DR 112741 26,000 MLS BOfW AT M; TILT CRSE PW PL CD ....................-...........
03 TOVOTACOROLLA mB711AT AC T1LT CRSE BOFW ....................... - ....................................-...... .................... ... .....
03 HYUNDAI ElANTRA 11- AT AC TILT CASE PW PL ......._.............. - ......... ,_.................................................
03 FORD FOCUS 012841AT AC GREAT GAS M1LEAGE........................................................................................... ......
03 FORD TAURUS 112937 AT AC TILT CASE PW PL........................................................................................... .........
03 HONDA CIVIC EX 112835AT AC T1LTCRSE PWPLPWR SUN ROOF SPRTWHLS.............................................
03 FORD TAURUS SES m933 AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL PWR SEATS .........., ........................................... -............
03 POlmAC GRAND PRIX 012832AT ACT1LTCR91i PW PL PWR SEATS SPRT WHLS CO ................. -............
03 FORD MUSTANG GT •12160158Po23,000MLSBOFWPWPLPWRLTHASEATSVIBUUITTWHLSMACHSTEAEO.....

S12.995

$119
$119
$ 19 9

113.950 $211
$11,995 $119
S14.890 $21 g
510.995 $ J 59
SI0,995 $ I 59
S13.300 $2 23
S 10.900 $ I 59
SUDD $ I 43
S10,300 $ 14 9
$14.800" $234
S9.3SO $ I 35
Sll.995 $ 189

$289
$11.900 $ 179
S11,900 $ I 7 9
$17.925

$162

$1 58

*02 BUtCK PARK AVE ULTRAr~:..-IIMI'IctWIOI!II aoo""'~••uucn.rt~~~e"'"'-~-...co••.woiiiLI _ _ $20.995

$1 79
$345

01 CHEVlMPALA4 DR BLUE112855ATACT1LTCRSE PWPLPWR SEATS CD-...................................._ $9,900
01 NISSAN MAX!~AI12818ATACTILTCRSE PW PLPWRSEATSSPRTWHLS- ......._.........- .................. $1 2.900
~01 MERCURY SABLE SW 112806 AT AC T1LT CRUISE PW PL P. SEAT Sl'OR'TWHEEL.. ....-................. 19:900

$147
$199
$1 47

-01 BUICKLESABRE112758ATA,C11LTCRSEPWPlPWRSEATB38lSPRTWHLSCO ................................... $9,900

$141

*"01 PONllAC GRAND PRIX SE ~1 2644ATACTLT CRSf PW PLSPRT WHLS_

$99

-~--· .... - - --- - -· --- S6.995
OOVWNEWBEETlE"""-·····--·--- ..·--·--··---··..··-··---··--·· -----·· -· •. _ 18.995

$139

00 DODGE STAAnJS.12t531CYLATACTJ..T CRSCPWPLLOWMIW --·- .. _ .... ............ " ·-· ·----. --- -----.

$139

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• Page Bs

Miller gets elusive win over Southern
Bv Scan WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK - Miller Coach Mark
F.ortney finally got what he wanted- "a
real win." A few weeks ago the Willy
Fortney sa1d of his team's losses, but
good overall play, ''We are tired of moral
victories, we want a real one." Friday
night the veteran coach's wish came tllje
as the Falcons gave Fortney his first win
of the year, a 14-6 win over the Southern
Tornadoes.
·
Miller (1· 1. 1-6) won its first game of
the year and evened its mark in the TriValley Conference Hocking Division .
Southern (0·2, 2-5) has started the league
season with two consecutive losses.
On the second play of the game,
Miller's Jeff Connell rambled 70 yards
for a touchdown only to have it called
back on a clippmg penalty. Although ·it
did not result in a score, il was a bad
omen for the Tornadoes.
Then, a blocked punt, an interception,
and a fumble led to poor field possession

and two eventual Miller scores.
Senior Falcon quarterback Jordan
Gotke scored the game's first touchdown
at the I :07 mark of the first period on a
one yard run . The PAT kick failed and
Miller led 6-0. Shortly thereafter, Miller
took advantage of a Southern fumble and
in nine plays punched it into the end
zone for a 14-0 advantage at the 10:06
mark of the second canto. Zach Osborne
received the nod and blasted through
from one yard lme. A Gotke to Jarrod
Bolyard pass added the extras and the
score slood at 14·0.
That score stood to the half.
In the latter stages of the third period,
Josh Pape fired a 7-yard pass to Butch
Mamhout, who rambled in for the score.
Southern tried the two·point extra's at
the 3:27 mark, but the· pass fell incomplete, the score 14-6.
Miller threatened late in the game , but
took a knee on consecutive snaps to let
the clock run out on what became a
tough Southern loss, 14-6.

Southern once again made a good
defen sive showmg , especially in the second half. The offense once again slrug·
gled for consistency. Southern was led
by Blllch Marnhout w1th 8 carries for 4'3
yar,ds, ~nd Weston Counts was 10-25.
Buddy Young had two catches for 56
yards, Jesse McKn1ght 2A yards. and
Butch Marnhout 1-7 and a touchdown .
Connell led Miller with 20 carries for
87 . yards, Gotke was 10-43. Zach
Osborne was 12-42, and John Brown
was 4-6.
The Southern defense was led by
Darrin Teaford with nine tackles, Jesse
McKnight seven with an interception,
Buddy Young seven, and Butch
Marnhout six. Ryan Donaldson, Weston
Counts. Wes Riffle, and Mike Brown
also had a handful of solo stops. David
Myers blocked the extra poinl kick
against the Falcons.
Bolyard had an InterceptiOn for the
Falcons, and had a fumble re~overy.
Southern
hosts
Waterford
in
Homecoming in Racine next Friday.

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Point Pleasant passes Poca in.OT
2-point conversion
lifts Big Blacks to
overtime victory
BY ANDY LAYTON

S)OO gr'll ot ga s lrt•e

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Ga~Iipolis ·

2005

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spent going back and forth
with little yardage rained by
either side until Jarvis ran the
ball through 45 yards of
Eastern defense with less than a
minute remaming on the third
quarter clock. Their was some
comroversy concerhing the
play however a~ two tlags were
thrown down for unsportsmanlike conduct on behalf of
Federal Hocking. The score
was allowed but the kick was
penalized and moved back 10
yards and was blocked.
The fourth quarter was
spem much like the middle
portion of the third with ball
gaining little ground in either
direction. With less than a
minute left, the clock was
allowed to count down and the
game· was ended with a solid
victory for Federal Hocking.
Jarvis rushed for 140 yards
to pace the Lancer running
attack. Terry Durst gained 75
yards for Eastern,. but the next
leading ground-gainer tallied
only three.
Shaffer completed three
passes for 72 yards - all to
leading receiver Derek Young.
Eastern will attempt to pick
up its ftrst victory of the year
next Friday at Miller.

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TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern spent friday night at
East Shade River Stadium for
the1r Homecoming game
against the Federal Hocking
Lancers. The cold autumn air
and misty rain couldn't deter
loyal fans who had come out to
Witness the battle.
The game was well fought
on both sides and the rain didn't stop Federal Hocking from
rolling to a 40-6 win over
Eastern, whose losing streak
has still yet to end.
The game was threatened to
be postponed from the start
due to a power outage that was
plaguing the are~. but luckily
for players and spectators
alike, the power was returned
at around 7:10 p.m., so the
rapidly darkening field could
be illuminated an the game
could proceed as scheduled.
Federal Hocking received ,
the opening kick from Eastern,
wh1ch was received by A.J.
Smith, who caught the ball on
the 30-yard line and ran II to the
45 when Eastern's. own Bryce
Honaker brought h1m down.
Tyler Jarvis of The Lancers

didn't wait long before throw.
ing down the frrst score of the
evening when only minutes
into the tirst quarter, he scored
on a two-yard plun11e followed
by the PAT from kicker Tyler
Chadwell.
It became evident early on in
the game that this evening was
to belong to the two Tylers.
Chadwell scored his own
touchdown and tacked on his
own extrd point at 3: II on the
clock, followed again by
another score from Jarvis with
only seconds left in the opening quarter.
The second quarter was
marked by more action from
the two Tylers when Jarvis
recovered a fumble in the end
wne and Chadwell added the
point after.
Eastern finally hit paydirt in
the last remainmg seconds of
the first half when Derek
Young received a 30 yard pass
from Shaffer. .
Young was still on fire as the
second half opened UJ? and he
caught the receiving kick. only
to dance the ball across the
field, making a dashing 80yard run to near glory•. sending
the crowd mto a frenz1ed roar.
The rest of the third was

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Federal Hocking beats Eastern

Sunday, Octobe,r 9,

POCA. W.Va. - "There's
gonna be a heartache tonight,
a heartache tonight, I know."
The Point Pleasant Big
Blacks were finally the team
causing heartache Friday
night with a 23-22 overtime
victory over the Poca Dots .
The win ended a four-game
losing streak for the Big
Blacks, and perhaps ended the
Dots' postseason hopes, not to
mention ruined their homecoming night
"All in all, there were a lot
of big plays from a lot of kids
on both sides of the ball
tonight," said Point Pleasant
coach Steve Safford. ''We're
just happy we made the
biggest one al the end."
The "biggest play" that
Safford spoke of was the
game-winning catch by junior
Jarod Stouffer from James
Casto on the last play of the
game in overtime. The gameending catch ended a great
effort from Poca, and sealed
an even greater victory for
Point.
After having a rough home
stand, losing all four games,
the emphasis on the run was a
must for the Big Blacks, and
was established from beginl)ing to end. Point rushed 51
times, compared to attempting just eight passes on the
night Senior Brandon Warner
benet! ted from the great effort
up front the most with his second 'I00-yard game of the season, posting 101 yards on 20
carries and a touchdown.
Nathan Patton, Poca's feature back, also had a terrific
game posting 142 yards on 20
carries, a great 7.1 carry average, but his effort was not
enough to get the Dots the
homecoming night victory.

1

The Poca offense had enough
to get the job done but, for the
third consecutive week, their
defense could not. They were
beaten the previous two
weeks by combined scores of
63-7, by Magnolia and
Herbert H90ver respectively.
The scoring did not begin
until the second quarter of the
game, when Poca drove 90
yards down the field and
scored on a Derek McClure
three yard run. The PAT was
good by Tyler Ragan and
Pocajumped out to a 7-P.lead.
"We fiddled around for the
fi'rst quarter, did not get anything going offensively. and
just did not play welL We
punted it to the 10 yard line,
and they ~arne out with a 90
yard drive to take the le~d,"
Safford said:
The Big Blacks were able to
answer on the ensuing kickoff
with an amazing return by
senior speedster Travis Riffle.
There . have not been many
teams kicking to Riffle lhis
season after his two kickoff
returns last season, but Poca
decided to, and paid for it.
Riffle returned the ball to
midfield. and if not for a blatant facemask by the kicker,
would have returned the kick
for a touchdown.
Point was able to take
advantage of the field position
and drive down· the field for a
touchdown run on a quarterback sneak by James Casto.
Senior
kicker
Patrick
Holland, who was in Point
Pleasant for his senior night
.soccer game, was missing.
making Dewey Wroten .the
place-kicker for the night.
With Wroten set up to kick ,
the last thing Poca expected
was a fake, which is just what
they got. Casto got the ball on
the snap, picked it up and
threw it to sophomore Mark
Fooce for the easy two-point
conversion to put Point ahead
8-7.
''We came to life in the second quarter: We got a score on
the board, and then made the

decision at that time to go for
two. We thought that if we got
a little bit of momentum from
a two-point conversion it
would help out."
The next score of the game
came in the closing seconds
of the third quarter on a four
yard run by Warner. Point was
able to chew most of the third
quarter clock on this drive,
and made the lead 15·7 with
the PAT from Dewey Wroten,
which was his first, and might
end up being his only PAT of
his high schQol career.
Poca was able to knot the
game up at 15 with a touch·
down with just six minutes
left in the game. Jamie
Barnhart completed a nice
pass to Josh Jenkins to make
the game 15· 13. A' Nathan
Patton PAT run made the
game 15-15 with just minutes
remaining. ·
•
Neither team was able to
score in the final mmutes of
regulation, therefore making
the \lame an overtime affair.
In h1gh school, overtime has
the same rules· as college
overtime rules', with the
exception of where the ball is
marked. In college it is
marked at the 30, but in high
school, it is marked at the 20.
Poca was on offense first,
and on just their second play
from scrimmage, Barnhart
completed a swing pass to
Jenkins for a 15 yard score to
put Poca ahead. The PAT from
Ragan was good again, and
Poca was up 22-15.
The Big Blacks then took
the ball, and pieced together a
two-yard touchdown run from
Warner. Despite the PAT kick
in the third period, the coaching staff decided to go for it
all an~ win the ballgame.
Casto then rolled out, completed the pass to Jarod
Stouffer, and the ball game
was over.
Point, as mentioned above,
was led by Warner with 101
yards on 20 carrles and a
touchdown. Casto had a very
nice game rushing, with 15

rushes for 67 yards plus a
touchdown. Travis Riffle had
50 yards on II carries, and
Jarod Stouffer rounded out
the rushing attack with 17
yards on five carries.
Poca was led by Nathan
Patton with 20 carries for 142
yards. Heath BU~Tett had four
rushes for 35 yards, Derek
McClure had seven rushes for
26 yards and a touchdown,
and Ryan Vanney completed
the high men for Poca with 25
yards on four carries.
Casto had 50 yards passing
for Point, completing . 3·of-8
with one interception. Poca
quarterback Barnhart also
completed 3-of·8, but for just
38 yards and one interception
as well. Heath Barrell also
completed one pass for 10
yards.
Troy Leport had the 'big
receptiOn of the night for the
Big Blacks with a 30 yard
grab, his only reception of the
game. Dewey Wroten had a
nice 18 yard reception, and
Travis Rime had one reception for two yards.
Josh Jenkins caught three
receptions for 32 yards and
two touchdowns for Poca, and
Drew Nutter also caught one
ball for 16 yards.
The win marked the second
win of the season for the Big
Blacks , and improved the
record to 2-5, ·both of' those
wins coming on the road
against Cardinal . Conference
games. They will be at home
next Friday night against the
Ravenswood Red Devils, who
1mproved to 4-3 with a win
over Sherman. Ravenswood
defeated this same Poca team
14· I 0 111 week two of the season.
Poca drops ' to 3-4, and perhaps watches their playoff
h'Opes come to a halt. "(hey
still have dates with Winfield,
top. ranked
Wayne,
and
Hurricane to come. so winning out doesn ' t look good for
the Dots. They will play their
inter-county rival Winf,1eld
next Friday at Winfield.

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Rio volleyball snaps losing skid at Central State
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTINEL

WILBERFORCE - The
I 0-match lo sing streak for
the University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball squad
became a part of history
Thursday evenin, as the
Redwomen downed Central
State on 'the road in four
games, 28-30, 30-23, 30-15
and 30-n

Outlast
fromPageBl
period.
The Buckeyes were on the
drive late in the first half driving to the Marauder 25. Sut
the Meigs defense rose to the
occasion and held the
Bucld!yes taking over ot;
downs with 2:07 left.
On third and seven, Jared
Casey ripped off a 37 yard
gain to the Buckeye 36. On
the next play, VanMeter hit
Casey with a beautiful pass
down the ri~ht sideline for
the score wtth 4 7 seconds
left. Josh Buzzard nailed the
extra points and the two
teams went into the . locker

Rio Grande (4-18) snapped
the losing streak but it wasn't
easy • as the Red women
allowed Central State to capture the momentum with a
30-28 first game win. Rio
struggled in the serving and
passing departments, totaling
26 and nine errors respectively. Despite the difficulty, Rio
rebounded and won the final
three games to put the streak
to bed.

Senior
outside
hitter
Lynnette Kiesling produced
her best outing of the season
with 20 kills and three block
assists to lead Rio Grande to
victory.
F~eshman outside/middle
hitter Jessica Rodger ~ was
solid again with 14 kills, nine .
digs , three block assists and
three aces. Junior outside
hitter Lindsay Urton also
racked up double figures in

room tied at seven.
Meigs drove the ball to the
Buckeye 45 yard line in the
third period, but the drive
stalled
forcing
the
Marauders to punt. Edwards
fielded the punt from Goble
on his own 15, started to his
right and cut back against
the grain . Picking up a couple of good blocks along the
way Edwards went down the
left sideline for the score.
The pass for the extra points
was no good, but the
Buckeyes held a 13-7 lead
with 4:23 left in the period.
The Marauders were able
to drive to the Nelsonville·
York 34 in the fourth period.
But a fourth and 17 pass fell
incomplete
and Meigs
turned the ball over on

hitting two for 13 yards.
downs.
The Buckeyes drove the Adam Wagner caught ohe
ball deep into Meigs territo- for seven and Jolley one for
ry late in' tre game, but six.
"This was a hard fought
Coach Dave Boston Jr.,
showed good sportsmanship , football game", a dejected
coach
Mike
and took a knee on the- Marauder
games final play at the Chancey said after the conMarauder four yard line to test.' "They are a good foot·
ball team, and made some
run out the clock.
Casey led all rushers with big plays. But we never gave
135 yards in 24 carries, up, both teams played well,
VanMeter went to the air we have three games to play
eight times completing three and we have to work hard
for 46 yards. Josh Kimes and get ready for the final
caught two passes for 20 three games ."
yards, and Casey had his 36
Meigs (4-3, 0-2 TVC) will
yard touchdown catch .
return home next Friday and
Jolley led the Buckeyes on host Alexander, while the
the ground with 57 yards in Buckeyes (4-2, 2-0 TVC)
13 carries, Bear Lewts added will travel to Wellston for a
51 in 11 carries. Edwards show down the Golden
went to the air seven times Rockets.

•

kills with II .
Junior setter Jessica Veach
I allied 35 assists and I 0 digs
while sophomore hbero Jodi
Smith delivered ihree aces
and paced the defen se with
14 d1gs.
Central State falls to 0-7 on
the season:
The rematch will take
place October 20 when
Central State comes to Rio
Grande.

--

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•

�Page B6 • ~unbap i!l:inle9 -~ntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday; October 9, 2005

Cl

High ?chool Soccer

Point Pleasant shuts out Defenders, 4-0
'qvc

Patrick Holland was
next to score for Point
Pleasant with an unasPOINT PLEASANT. W.Va. _ On a
sisted goal late in the
first half to give the
rare Friday night soccer game under
Black Knights a 2-0
the lights. the Point Pleasant boys
lead
over
the
came out strong with a big win over ·
Defenders.t- ,
Ohio Valley Christian School on senior
There was little scarnight at PPHS .
ing through most of
Posting a solid performance, P!&gt;int
the second half until
Pleasant improved to 10-3-2 on the
Stinson
senior Dustin Taylor
year with a 4-0 win on senior night broke free and fired a shot from about
while their Galli a County neighbor tell 25 yards out for the goal. , .
to 6-7-1 on the season.
· Walker put · up the final goal of the
On the night, the Black Knights put game only two minutes. later on an
up 27 shots on goal to only seven for unassisted goal. from about 25 yards
OVC
out to give the Black Knights the big
Point Pleasant got the scoring started. senior night victory.
only five minutes into the game when
Along with three goals by seniors on
Chase Gibbeaut slammed in a goal the night, another senior Justin Sayre
alter senior Stephen Walker chipped a put up an impressive performance in
high lob from the right side of the goal. . the net with six saves and keeping
BY LARRY CRUM

scoreless on the

night.
OVC keeper Luke
Stinson faced a little
and
more
action
grabbed 15 saves in the
loss.
During the
rain
dampened
night,
seniors Holland, Sayre,
Glbbeaut
Taylor, Walker and
Marco Sh'reiber were
honored &lt;luring halftime as the boys
played one of their final home games
at Sanders Stadium.
After Saturday's game was canceled
due to heavy rain, Point Pleasant will
return to action 5 p.m. Wednesday as
the Black Knights host Ravenswood
before traveling to -face Galli a
Academy 5:30 _Thursday.
Ohio Valley Christian is at ·South
Point Monday.

. LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

-'

ASHTON, W.Va. - It
began like it was going to be
another long night of .football for Hannan, but a strong
showing by the Wildcats
defense brought the close
game down to the wire.
With only four minutes
left in the fourth quarter,
Harts Creek (3-4) hit a 59yard touchdown pass to
break up a 6-6 tie and keep
the Wildcats (0-7) from
grabbing a victory during
their · homecoming as the
Lions roared to a 14-6 win.
"I think that was probably
one of our best efforts of the
· year and I think the kids are
coming along well," said
Hannan head coach Mike
Wallace. "We have three
more. games and I can't see
any reason why we can't pull
out some wins."
And what an improvement
it was.
With the Wildcats giving
up more than 40 points per
game this season, the
Hannan defense stepped up
and made key plays throughout the game to keep the
game close and limit Harts
to 14 points.
Early on , however, the
game looked like it may be
another poor jhowing.
Bef{)re even taking the field
Hannan was Oagged for
delay of game for taking too
long in the locker room and
then fumbled the ball on the
first play of the game.
The fumble set up the
Lions for a quick 20-yard
touchdown run by Ryan
Vance less than two minutes
into the game. After a failed
two point conversion, the
score was 6-0 in favor of the
visitor.
Hannan's offense took
some time to get moving,
suffering quick possessions
with no first downs through
most of the first quarter. but
the defense
kept the
Wildcats alive to the very
end.
. Harts answered the struggling Hannan offense by
putting together strong dri ves which eventually stalled
in Hannan territory.
The Lions faced two
fourth down conversion
attempts in their first four
possessions in Wildcat .territory, but a broken up pass by
Christian Estep and a one
yard stand by the defensive
line gave the ball back to
Hannan .
·
And Han nan responded.
The Wildcats · quickly got
the ball moving when Estep
opened up with a 32-ymd
run to set up Hannan at the
15 yard line. '
After three fai led attempts
to move the ball, Hannan
was held to a fourth and six
where Alan Dye faked a
field goal and powered
through defenders fo r a I0-

yard touchdown run.
Froni there on, it was up to .
both defenses. Both teams
held each other in check and
prevented big plays, leaving
the two teams deadlocked at
6:6 midway through the
fourth quarter.
Hannan did manage to put
together some drives, but
stalled in each.
Harts finally looked as if
they would break the score
at the beginning of the fourth
qtJarter. The Lions moved
the ball successfully for the
first time since the first quarter and drove down inside
the IOyardline.
With first .and goal from
the eight, Hannan posted a
strong goalli ne stand, pushing Harts back and eventually getting a big sack from
Dye and Wes Gue to set up a
fourth and goal from the 24
yard line. On the fourth
down play, Steven Lambert
came up big, breaking up the
pass and giving the ball back
to Hannan.
Along with Lambert and
Gue, Luke Edmonds provided some impressive stops to
help lead the defense.
Following
the
stop,
Hannan finally got the ball
back but failed to do anything with it as the Hans
defense finally began to
wear on the offensive line.
"Our offensive line , is
coming together, we are not
having as much flow
through the line, but the
unfortunate thing is that
when the flow happens, it is
at real unfortunate times,"
said Wallace .
After failing to move the
ball, Hannan was forced to
punt, setting up Harts for the
final big play. Stuck on their
own end, quarterback Aaron
Bailey launched · a pass
where
Rickey Thomas
burned the defender for a 59yard touchdown pass to keep
the now 29-game losing
streak alive for Hannan.
Estep lead the Wildcats on
the ground with 35 yards
while Dye was just behind
with 31 yards. -Lambert posted · 12 and Aaron Payne and
Gue posted nine yards
apiece.
Lambert also posted. 14
yards receiving and came up
huge in the kicking game,
putting up impressive kicks
locking Harts in their own
end, including two punts of
54-yards and 48-yards.
Hurts ·was led by Vance
with 77 yards and Joe
Browning who posted 64
yards on
22 carries.
Quarterback Bailey went 2fo r-6 for 66 yards and a
touchdtlwn, though · almost
all those numbers came from
the big pass.
Hannan will return home
7:30 nex t Friday with a big
match against struggling
Greater ~eck ley Christian in
the final home game of the
yea r for the Wildcats.

•

arsof

Students, teachers and ·
the community hold
South Gallia High School's
tenth homecoming
close to their hearts
STORY AND PHOTOS BY IAN McNEMAR
IMCNEMAR@MYOAILYTRIBI1NE.COM

ERC~VILLE - Tlie students at South Gallia
High School have more than enough reason to eelebrate this week.
.
This year's week of homecoming activities fall on the
tenth year of the school's existence.
The former Hannan Trace High School, the current
SGHS, closed in 1992 along with Southwestern, North
Gallia and Kyger Creek High Schools and the students
moved into River Valley High SchooL
.
Students from the Mercerville and Patriot areas were
bus~ed the long distance to Cheshire before South Gallia
opened in 1995.
In the · 10 years since SGHS opened, the students and
teachers are seeing the school embraced more every year
by the community. ·
·
"When we first opened, it was really like putting oil and
water together, things didn't really mesh," said Dafne
Davis, SGHS history teacher who is one of eight teachers
who have been at the school since 1995. "Now, I think we
have the most school spirit in the county.
"We are now South Gallia, we're no longer Hannan
Trace. There is an unbelievable comf!lunity following."

Hannan still winless
BY LARRY CHUM

Ten

.M

Larry Crumlphoto

Hannan'.s Christian Estep (12) is_chased by .a Harts defender
during Friday's contest in Ashton. In their closest contest of
the season, the Wildcats fell by a 14-6 score.

LCRUM@MYDAILYEGISTER.COM

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Led by Rachel Merry, freshman classmates sere
h1ohmeepcaormading parade
_e.

~~tu~~~~~: ~~;~ ;Pc~~~ln

·

·.

Fri~~/~~~
~;~~~~a~t~~:s~~~~~ ~~o~~~hi~ ~haeckwoefeaktsr~ck
before the start of the
.
"omecomtng compettttons

Athletic teams and academic programs are seeing more
success every year.
Last year, the basketball team saw its first district birth.
This year, the football team is staring at its first winning
season. Students are making it to the state level in the
History Day event every year. The cheerleading squad has
qualified for national competition. The PRIDE group has
been recognized nationally for its community work.
• "My son is a junior and he wouldn' t go an,ywhere else,"
said Jack James, athletic director and business teacher. "He
(Craig) thinks the world of this school and he would do
anything for it."
. SOHS' homecoming week was filled. with fun competi.tions for each grade level and a parade prior to the home-·
coming football game Friday.
In 10 years, traditions are taking root in athletics, the .
band and all extra curricular activities.

Right: At the begin-

ning of.the homecoming ceremony, 2005

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Lit!la
Cllunty
LexiM~~;~=~:~ left, stands with
SGHS' first homecom·lng queen from 1996,
{;wen Montgomery,
2001 queen Alicia
Halley and 2003
queen Chrissie Green.
. 2004 homecoming
· queen Julia Gwinn
was present to crown
the 2005 queen,
Miranda Merry.

3-2005

"When we first
'

'

'op·ene•a, -it 'was really
like putting oil and
· water together,
things didn't really
mesh. Now, I think
we have the

SGHS teacher Tina Johnson helps
the junior class as they
decorate the gymnasium for h·omecomlng. She has beet=~ at the.
_school since it•opened 10 years ago. Johnson has se§n the school
get state and. ~ational recognition for extracurricular activities In the
past few years. "I think that helps give us some wleght," she said.
The academic teams and extra curricular activities are starting to
develop their own traditions and people are recgonizing them as
South Gallia High School, not Hannan Trace High School. "We have
our own identity now," she said,

most school spirit
in the county."
- Daflle IMis,
t'i(if1S llismry m&amp;dlef

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Above: SGHS band members take a break from practicing their homecoming routine Thursday. Left:

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Having went to high school in Worthington, a suburb
of Columbus. and college at the Ohio State
University, Laurie Brevick's first teaching position
landed her at South Gallia High School teaching
Spanish this year, the opposite end of the spectrum 1
from what she was accustomed to . ."~ was definitely
a culture shock," she said, "but, the community here
is wonderful and I feel like I bel9ng here. It's very
close knit here. It's almost like an extended familY:"

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Blind-folded senior football player Bernie Fulks wolfs down bananas as fast as he can as
an underclassmen competitor watches during a contest in the pep rally Friday at SGHS.
He later learned that he was tricked in front of the school to not ,only eat his bananas,
but many of his competitor's too.

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'

Glenna Wright passes the hulahoop to a blinded Nikki Fulks as the sophomore class races to beat
the other grades in the hulahoop chain pass Friday. Homecoming week at SGHS was filled with many
A group of kids bear the rain to yell and support the South Gailia High School homecom- different compeititions and special ,days to celebrate. Though the sophomores did not win the overall
ing parade as It makes its way down Mercerville Road to the football field Friday night.
week, they won by a huge margin in the hulahoop chain pass .

�YOUR HOMETOWN

iunba~ Qttmt~·itnttnel

COMMUNITY (ORNER-It may be pennies, but funds are .welcome
...

Last week, the National
Honor Society at Meigs High
School staged a contest
where classes competed for
p&lt;1ints in a "penny war" to
raise money for Katrina
relief.
The "war" worked like this.
Each grade had a coin jar and
each penny put in the jar
earned a point for the class ..
However, students in other
grades could put in a nickel
. to take away five points.
Miranda Beha of the Honor
Society said it became quite
competitive .and that's how
$671.71 was raised to be sent
to the Red Cross for the hurricane relief fund. And the
winner was the junior class.

•

•

...

Donna
Wilson
of
Middleport has returned from
a week in Louisiana caring
for some of the children displaced by the hurricane. As
many parents stood in long
lines to get assistance or to
handle other details of lrY.ing
to get their lives back together, it became a hassle for the
children.
That's when Donna and
other Southern Baptist child-

to

go to assist McKinney.

•••

Startled is putting it mildly
for Art Duddek of Danville
and hi s family, who were
preparing to have supper the
Charlene other night on a glass-topped
patio table when it came
Hoeflich
crashinj; down in a million
pteces for no apparent reason.
He says he still can't
believe it. No loud sounds
were heard, no hot dishes had
care volunteers stepped in to been placed on the glass. An
help. Their rol.e was one of . is at a loss to figure out what
giving love and attention to caused the implosion.
the youngsters whose lives
•••
have been turned upside
Three
storefronts
on
Second Street in Pomeroy
down in: the disaster.
which have been empty for
•••
A Meigs Countian who weeks are showing stgns. of
always . seems .ready to life. The Acree Army Surplus
respond to a good cause is store, Ed's RC and Hobby
Dwight . Icenhower, Elvis Shop, and tbe Hair Shack are
tribute artist. He's done many open C!r about to, and that's
benefits and Friday night will good news for the downtown
be at the Rutland American business community. •
Legion hall to raise money
•••
for Sam McKinney, who has
Now about that bubble
serious health problems.
machine which operateS occaDwight will be doing a sionally on Pomeroy's Main
show from 7 to 9 p.m. and Street to the delight of many
there will be a variety of young children. It's all item
other things going on during available at Mac Willliams'
the evening, with ~II proceeds Party and Stuff store.

/.

Do you still own any
Savings Notes, also known as
Freedom Shares, issued from
May 1967 through October
1970 during the height of the
Vietnam War? Like E/EE
bonds, these bonds were
issued at a discount with the
interest
deferred
until
redemption.· Savings Not~s
had 30 years to final maturity
and no longer earn interest.
H and HH bonds differ
from other savings bonds in
that investors buy them at
face value and the bonds pay
out interest in cash semiannually. The government first
issued H bonds in June 1952.
Those issued through January
1957 had final maturities of
29 years, eight months. All H
bonds issued after January
1957, until HH bonds
replaced them in January
1980, have final maturities of
30 years. Again, as of this
writing, H bonds issued up to
April 1975 have stopped
·
earning interest. ·
But H and HH bonds,
which the government quit
issuing after August 2004,
have final maturities of only
20 years. Consequently, any
HH bonds you have that are
older than 20 years should be
cashed in to get back the
original investment (the face

J. Mark
Curry

when the accumulated interest and the original price raid
for a particular bond tota the
face value of the bond. But
interest payments are automatically extended after that,
usually for periods of 10
years, until the bond reaches
its "final maturity." At that
point, the bond quits earning
interest.
This . is where matters get
confusing for investors,
because the final maturity
dates vary. E bonds issued
from May 1941 through
November 1965 and 40 years
to final maturity. As of this
writing, nearly all of them
have stopped earning interest.
E bonds issued from
December 1965 through June
1980, however, have only 30
years to final maturity. As of
this writing, all E bonds
issued through April of 1975
. have stopped earning interest.
The fmal maturity . for all
EE bonds is 30 years, and
since none are older than July
1980, you have a few more .
years before they stop earnmg tnterest.
·

v~lue).

Taxes on savings bonds are
free of state .and loc.al taxes,
but you p~y fetleral taxes at
your ordinary . mcome tax
rate. Because HIHH bond-

Food safety vital forpregnant women
Pregnancy brings many
surprising changes to a
woman's body. One of them
might be ·a weakened
immune system that makes it
harder to fight foodborne
microorganisms. And, the
fetus, immune system is not
fully developed. So that puts
both mom and her growing
fetus at higher risk for foodborne illness.
Besides taking normal
food-safety precautions such
as hand washing when handling food and cooking foods
thoroughly, there are three
specific foodborne risks
pregnant women need to be
aware of.
The first is listeria, a oacterium that can grow on
foods even when refrigerated. Although the illness liste. ria causes is rare, it can be
deadly, especially for your
fetus. It's most commonly
found in refrigerated, readyto-eat foods and unpasteurized milk and dairy products.
To a void problems, steei
clear of hot dogs and lunchmeats unless they're heated
until they're steaming hot.
And, unless they're made
with pasteurized milk (check
the label), take a pass on soft

BY JAMES SANDS

t

Becky
Nesbitt

cheeses, such as feta , brie,
blue cheese, "queso blanco,"
"queso fresco" and panela.
Also, stay away from
refrigerated pates or meat
spreads; refrigerated smoked
seafood unless it's in a casserole or other cooked dish; and
raw unpasteurized milk.
· Also, don 't eat large, longlived fish, such as shark, tilefish, king mackerel and
swordfish, which·can contain
high levels of methylmercury.
When it reaches high levels, it
· can harm the fetus, developing nervous system . Other
types of fish and seafood may
have lower levels, so limit ·
them to two meals a week.
Albacore (white) canned tuna
tends to have higher levels, sd
restrict intake of it to one
meal a week.
Finally, toxoplasmosis is an

Subscribe today • 446-2342 or 992-2155

SMITHSONIAN
MAGAZINE

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

$CASH$

.

. Gardens, in Virginia, where human beings from fossil
Washington lived from 1761 remains. Schwartz began by
until his death in 1799, insti- examining Washington art.
. gated the research. For an · works and artifacts, including
exhibition next October, it a 1785 life mask made by
plans to present life-size French sculptor Jean-Antoine
sculptures of the 6-foot-3 Houdon, with eyeglasses· and
Washington as a presidential false teeth.
Washington stal'led losing .
nominee at 57, a soldier at 45
and a surveyor at 19.
his teeth in his 20s, and by
.People are so accustomed the time he became president·
to seeing his venerable vis- in 1789 he had only one left.
age, Mount Vernon director An original set of his lower
lim Rees tells Smithsonian dentures, made in 1795; is
magazine, they tend to forget housed at the Dr. Samuel D.
he was the "most physically Harris National Museum of
impressive of the Founding Dent-istry, in Baltimore.
Fathers."
Made from hippopotamus
To help visualize the young ivory - not wood as com' man, the museum turned to monly believed
the
Jeffrey.Schwanz, a University spring-loaded dentures "were
of Pittsburgh physical anthro- terribly uncomfortable to
pologist, who . specializes in wear," says dental museum
teasing out details about ·early curator Scott Swank.

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(James Sands is a special
correspondent for
the
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to 1040 Military Road,
Zanesville, Ohio 43701,)

Forensic portraiture: Re-creating a young George Washington

Not
even
George
Washington is immune to the
current makeover craze. But
scholars hoping to overhaul
his image- the tight-lipped
bewigged old George we see
on a dollar bill - drew a
blank when they set out to
porlray him as a youth.
The ·problem? There are no
pictures of Washington under
40, before tooth loss, bonejaw decay and other ravages
of time altered the First Face.
The solution? Analysis of the
Gallia Co11nty ·Extension Founding Father's choppers
Educator, family and con- - and a new field of study
SIImer sciences/community that might be called forensic
development ar1d·chair, Ohi(J · portraiture.
,
State University.)
Mount Vernon Estates ·and

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

ill.ness caused by a parasite
called toxoplasma. It can be
hard to detect but, left
. untreated, could cause mental
retardation Or sight problems
in the child. Toxoplasma can
be found in undercooked
meat, unwashed produce, soil
or dirty cat-litter boxes. If
you have a cat, ask someone
else to change the litter box,
or wear disposable gloves
.and wash your hands thoroughly whenever you do.
Wear gloves if you work in
the garden or handle sand
· from a sandbox.
'(Becky Nesbitt i.v the

'

some shouted."
The Confederates were
able to bring up reserves
from Winchester and the
Union Army was unable to
get reinforcements onto the
field, thus leading to the
charge by Union volunteers
of being betrayed . Union
losses were 2,70.0, including
481 killed and ·1, 124 wounded. 1 The Confederate losses
were 387 killed and I ,582
wounded. The retreating
Union Army had to march
almost one whole day back
toward Washington without
food water or rest.
Dr~uillard contluded his
Jetter .with the confession that
he did not expect to live
through another battle and he
told his father where he could
find his personal effects. "I
will do my duty and if the
fortunes of ~ar result
adversely to me, I will leave a
good record.''
Fortune did smile on
Drouillard as he did survive
the next battle. He became a
major and served as an aidede-camp to both Generals
Thomas and Rosecrans. In
1862 Drouillard became a
part 'of . ihe Army of the
Cumberland 's division that
guarded Nashville.
At Nashville, Drouillard
courted the southern belle
Mary Kirkman. She came
from a well-to-do family and
had received a proper education at a New York boarding
h
h 1
1850s
sc 00 1· 111 1 e ate
. '
Mary returne~ to . Nashvtlle
tor her father s funeral and
r~-op~ned the famtly manston 111 ,Nashville that her
.lather had ~l.osed 111 1849
when Mary s .mot~er had
dted. In 1863, Mary s grandfather Anthony Van Leer, one
of the wealthtest men m the
so~th, died and so Mary was
heir to both her father and her
grandfather's large estates.
0~ Sept 21, 1864, the
unth111kable happened ~hen
Umon otllcer James Pierre
Drouallard marned southern
and ·· mtlhonatre
belle
Confederate heiress Mary
KHkman. The people of
Nashville shunned the newlyweds . So they moved to
the family mansion at
Cumberland Iron Works
about . 40 miles west of
Nashvtlle and made more
money. In 1886, the couple
moved back to Nashvtlle m
hopes that they could be
accepted. Here they· b\lilt a
mansion but spent much of
their time traveling to
Europe. James died in 1892
(in his early 50s) and Mary
in I 905.

216 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
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.COMMUNITY

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Gift of a jacket tells an American story

SUCCESSFUL BENEFIT

Bv SMITHSONIAN
MAGAZINE .
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Anyone who has ever
bought secondhand clothing
knows . that in a well·worn
cashmere sweater or dotlblebreasted
tuxedo
there
remains some echo of · the
original owner's life and
times, however faint. Like
old houses, lived-in clothing
has a story to tell.
·
This feeling of connectedness ~a n be especially potent
with clothing that bclongcd
to someone well known.
The mby sli ppers worn by
,Judy . Garland as Dorothy in
"The Wizard of Oz" and Jackie
Kennedy's inaugural gow n
have. by now. taken on near
mythic magnetism .. Nut only
do we asspciate these things
with an individual but also
with a time _in om lives. and ::1
time in the nation \ history.
· So when Harry Rubenstein,
a curator at the National
Mu se um
of
American
History, asked the famil y of
Cesar Chavez a few months
after the union leader's death

at age 66 in 1993. fur some
memento for the museum. he
was delighted to receive
Chavez's union jacket. It is
made of black nylon .satin,
with the. eagle emblem of the
United Farm Workers to the
left of the zipper and '·Cesar
Chavez" embroidered to the
ri ght.
'The ja&lt;.:kct makes a simple
statement." Rubenstein !ells
Smithsonian maga7ine . " It \
uniform-like. but it' &gt; not
fancy-very American m
sty le ." ·
Called ·'one of the heroic
figures or our time" by
Robert Kennedy, Chavez was
a tlrst-generution American
·whose Mexican -born parents
lost their Arizona farm in
19.17. during the Great
Dcpres&gt;ion. when he was I 0.. ·
The family became migrant
workers. The National Labor
Relations Act of 1935
excluded agricultural workers in its rights and protec\ions, so migrants' working
conditions ranged from rea&gt;o nahl e
to
deplorab le ,
depending on an employer's
attitude-' or whim.

Submitted photo

The "Voices United in Love" benefit held on Saturday, Oct. 1. at Gallia Academy High School raised $3,000 from ticket sales
· and donations for Hurricane Katrina relief. The money is being sent to the First United Methodist Church in Gonzales, La., where
Gary Willis ·is pastor. Members of the Junior High Symphonic band, seventh and eighth grade· Symphonic Choir High School
· Concert Choir, Symphonic Choir, Madrigals and GAHS Key Club worked together to perform a variety of musical pieces. the final
song. "Why We Sing," was.. performed white powerpoint video of Hurricane Katrina devastation played. The choir classes and
Key Club will continue. to collect donations to aid those in need.

.Grad students become immersed in campus life
RIO
· GRANDE
everything runs smoothly in
Graduate sllldents at the the halls.
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Andrea Neff, a graduate
Grande Community College student specializing in educaar.e now working as assistant tion technology, &gt;aid that as a
. coaches and 'student life coor- student life coordinator. she
. dinators, benefiting both the oversees the work of four resstudents and the university.
ident assistants, works with
During the 2004-05 school the students living in the hall,
yem, Rio Grande began the and takes care of problems in
program thar moved graduate ·· her hall.
· students into these important
"We're on guty pretty
. positions. and the program much 24 hours a day. seven
. has been expanded this year. days a week," Neff said . .
As a student life coordinaRio Grande's graduate program offers a master's of tor, she lives rent,free in the
education in classroom teach- residence hall and is also paid
ing degree with several spe- a stipend for her work. She
cializutions. ·
takes classes during the day
Master 's degree students at · Rio Grande, although
who work as assistant coach- many of the graduate proes and student life coordina- gram classes are taught on. tors for the university gain line during the school year.
Graduate student Doug
important experience and can
even make money while they Dunn works as a teacher at
m·e in school. In addition to Gallia Academy High School
working as student life coor- during the day and then lives
dinators and coaches, many on campus in the evening.
. of the graduate students also · working at Rio Grande as a
teach the · Freshmen Spccess student life coordinator.
Another of the graduate
course, which is a one-hour
course for all entering stu- students working as a student
life coordinator, Haydn
dents.
These classes help students Jones, lives. on campus with
. choose majors, adjust to col- .his wife and child in a resilege life . develop an under- dence hall.
standing of the learning
The other student life coorprocess, acquire basic acade- dinator who is. a graduate stumic "s urvival ski.Jl s" and dent is Renee Bell.
Neff said thatsl]e likes the
expose them tjl a variety of
topics ranging from personal work she does as a student
. health, .cultural diversi ty, life coordinator, and she said
· music, dance a'nd theatre.
it would help her in her
· Four graduate students who career.
work as student life coordina"It helps me with my peotors live in the residence halls ple ski lis," Neff said.
Working as a student life
on campus, making sure that

coordinator has also helped and answering questions."
her become a leader.
Lanham is happy to have
Rio
Grande
Athletic the graduate assistants workDirector Jeff Lanham said ing as coaches this school
that five' gradual~ students year, and he is proud that Rio
are wo'rking as assistant Grande is helping them .
coaches for the university.
receive the experience. they
"Personally, I think it's the need to start on their careers.
best thing that our athletic
For more information on
department could have done," the graduale assistant proLanham .said. " It provides an gram or the master's of eduopportunity for young, ener- cation in classroom training
getic indi victuals to get into program at Rio Grande. call
the ·coaching ranks."
(800) 2ll2-720 I
Many of the coaches are
moving from being players to
becoming coaches, and the
graduate assistant program
gives them the experience of
working as a coach for the
first time .
Most of the graduate assistants in the program this year
are specializing in athletic
coaching and leadership in
the graduate program , so the
assistant coaching positions
are perfect for them.
Working as assistant
coaches is good experience
for the graduate students,
and t\Iey are also paid for
their work. The graduate
assistants are also a pig benefit for Rio Grande because
of all the great work that
they do helping to coach the
athletes and work in a variety of roles.
"Some of our programs
have part-time head coaches
who are no.t here on campus
full-time."
Lanham
explamed. "The graduate
assistants 1111 in during the
day for the coaches, working
with the stude!¥s on campus

Shakespearean acting workshop set Wednesday at Rio

:
:

·
·
:

Special Care

PageCa
•

Gallipolis native witnessed
Union rout at Bull Run

On July 28, 1861, Lt.
Jame
s- Pierre Drouillard
As if we didn ' t have
wrote
to hi s father in
enough to worry about, now
it's the avian (bird) flu and Gallipolis a letter detailing
the scramble to entice some . the former's involvement in
drug company to make a vac- the battle at Manassas on July '
cine before a pandemic 21, 1861. This battle later
strikes.
'
became known as the First
Right now the big concern Battle
Bull · Run .
of
of many Meigs Countians is Drouillard, who was a graduabout the availability of vac- ate of West Point, and grew
cine to ward off the old-fash- tip in Gallipolis was in a bationed flu, which comes talion of Regulars, that is
around every year. The health · men who had been a pan of
department had to cancel a the Regular U.S. Army at the
clinic for senior citizens outbreak of the Civil War.
scheduled for thi s week The predominant number or
because there is no vaccine men who fought for the
here.
North in that tlrs.t. battle at
The problem seems to be Manassas were mtlttia _and
delivery from the §Upplier, volunteers who had recetved
not shortage, or so we're told very little training. " .
by the Ohio Department of
Drouillard wrote: ·We won
Health, which distributes it to the victory at first, but while
local health departments. the rebels ':"ere falhnl;l back,
Who knows when, or for that '!"e saw 111 the distance
matter if, the vaccine will Immense volumes of dust
arrive. Meanwhile, the raising, and kn~w they were
frailest of our population
enters the flu season unpro- re!~forcements .
volunteers. fought
tected, just as they did last wenOur
at
first,
and wherever
year.
they
met
the
enemy
on equal
·(Charlene Hoeflich is gen- grounds, they repulsed
them.
eral manager ·of The Daily
By some mean s a pamc was ·
Sentinel in Pomeroy.)
created among our troops - .
wh~le regu~ents :brew down
their arms and ran for their
hve ~. When defeat became
mevJtable, Gen. McDowell
holders pay taxes on the satd the safety of the army
interest as they receive it depended on the. Regulars,
each ;rear, they don't owe any and ordered Major Sykes ,
taxes when they redeem them our commander, to cover the
retreat of the volunteers.
- the tlnal payment is sim- Our
tittle band was surply a return of the original rounded
at one time by their
principal.
calvalry,
artillery
and
But with EIEE bonds and
Savings Notes, you will owe infantry, but we fought our
taxes on the accumulated way out, and while interinterest, assuming you elect- posed between the retreating
ed ·to defer reporting the volunteers and the pursuing
interest over the years, when enemy, we were subjected
you redeem them - or when -the the most terrific tire ."
"I expected to fall every
they reach' final maturity,
moment
- men were falling
even if you haven't redeemed
all
about
me _· legs and
them. This interest income is
tax'able for the year of arms, flying in every direcredemption or final maturity. tion - the groans of the
If you missed that year - say dying, and screams of the
you now realize some old E wounded \lfC still in my ears."
Drouillard went on to
bonds you've got · lying
explain
that since the Union
around the house matured
years ago - you may need to Army was so confident of
file an amended tax return victory, the cooked rations,
and possibly be subject to a .blankets and so forth were
late penalty and interest. left in the enemy's rear, the
Confer with your tax special- point at which the Union
Army had attacked. The
ist.
· For current information on Union Army left on the batwhether apy bonds you hold tle_field 28 artillery pieces, 37
have reached final maturity, caissons, 500 muskets, nine
go
. to flags and half a million
http://www.publicdebt.treas. rounds of ammunition.
Shelby- Foote wrote about
gov/ and to "Are Your
this
Union Army' panic :
Savings Bonds Still' Earning
Interest?"
"They turned and fled past
(This column is produced officers on horseback, flailby the Financial Planning ing the smoke with saoers,
Association, the membership while screaming for them to
organiwtion for the finan- stand. They ran and they kept
cial planning community, running, many of them
and rs provided by J, Mark throwing down their rifles in
Curry, CFP, a local member order to travel lighter and run
of the FPA.) ,
faster. 'Betrayed! Sold Out!'

BY

iunbap ottmes -ientind

Sunday, October 9, 2005

Are your old savings bonds still earning interest?
Do you, your parents, or
elderly relatives have old E
bonds, H or HH bonds, or the
rare Savings Notes, lying
around? If so, it may be time
to cash in some of these
bonds because they are no
longer earning interest, and in
some cases could hav1= tax
problems.
According to the U.S.
Treasury Department, $12
billion in outstanding U.S.
savings bonds no longer earn
interest. Are you·r bonds
among them? To answer that
~uestion, you need to know a
ltttle about how the various
savings bonds came into
being, how they work, their
different maturities; and how
they're taxed.
The federal government
first began issuing savings
bonds, called E bonds, back
in the mid-1930s. The bonds
were issued in a range of
denominations and citizens
bought them at a discount of
75 percent of face value. You
paid $75 for a $100 bond, for
example.
The government stopped
issuing E bonds after June
1980 and replaced them with
EE bonds, which calculate
interest slightly differently
than E bonds. Investors buy
EE bonds at half of their face
value.
Investors receive interest
from EIEE bonds only when
they redeem the bonds. The
bonds earn interest up to their
"original maturiiy" - that is,

PageC2

RIO GRANDE - . A
Shakespearean acting work- ·
shop· will be held at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
on Wednesday, Oct. 12.
The workshop is free, and
it will begin at .1:30 p.m. in
the
Berry
Fine
and
Performing Arts Center on
the Rin Grande campus . All
area high school student s,
community residents and Rio
Grande .students are invited
to take part in the workshop.
James Bocock. a guest
artist at Rio Grande, will lead
the workshop. which will
focus on performing in the
acclaimed plays of William
Shakespeare.
Bocock is a professional
actor who is currently in the
cast of "The Odd Couple,"
which is being 'staged at Rio
Grande on Oct. 14, 15 and 16.
Bocock. who is a graduate
of the theatre dep~nment at
the University of Virginia's
Col lege at Wi se. has worked
for the Penobscot Theatre
Company/Maine
Shakespeare Festival, the
Hampstead Players. Theater
IV and "Tecumseh'''
Many people consider the

works of Shakespeare chal- in all different kinds of plays.
those who are interested in
lengihg and shy away lrom
acting in Shakespearean plays. taking part in the workshop
Bocock explained, though, can bring a prepared dialogue
that Shakespeare can be fun with them (preferably a
Shakespearean dialogue), or
to perform. and in the workshop he will help area resi- they can work from a sce ne
dents and students learil how that Bocock will provide. The
to act in Shakespearean plays workshop will be an exceleffectively.
·
lent teaming experience for
"Shakespeare' is not meant people of all ranges of acting
to be read, it is meant to be cxpcnence.
If you have never been in a
performed," Bocock said.
Although the characters play before or if you have
may seem difficult at firs t, heen in numerous producthe plays can be very power- tions. you will enjoy the .
workshop and learn in it.
ful.
Bocock also promise&gt; to
J.J. Cobb, an adj unct professor at Rio Grande and the make the workshop fun and
director of "The Odd entertaining.
For more information on
Couple," agreed with Bocock
that people arc often rei uctam the workshop, call Cobb at
to try the works of 245-7119 or (800) 282-720 L
For additional information
Shakespeare.·
,
"Shakespeare can be scary ·on the Oct. t 4, 15 and 16 perat first,'' Cobb said. "The lan- formances of "The Odd
guage in the plays can seem Couple," or for tickets, call
like-a foreign language when 245-7364 or (800) 282-7201,
you first read the plays , but extension 7364.
For additional information
the language is actually very
rich, powerful. humorous and on upcoming events HI R!o
Grande , or on the wide varifull of meaning ...
At workshop, Bocock will ety of academic and protesgive Lips to help actors per- ; ional programs offered by
form in Shakespearean plays Rio Grande. log on to
as well as tips that will help www.rio.edu.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS; INC:
1-800-291'-5600

•
et

~I

DIC

The UniversitY Medical Associates pediatric physicians,
from left. Andrew

W. Wapner, D.O., Celeste N. Wallace, D.O.,

C: Thomas Clark , D.O., and Karen Montgomery-Reagan , D.O.,
are available for appointments -at our clinic.

• Gastroenterology arul Internal Medicine

• Pediatrics
·Office hours on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays

Office hours on Tuesdays

• Geriatric and Internal Metlicine
Office hours on Monday~

• Potliatry and Podiatric Surgery
Office hours on second and lourth laturdays

• Obstetrics and Gynecology
Office hours on Tuesdays and Thursdays

Qiiiti::"N"Ess ~ .
HEALTH SYSTEM

�'

iunhtt~ limt!f·iltntintl
'

CELEBRATIONS

'

.

'

·'

PageC4

iunbap It me- -ienttntl

Swulay, October 9, 2005

ON THE BOOKSHELF
I

·,

'

Mr. and Mrs. David Wandling

WORLEYWANDLING
WEDDING
. ..

THURMAN - Neatta Worley and David Wandling were
united in marriage at 4:30p.m. on Sept. 24. 2005 . .at Elizabeth
Chapel Church near Gallipoljs. .
· ·
The couple was married by Pastor Mark Beaver in a double
ring cere,mony. ·
·
·
.
' .
Tht bride is the daughter of Gene and Betty Mullins of
Southside. W.Va. The groom is the sqn of Pat and Agnes
Usa Dill and William Morris
Wandling of Gallipolis.
The bride's attendants were her daughter, Megan Worley,
and Allison Wandling, daughter of the groom.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha~es Lee Stevers
The groom's best man was his son, Kruize Wandling, and
the usher was the.son of the bride, Zachary Jenkins.
The bride is is a graduate of Point Pleasant High School and
is employed by Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Services.
POMEROY- Lisa Marie Dill and William Nelson Morris
The groom is a graduate of Galli a Academy High School and of Pomeroy were married Aug. 13, 2005, at the Veterans Park
is self-employed.
'·
·
.
in Williamstown, W.Va.
&lt;"
Following a honeymoon trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C., the. couGALLIPOLIS - Charles Lee and Joyce Belle. (Hou&lt;:k)
Tim Russell performed the ceremony for the daughter of Joe
ple has made their home at Thurman.
·
White of South Dakota, and Faye and Sam Stienmetz of Stevers of Grove City will be celebrating their 60th wedding
.
·
· Pomeroy. She is a 1987 graduate of Meigs High School and a anniversary.
The couple was married in Gallipolis on Oct. 17, 1945.
graduate of the University of Rio Grande. She is employed
Charles Lee is the son of F.L. (Bud) Stevers and Blam:he of
with the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center as a head
Mercerville·, who were the owners of the Stevers Funeral '
start teacher.
'
'
The groom is the son of the late William Morris, and his Home. He is retired from Columbia Gas Co .. and Joyce Belle
.
mother and stepfather are Joan and Dean Heckert. He is a is retired from Joyce Belle's Beauty Salon.
They have a son, Richard, and his wife, Marylin ; two grandgraduate of Parkersburg High School.
CROWN CITY- Jenny A. Fowler and William A. Brown,
The bride was given in marriage by her mother. Following children, Amy and Chad (Emily); and two great-grandchilboth of Lexington, Ky., are announcing their engagement and their wedding, they took a trip to Williamson, W.Va. They dren, Alexa and Kylee.
upcoming wedding.
.
now reside at 215 Union Ave. , Pomeroy.
· They will be celebrating with their children.
The bride-elect is the 'daughter of Carl and Evelyn Fowler of
Crown City. She is a 1998 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and a 2003 graduate of the RETS Tech Center.
She is employed as the advertising arid marketing manager
for ER.A Woods Real Estate Group.
BY RUSS BYNUM
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Barbara Brown of
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
. Versailles. Ky.. and William Stacy of Jacksonville, Fla. He is
a 1998 graduate of Bourbon County (Ky.) High School.
SAVANNAH, G':L
·He is employed by Layne Trucking Co.
Blown-out candles rekindle
The wedding will be held at I :30 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 12, themselves,
silverware
2005, at Orlando, Fla.
moves untouched around
vacant tables and a shadowy
figure lurks in the basement.
Based on the manager's
description, the Moon River
brew pub is a perfect spot for
Jason Hawes and Grant
BY ROGER ALFORD
I ,000 feei wide - from the Wilson to hunt for ghostly
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Breaks Interstate Park outside shadows and eerie bumps in
Elkhorn City to Cumberland the night - at least those not'
WHITESBURG, Ky. Gap · National Park near coming from the cameraman
Shad Baker is a trailblazer in Middlesboro as a linear park.
the literal sense, working Legislators approved his plan filming their every move.
"It's a different world when
with an arm~ of volunteers to in 2002 for what now is
build a 120-mile route along known anhe Pine Mountain the cameras aren' t here," says
Wilson, half of the plumbersone of the highest and most Trail State Park.
by-day,
ghostbusters-byisolated mountaintops in cen".
Kentucky Department of night duo from the cable realtral Appalachia.
Parks Commissioner George
Like Daniel Boone and his Ward said it may be another ity show "Ghost Hunters."
band of ax-wielding frontiers- five to 10 years before the . "When there's no show, it's
men who blazed the first trail trail is completed. The state just us two. So when you hear
through this pan of Kentucky, has set aside $3 million to pay footsteps. you · knO\y· there's
they occasionally run across property owners for ease- no one else around."
AP Photo
Though their Sci Fi
bears imd rattlesnakes. And ments and officials are hoping
Atlantic
Paranormal
Society
founders
Jason
Hawes,
right,
and
Grant
Wilson
set
up
their
digithey scale some of the steep- that money ·can be stretched Channel series debuted just a . tal recording equipment Sept. 28. at the Moon River brew pub in Savannah, Ga. For more than
est terrain in the Southeast. with people willing to donate year ago, Hawes and Wilson a decade, the blue-collar ghost buffs from Warwick, R.I., indulged a passion for paranormal
of Warwick, R.I ., have been
mattocks in hand, to clear a easements without charge.
haunted investigation by dipping into their: day-job pay checks until they recently got picked up by the
path despite stifling heat and
When complete, the park investigating
Sci'Fi Channel.
· .
bloodsucking insects.
would connect with the hotspots for 15 years as leadof
The
Atlantic yellow fever epidemics. In tery about sticking around
The project has captured the Cumberland Trail State Park ers
be here after 2 a.m."
Paranormal
Society.
. imaginations of people from being
2002, the American Institute · after the bar closes.
developed
in
After the bar empties after
Away from their Rota of Parapsychology dubbed
across the nation who have Tennessee. Park supporters
"We
have
silverware
that
11:30 p.m., the TAPS team
scheduled vacations to come predict it will attract tens of. Rooter day jobs, they seek Savannah "America's Most gets. left on the tables. and if &gt;huts off the lights and goes to
to Kentucky to help. So far; thousands of tourists who also solid evidence of spectral · Haunted City."
·
you watch it'll stan circling work. 1nf~arcd cameras and
some 500 people have come. would visit and spend money encounters with no-nonsense
"Everyone here has told us, around on the tables," he digital audio recorders will
They work by day clearing in mmmunities near the trial. skepticism, relying on the 'Oh, you've got to go to THE says. "I would hope they
trails to lofty crests that look At the same time, a natural ele'ctric eyes and ears of tech- most
haunted
pi· ce, "' could find some proof of rewrd from ' ix rooms
through the night. Hawes and
down on lesser mountains in treasure would be protected;. no-geek gadgets rather than Wilson, 31 , says after · osing
every directjmi. At night, they
Parks ·
department the sixth sense of mediums for snapshots with fa s out- ~o mething in this building, Wilson begin by monitoring
camp beneath the stars.
side the pub. "And it's !ways just so I know there's some the camera feeds on a computspokesman Doug Bennett Jr. and psychics.
validity to me being scared to er screen in the main bar area.
"I'd
really
like
to
get
away
"It was more rugged than I said an engineering firm has
a different spot."
had anticipated," said Jeffrey been working recently to from the sensitives who come
At the Moon Riv brew
Hunter of Chattanooga, acquire easements around in and do the floppy tuna, pub, built on the bon s of an
Tenn .. who spent a week on Pineville in southeastern saying. 'Satan's liviflg in 1820 hotel , manage Chris
Plain - Carved
the mountain last year. "It's Kentucky, p time-consuming your closet,"' says Hawe s, Lewis gives the ghos hunters
Diamond
beautiful. Sot1 of a frontier. process because an estimated 33, as the four-man TAPS - cameras in tow · a tour
The most you hear. other than 200 people own various team . sets up six infrared and a rundown of spooky
cameras to constantly record sightings reported by his
the birds. are occasi&lt;uJal tracts on the mountaintop.
planes passing overhead."
"The good news is that many the rooms throughout the employees.
The solitude and the views of the property owners have Savannah brewery.
Workers say a ·rot ed chair
The ghost hunters have propped again't a window
arc the payoff for volunteers, been approached preliminarily
said Baker. president of the and most have expressed sup- traveled to Georgia's oldest upstairs will uprl¥ht itself
Pine
Mountain
Trail port for the trail," Bennett said. city, founded in 1733, to film with all four legs on the floor. ·
an · upcoming Halloween They say candles slnuffed on
Conference. the organization "Not all, but most."
in charge of building the path
Meanwhile, Baker said the episode. There's no shortage tables in the basement will
atop the eastern Kentucky trailblazers conti nue their of raw material here.
flicker back to life after 20
·The
ci
ty's
haunted
history
minutes. One reponed spotmountain.
work. Grou~s will be work"The· views are spe&lt;:tacu- ing from Oct. 9-22 to build stems from its · grimmest ting a hooded figure in the
' a bloody darkened basement.
lar,'' Baker said .. ;'There i; a another seven miles of the episodes
Revolutionary War battle, a
Lewis says he's witnessed
large concentration of sand- trail'in Letcher County.
harsh
Civil
War
occupation,
one
strange occurrence himstone arches. Some really
'They get to camp f!!r free,
three
devastating
fires
and
nice rhododenron tunnels. ear for free, and in exchange,
self, enough to make him jitI've .seen seven bears on the we get the free labor," he said.
mountain. Lots of elk. It's the
Mike Sucik of Des Moines,
closest thing to wilderness Iowa, said many people vol - ·
that Kentucky has."
U!lteer as a way to explore
The Pine Mountain Trail is Appalachia.
pan of a broader initiativ' to
''It's a pan of the country I
build a series of connected had never been in before," he
trails from the Florida Keys said. "I wanted to see it."
to Lake Champlain in upstate
Sucik spent a week in
New York.
September not only lengthenHOLIDAY-~
Then-Gov. Paul Patton was ing the Pine Mountain trail
so taken with the idea that he but also clearing land and
pushed for legislation to ~et helping to build a shelter for
See Sunday Puzzle on 20
aside a narrow stnp- 250 to long-distance hikers.

._,

DILL-MORRIS
WEDDING

.

STEVERS
ANNIVERSARY

moralizing voicecomesoutof
the American heartland." Her
displays also include works of
poets;rangingfrom the Polish
Nobel Prize winner Wislawa
Szymoborska's "Tortures'; to
Jack Gilbert's "Brief for the
Defense." One critic says,'
"Ms. Holzer has sought to
unhinge
settled
beliefs
thro~gh a chorus of quarreling
sensibilities: "Awful punishment awaits ·really bad peo· ple," "morals are for little
people," and "words tend to
be inadequate." " Romantic
love was invented to manipulate women." "Mostly you
should mind your own busi ness." 1 don't know about
you, but I am· impressed.
Would love to meet this lady
of rare abilities and the
courage of her convictions.
We
visited
the
Guggenheim, Frank Lloyd
Wri!;Jht's fascinating b"uildi.ng.

Publishers weekly best-sellers

for a wonderful exhibition of
Russian an. "The moSt comprehensive and significant
exhibition of Russian art outside Russia since the end of
the Cold War." It included
some 250 artworks from the
13th century to the current
time . .It unfolded chronologically along the wall~ .o f the.
\rotunda (the "galleries" are
hctually a seven story ramp,
much like one in a parking
garage).
. The e~rly works are p~i~ted
1cons (Images of religiOus
ftgure s). One can see th e
Byz":natine influence . The
Russtans were an mtensely .
, religious. people , prior to
Commumsm, and the~ struggled to hold f~s~ ~o the1r farth.
1 remember vtsttrng Moscow
111 1971 and anendrng a
Bapttst Church there. The ser'
vtce was two hours long, and
they sang "Showers of
Blessing" in Russian, · of

wisdom. fortitude and physiMcCullough (Simon &amp;
HARDCOVER FICTION
cal strength." It is very obviSchuster)
·
ous that men are cheaper to
1. "A Breath of Snow and
use than horses or oxen. It is
Ashes" by Diana
MASS MARKET
an example of art as a tool for
PAPERBACKS
Gabaldon (Delacorte)
sJcial commentary and criti2. "Son of a Witch" by
cism. very similar in tone to
. 1. "London Bridges " by·
Gregory Maguire
Ms. Holzer's work. Art m its·
James Patterson (Warner
(ReganBooks)
best allows you to see. really
Vision)
3. "The March " by E.L.
see, the human condition.
Doctorow (Random House) 2. ",Northern. Lights" by
Another of my favorites is
Nora .Roberts (Jove)
4. "Goodnight Nobody" by
of two men. stam)ing in u bat3. "Hour Game" by David
Jennifer Weiner (Atria)
tlefield, called "Defeated:
Baldacci (Warner Vjsio,n)
5.
"School
Days"
by
Robert
Service for the Dead." The
4. "It Happened One ·
B. Parker (Putnam)
priest has been brought to
bless those lost lives, und his
6. "Anansi Boys" by Neil
Autumn" by Lisa Kleypas
beautiful robes contrast with
(Avon)
,
Gaiman (Morrow)
the barren field and the for7. "The Da Vinci C.ode" by
5: ."Ghost Walk" by Heather
bidding sky. Seeing those .
Dan Brown (Doubleday)
Graham (Mira)
images of Russia makes me
8. "The Historian" by
6. "Twisted" by Jonathan
want to go back and read
Kellerman (Ballantine)
Elizabeth Kostova (Little ,
Tolstoy and "The Brothers
7. "Metro Girl" by Janet
Brown)
Karamazov." Little wonder so
Evanovich (HarperTorcti)
9. "Lipstick Jungle" by
much of their art and litera8. "Echoes" by Danielle · ·
Candace Bushnell
ture is gloomy, considering .
Steei(Dell)
(Hyperion)
their history of oppression'
9.
"In Her Shoes" by
After read ing Cather's "My
Jenmfer Weiner (Pocket
NONFICTION/GENERAL
Antonia," 1 felt the need to
Slat)
~ourse.
read more a(&gt;out her pioneers
.1. "Natural Cures "They"
One of the most interesting on the Nebraska prairie, so
Don 't Want You to Know
TRADE PAPERBACKS
pieces is a·painting of a dozen got "0 Pioneers and Other
men pulling a barge, Repin's Tales• of the Prairie" from
About " by Kevin Trudeau
"Barge Haulers on the Volga." Bossard. Great writing, great
(Alliance Publ is hing)
1 . "A Million Little Pieces "
Some of the men are young, characters,
intere sting
2. 'Th·e City of Falling
by James Frey (Anchor)
with heads held high , 'others plots. What more can I say?
Angels" by John Berendt :2. "Wicked " by Gregory
are old and bent and defeated. Don't neglect th~ old estab-·
(Penguin Press)
Magu ire (ReganBooks)
It is described as "a record of . li shed writers in your reading ..
3 , "The World Is Flat: A
3. "The Kite Runner" by
both individual personaliti es They are classics for good
Brief History of the
Khaled Hossei~i
and human embodiments of reason.
Twenty-first Century· by
(Riverhead)
Thomas L. Friedman . .AI 4. "Why Do Men Have
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)If Nipples? " by Mark Leyner
4 . "What Remains " by
and Billy Goldberg, M.D.
Carole Radziwill (Scribner)
(Three Rivers Press)
Dorothy has conquered the in "Joplin's Ghost" (Atria) hy
5. "Freakonomics" by
5. "The Known World" by
Wicked Witch of the West.
Tananarive Due.
Steven D. Levitt, Stephen
Edward P. Jones (Amistad)
In "On Beauty" (The
More new nonfiction:
J. Dubner (William Morrow) 6. "The Secret Life of
PeAguin Press) by Zadie
"What
Remains"
6.
"The Purpose-Driven
Bees" by Sue Monk Kidd
Smith, the son of a New (Scribner)
is
Carole
Life" by Rick Warren
(Penguin)
England college professor Radziwill's memoir of her
(Zondervan)
7
.
"Light on Snow" by Anita
falls in love with the daughter career as a TV joumalist and
7. 'Your Best Life Now: 7
Shreve (little, Brown,
of the professor's ideological her marriage to Anthony
Steps
to
Living
at
Your
Back Bay)
rival; and a college campus in Radziwill. nepl1ew of JFK.
Full Potential " by Joel
8. "-Bad Dog " by R.D.
upstate New York is the set- Another .JFK
nephew.
· Osteen (Warner Faith)
Rosen, Harry Prichett
ting for Ali son Lurie's comic Christopher
Kennedy
novel
"Truth
and Lawford, offers his memoir.
8. "You: The Owner's
and Rob Battle's
Consequences"
(Viking). "Symptoms of Withdrawal''
Manual" by Michael F.
(Workman)
about two married couples (Morrow).
Roizen and Mehmet C.
9. "The Tipping Po in t" by
Other new biographies
with various afflictions.
Oz (HarperResburce) ,
Malcolm Gladwell (Back
In
"Everyone
Worth include "Mark Twain : A
9. "1776" by David
Bay)
Knowing"
(Simon
&amp; Life" (Free Press) by Ron
Schuster)
by
Lauren Powers; "John" (Crown) by
Lennon,
John
Weisberger, a young woman Cynthia
dumps her hectic Wall Street Lennon 's first wife; aml
~
career to become an events "Helen of Troy" (Knopf) by
planner; and a bored mQther Bettany Hughes.
in suburbia snaps out of it
Scientific topics are found
Subscribe today • 992-2155
when a neighbor is murdered in "The Planets" (Viking).
in "Goodnight Nobody" Dava Sobel's guided tour of
WALLACE &amp; GRQMtT: THE
the solar system; "The
(Atria) by Jennifer Weiner.
CURSE (G)
In "The Divide" (Putnam) Singularity Is Near" Viking).
7:00 &amp; 9:00
by Nicholas Evans, an afflu- Ray Kurzwcil's forecast of
how
technology
will
transent couple look back on their
lives after the body of their form human life in the near
ecoterrorist daughter is found future; and "A Briefer
in the Montana wilderness; History of Time" (Bantam)
and the unex~ected death of by Stephen. Hawking with
her mother bnngs a period of Leonard Mlodinow, an
retrospection for a 30-ish updated and streamlined ver·
Auto-Owr1ers Insurance
woman in "Missing Mom" sion of Hawking's "A Brief
Life Home Car Business
(Ecco) by Joyce Carol Oates . History of Time•: (1988).
REMODELING HAS BEGUN!
In · "Martha 's Rules" . 7-k '1/.. ~ ~ ­
"A Wedding in December"
We now have theater seats,
with cup holders for sale at
(Little, Brown) is Anita (Rodale), Martha Stewart
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In purchasing used theater
mer school chums reunited and advice thro.ugh stories
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after having been separated
114 Court Pomeroy
during regular
experience.
years earlier by a tragedy.
lor details.
Kurt Vonnegut's recent
In
"The
Darwin
Conspiracy" (Knopf) by John short essays and speeches are
Darnton, a blend of fact and · collected in "A Man Without
fiction explores the mysteries a Country" (Seven Stories
surrounding the life and work Press); and a man who served
his country is Louis Freeh,
of Charles Darwin.
former
director of the FBI
A young singer meets a
spirit who might be that of and author of "My FBI" (St.
ragtime musician·Scott Joplin Man in's Press).

New books include two that.commemorate historic tragedy
Bv RON BERTHEL

FOWLER-BROWN
ENGAGEMENT

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Reality TV's Ghost Hunters tackle America's 'most haunted'·city

Trailblazers extend route across
remote Appalachian mountaintop

Season.••

POOLS INC.

Beverly

. ~ettles

Sunday, October 9, 2005

~

Jenny Holzer's art and Russill at the Guggenheim
Drove to New York last
week. Always an adventure!
Every time 1 go, 1 canot
believe I drove through
Manhattan! lma~ine my surpnse when 1 p1cked up an
issue of New York magizine
. and spied an article on Jenny
Holzer! It stated she is from
Gallipolis, Ohio, so I decided
to investigate. She is a niece
of Dr. Charles and Bobbie,
born
here, rai sed in
Lancaster, Ohio. She is highly respected in New York art
circles, very · popular in
Europe, and there are di splays of: her words on buildings, projected on the sides of
them (Rockefeller Center, 'the
New York Public Library.
Bobst Library at NYU)
beginning last weekend.
Her works are called installations and record her
response to 9/ll. She is a
"conceptual artist," using
"truisms" · such as "PROTECT ME FROM WHAT I
WANT" and "A BUSE OF
POWER COMES AS NO
SURPRISE." Her current displays inclued copies of recent
government documents from
the Department of Defense
concerning torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and
Guantanamo. The New York
Times says, "Her austere,

PageCs

'.

The centennial of the San
Francisco earthquake and fire
of April 18, 1906, is still
months away, but two new
nonfiction books chroniCling
the historic and tragic event
are already on the scene.
The books, one by Simon
Winchester and one by
Dennis Smith, are among the
latest hardcover volumes that
include novels by E.L.
Doctorow, Nora Roberts,
J.M. Coetzee and Diana
Gabaldon, and nonfiction by
John Berendt, Joan Didion
and Jonathan Kozol.
In "A Crack in the Edge of
the World" (HarperCollins),
Winchester blends htstory
and science in his account of
the magnitude-8.25 earthquake that 'affected an area
200 miles Iori g. He includes a
history of the founding of
San Francisco, explains the
quake 's geological and cultural significance, an~ shares
knowledge gained about
earthquakes since.
r'n "San Francisco Is
Burning" (Viking), Smith, a
former New York City firefighter, explains how the
·quake set off four days of
frres that destroyed more than
500 blocks and 28,000 buildings. He describes the her&lt;)ic
deeds of firefighters and restdents as they tried to save
their ~ity, and tells howd~r
planmng, corroptron an tiladvised decisions by city
fathers contributed to the
.
quake's aftermath.
Fires figure prominently
also in three other new
books:
• One of history 's most
famous fires - the burning
of Atlanta during .the Civil
War - sets the stage for
"The March" (Random
Hou se). Doctorow's novel
follows Union Gen. William
Tecumseh . Sherman on his
1864 trek us he leads 60,000
troops east through Georgia
and nonh to the Carolinas.
On their way. they battle
Confederate troops , pillage
plantations, help themselves
to livestock and crops,
destroy town ~. and gather a
following of freed blacks and
white refugees.
· ~
• In "The City of Falling
Angel s" (The Penguin Press),
Berendt travel s to Venice.
Italy, arriving in early 1996,
three days after a fire has
destroyed the city's historic
Fen ice Opera House. He tells
how his inquiry into ·the fire's
suspicious origin introduced
him to some colorful
Venetians - · Ezra Pound's
nonagenarian mistress, a
master glassblower, the Rat
Man ofTreviso, and a "walking thicke\" called 1!he- Pla11t
. "
!'v
.
· Man.
• In " Blue Smoke"
(Putnam), the prolific Nora
Roberts offers a n)mancesuspense novel that begins in
1985 with an arson fire that
destroys the Baltimore pizze-·
ria owned by the family of
.10-year-old Reena Hale. The
blaze is the spark that leads

Reena to pursue a career as a
police arson investigator.
Fires continue to plague her
life as her college sweetheart
dies in a fire and, later, an
arsonist threatens Reena and
her family.
.
The main character in
Coetzee's novel "Slow Man"
(Viki'ng) is Paul Reyment, a
. 60-ish photographer whose
bicycle mi shap has cost him a
leg and his independence.
ReymeAt is confined to his
apartment
in Adelaide,
Australia, and struggles to
accept his reliance on others.
Hi s spirits rise as he falls in
love with his Croatian nurse,
but matters are complicatedby a woman who appears out
of
nowhere,
refusing
Reyment's requests to leave
and challenging him to take
charge of his life.
The 900-page "A Breath of
Snow and Ashes:• (Delacone
Press) is the sixth in
Gabaldon's "Outlander" saga
that blends historical fiction
with fantasy. In 1772, the
governor of North Carolina
asks Jamie Fraser to unite the
restless Colonists and thus
please the British crown.
However, Fraser has a dilemma: Thanks to his time-traveling spouse, Claire, he
knows that the American
Revolution will start soon,
that it will end in victory for
the Colonists, and that British
loyalists will be killed or
exiled.
In "T~e Year of Magical
Thinking" (Knopl), Didion
relives a brief but intense
period of her life, one that led
her to reflect upon life and
death, marriage and motherhood. It began in late 2003
when. Quintana, the only
daughter of Didion and husband John Gregory Dunne,
became ill and was eventually placed on life support.
Meanwhile. Dunne, Didton's
partner for · 40 years, died
That's ·"ow- much more you can earn in
unexpectedly of a massive
your lifetime with an· associate's degree I
heart attack. Quintana recovered, but soon underwent
brain surgery.
"The Shame of the Nation"
(Crown) contains Kozol's ·
findings on U.S. public education from a five-year study
that took him to nearly 60
schools in 11 states. Among
his conclusions: The quality
of education. for inner-city,
children has worsened, racial
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as the anniversary of their
historic battle approaches ;
and for "Son of a Witch"
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Gregory .
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PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT

iunba~ QCfme~ -ientintl

Sunday,Ck1ober9,2005

Down on the Farm, Page 02 ·
Gardening, Page 06
&lt;

Say cheese: ·Wallace &amp; Gromit get big-screen clay day in 'Were-Rabbi~'
Bv DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOVIE WRITEr

t

BR ISTOL. Enuland -· You
~ave to love those class ic
comedy duos. often at odds.
playfully disagreeing . but
always indivisible. always
there for each other in a
piiKh.
Burns and Allen. Laurel
and Hardy. Abbott and
Costello. Hope and Crosby.
Wallace and Gromit.
British tw it Wallace and his
ever-put-upon dog Gromit
have come a .long way from
their humble beginnings as a
fi lm-school project in · the
early 1980s for stop-motion
. animation enthusiast Nick
Park.
Back then. Park toi led by
himself to manipulate and
photograph his li ttle characters. Twent y-so me years
later, Park uversa w. dozens of
animation teams working
with 400 clay puppets at a
warehouse-sized set in this
southwest Eng~ish city to
prod uce the duo's big-screen
debm, "Wallace &amp; Gromi t:
The .C urse of the .WereRabbit.''
What's t~e secret behind
the .worldwide appeal of this
geeky, not-so-bright cheese
addict who never stops talking and the unass umingly
brilliant dog who not on ly
cannot speak, but also doesn't even have a mouth?
Park figures Wallace and
Gromit's odd domestic bond
simply re minds viewers of
their own famil y households .
''In many ways, l thought
of them as an elderly couple,"
Park said. "They're inseparable, they li ve in each other's
pockets. There's a kind of
love- hate relationship, but
they' ll always look out for
each other at the end of the
day.
"It 's a real kind of love
without being all sloppy and
se ntimental. which I think
people can kind of relate to as
the more truer fami ly thing.
There's a long-suffering-ness
about it."
"They 're like a family of
two," added Peter Sallis, the ·
84-year-old British actor who
has been supplying Wallace's
voice since Park's student
days. "They could be not
quite brothers but could be
father and son in a sort of
way. And there 's the charming fact that Grornit doesn' t
speak, and Gromit. of course.
is the brains of the fa mily." ·
Joining Sallis in the tilm's
voice cast is Helena Bonham
Caner as a giddy society dame
overseeing a giant vegetable
competition and Ralph Fiennes .
as her villainous ·suitor.
"Curse of the Were-Rabbit"
has· .Wallace and Gromit
us in&amp; their fabulous contraptions and inventions to help
humanely rid the town's gardens of pesky rabbits chowing down on the veggies and a ravenous mutant bunny
that threatens to ruin the
annual contest.
Wallace and Gromit grew
into an unlikely cul,tural sensation afte r their 1989 debut
in the animated short "A
Grand Day Out" and two
Academy · Award-winning
cartoon adven tures that followed. 1993's "The Wrong
Trousers" and 1995's "A
Close Shave." all directed by
Park.
''The combinatio n is so
classic, the man-dog combination . There's obviously a
great love between them,"
said Steve Box. Park's codirec tor on "C urse of the
Were-Rabbit." "! think
Gromit is the biggest key, in
spite of the fact he's mute .
Through economy and simplicity of ~esign. he lust his
mouth , but this charac ter
obviously is very clever. He
speaks with his eyes and can
complete ly cross any language barrier in the world."
Today's cartoon heroes
tend to be wry, glib l1epcats
oozing sarcasm and irreverence. Wallace. with his corny
kni lled vests and cheese compulsion, and Gmm it, with his
stout heart and servile ways,
seem like old fogies by cornpanson.
\ The innocence and naivete
of the characters could be
what sets Wallace and Gromit
apart from a parade of cartoon wi senheimers that
stretches from Bugs Bunny
and Daffy Duck up to Shrek
and Donkey.
"They're not derived from
anything you've seen before.
What else is like Wallace and

•

Gromit'' It's very hard to say,"
said Peter Lord. co-founder of
Aardman Animations, which
produces tile "Wall ace &amp;
Gromi t" films. " It doesn't
\ake shoncuts. It doesn't do
the obvious.
"For ex;1mple, Wallace is a
deeply flawed character,"
said Lord, who co-directed
Aardman 's animated hit
"Chicken Run" with Park.
"He's so unaware ofGromit's
fee lings and needs, and he's
obsessive. He's pretty stupid.
Your stud io development"
executive would never come
up with this character. but the
audience can believe in him.
They can trust Wallace and
Gromit , and know they're
gelling so methin g genuine.
They ' re not going to be
duped and tricked."
Lord and his Aardrnan cofounder David Sproxton,
who both served as producers
on "Curse of the WereRabbit," met Park in the mid1980s while doing a guest
lecture to animation students
at Park 's film school near
London.
In Park. they found a kin-

' ' "'"··· ...

l

'

..

'

AP Photo

In this photo provided by DreamWorks, Wallace and Gromit are cashing in with their humane
pest-control outfit in "Wallace &amp; Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabb"it. "
dred spirit with similar aims,
trying to push the ~oun~aries
of stop-mot1on ammauon, a
technique that involves
meticulously moving inanimate objects and photograph-

ing them a frame at a time.
When run at the cinematic
standard of 24 frames a second, they zip about as though
moving under their own
power.

After film school, Park ,
carne to work for Aardman,
creating the dazzling stopmotion animation for Peter
Gabriel 's
music
video
"Sledgehammer" and com-

pleting the firsi "Wallace &amp;
Gromit" short, "A Grand Day
Out," in which the duo runs
"out of cheese and flies to the
moon to replenish their supply.
"The Wrong Trousers" pitted Wallace and Grornit
against a bizarrely comic
penguin on a robbery spree,
while "A Close Shave" has
Wallace falling for a wool- ·
shop owner and Gromit
framed for sheep rustling.
. For all their wacky adventures, Wallace and Gromit's ·
peaceable little domestic
kingdom presents a cozy,
reassuring front to audiences,
said Aardman spokesman
Arthur Sheriff.
"A quite eminent B"riti sh
psychologist said one of the
reasons
children
like
'Wallace &amp; Grornit' so much
is because no matter how big
the adventure is, it starts from
the front room and ends in
the front room,'' Sheriff said.
"They take great security in
that. Wallace and Gromit
have been to the moon and
everything, but that cup of tea
in the front room is really
comfortlilg after all that."

Dl

INSIDE
.

•

Sunday, October 9, 2005

House·
with a
splash
of style
'

T

houghtful amenities and careful
detailing ensure
comfort and style in this
home, plan CC-1990-M
by the Homestore Plans
and
Pu_blications
Designers' Network. The
.., floor plan covers 1,990
AP Photo&amp;
square feet of living In this photo provided by Homestore Plans and Publications Designers oNetwork, eye-catching keystones, arched window arrangements and varied rooflines give
this home a refreshing splash of style.
space.
Inside, the entry leads
to the di"ning room and
the great room. A high
vaulted ceiling expands
the great room, which
Kit.CJ
features a brick fire10"x
14•
place that goes to the
. I
ceiling.
I
I
A sunny bay brightens
I
I
the breakfast nook and
I
I
the adjacent kitchen. A
I
I
built-in desk, a pantry,
I
I
an island work station
Car,
1
OPEN TO
1
and a nearby powder
BELOW
22" x400
room make the inost of
r --- --J
I
this busy area.
I
I
A split staircase at the
I
center of the plan leads to
the upper-floor bedrooms. A cathedral ceil·
CC-1990-M
ing, a sunny bay and a
plant ledge spice up the.
In this photo provided by Homestore Plans and Publications Designers
master bedroom. The hi this photo provided by Homestore Plans and Publications Designers Network , a
Network, the front bedroom enjoys a built-in bookcase and a vaulted
suAny
bay
brightens
.the
breakfast
nook
and
the
adjacent
kitchen.
ceiling.
private bath features a
whirlpool tub, which is
under a vaulted ceiling.
Two vanities and a separate shower are also
A downloadable study plan of this . house, including general lledrooms: 4
included,
information on building costs· and financing, is available at Baths: 2 1/2
Tbe secondary bed·
httJ!,:IIwww,houseoftheweek.com. To receive a study plan by Upper Hoor: 967 sq. ft.
rooms share a split hall ·
mail, send $10 plus local sales tax to House of the Week, P.O. Main floor: 1,023 sq. ft.
bath. The front bedroom
Box 75488, St. Paul, MN 55175-0488, or call (866) 772-1013. Be Total living area: 1, 990 sq. ft.
enjoys a built-in booksure to reference the plan number. To view hundreds of home Standard basement: 1,023 sq. ft.
designs, visit our Web site at http://www.houseoftheweek.com.
case and a vaulted ceil•
Garage: 685 sq. ft.
ing, while the rear bedExterior wall framing: 2x4
Foundation
options: Standard basement
room is crowned by .a
high cathedral ceiling.

__,I 1J~~"~m ~~~~·==1~
I

Plan CC-1990-M DETAILS:

Now You Can Take Fun
in AWhole New Direction.

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~ew calculators help in measuring for home improvement
Bv MORRIS AND

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and get the right answer the use of dedicated function
• Paperless .tape
5 7/8 inches .
keys to make construction
JAMES CAREY
• Fixed fraction mode
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
However, builder and con- specific calculations that . • Triangle keys
struction calculators are would otherwise be difficult
• Circle/arc keys
hen it comes to fig- fractional calculators that to perform on any kind of
.
uring out how take the next step.
calculator, including the
Each calculator offers
.
much of something
Here is an example of a most sophisticated of frac- some, but not all, of the
you will need for a given common problem associated tiona! calculators.
above features. Choose the
with using a standard calcuFor example: At the press ones thai are most important
project, it can be confusing.
It might be easy to figure Jatar to acquire a measure- of a button one can figure to you before taking the dive .
out ihe area of a room is by ment value: Spacing ·the how many rolls of wallpaper.
By the way, you may have
calculating length time s spindles in a homemade or how many yards of carpet some difficulty finding
widrh, but what about deter- handrail system is .easy. All will be needed. And the most these babies on the Web.
mining how many rolls of you have to do is divide the common calculation of all There doesn't seem to be
wallpaper will be needed? overall. length of the rail by - how many gallons of any one category that . you
Let's -see - length times an estimated number of paint to buy. All are light can type into a search
width of the room, convert- spindles until you get an work ·when using the dedi- engine that Will give you a
ed to inches and divided by answer that approximates cated function keys on a li st of all the various units
ihe width of. the wallpaper ·yoijr spacing need - not too home improvement fraction- that are available.
.
times the length of the roll wide, not too narrow. al calculator.
Here are Web sites for sev=
When shopping for a con- eral companies that make the
divided by 12 ... You get the . Sounds simple until you
point.
· have !o make the measure- sttuction calculator there are various units and the part
Why not use a calculator? ment with a decimal answer. a few things you need to number that will have to be
Well, using a calculator can Did you ev·er try finding · know. First, most experts used to find the item within
be one solution' if you know .333334 inches on a meilsur- agree that the less expensive that site:
how to accurately convert ing tape? Good luck !
mod.els (under $25) are best
fractions of an inch to their
On the other hand, with a suited for the do-it-your. • http://www.calculated.com
decimal equi valent.
standard fractional calcula- selfer. They have fewer part #8525 .
Now the re is a really s im ~ tor. you enter the overall functions and features mak• · http ://www.woodworls.- ·
ple solution to all thi s cal- length of the rail in feet and ing them less complex to
er.com
part #104-642 or part
culating mumbo jumbo. It inches - fraction of an inch use. Next, compare func #949-811
is a new breed of calculator included - and divide by uon s.
• ht\'p://www.craftsman.com
- the "fractional" calcula- the approximate number of
part #39749 or part #39785
tor made especially for spindles desired and the ·
Among the various
• http://www.leevalley.com
builders and remodelers. answer that is fed back can
features th&lt;tt are
part
#86K78 .07 or part
We used to call them "foot- be found on any measuring
available:
#86K78.!0
inche s"
calc ul ators. tape.
. Fractional calcul ators add,
Building and remodeling
You can type in fractional
subtract, multipl y and · fractianal calculators take · • Basic math keys
• Fractional keys
calculator, but you may not
divide fractions. You· can construction calculations to a
• Board-foot key
come up with one that is
actually add 3 5/8 inches whole other level of ease and
construction specific. It
• 4x8 sheet stock key
together with 2 1/4 inches simplicity. These units enlist

W

- . ,--

1

0NTH£HousE 1foM

I

llniiiiiCd•clleul...

..,.wan••n

In less lime lllan conventionary metl1ods. construction calculators
can prefQrm a multltllude of commands and give you a sc:ilutlon
you can actually measure as opposed to a decimal answer.
Answers ct111 be
converted to feet
and inches. All
fractions 112's
1184's

Galruate material
worl&lt;ing

'"J-··,Iirectly in feet
inclles. fractions

and yards
Secondary
• func110ns we&lt;e
.. ....... !i ... specifically
de9gned for ·
contractors.
'

.

.

-~~

'

remodeling and
other construction
professionals
Phil Holm • AP ·

depends on which search
engine you use.
We prefer the models that
offer preset fraction keys
and paperless tape . Both of
these fea tures are personal
preference and neither of
them b; critical to th e simplicity · that we suggest is
availab.le with any of the
.,

units li sted .
And, that's all there is to it. ·
For mnre hnm e improvement rips and informmion
l'isir our Web sire at
hrr p: IIll' 11 '11'. nn the lwu.se.com

nr callus ar 1800) 737-2474
nery Saturday. 9 a.m. tu I
p.m. EDT. And, good lu ck!

·--·--

�iunbap ~tmt~ -iPtnttnel

DoWN ON THE FARM

EXTENSION CORNER
Need some color added to
your landscape'? There is still
time to plant pansies and violas into your yard for fall
color. Fall planted pansies
create a larger impact in the
spring when they explode
into bloom from a well-established dver-wintered plant.
Some years. violas, which
have nickel-sized blossoms,
have bloomed all winter in
protected areas in the garden.
Pansies, the larger blooming
violas, .have fewer blooi:ns
but light up that garden spot
when grouped in mass plantings of five. seven or even
larger nu.mbers.
Hybridizers have created a
great many new color
schemes and blotch arrange-·
ment on the pansy !lower
faces. If you plan on viewing
the bed of pansies from a distance, plant lighter-colored
pansies . with solid-colored
blooms.
If deer and rabbits visit
your yard, you need to fence
out these critters and use one
of the repellents on the market containing hot pepper oil,

I

''

animal urine or thiram. Do
noi wait even a few hours
before applying repellents as
animal eating routine~ are
ditlicult to change.
Prepare !lower beds that
are well-drained for your
pansy plants. Two or three
inches of compost or wellaged manure should be
incorporated into the !lower
bed before planting. Plant on
slopes or · construct' raised
beds if well-drained soil is
lacking. After planting the
pansies. apply one to 1-1/2
inches of mulch to retain the
soil warmth and moisture.
Do not over-watet your
pansy bed, as too much water
creates an ideal site for root
diseases.

brown with a red spot in the
center of their backs.
Boxelder bugs, when immature. are red in color and as
they mature, they molt
(evolve) into bugs that have
brown wings and a red marking on their backs.
These bugs do not lay eggs
or cause structural damage
when they congregate under
the siding of houses, but are
looking for a place to overwinter. Thankfully, they do
not invade the .interiors of
households like the lady beetles. They re-emerge from
their .over-winterlng spots in
March and April to lay eggs
in and around Boxelder trees.
The eggs hatch into young,
reddish-colored nymphs that
.l,. •••
continue through five stages
The insect call of the week before transforming themwas not the · multi-colored selves into adults.
During their growing
. Asian Lady Beetle. but the
Boxelder Bug that is congre- weeks .. the Boxelder nymphs
gating around homes that are feed on the sap of the leaves,
near Boxelder trees. Irate stems and developing seeds
homeowners found the of the Boxelper tree. The
sunny side of their homes Boxelder tree (Acer negunalive with thousands of one- . do) is actually a type of
half inch long bugs that maple tree .that has a comlooked like lightning bugs, pound leaf composed of thtee
but were red in color or to live leatlets. It may grow

Eggs: Not just for breakfast anymore
BY ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

•

An egg is just .an egg, one
thinks - scnimble 'em, fry
'em, boil 'em, chop 'em up in
tuna salad, make ·em into
omelets, hide 'em for the kiddies ·at Eastertime, or with
enough .beers and idle time,
try to stand 'em on end. Or if
you're , really adventurous.
toss 'em (this is neithe{a recommendation
nor
an
endorsement) at politicians.
How m.uch more simple ,
innocuous a product can
there be, you may ask. In
which event you likely, as I,
were not aware that· the
· Department of · Homeland
Security is said to have
deemed eggs one of .the five
most likely targets for agroterrorism. So now we've got
worry that glomming down
an Egg McMuffin could
cause a world of hurt s hould
some evildoer have contam-·
inated the hen fruit with
botulism.
Fear not! A Massachusetts
company, claiming to' be the
first in the nation to enact a
new "Egg Safety Plan," is
now marketing eggs that are
laser-etched with freshness
and traceability codes on
each eggshell. The codes,
they say, will al!ow govern-

ment officials and consumers
to trace an individual egg
back to its farm source.
The Born Free brand eggs
are packed in clear cartons
that offer a full view of the
product and let the purchaser
check for broken eggs. And
of ·course they're "all natural;' with ·no. antibiotics or
artificial hormones, a,nd are
available in several varieties:
Certified USDA organic,
cage-free from free-roaming
hens in an all-natural environment, vegetarian-fed, and
Omega 3, containing at least
200 mg of Oniega 3 fatty
acids and 75. mg of DHA:
They're being sold at 1,000
stores along the East Coast,
with plans . for national
expansion, Tongue-in-cheekish though one's reaction
may be to the thought of
laser-etched
eggs,
the
Department of Homeland
Security and the USDA are,·
we're told, taking very seriously . the threat of agro-ter'
rorism and the potential for
use of biological agents to
destroy crops, sicken liyestock, and contaminate the
food supply.
Milk, another of those s im~
pie, innocuous staples of
everyday life, could also be a
major target for the bad guys.
Surreptitiously slip less than .
an ounce of botulism into a

tank at a processing plant and
potentially 400,000 or more
people could be sickened or
die. A report by Stanford
University · researchers on
weaknesses in the nation's
·milk supply was considered
so sensitive its publication
was suppressed for weeks,
although
it
eventually
became public.
From ancient Rome to
Sherman's march through the
South to World Wars I and II,
destroying or poisoning an
opponent's food supply has
been an oft-used tactic. The
devastation of crops and
farms by Sherman is considered epic in modem warfare.
There is former Secretary
of Health and Human
Services Tommy Thompson's
infamous quote last year,
"For the life of me, I cannot
understand why the terrorists
have not attacked our food
supply. because it is so easy
to do." But despite the billions being poured into
thwarting terrorism on a myriad of fronts, including agriculture and the food supply,
many doubts · and concerns
exi;;t about the ability of government and/or the health
care/emergency management
system to cope with a widespread catastrophic event.
Hurricane Katrina being a
prime example.

Winner of 4-H miniature horse.giveaway announced
. GALLIPOLIS - Recently,
members of the Galli a County
4-H Advisor Association
drew for the 4-H Miniature
Horse Giveaway.
Members of the 4-H
Executive Committe·e who
took an active lead in this
fund raiser were Garry Lewis,
Ronnie Slone, Jpdy Clark and
Evelyn Elliott.
The winner of the 4-H
Minjature Horse was Rhonda
Johnson· of
Centenary.
Proceeds of the drawing go
directly buck into the Galllia
County 4-H Program, with
sponsorship of these various
activities, such as 4-H camp
Washington
scholarships,
focu s trips. conservation,
forestry and leadership camps
at Camp Ohio, Sea Camp at
Kelleys -Island, advisor/volunteer banquet and recognition, and a host of other youth
development programs.
Appreciation was also
. offered to Joe and Cheryl
Hubble for housing the horse
. during the fund-raising project. This year's fund-raiser
was a huge success and the
committee expressed · its
appreciation to everyone who
participated, as well as the
$100 sponsors. In their honor,
a sign giving them recognition is on display at
Montgomery 's Barber Shop
in Gallipolis.
.
The $100 sponsorship list
includes Eddie Butler and
family, Bill · and Marilyn

6unba~t f!;tmtf -6tnlintl

Swulay, October 9, 2005

. m::rtbune Serttinel
CLASSIFIED

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Lower

Co lllo

To

Cows-Lower

\!Crihune.

Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342

·Back To The Farm:

Otftfee #oar~

Cow/Calf Pairs $650-$1,135: Bred Cows $200-$830;
Baby Calves $20-$260; Goats, $15-$105 ; Lambs, $85$112; Hogs, $40.

Monday t:h ru ·Friday
8:00 a •.ITI. t:o 5:00 p.m.
\:\'\01 \(I \II \IS

Upcoming specials:
Fat cattle sale, 8 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 12.
Feeder calf sale, Oct. 19.
For more information, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com

--::1!-----...;..., 1110
..
•

r
,
:
•
:

HELI'WANUD

looking lor single while
Chrislian . female. for some
companionship.
Ages
between 28-45. Please call
740 645-0397 after r- ·m.

t..-------,.1

As ol September. 30; 2005 1

wiil
any

not

be Responsible for
then' my

GIVtJ\WAV '
9 ADORABLE 5 112 week
• Old mixed breed pu~pies to
good home. (740)388-9956
.. Black · Kittens

'-•----_.,1
100

H~aith Care- Local Agen cy
looking to train "the right peopie to p10vide personal care
and homemak1ng services
to the elderly. No eKpe rieilce
necessary. Agency is al so
hiring LPN 's, STNA's or
CHHA 's to cover Meigs,
An Excellent ·way to earn Gallipolis,
Athens
an(f
money. The New A\lon.
Jackson areas. We provide
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
flexii:Jie schetiuling and benAre you looking for a change elits. If interested please call
in your nursing? Full-time
AN needed to·r growing Home Health Care oi SE
11ome
1"1ea1tl1
agency. Ohio Is currently hiring
Flexible sc l1edullng, compet- HOme
Health
Aid es.
Itive wages with benefits. Competitive wage s. Call
Call toll free - 1 -866-368 1tOO .
Housekee ping &amp; laun dry
AVON! All_Areas! To Buy or ·supervisor position a11ailable
Sell.
Sh irley Speafs, 304- (n tl1e Gallipolis/Pomeroy
675-1429,
area. Management experiBabysitter needed in my ence requi red . Please fax
home
tor
Occasional res um~ to: 614-851-5948.

awks old

(304)675-53 13

Assemble crafts,
wood items.
To $480/wk
Materia ls provided.
Free information pkg. 24Hr.
901-428-4849

'-(7_4_0:__)4_4_1·_13_7_7_.____

740;662-1222

evenings and some weej:- lndep. LPN looki ng for RN
Free puppies 112 Aottwie ler ends. $5.00 per hour. Gall
Superv1sor in Meigs County.
To good home Call (cell) 740-742-1516
Thirty minutes work per
(740)578-1055

SUNDAY PUZZLER
10tJ.(lvlt001ked hcnt .
110 CIOOI!d of 11im11t
111 ~112
NftY..,.Jpnmlsa

ACROSS

1 Growashen
6 Raal'

~..-tty

10 Cllllllf

1 Bedoulne
·
21 -and well
22 Klnd ol ectlplt
23 t.haiOI

115 Eallenl
117 Mete
118 IIIII palll&gt;

119 CMIIO(I
.
121 DoaflimJob

24 l.awU ·

26 Drwed 10 h -

122 Mlndaver-

26 Soap pllnl
27 Aro1natc wood
26 !lulptcl'l doltt1l4l
29 FRill
·

123 Mtld"-

125 fbelan ....

127 C1'1111:11-

·t29 The lllld'srtwr

30~NIWJe8d

32 Have,_ of ·
34 Glowlrrg coal

132 WMp

134 ~opon

131 Formenony

36 Tlvuh

37 'fllld by treety

137141 T)ier or Utlnlm

38 Clletrfl.ll

Narrated
43
44 Nol*tu more l1on
45 Gather8d IOtll~
48 Balle kom A&amp;
5tl - Spumante

142 NMit

""'*' .

52~

144 Pilchtr
148 llt1lr dettrl£1lon
148 -wtllll

.

149 Sptettify
151 Belows
153 Kind or t&gt;ear

.

94 Long ti1)11 '
95 Be an ~gn of

DOWN
1 Will ftei

2 WondorWid vlailor
3 ,,.,... **~
4 NtwVNI's 5 E8CIIIDirs
6 l'lll" forllmt
78~

8 From- - Z

9~18'-

10 Skirt"*
It AoMUa1lon
12 Poem
13 Ort doplelt
14V~

15 WMie lltlgrade Is
18 OIMl!l$
17 Fallt (allbr.)
1819 Child's book
~

20 tll-'*
31 Mild oeth
33 BcMne Cliature
35 Graal delight
38 t.ltrlts
~Rot

55 MOlle trom an iniUY
57 Heartot59 Lllnbt!

156Tum-out
158 S1lut

42 Coodemn
44 Silent pertormer
46 Made tile

64 Royal crown ·

1609ecut

47 Pop

:=

63 Wabr ot Eastwoocl
ol181118gi1

68 '1tlad' etttlng
10 Baddalk
73 Ump'scoy

74 Employ

75 Esclltw
76· Mil1ary ttalnee
76 Twisted

79Gretn-80 l!cudaii'- ~
112~

a-

86 rluetrali8n bird

87 l.eguninous plant
88

Alli&gt;J. 1n

90~1ur

93 Slep11aprocess

95 Ventilate
96 Newspaper
tOO DrBI!Witic10 t SoiM!nlng Actty
102 Powerful
bullnee8rran
104 ReQIC&lt;I
t 05 - poetico
. t 08 Totality

107 Disccwtred

159 Act like • hem

181 Groupoi1821Jwm~

163

72 !iqttora-

89 Prohibit

t57 Of a grain

.!'::'pOrt

1&amp;1 Faun

~of

49 Failure

51 Ebb or neap
52 Sc:oor
53 Neck and neck

54 Aloiated

56 Kildotrace
56 On!S18r part

60Mal&lt;eswdlen
6t Get away trom
62 AppraiSed

64 Percussion
illtn.mlnt

96 Clothing.

101

Sr.w

103 The Brilllll cal
il petrol
104 Comnil
107 Skedaddled
108 Dummy ·
110Pen:eiYeo
111 Compltleiy ful
113 Pol1ent
114 cape canavtral gp.
116Votality
117 -King Cole
120 Royal bealtng
122Wt.. _
124 Thtnedday
126 t.Jnc:Ooked

128 Evergreet\ lr..
129 Standoffith

130 Like some lnle&lt;;llons
131 Egg·shaped
133 Pioneer Daniel -

135 Repulse

138 Emissary
139 Forgivooess

140 Fall&lt;' or Fooda
142 Pavitioo
1431pble
145 lllllla's clljlital
147 Prornoololy
150 Golf bal stand
152 CriJT!500
154 Cut off
156 Byway of

65 Center tpreH•I
67 Rotate
69 tliltical proooun
71 Square in a roon&lt;1 hate
75Abit

IJistnctl:lrcutatton

Gray/white female cal shor t

.. haired, 5 months old, very
" friendly.
Brown/tabby
: stripped female cat 4
months old. White female
cat, shOrt-haired. adult. Only
cat In nousehold. Female
blue-eyed Siamese mi)( cat
5 months old, very sweet.
(740)446 -2700 .

· 97 lfr4lliedbut -

96 Treawe·
99 Chamical COfll&gt;OUI1d

.

76~

71 Follow alter

79 Tarzan's mate
Depend
B2 ocean
84Gowroog
86S114&gt;tfy
81 01 spe&lt;ICh89 Poet o1 old

81

90 Ellta

91 Woody or Elhan

92 liQI'rt wood
93 snow displeas""

: Kittens to gweaway, 2 male,
• 1 female , 2 dark gray. 1
• grayiwhite (304.)892-2269

'

.

Three beautifu l male kittens

(304)675-6720

Aesponsibi liles
includ
recruiting and training o
arrier s. customer servic
nc1 m&amp;Ening sales goats. 1
ou have a positive alti
ude, are a self-starter,
nd a team pl~yer , w
would like to talk to you.
Must be dependable allC
ave reliable transports
ion. Position olfers al
ompany benefi ts includ
·ng health, dental , vision
ndl1fe insura,nce, 401k,
aid vacation, and person
I days. Ple ase se n
resume to:
Paul Barker

tor

$tOO

(304)773·5739

month

Is there anyone in tl1 e
Pomeroy/Middleport area
looking lor full time work?
Are you looking lor better
than
minimum wage s?
Primary
schedule
IS
Mon day-Friday 8am-5pm
MList have valid drivers
license and dependable
vehic le. Must be laniiliar witl1
Meigs County.
Send resumes including
references to: CLA BoK 2
c/o Pomeroy Daily Sentinel,
P.O. B ox 729,
Pomeroy. OH 4576~.

-

_45:-7_
__ 6_:_·
()

866,713-2778

mise

· w•

CDL·A 6 Mos. Exp.
www crstmalone cqm

LPN
needed , full -time ,
Monday-Friday, day shift. no
.
Drivers: Earn up to 1SOK per weekends, no holidays .
year! Weekly home time. no Apply at 936 St. At. 160,
: 115 Fourth . Duncan's in touch freight! Dedicated Gallipolis. (740)446-9620.
• New Haven, October 12th Midwest Account. 800-346MACHINISr , skilled
• and 13th. lots of misc.
2818 eX1. 447

v .,Rn SAt.E]\li\IEROY!MJDI&gt;Lt:

Huge s family, 10th- 11th. D1ivers: Great Pay, Ber'lefi ls,
home-Time I
: new &amp; used ite,m s. Cotlecta- BonUses,
Regional
runs.
1"yr'. Tanker
• btes,
d1shes,
jewelry,
clotheS, tools . misc. priced

• to sell, turn off Rt 7 onto 143

WANTtD
m Jim·

Absolute Top Dolla r· U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins',
~ Proolsets, Gold Rings, Pre-

1935
U.S
Currency,
: Solitaire ~~amonds- M.T.S.
... Coin Shop. 151 Secontl
'" Avenue , Gallipolis, 740· 446. 2842

I \11'1

o' \II'- I

SIN.\Ut...,

110

HFLPWMmn

LEARN
TO
DRIVE.
-

~0 EXPEPie~&lt;jCE

' ~UL~ HIE

NECFSS ARV

CLASSES

' COL fHA ININC•
' • FI"' .. ._CINQ AV,Ioil,O.I:Ilf:
• JOH NCEMFNT
• El\rtOlliNf"• NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TPAILER
TRAINING CE NTER 'l
WYTHEVILLE , VA

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

. Sales Manager

month

LICENSED SOC IAL
WORKER
Circulation Manager
Overb rook
Rehabi litati on
. (740)379-2316
Ohio Valley Publishing
Center Is now acceptin g
825 Third Ava
LOSTANil
resumes lor the position of
Gallipolis,
Olllo 45631
FOUND
Director of Social Ser~~ic es
Or email to
The quali fied candidate
pbarker@mydallytrlmust be a LSW possessing
Items FounD at Ma son Car
bune.com
strong 11erbal a11d written
Wash on Tuesday Oct 4th
communication
skills.
Call an Identify
items
Drivers Needed;
Medicaid, Medicare and
~4)66 2-3320
CDL Drivers willing to drive
MDS knowledge Long term
for local ready -mix -concrete
care . eKperience pr"eferred
:
fU
YARO SAt.•
company. Experience is
but not reqwred . Qualified
preferred but not necessary.
candidate s
may
send
Driver mUst be willing to do
resumes to: Charla Brownpre-maintenance on trucks
YARDSAI.EMcGuire.
AN
LNHA ,
&amp; equ1pment, yard worlo;. &amp;
G.~.Lif'OUS
Admin1slrator 333 Page
other miscellaneous chores.
Street , Middleport, Ohio
KaHina Fund- ya •d sale- Experience operating equipE
_O:_E
_ _ _ _ _·
Friday 7t h-15th. On 588 old ment &amp; extra skills such as
welding
a
plu
s.
Local
construction
company
- 35, 1 mile west Rodney.
Call
(
304)937-3410
now
hir1
ng
carpenters
: Name brand dothes. in
on ly,
wleKperience
• G1een House. Also Martin Drivers
{740)742-2623, 740-416·
OWNER OPERATORS
• bird hou ses
0599.
Don 't Just Drive ... Belong!
'Oct. 8-9, 9am-? SA 325 112
local office (Meigs Co )
,.Above Avera9e Earnings
mi. N of Rio Grande. Books. ,.Paid Twice Weekly
seeking motivated person
household items, etc.
:...Health Insurance Program for staff positi on. Must po ssess ability to wOrk with pub,.JQO% Owner Operator
: Yard sale Denny Cemetery
lic
and learn new !J"kills .
J,.Reg1onal Fleet A11ailable
• Rd. 7th ,. 8th . 9th . 9-5
Basic fl1ath and computer
"Ask About Our Lease
ski ll s
necessary. Send
Purchase Program
~ Yard Sale: 2081 Rt 7 north
resume to : Daily Sentinel,
w/Payments Around
atmve park Friday-S und[)y.
PO BoK 729·3. Pomeroy,
$1,200 Per Mont h~!
Hot Wheels , and lots ol
Ohio 45769

Weimaraner m i~ fem ale, 1 ~
year cld. Very loving.

:go 2 114 mile

SUbmitted photo
Rudy the miniature horse is seen with G.allia County 4-H
Executive Committee members Judy Clark, Evelyn Elliott, Garry
Lewis and Ronnie Slone. The horse was won in the. recent giveaway by Rhonda Johnson of Centenary.

C&lt;&gt;un l ~·.

1-800-334-1203

OR 2yrs. Tractor Trailer Exp
Martin Transport 866-2937435.

~egister

Sentinel
(7 40) 992-2156

&lt;JH

Or Fax To

Work alongside other talented machinists, technicia ns
and engineers at UTRON,
Inc. Worksite is located in
Ashton , WV. between Pt .
Plea sant and Huntinglon.
WV Pos ition requires

Envelope
stuffers
earn
money working· at home • .Recent &amp;Kpe nence with
Call 24 hr. lor details 972- marlual
lathes ,
milling
504-2690.
mcichmes, saws, and radial
drills.
Experienced
Floral
• Ability to hold tolerance to
Desig~er. Full or part time
.0005" on line work
Apply at Floral Fash1ons,
• Ability to accurately cut
244 Third Ave., Gallipolis
various male &amp; female
For a limited lime make 50% threads. including buttress
se lling Avon. Call (740)446- • Experience m"ac hinin g
materials of various hard3358.
ness and machin"mg charac.Front desk, midnight s11itt. teristics
Sl1ift differential pay. A pply In • Ability to read d~awings
person at Hol iday Inn.
and make parts to appropriGa.z6tt e 1 day Delivery. .ate specifications
·Familiarity with shop safety
Stmday only Route. cover·
routines end procedures
ing, Gallipolis Ferry, Apple
Grove, Glenwood. erab • L1fltruck operation is a plus
• U.S. citizenship and clear
Creek &amp; Jerrys Run . _ Call
results of OackQround eKam(800)982-6397 ext 1787
in atlon.
Leave Message
Qualified app lica nts ple ase
visit .,._ ut1o&lt;&gt;ir-c ooml•ropiO'f""'nt
GRAND OPENIN G
Do you have a pick-up to print appl ication form
truck ? TMn work lor us! wh ich can be mailed or
$150 to $300 cash paid faKed to human resources or
daily Call (740)44 1-7711 or call 703-369-5552 ext. 'too
(740)645-3963 EZ Meat lor to request an application
an 1ntervlew.
Ohio Val ley Wireless IS
Ohio Valtev Home Heallh, se·ekmg enthusias tic satesInc hiring Full and Part Time oersons that enJOY working
AN 's. Competitive wages , wil11 people in the commumWages
mileage and benefits includ- catlon Industry
Ing health insurance . Apply mctude salary plus sales
at 1480 Jackson Pike, based cOmmiSSion Ple ase
to
740·508-0211
GalhpOIIS or phone toll free call
1-866-441- ~ 393. '
arrang~ an 1nterview.

JUST SAY

CHARGE III

(304) 675-1 333 -~ VISAJ

992-2157

rJ;:.

Now you can have·borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3 .00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

. • _____
HH~P W.INlFD _.~ll.lo------"llllD
. ,
HEU&gt; WANTEil . .
~.~~.o

WORKERS NEEDED

ANNOUNCEMt:NI'S

lots FOR SAlE!!
River Lots Comlnl! Soon
On deep water Raaoon Creek in Beautiful Galli a·Co.,
5·20 acres. All lots have beautiful building.sites. Boat to
Ohio River. Call to reserve yours today!
Lawrence Co. 205 acres $1350/acre
Gatlia Co. Pumpkintown-5acres, 113,900
Meiss Co. Crystallake·4·6 acres 123,900

PERSONAlS

:· Single white Chris lian male

~

83 Golf OX!Urst arta
85 OUtmoded

Kuhn , Jack Swain/Lazy S W. Bodimer. auctioneer,
Farm, O'Dell Lumber Co., Smith' s Superstore/Greg
Robbie's BP, Montgomery 's Smith , Johnson's Mobile
Barber Shop, Steve McGhee Home s/Nick
Johnson,
and family, Mike Owens and Foster Sales &amp; D!;!iv~ry/Bob
family, Mike and Charlene Foster,
Graham' s .
Hemphi ll and family, Rio Towing/Bumper Graham,
Hardwa re/Mark
Neal, Kuhner-Lewis
Funeral
Smith' s GMC/Herb and Rita Ho.me, Jim Fraley 's Farm
Smith, Evelyn and Eugene Equipment,
Dr. David
Elliott and family, Silver Smith, Gallia County comStreaks 4-H Club, Southern missioner, Brent Saunders,
Hill Cabinetry, Fred .and Norris Northup Dodge/Mike
Mary Dee! and family, . Northup,
Steve
Evans
_. Altizer Farm Supply, French Country Time Saii'Sage,
City Foot Clinic/David Faro, River Bend Animal Clinic,
L&amp;L Scrap Metal, Tim Auto Trim Center, Brown
Massie arid family, C-5 Brothers Insurance, and Bill
Farms/Pat Canaday, .Joshua Smeltzer, CPA .

Place

Your Ad,

Well Muscled/Fleshed $45-$51 Mediuffi!Lean $40-$45;
Thin/Light $1-$30; Bulls $50-$64.

.PART'OF YOUR Lllt

41

OH

ln. One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
AD NOW ONLINE

275-415# St. $100-$139 Hf. $95-$125 425-525# St.'
$90-$125 Hf. $90-$115 550-625# St. $90-$115 l:lf $85$105 650-725# St. $85-$105 Hf. $80-$95 750-850 St. $80$95 Hf. $7 5-$88.

. PROUD TO BE A,.

e

C&lt;no nl ~ .

GALLIPOLIS- United Producers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for sales condu~ted on Wednesday, Oct. 5.

to 60 .feet tall and is rather
fast growing, with a winged
seed called a samara.
These bugs can also feed
on cherry, ash, maple, plum,
peach, grape or strawberry,
but don'llook for large numbers without a Boxelder tree
nearby. A second gene.ration
of Boxelder bugs hatch in
late July. These bugs are the
ones moving onto the local
houses.
·
Control measures include
remo.val of seed-bearing
Boxelder trees. Spray the
bugs with a mixture of onequarter cup liquid soap to one
gallon of water. Soapy water
suffocates the insect, especially tl)e immature nymphs.
Other
pesticid~
like
acephate,
carbaryl,
or
pyrethrins, may be sprayed
on plants as directed by the
product label. For further
mformation
call
the
Extension office and ask for
fact sheet #2106, "Boxelder
Bug."
(Hal Kneen i$ the Meigs
County Agriculture and
Natural
Resources
Educator,
Ohio
State
University Extension.)

11

Mclp

• Pac1e 03

LIVESTOCK REPORT

Pansies, violas create vibrant fall color
BY HAL KNEEN

•

PageD2

rtJechanjc ·
MECHANICS
Arctic Expres~ has 1mmed1ate openings tor Trailer
MeChanics and eKperienced
Diesel
Mecl1anics
with
Cummins eKperie nce. Must
ha11e a high te11el of me chan ·
ical
aptittJde.
Be riefits
include:
•EXCELLENT work sc hedule

WAMHl
To Do

Skilled Trade

WANTED : Part-time position
available to assist individuals with mental retardation
at a group home in Bidwell.
35 hrslwk : 3:30-9:30pm
n1urs: 3-10pm Fri: 9am-6pm
Sat; 9am-8pm Sun. High
sc hool diploma/GED, valid
drive r's lioonse and three
ye ars good drilling experience required. $7.25111r. Preem ployment D.rug Testing.
Send resu me to: Buckeye
~.o mmun l ty Services, P.O.
BoK 604, ' Jacks on; OH
4'5'640 or &amp;· mail to : ~~
SSIDL~ Deadline
for applicants· . 10/12105
Eq ual
Opportunity
Employer

TRAILER TECHNICIAN

Arctic E)(press is expandin g!
Mu st have a· high leve l of
mechanica l aptitude and be
able to wor k with pmtesslonal drivers. Benefits 1nclude.
•Paid vacation &amp; hOlidays
•4 -day work week
•Overtime Pay
•Compa ny supplied
uniforms
Fax. email, or apply ~ n
•Paid vacation &amp; holidays
person to.
•H ealth insurance. 40 1(k)
Denver Fannin
plan
4277 Lyma n Dnve •
•Overtime pay
· H illiard. OH 43026
•Company supplied uniFAX: 61 4·527 -0754
forms
Ema il:
. dcatron ~ afcticexpress.com
Fax, email or apply in
person to
STABILITY
Denver Fannin
Arctic Express, Inc
INTEGRITY
4277 Lyman Dri11e
Hilliard, OH 43026
FAX: 614.527.0754
Email:
dcatron@ arcticeKpress .com
Are you looking for a new
EOE/Dr.ug Free Workplace
career?
Someplace with a future ?
Medi Home Health Agency.
Inc. seeking a full-time AN At lnfoCision we offer full·
Patient Care Coordinator f01
tim e and part -ttme sl1ifls
Gallipolis , Ohio and sur· and up to"$8/hour. We offer
roun ding
area.
Duties paid training and paid vaca:
include estab11sl1ing and lion time every months. We
maintaining . open lines of
also offer a fu ll benefits
communication wi!h area
package and 401 K No
physicians and health care
experience is necessary.
facilities in the delivery ot
Ho~e Heallh Serv1ces. We II you are looking to begin
otter a competitive salary your new career in a stable
and benefit package !or lull
and professional atmoslime. E.O. E. Prea se send phere give us a ca ll today.
res ume to A.udre'y Farley, 1-877-463-6247 e~ t. 2455
Clioical
Manager,
352
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
or apply on-line at
OH45631 .
www.infocision .com

Outstanding Salary
Gall1pohs, OH/8-5 M-F/Full
benefil s. Multi-specialty cardiology practice ~ eeki n g certified NP w/O H license.
Experience in cardiology, IM
and/or acute ca re pre1erred.
Excellent interpersonal skills
&amp; enjoy autonomy, Please
call Mi chele @ 614·8238073, Fax 614-75!-6671 or
steadmichelc_ michele@ yah
oo.com.

We are look1ng for an outgoing, energet1c person to
work part time in our busy
chiropractic clinic . Please
hand-deliver
resumes
between 9am and 5pm,
Tuesday througl1 Thursday.
Back To Health Ch1ropract1C,
750 First Avenue , Gallipolis
Phone. (740)44 6-7460.·

Will do elderly care, have
o11er 2o yrs. experience and
many references ca ll after
Spm, 1740)949-35 0-1 ask for
Paula

Son'leon.a to care lor co uple
in th eir home. (740)2561524.

11\ \ \( 1 \I

Concealed Pistol Class
October B. 9:00 am . VFW
Mason WV. Ph. (740)843-

IIUSINtN;

OJ1 1()RJ'UNIT'V

1.,-..0ii.ii-iilliiio;.,,.t

5555. Cell (740)416·3329.

Gallipolis Career College
1Careers Close To Home)
Call Toda~ l 740-446-4367,
1.BOO 2 14 0452
www.gall1pollscare11rcollega.com
Ac~:rBditad
Member Accreditin~
Counol tor lnd&amp;pendent Colleges

orrow Smart . Contac
he Ohio DiviSion o
Fma ncial
In sti tu tion'
ttice of
Consume
flairs BEFORE you refi
ance yo ur home o
blain a loan. BEWA.R
f requests for any larg
dvam:e payments o
ees or 1nsu rance. Cal
he Office of Consume
flairs toll tree at 1-866
78-0003 to learn if lh
ortgage
broke r o
ender
is
proper!
1ce nsed . (Th1s is a publi
er&gt;.Jice announcemen
rom the· Oh 1o Valle
ublishln Com an

1.,-------_.J
i'ROI'l,:O,.'iiONAl.
SERVIOS

TURNED DOWN ON

ABSOLUTE

GOLDMINE1

60 vending machines/
&amp;Kce llent locations
all lor $10,995
• 800·234-6982

..

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSl?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582 -3345 ~

H. I \I I
~10

~I\

Ml&lt;;CFJJANF:OUS

~

GetPaidlo

DIRECT TV. 3 room with
Hunt &amp; Fish!!!l!l!
Ti110 FREE 145 channels
urn your passiOn into
only $39. 00 per month. · Ask ~usiness .
Call' Jirr
how to get FREE HBO,
MAX, and 11ome. ente rtainment system. Call BOQ-5237556 for details

House lor sale in Rulland,
$25.000 firm, out of flood
area, call (740)742-2661

304)576·2707

Make FREE Phone Calls to
any phone and make big
To Do
money givmg away Free
Long
Distance
Phone
Computer
Repair
and Service! Visit·,
Troublesl1oot. Web Des1gn, www.MyAdCalls. com/2 15~0
and
Networking, .Programming ,
www.AdCalls.com/21550.
Build New Systems. Restore
Window s. Virus Remo11al.
Certified
Phona#740-992·

160

State Tellfed Nursing

WANTEI)

Assistants
·Are you Jook1ng for a chal lenge? Would you like to usa
your sKills to make a differ·
ence ? If so. we may have a
position foi you . Arbors at
Gallipolis is currently seeking qualified State Tes ted
Nursing Assistants to join
our caring team. For more
information, apply in person
at
Experience. looking to take
ArbOrs AI Gallipolis
care of elderly or handicap.
170 Pinecrest Drive
Flellible hrs. eva1table . Call
Gallipolis, OH 45631

0102.
Experienced CN,A with good
References will take ca re of
Elderly. Call lor more detailS
(304)895-3918

Help Wanted

~eardifat
cJ{8//l()'litH
(!;/(onamenlJ
Sales
I Counselor

Clerical

I.earn the

Position

Monument
and Funeral
Business

PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

(866) 286-4777

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

lNG CO. recommends tt1a
ou do business with pea
le you know, and NOT to
epd money through the
fall unt1l you 11ave 1nvest1
a ted the offerino.

WANTED: Position available to assist
an individual with mental retardation who resides in the Meigs
County area; 35.5 hrs; 11 pm Fri. 7:30 am Mon ; sleep-over required.
Must h&lt;IVe high school diploma or
GED, valid driver's license, three
years good driving experience and
adequate automobile msurance.
$7.25/hr. Send resume ·to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or e:mail to: beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 10/12/05.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Earn

50:

Easy

I

HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
TRAINING FOR
EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

Bulldozers, Backhoes ,
Loaders, Dump Trucks,

Graders. Scrapers,
Excavators
Train in Ohio

Next Class: Oct. 31st
-National Certification
-Financia l Ass istan ce

.• Job Placement A ssistance

800-383-7364
Associa ted Traming Services
2323 Perlormance Pkwy

Columbus, OH

43207

www .a tsn-schoots .com

03-11 -1697T
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

· "Notice of Position Vacancy"
Posilion: Liccns~d Dic1iC1an 1&lt;1r WI('
Ty'Pt' (,.f Posi tion: Part time
Minimum Requirements: Bac helor-.

0

degree in Dietetics. Comru1cr L'xpcricm:c.
good oral and written comnnmication

CRITICAL CARE SERVICES

skill s. Must hold a valid Ohio driver\
licen"ic.

. COORDINATOR
Pleasant

Vall ey

Hospi ta l is currently
lOr a Critit.:al Care
Scr vic~ ., Coordinalor in lhc ICCU and ER
Depanmcnh. A minimum of three years

Dmc

a\'aila~le :

December I. 21KI:i

~u.:ccpt i n g , re~umcs

cxpericn~e in an acute carC'" sell ing.

matJagcmcnt/supcrvisory

Previous
experi ence
in

cl in u.:ul servi o;: c ;.areas req ui red. Graduate of a
~hool of nursing. Current West Virginia

lice nse. BSN preferred.
Fl exi ble sr.:hcdul in£. excellent salal-y_

holidays. health insurance sin gle/fam il y
plan. dental rtan. life in!'!uranc e. vacat ion.
long-1enn di sa hility and re~ircmcnt .
rest~ me. .

to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
(/o 1-fuman ResOurces

2520 Valle)' IJrivc
l'oint l'lcasant. WV 25550.
(.104) 675-4.140
www.pval lcy.org
AA/EOE

•

Help Wanted

J

Send

Substitut e, Early Educat1on
StatiOn Preschool Program
Send Resume to 2122
Jefferson. Ave . Pt. Pleasant

New Haven 4 BR, B1·Level,
AppK . 2,000 sq tt. , LA , DR,
Kit. FRwllp, 2 Baih , DB. Car
Garage; Lg corner IOI in
groat ·NeighOorhood. View
on
web :
www.orvb co m,lf6505
$8 7,000 call for Appt .
(304 )882-3368 .

Call Ken @
887-299-.1600

Help Wanted

Pm

bedroom , 2 baths. 2 car
garage . Master bedro om is
28K24 with a jacuzzi tub.
$120,000. (740)446-7029.

oNOTICEo

NOON

Wanted : Pos1tion a11aflable
to assist an 1nd1Vidua1 W1tt1 .
mental retardation ,who
res1des 1n the Metgs County
area; 35.5 hrs: 11
Fri 7:30am Mon; steep ·over
reqwred . Must have h1gh
school diploma or GED.
11alld dri\ler's license. three
years good driv1ng e~pen­
ence and adequate automobile Insurance
$7 .25111r.
Send resu me. to ·Buckeye
Community Serv1ces. PO
Box 604 , Jackson . OH
45640 or ema1l to : beyecserv@yal1oo.com. Deadline
tor ap pliCants: 10112-05.
Pre-employment drug resting.
Eqval Opportunity
Employer

4 year old Colonial on 3
ac res Appro~ t ,900 S~l ft. 3

open in
Gallipolis area.
Hours are
M-F
8:30-5:00 p.m.
Please call
Lisa at

2395

(740)446·6743. (740)367-

(304)675-4034

HOMt~

FORSALF.

17U

11 2 Pleasant Slr~et. 3
BedrGOm. 1 1/2 · Baths.
Family. Room. Din ing Room,
Full Basemen t, Storage
Bldg, Garage , New Central
Air Cond ,. New Windows.

II

and Schools 1274B

Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed. Apply al 1354
Tl1e
Athens-Metgs
Jacks on Pike, Gallipolis.
. Educational Se rv1ce Ce nt er
PART-TIME
HEALTH is seeking a qualified applilor can t to work ll'o'e (5) days a
COOAOINATOR-RN
Meigs Coun ty Board of week
(32 5)
as
an
Mental Retardation and EducaiiOnal Aid e for assign -·
Developmental Di sa bilities. ment at Beacon MRDD. tor Weekends and Holidays otf! the remainder of the 2005Part-time job with full -time 2006 School Year. This posi·
benefits including: hospital- tion does not have be nefits
ization. dental. v1sion and Applicants must be w11 111lQ to
lite. Work three week days oe f1ngerpnn ted to have a
(8am-4pm) per week with criminal racord chec~. hold a
students and adults wi lh valid educational aide perdevelopmental disabilities , mit,
passed
th e
1mp~menting a comprehen- Paraprofe ssional Tes t for
sive health and del ega ted Educational Aides or ' hav e
nu{.Sing program. Musl be a the proper degt" ee or cou rse·
Rwps tored Nurse currently work n eeded to meet State
licensed in the State of requirements, ability lei work
Ohio. Prelerred qualifica - well w ith staff. student and
lions: experience "in public public, and must provide
health nursing, expefience own transportation Salary
working with chi ldren and will be based on qualihca·
a"du lts will1 developmental tions
and
experience .
disabilities. Send resume by Please submtt a letter of
Octobe r 12 , 2005 to. mterest, resume , and reterMCBMAOO, 13 t0 Carle ton ences to: John D. Cos tanzo .
Street
PQ BoK 30.7. Superintendent .
A thens·
Meigs Educalional ,Serv1ce
SyracUse. 011io 4~779
Center,
507
Aicr.tand
Service Masier has cleaning Avenu e , Suite
lt !0 8 .
positions a11allable in the Athe ns, OhiO 457o1 Tl1e
Apple Gro11e area. Full lime AMESC is an equal opportu11ours Monday thru Friday. nity
employer/provide r.
Call toll tr ee 888-305-7378 Application
Deadl in e:
or locally (304}529-7378
Oclober 14 , 2005- 12:00
Service Technlcten and
Trainees , local, growing
com p an~. established in
1954 is seeking service
technicians and trai nees
Competi&gt;.Ji tes wages and
benefits witl1 advancement
opportunities for motivated
mdividuals.
A wu iety of
posittons and different skill
levels are needed Desired
quatificaiiOns include C D L
license. mechan1cat aptitude. electromc aptitude,
computer !kills. welding and
cutting skills. Please send
resume to PO Box 569,
Poca , WV 25159 or FAX to
(304 }755-3169 . EEO

Part-time nanny for parerlls
nita our or shopping spree. I ·
hava references &amp; tSyrs
exp. Ph. (740)245-0339.

INsrntrcnoN

INFOCISION

NURSE
PRACTITIONER

10
·J
HoM~
. '--.,;,f'OiiiROiSii.Aiit.tiii:- r '

MoNH
mLoAN

George s Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your Logs to the
Mill jus t call 304-675-1957.

ScHOOl.,

lSO

IE

Rate of Pay and benefit&gt;: WIC Liccthcd
Diutician p,ay rutc a!oo per Gdlli a rounly

Health Department salary struciUre. See
WJC Director for starting rut(' und

benefits.
Dale of Po,tin g: Oc1ohcr 6. 200_1
DcJc.ll i nt~

fur an:eptanct' of aprliculiun•.;:

clo'e of ou,ine" October 14. c005.
Subrn1110 the WIC Dircclor. '
The Gallia Cou n1 y H~al1h Ocp:mmcnl is
an cqu:.:~ l oppnrtunit) employer and

'cn·ice

provider.

.

'

�'
Page 04 • 6tmbap 1lf111tt1-6tntfntl

It M~s~

HOMES
llJR SALE

Attenllonl
Local company oHenng ~No
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams lor you to buy yoor
home Instead of rent1ng
• 100% fl nanc1ng
• Less than perfect cred1 t
accepted
• Payme nt could be the
same as rent
Mo rtgage
Locators
(7 40)367 0000

Three Rental Properties for
Sale Duplex each w1th 3
8/R UA DIR K1tchen bath
&amp; porch, House- 3 SIR UR,
K1tchen Balh Cot1age 8/R,
K1tchen Bath
Rental
mcome tor all three Approx
$1 CXXllper month PriCe for
all three $70 000 locate·
104· 106 7th Street P01nt
Pleasant (304)875·2495
after 7 00 pm
M081LE HOMES
FOR SAlE

real eatate edvertlalng
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Hou1lng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based or)
race, ~::olor, religion, sex
r.m•llalalatus or national
ongln or any •ntentlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or
d•acrlmlnatlon
Alt

Th1s newspaper witt not
knowingly accept
advertlaements lor real
estate whrch is In

violation at the law Our
r&amp;aders are hereby
intormed that ett
dweiiings advertlaed 1n
th•• newspaper are
avarlable on an equal
opportunity baees

••

12x60 Wllh add1llon good
cond1t1on With heat pump
and porches $5 000 Call
1740)388·0157

New all Orick 2BR, 2BA 2
car garage
1n A1o
Grande
Call
(740)446
2927
or
1740)339 0365

OAKWOOD HOMES OF
NITRO, WV

SUPERSTORE
• ..QA'ERIN&amp;GtoAYr0N ,
FLEETWOOD, GILES MHE1
AND OAKWOOD
LOWEST PRICES· BEST
SERVICE GUARANTEED
DRIVE A UTILE · SAVE A
LOT
304·755-5885
Open House of Home for
Sale Sattlrday Oct Btti 1pm? 2612 Jackson Aile

.

PRICE
REDUCED
to
$85 000 1401 Cedar St
Meadowbrook
Add
3
Bedroom 1 112 Bath Corner
lot new Roof mo'lle-m condillon new Carpet and
Flooring Storage Bu1ld1ng
Fenced 1n Back Yard
(304)773 5254 or {304)593·
4135
Remodeled 4 bedroom with
barn on 1 63 acres AI 554
81dwell 599 000 (740)4463629- (740)446·4824

For sale or rent 1999
Oakwood mo b1Ie horne
I I
16x80 Ale, tlnderpnnng
might consider land con·
tract Already set on rente d
lot $21 500 (740)446-4053
Great used 99 Skylme
16,80 VInyl/shingle 2x6
walls glamour bath Call
(740)385 9621

~.,r.

6
16
I .Lr_,__FOR_".O\.SES·JIENT·-·I
__.!_olisE
_JIENT_
;s_

Bruner Land Company
(740)441-1492
Meigs Co Off SA33,
Hemlock Grove, very n1ce
!&amp;vel tracts, 5 acres With
barn $21,500 or 14 wooded
acres $23,5001 Danv111e,
Red H1ll Ad , 7 acres
$19,950
co
water!
Landaker Ad 5 acres w1th
pond $20 500 co water!
Reedsville, Hudson Ad 10
acres $15900 co waterl
Tuppers Plams off Joppa
Ad 5 acres $16950, co
water• Chester 17 acre field
along Shade A•ver $28 5001
Gallla Co. Kyger 10 acres
$13,900 or 16 acres
$17 5001 R1o Granc:le 8
acres cyo water NROdW
$20,500! Inion Dodnll
5 acres $11 950 co water
Just a few of our 20+ toeat10ns in SE OhiO Call lor free
maps to e)(plore each s11e1
We'll gladly fmance With 5%
markup•
REAL ESI'Alll
___
WANnD

r

Real-Estate Wantad·Local
person lOOking for a home to
buy All ca&amp;h Me1gs or
Ga!lla No double·wlde or
modular 740-416-3130

I ::======~

r

FORHOUSESRENT
Barn
Blowout• 1D
Polo
30x50x10 Only $6,995,
pa1nted metal slider, Free
Delivery Call (937)789· 1 Br House and 3 Br House
for Rent call (304)675·2441
0309
between 9am 2pm
------'--2 bedroom neuse, 1 5 bath
In town Ut11it1es 1ncluc:led 1n
rent (740)379·2303

r

6 rooms &amp; bath, 910119
refng , wasner/dryer hookup Recently remodeled 644
Second Ave (740)446·0332
8am-5pm
---------

For rent 1 bedroom 1 batn,
fully renovated all appli·
ances
$50D/month
$500/depoSit Call (740)446·
3481
-----~--

House tor Rent $400 a
Month plus Dep Ret No
Pets (304)675·4874

bedroom
unfurnished
house deposit prevlot1s
rental references no pets
(740)992 0165
-------Stop rent1ng Buy 4 bedroom
home $15 000 For listings
BD0-391 · 5228 e.xt 1709

Auction

1322 S Vermont Ave
Wellston , Ohoo
Tues. November 1 , 2005 6 00 PM
Attention lnve1toral Handymen! Landlords!

Including the Farm House, Huge Bam,
Corn Crib, Hog House, Smoke House

r
BR
apt
water/sewer/trash
pd
$325/month &amp; $400/month
1740)446-4734 or 1740)367·
7746 or (740)367·7015

Auction

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lurn1shed and untu•

Internal Revenue Service

&amp;

2

mshed secunty deposit
reqUired no pets, 740·992·
2216
1700 sq ft apartment
Located downtown No pets
_c::cat::-11.,.74-:0-.,)4_4_1·_1_12_4_.....,._
fBRW/Dhookup electncor
gas no pets $290 plus
deposit
(74 0)441-1~84
{740144 1.0194

2 bedroom apar tment
Aacme, 11ery n1ce clean
$425 per month plus
depos1t no pets relefe.nces
requ~red,
740·44 1·01 10,
1740)992-5174

663 Third Galllpolts 2 bed·
Immaculate 2BR 2 bath room unfurn•shed no pets
mobile home for rent 1n the DepOSit &amp; rent $325 Leave
country
$400/month message (740)245 9595
.(614)595·7773 or (800)798Apartment available now
466&amp;
: - : - - - - - - - - - - Rwerbend Apts New Haven
Mobile home s1 te s m wv Now accept1ng applicaCountry Homes Shade tions lor Hud-Stlbsldlzed
one Bedroom Apts Utilities
5130 mo (740)385 4019
1ncluded Based on 30% ol
Trailer lot for rent Pn11ate adjusted Income
Call
w/large yard $150/month, (304)882·3121 available lor
relerence an d depos1t Sen1or and OISableC People
reqUired (740)367·7554
EHO

r

Modern l bedroom apt
(740)446 0390

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments
and/or small houses FOR
REN T Call (740)441·1111
for appbcat1on &amp; 1nformahon

Auction

Auction

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS

or

to auchon
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2005
@!O:OOAM.
Antiques .•. Furniture~ Ntcc oak stdcboard
w/m1rror, oak ba~he lor chest wfmmor &amp;
bonnet box, oak. dresser w/oval mmor, earl y

walnut

pe de~tal

sewmg stand, ntce mce

M o&lt;soon Oak II brary table, oak NCR bombe
cash regtster &lt;;:ase, aok cl aw ft curved glass
ch1na cab met, oak h1gh chest, round oak
dnugn table w/sphl pedestal &amp; 3 leafs, set 6oak ''T' bk chalfS. r ockers, stand s &amp; beds.
knockdown wardrobe, 2-HosJer style s&amp;dc
ll .tl\o\ all cupboards, small crock bench-blue,
Berke) &amp; Gay fl oor flour phonll case, as-1s
walnut Vtcl h1gh back bed. old a:s·IS fum1ture.
WINTER mahag case poano. Lots of OLD
FARM &amp; PRIMITIVE ITEMS:
Jamesawa) feed tmckl small hewn stone
trough abl 18", Iron I 0 ann plant stand, noor
corn sheller. Btg Boy feed cart, Burkhardts
wooden t-.eer box. 25 gal stone Jar, large lard
rlrettle, stone bowls early as-1s muzzle loadmg
nfel wh1skey barrel, wheat cradle, old knchen
Hem s, horse tack 15 milk cans, over 35 mm1
011 lamps &amp; other old Oil lamps. feed sacks.
qUJit~Jcomf ons M Bentz Coolv1le sh1ppmg
box Mallard decoys, clothmg from 40's/50's,
. costum eJC\H iry, framed pnnt s, old bottles,
Loft of Corn Crib Full of Old Items! TOYS:
Dosne) Donald Duck "Party Game"-ob, Roy
Rogers "Socks" box. other games m ong
boxes. as IS cast tron Bell Telephone truck, asI S Jeep pedal car pressed steam shovel , few
marbles, pulzlcs, Illustrated BOOKS for
c holdren VE;RY GOOD Selection of
GLASS, CHINA &amp; cookie jars .HARLEY

DAVIIlSON 'looper" motor scooter- to
"a.-os" condoton. 19116 CHEVY SIO TAHO
p1ck up truck Tool s and a Very Good
Selection or Quahty Modem Furnishings.
Huge barn m case of ram 2-Auct•on Rmg s
Tenns Cash or good check dau of aucuon
Pos11\e 10 Church Lunch
AUCTIONEER:
OTTIE OPPERMAN Inc,

email: oeopp@hocklng.net
Pictures &amp; nyer:

www.opperman-auctions.com
Auction

Auction

The one floor plan home offers 5 rooms 3 bedrms &amp; fu ll
bath wlfull basement, covered front porch, level tot w/
alley &amp; cham ltnk fenctng Spacious hv1ng nn w/e)(posed
bnck hearth fireplace &amp; wood bumer kttchen IS eat-In
style wltop &amp; bottom cab1netry_: home equtpped wlgas
furnace electric breaker box Ct~ water &amp; sewer Real
Eslate Terms $26,000 mrnlmum bid $3 000 down at
t1me of sale, balance &amp; possession at clos1119 onJbefore
1211/2005 offered free &amp; clear pnor to closmg sold m
present as-1s condition no conllngencles, caveat emptor
AI 5 55 PM we Will sell
the 2001 Smol&lt;e colored
4 door Chevy Impala w/
spill cloth seats auto
trans &amp; power w1ndows
Nice, clean cit' TERMS
on Car Cash or CFieCKat
bme of sale Agents for
the Estate of Martha Ann
Williams JCPC # 05-ES 0,3g
Marl&lt; A Willrams, EKtlc
Shern K Rulherford AHy

Call for d ail

..

Combination, or Whole Property!
949 Ac. Selling In Jackson Co. - Offering 28 Tracts
Selling In Gallla Co. - Offerlng13 Tracts

Auction Location · All properties w oll be sold at Benmgan's
Reslaurantlocated at 966 E Mam St tn Jackson, Oh1o

Call Today for
Property Directions &amp;
De..taifed Brochure/
REAL ESTATE, INC. 1-800-450-3440
Wilson -Harvey
Auction
Visit www. wllnat.com

""'II,SON ~

Flowers and More
True double door flower coolers (like new)
Supenor staml e~s steel
cooler (hke new),
Mag tc C hef 30
range. shelvmg. vmes,
wreaths. · g afts, se\eral boxes of sli k flowers,
balloons, nbbon, pamt, basket of trees, creLI1t
card mach me and more'

Auction

Auct1on

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
SAT. OCT. 15TH, 2005
10:00 AM
Located on Tornado Ad tn Ractne, OH at
the Rac1ne United Methodrst Church Th1s
rs a money maker for the Church you can
donate or cons1gn at 20% commtssron
" CAMPER"
Dutchman 5th wheel w/ 12' sUde, reese
httch and eiectnc 1acks

"GUNS"
The Hopk1ns &amp; Allen 221ong nile 1t47,
22·250 Savage model110 wNista scope
3 9x32, Thompson Center Cherokee w/2
b arrels 45 &amp; 32 cal and Crossman aorgun
w/scope, shoots pellets orB B 's.
Farm wagon, 7 0 gal fuel tank , golf carl
lrame &amp; new motor, Kerry ndrng mower,
mtler box &amp; saw Acyte i1Me hose &amp; torch,
318 electnc dnll, 3 HP game fisher boat
motor, lawn vacuum &amp; chrpper, frberglass
tru ck topper Iris 99 &amp; up and Australian
saddle
" ANTIQUE &amp; HOUSEHOLD"
Drnnrng table wlleaves , sland, rock1ng
chairs trunk, mrsc sewtng tlems, panern
cun1ng board , dress maker sewrng
machtne ; qurll top double weddrng nng,
embrordered full stze qu1lt, 48' bathroom
sonk top, btcycles, lawn mowers, tores &amp;
blades, e lectnc trolhng motor, new
wheelbarrow tubs, H alloween &amp;
Christmas decorattons, toys, roller blades,
new &amp; used hand bags, cannrng 1ars,
book &amp; lots more comtng tnl
Cons1gnment &amp; Donat1ons
AUCTIONEE8 : Dan Smrth, OH 13449
ADorentice: Chrrs Cottttll, OH 0096
CASH
POSITIVE ID
REFRESHMENTS

1914 White Oak Road
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(Bi~weii-Porter area)
102 acre farm with no imnrr&gt;vements located at the
Bemg Aunn,nr

J.
95
16, 1981

1u•nce,

&amp; recorded

OH.

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION COMPANY #66
304 l73 5447

OR

New 2BA apts 1n town All
electnc water/sewer/trash
Included CIA $525 rent
plus depos1t No pets
1740)441·1164, 1740)441·
0194
NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPAC IOUS
• 2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
•ALL ELECTRIC
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, REF,
"DISHWASHER
•GARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
"CEILING FANS
"WATER SEWAGE &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
1304)662-3017

St.~:~~. OH. Walth for signs.

WE WILL Bt SELl/MJ I HE PERSONAL
BElONGINGS OF ANNA AND WALlER
ROUSH
S1mmon 2 pc LR Su ue, collec tabl e and
end tabl es, 2 rcc hncrs, daybed, pmc '"''" hcd
4pc Queen A nne cherry BR Sunc. maple
dres ser. an dcco m1rror pantr) cupboard
Wh1ripool wash er &amp; dr;e1. palio se t, Fe nton
glass, church plate~ t1 gunncs, head v,tse
creamer and sugar. lamps 3 p~,; copper lu ster,
several Longabcrgcr basket s '97 Inaugural '98 Collector~ Cl ub " 2000 tal l camster - 98
sweetheart - tall key basket and other~
Longaberger
pottery. small
k1tchcn

Auction

EVENING
FARM AUCTION
Albany, OH
Selltng farm equtpment and mtscelianeous
1tems from th e personal property of the
late Okte Ferguso n DIRECTIONS From
Rt. 50/32 at A lbany, turn on Rt 681_Wesl,
less than 1 mrle bear right at Y on to
Marshfield Road, go 1 2 mtle past
Townsend Road, metal butldtng on nght,
watch for s1gns
TRACTOR. FARM EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCK: Ford Power Master Traclor wlend
loader, Massey Ferguson 1560 round
baler, Hesston PT-7 hay brne &amp; 1 for parts,
Ford 3 pi Rake , Ford 630 square baler,
Ford 3-botlom 14" plow, Ford 1 It
transport dtsk, Ford 3 pi 8 It PU dtsk,
Ford 309 2- row corn planter on steel
wheels, Ford 311 4-row corn planter, New
Idea 701 2-row corn pic ker (doesn't run),
Minneapolis Moline grain dnll, Montz 12 It
stock tratler, 19711nternatronalloadstar
1600 dump bed truck (doesn't run) ,
sprayer/fertthzer spreader, galvanized
water trough, bale spear, round hay
feeders, 3·52" hog panels, 16 It metal
gate, 15+ steel fence posts, 4-rolls new
barb w1re, uttltty lratler, 3-ax le farm trarler
(bed rough),

o

TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS:
Ltncoln 200 amp 4 cyl. Welder on tra1ler,
MagnaForce 3 hp. Compressor,
oxyacetylene hoses &amp; gauges, Master
Mechantc tool c hest, sockets, " socket
set, wrenc hes, Anv11 (approx 70#), stckle
bar guards, ptpe vrse, corn cune r, come
along, plaHorm scales, old mule harness,
pony saddle, large metal &amp; wood barrels,
croc~ buner churn , and other rtems
TERMS · Cash or check w/pos111ve 1 D
Checks over $1000 must have bank
authonzalton ol funds avatlable Food w111
be available Nol responsrble for loss or
acctdents.
OWNE8: Jants Ferguson by James
Ferguson, P 0 A
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER
John Patnck "Pat" Shendan
lrcensed &amp; Bonded 1n Ohto &amp;
WV - Member of Oh10 &amp;
National Auclroneer Assoc
Appren11ce Auctioneer
Kerry Shendan Boyd
Ematl · ShamrockAucliOn@aol com
WEB· www shamrock-aucliOns.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

TRACTORS &amp; FARM EQUIPMENT: Ford
9600 Tractor-l 1ke new (4200 hours wlnew
radtal lites &amp; wetghts ), Ford 3000 Tractor
(2000 hours), 2-old All1s Chamber Trac lors
(both run) , John Deere 510 round baler1500# bales. New Holland haybrne , 2-John
Deere 4400 Combtnes w/13 It &amp; 16 It
grain heads (6 cyl D1esel), John Deere
8300-23 hole grain droll, International 51 021 hole grarn dnll, John Deere 7000 no 11114 row corn planter wlmonrtor New Idea
corn p1cker New Holland 782 forage
chopper wlgrass
head, Fox forage
chopper, N ew Holland 358 feed g nnder
John Deere 125 s1leage wag on, Ford 15 1
5-bottom 18" plow, 2-Ford 4-bottom
16"plows wl new shears , Oliver 5-bottom
16"plow, New Holland 545-7 fl mowtng
mach1ne (be lt dnven), John Deere 12 fl
lransport dosk , Ford 954B 7 ft bush hog,
Bush Hog post hole auger, New Idea 40 It
gra1n elevator, Ftlson cattle shoot,
HEAVY EQUIPMENT; lnlernat1on al TDBE
Dozer w/wtnch &amp; hydraulic 6-way blade
(2703 hours-undercatttage redone 100
hts.), lnlernattonal TD8C Dozer w/winch,
Ford 555D Back Hoe (1000 hours),
International S8 Skrdder, GradAII G660
w/Detro1t d1esel engrne,

\

TERMS ; Cash or cheeR w/pos11ive I D No
Credrt Cards
Checks over $1000 musl
have bank au1honzat1on of funds ava1iab le.
Food wtll be avatlaqle . Not responstble l0r
loss or acc1dents
• OWNERS Donald , Rusty &amp; Oanoel Wooten
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER :
John Patnck "Pat' Shen dan
Locensed &amp; Bonded 1n Oh 10 &amp;
WV - Member of Oh1o &amp;
National Auctioneer's Assoc1a!ion
Apprentice Auctioneer
Kerry Shendan Boyd
Ema1l ShamrockAuctron@aol com
WEB www shamrock-auct1ons com
PH: 740·592-4310 or 800-419·9122

In Memory

In

In Memory

Lovmg Memory of

Jeffrey Fulkerson
02 Harley Dav1dson Ultra
Classic, low m1les e)(cellent
cond1t1on (304)895 3825

2002 Honda Recon ES
250cc ATV e&gt;teellent condl·
t1on $2200 1304)675-1444

Thejamrl\ of Jason Hmjield wo1~lrke to
e.Apress the1r gratitude to el'ervo re j01
therr thoughtfubtt~\ m our lime o orrow
Thejood )OU brou~llf. till' rwd\ )'uu ~enf
the phone l all\ \011 made or e\f! 1l a kmd
word \ou \poke wrlln eve1 be fOJKOrten A
fipeua f thank \Oil to Willr\ Funeral Home
owl only for the wondeiflll ;o/J ) 011 cild. b11t
to Matt for }OUr kmd word,\ mul wpporJ
tv u11r jwmly Thank vou toRe\' Jimmv
Clrtlpmall. Rev. Todd BowerJ. and Rev
Matthew

New Fred Bear Bow se tup
$375, Ruger 10·22 40th
Anmversary and Scope
$225
Ruger All-weather Mop 77
22 Hornet and Scope $550
Savage Mod 11 300 WSM &amp;
Leopold Scope $650,H&amp;R
Topper 12GA $80 6 5
Mouser and all Aoc. $250

Hem ~

fM58·:~

oni~ \'Oil spoke
and each of the
vtsll~ vou made to
11H'I'f:'

ate ~o man v fU'nple
\H'

would ltke to

tlwnk and ea&lt; h of
\Oil

1970 Chevy truck 2611 steel 1995 Slarcratt l1ghtwe1ght
tilt bed w1th wench equ1p truck camper Used 4 t1mes
ment hauler $1 500 740· $3 500, Reduced pr1ce
(740}245 9109 or (740)441
~;~·~;-~56~37·362-~775 7632

April

15, 2005

ll

ow home
18 motor nome, sleeps 6,
runs great, S1 200 Old
wood cook stove $200
1740)379-2316

7, 1976 -

October

fm the kmd
'

Buy or sell R1verlne
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
CKC Jack Russell Tamer 1985 Ford tr u e~ F150 6 1997 !nnsbrook
992·2526 Russ Moore
pupp1es $125, 2 females cylinder. automatic, good camper, ..model 135 35ft w/
(740)256·1652
body runs $900 (740)446· roll out Good condition
9742
(740)446-4710
Miniature Dachshund pup· - - - - - - - pies, 3 males 1 female, lull 1998 Chevy Z71 extended - - - - - - - blooded, but no papers, Cab, w/th1rd door fully
In Memory
16FT Tra11er Dual Axles titled $150 call (740)992-4441
loaded Tahoe co11er and
and licensed $700 firm
spray In liner $11 500 call
(304)675 1165
Robert
FRUITS&amp;
(304)751 7378
Rlmmey
VEGETABL!ll
1999 Ford Ranger PU ext
1yr old bul'lk bec:l set, white Home Grown Tomatoes, cab, XLT loaded 60,000
refng/freezer, black metal Field Run you pick 55 per mites, see 14 VInton Ave
One Bedroom Apartment for
Iuton, winDow AJC $75
Rent $350 month, $350
bucl&lt;st 17401379·9110
~17il4ro:.)4-46;.·.;1082~-:---..,
DepoSII, No Pets call each 1740)388·6532
4x4
--~----'~- Ktwla- homegrown you PICk,
(304)675-6666
FOR SALE
340 sq It Natura! White Vlrglls Berry Patch. st AI
F1ve years h a~e passed
Pleasant Valley Apartment Oak, T&amp;G pre flmshed 124 betWeen Syracuse and
smce God took you to
Are now taking Applications Hardwood floor•ng, w/nalls Racine, (740)992-7449
1969 GMC 4x4 pickup, 350
help at h1s side
engine, 4 brl carb needs lit·
for 2BA 3BR &amp; 4BA , mcluded $550 (304)882·
t \tnl..,ll'l'l n"
tie work (740)992 5271
There 1sn' t a day ~;oe s
Applica tions are taken 2319
,\ I J\I.., !Ott,
that you are not
Monday thrtl Friday, from 6 16 Inch Tires oft Motor
1998 Explorer, Edd1e Bauer But ynur presence IS felt
9 00 AM ·4 PM Office Is Home $25 each hke new
FARM
loaded, runs &amp; looks great
all around us We ca rr~
Located at 1151 Evergreen (304)675 _4088
EQuiPI\DNr
Books
$6,200 w111 sell
ynur memory ever; day
Dn'lle Po1nt Pleasant WV - - - - - - - Phone No 1s (304}675- 70 000 BTU gas heatmg '-......iil..iiiiliiii,;,.,.J S4,00010BO 1304)576 2607
1n our hearts
5806 EHO
Ynu w1l l be forever
stove, st1!1 works and IS 1n 8FT Pull type Ume Sl)(eader 2004 F-150 Lar~at crew cab
m1ssed &amp; forever
Tara
Townhouse good cond1t1on (740)245· (304)675-5906
black w1th chrome. 4x4
wnh us
9212
-'--~----- leather Toneau cover low
Apartments, Very Spacious, - - - - - - - - l&lt;ubota BX2200 Power
We love you.
miles loaded e11tra clean,
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2 89 BUick Park A.ve Very steenng 4 WD, diesel, Cost too much to list $28,000
Mane, Kunberly, Ray.
J1m, Rob Teresa
=~. p~~u.lts~~ 1 $:S~~ good conditiOn, Kohler· $10,000 new In 2002 Sale (614)595·7773 or 1·600·
&amp; Grandchildren
No Pets Lease Plus Campbell p1ano very good $7,000
133
hours 798 .4686
condition child's sw1nQ set (740)388-0062
Secunty Deposit ReqUired, (740)245 _5064
1740)367-7086
--~-----·
LMNrocK
Card of Thanks
Card ol Thanks
Tw 1n R1wrs Tower Js accept· Colleet1on ol ReproduCtiOn __
lng appllcat1ons for wetting Tms (304)882-2436
Angus bull reg1stered 2
hst for Hud-subs1zed, 1· br,
Good Seasoned F1rewood years old
s1red by
The famtly of Raymond Furbee v.1sh 10
apartment call 675 6679
tor Sale (740)742 7004
Summltcrest Prime Cut
EHO
thank the many rnends and ne1ghhors who
(740)446-8997 evemngs
JET
sen1 prayers and cards of condolence dunng
SPACE
AERATION MOTORS
Aeg1stered
Angus
bulls
and
1he
1llness and death of our beloved husband
FORREI'lr
Repaired, New &amp; Aebwlt In he 1fars, 40 years ot A I
and father We also 1hank 1he many doelors
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1· breeding Slate Run Farm,
and nurses ol R1verstde M el hod lSI Hospital
Downtown Off1ce Space- 5 800-537 9528
www slaterunfarm com
room suite $650/mo 1 room
(740)286-5395
who pro' tded htm wt1h weeks of care, th e
ofl•ce- $225/mo · 2 room - - - - - - - - ';;;~;;;;;;y;;;;;;;;;;-;:;;;;;;;;;
Pastor Kerry Wood who made several vts lts
su1te $250/mo Secunty KLAF St1n, Tanmng bed, 30 Registered
Quarter
to Raymond 's beds&amp;de, to Jay Cremeens the
deposit reqtllred You pay minute 24 bulbs, $1,000 horse geldmg
utilities All spaces very niCe (740)44&amp;-6959
bred (740)446-2075
funeral dtrec10r lor hts skilled servoce. to 1hc
Elevator Call (740)446-3644 -'----~---­
women a11he Church and lovong nc1ghbor
II{ \ '-"1 '1)!~I \Jill\
tor appomtment
NEW AND USED STEEL
for fumoshong dehctous food for 1he fam1l y
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
For Lease Off1ce or reta11 For
Concrete
Angle, (1 10
Auros
and all1hc bcauttfulllowcrs and o1hcr
lnbutes and gilts m~de m
spaces In vary good cond1 Channel Flat Bar, Steel Ll..,;,-•fllitiliRiiSiiAI.Eiiiil'-_.1
h , . !TVOO..
liOn Downtown Gallipolis Gratmg
For
Dra1ns ht s memory
Approx 1600 sq ft each 1 Dmeways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L $5001 ' Police 1mpounds
Hn Wife a11d Famrlv
or 2 ba1hs Lease pnce Scrap Metals Open Monday, cars/trucks from $500
negotiable to encourage Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; L1st1ng BOO 391 -5227 Ext
new
bus1ness
Call Fnday, aam-4 30pm Closed C548
(740)446 4425 or (740)446· Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
as Chevy Cavalier lor sale
3936
Sunday (740)446-7300

knnn aho

vo r~

are.

Thank vou all
su mu(h

If tears could build a stairway
A11d memories were a la11e
We would walk right
up to Heaven
To bri11g you home again.
Love.
Mom a11d Gw11dma

Laser~:::::::::::::::-::::::::::::::~

r

Public Notice

Public Notice

BUS BID
The
Board
of
Educa11on ol the
Gallla County Local
School District will
accept sealed bids to
purchase 1wo (2) 72·

passenger

school

buses. In order 10 ba
considered, all sealed
bids shall be received
In the office ol the
Treasurer,
230
~hawnee

Lane,

Gallipolis, Ohio, on or
before 12 00 noon,
October 24, 2005. The
Board ol Education

reserves the right to
accept or reject any
or all bids. For speci-

fications or lnforma-

llon please contact
Sandra Foster or
Keith Carter 740·446·
7917.
The Gallla County
Local
Board
ol
Education
Sandra
Foster,
Treasurer
October 9, 16, 2005
Public Notice
The Le-Ax Wa1er
District Board ol
Trustees has asked
the Court to aulhorlze
the following enlargement to Its service
areas In addition 10
the areas listed In Its
original and amended
Petition and Plan:
A. In Athens County,
Sections 31 and 32 of
Dover
Towroshlp,
Sections 5 and 11 ol
York Township. Also
Included Is the south
one-halt of Section 6
ol York Township,
Athens Count~ Th1s
Petition does not
include any areas
wllhtn 1he boundaries
ol
the
Coty
ol
Nelsonville as II Is

BULLETIN B-OARD

Public Notice

currantly platted, but
held on suc;h request,
does Include currant
In the Athens County
customers of Le·Ax
Common
Pleas
Water District who
Court, Number 1 on
were customers prior
November 9, 2005, a1
to annexation This
1 00 p.m. Any obJec·
Petlllon does not
tlbns to such request
lncuda any areas
should be !lied with
within the boundaries
the Clerk and served
of the City ol Buchtel
upon legal counsel
as Ills cur111ntly platfor Le·Ax,
Adam
lad but doaa Include
Exqulre, 8
Baker
current customers of
Court
North
Le-Ax Water District
Street,Sul1e
212,
who were customers
A1hens, Ohio 45701,
prior to annexation.
on or before 1he day
B. In Meigs county, ·of such hearing
Sections 29, 30, :!4, 35
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30
and 36 of Columbia
Township.
Publtc Notice
C In VInton County,
Sec11ons 6, 12, and 18
of Brown Township,
TUPPERS PLAINSSec11ons 13, 26 abd
CHESTER
WATER
ol
Madison
DISTRICT (TPCWD)
32
Township.
Also
39561 BAR 30 ROAD,
Fractions 1, 6,7, 13,
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
19, 25, 30, 31, 32, 33,
45772
and 36 ol Madison
Separate sealed Bids
Township,
Vl~ton
for the construction
County and the south
of tho Phase VI
one-hall ol Fractions
Improvements
18 and 24 ol Madison
Project
which
Townah&gt;p,
Vinton
includes Contract #1
Counly. Sec11ons 1, 2,
(1A, 1B and 1C)·
3, 4, 5, 7, B, 25, 26, 29, Water
Line
30,31 ,32,33, 34, 36
DIStrtbUtlon System,
and 36 of Knox
Contract 112 (2A and
Township,
Vlnlon
2B)· Water Storaga
county.
Also
Fac11i11es
and
Fracllons 2, 3, 24, 32,
Contrac1
#3
33, 34, and 35 ol Knox
Telemetry System will
Vlnlon
Township,
be
received
by
county and the south
TPCWD, at
their
one-hall porllon ol
Dlatnct OHice, locatFaction 12 of Knox
ed al 39561 Bar 30
Townshtp,
Vinton
Road,
Reedsville,
County Secllons 4, 5,
45772
un111
Ohio
6, 11 , 12, 16,17 and 18 10:00 a.m (Local
ol Vlnlon Township,
Time)
Thursday,
Oclober 20, 2005, and
Vinton county. Also
Fractions 2, 4, 5, 6, 12,
1hen at said olllce
and 36 of VInton • publicly opened and
Township,
VInton
read aloud.
County and the north
The
Contract
one-hall portion of
Documents may be
examined at the folFraction 1 of Vinton
Township,
VInton
lowing locations.
County
Dodge Raports In
A hearnlng shall be
Columbus, Oh1o and

Estate Sale
1988 Astro CL Van
$975 negotiable

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Call 446-8997 evenings

Public Notice
St.
Albans, West
Virginia,
Builders
Exchange
In
Cleveland, Ohio, M·E
Compan1es at 399
Ltncoln Park Drive,
Su1te
B,
New
Lexlng1on, Ohio, and
TPCWD's Office In
Reedsvllla, Ohio
Copies
ol
1he
Contract
Documents may be
obtained
at
the
Issuing Olllce, M-E
Companies,.
Inc.,
located
at
635
Brooksedge
Blvd. ,
Westervllle,
Ohio
43081 upon payment
ol $250 lor Contract
#1 , $100 for Contract
f2; and $75 lor
Contract #3.
The Engineer's estimate for Contract .ft1 A
Is
$1.430,000;
Contract
.ft18
Is
$1,220,000; Contract
#1 C Is $2,650,000;
#2A
Is
Contrac1
Contract
$245,000;
#2B Is $210,000; and
Contract
lf:3
is
$160,000.
By order of the
Tuppers
PlalnaWater
Chaster
District, 39561 Bar 30
Road,
Reedsville,
Oh1o 45772, County
ol Meigs, 1hls 22nd
day of September
(9) 23, 25, 30, (10) 7, 9
Pubhc Notice
Morgan
Township
Trustees will meet
October 131h at 7•00
at Morgan Canter
Townhouse to finish
lhe 2006
budget.
Budget
may
be
viewed by calltng
Clerk, Paula Justus
740-386·8152.
October 9, 10, 11,
2005

HOUSE FOR SALE
Newly rem odeled ,

3 or 4

bedrooms, centra l atr, full
basement, h a rdwood floors,
detached garage, large cov-

Public Welcome
Gall1a County Conservatton

KC Rinky Dink will meet

Club meet1ng

and elect officers on

Wednesday, October 12.

Friday, Oct. 14th at 6 pm

D1nner served at 6:30 pm

at Addaville Elementary

SALE!

JOHN GEE BLACK

MOLLOHAN CARPET
Sept 26th - Oct. 15th
Save up lo 50'?'o on stock 1tems.
Drive a little, save a lot
446-7444

1 -877-830-9162

HISTORICAL CENTER
FALL PROGRAM
October

15, 2 pm

GREEN ELEMENTARY

FALL CARNIVAL
Thursday,
October 13th
Dinner at 5:30
Games 6:00 - 8:00
Auction at 8:00
for

lheme baskets
and more

SPEAKER: DAVID PERRY

.

ALTERNATIVE SCHOOL
Special Kids Days!
Fri.

MISCELLANEOUS: 3-overhead propane
heaters, Gravely walk-behind mower, yard
ut1i1ty tra1ler, Truck tool box , traclor wheels
&amp; It res, and some oth er small rtems.

SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS!

1740)446-6865

r

Auction

DIRECTIONS: From At 32150 we st of
Albany, Extt on At
160 South lo
Wrlke svolle , go 4 mtles soulh ol W rlkesvtlle
to Adney Road or from Gallipolis-16 m1les
north on At 160 to 1736 Adne y Road, 4
mtle lo !reid on left , wa1ch for stgns.

(740~441-0135

Hwy 160 N

i

.

"'

Owners Lmda F1cld s - Sharon""D1ddle,
&amp; Debra 01css
Terms Cash or Check w1th ID

FARM &amp; HEAVY
EQUIPMENT AUCTION
Gallia County, Vinton, OH
Saturday
October 15 -10:00 a.m.

Pole
Barn
Blowout•
30x50x10 Only $6 995,
painted metal, sl1der Free
Delivery Call (937)789·
0309

r

*Terms: Cash ur check with ID
Auctron

1740)446·6293

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1t1onal lifet1me guar·
antee Local references fur1998 Dodge Grand Caravan mshed Established 1975
ES White Tan leather, quac:l Call 24 Hrs 1740) 446·
seats rear AJC ~ New 11res 0870 Rogers Basement
loaded
$4 900
OBO Waterproofing
good coM . runs good
$3 500 OBO Call 1740)441
0712

iO

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION COMPANY #66

Auction

Stratus $1.900, 00 K1a,
52 600 97 Ranger eK cab,
$2 695 95 GMC Sonoma
4K4 $1 800 98 W1ndstar
van $ 1850, 99 Ranger
4x4, $2 600 98 Jeep
Cherokee Sprt, $3,200
B &amp; D Auto Sales

r

304 773 5785

Owner: Henry VanMater

\ Ill{( II \\ 1)1..,1

F1reb~rd, $2,400 99 Dodge

old ltme hunt1ng licenses

N 3rd Ave , Middleport, 2
bedroom unfurmshed apartment no pets depoSit &amp;
preiJIOUS rental references,
(740)992 0165

AUCTION

'
apphances,
Kenmore mu.:ro\vt~ve, Horne
B•ssell ~ wL!eper old country l l
Intenor,
ret.:ord s, !mens, comlorters, K1rby wh tskcy
adv punts, mr mattress, cooaumc JCWclry
se 'lleral cass.cttc tapes, doll. RCA Camcorder,
Yash1ca 35 mm camera, 2 bllrner hotplate,
few tools, B&amp;D hedge tnmmcrs, alumtnum
ladder, Yardman 42" deck, 17 5 HP n dmg
lawn mower (used 4 umes)
VEIIJCLES WILL BE SELLING AT
12 NOON\ WITH RESERVE
Real n&amp;ce 2000 M ercury Grand Mruqu1s
48.000 ac tu al miles, Loaded II
1999 Ford Taurus · 92 [IIJIJ moles, PW Pl,
AC
'
Auc1ion Con~ucre~ BY

740 -446 2568
Equal
HOUSing Opportunity

dom•naes· double twelve

Middleport North Fourth
Avenue 2 room effiCiency,
no pets Depos1t &amp; previous
rental references, uhllt1es
pa1d 740 992 0165

PUBLIC

College

nagot1able (740)367-7435

Old time d1nner bucket old 01 Cavalier 20 $2,700, 98 1997 Plymouth
Grana
milk bottles old. wooden Monte C&amp;Fio. $2 500 95 Voyager Wh1le 2 sl drs

Apartments m Middleport
From $295-$444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal HOUSing
Opportunities

Toler

in the Recorder's

Gallia County,

Drive from $344 to $442
Wa lk to shop &amp; mov1es Call

HOUSEIIOW
For rent 2 bedroom apt 1n
Gooos
Kanauga S425 per rna $425
deposit reference requ1red
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
(740)446-4107
Repalr-675-7388 For sale
Furmshed upstairs 3 rooms re-conditioned automatiC
&amp; bath Clean, ref &amp; dep washers &amp; dryers refrlgera
requ1 re d No pets (740)446· tors gas and electric
1519
ranges, a1r cond1t1ooers and
GraciOus llv1ng 1 and 2 bed W(lnger washers W1ll do
room apartments at V1Uage repairs on major brands 1n
Manor
and
R1Vers1de shop or at your home

304 713 5447 or 304 773 5785
AUCTION CONDUCTED BV

Thursday, October 13 -5:00p.m.

"MISC."

Buy Any I ndlvldual Tract,

located at the Huctlon Center on Rt. ti2 north
ofmason,WU
W11l be sel hng the contents of Dehb1es

FR Ebrochure/

STA
._
.
• 330
WWW.STANLt:YAN SO .COM
HenlY M. Stantay Ill
CAl .A).RE:: GFPi\ Auctloneer/RE Broker
Wm J Fanmn Jr &amp; John J Stewart
Auctioneers &amp; ReaiiOrs®
L1sa J Wallman &amp; Dave lunelofd AuciiCneers
IT'S HAMMER TIMEIII

Auction

October 12, 2005, NOON

1740)446-~45

41144 Keebaugh-Follnld Rd., Pomeroy, OH.
12 mtles north Pomeroy CXII us Rt 31
onto S R 681-Easl (near 1my Vollage of
Darwm, Oh) travel 6 mo to Kcebaugh-Follrod
Rd, follow I -mo

BEAUTIFUL
APART· Gall1pohs RetaiVOff•ce.OOHdIIENTS AT
BUDGET •ng beautiful country set
PRICES AT JACKSON t1ng 4,000 sq P (flmshed),
ESTATES, 52 Westwood heat and water 1ncluded $

Auction

c::::c:----:-- -

·A....~

Sheds! Not poss1ble to get a complete
mventory•

&amp;unbap 11fmtt -6mtfntl • Page 05

2005

2BR apt In RIO Grande Inspection: Drive- By Only
$325/c:lep $325/mo Ca ll IT•·rm.: 20% of b1d pnce and the bal(740)245·9060
"'"''" by 10/26/2005
3 &amp; 2 BR apts Close to
Payment: Cash, Certified or Cash1er' s
hospital
WID
Beaut•ful mer VIew 10 Holzer
water/sewer
Kanauga Ideal for 1 2 pea- hookups
Startmg
at
pte
No pets please mcluded
Ke1th L. Thomas, PALS 502-572-2284
deposit
ApplicatiOns be1ng taken $450/month ,
vvww irssales.gov
requ1red No pets (740)441
Call(740)441-0181
11
84
(740)441-0194
::---:-:--:---,-,For rent 2 bedroom mob1le 3 rooms and bath All utilities
Auction
Auction
home at 402 Polecat Ad pa1d Downsta1rs, no pets
$425/month $425/deposlt $450/mo 46 Ol1ve St

$26,000 MINIMUM BID Ill

Sharp 2001 Chevy Impala 4 Door

Th1s early Me1gs Co Farm has been home to
Mrs. Sarah Caldwelf lm tier en tl~ 84 years
and ow.1s alsu the dWellmg of her parents and
grandparents Sarah must now leave the farm ~
and move ro town Everything Full

Ottie Opperman
&amp; David tlood
Phone: 740-385-7195

764 Ac.

1 Bedroom house Newly
remodeled 1ns1de &amp; out All
ut1ht1es pa1d $450 oo per
mon\h Also Newer 2bed
room trailer w1th electnc
central heat &amp; a1r $42500
per month Call 740·243·
5611
-.,--~----,-2BR furnished mob1le hOme
$300/montn $250/ deposit
Need references and no
pels allowed (740)245

---r(740)446·4107
e-fe-re_n_c_•_ _ _
re_q_ul-re_d
M1dc:lleport
701Beech
St,2 _

WILLIAMS
AUCTION
5 Room 3 Bedroom Bath Home

Large Old Fashioned Country
3-Generation
FARM AUCTION

I

Attention!
l ocal company offenng 'N0
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
h
d I
orne lnstea o renting
• 100"'IC f1nanc1ng
• Less than perfect credjt
accepted
~·2~1_2-:--::--:---­
• Paym~nt could be the 3 bedroom Tra 11er In Letart
same as rent
Mortgage
Loca tors WV for Rent All Electric
(740)367·0000
$350 month $250 depOSit
(304)882-2858

Auction
Auction

_.,l

3BA,
1 5BA
2story
Totally ramodelad
ElCoollent location 1n town
Interior!
Close to schools and 3 bedroom house central
Library No pets (740)446 heat &amp; M, washer/dryer
11 62
hook-up fenced yard, storage bldg $475 per month
5 roams &amp; bath sto'lle &amp; ren I 17401441 1111
refngerator no pets 50 ~:o!il"~~-~~--,
Olive St $350 month
MOBFORILERENTHOMFS
(740)446·3945

3 bedroom 2 bath stove
refrigerator, w/d $500 per
mo , $500 deposit Long
L.2~!!,!!~:!2;~:!._j Bot1om (740)378-6 209

Auctiun~rs:

Auction

..

__

~.,r .l.~--~-~--

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

,

No Down Payment Less
than perfect cred1t 0 K F1ve
mmutes
tram
Holzer
Hosp1tal Three B'edrooms.Qne Bath Lavel lol Newly
remodeled 740·416-3130

.:.:.:::.:.:....::......;.;::c..c;_=

Auction

New loghorrte 36r ZBa
.,..• ..,.....,._ ~ ... wt16x32 1nground pool
24x40 garage on appro11 1 5
acres S269 000 (740)645
0870

1740)709 1382

2001 14x50 Clayton 2BA
1BA excellent condlhon
1985 short bed Chevy, V8
4x4 excellent cond1tlon Call
(740)245·9497
--'----:---:--:-:-::5 Homes under $ 10 000
Will deliver (740)385-7671
94 Clayton 16)(80 3BA cen·
tral air, must move $5 000
080 (740)446-2075

r

NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 3 LEFT
ASSUME LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
OWNER F1NANCING
AVAILABLE
304 755-5566

Newly reroodeled 3 or 4
bedrooms central a1r, tull
basemen! hardwood floors
detached garage large covered patiO fenced bacK
yard close to schools Po1nt
Pleasant
$69 500

I

1972 Elcona house tra1ler
VG cond1t1on gas furnace
central a1r awning 12x60 New 16x76 3 bedroom/2
bath M1nutes from Athens
55400 \740)992 2652
Must sell Move 1n today Call
1981 Nashua Governor '-17-'40::.138=5-..:2-:434:._-:--::-~
14x60 Central A1r Gas Heat New 3 BR Home Only
&amp; Range $6 000 1304)862
$1 69/mo Includes ale, dellv·
2319
ery and set up (740)385
1987 2bd 1ba Clayton
_
43_6_7--...,.---=~
mobile home very good
2000
cond1!10n well ma1ntamed, Tra•ler for Sale
Clayton
16
X
70
3
bed
$8 900 OBO
(7 40)446
room-·2 bath-·centra! a.r··
3423
porches $23000 740992
1995 16x80 Fleetwood 3bd, 5972
2ba on I 3 acres 815 Clark
Chapel Rc:l Call (740)367·
IJusiNE8o;
7187
AND~

t 996 16x80 Skyl1ne Spruce
Ridge Supreme 38A 2BA
~::::::::::::::::::' v1nyl s1dmg shingled roof
Country setting 1n Gallla and heat pump AU ~~chen
Countyl, 3 bedrooms 2 appliances Included Very
baths lneplace $89 000 Nteellmmedate Possess1on
(740)709·1 166
Will need moved Call 740441 -5862, leave message
Foreclosure 4BR only
$15 000 F.or ilstmgs call 2000 14X70 Oakwood 3bd
800-391 ·5228 ext F254
2ba CIA can rent teL er
move (740)388-6513 (days)
(740)388 6017 (e11emngs)
NEW 3 BFIDM $1299
2000 Clayton 16x80 3BR
DOWN
Ylnyl/sh•ngle $17 500 Oua11
$2.29 00 MONTH
Creek
Park Call (304)372
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
2179 or 1 800 439-2179
HOMES
NITRO, WV 304· 755·5885

Sunday, October ~.

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

Sat

7 pm

&amp; Sun

to 11 pm

1 prn to 11 pm

Ktds bowl HALF PRICEI
(K1ds 22 yrs

&amp;younger)

Adults regular price
Mason Recreat1on Center
Corner Pomeroy
Mason,

&amp; 3rd St.

PRINCIPAL

Club Calves 'for sale .

TOPIC . Youth Involvement tn

296-6629
even1ng or
388-0144 dayt1me

School and lhe Community
See Megan Da1nes' underground ra1lroad exhrbtt display!ld at the Smithsonian
lnstllute, Wash1ngton. DC
Everyone Welcome

Games- Food· MUSIC

David

Serenity House
. serves victims of domestic

Off Road Diesel available
for customer pick up at ·
Burlile Oil Company.
Rt. 7

&amp; 35

Kanagua

We have relocated to better
serve Galiia County.

WV

304-773-5300

Call

violence call 446-6752 or
1 - 800- 942-9577

K. Smith , D.O. $.

Woodyards M1n1 Mall
Aucttqn Sal 6 30 pm
Also store JUSt rece1ved a large
load of hvrng room furnrture. and a
ton of Home Comtng dresses
Pnced at only $20 740·446·7327

All Shrine Club
Members
are urged to attend
meeting Thursday,
October 13, 2005
for a group picture
PORTRAITS
for any occaston
&amp; WEDDING photography
• by Davtd Snowden
7 40-709·0400
dave @ essencestudro.com

close to schools,
Potnt Pleasant, $69,500

740-709-1382
(See photo on classified secl1on)

Meigs Sentor Center
is accepting 1tems
for the 2nd Annual

Make a Difference
Day Auction
For more information
call

740-992-2 161
No clothing please

I
4352 Cora Mtll Ad
October 12-18

1 0·4 Darly

Some household, coal

1615 ~astern Ave. Gall1 pohs
(740) 446·3191

ered pat1o , lenced back yard,

7 Day Bear Hunts
August 15th - 20th, 2006
Ontario, Canada
9740) 388-17q8

&amp; wood

heater, collectibles , antiques,
old to ols, craft &amp; quilling
supphes, dned flower
arrangements or bulk , mtsc ,
no
or clothes

�iunba~ m:tmr~ ·itntinel

GARDENING

PageD6
S~day, October 9, 2005

.Arctic tundra is anything but empty for autumn visitors
BY DEAN FOSDICK

~ounterparts. Picking the tart

through deep snow, guided
fruit, however, is stoop labor. unerringly by their strong
Better to kneel or lie prone as sense of smell .
KIANA,
Alaska.
you gather berries by the
The tundra's color show
Crimson comes early to the handful to snack on immedi- isn't altogether an autumnal
Arctic. The tundra seldom ately or freeze or dry for the display.
draws visitors strictly on the pancakes, pies, marittades
"The bloom in spring is
strength of its fall colors, but and preserves to come later.
amazing. . .. You have large
the horizon-to-horizon dis"They're a little sweeter. flowers relative to their
. play is· a visual feast for the F"rost lrr ds to develop the (plant) size,". Spencer says.
fortunate few waitin g !"or the "'gars, .. &gt;ays Page Spencer, a "They burst into bloom right
caribou to arrive or who are Nntional Park Service ecolo- away as they come out of the
here picking berrie,.
gist based in Anchorage. snow. After a brief period o~
This abundant land along "These are superior to the bloomin&amp;, they move immethe Kobuk River. sustains a ones in the Lower 48. More diately into the berry stage.'
variety of users. but primarily intense. Their taste and color And then the fall colors you
lnupiat Eskimos dependent is richer. They're really the saw and the whole thing is
upon the caribou. The Arctic ling·onberries
of over in a couple of months.
deer migrate southward in Scandinavia."
"They tend to. store starchbands of two to -200 or more
Blueberries are well past es below ground level so
in late summer and early fall. their prime by the end of come spring they have a big
· This time of year, the clus- September. Wrinkled rem- burst of food. The load lip
ters of aspen and birch trees nants dangle from the bushes their roots again during the ·
lining the Kobuk Valley like globular Christmas orna- short summer."
greet the dawn with· shim- ments, falling easily to the
Tundra plants are difficult
mering
yellow
leaves. · ground whe~ touched. · Rose to transplant and develop
Conifers provide a blue- · hips or the fruit of the wild unless you can provide them t
gr-een backdrop for the rose are a favored trail food with similar habitat - ample
grassy tussocks, , mosses, of people living in the north- moisture. long hours of sunsedges and bushes also com- ern latitudes. With the seeds light.
mon to the tundra.
removed, they can be
"They're not . easily transMany of the smaller plants processed into juices, jellies, ferable. TIJey don't do well
lie close to the ground; taking · syrups and wines, among 1 when rrioved ot tossed
what warmth they can from other things.
around,"
Spencer says.
the thin soils overlaying the
"They're an incredible "These wild shrubs aren't
permafrost. Temperatures fall source of vitamin C," really available through nurs- .
frequently to 60 degrees Spencer says. "My mother eries, either. The best thing to
below zero in w,inter. The sun used to say three rose hips do is come to Alaska and see
doesn't climb above the hori- were the same (in vitamin them for yourself."
zon for weeks.
value) as eating an orange."
September and October are
Add the salmonberries that
Recommended readiRg:
the waning months for also grow thick on the tundra "Alaska Wild Berry Guide
berries. Most of the bearber- and you have the makings for and Cookbook," by the ediries are gone but the plant's a variety of cookbooks.
tors of Alaska Magazine.
leathery leaves have turned a
"There are a half-dozen or List price: $14.95.
deep scarlet. They make col- more rich berry plants here,"·
orful combinations alongside Spencer says. "People also
On the Net:
the orange-brown leaves of use the early willow leaves
For more about the Kobuk
low-bush cranberries and and the roots of plants they River Valley and tundra colcrimson blueberry bushes. gather for starch in the ors. see this National Park
No human decorator fashions spring . Other leaves they use Service Web site:
a more attractive centerpiece. for the greens."
·
http://www2.nature.nps.gov/
Cranberries gathered in the
Many of the lichens that geology!parkslnoaalindex.c.fm.
Arctic or near-Arctic have a support the browsing caribou
taste all their own - some are moi st and bright green.
You can · contact Dean
say superior to that of their But soon the animals will be Fosdick
at
bog-grown,
domesticated pawing for dry patches deanjosdick@netscape.net.
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

•

.
.
.
. M~
Ron Boor of Tyler County weighs his pumpkin in at 1,085 pounds Wednesday, in the largest
pumpkin competition, a tradition of the Milton Pumpkin Festival, at West Virginia Pumpkin Park
· in Milton, W.Va.
·
••

PRIZE PUMPKIN TIPS
SCALE AT 1,085 POUNDS
. .

MILTON. W.Va. (AP)- It
took five men and a fo rklift to
get Ron and Sue Boor's prize
pumpkin onto the scale at the
West
Virginia
Pumpkin
Festi~al. The verdict: 1.0~5
pounds, a record for the event.
"They told me I shouldn't
have grown it so big," Ron
Boor sa id.
Boor and his wife raised
the pumpkin in Tyler County,
a three-hour drive from
Milton.
The have toiled in their

pumpkin patch since May.
The couple .installed an irrigation system and shade tent,
attended gardening seminars
and watered pumpkins endless ly. At the prize pumpkin's
peak growth, it grew about 35
pounds·a night and. consumed
about 200 gallons of water
per day.
"I say it's worse than raising a baby," Sue Boor said.
The Boo.rs have raised
large pumpkins since 1990.
Their previous record was .

•

at

ne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CE'\ J"S • \'ol. ;,;,. No. :19

MONil.\Y, OCTOBER to, 2005

""" ·"')&lt;l.,il"'""'i•u·J., ..,,,

SPORTS

Appalachian sch:olars program created, benefits Meigs

• Penn State edges
. Buckeyes. See Page B.1

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY

CHARLENE !10EFLICH

·

the 29 ~unties of Appalachian
Ohio who plan to attend Ohio
University. Efforts seeking out
students who qualify to
receive awards through the
new program are currently
underway, Leslie Lilly, president and CEO of the
F'oundation for Appalachian
Ohio, said Ftjday.
Lilly and Ohio University
Roderick
J.
President
McDavis described the pro-

gram as one where graduates
of Appalachian schoo l districts who demonstrate enthusiasm, motivation to succeed,
academic achievement and
financial need, will.be able to
get" needed assistance.
"Leaders in Appalachian
Ohio know and understand
greater access to educational
opportunity can make a profocind difference in the economic future of our citizens

and region. Helping our
region's st udents overcome
barriers and create access to
educational opportunities is
the work of many hands and
many partners. And there is
no better place to start that
process than right here with
the world class educational
resources of our region's tlagship university and its associated campuses," said Lilly.
"Ohio University recog -

nizes its unique position in and
responsibility to south£~§tem
Ohio," added McDavis, noting
that all six Ohio University
campuses will [!articipate in
the program.
The Appalachian Scholars
Program is an unprecedented
partnership between Ohio
University
and
the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio. who are working

·Meigs rumounces .homecoming festivities

Ward appeals
rape convictions

ATHENS - Students in
Meigs and Gallia counties are
among those who will benefit
from a scholars program
being established by The
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio and Ohio University.
The program is a needbased - scholarship program
open to high school students in

BY

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

BY BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

0BOUARIES
Page A5
• Roy Miller, 90

-INSI:DK,
• Meigs County Girl Scout
Diar;. See Page A2
• Garden club members
leam about gourds.
See Page A3
• Grant awarded to
develop histor; education
in Meigs. See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5

WEATHER .

POMEROY- A variety of
activities leadin~ up to hornecoming festivities Friday
night will begin Wednesday
at Meigs High School.
Candidates for homecom. ing queen have been selected
and include Miranda Young,
Brittney Jacks, Ashley Cook,
Ashley Samar, and Kay Ia
· McCarthy. The 2005 queen
will
be · announced
in
pregame . ceremonies
at
Friday night's football game.
Wednesday will be team
logo day with a powderpuff
football game to take place
on the school field . after
school. Thursday is "support
our troops" day, and Friday is
maroon and gold day .with a
pep rally.
The annual homecoming
parade and bon fire will take
place at 7 p.m. Thursday
night. The parade will form
at the Rock Springs fairgrounds and move to the
high school where there will
be free food and drinks, and
donations will be accepted
for hurriqane relief.
Chadene· Hoeftlch/photo
Another activity taking
Candidates
for
the
2005
Meigs
High
School
homecoming
queen
are
from
the left, Miranda
place will include a yearbook
signing party from 4 to 6 p.m. Young, Brittney Jacks, Ashley Cook, Ashley Samar and Kayla McCarthy. Announcement of this
Graduates who have already . year's queen will be made in pregame ceremonies at Friday night's football game on Bob
·
picked up their books are Roberts Field.
encouraged to bring them
back
for the
signing. display of memorabilia from . information on the Meigs dance will be held at the
·schoo l from 9to midnight on
Yearbooks will be on sale at the schools prior to consoli- Local School District.
$45 each and there will be a dation along with current
The annual homeco ming Saturday.

Church grateful for
blessing of donated land
BY BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HEMLOCK GROVE -· .The
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
celebrated its !39th Homecoming
on Oct. 2 but before that celebra'
tion the minds of congregation
members were troubled by surrounded acreage being purchased
2 SECriONS - t6 PAGES
by a new landowner, essential
Calendars
making them landlocked.
The new landowner was .Bruner
Classifieds
B4-6 Land
.Company of Byesville, a
Comics
B7 real estate company which is
described as a family-owned busi.
ness. Diana Bruner-Steele of
Dear Abby
Gallipolis coordinates sales in
Editorials
A4 Southeastern Ohio for her father
and brother, who are the propri·
Obituaries
As etors and who also are church dea- ·
in the Byesville Church of
B Section cons
Sports
Christ.
The Hemlock Grove Christian
AS
Weather
Church sits on property donated by
the Hoyt Family. The congregation
© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing ·Qi.
Detatlt on Page A8

INDEX

A3

A3

EPA ESTIMATED
34MPG
HIGHWAY!tl

lEASE FIR

CISHIICK
FROM TOYITI'

·Mo.

Please see Scholars, AS

.

...

710 pounds.
"Our goal was originally to
raise a 1,000-pound pumpkin, but now that we've done
that, we just have to shoot
higher," Sue Boor said.
The festival's l 0 largest
pumpkins will. be auctioned
Sunday, with proceeds benetiling local scholarships. The
Boors' pumpkin wi II .be
carved into a jack-o' -lantern
and delivered to the winning
bidder. Its seeds will sell for
about $25 each

Guatemala declares
landslide areas
cemeteries, A6

EHS Homecoming
· Court,As

· POMEROY -A Rutland
man sente nced last month to
54 years in prison on charges
he raped his niece has
appealed the conviction.
Raymond Ward filed his
appeal with the Fourth
· District Court of Appeals on
Thursday, through his attor. ney Charles Knight of
Pomeroy. Ward is now in
prison after his sentencing
earlier this month on six
rape counts by Judge D.
Dean Evans of Gallia
County, who .heard Ward's
case by assignment.
Ward was convicted on the
charges in a June jury trial, but
was acquitted on four other
rape charges and a charge o(
corrupting another with drugs.
Another trial involving a second alleged victim ended in a
mistrial in July after a jury
deadlocked. Those charges
contain two counts of unlawful sex ual conduct with a
min or, involving_ two additional victims. They will be
retried on Nov. 30.
Ward's earlier request for a
retrial on the charges for
which he was convicted was
based on allegatations that
school records concealed by
the stale at trial proved the
alleged victim was in school

· Please see Ward, AS

The prayers of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church were answered
with a donation of onequarter ·acre of land
from Bruner Land
Company of Byesville.
The donation kept the
' 139-year old church
from· being landlocked
and maintained convenient parking for elderly
parishioners. Pictured
are (from left) Jack
· Welker, church deacon
and superintendent,
Diana Bruner-Steele,
Bruner Land Co"rnpany,
Greg McCall, church
trustee and deacon .

only owned a portion of the actual
building site and three feet around
the struct ure which originally
accommodated pas·sage of a horse
and buggy.
The idea of relocating the church
was entertai ned and the convenient·
parking for elderly attendees was
·
threatened.
In an age of corporate greed ahd
nameless, faceless corporations,
congregations members were not
sure what to expect when they
approached the Bruner Land
Company about donating some
-land in close proximity to the
church.
Church trustee and deacon Greg
McCall expressed the congregation's concern to Bruner Land
Compa~nyrepresentati~es and the
request or the donated "land was
grarue , increasing the church's lot
by approximately one-quarter acre.

Submitted photb

Please see Church, AS

MOS.

DUE AT SIGNING"

Holzer Clinic is Close to You. • •

DUE AT SIGNING INClUDES: $1360 DOWN PAYMENT+ SO SECURIIY DEPOSIT t 52391ST MONTH PAYMENT t $400 ACQUISffiON fEE. lAX, TAGS AND INSURANCE ARE EXTRA.

'

Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meigs Point Pleasant

,

.

•

,.

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