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                  <text>ALONG THE RivER

Lryr;-.,;c

Standing vigil:
Family honors church .with service, Cl

2005 Dodge Dakota
Club Cab, Dl

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Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ ali&lt;-~ l'uhlishin14l o.

l'oni&lt;·ro~

• Devils win share of
SEOAL. See Page 81

BY CHRISTINE COZZA
CCOZZA@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT - In
spite of overcast skies, hundreds of people attended the
dedication ceremony of the
Vietnam Memorial Moving
Wall Friday morning at the
Riverfront Park in Point
Pleasant. where appreciation
and gratitude were expressed
to veterans and volunteers

Input sought
on distress
grant
Page AS
• Haylee Jo Swain-Love
• Eunice L. Alderson
• Mary M. Close
• E. Maxine Coats Gaskill
• Barbara J. Leach
• William McNeal
• Jessie White Jr.
• Frances L. Gibbs
• Ronnie Ray Henry
• Joseph Hammond Sr.

2004 VOTER GUIDE

- MEIGS

Sl.:.!:; • \'ol.

INSIDE
• Three days to go: Bush,
KertyCiastrbver national
secu«y . See Page A7

' ·':&gt;

alike for their service.
Jerry Bain, Vietnam veteran and · Point Pleasant reside nt, was instrumental in
securing The Wall for a fiv eday period. He began his
quest nearly four years ago so
that Vietnam veterans could
"say good-bye to their buddies."
The Moving Wall was created specificall y for that purpose. Its creator. John Devitt,

attended the dedi catio n of the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial
in Washington, D.C., in 19~2 .
He wanted ot her Vietnam
veterans who were not able to
go to Washington . to be able
to share hi s experiem:e. So he
and fellow Vietnam veterans
built The Moving Waii"'"There are now two structures of The Moving Wall
that travel from April through
November across the United

States so that people may pay
tribute to the more th an
5~.000 men who gave the
ultimate sacri fi &lt;:e - their
lives- for the freedo m or all
Americans.
Bain thanked everyone
who helped obtain the fund '
necessary to get The Wall.
"There are so man y people
who made thi s possible,"
Bain said . "You opened yo ur
hearts and yo ur pocket-books

Free flu vaccination for high risk and elderly

$300,000.

Unfortunat ely.
onl y
eight of Pomeroy's 2,000
citizens attended the meeting headed by Mayor John
Musser and Jean Trussell,
Meig s County 's grants
administrator.
, Although turnout to the
meetings is important, filling out surveys and returning them is cruc ial to getting the·grant apJ'lroved. as
well as addressing the
appropriate problem areas
in the village .
The surveys are short
and simple, taking less
than a minute to fi ll out.
They ask residents to rate
the
importance
of
improvements in their
community, such as infrastructure needs, public
facility needs and demolition of abandoned build-

(Jan McNom&amp;l/ photo)

Anna Burke. left, gets a band-aid applied by Melissa Conkle. RN. after receiving a flu vaccination Saturday at the Fi rst Baptist
Church in Gallipolis. Health department employees, volunteers and Gallia County Red Cross volunteers supplied ·more than 400
high risk and elderly residents with flu vac.cinations , a number that is slightly lower than in previous years. Starting Monday,
qualified residents will be able to receive a free flu vaccination at the Galli a County Hea lth Department.

BY KEVIN KEUY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

Detollo on Page A2

INDEX
4 SECI10NS- 28 PAGES

of the State of Ohio)
Doug White (Ohio
President)
Jim Petro (Ohio Attorney General)
Southern Oh(o FOB Lodge 55
Scioto Co. Bar Association (Voted
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C2
C Section
D Section
insert

A4
A6

A2
B Section

AS

© 2:004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Sheriff
Meigs County will have a new
sheriff in January, regardless of the
POMEROY - When they go to outcome of Tuesday 's election. '
the polls on Tuesday, voters in
Republican Robert Beegle of
Meigs Cou nty will have more candi- Racine, a long-time deputy sheriff
dates to choose from than usual.
and retin:d school · teacher. and
The county's ballot includes a Democrat Jeff Miller of Middleport.
four-way contest for a seat on the who now serves as jail administrator
Board of County Commissioners, a in Middleport and as Rutland Village
three-way race for another seat on marshal, face the additional chalthe board, and three-way races for lenge of a write-in candidate, Joe
treasurer and sheriff.
Kirby Sr. of Racine, a former
County Commissioner
Pomeroy police offi&lt;:er.
Republican County Commissioner
Beegle defeated Sheriff Ralph
Jim Sheets of Reedsville seeks re- Trussell in the March 2 primary.
election to a second term. Democrat
Treasurer
Paul Carter of Albany, and indepenIn the race for county · treasurer.
dent candidates Janet Howard Republican Howard E. Frank. the
Tackett. a fo rmer commissioner, and incumbent, is challenged by
Ben Davidson. both of Middlepon, Christina Gater of Syracu se, a
al so seek election to the Jan. 3, 2005 Democrat, and John Fisher of
commissioner.term .
Pomeroy, an independent candida!~ .
Jeff Thornton of Racine, a
Recorder
Democrat, will face Republican Del
Meigs County will have a new
Pullins of Long Bottom and inde- county recorder in January. Kay Hill
pendent Clarence "Ed'' Evans of of Syracuse, a Republican. and Tom
Dexter in hi s bid for a third term in Lowery of Syracuse, a Democrat,
the Jan. 2. 2005 seat on the Board of
County Co mmi s,ioners.
Please see lhlllot. AS

w. Mcfarlantl.

GALLIPOLIS - Local interest is
expected to focus on the outcome of
the race for Gallia County sheriff
when voters go to cast their votes in
Tuesday 's general election.
Other countywide race s. inducting
contested campaigns for two cQmmi ss ioners' seats and recorder. will
appear on the ballot. Pol ls open at all
36 precincts at 6::10 a.m. and close at
7:30p .m.

Incum bent Sheriff Da1·id L.
Martin. seeking a second term. i'
opposed by the man he replaced in
-the office . Republican James D.
Taylor.
Taylor decl ined to seek a th ird
term as sheriff in 2000. and Martin's
subsequent vic tory that November
returned a Democrat to the office for
the first time in 12 vears.
Among the i"ue~' in the race are
budge ting. protection leveb and
operation of a free food program for
the needy.
.
Threei way race .s ha,·c dc,eluped
for two seats on the county board of
commissioners that will open up
with the departure of im:um bents
Shirley Angel and Bill Davis. who

both decided against 'ee king re-election thi' \Car.
For the. Jan. 2 term. former county
-1 -H agent Fred J. Dee! is the
Democratic nom inee. and is opposed
by Repu blica n Lynn Angeii-Queen,
a member of the Gallipolis City
Board of Educat iOJi. and independent camlidatc Morris G. Sheets. an
auto sale, repre,en tative and farmer.
Dr. David K . Smith, a Gallipolis
dentist. i' the GOP ,·andidate for the
Jan . 3 term. and he face' oppos ition
from Democratic m&gt;m inee Shirley
Allhrif,!hl Do&gt;'. who i' principal at
Bid~&lt;eii - Pllrtt'r Eleme ntarv School ,
;tnll independent l10pdul· Cory E.
. Camden. "" employee of Holzer
Medic-al Center.
Vyinf! to repLt~:e incumbent
Rewrder t\1nll v V.- Ph m&lt;~le. "ho is
stepp ing dcl\\n. after f;' ll r te rms. are
Republican J. Roger Walker. a loc-al
court admini,trat or. and DemcxTal
Man Bea McCal la . .di rector of the
Fre1ich An Colom .
The rcm;t i ni n ~ candidate' for
COUll !) lll'fic·e are unoppmed : C.
Jeffrc) Acll-in,. pr1"ecuting attorney :
D. Dean E\an,, Common Pl eas
judge: l'&lt;oreen M Saunder,. clerk of
Please see Focus, AS

November is Diabetes Month

~Education:

Capital University, BA
(cum laude), J.D. (Order of the Barristers)
•Former Assistant County Prosecutor
(Licking County and Sciotq County) ·
o Former Special Counsel for Attorney.General
-~
Betty D. Montgomery .
o Member: Sciotoville Nazarene Church,
•
Wheelersburg Western Sun Masonic Lodge No. 91.
o Boy Scout Tecumseh District Chairman and Iagie Scout
o Form.,. member Scioto County Rlipubllcan Central Committee
o Scioto County Common Pleas CQurt Probate{Juvenlle Maglstrat

Please see Wall, A5

Three-way races highlight Focus on Gallia sheriff's race
Meigs ballot

WEATHER

Betty D.

and I am grateful."
Point Pleasant Mayor Jim
Wi fson sa id that he was honored to have The Wall in
Point Pleasant and commended Bain and other volunteers lor their selflessness.
"We are ,·ery proud of our
city and om volunteers. They
give back to ou r communit y.
to you. For a , mall town of

POMEROY - The first
of at least three public
meetings wa s held las t
week to gauge community
opinion and interest in an
Ohio Department of
Development Community
Distress Grant of up to

Please see Crant. AS

Around Town
Celebrations
ClasS1fieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

:lH. :\o. M:l

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

0BITIJARIFS

16 •

~ 00-1

Veterans, volunteers praised during Vtetnam Moving Wall dedication

SPORTS

PAGE

• \lid&lt;ll&lt;'l""'l • !.allipoli, • Odoht·r· :11 .

Join us for a sppcial presentation ...

Thursday, November 4
9 AM- 11 ·AM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center AB
\
\

Pie!)entations will be provided by Rick Stocker, LPTA , of the Holzer
Medical Therapy Center. and the HMC Nutri1ion Services Department.
Refreshments will be provided. '·
Fo1 mo re information . please call (740) 446-5080.

MEDICAL CENTER

"Hca lthcarc in Your
Own Backvard"
www .holzer.org

�6unba~limt~-itntintl DOWN ON THE

PageA2

FARM

Sunday, October 31, 2oo4

BY HAL KNEEN

Are you finding that pesky
flies have entered your home.
church. omce or garage?
I f they are fou nd near
sunny windows. spin around
in ci rcles and make an irritat·
ing 'buzzing noise, you may
have cluster or attic !lies.
These dark , large .(5/ 16ths
of an inch) !lies are bigger
than our regul ar houseflie s
but easier to swat beca use
they move a Jot more slowly.
Cluster llies overwinter
(hibernate). as adults in protected places like attic s. base·
ments, tree holes. etc.
Unheated attics and garages
provide just enough protection for them to survive until
next spring. They re-emerge
when spring day temperatures climb over 54 degrees
Fahrenheit.
Which is why the flies are
so irritating to us when they
enter our homes and distract
us when we turn on ou r lights
in the fall and winter· months.
The llies do not breed in
our homes, but actually lay
their eggs where earthworms
congregate . The cluster fly
larvae are actually parasites
that feed on earthworms for
13 to 27 days. luhen pupates
(resting stage) for another
two weeks and emerges as a

drainage or frost-free soils so
the root structures may
remain in our flower beds.
This past week's rainfall will
make digging a little easier.
Cut off the tops of the
plants and label the plants.
The roots are quire fragile, so
dig several inches away from
the slems and dig deeply.
Injured or cut rhizomes or
tuberous roots provide entry
for bacteria and fungus dis·
eases.
· SLrlfur powder can be dust ed on wounds to limit disease
problem s. Wash off excess
soil from the root systems so
that insecls are removed
before storage.
Allow the root systems to
dry down naturally in a well·
ventilated spot wil h indi rect .
light, i .e .. garage or portico.
After a week. package the
roots in sand, peat moss or
verticulite. Place in a cardboard box or open plastic
•••
Dahlia and canna growers, container.
Store in dark. cool (50
if frost has ki lled back their
foliage, it is time. to harvest degrees Fahrenheit) area until
your tuberous roots and rhi- . spring. Check the roots every
zomes.
couple of weeks. For further
Remember, the se plants information ,
check
out
store nutrients in their re spec- Extension fac tshee l 1244,
tive rooting structures so they " Summer Flowering Bulbs."
(lfa/ K11een is the Meigs
may remain dormant until
warm weather returns in the County Agriculture and
spring. · Unfortunately for Natr1ral Resources agent.
most of us in this region, we Ohio
Sta re
Universill'
·
· do
not have adequate t."xrension.)
fly. Up to four generations of
flies may be produced over
the summer months.
Control is best when you
prevent the adult fly from
en tering your home or place
of business. Seal the cracks
and crevices. Install screens
in doorways. windows and
attic vents. Use yellow, low
insect attraction lights near ·
doorways.
Insect control is limited to
aerosol pyrethrin sprays ,
insect dusts for control in
wall voids and sticky tapes
hung in bright windows. Like
the lady beetles, a good vacuum may quickly suck up
large numbers of flies negating the need for pesticides
especially in cooler temperatures under 54 degrees.
For further information,
ask the Extension oftice for
fact sheet 2110, ''Ciusler and
Face Flies."

Animal issues on the election ballot
BY ROBERT PAWELEK

OSU

EXTENSION

GALLIA COUNTY

Voters in M aine, with the
largest bear population east
of the Miss issippi, will weigh
in Tuesday on a ballot measure that wo uld outlaw bear
hunting with bait, dogs or
traps.
In Alaska, voters will also
decide a bear-baiting ban.
Baiting is a widely-used
hunting practice in both
state s. The two opposing
sides to the ban are expected
to spend more than $2 mil·
lion on the campaign.
Other issues on state bal lots include a Florida amend·
ment that would allow slot.
machines to be installed at
horse and \log tracks. Animal
rights activists oppose the
measure because they say
.casino gambling profits will
·subsidize greyhound races
and horse races , thereby
encouraging the breeding of
those animals to supply the
racing industries.
In Louisiana, a state constitutional amendment is on
the ballot that will "forever
preserve" the freedom to
hunt ,
fish
and
trap.
Montanans will also vote on
a constitutional amendment
that says the "opportunity to
harvest wild fish and wild
game animals is a heritage
that shall foreve r be preser ved to the individ ual..."

The Maine referendum on
black bear hunting has garnered the most national attention, mainly because of its
proximity to the East Coast
media and the amount of
money spen t on the campaign. The Louisiana and
M o ntana
initiatives
are
attempts to pre-empt future
legislative efforts to restrict
fi shing. hunting and trapping.
Animal rights groups are
behind the state initiatives,

and often cite the small per·
centage of Americans who
sti ll hunt and trap. For
instance, they claim only I
percent of .Americans trap
animals for fur, and less than
5 percent of Americans hunt.
1ust 5 percent of Americans
hunt so they think we should
ban the practice. Does that
mean since fewer than 2 percent of Americans are farm·
ers and ranchers we should
ban that , too?

~

Members of the Gallipolis FFA chapter who placed in the recent Urban Team state soils competition ar!! , from left. Rex McKinniss, Kaitlin Angell, Ryan Elliott and Bradte Angell.

Gallipolis FFA places in soils competition
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis FFA students
recently participated in the
State
Soils
Career
Development Event at Dawes
Arboretum , where
their
urban team placed fourth .
The Agriculture Te am
placed 28th out of 48 teams.
When asked when she would
use the se skill s, Bradie .
Angell. who placed third
individual, said, " While I am
plannin g to build a house, I
will use the skill s and knowledge from being on the urban
team to help with the placement of the house, septic syslems, driveways and landscaping to assure there will
not be any major problems."
The Urban contest . which
co nsi sts of four pit s and two
written tests, test the ability
of the student to determine
the management practices to
be used in a co nstruction set·
ting. For each pit, the student

tion. The Urban Team included Bradie Angell, Ryan
Elliot, Rex McKinniss and
Kaitlin Angell . Bradie Angell
was team high individual at
third, while Ry an Elliott
placed 24th, McKinniss
placed 26th, and Kaitlin
Angell placed 76th.
The Agricultural Use team
incl uded Charles Kormanik,
Heather
Withee.
Tyler
Handl ey
anp
Spencer
Russell. Kormanik was team
high individual , placing 37th,
while Heather Withee placed
71 st. Tyler Handley pl aced
!29th, and Spencer Ru ssell
tlnishcd !40th .
The contest was held at
Dawes Arboretum
near
Columbus . The top two
team s in the Urban contest.
along with the top lhree
te.ams from the Agricultural
Usc contest, go to the national contest in Oklahoma i n the
spnng.

mu st determine the slope.
the type of land form , sub·
ject to tlooding, subject to
slippage, the tex ture ot the
surface and the subsoil , the
seasonal high water tabl e.
the depth of bedrock and if
there is a hard dense soil
layer.
The management practices
determine the suitab ility of a
soil to build a building with a
basement, type of septic system to use, roads and driveway construction, and lawn,
garden and landsc aping
establishment.
In the Agricultural U se
event, students determine the
slope, amount of erosion, texture of the surface soil , depth
of soil, and natural drainage.
The students then determine
the land class, land use and
make recommendations for
conservation practices.
About 182 students participated in the Soils competi·

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

Livestock sales
GALLIPOLIS - The follo wing results are from the Oct. ·27
auction at United Producers, Inc.
Feeder Cattle
Ml and Ll
Steers
Heifers
275-415
110-132
95-123
105-130
425-525
90-109
100-117
550-625
85-95
95-112
650-723
80-90
750-850
75-82
88-98

Cows

Gallia County

Well Muscled/Fleshed: 45-52
Medium/Lean: 44-47
Thin/Light : 20-30
Bulls: 52-69
Back to the Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs $400-910; Bred Cows 5250-850; Baby
Calves $35-200; Goats $20-1 45 ; Lambs $78-89.50; Hogs $2850
Upcoming specials:
I p.m. Nov. 3, 30 head registered Angus cattle
For more in fo rmation. call Brad at (740) 584-482 1 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241, or v isi t the Web site at
www.uproducers.co m

J. ·Roger Wall{er

I

•••,,d•.•

•

Commissioner

t,.• 3·····
i. .

r. . . ., ,. . .

Community events
Tuesday, Nov. 2
VIN10N - American Legion
Post 161 will host a "Hot Dog
Bonanza'' at the Citgo stalion, 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Aerobics at
New life Lutheran Church.
free . 11 a.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Holzer
Clinic Retirees will meet for
lunch at the Ponderosa
Restaurant, noon .
Wednesday, Nov. 3
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County Board of Health , 9
a.m., conference room of the
Gallia County Service Center,
499 Jackson Pike.
Thursday, Nov. 4
GALLIPOLIS - Free exercise at New Life Lutheran
Church , 5:30 p.rn.
Friday, Nov. 5
GALLIPOLIS- Aerobics at
New Life Luth eran Church,
I ree, 11 a.m .
Saturday, Nov. 6
EWINGTON - American
Legion Post 16 1 Ladies
Aux iliary
will
host
a
Tnanksgiving
dinner
at
Ewington Academy, 6 to 7
p.m . Members, family and
friends are urged to bring a
covered dish.
Support groups
GALLIPOLIS Cancer
Supporl Group meets, 6:30
p.m., on the first Monday of
each month at New Life
Lutheran Church.
GALLIPOLIS - Grieving
Parents Support Group meets
7 p.m. second Monday of

Presld&amp;nt George W. Bush promoted and signed the Partial·

Senator John Kerry voted against the Partia i~Birth

B1rth Abortion Ban Act into taw.

Abortion BQn Act r!-~efiJ chance he 901 ~-six t1rr'les.

.,.,. partial-birth obortion procedu,.- UH&lt;/1\'0m IM rtrlh monff! on - lnlfO!vet pulling • living !Jolly tHI·ftrrtt out ot IN
womb, ucept 1o1 !he Mild, puncturing the rkull and suc#onln~ out IM brain. Tho II'NI majority ot porlf•t-blfffl
abot1lcn1 are perlormlld on healthy bsbleo ot hNIIhy tn&lt;JIIIero.

on Novemher. 2. 2004'!

Abortion on Demand

My wife Dixie and [.l ive, in Morgan Township on the farm whe re I grew
up. We are now em pty neste rs since our son Ryan Ashworth married
Jenni fer Bryan I in August
As many of you may know. I'm the son of the laic Sheriff Den ver A. and

George W. Buth opposes the 1973 Supreme Court decision
that lega!izet:l abortion on demand and he supports legal
protection for unborn children .

John Kerry supports the 1973 Supreme Court dec•sion
that legalized atxlftion on demand •• even as a method of
blrrh controL

Government Funding of Abortion

Margue ri te Walker.

I have a great love and respect for Gallia County and wish to
serve you as your next full-time County Recorder.

I ~~~~~~Wi Bush opposes using tax dollars to pay for
I~

During·his first wook in office , Presit:lent Bush
remstated t:tle Me.:ico C,ity Policy. which cut off tax funds to
1grc&gt;upslhal promote abortion overseas.

1

·

egu ar meetingS
GALLI POLl S - Moms' Club
meets, noon, third Monday of
each month at Community
Nursery School. For more
information , call Tracy at (740)
441·9790.
GALLIPOLIS
Friday
Morning Coffee meetings to
discuss community events will
now be held at 8 a.m. each
Friday
at ·the
Bossard
Memorial Library. ·
CHESHIRE
Citizens
Against Pollution (CAP) has
its monthly meetings at the
Galice Workshop building,
north of Cheshire on Ohio 7;
the last Mond ay of every
month starting at 7 p.m ..
Anyon e with conce rns are

encouraged to atlend. For
more information , call (740)
367·7492.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Animal Welfare League
meets the third Monday of
each month at 7 p.m. at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.
Anyo!]e interested may attend.
For info call441·1647.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County Commissioners meet
every Thursday, 9 a.m., Gallia
County Courthouse.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Airport Authority
Board meets at 6:30 p.m .. on
the first Monday of each
month at the Airport terminal
building.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly)
meets
each
Monday at 6 p.m. at the
Sycamore Branch of Holzer
Clintc with weigh-in starting at
5:30p.m.
GALLI POLIS
Bold
Directions Inc. social group
meets 3 to 7 p.m. each
Tu esday in The Cellar at
Grace
United
M ethodi st
Church, 600 Second Ave.
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio
Valley Radio Club Inc. meets
8 a.m . first Saturday of each
month in basement of Gallia
County 911 Center on Ohio
160. Licensed amateur radio
operators and interested parties invited . For information ,
call 446·4 193.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipollis
Rotary Club meets 7 a.m .
each Tuesday at Holzer Clinic
doctor's dining room .

Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 1
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees wi II
meet at 5 p.m . Monday at
the office building .
SYRACUSE
The
Sutton Township Trustees
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Village hall.
Wednesday, Nov. 6
PAGEVILLE
The
Scipio Township Trustees
will meel at 6:30 p.m .
Wednesday
at
the
Pageville town hall .
Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Nov. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363 ,
F&amp;AM will meet at 7 :30
p.m. at the temple.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association will meet at
8:30 a .m . at Peoples Bank
in Middleport.
Concerts and plays
Sunday, Oct. 31
CARPENTER
- One
Heart will present concert
at the Mt . Union Baptist
.c hurch near Carpenter,
6:30 p.m . Refreshments to
follow in fellowship hall. Call

David Wiseman for more
information , 742·256B.
Church services
Wednesday, Nov. 3
MIDDLEPORT
Revival services will be
held at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene
through Nov. 7 . Services
will be held Wednesday
through Saturday at 7 p.m .
with Sunday school at 9 :30
a .m . Sunday morning war·
ship at 10 :30 a.m . and
Sunday evening service,
6 :30p.m. The Rev. Davi.d E.
Brownfield will be the evan·
gelist , doing both preaching
and singing. The Rev. Allen
Midcap is pastor.
Other events
Sunday, Oct. 31
RACINE
Carmel

Sutton Church will host a
charge-wide
Meigs
Cooperative Parish hymn
sing at 7 :30 p.m . at the
Carmel Building .
Monday, Nov. 1
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Center for Comprehensive
Weight
Loss
Support
Group, 6:30 p.m ., Holzer
Medical center Education
and Conference Center
Rooms AB. Information at
446·5825 .
Birthdays
Tuesday, Nov. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Manley
Christy
will
observe his 95th birthday
Tuesday. Cards may be
sent to him at 40 Custer
Street , Middleport, Oh io
45760.

• • *• -** • * • • • **•* *• * • *• • * • • • • • * *• **

Howard
Tackett

Meigs County Commmlssloner
34 Year Resident of Meigs
Count)', prior office 8yrs.
Committed to serve the people of

• **• * • * • *• * * *• * * *• *• ** • • ** • • • • • • • •

.Creek Trucking
"'for purchasing my
' """''"V"'T Market Hog at the
Gallia Co. Junior Fair,
and for all of your
continued support.

John Kerry supports IJSing taK dollars to pay for aOOrtiOn.
Kerry saki that his first executive order would be to
·reversa 11\e Mexico City Policy." and thorelly give tax
funds to groups that promote abortion overseas.

Record on life

Here are n few of my quali fications that I feel will help to make me the better choice for Recorder.:
• I have worked in the Gallia County cou rt system for 13 years and I am currentl y the Chief Probation
Ofllcer for Ihe Common Pleas Curt Ju venile Divi,ion ..

II ~::';r~~~~~~:~-~~~~!~~
suppor!Bd legislation which
~
and people with di$$bilities.

government office~.
* I am fully awa re of the duties requi red of the Recorder\ office.

I G110ra&lt;1 W. Bush supported legislation to prevent minor

• I have 15 years of management experience including budgeiing for both large and small ofllces.
• I attended the University of Rio Grande and received a Bachelor Degree from Marshall Universit y.

-Ohio Bai li ff &amp; Court Officers Association - Supporter of the Gallia Coun ty Junior Fair
*.Perhaps more importanily, I have a strong desire to continue serving the citizens of Gal lia County.
Thank you for your time and consideration. Now, I am ask ing for your vote Io he you Galli a County

,.

J. Roger Walker

•n Ofder to avoid parental no1ice laws.

Goarge I'N. Bush slaled thai he will appoint Supreme Courl
· ·
who share his conservaiiVe pMosophy and who wtll
slrictty inle'!&gt;ret lhe Constrtulion according to i!S text. (Tho
loKI or tho Constitution contBin&amp; no nght to abortion.)

~

Country Kuzins 4-H

Dick C~y has taken a strong pm-IKe posi1ioo. Dunng his
t 0 years in Congress. he compiled a i~4 pro-life voting
record. He opposes parrial--blr!h abort~ and he voted against
ta&gt;l fun.d1ng of abortmn

John Edwwa.ln his SIX years In the Senate, hos compltod

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· ~-·- - .. - - · · · · · ·

$9.95 N~J~

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··············
'Re-&amp;tea

D. DEAN
. EVANS

Common Pleas Judge

~tun 'VCJte u ~

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
RE-ELECT

DHUID l. mHRTIU
SHERIFF 2004
I have always operated the Gallia County Sheriff's Office
with pride, dignity and honesty. My campaigns have
always been conducted in the same manner.
The truth about expenditures
Recently, my opponent has published allegations that the cu rrent She.riff's budget is $400,000.00
higher than his last budget in 2000
The truth is•••
My expenditures in 2003 totaled $1,767,000.00
His expenditures four years ago totaled $1 ,759,000.00
My opponent failed to inform the public that his expenditures for grants, phone services and !
hospitalization at that time we re stated separately by the county and were not in his budget.
The truth is•.•
A vote for David L. Martin is a vote for financial responsibility.
More work for same dollars ·
In 2000, t 475 persons were booked into the county jail under the prev1ous Sheriff
To date in 2004, 1444 have been booked in lo the county ja il (1700 annual bookings)
...•. A 15% increase ••••.
In 2000, 132 felony cases were filed under the previous Sheriff
In 2003, t62 felony cases were filed and to date in 2004, 148 felony cases have been filed under
Sheriff Martins' leadership.
..... A ll% increase .....
Excellent time management on . patrol pays dividends
Good 5taff=Good Results
In 2000, my opponent had 21 patrol officers and detectives. My current staff of patrol and
detectives totals t 9
His allegations of a 50% cut in staff are "NOT TRUE"
the small red.uctions in staff were the results of severe cuts in federal and state grants to local
communities.
As your Sheriff I will continue to stand steadfast and serve you
·
•
with honor, dignity and integrity
Your vote on November 2nd will be appreciated.
II

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AVAILABLE

4

BENNICAN'S IS COMING TO POINT PLEA$ANT, WV

a 0% pm-tifo IIO!tng record. He I'Oied to keep pantat-birth
aborUonslegat and

he oupports 1111&lt; funding ol abor11on

.

*
for

•

7

&amp;

•John• Edwards
• ••

t 1670 Slale Route 554, Bidwell, OH 45614

.~ • •

Internet

IMlus test.." .

•Dick• Cheney
• • •

. .···---·····"- -.. - , ., . .. .,.

OPPO

John Ke"y has alated II\ at II elected pi'8Sident he would
aPPOint only Supreme Coull justlcas who support' the
t973 Supreme CourtdeclsiOnltlat legalized abortion on
demand. He declared, • ... 1will support only pt04\olce
IUdQesto the Supreme Court. Some may call tnla a

Pteaoe copy and distribute frftly

~

a.'

Rd .

wo!l.d4lrful. retir~meoL

·---·4______________.. .,___ _ . . .

· Courtney Roach

John Korry voted against nolifying a parent belo•e
performing an abortion on a min Of da~ter .

I ~~~~~~~~~· from being taken acrou state lines lor secret

I;

Recorder

I'd like to thank Moll y Plymale.
· lhe current Recorder. for her
years of service to Gal li a
Coun1y and wish her a

\.or

tames to support abortion.

Suprt!rne.court Appointments

followed hy ma ny hours of special ized train ing in personnel. management.
* I am al so acti ve in many' local , state and professional organizations includ ing:
- Keep Galli a Beauti ful -Conservation Club of Galli a County - · Ohio towns hip Associmion

Respect fu lly,

\

John Kerry, during his 20 y6ars in the Senate. voted 79
John Kerry voted against ~laci and Conner's Law," which
recognizes as victims unborn children whO are lt.llled or
Injured in Violent federal crimes.

* I have expe rience with the County's computer system and have worked with Count y and State

WAS dead. and 'o 11~rc an)
DEAR ABBY: I have been
illu;ion'
he had about the per·
married to "Sam" for 20
&lt;,On. I aho advi;cd him that if
year,. He i' a wonderful hu'he beg;v1 to ob'e" agatn. he
band and provider. When I
should remind him,elf nut
married Sam. we had nothing:
loud that he wa' only pht) til!'
now we have a home and
Dear
"old tape,·· in hi;. head and to
rental properties.
change the channel.
Abby
My family seems to he jealHe told me that tm ad\ icc
ous of the financial 'ucce"
hadn't
been ea~y to' follow.
we have achieved. My sib·
but it had work~u Ji11· him
lings make snide comments
then and 'event! time' , ul"c·
and have pulled away.
It came to a head the other very rude. 1 know I need to 4uently. (I have u,eJ the tech·
night when my youngest ;.is- move on. but I can ' t get him nique my;.e!f. and it "or led
ter announced to the family out of my heart. Please help. for me .) Give it a try.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
that I had gone online and - STUCK IN ST LOUIS
ASPIRING
ACTRESS
I!"
anonymously threatened her
DEAR STUCK: Part of
ACTON.
CALIF.:
Remember
family. Abby. I have never your problem may be that you
j.., a..., l' l{}..,e lu
been anything but kind to didn 't have "clo,ure" when that ··avcra,,e··
&lt;
it i' to the top.
them . They have an open the rclation;.hip with Rick the bottom
There·,
a
...
hov.
hu-..inc-..,:-.
invitation to vis it our home was over. For him to have
axiom
:
"A
per,on
·,
ca reer
and swim . and I have even uroppeu you the way he did
bought her children cloth ing w~" cruel. Perhaps this will usually la'h " ' long '" the
time speni preparing for it. "
and shoes when she was help you:
I recently attendeu a confer- So don't ,cttle for lc" tha n
unable to.
! don't understand tl1i s. and c'nce where a man approached your potential : alwa)' lccp
I'm very hurt . Please hdp me me and stuck out his hancj. He strivin g fm the hc't.
Dear Abby is wrilleu by
to put thi s in perspective, saiu he wanted to thank me
Abigail
flau Burell, a/.I'IJ
becau se I am fully aware tllUI for some advice I had given
known
as
.Jeanne
Phillips. aud
money cannot buy happine" him years ago. Like you, he
happine" come' from was ha ving uifficulty moving was founded by her mother.
famil y and lovcu ones. on after a romance had ended. Pauline Phillip.~. Write Dear
WRONGLY ACCUSED IN Al the time . I told him that he Abby a/ www.DearAbby.com
ARKANSAS
shoulu pretend that hi s love or P.O. Rox 69440, Lo.1·
DEAR
WRONGLY object had 1ragicall y dropped A ngeles, CA 90069.
ACCUSED: Your sister may dead. ( It happens') I said that
be jealou s. may have mental • although the person might
problem s - or tn ay just have · qill be alive. their romance
a need to be the cen ter of
Faster
Easier!
attention. Since you have
been generous with her. it
Unlimited
Ar.cessl
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4514 MCVI[ HOTLINf
may be ti me to reali1.e that
loving relationships arc rec iprocal. If your relat ives are put
off by what you and you r hus~SETUP SOFTWARE
~ makes conne!ting fos1 &amp; easy I
band ha ve accompli;.hed. the
problem i s rea lly theirs. and
S Email AdJresses • W.bmai/1
you can't li x it.
INSTANT MESSAGING Atlol. MSII en~ vnhoc
P.S. If your sister did. in
lrH liVE Ttr:chnu~ol SuppNtl
fact. recei ve a threat c n i n ~ eImmediate Access: www.locolnet.com
mail. rather th an accusing
- -,...- - PhJ !i _ __
yo u,
' he
shou ld
have
;;:;ISS
Sul'f up lr&gt; I
informed the police.
i"~
,, ~"
Sx
foster.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and
have just ..tarted 1i1y junior
year in hj gh school. Last
sprin g. I start ed d;Jting
"Ric·k.'' a guy in my class.
After six weeks. he dropped
me 'and started dati ng a popular girl. He never said it was
over or gave. me a reason ror
dumping me. He j ust stopped
calling, wouldn ' t talk to me
and wouldn ' t answer my
phone ca ll s. I was devastated.
Now that school has started
again. I see Rick in the halk
!'told him I still !oYe him and
would do anythi ng to get back
Po•d lor br D Dean Evans lor Judg~ Com rn~~. D Decn f,om rreosurer : rtxusr SrreP~ (;aii,D()I•I OH ~56$1
the way vJe were. and he was

ELECt lanai

Thank You

Partial-Birth Abortion

Dear Voter.
May I take Ihis opponuniiy 10 introduce myself and to ask for your vote

each month al New life
Lutheran Church , 170 New
Life Way off Jackson Pike . For
information, call 446·4889.
ATHENS Survival . of
Suicide support group meets
7 p.m., fourth Thursday ol
each monlh at Alhens Church
of Christ, 785 W. Union St.,
Athens. For information, call
593·7414 .
GALLIPOLIS - Parkinson
Support Group meets at 2
p.m., second Wednesday ol
each month at Grace United
Methodist Church, 600 Second
Ave. For information . call
Juanita Wood at 446·0808.
GALLIPOLIS Divorce
care group meets from 7-8:30
p.m. every Monday at the First
Church of the Nazarene. For
more information , call (740)
446·1772 .

R

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Siblings' jealous attitude sours sister's succe,ss

Meigs County calendar

George W. Bush

~

Gallia County Recorder

AROUND TOWN

6unbap limtf -itntintl

Gallia County calendar

Seal cracks, crevices to keep out flies

PageA3

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·.

~

Rita

-.........

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

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.,.._,.,

PROVIDING OVER 30 NEW JOHS IN THE AREA!
Managers
Shift Manager$
Servers Cooks
Cooks
Dish Washers
and MORE!

*

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*

WV JOBS SERVICE
155 6th Street
Point Pleasant, WV

..

�OPINION

iunbap \l!:imes ·ienttnel
~unbap tn:ime~ -i&gt;enttnel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446· 2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydailytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

I,"''~"'

To 1he editor uri! ln' /(ome. Th ey .~hould be leu I~IG"
,'(ltJ 1\ord\ . . \ II h•lfl'n II!"(' \llhject to nliting and must be
\l'..,'llu / 1111d iududc clddn•.,,. and telephone nwnber. No
o: •lt,'llt'd ft ·tfl 'n ~~·;// h1· Jlttblished. Letters should be in good
rtt/tf/,t '1111/t: i\ .\IJl'\ lUI{ f!l' r .W I/(l/i(jl'J ,

'd&gt;/1

''f'J/1;,,,, (',tpre.\ x,·d inlhe co/umn '/Jl' /011' are the ('(mof rlu· Ohio \ ldlt&gt;y Publishing Co.\ (•dirorial board.

/ iJ ,
,, ./'Ill

.!lift

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Page&amp;J

(1 /f!t /"1\ "(' 1/0fl'd.

TO DAY IN HISTORY
I'''L" '' Sunday. Oct. 31. the .'l05th day of 2004. There are
"I ,J.t,' kfl in the year. This is Halloween.
· ],~,_LI~ ·, Highlight in History:
( 111 ( kt. .&gt; I. 1517. Mart in Lu ther posted the 95 Theses on
the d"' '' ,,r the Wi ttenberg Palace church. marking the start of
the l't&lt;lic''ta nt Rctixmmion in Ge rmany.
Ott tltt'llatc:
111 17l!'i. English poet John Keats was born in London.
In I~ (, .J. :\e,·ada became the 36th state.
111 I'l::'h. "" 'gic ian Harry Houdini died in Detroit of gangrcllc' and peri tonit is resulting from a ru ptured appendix.
111 I'1-l I. the U. S. Navy destroyer Reuben James was torpedPc·cl t;, " German U-boal off Iceland with the Joss of I I 5
i" ,., . ,. 1cn though the United States had not yet entered World
\\, tr ll.
111 l"'ih. Rectr Adm. G.J . Dufek became the tirst person to
l.tnd .111 ctirplane ctl the South Pole.
In I%X. Prc, ident Jllhnson orde red a hall to all U.S. bomb·
'"~ ,,r \onh Vietnam. say ing he· hoped for fruit ful peace

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Assessing the Kerry -challenge
A Iso, Senator Kerry has
where will they come from?
- What will he do lO also been a staunch supponprevent more than three mil· er of legalized partial birth
lion illegal immigrants from abortion. Why does he think
crossing the bord~r from 64 senators voted to ban the
procedure?
Mexico each year?
Bill
All of these questions
- And why does he
O'Reilly
una nswered by the
remain
oppose gay marriage when
se nator
from
he voted again st The junior
Massachusetts,
thus
his
chaJ.
Defense of Marriage Act
signed by President Clinton? lenge is reall y built on the
In addi tion, I would ltke ch&lt;ws in Iraq, not a publicly
us simply do not know how
he wi ll handle comp)icmed to know why in I 991, Kerry stated clear and present
problems and how he has voted against removing vision.
I've known J.ohn Kerry for
arrived at th is belief system. Saddam's army from Iraq by
Washington Post assistam force in light of the fact that 15 years. and he's always
p~Hg n .
Bob at least five thousand been a hard man to read. If
editor
Se nator Kerry has done managing
an effective job of poiming Wo11dward, the Watergate Kuwai ti women were raped he hecomes president of the
out the mistakes of the Bush guy. recemly appeared on by Saddam's brula lizers, Uni ted States, there's no reaadministration. and a sympa- my TV program saying that according to the European son to believe he will not
thetic media has aided him Jcihn Kerry wo ul d not give Jo urn al of International Law. remain that way.
( Vere rcm TV news anchor
I'd also li ke to know what
every step of the way. That's him an interview even
a potent one-two punc h; the though he submillcd his he woul d sav to General Bill O'ReillY is host of the
Kerry challenge e~ h oed hy questio ns to Ke rry in Tnm my Fran k~ about Osama Fox News ;'how "The
network news broadcasts advance' Woodward and I Bin Laden. Franks has said O'Reillr Facror" and awlwr
and majo r urba n papers li ke agreed !hal we have no idea Kerry is Jlat out wrong to of rile imnk "Wh o's Looking
the L.A . and New York where Kerry stands on the accuse the Bush administra- Our For Ycm?" To find our
tion of "outsm1rcing" the job more a/)()ur Bill O'Reillr.
Ti mes. Toge ther they are fo llow ing:
- How would he pay fo r of catching Bin Laden in and ruul fea tures by oth~r
po und ing ho me a simple
message : Iraq is screwed up; th e mass ive governmem Tora Bora to '' war Ior ds. " Creators Svndicate writers
medical imura nc'e he says he According to Franks. U.S. and cartoon ists, •·isit til&lt;'
Kerry can do beller.
But the Kerry challenge wil l provide'! Tax ing the rich Special Forces wcr~ embed- Crturors Sl'ndica te web
stalls after leaving the Iraq cannot cover the trillions or ded with Afg han locals in pore at H'WW.creato r s.com.
the hu nt for Bi n Laden. 1/1is column originates on
iss ue because the senator has do llars th at wi ll be needed .
not defined himself 10 the
- How many new troops Who's right, Franks or rhe Weh sire www. billoreillr.com. )
American peo ple. Many of will he will send to Iraq. and Kerry''
If John Kerry wins the
presidential election, he ~an
thank Donald Rumsfeld . The
Secretary of Defense truly
believed the Iraqi people
would rise up and help the
United Stmes pacify their
country and therefore did not
plan adequately for the guer·
rillu war thal began after
Saddam was toppled.
That
war has
put
President Bush unt he defensive and is. perhaps. the
defining is.suc in the cam-

•

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111 I'JX-1. lndictn Prime Min ister Ind ira Gandhi was assassi·
,l,l!Cd b\ l\\ o Sikh security guards.
In · llJ9.1. mm ie director Federi co Fellini died in Rome at
a,:c 7.&gt;: .tctor Ri ver Phoenix died in Los Angeles at age 23.
In I YYR. a gene tic study was released suggesting President
Tho m"' Jcilerson did in fact fa ther at leas t one child by his
, Ja\c' Sally Hemings.
Ten 'ear' ago: A Chicago-bound Ameri can -Eagle ATR· 72
n"'llcd in nort hern Indiana. killing all 68 people aboard.
h'c \'C:tr.s ago: EgyptAir Flight 990, bound from New Yol·k
tu C':tiw. uu, lled off the MaS&gt;achusells coast, killing all 2 17

.x

IZ

IVl

li

•z
•m

pC l lj1]c.: :~board.

One 1car ago: A man angry at a lawyer over the handling of
h1, trt"t fuml v.as captured on videotape shooting the attorney
h) ere" ' C&lt; l\ cring actor Robert Blake's murder case in Van
\ u1 '·Cali f. !The shooter, William Strier, was later ruled meni&lt;tlh uni"ittn ' land trial on charges of attempted murder.) Teen
' uri int• ' tar Bethany Ham il ton lost her left arm in a shark
C~ti.td. ,ff Kaua i. Hawaii . Abdull ah Ahmad Badawi was sworn
111 "' ~ l al·.t;s ian prime minister, ending Mahathir Mohamad 's

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2~ ·\!...'~lr
rc i ~n.
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l'h llu~ lll

lh. tn ,, IlL'''

for Toda) : "An old error is always more popular
truth ... - German proverb.

- - - · -----,...--------,

$ unbap ~ttnes -~enttnel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

Avenue , Gallipolis, OH 4563 1.

Ou• r'lav· -:onc::r1 m all stones IS to be
r:sc.;r~te I' f':!'J k~ow of an error 1n a
W/, ;:; 1 ~asA :...dl one of our newsrooms .

Pe riodical
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the
We st
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and
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Postmaster : Send address correc tions to the Gallipo lis Da lly
Tnbune . 825 Third Avenue .

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GALLIPOLIS - Rides to
the polls for Gallia County
voters un able to get their voting precincts are available by
ca lli ng
Gallia
County
Democratic headquarters at
446-9884.

Road closing
slated for
Tuesday
VINTON
Gallia
Count y Engineer Glenn
Smith
announ l ed
that
Morgan Cente r R0ad wi ll be
closed to throug h traffic,
wea ther
permill ing,
betwee n Oh io 160 and

I

Survey clearly urifair
Oh. swe ll : We have ye t
another su rvey show ing that
me n. whe n compared to
wo men, are sc um . Just
once, I'd like to see some
survey aski ng ques ti ons that
wo ul d hi ghligh t areas
where men are more li kelv
to be superior. such as:
·
I . If it was an emerge ncy.
co uld you open a bee r boule
with your teeth''
2. How many hours per
wee k, total, do yo u spend
fret ting &lt;tbout your thig hs''
3. Do you have the cmo·
ti ona! stahili ty to make a
mea nmg ful li fe long commit me nt. through good
limes and bad. lt~ a set of
underwear?
4. Do you know the joke
whose pu nch line is: "But
first. roo roo 1"' 1
5. If another person is not
saying anything . and you're
wonderi ng if th is n11ght be
because so meth ing is hoth ering that perso n, and you
;~ s k that perso n what lhctl
pe rson is th inking. and that
person . says "1\othi ng," do
yo u accep t this per fect ly
reaso nab le answe r. or do
you proceed to NAG THE
PERSON
II ALF
TO
DEATH''
Bl\t do we .sec the se ques tions on ~ ur vcvs ' ! We do
not. Inst ead w~ see ques tions lik e the ones asJ..cd in
a recent sur vey hy the U.S.'
Depa rt ment
uf Labor.
Hav ing ~qiparelll.ly run coin plete ly ou l of useful things
to do. the dcparlmcnl :1\keu ·

Dave
Barry

2 1,000 Americans how they
spend th ei r time when
they're not wo rking.
It tu rn ed out that wo men
spend twice as much time as
men Of\ household chores
and child care, whi le men
spe nd more time on le isure.
On the surface. th is looks
bad . But surface looks are
ofte n dece ivi ng. A good
example is the iceberg,
which appears to he a big
hun k of ice. bu t if you look
beneath the surfa ce. yuu
fi nd that it is ... OK, it i~
actu all y a bi g hunk of icc.
So we .see that thi s is in fact
nul a good example, and we
should ju~t move on.
But tny point is tha t this
survey is very mislead ing.
Take th e concept of "hou,ework." It may he true that
women spend more T IME
on it . but wha t. rea lly, are
they accomplish ing" In my
own home . my· wife spends
a lot of time pi cking up our
.J-vcar-old daugh te r\ do ll
clothes and lahorious ly
Jl Lill ing them back on the
var.ious naked Barbie.s. the
nak ed Snow Wh ite. 1h c
naked Ariel the mermaid.

and the incredibly luc ky
naked Ken.
When my wife does th is,
she is clearly wo rk.ing. but
she ts not what a man wo uld
call "wo rki ng .sma rt. " A
man knows from ha rsh real·
wo rld experience that all of
these do ll s wil l soon be
naked again, and so be
makes a conscious dec ision
to leave the dressing of the
dol ls. and the clea~ in g of
hi s daughter's room in general. until a more sensible
and productive time, such
as when. his daughter enters
college. But does thi s man
gel any slack fro m the soca ll ed "Depan me m of
Labor?" He does not.
And let's talk about child'
c;~re vs. leisure. For wome n.
the se are two se pa rate activiti es, but me n have perfected a productivity-enhanci ng
techniq ue cal led "multi tasking." Say a man is sup posed
lo watch a child. but he also
wan ts to wat ch a football
game. Thanks to "multitasking," thi s man can keep o n ~
~ye on lhe football ~a m e.
whi le at · the same .rtime
keep tng the other eye also
on the !'oolbal l ga me. But in
some remote sector of his
hrain he is vaguely aware
that there is a t:hi ld around
.; nmewhere. and if he hears
anyth ing ..,u . . piciou ., , ~uch as
sirens or -an · explosion. he
wi ll respond immediate ly.
UA iess it is a crucia l thi rd down si lum ion.
Speak in g of which : I was

once at a Thanksgiving
gathering where there was a
backyard
touch-football
game involvin g all the guys
except one. I will call him
"Fred " - wh·o was watching
us whil e holding hi s infa nt
duughter. My team was
short one playe r, and we
were in a crucia l third-down
si tuation, so we looked over
at "Fred " - an exce lle nt
receive r · and . after making
us swear we wo uld never
tell his wife. he very carefull y se t hi s dm1ghter down
on the lawn and joined the
gam e fo r a sin gle play.
whi ch res ulted in Joe l ·
exc use me, I mean "Fred" •
scorin g a touchdown. Thi s
never wo uld have happened
if we had allowed ourselves
to be shackled by the ri gid.
in llexible defi niti ons of
"le isure" and "child care"
th at have fo r so long
enslaved women and the so·
called "Depart me nt of
Labor."
Am I saying men are per·
fect'1 I am not. The re are
certainl y areas of domestic
life Where men could show
more sens iti vi ty toward ,
and awa reness of, · the
imbalance be twee n them
and women, an d I intend to
addre&gt;S these areas in detail.
But first: Roo roo'
(Da1·e Barn is a lwm or
columnist .foi· rit e Miami
Hera/d. Wrire to him c/n
Th e Miami Herald, One
Herald Plaza. Miami. FL
33 132.)

Spires Road beginning ·
Tuesday at-£ a.m.
The closure wiU la~l until
Friday, Nov. 5 at 3 p.m. for
the installation of a concrete
box culvert. Local traffic wnl
GAL LIPOLI S - Sonlite
need to use other cou nty recording artist Mark Bishop
roads as a detour.
will appear in concert at 6
p.m. Saturday, Nov, 6, at the
New Life Church of God i'n
~
Gallipoli s.
There wiII be refreshments
after the concert. The public
BIDWELL Bidwe ll· is invited 10 attend. For more
P011er Elementary PTO wi ll information. call (304) 675have concessions set up at the 3538.
school on Tuesday, Election
Day. from earl y morning into
PROUD
the evening.
TO BE A
On the menu are sausage
biscuits , hot dog s. torti lla
'PART OF
chips wi th chili cheese,
YOUR LIFE.
shredded barbeq ue sa ndwic h,
•Subscribe todpy •
cole slaw, chips and asso rted
. ' 4462342 ' \ 't
bewrages.

Singer to appear
Nov.6

Election Day
activity set at B·P

Grant

tress grant can bring into attendance to the public
reali ty.
meetings.
The di stress grant is not ' Accord ing to Trussell, the
money for downtown, but more enti ties involved (like
from Page A1
money for neig'hhorhoods in churches and residents), the
ings.
Pomeroy. For example. if a more points Pomeroy can
To put it more simpl y, Pomeroy chu rch wanted to score on its grant application
what do yo u, not the poli ti· beautify thei r su rroun ding which means their chances of
cians, fee l yo ur communi ty neighborhood by landscap· approv al become greater.
needs more? Does it need ing. that woul d fall under the
Musser hopes to have at
sidewalks. street li ghti ng, stipu lations of uses fo r the least a 50 percent response to .
park and recreation faciIities, grant money.
the surveys . which would be
parking fa cjj ties, storm
However, the grant admin- around I ,000 . The surveys
drainage improvement s or a istrator will have lio idea of are availabl e at the water
commun ity cenler' 1
what needs to be do ne with· office and there are plans to
Those are ju st a few of the out feedback from di ffe rent place boxes at several busiimprove ment s tha t the di s- entities via the surveys and nesses. There was also a sug-

Focus

I

Thrunc

1'-, ~ -f

Rides to polls
available

from Page A1

issue is fo r the continuation
of the existing 0.25 perce nt
sales and use tax for operation of Gallia Coumy 9· J.l ,
which is subject to renewal
eve ry fi ve years.
Huntington Town ship is
seekin g a 1-mill re placement
levy for fire protection. Clay
Township voters will decide
on a se ven-tenths of a mill
replacement levy. also for fire

Kyge r Cemetery Road; Clay
Precinct and Clay Township,
Head Start on Ohio 7 South;
Gallipolis Township, Gallia
County Senior Resource
Center; Kanauga Precinct,
DAV-AMVETS Building;
Green Township I and 3,
Gallia
County
Health
Department; Green Township
2,
C.H.
McKenzie
Agricultu ral Center; Greeg
4,
Gallipol~
Township
Christian Church; Green
Township 5 and 6, Green
Elementary;
Greenfield
Township,
Greenfield
Community Center on Ohio
233: Guyan Precinct, Crown
City Village Hall; Guyan
Township, Guyan Townhouse
on Oh10 218; Harrison
Township, Harrison Township
Volunteer Fire Department,
Li ttle Bullskin Road;

court s; Steve McGhee, treasurer: Glenn A. Smith, engineer; and Dr. Daniel H.
Whiteley, coroner.
All , with the exception of
Adkin s. are Republi cans.
Saunders and Smith are seek·
ce .
ing third terms, McGhee and serv1
The
following are Galli a
Whiteley, second full terms,
vot ing locations. by
and Adkins is a first-time County
preci nct:
candidate fo r prosecutor. He
City I. St. Peter's Episcopal
has been assistant prosec utor
Church;
Ci ty 2, Grace United
for Brent A. Saunders, who is
Methodi st Church; City 3, 4
stepping . do wn in January and 5, First ~hurch of the
after 17 years as prosecutor.
Nazarene; Addiso n Precinct
Evans is seeking hi s first and
A dd ison Township ,
full term as judge as he comAddaville
Elementary
pletes the term of Joseph L. Schoo
l; Cheshire Town ship,
Cain, who resigned in 2001.
A regional race that will be Che;hire Townhouse on
de cided is in the 87th Ohio
House of Representatives
di strict, in which incumbent
Clyde Evans. a Republican
fro m Rio Grande, is running
for a second term.
He is challenged by Philip
Robert s of Kitt s Hill , a
Democrat who left the
National Guard after I 0 years
to enter the race . The 87th
District inc lude s Galli a,
Jackson and Vinton counties,
and portions of Lawrence and
•
Ross count ies.
• As your Commiss ioner
The only count ywide ballot

Keep
Jeff Thornton
Meigs County
Commissioner

Ballot
from Page A1
vie for the post now occupied
by Judy King, wh o has
announced he r plans to retire
when her term ends in
January.
Unopposed candidates
Engineer Et1ge ne Triplett,
Coroner Douglas D. Hunter,
Clerk of Courts Marl ene
Harri so n and Prosec uting
Attorne y Pat Story. all
Republicans. are unopposed
in their re-election bids.
Di strict/state races
Matthew McFarland, a
Republican
from
Wheelersburg, and Douglas
Bennet!, a Democrat and
Athens Muni cipal judge, vie
for a seal on the Fourt h
District Court of Appeals.
State Rep. Jimm y Stewart.
R·Athens, and Democrat Pat
Lang of Albany are in con·
le nt ion for the 92 nd Dis trict
House of Represcntalives
seat.
Terry
Anderson
of
Gu ysville, a Democrat. is
challenging State Sen. Joy
Padge t! , R-Coshoc ton. fo r
the 20th District State Senate
seat.

U.S. Rep. Ted Strick land,
D-Lisbon, is un opposed 111
hi s bid for a sixth te rm in the
U.S .
House
of
Representati ves, representing
the Sixth Di strict.
U.S .
Sen.
George
Voinovich of Cleve land. a
faces
Republ i'can,
Democratic challenger Enc
Finge rhut, a stale se nator
from Shaker Heights.

Sunday, October 3 1, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Local Briefs

I

In I &lt;J~O . Rc1.ct Pahlav i. eldest son of the late Shah of Iran,
pr"c·l:umed hitmclf the rightful successor to the Peacock

l "d'" ·, Htnhdays: Form er Attorney General Griffin Bell is
S6 ..-'.utll\li· Dick Fra ncis is 84. Actress Barbara Bel Geddes is
K: . 1-mmc·r Cambudian Ki ng No rodom Sihanouk is 82. Movie
cnttc .-\ndrc" S:mis is· 76. Former astronaut Michael Collins
''--I .\c·1rc" l.ee Grant is 73. CBS anchorman Dan Rather is
7_1 \cli•r Ron Rifkin is 65. Actor Dav id Ogden Stiers is 62 .
Ac~r,.,, S:tlh Kirkland is 60. Singer Kinky Friedman is 60.
-'. eire·" fJcidrc Ha ll is 56. NBC anchorwo man Jane Paule y is
.~.J .-\ct"r Bri an Stok¢Mitchell is 46. Movie director Peter
.l :ll·k-.•n i, -13 . Rock musician Larry Mullen is 43. Actor
1Jcm1• &gt;I .\lui roney is 4 1. Roc k musician Mikkey Dee
1.\ I&lt; 'i&lt;&gt; rhc.td 1 i, .J I. Rock singer-musician Johnny Marr is 41.
,\ c~ "r R"h ~,·h ncidcr i,; 40. Coun try singer Darryl Worley is
-10 R.tplllLh ici:tn Ad roc k is 38. Songwriter Adam Schlesi nger
" _;-; R.t p pe rformer Rob Van Winkle (formerl y known as
\ :nnl l&lt;t kc 1 i' 36. Rock singer Linn Berggren (Ace of Base )
".i-1 T\' ih " I Trny Hartman is 30. Actor Eddie Kaye Thomas

Page A5 • e unbap tlrimrs ·*'rntinrl

I've been dedicated
to Meigs County. This is the only job I have
and I take it very serious.

~

Wall

.

.~1

from Page A1

Meigs
informed
../!fooil stJdol ~·

~~
~

p/!ofDs
'
. to:

~CDm
.
0(

11$Siin»)d:li7y.sentJilelCDm

·sunday

'('lm•s-Sentlnel
'Galli• .. 441•2542
.,- MtiJs. ~ :112·2151

gestion of finding volunteers
to go door to door to get a
more accurate reading of
community needs.
Trussell said the biggest misconception the public has about
this grant is that they don't have
any input and that politics are
involved. The grant is specifi·
call y targeted to meet the needs
of residents who are encouraged to be as creative as possible when considering how to
improve their community.
The next community
meeting is tentatively scheduled for January.
Huntington
Precinct,
Hall ;
Vinton
Village
Huntington
Township,
Ewington Academy; Morgan
Township,
Morgan
Townhouse on Morgan
Center
Road;
Ohio
Township, Ohio Townhouse
on Swan Creek Road ; Perry
Township, Perry Townhouse
on Ohio 325 ; Centerville
Precinct, old Centerville
Elementary School; Rio
Grande Precinct and Raccoon
Township,
Rio
Grande
Elementary;
Bidwell Precinct, and
Springfield Township I .and
3,
Bidwell -Porter
Elementary;
Springfield
Township
2,
Gallia
Cornerstone Church on
Ohio 850; and Walnut
Township ,
Cadmus
Community Center.

• If re-elected I will continue working toward
building more infrastructure to help in job
creation. I will have a stratgic plan. I will meet
with all townships &amp; villages to see where we
need more help with the infrastructure the11
when appling for new grants focus on the
area's that need the most help.
• In. the last 3 years the commi ssioner's have
been workin g with a company from out west everything looks great and all parti es are close
to signin g the papers. Wh en thi s is
acco mpli shed we will be abl e to announce
publicly and Meigs County will have a 2.2
billion doll ar project (c reating several high
pay ing jobs &amp; ex tra tax money to help our
county).
• I will never supprt Higher Taxes ! I voted
NO on a sales tax NO an a permit fee &amp; NO
on' a permi ss ive fee - whi ch save over 3
million in hew taxes for the people of the
county.
If re-elec ted commi ss ioner I will continue to
fight the fig ht for the common peo ple of the
county- Workin g Hard to make Meigss County
a better place to li ve!

Re-elect

NOREEN M. SAUNDERS
Gallia County Clerk of Courts
Although Complimentary, Your Vote I\ Still Appreciated'
NOW SERVING YO U IN THREE LOCA TIONS

• Gallia County Clerk Court Common Pleas
and Fourth Appellate DIStrict Clerk
• Gall ia Cou nt y Title Department
• Gallia Coun ty Licc n'e Bureau
Pa id for by the Candidate, 10615 State Route 7 Ga1fipolis, Ohio 45631

I

,

Hello, I am Morris G. Sheets,
and I am running to be your
Gallia County Commissioner.
Gallia County is very
important to me. Our county
is facing man ~___iifficult
decisions, a ~ county

needs solid leadership in these tough times.
I am running as an Independent candidate. As
you Commissioner, I won't be beholden to a
political party when making the decisions that
will affect all of us. I think that'$- the way it
should be. And I hope that you do.too. •
Please consider casting yout vote for
Morris G. Sheets, your independent voice for a
strong Gallia County, on November 2nd.
Thank you.
·
$

.

t·

Paid for by Co mmittee to Elect Morr is G . Sheels,

RobM G. Brumfield , Trea surer. 6382 State At. 141. Gallipolis, OH.

·~~~~~·~·····~~···~~···~·······~~··············~~~·

VOTE - REPUBLICAN
Gallia County, Ohio

George Bush

DickCheney

President

Vice President

George V. Voinovich
United States Senator ·

.

• Me igs County ha s received .over
$130,000,000 since I' ve been commissioner.
(The money as been invested in infrastructure)
(Road, water &amp; sewer) and programs to help
Meigs Countians.

5,000. we've accompli,hed a
Jot. We have many things we
can be proud of."
Congresswoman Shelley
Moore Capi to, keynoie 'peak·
er, also thanked everyone for
their efforts in gelling The
Wall and preparing the city for
its stay in Point Pleasant,
refeoing to their hard work as
"a job we ll done ."
Capito said that the
Vietnam War was a very dif·
fic ult era in our hi story. and
The
Vietnam
Veterans
Memorial and The Moving
Wall have helped people reconcile their moral and politi·
cal differences abou t the war.
Capito talked about the
nearly I,()()() Vietnam vcter·
ans who are missing.
"The · government wi ll
commit ever)' resource ava il ·
able to bring them home,"
she said.
Capito, who visited Iraq

and Afghani ~tan earlier . thi ;
year, &gt;atd that she apprenates
the &gt;acrificec, made by tll O&gt;c
men and women and by all ·
who have &gt;erved our countrv.
The ceremony would not
have been complete 'withoul a
21-gun salute, prec,ented by
member&gt; of the 3664th
Maintenance Company of the
Army National Guard, Point
Plea;anl , which wa&gt; followed
by the playing ofTaps.
Randy and Li sa Searle,
and Dcni;,e and john
Bonecutter of the go,pel
group Eternity. &gt;ang seve ral
&gt;o ng s
includin g
Th e
National Anthem and God
Bless the USAThe All County Choir also sa ng and
their were performances by
the Wahama and Point
Pleasant high school band s.
Du,tin Stover. a senior at
Hannan Hi gh School. Jed the
opemng prayer.
There wi ll be a closi ng ceremony at 7 p.m. Wednesda y
at the Riverfrolll Park . The
Wall will be di smantled on
Thursday.

Clyde Evans
State Representative, 87th District

Thomas J. Moyer
Judith Lanzinger
Paul Pfeifer
Terrence 0' Donnell

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
Justice of the Su preme Court
Ju sti ce of the Supreme Court
Justice o f the Supreme Court

J. Roger Walker
County Recorder

Steve McGhee
-Glenn A. Smith
Daniel H. Whiteley

Count) Treaurer
County Enginee r
Coroner

Lynn Angell Queen
Count y Commissioner

David K. Smith
County Commissioner

Noreen M. Saunders

Clerk of Courts

J.D. Taylor
Sheriff

Matthew W. McFarland
Judge of the Court of Appeals. 4th District

D. Dean Evans

Jud~e

of the Court of Common Pl eas

Candidates listed in Order ~~/'Appearance 011 Balint
Names Listed in Small Print Are Unopposed
Call446-7638 on Election Day for a ride to the poll$.
Taking This Ad With You in th e Voting Booth Is _Permi.~ s ib le
Paid for by th e GaJiia County Rt~JHihlinm

f:.~H'i 'llfi\"t' CommifTI' I

narid C. Enms. 7ren.Hin ' l:

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··~·······················¥······

�Sunday, October 31, 2004

&amp;unbap QJ:imt&amp; -~enti ntl • Page A6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Third Avenue and Grape Street.
Memorial contributJons may
be made in Haylee's memory
to the Haylee Jo Swain-Love
Memorial Scholarship Fund,
c/o Dian Callihan, 7751 State
Route 218, Crown City, Ohio
45623.

son, Richard(Angela) Close, of
Cincinnati; two granddaugh·
ters, Natalie (Scott) Cooper, of
Cincinnati and Madeline
Penix, of• Cincinnati;· great
grandson, Camden Cooper; sis·
ters, Julie Bell, of New Paltz,
N.Y. and Rose Kish, of
Orlando, Aa.; and one brother,
Frank Granieri, of Atlantic
• City, N.J.
Graveside services will be at
2 p.m. Monday at the Byron
Cemetery
in Fairborn. The
Eunice L. Alderson, 84, of
fanlily
has
requested
that in lieu
Gallipolis, passed away Friday,
of
flowers,
donations
be made
Oct. 29 at her residence.
She was born on July 31, to the Holzer Cancer Center c/o
1920 in Oak Hill, W.Va. the · of Tom Gooch I00 Jackson
daughter of the late John D. and Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Artha M. (Carr) Hornsby. Arrangements are under the
Eunice was married to Harold direction · of Willis Funeral
Ray Alderson on July 18, 1936 Home.
Please visit www.willisfu.
and he preceded her in death in
neralhome.com
to send e-mail
1988. She was a school cook at
Decota Elementary with 33 condolences.
years of service in Decola,
W.Va., retiring in 1983. She
also was a volunteer in the
cafeteria at the Holzer Medical
Center for 7 years. Eunice was
a member of the Miami
E. Maxine Coats Gaskill, of
Nazarene Church in Miami, Middlepon, passed away
W.Va.
Friday, Oct. 29 at Adena
In addition to her husband, Medical Center in Chillicothe.
those preceding her in death are
She was born on Oct. 16,
two sisters, Ethel Hornsby and 1916 in Middleport, the daugh·
Geraldine Osborne and one ter of the late Walter and Hazel
brother, John W. Hornsby.
Reichman Hayes. She was the
Surviving is one daughter, graduate of Middleport High
Lana Ray (Stephen) Ferrell, of School and attended Ohio
Gallipolis; one son. Danny R.' University in Athens. She was
(Priscilla Jean) Alderson, Sr., of a member of the Heath United
Charleston, W.Va.; five grand· Methodist
Church
m
children, 10 great-grandchil- Middleport. She was a member
dren and one great great grand· of the Evangeline Chapter 172
son. Also surviving is one sis· Order of the Eastern Star tor
ter, Inez Haislop, of Gallipolis, more than 50 years. She wa'
and a very special niece, Sandy also associated with the Meigs
Byer, of Gallir.&gt;lis.
County Historical Society, the
Services will be at I p.m. Middleport Literary Club, the
Wednesday at Willis Funeral Middleport Arts Council, the
Home with Pastor Eugene Meigs County Golf Club
Harmon officiating. Burial will Association, an honorary mem·
follow in the Ohio Valley ber of the Amatuer Garden
Memory Gardens. Friends may Club, the Thursday Afternoon
call Thesday from 6 · 8 p.m. at bridge Club in Stuart, Aa. and
Willis
Funeral
Home. she
was
a
board
Pallbearers will be Danny member/trustee of the Meigs
Alderson,
Jr.,
Richard County Senior Citizen Cener.
Price,
Alderson,
Joshua
She was associated with
Michael Kirby, Derek Kirby Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
and Joe Hammond.
from 1935 · 1965. After the
Please visit www. willisfu. death of her huband, Raben L.
neralhome.com for e-mail con· Coats, in 1965, she became
dolences.
owner of the funerla home until
she retired in 1979. She was the
organist at the funeral home for
25 years.
Mary M. Close, 85, of
In addition to her parents, she
Gallipolis, died Friday, Oct. 29 was preceded in death by
at the Holzer Senior Care Robert L. Coats, her first husCenter in Gallipolis.
band; Charles N. Gaskill, her
She was born on April I. second husband, and stepmoth·
1919 in Wtllow Grove, Pa., er, Beulah Burford Hayes.
daughter of the late George and
She is survived by her
Madelena Serrao Granieri. daughter and son-in-law,
Mary wa~ a life-long artist.
Christine and the Rev. Dr.
She was preceded in death by Russell L. Mcintyre, of
her parents, four brothers and Morristown, N.J. and son and
three sisters.
daughter-in-law, Dr. Stephen
Surviving is her husband H. Coats and Mary Elizabeth
Harry Eugene Close, of Coats, of West Plains, Mo. She
Gallipolis; a daughter, Bonnie is also survived by eight grand·
(Arnold) Penix, of Gallipolis; a children:
Lisa Christine

Eunice L
Aidenon

Haylee Jo .

Swain-LOve
Haylees Jo Swain-Love, 18,
of the Mercerville Community,
passed away at 2:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 29 at St. Mary.'s
Medical Center in Huntington,
W.Va. from injuries she
received in an accident.
- Born Aug. 8. 1986 in Point
Pleasant. W.Va., she was the
daughter of IJonald Michael
Love of Jacksonville, Ra. and
Dafney Swain Davis of
Mercerville.
She was a graduate of South
.9allia High School and was a
student at the University of Rio
Drande.
She
attended
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church.
Surviving is her mother and
stejrfather, Dafney and Mike
Davis, of Mercerville; father
;md special friend, Donald
Michael Love and Kristin
·shook, of Jacksonville, Aa ..
She is also survived by two
.brothers, Tristin Michael Davis
illld John Henry Griffin; pater·
~al grandparents, Fred and
Marilyn Love, of Crown City;
Jnatemal grandfather, Kenneth
Swain, of Gallipolis; greatgrandfather, Clarence Layne,
N Crown City; and step-grand·
:parents, Roger and Linda
:Davis, of Crown City. Aunts
illld uncles surviving are Dian
and Keith Ca)lihan, Tammy
Ireland, Donna and Todd
Shang, Marsha Cole, Paul and
Nikki Stevens and Eric Love.
Haylee was preceded in
death by her maternal grand·
mother, Joy Swain, and great·
grandmother. Gladys Layne.
· Casketbearers are Mason
Stevens, Brandon Coburn,
Richy Whitt, Luke Lawrence,
Zack Lee and Ryan Gregory.
Honorary casketbearers are
Mandy Harold and Angel
Wright.
Funeral Services will be at II
a.m. Monday in the Providence
Missionary Baptist Church.
Officiating will be Rev. James
Sisson. Internment will follow
in the Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 · 8
p.m. today at the Cremeens
Funeral ChaP!" I on the comer of

Deaths
Frances L Gibbs
Frances L. Gibbs, 91, of
Hartford, W.Va., passed away
Friday, Oct. 29 in Arbors at
Gallipolis.
She was born on Feb. 25,
1913 in Longdale, W.Va., the
daughter of 0. Edwin and
Sarah (Roberts) Brinker.
She was a laborer at Lak~
Tree Nursery, a member of
Church of Christ in Christian
Union in Hartford, W.Va. and a
member of the Cabin Creek
c Quilters.
Surviving is her daughter,
Betty
MacNamara,
of
· Hartford. W.Va.; son, James
·Gibbs, of Hartford, W.Va.; .16
grandchildren and 27 great
grandchildren.
Visitation will be from 6 . 8
p.m. today at Fogleson~·
Tucker Funeral Home m
Mason, W.Va. Funeral services
will be held at I p.m. Monday
· at the funeral home with Pastor
David Greer officiating. Burial
will follow in Graham
Cemetery in New • Haven,
W.Va. -

Joseph H.
Hammond Sr.
Joseph H. Hammond Sr., 80,
Pliny, W.Va.. died Thursday,
Oct. 28, 2004, in the Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
and
Rehabilitation Center, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Linda Hammond.
Services will be 2 p.m.
Sunday in the Deal Funeral
" Home, Point Pleasant, with
l&gt;astor Bobby Woods official·

ELECTIONS

iunbap limd ·itnttntl

Obituaries

E. Maxine Coats

Gaskill

Mary M. Close

Mcintyre, Gregory Russell
(Suzanne) Mcintyre, Raben
Sean (Marie Ann) Coats. Dr.
Lloyd Wayne (Tracey) Coats,
Laura Beth (Kelly) Decker,
Stephen Andrew (Sara) Coats,
Douglass Scott (Me lanie)
Coats and Walter Christopher
Coat~. She is also survived by
seven
great-grandchildren:
Rose Ashley. Megan Elizabeth,
Emily Counney, Stephen
· Zachary. Catherine Elizabeth,
Wesley Donald Coats and
Merron Elizabeth Decker. Also
surviving are three step-chil·
dren: Susan G. Pettinger, of
Belpre; Charles Ned Gaskill, of
Aorida; and Barbam (Robert)
Wagner Lenior, of North
Carolina. Also surviving are
five step-grandchildren and six
step-great gmndchildren.
Services will be at II p.m.
Tuesday at the Heath United
Methodist
Church
in
Middleport. Burial will follow
at Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport. Officiating will be
the Rev. Brian Dunham and
The Rev. Dr. Russell L.
Mcintyre. Friends may call
between 7 · 9 p.m. Sunday,
from 2 · 4 p.m. Monday and
from 7 · 9 p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Fisher Funeral
Home in Middlepon.
On-line condolences may be
sent to www.fisherfuneral·
homes.com.

Ronnie Ray
Henry

On November 2nd, the 114%
Sales Tax Collected for the
operation of the Gallia
County 911 System will
appear on your ballot for
RENEWAL. Please remember to Vote YES for the
CONTINUED COLLECTION

of the sales tax used to fund
the operation of your
countywide enhanced
911 system.
Thank You For Your Support.

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Three days to go: Bush, Kerry clash over national security

at II a.m. Wednesday at the
Crow· Hussell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. with Rev.
Ralph Sager officiating. Burial
will follow in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery,
in
Cheshire.
Visitation will be held at the
funeral home from 5 · 8 p.m.
Tuesday.

Bv RON FOURNIER

William Wild
Bill' McNeal

William
"Wild
Bill"
McNeal, 70, died Thursday,
Oct. 28, 2004, after a lengthy
battle with cancer.
Jessie White Jr.. 79, of
He was born June II , 1934, Gallipolis. went to be with the
to Thomas and Corrine Rupert lord Thu r;day, Oct. 28 at
McNeal.
Scenic Hilb Nursi ng Cemer.
Bill was a lifelong resident of
Born March 2. 1925 in Galli a
Jackson County, and drove a County, he was the son of the
fuel truck tor Buchanan Oil Co. late Jesse and Nellie Newland
until the business closed.
White Sr.
Bill enjoyed llxing fuel fur·
He retired fr0111 the Federal
naces for many years. He was a Mogul Corporation in 1989.
humer. and enjoyed helping He was also tormer employee
friends with their farms.
of
the
Gallipolis
Bill is .preceded in death by Developmemal Center. and a
his parents: his wife, Jacqueline United States Army Veteran.
"Jackie" McNeal; brothers, He was a member of the First
Charles "Bo" McNeal, Thomas Church of the Nazarene. He is
"Junior"
McNeal,
Fred survived by his wife. Louise
McNeal and Jack McNeal; and Johnson White and seven chil·
a sister, Mildred Hamilton.
dren: Barbara (John) Bowen, of
Bill is survived by his wile, Scottown: Jessie Lynn (Sandy)
Donna Pennington McNeal ; McCarty, of Scnttown; David
children, Tom (Kim) McNeal, (Sandy) White. of Crown City;
Rob (Sharilyn) Leonard and Mike (Linda) McCarty, of
Brandon McNeal; stepdaugh· Vinton; Keith McCarty. of
ters, Sherry (Jeff) Coplan and Gallipolis; Richard (Janet)
Barbara J. (Spencer) Leach, Jamie Brown; grandchildren, McCarty, of Xenia; and Pamela
62. of Gallipolis, died at her Joanna (Don) Bradley, Ruthie (Ed) Smart, of Albany. Also
home on the evening of Friday, (Tracy) Williams, Layne surviving are 13 gmndchildren
McNeal, Meghan, Alison. and two great grandchildren.
Oct. 29.
Funeral services will be at 2
She was born Aug. 23, 1942 Kirstin and Teri Leonard ; a
in Mason County, W.Va .. She step-granddaughter, Alyssa: p.m. Monday at the Waugh·
great-grandchildren, Halley· Wood funeral home
was the daughter of the late and
Kaitlyn
and
Taylor Williams, with Pastors Eugene Ham10n
Thomas Carl and Katherine
and R'obert Fulton otliciating.
Mae (Knapp) Spencer. She was and Caleb Bradley.
He
is
also
survived
by
a
Burial will . follow in Ohio
raised on the family farm in
brother,
Bob
(Connie)
McNeal;
Valley Memorial Garden s.
Camp Conley, W.Va. She was a
1960 class graduate of Point a sister, Evelyn (Raymond) Friends may call at the funeral
Pleasant High School, in Point Hutchins ; a brother-in-law, home from 6 · 9 p.m. Sunday.
Pleasant, W.Va. and a 1963 Silas Hamilton ; a sister-in-law, Military services will be pre·
iraduate of the Holzer School Pat McNeal: several nieces and sented at graveside by the
of Nursing. She had worked for nephews; and many special Gallia . County
Veterans
Holzer Hospital as a nurse and tiiends. caretakers and wait· Organizations. The grandsons
will serve as pallbearers.
for the Mason County Health resses.
Services will be I p.m.
To send condolences. please
Department. She was a fom1er
member of the board of direc· Sunday. Oct. 31, 2004, at the visit us www.timefonnemory.
Funeral comlwhw.
tors at People's Bank in Point Eisnaugle·Lewis
Home in Jackson. Burial will
Pleasant, W.Va.
In addition to his parents, he
She is survived by her hus- follow in the Pennington was preceded i11 death by two
band, Joseph L. Leach: a son, Cemetery. Visitation was held children.
Donna
Kay
in
the
funeral
home
from
2
to
8
Mumpower and Tammy
Charles L. Brown, Ill. of Fort
Louise McCarty and by six
Myers, Ra.; a daughter and son· p.m, Saturday. Oct. 30, 2004.
in-law, Charla J. and Dennis
brothers and six sisters.
McGuire of Point Pleasant,
W.Va.; two brothers and sisters·
in-law. Joseph R. and JoAnna
Spencer of Point Pleasant,
WVa. and Steven A. and Kim
Spencer of New Haven, W.Va.:
a niece, Counney A. Spencer of
Huntington. W.Va.; and special
friend~. Jeannie Pullins Neal or
Aorida, former! y of Point
Pleasant, W.Va. , and Karen
Luckeydoo of Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
Pd tor by the Committee to elect Fred Deel
Tim Massie, Treasurer, 41 Alexander Church Ad ., Galli olis, OH 45631,
Funeral services will be held

Jessie White Jr.

Barbara J. Leach

Gallla Countv Commissioner

APPLETON,
Wis.
Wrapping up a campaign shad·
owed by war and terrorism,
President
Bush
and
Democratic S,en. John Kerry
unabashedly sought political
advantage Saturday from
Osama bin Laden's re-emer·
gence.
"It's very helpful to the presi·
dent," contended Bush ally
Sen. John McCain, R·Ariz.,
although the president didn't
mention the menacing new
messa~e from bin Laden at a
cmnpatgn stop in Grand Rapid,
Mich.
Rather, Bush declared. "The
terrorists who killed thousands
of innocent people are still dan·
gerous and they are deter·
mined."

For the second straight day,
Kerry responded to bin Laden's
re-emergence with his months·
old criticism of Bvsh's post·
Sept. II tactics in Af~hanistan,
the terrorist mastermmd's once
and perhaps current home.
"It was wrong to divert our
torces from Afghanistatl so that
we could rush to war in lrJq
without a plan to win the
peace," said the Democratic
challenger. "It wa~ wrong to
outsource the job" of capturing
bin Laden to local warlords.
As Bush and Kerry criss·
crossed Midwest battleground
states. a new poll showed the
president moving ahead of
Kerry in the popular vote, and
Democmts said their private
,urveys hinted at momentum
l(lr the Republican incumbent.
But the presidency will be
detennined state by state, Bush
and Kerry vying for 270
Electoral College votes, a
majority of the 538 available.
The two candidates respond·
ed to the bin Laden tape in
1vays reflecting their months·
old campaign strategies.
Bush has sought to offset
voter concerns about the war in
Iraq. the economy and his over·
all job pertonnaryce by fueling
fears about terrorism _ and rais·
ing doubts about Kerry's ability
to respond.
At his first stop in GOP-lean·
ing Grand Rapids; Mich., the
president raised the stakes in
the election while reminding
voters of the Sept. II attacks.

"Americans go to the polls at a
time of war and ongoing threats
unlike any we have faced
before."
In response to the videotape,
the
Bush administration
warned state and local officials
that the tape may be intended to
promote or signal an attack on
the United States.
Kerry has tried to tap deep
anti-war resentment within the
nmks of the Democmtic Party
while assuring swing voters
that he would keep them safe.
The decorated V1etnam War
veteran pledged anew to
"destroy, capture, kill Osama
bin Laden and all of the terror·
ist'l.."
With up to 40 states already
in the Kerry or Bush camps, the
race is concentruted in closely
fought
Florida,
Ohio,
Wisconsin,
Pennsylvania,
Iowa, Minnesota, New Mexico
and Nevada. Another six to 12
states could come into play
before their unconventional
lAP Photo)
can1paigns draw to a close.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. right. and President
Throughout the battle· Bush greet a crowd of supporters dunng a campaign ratty at
grounds, Kerry's mostly paid· Nationwide Arena Friday in Columbus, Ohio.
army of organizers were pitted
against Bush's largely volun· the Ten Commandments." said the war on terrorism. I'm not
teer-driven team to get suppon· Sen. Jim Bunning, accused by sure if it was intentional or not,
ers to the polls Tuesday. It's too his Democratic rival of viola!· but I think it does have an
late for some: · Early voting ing two of them. Dan effect." he said.
Kerry spoke sman, Mike
mushroomed this year and, in Mongiardo made his charge
McCurry,
rejected Republican
after
Republicans
suggested
he
Rorida alone, nearly 2 million
assertions
that the Democrat
is
gay,
which
he
denied.
voters have already cast ballots.
was
playing
politics with the
In all, 34 Senate races and all
In Maine, a state Bush
expects to lose to Kerry, the 435 House seats are on the bal· bin Laden tape.
"It's hard to imagine how
Democrat poured last-minute lot Tuesday. Republicans are
they
could make that charge.
heavily
favored
to
retain
con·
money into a Social Security ad
aimed at elderly voters in the trol of the House. Democrats since he's the one tliat refer·
north. Urtlike most states which must win seven of nine com· enced the tape in his vicious
have a winner-take-all system, petitive races. most of them in attack on Sen. Kerrv last
Maine awards two of its four states that favor Bush, to cap· night." McCurry said. ·
On Friday, Bush accused
electoral votes based on con· ture the Senate.
Kerry
of "shameful" second·
In
a
presidential
race
this
gressional district votes.
guessing
in the face of threats
close,
both
sides
are
on
the
alert
Democrat AJ Gore stumped
by
America's
deadly t(Je.
for Kerry in Hawaii, a state the for below-the-radar nastiness.
A Newsweek poll showed
former vice president won by Democrats said a bogus letter
Bush
ahead of Kerry 50-44. A
was
circulating
in
South
nearly 20 percentage points in
week
ago,
the same survey had
Carolina.
threatening
the
arrest
2000. Polls showed the race
the
race
tied.
The president has
much closer this year, and Gore of voters who had outstanding
donned a traditional Philippine parking tickets or failed to pay opened a small lead in an ABC
poll, too.
shirt, a green-and-red flower lei child support.
Vice President Dick Chenev
and told · Democrats, "The
told
Pennsylvania Republican~'
On the Net:
course of our nation can be
.Vwwjoht1kerry.com
that
the
bin
Laden
tape
is
"a
detenmined by Hawaii's vote"_
reminder
that
we
are
engaged
www.georgewbush.com
words not often spoken in presin a global war on terror." He
idential campaigns.
said
Bush would win it.
The congressional races did
McCain,
who has repeatedly
not lack for intensity, an unex·
campaigned
on Bush's behalf,
pectedly close Senate cam·
paign in Kentucky among said the terrorists' videotape
them. "I think we've all broken "focuses America's attention on

{AP Photo)

Democratic presidential candidate Sen., John Kerry holds up
three fi ngers indicating to supporters. at the start of a "get out
the vote•· rally in Appleton . Wis .. Saturday morn1ng. that there
are only three days left before he is elected president .

Fellow Gallia Countians,
1 am David K. Smith and 1 ask for
your vote and support on November
2nd.
Having spent most of my life in
Gallia County, I know the issues.
Jobs, education and economic
development are important for
Gallia County's future.
I will work diligently to Improve
Gallia County.
Sincerely,
David K. Smith

___....

..._

Candidate for County Commissioner

CANDIDATE FOR GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
JANUARY 2nd TERM

·...Working Hard to
Serve'Gallia County

••••••••••

· MaryBea·

cCALLA
for

GALLlA

COUNTY

-- ORDER

I believe in dollars and common sense. I will be responsible for
handling your Gallia County dollars and will do so with common sense
and care. I have over 20 years experience preparing the taxes and helped
to manage the finances of Gallia County families through my business.
I have been on the Gallipolis City School Board for 11 years managing
· tax dollars and gaining experience in government Finance. I believe that
I can do the best job possible for you in managing your Gallia County
tax dollars.
I believe that Qallia County needs emergency services spread throughout
the county 24 hours a day. One way to provide this is through a system of
medical first responders within the local tire stations. Al so, I believe that
Gallia County would be safer with more deputies on the road. I will
support our local EMS and Fire Departments in their efforts to increase
services. I will work toward providing our EMS, Fire and Police
Departments with the equipment they need to keep all of G,allia County
safe.
I believe that Gallia County needs more jobs for Gallia County
workers. We need to bring businesses to the county that will hire local
workers at higher wages. We also need to invest in our local businesses
to help them grow. This will enable them to hire more Gallia County
workers which will improve the lifestyle of all Gallia County residents.

Paid for by the cand•date David K. Smith
~

BEEGLE ·o
MEIGS COUNTY 0
SHERIFF
4

LYNN ANGELL QUEEN

I'm Lynn Angell Queen . Your candidate for Galli a County
Commissioner. I have spent this past year campaigning with three basic
thoughts. These are issues that I believe are central to the future of our
county as a whole.

ing. Burial will be in the
Evergreen Cemetery, Pliny.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday, one hour
prioi"to services.

Surviving are his wife,
Sandra Byrus Henry; step·
daughter, Kayla Niben and
three sons: Brad Richards,
Aaron Richards and Brandon
Richards.
Visitation will from 6 · 9
p.m. Monday at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Funeral Services will be held
at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the funer·
Ronnie Ray Henry, 52, of , al home with Rev. Bud Hatfield
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., pa~sed and f!,ev. Ted Nance officiating.
away Friday, Oct. 29 at St. Burial will follow at Jordan
Mary's Hospital in Huntington Baptist Church Cemetery in
W.Va.
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
He was born in Mason
Pleas visit deal_fll @char·
County on Aug. 6, 1952, the ter.net to send email condo..
son of Lee and Maxine Henry. lences to the family.

PageA7

*

Bob Beegle, a life-lqng resident of Meigs county, served as a
fulltime deputy sheriff for over 31 1/2 years involved in all
aspects of the Sheriff's Office. He is now seeking the office
of Meigs County Sheriff.

VIf elected, Bob Beegle has pledged...

• fiscal integrity· operate the Sheriff's Office within the budget so
there will be deputies all year
• prompt courteous response on calls
• Fair and impartial law enforcement .
• efforts to re-open"the County Jail to keep YOUR tax money in
the county PLUS save on cost of the wear &amp; tear on the cruisers
' transporting prisoners out of county and freeing the transporting
'
deputy to answer calls
·emphasis more INVESTIGATIVE WORK
J. • Cooperate with local and state agencies for assistance in
! combating drugs
....,-.seek grants for programs, training, and equipment for the
f'\. department
.
• to be available to the residents

With your vote I will work hard to achieve these goals. Only with your
vote and support can I have the chance to improve all of our lives. I was
born and raised in this county and have never wanted to live anywhere
else .. 1 believe that this can be the premier county of Southern Ohio if we
all strive for the best. I remember a bumper sticker that said Gallia County
Pride is County Wide. I believe in that. I want all of us to be proud of our
community. I appreciate all of the support t have received and thank-you
in advance for your votes.

0
E

Pa1d tor bv Robert Robte.

Lynn Angell Queen

PAID FOR BY STEPHEN L. WILSON
OH 45623

-·- ---

0

'E
*

2
0
VOTE ROBERT• BEEGLE
0
tor MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
4
on November 2nd.

BEEGLE has the PERSONAL INTEGRITY, HONESTY,
DEDICATION and CONCERN for Meigs County.

326 95 Rose H1ll Rd .. Pomeroy.

·~ · -·-~ ---------------"----------

v

- - - - -- - - - - -- -·----·

.

�OHIO

iunbap Ottme' ·ientinel

Gallia completes anti-hazard draft plan
StAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A draft of
an all-natural hazard mitiga·
tion plan for Gallia County
has been completed by the
county commissioners and a
core group of local leaders.
Emergency Manage ment
Agency Director Mike Null
said the plan, when approved
by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, will
guarantee Gallia County 's
eligibility for mit igation
funding from federal and
state sources in the future.
Gallia received fundin g
from the Ohio EmergcnL·y
Management Agency to complete the mitigation plan in
2004. Null led the core
group, which consisted of

Bv JAMES HANNAH

DAYTON - Pink T-shi11s.
Free hunting and fishing
licenses. More signing honuses. And a greater appeal to
patriotic duty.
The Army National Guard.
'which has fallen short of
recruiting goals during the prolonged fighting in Iraq. is trying new marketing beyond the
traditional enticement of college tuition aid.
Nationally, the Arrl,ly Guard
reached 88 percent o¥ its goal
of 56,000 recruits by the end of
September, signing up 49.210.
"Recruiting is tougher than
it's been in awhile," said James
Sims, spokesman for the Ohio
Guard, which is about 500 off
its target of 2, I00 recmits.
Guard officials around the
country blame concerns about
the war, Pentagon orders that
keep some soldiers from leaving actlveduty and going into
the Guard, and turnover among
recmiters. some of whom have
been sent overseas.
Of the 100,000 Anny Guard
members sent to Iraq. about
II 0 have died.
In the past, young people
saw enlisting as a way to get
college tuition with little risk to
themselves.. said Lt. Col.' Greg
Hapgood, spokesman for the
Iowa National Guard.

·'Today, that risk has
changed;· he said.
Tlic pink T-shirt beating the
v.ords "Soldier Girl" was
designed by Sgt. Stacey
Weston. a rec111iter in Indiana.
to get the attention of potential
recruits. She said the Guard
quickly ran out of the tirst
order of SOO shirts .
"A Jut of young ladies are
under the impression they
can·, be feminine if they join
the militarv,'' Weston said. "I
wanted to dispel that myth."
Ohio has used Hummers with oversized tires, televisions and booming sound systenb - for the past few years
to dmw a crowd. The Guard
also plans to increase the number uf recruiters from 81 to
106.
The Kansas Army Guard has
upped from 19 to 30 the jobskill categories - such as driving heavy equipment. - in
which it will pay , ;goi ng
bonuses that range from
$3,0(X) to $8.000.
And
thanks to
the
Legislature. its members will
be eligible for free fishing and
huming I icenses and passes to
state parks bcgihning in
January.
Renui.ter Lt. Co l. Jane
Ha1Tis said there is no way to
tell how many recruits have
been influenced by the new
marketing.

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Saturday, October 30
Overnight
(1 :OOam-S:OOam)

vation, dry-flood proofing,
Temperatures will diminwet-flood proofing. lightning
prediction system, interoper- ish from 67 to Ieday's low
able siren system, stream
restorations or any other of 57 by 6:00am. Skies will
activity potentially funded be mostly clear to partly
with mitigation dollars.
cloudy with 5 to 15 MPH
Commissioners' winds from the west turnPresident
Harold
Montgomery issued hi s ing from the southwest as
thanks to those who made the overnight progresses.
the project poss ible , and
Sunday, October 31
invitc.s the public to a hearMorning
in g on the draft mitigation
plan on Tuesday. Nov. 9 at
(7:00am-Noon)
6:30 p .m. in the second
Temperatures will drop
floor mee tin g room of the
Gallia County Courthouse. from 56 early this morning
Copies of the draft mitiga- to 55 by 8:00am then rise
tion plan wi II be available for back up to 62 late mornreview at the following locations: Gallia County EMA ing. Skies will be mostly
office. and on the county Web sunny with 5 to 15 MPH
site. gallianct.net.
winds from the southwest.

representatives from all
incorporated areas of the
county. mo't of the townships, and key county agency
representation.
"Each core group member
had a key role and was instrumental in moving Gallia
County forward in disaster
resistance." Null said.
Mitigation money t1sually
comes in the form of a grant,
such
as ·the
Hazard
Mitigation Grant Program
(HMGP ), Flood Mitigation
Assistance (FM A) or the PreDisaster Mitigation Grant
Progmm ( PDM ). which is
used to implement mitigation
slrategies and activities.
Examples of eligible a&lt;:tivities that cou ld be supported
hy mitigation dollars include
re lo,·ati on. acquisitions, cle-

National Guard shifts marketing strategies
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Page AS

GALLIA COUNTY
Gallia Academy 44, Marietta 22
Chesapeake 34, River Valley 7
Sciotoville· 35, South Cia Ilia 12

Afternoon
(1:00pm-6:00pm)

CORY

Haggerty tallies
263 total yards as
Gallia Academy
beats Marietta

CAMDEN

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p /

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GALLIPOLIS - After a disappointing loss to Logan last
week, Gallia Academy had a
statement to make .
The Blue Devils did so at the
expense of Marietta.
The two teams combined for
910 yards of total offense
· Friday as the Devil s defeated
the Tigers, 44-22.
With
the win,
Gallia
Academy won a share (with
Logan) of its third straight
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League title. the iirst three-peat
ever for the Blue Devil s.
Marietta (4-6, 3-2 SEOAL)
was also after a share of the
league crown, and didn 't make
things easy for the Blue Devils
(6-4, 4-1 ).
Galli a Academy took a I 0-0
lead at the end of one quarter of
play when Tyler Clagg booted a
31-yard iield goal and Du stin
Winters scored on a two-yard
touchdown run.
Winters finished the game
lea&lt;llilg all rushers with 25 carries for 166 yards and a pair of
TO's. Meanwhile , Jayme s
Haggerty had 102 yards ru shing
on seven carries and caught
eight~ passes for 161 yards and
three
touchdowns
total.
Quarterback Jeff Golden was
12-for- 18 passing for 226 yards
and a pair of TO tosses.
In tl!e second quarter, the
Tigerj. bounced back to regain
the lead.
Marieita's Jason Schob met
up with Ilen Howlett for a 35yard TO, one of many passes
thrown by the se nior quarterback.
Schob threw the ball 33 time s
in the first half and fini shed the
game 25-for-53 in the air for
289 yards.
He struck again a little over
two minutes later on a 30-yard
TD pass to Scott Casto to give
Mart etta a 14- 10 lead.
Casto was Schab's favorite
target on the evening · as 15
passe s went Casto's way for
127 yards. Marietta only ran the
ball II times as a team .
Gallia Academy regained the
lead on the next dri ve following

Please see Devils, Bl

POMEROY - When somebody stops
by your house on Halloween weekend, the
hosts are usuallv nice and have a treat
waiting for the·' isitors Meigs did the
same thing Fnday nig ht. but it wasn't the
kind of treat that Belpre wanted to receive.
A tricky Marauders. defense forced five
turnovers that translated into 15 points en
route to a 21-13 Tri -Valley Conference
Ohio Divi sion victory on CEScnior Night.
at Bob Roberts Field.
MHS (6-4, 2-3) started the fu ll -moon
evening along the river by recognizing
se niors Matt Hol ley. Gera ld Mintz . Zach
Dunham. Mike Higgi ns, BW. Smallwood.
Matt Wandling, Shawn Day. Eric Cullums,
Jarrid Eskew, Eddie Fife. Brandon Grover
and Curtis Varian for their hard work and
dedication with the mijfoon and gold.
Then the team rallied aro und those
upperclassmen one last time and put
together four quarters of football to restore
the Marauders. program back to their winning ways and a tina! rin gi ng of the victory bel l.
Afterwards. Meigs &lt;:oach Mike Chancey
was never happier for a group.
"I cannot emphasize how much thi s
senior class has meant to our football program. They have been a great group of
kids that guided one of the best off-seasons we have ever had. " commented
Chancey. "! think that hard work and extra
effort is a di rec t resu lt in us having success
this season."
A trio of junior., actually got Meigs
going early. with Jared Casey re turning the
opening kick-off 5R ya rd s and Eric
VanMeter intercepting a pass from Eagles.
quarterback Luke Nolan at 2:30.
Althot1gh MHS couldn't do much with
the tic ld position Casey gave them in their
opening dri ve. the hosts turned
VanMcter.s p1ck into points when class-

Please see Meigs, Bl

COACHES REMINDER

V

Gallia Academy's Jaymes Haggerty takes off for a big gain during the Blue Devils' 44-22 win over Marietta Friday
at Memorial Field. With the win. Galli a Academy earns a share of the SEOAL title with Logan. (ian McNemar)

Sma"or around lhlln 1 tllmfl

Buckeyes win windy game

-

Associated Press

•-

~

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i=Dii
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arsitv football coaches are
nnlinded to send in their
season football stats and
recommendations for OVP 25 and
district teams a~ soon as possible.
You may e-mail them to
sports@mydail}1ribune.com, fax
them to 446-3008 or drop them oft'
at out Gallipolis office on Third
Ave. Deadline is 5 p.m., Nov. 10.

College Football

BY RUSTY MILLER

National

Meigs ends
season
with victory
over Belpre
BY BRYAN WALTERS

This circuitry constantly adjusts both high and low
lrequencte.-to help keep loud sounds comfortable
Plus, all this hearing comfort Ia wrapped up tn a
hearing atd so small, no witt notice
wearing ttl

~ Home

Eastern vs. Southern,
late Saturday

bwalters@ mydailytrihune.com

1312 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631
r;r:.,

t

•

BY BuTCH CooPER

.Hearing Aid Center
t:" c=:!

0

and make soft sounds easler to hear.

· TOTAL

$5.00 .............. $250.00
$10.00 .............. $500.00
$20.00 .......... $1,000.00
$50.00 .......... $2,500.00

•

cho I

IVhac;s COUNTY
Meigs 21, Belpre 13

Devils win share of SEOAL
..

Beginning

Rebels fall to Sclotovllle, Page 82
Prep Scoreboard, Page 83
Rldwomen drop final home match, Page 84
NASCAR Weekend, Page 86

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Temperatures will rise
Some potential recruits were from 64 early afternoon to
still drawn mainly to the the high for the day of 67
promise of college aid.
The benefit ranges from full at 2:00pm as they drop
tuition reimbursement to aid of back down to 63 later this
up to $4.500 a year to loan afternoon. Skies will be
repayments.
The Air Guard was slightly mostly sunny with 10 to 15
more successful in recruiting, MPH winds from . the
signing up 93 percent of its southwest turning from the
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
goal of 8,842.
Scott Woodham, spokesman west as the afternoon pro,
Rio Gr!Utde. Ohio 4~674
for the National Guard Bureau, gresses.
said the Air Guard is smaller
and may have benefited from
LET'S GET BACK TO LAW AND ORDER!
not having to recmit as many
On November 2, Elect James D. Taylor Sheriff
new members. It deploys overseas for three months at a time
During my campaign I have talked about managing a budget efficiently.
as opposed to one-year stints
My opponent has only talked about programs unrelated to law enforcement.
for the Anm y Guard.
I have talked about crime and how to stop it.
The Guard is handing out
My
opponent
has only talked about food give-a-ways.
pens. key chains and posters
. beating the American tlag or
I have talked about attacking our drug problem.
with red, white and blue
My opponent only talked about commissary programs.
themes.
We must take back control of the sheriffs office!
Guard Bureau spokesman
Lets get back to law and order!
Lt. Col. Mike Jones said that
while su&lt;:h trinkets may not
I ask for your.support on November 2.
seem like much of an incentive
Vote James D. Taylor Sheriff
to join, they can make potential
rec111its feel appreciated.
Respectfully,
The Guard is al so promot~~v
~.
ing local sold iers as role
James D. Taylor
model s. and members are
appearing at more festivals
and parades.
"That's
marketing,''
Hapgood said. "That about
people saying, 'There's my
neighbor, and I didn't know he
wore a unifonn.m

Reminder
_F,rom
Sa11ta ...

Bl

Inside

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Ohio State's Tyler Everett (6) grabs an interception and retwn s 1t for a to~ch­
down during the first quarter against Penn State Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

COLUMBUS Ted Ginn
returned a punt 67 yards for a
touchdown and Tyler Everett ran
back an interception for another
score to lead Ohio State to a 21 -10
win over Penn State on Saturday.
Two offenses ranked· among the
worst in. the Big Ten struggled all
day, combining for fo ur turnovers.
Neither team could pass in the
gusting winds. with Penn State
'goi ng to the· air for just 69 yards
despite trailing all day and Ohio
State settling for 59 yards with a
keepaway attack for the fina l three
quarters.
Ginn's reiurn and Everett's TO in
the first quarter gave the Buckeyes
(5 -3, 2-3) an almost insurmountable
lead against ·a Penn ·state offense
that was last in the oonference in
scoring and turnover margin.
Penn State (2-6. 0-5) lost it s fifth

game in a row. The Nittanv Lions Buckeve to return twu punt&gt; fo r
lost six consecutive ga mes ]ust last TO, i1i the same ,ca&gt;on and the lirst
since Jeff Graham in 1990.
·
season .
Three
pia!
s
after
th
e
ensuing
. Penn State ran 16 plays in Ohio
State territory in the opening hal f kickoff. Robinson's wide re,·eil·er
(twice as many as the Buckeyes did "-reen in the left ilat \\ "' wide of
on the Nittany Lions' side of the the target and berett ran bet"een
fie ld). had a 13-4 upper hand in lirst two Penn Swte pl aye,rs to pick it off
downs and a. 157-6.1 advantage in and return it ~4 ~ ards un.tnuc.hed fo r
total yards. Yet .the · Buckeyes led the score .
2 1· 7 thanks to two Penn State
Ohio State ran a total of six plays
turnovers, a long kick return hy and netted ju&gt;t I:: yarJ, in the first
Maurice Hall and Ginn\ big punt quarter but ·led 14-6.
return.
The Bu ckeYes chipped in with a
The Lions .took the opening kick- turnover of thei r own midway ·
off and drove to a tirq down at the through the 'econd quan~r when
Ohio State 34, but a play later gu~r;terback Troy Smith was htt
Michael Robi nson's pass in the lrom behind bv Matthew R1ce and
right flat was intercepted by Ashton fumbled, with Derek Wake recoverYouboty, who n;tumed it 35 yards. ing at the Ohio State 41 . It took ju&gt;t
On -their next possession, the ,ix plays for Penn State to lind the
Lions were forced to punt and Ginn end ll)ne. Ton\' Hunt ~etting up his
burned them . The freshman accelcr- own 3-yard s&lt;:ure b' bursting
at~d up the middle and then cut .to through a hole for a ~6- yard gain.
the Ohio State side line for his sec It wa' onlv Penn State\ third
ond 'punt -return touchdown or the offensive touc:hd&lt;lwn in the Big Ten
season. He .became only the 1ifth thi-. s~..~a:-,on.

----. ~------------4-~----~----~~~-------

�•

PageB2

PREP F OOTBALL

Sunday, October 31, 2004
•

Sciotoville 35, South Gallia 12

The OVP

SciotoVille .ruins
Rebels season finale
How They Fared
1. 1ron1on (9-1)
LOST TO COL. DESALES, 17-14
2. Wayne (9-o)
DEF. CHAPMANVILLE, 44·20
3. Wheelersburg (9-1)
DEF, GIN. SHROOER, 33·1 8
4. Williamstown (8-o)
DEF. RITCHIE CoUN1Y, 65-13
5. Huntington (8-1)
DEF. RIVERSIDE, 32·23
6. Frontier (1D-O)
DEF. WEllSVIllE, 40-26
7. Parkersburg South (9-1)
DEF. BROOKE, 28·27
8. Parkersburg (8-2)
OEF. SPRING V ALLEY, 4 9-21

8. Parkersburg Cath. (9-o)
PLAYED WAHAMA, SAT.

10. Sheridan (9-1)

DEF. W EST M uSKINGUM, 3 1- 14

Prep Football
Standings/Results

:rum

ave
~

All
8-2
7-3
3-7
3-7
2-8
2-8

'Chesapeake
5-0
Coal Grove
4-1
Fairland
2-3
Rock Hill
2-3
River Valley
1-4
South Po int
1-4
'Wins OVC title.
Friday's Results
Chesapeake 34, River Valley 7
Coal Grove 41 , Rock Hill 14
Fairland 34, South Point 0

:rum

SEOAL
s.EQ

All
6-4
5-5
4-6
8-2
2-8
1-9

'Gallia Academy
4-1
'Logan
4-1
Marietta
3-2
Jackson
3-2
Warren
1-4
Athens
0-5
• Wins share of SEOAL title
Friday's Results
Gallia Academy 44, Marietta 22
Jackson 28, Athens 14
Logan 62, Warren 15

TVC
Ohio Division

rum

M

' Nelsonville-York
5-0
Vinton County .
4-1
Wellston
3-2
Meigs
2-3
Belpre
1-4
Alexander
0-5
'Wins TVC Ohio title.
Hocking Division

rum

M

All
7-3
8-2
7-3
6-4
4-6
3-7

MERCERVILL E - The Rebels' hopes for
consec uti ve home wins came up shon Friday
in a 35- 12 setbac k to the Sciotoville Ta~1a n s
(6-4) in the season fin ale.
South Galli a ( 1-8) seniors John Stapleton,
Joe Preston, Charlie McGuire. Josh Lyall,
Paul Combs. Jake Whiteman, Dav id Bayless
and Steve Pelfrey may not ha ve fi nished their
gridi ro n careers as they had planned, but
Rebels coach Jus;y Burleson believes these
eight. may have one of the strongest impac ts
·on the program in the upcoming years.
"These guys have always been real good
about doing pretty much anything we have
asked them to do. They stepped it up on the
field, for the team and the program," commented Burleson . "We knew we were going to
be inex perienced and they took these younger
guys under their wings and showed them what

Panthers down Raiders
for third straight OVC title
BY BuTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

CHESAPEAKE - Another year, another
season of Chesapeake rolling through the
Ohio Valley Conference .
The Panthers wrapped up a third straight
OVC title with another perfect league record
in a 34-7 vi ctory over River Valley Friday.
Chri s Edwards led the Raiders (2-8, 1-4
OVC) with 13 carries for 97 yards to lead all
ru shers on the night. Edwards also had the
lone Ri ve r Valley score, a 68-yard tou chdown run with 42 seconds remaining in the
game.
For C hesapeake (8-2, 5-0), Mark Roby
had 57 yards on eight carries . Kersten Harris
had hi s only carry on the evening in the first
qu arter, a 56-yard TD run that ptlt ' Peake on
top 6-0.
That was the only.score of the first quarter.

Devils
from Page B1

Meigs
from Page 81

mate Josh Buzzard opened the
scoring with a six-yard run.
Cardinal
His jaunt and PAT kick gave
the Marauders a 7-0 lead.
Ca!!liDII All
Belpre responded with a
'Wayne
9-0
5-0
seven-play, 66-yard drive that
Herbert Hoover
3-1 4-5
tied th e game following
Point Pleasant
3-2 5-5
Jordan Thornhill' s 22-yard
Winfield
2-2 5-4
run to paydin with 9:09
rem
aining in the half
Sissonville
1-4 3-6
Not to be outdone, the hosts
Poca
0-5 2-8
countered with an impressive
'Wins Cardinal Conference t~le .
eight-play, 68-yard dri ve that
restored the lead back to six
Friday's ResuHs
after
Casey scored from two
Point Pleasant 28, Roane Co. 7
yards out. His team-high 13th
Wayne 44, Chapmanville 20
Westside 24 , Sissonville 14
rushing touchdown this seaSt. Albans 28, Herbert Hoover 14 son came with 4:56 left in tqe
Hurricane 35, Poca 14
second quaner.
Tolsia 20, Winfield 8
The Eagles had a chance to
trim the deficit before halftime, advancing the ball to the
Meigs 12 with 26 seconds
Illm
All
left,
but a timely sack from
Ironton
9-1
Eskew dropped EHS out of
Symmes Valley
8-1 field goal range and assured
Wah am a
7-2
rhe hosts a 13-6 lead at the
3-7 . break.
Oak Hill
Eskew again caused havoc
South Gallla
1-8
oit Belpre' s second drive of
Hannan
0-9 . .the thfrd quarter, recoveri-ng a
Frtday'a ReauHa
fumble at the guest's 24 yard
line. Six plays later, Cullums
Scio1ovllle 35, South Gallia 12
Cots. Q.eSales 17, Ironton 14
found the endzone on a
Wavsrly 53, Oak Hill o
fo urth-and-goal at the two
Syms. Valley 43, Guyan Valley 14 and gave Meigs a 19-6 edge.
Gauley Bridge 12, Hannan tO
C ull ums found VanMeter
.Saturday'• &lt;;~me
with \he conversion pass and
Wahama at Parkersburg Cath, late

rum

it takes to get better each day at thi s level.
They have been role models for the school
and they wi ll deti nitely be lin ked to the progra m, s futu re successes."
A prime example of that re mark coul d be
felt in th e stats.
Nex t year 's returnees combined for 25 1 of
the Rebels 289 scrimmage yards in the contest
and rallied back from a 28-0 halftime deficit
to outscore the visitors in the last 24 JTl inutes.
Cun Waugh led the SGHS ground attack
with 166 yards on 18 carries. while Combs
had a nice show ing in hi s fin ale with three
totes for 32 yards. Bernie Fulks and Jonathan
Well s added 29 and 25 yards, respectively.
Well s also had 41 yards on 4- 10 passing.
Pelfrey hauled in two grabs, including one
for a score, for 25 yards. Bayless had one
catch for six yards.
Ricky Henderson led Sciotoville and all
ru shers with 213 yards on 15 carries, while
Arthur Henderson added another 41 yards on
nine tries in the win.

Chesapeake 34, River Valley 7

the Tiger's second score.
.
On an 11 -play drive highlighted by a pair
of Marietta I 0-yard penalties and a 19-yard
run by Winters, Justin Saunders punched it in
All
on
second and goal from the one to make it a
9-1
17- 14 game with 4: 16 left in the half.
6-3
Marietta once again had the ball inside
Devil territory, but a Schab pass' was picked
4-6
3-7 . off. by Saunders in the endzone, placing the
ball on the 20. ·
2-8
On the Devils' first play following the
2-7
interception, Jaymes Haggerty took hi s fir st
snap at quarterback and broke loose off the

' Trimble
5-0
Eastern
3-1
Waterford
3-2
Federal Hocking
2-3
Miller
1-4
Southern
0-4
' Wins TVC Hocking title.
Friday's Results
Meigs 21 , Belpre 13
Nelsonville-York 4 7, Alexander 12
Vinton County 14, Wellston 7
Waterford 7, Federai'Hocking 6
Trimble 47, Miller 13
Saturday's Game
Southern at Eastern, late

In the second quarter,
the Panthers made up for
it with a I 0-yard TO run
by John Warner, a twoyard scoring run by
Jackson Caynor and a ISyard TD pass from Caleb
McComas to Dustin ·
O ' Brien. With
that,
Chesapeake led 26-0 at
halftime
and
never

I

PREP 8oXSCORES
(

Ohio High School Football Score•

Frtdey 'e ReaUHI

Gallla Academy 44,
Marietta 22

1 Josh Sizemore 2·(·2).
M-Jared Casey 21-96, Josh
Buzzard 6-22. David Poole 5· 1o.
Shawn Day 1·6, Eric Cullums 10-5.

Scoring summary

Passing: 8-Luke Nolan 6-15-2-11 7.
M- Erle Cullums 5-11 -1-57.

Marlena
0 14 0 6 - 22
Gallia Acad. 10 14 13 7- 44
First Quarter
GA- Tyler Clagg 31 FG. 9:40.
•
GA- Dustin Winters 2 run (Clagg
kick) 2:40.
Second Quarter
M- Ben Howlett 35 pass from Jason
Schab (Justin Estes kick) 10:48.
M-Scon Casto 30 pass from Schab
(Estes kick) 6:06.
GA-Justin Saunders 1 run (Clagg
kick) 4:16.
GA-Jaymes Haggerty 80 run
(Clagg kick) 2:43.
Third Quarter
GA-Haggerty 24 pass from Jeff
Golden (Clagg kick) 4:06.
GA-Winters 12 run (kick failed)
3:39.
Fourth Quarter
GA-Haggeny 8 pass !rom Golden
(Clagg kick) 6:51.
M-Dana Casto 44 pass from
Michael Groom (Groom run ) 1:21.
GA
20
20
11 -56 43·261
347 .
226
507
403
28-58-4 12-16·0
2-1
1-1
12-110
7-60
4-33.5 3·35.3

M

First Downs
Rushes-yards

Passing yards
Total yards

County 0 7 0 0
Pleasant
7 14 7 0

Roan~

* Start Countlnal*

ElECTION DAY' DINNER
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST CHURCH
Old Portland Road and Lovitt Road.
Behind the Sutton Township Garage.

Starting at 10:00 am to ??

16::~e::ffi:~ :;~:::re Mohawk
Avo~ l~ 31, Amherst-Steele 7

7

Scoring summary
First Quarter
PP - Justin Smith 6 pass !rom James
Casto (Justin Lee kick) 2:58
Second Quarter .
RC - Eddie Williams 7 pass from
Evan Kendall (Bryan Bush kick)
11:53
PP - Nathan Moore 1 run (Lee Kick)
7:14
PP - Moore 50 run (Lee kick) 2:48
Third Quarter
pp - Newton Mattox 63 interception
return (Lee kick) :36
First Downs
Rushes· yards

Paulng: RC- Evan Kendall1 2·272 181, Justin Simmons 0·1-1 0.
PP - James Casto 2·2·0 17.
Receiving: RC- Derek Hardman 565, Cruise Lawson 3-65, Eddie
Will iams 3· 18. Dustin Coon 1·1 3.
PP -

Nathan Moore 1-11 , Justin .

Gauley Bridge 12,
Hannan 10

Gauley Bridge 6 0 0. 6
Tolsia
o 10 o o

sports@mydailytnbune.com

rushers with 96 yards on 21
totes, and eclipsed the 1,000
yard plateau ( I ,076) for the
season in the win. Cullums
added 57 yards in the air on 511 passing and finished the
season with 789 yards.
VanMeter hauled in three
catches for 42 yards.
Thornhill paced the Eagles,
running game with 77 yards
on 13 carri es, while the
receiving corps was headed
by Ale x Earley 's 100 yards on
four grabs. Nolan had 117
yards on 6-15 passing.
Meigs fini shed the season
with a plus- 14 turnover ratio,
and outgained their opponents 3.155-2,729 in total
offe nse. They also outscored
opponents 245-211 on the
year.

Apple Creek Waynedale 30, Jeromesville
Hillsdale 14
Arcanum 40, New Pans National Trait 0
Ashland 24, Lexington 7
Ashland Crestv1ew 22 , New London 13
AshtabtJia Lakeside 21. Geneva 10

28

E-mail us your local sr.orts

concluded the Marauder scoring with a 21 -6 1ead with 4:2 1
left.
Thornhill pulled the Eag les
within eight after a 68-yard
· punt return for a score at the
II :00 mark of the fin al frame,
then Belpre came up with a
fumble recove ry on the ensuing kickoff.
Fife's interception two
plays late r started ah
exchange· of
turnovers
throughout the remainder of
the game that ultimately
worked itself to Meigs fa vor.
The Marauders also ha d
fi ve turnovers on the evenin g
and were outgained 222- 196
in total offense, but gained 46
yards in penal ties from th~
visitors.
Casey led Meigs and all

Anna 28, Bethel 0
Ansonia ~4. Bradfo rd 13

Roane County 7

Smith 1·6.
Meigs 21, Belpre 13
Belpre
0 7 0 6- 13
Meigs
7 6 6 o - 21

Alliance 35, N1les 13
Amanda·Ciearc reek 35, Cots. Hamilton
"!Wp. 6

·Point Pleasant 28,

pp
RC
16
16
Comp-att-int
25-11 6 47-233
Fumbles-lost
181
17
Passing yards
Penalties-yards
297
Total yards
250
Punts-avg.
12-28-3 2-2·0
Comp -att-int
,·1
0-0
Fu mbles-lost
Individual Statistics
2-12
Penalties-yards
5-25
Rushing: M- Tom Wire 7-30, Jason Punls-avg .
3-39
1·25
Schab 3-27, Jeremy Antlll1 (-1).
GA-Dustin Winters 25-166, Jaymes
Individual Statlstlca
Haggerty 7-102, Justin Saunders 4- Rushing:
RC-Andrew Robe rtson
15, Kyle Burnett 4-1, Jeff Golden 3(18·91 , Jason Jackson 9·63, Heath
3).
Mullins 3·30.
PPNath an Moore 25· t 16, Newton
Passing: M-Jason Schab 25-53·3Mattox 16-70, Brandon Warner 9-35,
266, Michael Groom 3-5·1-61 .
James Casto 8-1 2.
. GA-Jeff Golden 12·18·0·226.

Receiving: M-Scott Casto 15-127.
Derek Crandall 4·53, Bon Howlett 2·
47, B.J.Isner 3·46; Dana Costa 1-44,
Justin Estes 2·21 , Sam Tuten 1,9,
GA-Jaymas Haggerty 6-161 , Tyler
Clagg 2-52, Shawn Thompson 1-7,
Kyle Burnett 1·6.

Akr. Buchtel 42, Akr. Garfield 21
Akr. Ellet 37. Akr. N. 20
Akr. Manchester 34. Akr. Covent!)' 14

Receiving: 8-Aiex Ea rley 4·1 00,
Jordan Thornhill 1-4, Brandon Smith
1-3.
M -Er~ c
VanM eter 3-42, Josh
Buzzard 1-14, Jared Casey 1-1 .

P

Danny Coburn has re centl y publi shed lette rs in several
Southern Ohio newspapers that had so man y mi struths that
I felt I should respond.
I have children and grandchildren li ving in Southern Ohio
and I do not want them subjec ted to lies ami right wing
propaganda.
First, on the subject of abonion. In 1973's landmark case of
Roe v s. Wade, fi ve Republi can justices voted to legal ize
abortton. Yes, Mr. Coburn, you can thank the Repuhlican party
for legalized abortion.
Secondly, John Kerry and John Edwards have always been
opposed to gay marriage. This is a matter that has been left up
to the states and should remain that way.
Thirdly, in our country all of our diverse re li gions are a
mtnonty. Our foundmg fathers establi shed a separation of
church and state in our Constitution. This was done to ensure
that no one religion could.be,ome dominam.
Unfortunately many of today 's so -ca ll ed rel igious
orgamz atwns are nothin g more than political ac ti on
committees.

Speaking of our Constitution, the ri ght wing in thi s country
have placed some of our most fundamental rights in jeopardy.
Read the Patriot Act and you will see how Attorney General
Ashcroft has practically eliminated our Fourth Amendment
rights.
·
On the subject of stem cell research, I asked myself 'What
w~uld Jesus do?' Today perfectly healthy stem cells are just
bemg thrown away. We should be using these healthy stem
cells and turning to the miracle of science in finding cures for
diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
I do not approve of politicians who lie about war, religion and
the economy or politicians who give tax breaks to the rich and
take health care from the poor. Politicians who out source th ree
million jobs for the benefit of their cronies do not deserve our
support.
We mu st all·· ·remember that . Je sus was a loving,
compassionate liberal . It was the right wing that cruci fied him
for his beliefs. Let us all strive to be less judgmental and
critical, but more forgi ving of our fellow man.
Stan Perry
,
3000 Floyd Street
Ironton, Ohio 41102
606-324-6499

•

il&gt;unbap trtmrs -il&gt;rntmrl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Prep Scoreboard

•

t2
Scoring summery
10
Fl111t Quarter
.M- Josh Buzzard 6 run (Buzzard
Scoring summary
kick) :24.
Firat Quarter
Second Quarter
GB--61 pass (kick failed) 4:29.
8- Jordan Thornhill 22 run (kick
Second Quarter
good)
9:09.
H-Safety
4:32 .
looked back.
M- Jared Casey 2 run (kick blocked) H-Adam Lester 3 run (l ester run)
Despite the lopsided score , the Panthers 4:56.
2:32.
were held to just a little over 203 yards of
Third Quarter
Fourth Quarter
total offense, not that much more than River M- Eric Cullums 2 run (Cullums GB-3 run (pass la1led) 7 18.
pass to Buzzard) 4:21 .
Valley's 162 yards.
Fourth Quarter
GB
H
Leading the Raider defen se was Kyle 8- Thornhill
68 punt return (kick First Downs
8
14
Tipton, Justin Halfhill and Derrick Smith failed) 11 :00.
Rushes-yards 31·52 52·200
with six tac kl es each. Pete Saunders also had
Passing yards
11 1
25
Total yards
B
t63
225
fi ve tackles and a sack and Ju stin Hudnell
M
First Downs
Comp-att-1nt
10
t3
2·6-1 1·6· t
recorded tw o sacks.
Rushes-yards
29-105 43-139 Fumbles-lost
3·3
2·1
Passing yards
117
Penalties-yards 11-80
57
9-60
Total yaf\ls
222
196
Comp-an-int
6-15-2 5-11 -1
Individual Statistics
Fumbles-lost
5-3
left side of the field fo l an 80-yard TO run.
5-2
Rushing: '1-1- Adam Lester 17·88,
5-40
Alan Dye 19-60. Gilbert Smith 6-16,
The Ti gers tried to cut into that lead before Penalties-yards 7-86
1-24.0 3-25.3
Billy Townson 8-15, Steven Lambert
halftime as th e Tigers" passing game put the Punts-avg.
1·4, Ben Midkiff 1·(·3).
ball on the Gallia 23.
Individual SteUstlcs
Schob, though, was again intercepted, this Rushing: B-Jordan Thornhill13-77, Passing : H- Adam Lester 1-2-1-25.
time by freshman Chri s McCoy that ended Man Alloway 6-26, Alex Earley 7-1 5, Alan Dye 0-4·0·0.
Dustin Adams 1-7, Luke Nolan 4-5,
another threat and helped the Devils take a Mike
Waderker 1·2, Shane Colvin 1· Receiving: H- Aian Dye 1·25
24-14 lead into the break .
In the third quarter. a 24-yard TD pass
'
from Golden to Haggerty and a 12-yard scornews:
ing run by Winters put the game away.
·
Gallia Academy will likely miss out on its
sixth-straight playoff appearance, probably
finishin g no better than ninth in Di vision Ill,
Region II . Only th e· top eight teams in each
region qualify for the playoffs.
Election Issues Dictated
The ofticial pairings will be announced
later today.
by Faith and Truth

Others

I

'

WALTERS
bwalters@ mydai lytribune.com
BY BRYAN

Sunday, October 31, 2004

'

7
Crest11ne 47. Lucas 26
Crooksville 41 , McConnelsville Morgan 6
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 62, Vermilion 7
Cuyahoga Fall s Walsh Jesuit 21. Akr. St.
ViflCent-St Mary 6
Cuyahoga Hts. 42 , Independence 19
Day. Carrol11 3, Springboro 7
Day. Jefferson 32, Day Christian 21
Day. Meadowdale 20, Day. Dunbar 16
Defiance 31 , Wapakoneta 14
DeGraff Riverside 33, Milford Center
Fairbanks 14
Della 42, Montpelier 15
Dublin Coffman 32. Rey noldsburg 20
Dublin Scioto 22, Lewis Center Olentangy
17
E. Palestine 4i , Sebring McKinley B
Eastl ake N. 31, Painesville R1vers lde 20
Eaton 37, W. Milton Milton-Union 22
Elyria Sr. 42, Medina 14
Fa1rborn 42, Lebanon 32
Fa1 rf ield 33, Gin. Win ton Woods 19
Findlay 24, Napoleon 7
Findlay Liberty·Bentoll 35. Dola Hardin
North ern 0
Fostoria 35, Shelby 9
Franklort Adena 49, Bainbridge Paint
Valley 20
Franklin Furnace Green 34, Harts (W.Va.)·

Barberton 24, Stow 7
Barneslo'ille 12, Belmont Un1on Local 0
Batavia 40, Williamsburg 0
Beachwood 28, Brookly n 6
Bellefontaine 28, New Ca rlisle Tecumseh
14
Bellelontaine Benjamin Logan 35, Spring
NW 7
Bellevue 52. Norwalk 6
Bellville Clear Fork 28. .._Miller~burg W.
Holmes 7
BelOit W. Branch 55, Alliance Marlington
13
Berea 38, Middleburg Hts. Midpark 14
Bl oomdale Elmwood
19,
Elmore
Woodmore 16
Bluffton 27, Columbus Grove 7
Bowling Green 7, Maumee 6
Brecksville 13. N. Royalton 12
Brookville 21, Waynesvi lle o
Bucyrus Wynford 39, Bucyrus 12
Burton Berkshire 24, Kirtland 7
Can. Cent. Cath. 14, Louisv1lle AQUIIlas 7
Can. GlenOak 24, Massillon Perry 17
Canal J\!lton NW 55, Akr. Spring. 6
Canal Winchester 35, Bloom-Carroll 7
Canfield 7, E. liverpool 0
Carey 21 , Fostoria St. Wendelin 8
Carlisle 25, Middletown Madison 13
Carrollton 26. Can. S. 13
Castalia Margarena t4 , Port Clinton 13
Centerville 35, Beavercreek 20
Chagrin Falls 52. Wickliffe 20
Chagrin Falls Kenston 10. Mayfield 0
Chester1and W. Geauga 40. Orange 0
Chillicothe Zane Trace 54, Chillicothe SE

Frederidl.town 35, Loudonville 32
Gallipolis Galtia 44 , Mariana 22
Garfield Hts. S6, Bedford 28
Garfield Hts. Tri nity 40, Bedford Chanel 30
Garrensville Garfield 21 , Windham 14
Gates Mills Hawken 40 , Newbury 0
Genoa 33, Gibsonburg 21
Germantown Valley View 49, Day.
Oakwood 27
Glouster Trimble 47. COrning M1ller 1~.
Graft on Midview 54, Oberlin 0
' Grand view 29, Summit Station Licking Hts.
7
Granville 20. Whitehall-Yearling 13
Green 41 , Norton 0
Gree llsburg Green 41, Norton 0
Green wich S. Cent. 34 . Ashland Mapletoll
0
Grove City 48, Westerville Cent. 34
Hamilton Ross 42, Finneytown 7
Hamler Patnck Henry 21 , Wauseon 6
Ha rrison 22, Cin. Sycamore 18
Heath 38, Gahanna Cols. Academy 0
Hicksville 32 , Haviland Wayne Trace 19
Hilliard Davidson 30. Thomas Worth ington

13

0

Cin . Aiken 27, Cin. Madeira 21, 20T
Cin. Christian Academy 49, Sidney
Lehman 28
Cin . Colerain 35. Cin. La Salle 7
Gin . Elder 49. Gin. Oak Hills 19
Cin. Glen Este 26, Gin. Turpin 19
Cin. Mariemont 41, Cin. Hughes 34
Gin. McNicholas 31, Gin . Purce ll Marian 13
Gin. Milford 42 . Cin. Walnut Hills 14
Gin. Moe ller 37 , Cin . Princeton 22
Gin. St. Xavier 42. Hamilton 6
Cin. Withrow 42 , C1n. Taf122
Cin. Wyoming 51. C1n. Harmony 8
Circleville 14, Ashville Teays Valley 0
Circleville- Logan Elm 41 , Lancas ter
Fairfield Union 40
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 21, Lees Creek
E . Clinton 14
Clayton Northmont 74. Spring . N. 15
Cle. Glenville 55 , Cte. John Marshall 7
Cle. Lincoln-West1 3, Cle East Tech 12
Cle. S. 30 . Cle. E. 6
Clyde 22 . Sandusky Sl. Mary 21
Coldwater 14. Delphos St. John's 7
Cols. Beechcrolt 40. Cots. Northland 0
Cols. Brookhaven 35, Cols. Mitilin 0
Cots. De Sales 17, Ironton 14
Cots. Eastmoor 41, Cols. Africe ntric 14
Cots. Hartley 45, Cols. Ready 21
Cots. linden 20, Cols. E. 6
Cols. Manon-Franklin 21. Cots. S 0
Cols. W. 39. Cols. Br1ggs 7
Cols. Whetstone 48. Cots Centennial 0
Copley 26, Medina Highland 14
Cortl afJd Lakeview 25. Champion 6
.
Covington 24. Le'Nisburg Tri-County North

Hillsboro 46, Greenfie ld McClain 12
Hubbard 54 . Broo kfield 0
Hullting Va lley University SChool 20 .
Medina Buckeye 14
Huron 38, Sandusky Perkins 21
Jackson 28, Athe ns 14
Jackson-Milt on 12. McDonald 7&lt;
Jefferson Area 56, Conneaut 33
Johns town Northridge 18, JohnstownMonroe 6
Kent Roosevelt 21 , Cuyahoga Falls 20
Kettering Alter 21 , Chaminade-Julienne
14. OT
Kenering Fairmont 36. Wayne 30
Lafayette Allen E. 21, Ada 7
Lakewood 32, Lorain Admiral King 20
Lancaster 69, Hilliard Darby 68, SOT
Leetonia 34, Hanoverton United 12
Utterty 38, Girard 23
Utterty Cen ter 47. Archbold 18
lima Bath 25, Van Wert 12
Lima Shawnee 28, Elida 6
lisbon Beaver 69, Richmond Edison 19
Logan 62. Vincent Warren 15
London Madison Pla1 ns 22. London 7
LOUISVille 28 , Minerva 0
Lucasville Va lley 7 , Minford 0
Madison 46, Cle. Co llinwood 7
Mantua Crestwood 21, Atwater Waterloo
19
Maple Hts. 37, Loratn Southview 12
Marion Elgin 33, Richwood N. Un1on 0
Marion Harding 31 , Li ma Sr. 0
Marion Pleasant 35, Cardington-Lincoln
27
Martins Ferry 21, Bellaire 7

8

Marysv11ie 34, Delaware 21
Massillon Jackson 34, N Can Hoover 0
MassillOn Tuslaw 17, Navarre Fairless 13
McArthu r Vinton County 14, Wellston 7
Mechanicsburg 42, Cedarville 0
Mentor 21, Euclid 14
Miamisburg 27. Day. Stebbins 7
Middletown Fenw1ck 41, Franklin 6
Mineral Ridge 28, Bertin Cent er 'Nestern
ReseNe 14
Minster 35, lima Cent. Cath . 6
Mogadore Field 7. Mogadore 6
Monroev1lle 63, Plymouth 8
Morral R1dgedale 46, Galion Northmor 0
MI. Gilead 19, Caledonia R1verValley 12
MI. Healthy 54, Batavia Amelia 6
Mt. Orab Western Brown 18, Bethel-Tate

13
N. Bend Taylor 36, Cin. Summit Country
DayO
N. Lewisburg Triad 40. Jamestown
Greenev1ew 20
N. L1ma S. Range 34, New Mtddletown
Spring 10
N. Olmsted 31. Rocky R1ver 0
Nelsonville-York 47, Al ttany Ale~ a nder 12
New Albany 17, Cols. Be ~ ley 3
New Brem en 42, Maria Ste1n Marion Local

0
New Concord John Glenn 27, Zanesville
Maysv1lle 6
New Lebanon D1xte 51, Day Northridge 21
New Lexington 7, Philo 0
New Matamoras Frontier 40. Wellsville 26
New Philadelphia 21. Dover 20, OT
New Richmond 27, Blanchester 21, OT
New Washington Budoieye Cent 34. Mt.
Blanchard Riverdale 0
Newa rk 14, Gahann a 9
Newa rk Cath. 35, Millerspo rt 6
Newark Lick ing Va lley 55, Hebron
Lakewood 6
NelrV!on Falls 43, Leavittsburg LaBrae 12
Norwallc. St. Paul 30, Col lins Western
AeseN e 13
Oak Harbor 28. Milan Edi son 20
Oberlin Firelands 30. LaGrange Keystone

27
Old Washington Buckeye Trail 21. Belmont
Ft. Frye 6
Olentangy liberty 33, Cols. Fran klin Hts. 6
Olmsted Falls 35. Fairv1ew Park Fairview 6
Ontario 35, N. Robinson Col. Crawford 7
Oregon Clay 24. Tol. Bowsher 0
Orwell Grand Valley 27, Middlefiel d
Cardinal 21, OT
PainesVill e Harvey 22. Ashtabula
Edgewood 13
Pandora-Gilboa 42, Cary-Rawson 21
Parma Valley Forge 28, Parma Sr. 7
PembeNille Eastwood SO, Millbury Lake 13
Perry 25, Aurora 14
Pickerington Cent. 45. Chi W
1cothe 35
Pickerington N. 14, Pataskala Watk1ns
Memorial S
Piketon 30, Chillicothe Unioto 12
Piqua 27, Greenllilte 7
Plain City Jonathan Alder 14, Cols.
Crusaders 6
Poland 35, Struthers 13
Pomeroy Meigs 21 , Belpre 13
Portsmouth 41 , Cols. St. Charles 14
Portsmouth Notr e Dame 21 . Scioto
McDermott NW 20
Ravenna 20. Hudson 7
Ravenna SE 22 , Peninsula Woodridge 0
Richfi eld Revere 36, Wadsworth 13
Ridgeway Ridgemont 18. Lima Perry 0
Rocky River Lutheran W 35, Richmond
Hts. 27
Rootstown 48. Streetsboro 13
Rossford 21 . Hollalld Spring. 17
Salem 44, Campbell Memorial 6
Sandusky 21 . Fremont Ross 12
Sarahsvi ll e Shenandoah 33. Caldwell 12
Sherwood Fairview 35, Holgate 8
Solon 50, Macedonia Nordon 1a 31
Sparta Highland 42, Delaware Buckeye
Vall ey 25

Spencerville 19, Delphos JeHerson 13. OT
Spnng. Cath Cent. 40, S Charleston SE 13
Spr1ng Kenton Ridge 50 Spr1ng Greenon

0
Spring S 38 , Xenia 29
Spring Shawnee 27. Lew1stown Indian
Lake 7
St. Berna rd Roger Bacon 35, Ctn NW 8
St. Cl airsv1tle 33, Cad1z Hamson Cent 6
St . Henry 34, Ft RecoveryQ
St. Marys Memorial35, Celtna 14
St. Pans Graham 42, Casstown Mtaml E

t3

Steubenville t8, Youngs Rayen 8
Strongsville 31 , Brunswick 13
Sugar Grove Berne Union 28. Baltimore
Liberty Union 0
Sugarcreek Ga raway 26, StrasburgFranklin 0
Sullwan Black River 56. Swanton 8
Sunbury Big Walnut 28, Dub11n Jerome 0
Syhiama Northv1ew 31 . Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne 6
Sylvania Southview 36, Perrysburg 14
Tallmadge 43, Lod1 Cloverleaf 22
Thompson Ledgemont 7 Fa1r"port Harbor
Harding 2
Thornville Shendan 31 . Zanesville W.
Muskingum 14
Tiffin Cotumb1an 49. Upper Sandu sky 21
Tol. Cent. Cath. 7, Tol. St. Franc1s 6
Tal. Northwood 20 , Oregon Stntch 13
Tal. Ottawa Hills 42, To! Chrislian 31
Tol. Star! 33 Tol Scott 25
Tol. Waite 14. Tol. Rogers 7
Tol. Whitmer 8. Tol St. John's 7
Tontogany Otsego 42. Kansas Lakota 7
Toronto 20, Lowellville 0
Trenton Edgewood 29, OxlordTalawanda 7
Troy 49, Trotwood-Madison 6
Troy Chnslian 41, Yel low Spr1ngs 14
Twinsburg Chamberlin 26, Lyndhurst Brush
8
Union City Mississinawn Valley 36, W
Alexandna Twin ValleyS. 0
Uniontown LaKe 56. Call . T1mke'l 0
Upper Arlington 47. Groveport 14
Urbana 28, Tipp C1tyTippecan oe 18
Uttca 35 . Cenierburg 27

Vandalia Butler 27 , Sidney 0
VersaTIIes 48, Rocktoru Parkway 2
Vferlna Mathews 14, Andover Pymatun1ng
Valley 8
.W CarroUton 42, Monroe 28
W Chester Lakota W 38, C1n Anderson 2 1
W Jefferson 40, Hamtlton New M1ami 8
W.
Lafayette
Ridge wood
55,
Newcomerstown 14
W. L1berty-Salem 42 . Spring NE 0
Warren Harding 49, Akr. Hoban 35
Warren JFK 21 , Warren Howland 20
Warsaw AtVer V1ew 13, Dresden Tr1-VaMey
7
Washington C H. M1am1 Trace 42,
Washington C.H 6
Waterford 7, Stowart Federal Hock1ng 6
Wellington 21 , Lorain Clearv1ew 7
Westerville N. 23. Galloway Westlalld 13
Westervtlle S 28 , Grove C1ty Cent
Cross1ng 0
Westlake 10. Bay V1llage Bay 7
Wheelersburg 33. C•n Shrader 18
Willard 49, Gahan 8
w·i lhamsport Westfall 33. ChtlliCOthe
Hunnngton Ros s 12
Will ough by S 32. Chardon 13
W1lm1ngton 34 Zaneslo'ille 7
Woodsl1eld Monroe Cent. 14, Beaflsv1lle 6
Wooster 21. Orrville 20
Worth•ngton K1lbourne 56, Mt Vernon 21
Youngs Aus tmtown-F1tch 31 . Youngs.
Boardman 6
Youngs. Mooney 14, Cols. Watterson 10
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 21. E Can 19
W.Va. high school scores
Friday's Res ults

Allegany, Md 30. Berkeley Spr1ngs 20
Bluef1eld 34, James Monroe 0
Braxton County 12. Calhoun County 8
Bnd geport 20. Fa1rrnont SeniOf" 7
Buckhannon-Upshur at Preston . ppd !II
Sal
Cabell Midland 28 , Woodrow Wilson 12
Cameron 8, Bndgeport . Ohi o 6
Clay -Ballelle 28 , Notre Dame 22
Fayetteville 8. Greenbrier West 6
Franklin Furnace Green. Ohio 34. Harts 8

Gauley Bndge 12 , Hannan 10
•
George w ashtngtoo 21 South CharlesiOr

20
GUmer County 30 Hamltn 1 S
Hampshtre 41 , Hedgesville 0
Huntrngton 32 Rrverslde 23
Hurricane 35 Poca 14
Keyser 20, FranKfort 13
liberty Hamson 8. Philip Bartx&gt;ur 6
L1ncoln 35 , Gratton 28
Magnolia 9. Oak Glen 6
Man 30, Gilbert 20
Martinsburg 42 Musselman 0
Matewan 21 BuffalO 8
Midland Tra1l 7, Valley Fayene 6
Moorefie~ 42 , Pendleton County12
Morgantown 38 . Umvers1ty 3
Mount Hope 34 , Meadow Bridge 21
Mount Vie-N 28 , Oak HiltS
NICholas County 41 , Summers County 6 :
Nttro 35, Greenbner East 7
North Manon 26. Elktns 13
Parkersburg 49. Spnng Valley 21
Parkersburg South 28. Brooke 27
Petersburg· 32. Tucker County 20
Pocahontas County 43, P~eV1ew 12
Po1nt P!easanr 28. Roane County 7
Ravenswood 21 A1p1ey 19
Robert C Byrd 45 LewiS County 0
Shady Spnng 14 L100rty Raletgh 0
Sherman 28, Scon 8
South Hamson 39 R1chwood 6
St Albans 28. Herber! Hoover 14
St Marys 4 1 Doddr1dge Courny 12
Symmes Valley, Ohto 43. Guyan Valley 14
Tolsia 20, Winfield 8
TugVal ley41 . Burch 14
Tygarts Valley 29 Hundred 20
Valley Wetzel 27 Paden C1ty 18
Wayne 44 . Chapmanville 20
Webster County 28. Clay County 18
Werr 43, Buckeye Loca l. Oh ro 6
Weststde 24. S1ssonvtlle 14
WheellllQ Central 35. L1ns1y 20
Wheeling Park 24. Johll MarShall 14
Williamson 30. Duval 6
Williamsto·.vn 65 . Rnchle County 13
Wyom1ng East 24 llldependence 0

Meigs County Voters, I urge ''YOU"
to cast your votes for a better qualified
candidate for County Treasurer than the
current incumbent treasurer.
I, John Fisher, Jr. , am that candidate.
A candidate for the tax paying property owners, which bears th e burd en of
our County and School financing.
• Our county employees clerical workers deserve to be better paid.
• When you go the poll and vote, think about what your elected official s have
done for you .
• While taxpayers of Meigs County struggle, some of our !!lected officials are
"Double Dipping". I will be an official that gives back to Meigs County.

x Elect John Fisher, Jr.

Meigs County Treasurer
Patd for by th e cdndlddle

9u9 SHe,'d ~:
, Be
Sure
VOTE I

To

-- uemocrats &amp;

Republicans ...
&amp;&gt;th WIN with our
~ .PROGRAM CAR SAVINGS!..,

.

(3) 2004 Chevy Cavaliers
(2) 2004 Olds Aleros
(2) 2004 Pontiac Grand Ams
(4) 2004 Pontiac Grand Prixs
(4) 2004 LeSabres (2 Limiteds)
(1) 2004 Buick Park Avenue
(1) 2004 Pontiac. &amp;mnueville
(4) 2004 Chevy Oassics
(3) 2004 Buick Rendezvous
(2) 2004 Buick Raniers
(2) 2003 Buick Regals ·
(2) 2002 Chevy Trailblazer 4X
(2) 2002 Pontiac Grand Am GTs
(3) 2001 Cadillacs
(3) 2002 GMC Sonomas (2-4x4's

."-

Fred Deel, candidate
for Gallia County
Commissioner

Shirley Allbright Doss, Gallia County Sheriff
David Martin, seeks
candidate for Gallia
County Commissioner re-election.

Mary Bea McCalla,
candidate for Gallia
County Recorder

Philip M. Roberts II,
candidate for 87th
District.S.tate.llim~

Representative

What do I need to know if I am voting by punch card? Do not allow anyone to trick you out of voting !
Rcmembn Flo rida' We CJn't be dcf&lt;Jicd by h; nging chads. To call

[n .\ 1ardand in !002. Jn J.nonymous :source dlSi rib lHI:'d li tc r ~t un.·

atlt'!ll) llllt~ w ~uppit'~~ the H)\t' in poor ar~as . The lit t'rJ.ture narne.,l
your vorr when us ing a punch card. r·r m(·mbcr these three tips:
Jn itH.\•Ir~o:\.1 d.tt~ lnr l:.lcnion Day and fa lsd ~ wlJ pc-oplt· th;a 1h"cv
t Double-c heck rhar you arc punching rhc right hole. If you
make a· inistake , .vou ca n alway.o; ask for J new h.1llor. llP rn rhrcc LouiJ not \'(HC if rh cy ha d outstanding parking tickcu. rent p.tymt·nt' tlr w.trrJn£!&gt; . "!hi.'. is a lie! Do nollet anyone trJ ck mu out nl
1i mes.
_mur rt~h r !0 \t.Hc:
2. Punch through your ballot co mp letdy.

3. If requ ired, don 't forget to sign your bal lo t.

It's as easy as 1-2-3!

If you are denied the right to vote,
call Ga ll ia County Democratic
Headqua rters at

446-9884

�Pa~e

B4 • i»nnll&lt;w i!:nnr!i -i;lrnhnrl

2

EASTERN CONFERINCE
New York Knicks
]9-43 • Et1m1nated 4·0
bv New Jersey m f1rst
round ot playoffs

0

5

N

B

A

P

R

E

E

V

W

Tham~s· old spot at power forward.

~&gt;;.:~

·Success depends on
whPiher Allen Iverson

can make a successful
sw1tC~l from shoot1ng guard to point
guard. a tncky proposrt1on for a player
who hasn't played that positiOn s1nce
h1:-; rookiE' season. F Corliss
W1lllan:son rs an upgrade over Oernck

Minnesota nmberwolvea
58-24 • eliminated 4·2 in
second round by Los

-~

Wolves in the offseason ,

except the moods of Sam Cassell and
Latrell Sprewell going south because of
their lack of contract extensions.lrey're
of reigning MVP Kevin G_arnett's dominance.

Utah Jazz
42-40 • missed playoffs
Made two major up·
grades along the
front line, getting a
young inside-outside

18

The NBA's newest member, the Charlotte Bobcats, will tip off its inaugural
season as part of the Eastern Conference while the New Orleans Hornets will
move from the East to the West Each conference will have a total of 15 teams:

,

threat in FMehmet Okur to replace
CGreg Ostertag, and an Olympian
in F Carlos Boozer who will become the franchise's next stalwart
at power forward.

three divisions of five teams .

.

Denver Nuggets
43-39 • eliminated

.

II R,tef Ldfrentz IS able
to recover atter knee surgery caused
~"wn to rn1ss a maJOrity of last season.
the Cei!ICS should at least contend for
a 500 reco rd . Paul Pierce remains
on(l of th e leagues best shooting

4· 1 by Minnesota

in f1rst round

Add1ng FKenyon
Martin without
having to trade away Nene or
Marcus Camby gave the Nug·
gets one of the deeper front lines
in the West. Shooting guard is
the weakest link.

~lLmrds

Toronto Raptors
33-49 • mssed playoffs

Portland Trail Blazers

Until !hey f•qure out a

long-rerm solut1on to the
quosliQI' d whether
Vn1ce Cdrter w1ll be part
ot the teams fu ture 1t's diff1cult to see
th1s trancll1Se movrng forNard. G Rafer
Alston IS an upgrade over Alv1n
W1ll ams. ·.vhose career 1t appears will
be cut short by a knee InJury

41-41 •m issed

Western
Conference 1!!1
Eastern
Conference •

playoHs
weren' t able to find

.,'I

a taker for Shareef
Abdur-Rahim , who
has been unhappy with Portland ever
since arriving along with Thea Ratliff
last February in a mrdseason trade
Look for a big shakeup by midseason
if the Blazers start poorly, with everyone except Zach Randolph ex-

Old faces, new places

New Jersey Nets
a7-35 • el m~nated 4-3

Some of the offseason's biggest deals:
Shaqutlle
Traey McGrady Kenyon
O'Neal
from Orlando to
Martin from

by Dt;trolt 1n conference
sem1f1na1s

from Lakers to
Miami fOf Lamar
Odom , Caron
Butler. Brian
Grant and a No

1--tave gotten worse after
·1ad rng Kenyon_Mart~n and Kerry
K1rt1es tor draft piCks. Jason Kidd
ll~QIIl'J rhe sea son on the Injured list
and slmuiU be a prime candidate to
be deJit befor8 the Feb. 24 trading
deadnfle Same goes fo r Alonzo
t..-1 ournmg. who rs attempt1ng a
comet-ack atter a krdney transplant.

1 dran p1ck.
Moves the
game's most
unstoppable
force from West
to East.

Houston, along
with Juwan
Howard and Tyronn Lue, for
. Steve Francis,

Cuttino Mobley .

and Kelvin Cato.
The league's defending scoring
champion will
join Yao Ming.

New Jersey to
Denver for
three futu re
first-round draft
picks. The Nets
disassemble
what was the
strongest team
in the East over
the past three
years.

Free agent

Free agents Car·
los Boozer (Cava-

Steve Nash
leaving Dallas
for Phoenix.
Mavs recover
with several
subsequent
offseason
moves. in-

cluding the
acquisition of
center Erick
Dampier from

liers) and Mehmet
Okur iDetrolt) join-

pendable.

ing the Utah Jazz .
Who says it takes
time to rebuild?
In second
season fol·
lowing end ..._..,._____ ._.-

Seattle
SuperSonics
37-45 • missed

playoffs
Made a

of SticktonMalone era.
the Jazz look

/

more lucra tive offer than San Antonio did to keep
G Brenl Barry, but,he lett anyway to
ioin a winner (San Antonio) Will the
same th ing happen to Ray Allen, who
is entering the fina l sea son of his con·
tracl? Franchise has been treading
water for six years and counting

•

Golden State. pretty good.

Central Division

onseason coaching

Detroit Pistons
5!.-28 • won NBA title
4- i over the los
Ange•es Lake1s
I

April 21 -The Sixers hired former
Celtics coach Jim O'Brien to replace
Chris Ford , who was promoted on an
interim basis after Randy Ayers was
fired.

-nproved throu ghout

the final two :-nonths of the regular
seJson and dunng the course of the

May 21 - Stanford's Mike Montgomery
was named Golden State's coach. replacing Errc Musselman .
May 28 - New Orleans h1red Byron

.Indiana Pacers
•61·21 • el1m1nated 4-2
:by Detror: 1n Eastern
·Corlterence fi na ls

Scott, replacing Tim Floy.d.
June 29- Toronto hired ex-Bucks as~

sistanl and 13-year vet Sam Mitchell

Lost some of thetr depth
t:y deal.ng the unhappy AI Harrington
to Atlanta_ tlut added a much-needed
outsrde shooter. Stephen Jackson ,
·""'ho wrll rnove rnto the space soon to
·be vaca ted by Reggie M1ller.

Ia replace Kevin O'NeilL

July 8 - Atlanta named Mike Woodson, assistant for NBA champion Detroit. as its head coach.

July 10- Los Angeles Lakers hired
Rudy Tomjanovich to repl ace Phil
Jackson, who decided not to return for
a sixth season as Lakers' coach.

'Cleveland Cavaliers
35-4 7 • m1ssed playoHs

F Drew Gooden rs
nowhere near the talent
Ca ri es BouLer was at
.power for\vard. bu t G Enc Snow is a
:key add1tron to the backcourt .
·Zvd~:;nas llgauskas 1s arguably the
.conterE'nce s second·best center
betl•nd Sr.aqu111e O'Neal. at least from
an Glfen~Ne standpo1nt.

_23·5St • mrssed

playo~s

,Now rn !herr SI Xth
:consecutive year of
rebul ;d•ng, tt·.e Bulls may actually be
on the verge a! some real
rmprovement. Krrk Hinrich has been
fantast c durrng the preseason , G
Andres Nocrom wrll be a pleasant
. surpnse ar)d rookie Ben Gordon can
, flat-ou1 pla~·-

Milwaukee Bucks
41-41 • ehrntnated 4-1
by Detrort 1n firs! round
of playott s
The cont1r.uad absence
of T.J Ford due to a spinal cord injury,
r~.tong wrth the depanure of Damon
Jones wl free agency, gives
MilwauKee some senous questions In
the backcoun One olthe league's
surpr1~e teams before losrng 14 of
thetr frnal 22 games.

The top five 2004 draft picks and how much of an impact they will make on their new teams:

Southwest Division
San Antonio Spurs
57-25 • el1m1nated 4-2

April 29 - The Celtics introduced Doc
Rivers as their coac h, four days after
indiana swept Boston in the playoffs.

plavot1 s last sea son after acqu1nng
Ras t1eed Wallace, and now will have
a vea • ot expe rience under Brown's
leac!ersh1p

Chicago Bulls

Welcome to the league

Southeast Division
Miami Heat
42-40 • eliminate d
4~2 by Indiana in
second round
It's impossible to
acquire O'Neal and get worse . The
Heat were able to pull off the rare feat
of acquiring a dominating center
before he's past his prime, and Stan
: Van Gundy will unleash him on an
: array of Eastern Conference centers
: with no hope of stopping him.

Orlando Magic
2t -6t • missed
, playoffs
Have gotten
undoubtedly better,
anp could be the sleeper team in the
East General manager John

Weisbrod was able to bring in plenty
_ of talent in exchange for F Tracy

McGrady (traded to Houston). Added
No. t draft pick Dwight Howard.
Washington
Wizards
=

25· 57 • missed

. playoHs
: The franchise felt it

by Lakers in conference
semifinals

I. Dwight

2. Emeka

Howard
Magic
Howard has
grown an inch and
put on 20 pounds
since Orlando
drafted him in
June. He'll start at
power fo'rward,
and will likely have
a bigger rmpact
this season than
most origrnally
predicted .

Okalor
Bobcats

3, Ben
Gordon
Bul ls

As expected . his
Accordrng lo Scott
defense and
Skiles. Gordon has
rebounding are well : struggled with the
ahead of his
· pace of the NBA
oHen sive game .
game thus far.
What nobody
rushing shots and
questions is his work · tuming the ball over.
ethic. Okator will take . He'll likely begm the
his lumps early, and : season coming off
then begin to show
the bench, but the
why Charlotte was
Bul ls expect big
so thrilled to get him
things in time.

could not move for..vard with
malcontents G Jerry Stackhouse and
Christian Laettner (traded to Dallas)
in the locker room , but may have
given up too much wh en they
packaged them with !he No. 5 pick
to acquire F Antawn Jamison (trad e
with Mavericks).
'
-

Atlanta Hawks
28-54 • missed

playoffs
It's tim e for another
rebuilding, but don't count on F
Antoine Walker stick1ng around for

the whole thing. Atlanta could try to
move him to a contender at the
trading deadline.G John Chi ldress
should be the starter at shooting

guard.
Charlotte Bobcats
(Inaugural season)
In the case of an
expansion team, it'd be
hard to do worse thcin
the Q.-17 start by the Miami Heat in
their inaugural season of 19BB·89.
As the season drags on , another
fining standard of comparison might
be the worst record in NBA history,

9-73 by the Philadelphia 76ers in
t972-73,

i
0

4. Shaun
Livingston
LA Clippers
Mike Dunleavy has
been su rpri sed by
his defensive
effort. After Marko
Jaric . who 's
constantly inju red.
the Clippers don ·1
have ma ny options
at the porn! ,
mean1ng
Livingston will get
a chance.

Pacific Division
Los Angeles Lakers
56-26 • 1ost4-t to - ·
"'
Detroit Prstons rn
· ~~.; ·
NBA Finals

How the breakup of
the league's
"'i
marquee team, mainly through th6
~ trade of O'Neal and the departure
m of coach Phil Jackson to clear the
way for the re-signrng of free agent
Kobe Bryant affect team . The
addition of coach Rudy Tomjanovieh
means an end to the triangle offense.

Sacramento Klnps
55 -27 • eliminated

4·3 by Minnesota in
second round
They were worse
from the moment
Chris Webber returned from a knee
injury last season. Brad Miller went
ta the bench and the team lost halt
of its final 24 games. This seems to
be a franchise whose window oJ

opportunitY is quickly closing.
Phoenix Suns
29-53 • m1ssed

playoffs

5, Devin
Harris

Mavencks
He won't start
right away, but
the Mavericks
think Harris rs the
real deal. Of all
th e po1nt guards
chosen rn the

2004 draft. he's
the most ready

lo play.

A huge problem last season was the
lack of a cons1stent outside shooter to
take the heat off Tim Duncan on the
inside , and the Spurs couldn't have
found a much better one than G Brent

Bany (free agent,SuperSonk:s), whose
452 accuracy rate was the league's
second-best. Should win the West and
advance to !he NBA Finals .

Houston Rockets
45-37 • eliminated 4-1
by Lakers in first round

of playoHs
That'll depend on G
Tracy McGrady. who will be pushed by
JeH Van Gundy to be a bener defender
and to defer at times on offense to Yao
Mlng. The third-year center from China
still lacks in toughness and consistency.

backcourt wil h two s•gnings of G
Quentin Richardson (free agent,

Clippers), C Steven Hunter (free

Dallas Mavericks

agent, Cavaliers). but didn't add
much height to a squad whose
qUickness is its strength .

52-30 • elimrnated 4-1

by Sacramento in first
round

Golden State Warrriors
37-45 • missed

playoHs
Hard to see any
improvement coming
from a team that dealt
away two of its top three scorers (C

C Erick Dampier provides something the Mavericks have
been lacking for years, a legitimate
low-post lhreat- and he comes at a
t1me when the Western Conference
has been depleted of the game's most
dominant big man .

Erick Dampier, GN~k Van E&gt;el)and

Memphis Grizzlies

received very, very little in return.
Jason Richardson has developed .
into a lop- level talent among the
league's shooting guards

50-32 • eliminated 4-Q
by Spurs in first round
In an improved conference, it' ll be difficult tor
the Grizzlies to sneak up
on people as they did last season to
win 50 games. F Brian Cardinal (free
agent, Warriors) is a gritty addition to
a front liner.

Los Angeles Clippers
28-54 • rilissed

playoHs
G Keny Kinles and G
Quentin Richardson
are somewhat
interchangeable parts, but a knee
problem has sidelined Kitties
throughout the preseason. A
franchise that hasn 't won a playoff
game since 1993 has zero chance
of ending fhat streak.

Significantly
upgraded their

New Orleans
Hotnets

NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Marvin Lewis stood on the
sidelin e in August 2003
watching Tennessee coach
Jeff Fisher and thinking that
one day his Ci ncinnati
Bengals would look just like
the Titans.
Lewis' wish has come true
- j ust not how he imagined.
Hi s Bengals (2-4) visit
Tennessee (2-5) on Sunday
with the winner keeping hope
alive that an injury-plagued
season can be salvaged.
Cinci nnati hopes lo carry
momentum from a victory in
its first Monday night ga me
since 1992, but the Bengals
must prove they can survive
an emotional game in a short
week.
"I hope our guys realize
now what we need to do to
play winning football week in
and week out," Lewis said.
Bengals corn erback Deltha
O'Neal expects nothing less
from hi s teammates afler Iheir
23-1 0 upset of the Broncos.
·'We 're at the bollom of our
di vision, we ' re at the bottom
of the list in the NFL and

Thanks to both realignment and the retirement of F Jamal
Mashbum due to a knee injury, the
Hornels shou ld take a precipitous fall
now that lhey've moved to the deeper

AP

College Volleyball

Assoc1ated Press
CINC INN ATI
Two
months into the season, the
Cincinnati Bengals' top draft
pick has contribu ted next to
nothing,
And it's drivi ng .Chris
Perry batty,
The rookie running back
from Mi chi ga n has spe nt
much more time in 1he trainer's room than on the field .
tending to a cou pl e of
injuri es that have made him
an afterthou ght.
··Patience isn't a virtue I
have - not at all ," Perry
said. ··1 guess thi s is a life
le sso n. I have to deal with a
whole range of emotions, a
lot of things."
It' s nothing like what he
expected.
The Bengals ignored their
needs for he lp on defe nse and
chose, Perry with the 26th
overall pick, They envisioned the shift y back quickly becoming a complement to
power runner Rudi Johnson .
A harhstring injury in the
final preseason game sidelined Pcrrv for the seaso n
opener. and he didn't play in
the next two games, either.
Benga ls coaches want to

Redwomen lose home finale to Mount Vernon.Nazarene
keeping the score clo'e until Mount
Vernon Nazarene 125- 11 . 9-5 AMC
South) put toget her a run late to win
RIC! GRAN DE - The University 30-2 I. The second game was all
"I R"' ( irande Redwomen volleyball ' MVNU and the thi rd conte;t ·was a
)tjlllld ]o~, t their regular sea~on home · back-and-forth battle with the I.mly
t111.dc to Mount Vernon ~at.arenc , 2 1- Co u ~a" 'coring the fina l two fXJt nts
111. 1-l-10 anJ 27-10. ThuC\d:Jy at the to wm 30-27 .
Juni or outs ide/midd le
hitter
:-..c" t. Ol i'&gt; c'l .-\ren a.
Lynnette
Kieslin'
g
paced
the
Ri" (iranJc ( 11 -2-l. 1- 13 AMC
~·liliiJ, pla,cd earl y in game one Redwomen attack with 14 kills .
Sophomore oOtside hitter Lindsay

Unon al"' tallied double ligures in
ki ll' with II . Fe llow sophomurc
Me lissa Do" was on the 1w~e ,f
double -ligure ... with nine. D'''~ :tl \o
collected nine Ui g ~ .
Senior out \ ide hitter Ch,·l,ea.
DeG armo played her fi n;d eo~mc
be fore ihe h11mc l(,fk, anJ rect ~tcrcd
eight kill s and II Jigs. DeGarlno 11"'
rccogmzcd witl\ her parents_ Ral' am!
Gi!il DeGarmo. bel(&gt;rc the ~ a m c-.
S(&gt;jlil!Jmorc \Cttcr Jc " ica · Veach

deli l'ered J I a" ist&gt; and freshman
lihern .A lex Savage led tile defense
"i th I'I digs .
\1 VNU played a powerful game at
the ncl wtth [(,ur playc" reaching
douhlc ligli rc\ 'n kills. Perennial Ali A\lC performer Amanda Stevens had
an outs tanding all -around game with
12 kilb . \CI'Cn digs and three serve
aces. Jenn y Weaver added I I digs,
eight di gs and five blocks .
,
Sl1ena flehclcr tallied II kilb and

- Cincinnati running
back

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East
W

L

New England

6

0

N.Y. Jets
Buffalo
Miami

5

1
5
6

W

L

5
4

2
2

3

3

2

5

W

L

5
4
3
2

1
2
4
4

T
0
0
0

Pet
PF
1.000 t48
.833
.167

t27

0
South

.143

77
86

T
0
0
0
0

Pel

PF

.7 14
.667

t 22
t83
t 38
t 24

.500
.286

Pittsburgh

Baltimore
Clevelarid
Cincinnati

had four blocks whi le Katie Ickes
posted I0 kills. Brittan'y Di xon led the
Lady Cougar defense with nine digs
whtle All "on Klusmann added seven.
Klusmann also handed out a gamehigh, 39 assi sts.
'
Mount Vernon Nazarene wins the
season series 2-0. The Lady Cou~ars
defeated Rto Grande at Cedarvtlle
'
0 ct. ?-·
Rjo Grande closed out the season
wtth a tri -malch Saturday at Tiffin.

•

T
0
0
0
0

Denver
San Diego

'

Kansas City

Philadelph ia

L

5

2

3
2

4

4

2

Atlanta
New Orleans
Tampa Bay

Ca rolina

5

5

0
0
0

South
T
0
0
0
0

t37
t 58

PA

PA

W

NY. Gian ts

Dallas
WashingtOn

126

133

Pct P F

2

6

PA

85

714
140
.571
177
.333
161
0
.286
124
CONFERENCE
Eeat
Pot
PF
T
L
1.000 171
0 ' 0
667
117
0
2
333
107
4
0
333 84
4
0

5
2
4
3
2 4
2
5
NATIONAL

PA
90
102
106
121

Pet
PF
.833
t 36
.667
tt7
429 • 147
" .333 106

wett
WLT

Pel
714
429
. 286
t67

114
147
139
100
142
142
181

PA
94
100
156

95

PF

PA

t54

t42
t91
124

t29

109
83

135

North

r

Pet

PF

Minnesota

W L
5 1

0

833

.170

PA
128

Oetrort
Green Bay

4

2

0

66 7

,,6

123

3

4

429

, 78

t 72

Ch 1cago

1

5

0
0

167

85

WLT

Pct

PFPA

4
3

toe

West

St

LOUIS

Seante
Ar•zona

San Francisco

2

Chri~

Perry

make sure he knew who to
block on blitzes before
putting hi m in.
Perry finally made his
debut in Pittsburgh on Oct. 3,
catching two passes for 24
yards . A week later. he
caught one pass in Cleve land
for 9 yards and carried twice
for I yard.
Two days before the
Bengals"· first Monday nig ht
game in a dozen years, Perry
aggravated strained abdominal mu scles during practice
and had to miss the game.
" You can ' t ru sh' Mother
Nature,'" Perry sa id. "' The
only thing yo u ca n do is
delay the process, which I
did on Saturday. I've got to

National Foolball League

W

STAFF REPORT
sports Qi myda1lytnbune.com

"Patience isn't a
virtue I have not at all. I guess
this is a life
lesson. I have to
deal with a whole
range of
emotions, a lot
of things:'

BY JOE KAY

Oakland

I

home, which we haven' t done
this year," he said.
Beating the Bengals would
be a nice way for Tennessee to
slide into the bye week, when
it can heal up a handful of
players For the stretch run.
That includes Titans quarterback Steve McNair, who is
li sted as questionable after
bruising his sternum for the
third time in five weeks. The
Bengals have been McNair's
favorite target, and his 20
touchdown passes are the
most against any team.
Backup Bill y Valek could
make his second start this season if McNair decides to rest
and heal up this nagging
inju ry. The Bengals will
believe the NFL's co- MVP of
20(B sits only when they see
him on the bench Sunday.
"It 's two teams that are
ex tremely hungry for a win,"'
Cincinnati
quarterback
Carson Palmer said. "Steve
rea lizes that, and the coaches
realize that, so we're expecting him to be in there."
The Titans might have the
edge if Chris Brown can run
with a sore left big toe that
had him in a walking boot this
week. He is third in the NFL
with 663 yards rushing, and

the Bengals allow a leagueworst 152.4 yards per game.
Tennessee has to prove it
can hold onto the ball after
seven interceptions in the past
two games, with three by
Valek in last weekend's 20-3
loss at Minnesota.
Bulluck said the Titans can
help themselves by giving
thetr patient fans something to
cheer early, providing some
much-needed emotional energy.
" Honestly, it's not fair to
them. We know we can play
better footbalL We don't go
out and do it, especially at
home , We have to give one of
those stellar perfonnances. lf .
it's not now, I don't know
when it's going to be," he
said.
Pro Bowl receiver Chad
Johnson, who had one of the
best games of his career to
beat Denver, knows what a
victory would mean for
Cincinnati, which has lost
eight of the past nine in this
series.
"It would be big," he said.
"Every game from this point
on would be big. Everyone
sets goals to get to
Jacksonville , and this is
where it starts."

Injuries keeping Bengals
top pick Chris Perry off field

North

·--_ ·-·-•---;;;b;;,;~;;;,;;;;;;-----------------------------------------_:______~_ _____:w:e".'s;(:te~rn~C::o~n~fe~re~n~c~e.___ · - - ·souRCE 'Ja:1e;nal Basketball Asssocration

'

Associated Press

Jacksonville
Indianapolis
Houston
Tennessee

41·41 • eliminated 4·3
by Miami in first round

we' ve just got to keep fighting and not think abou l next
week (or) we' re going to trip
and fall again." O' Neal said.
A similar sense or desperation hangs over the Titans,
who didn ' t expect to be looking for their ftrst home victory th is season un lhe final day
of October. After all , this team
has won 56 games over the
past five seasons. wi th four
playoff berths.
"It's ki nd of a state of emergency around here," Titans
All-Pro linebacker Keith
Bulluck said. "We have to go
into this game like it 's our last
one ."
Tenne ssee hasn't losl as
many players for the season
as Cincinnati has ( I J ) , but the
Titans have 14 players on the
injury list and they have lost
five of thei r past six games .
The last time they played
Ci ncinnat i. they held Corey
Dillon out of the end zo ne in
the, fin al minute for a key victo~y in their rebound from a 14 start in 2002 to the AFC
championship ga me .
Fisher insists a simi lar run
remains possible - if they
start Sunday.
"We have to win a game,
and we have to win a game at

BY TERESA M . WALKER

to the conference finals, mostly because

r11'"!'1.J

Page 85

Bengals just as desperate
for victory as Tennessee

the popular preseason pick to make it

1fl••

(traded to Detroit).

36 46 • e lmlna te d-4-0 - -'_
bv De trot 1n first ro und _ \ ,• ~

Angeles Lakers
Very little cllanged for the

,

~uubap i!:tllttS -~tllhnrl •

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2004

WESTHII CIIRIENCE

Pistons' Rasheed Wallace (36), Ben Wallace (3)
and the entire starting lineup are back and
looking to defend their title. ~~

Division olland

Sunday, October 31,

National Football League

Northwest Division

Western Confe rence ~ill has the larger
number of quality teams able to compete
for a championship . Many th ink the
defending champion Detrort Pistons are
one of the top teams to beal . The
Pistons returns with almost the same
exact lineup , tinkering only to
strengthen its bench with the
additions of Anton1o McDyess,
Derrick Co leman and Carlos
(
Delfino

of the Los Angeles Lakers, unquestionably
the league's marquee team for the past halfdecade. WithShaquille O'Neal now in Miami,
coach Phil Jackson in semi-retirement, Kobe
Bryant is the only one of the threesome still
remaining wrth the Lakers. There's been talk
that the balance of power has shifted from
West to East due to the Detroit Pistons'
success and O'Neal's relocation, but the

M.chael Sweetney moves into

cl plavors

4

entering unfamiliar territory
T hein rtsNBAfirstisseason
following the breakup

Nr~zr Mohammed rn the pivot and

Boston Celtics

0

Breakup of the Lakers • Expansion Bobcats debuts • League realigns to four divisions

· W111 be suspect
defens1vely and small In the m1ddle,
espec1a11y 1f Kurt Thomas supplants

Col~rlJn

0

Who's the NBA's

Atlantic Division

Philadelphia 76ers
33-49 • m1ssed playoHs

Sunday, October 31,2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

3

0

.57 1

158

3
4

o
0

500
. 333

129
11 2

5 . 0

167

105

165
10 1
104

159

be patient . I'm pretty sure I' ll
get an opportunity when I'm
hea lth y."
The Bengals had expected
that to happen long before
now.
"Chris ha s been hurt,"
coac h Marvin Lewis said .
"Th ere's not much we can
do. I have not been displeased with Chri s when he's
go tten an opportunity to play
and the things he's done."
He's go t a role waiting to
be fill ed.
The runnin·g back from
Mi~higan is a better receiver
than Johnson , so he's a ,natural fit for third down . The
Bengals have been particularly aby smal on third down,
converting only 4-of-26 in
the last two ga me s.
''I'm not sure when he's
coming back , what the timeline is," quarterback Carson
Pal mer said. "But we could
use him . He's so explosive
and creates mismatches all
over the place .
"You can line him up in the
slot and he can run routes.
He catche s the ball very well
and he runs the ball well
between the tackles and outside . We can run screen plays
with 1 him. He can run any
route and catch any baiL So

Pictured is Trenton Wolfe (1st place in 10 and under boys ),
Carissa Wolfe (1st place in 11-12 year old girls) and Katie
Blodgett (1st place in the 10 and under gi rls).

Rio youth swimmers
begin.season
STAFF REPORT

sports@ myda1lytribune .com
PARKERSBURG. W.Va .
- The University of Rio
Grande Youth Swim team
started the 2004 -05 Short
Course Season 111 at the
Parkersburg Invitational.
Out of the 130 athdetes
competing, three of the Rio
Dolphins brought home hi gh
point awards in their age
gro up. Trenton Wolfe. in the
boy s I 0 and under: Katie

Bl odgett. in the girls 10 and
under: and C ari&gt;~ a Wolfe. in
the girl ., 11 -12 &lt;ige t' roup .
Additional swimme" from
the Ri o team swam best time s
in their events.
Those participating were:
Robyn
Rhodes,
Ernily
Deinert. Allie Hamilton .
Joshua
GoodalL
Chri s
Haw kin, , Sarah Blodge tt.
Lena Bryannc Hamilton.
Marren Nev. ' om . Adam
McCaulla and Jonathan
Hawkins.

_Marshall hoops tickets
go on sale Monday
~

HUNTINGTON. W.Va.
The Marshall Univer~itv
Athletic Ticket Office wo uld
like to announce that single
game basketball tickets go on
we're definitely hurting for sale Monday.
him to get back on the field."
This year's home schedu le
His injury amounted to a is one of the toughe st
second setback for the Marshall has faced. The
Bengals, who decided to let schedule includes 200-l
Peter Warrick take hi s place NCAA Tournament team'
on the active roster Monday. UAB and East Tennc "c c
Warrick sat out the last two State, as \\CII 011T finaliq
game s with a cracked bone
in hi s lower leg and was used
sparingly in the 23-10 victory over Denver, failing to
catc h a pass.
Warrick also is a valuable
third-down receiver, able to
shake free for a short reception. With Warrick and Perry
hobbled,
the
Bengal s'
options are limited ,
The Bengals (2 -4) weren ' t
sure whether Warrick will be
a1 ,; }able for a game Sunday
in Tennessee. Palmer hopes
that the limited appearance
against Denver prepared him
for a larger role .
" It's great just to have him
wllh IDW.IDW miles
on the field." Palmer said.
" Hopefully he got a little
more comfortable because
it's been awhile since he 's
been out there. It takes you a
little while to get your feet
back under you. So hopefully that was a good game for
him to get comfortable and
23.000 miles. Red
he'll be ready to play this
week ."

Oregon (in Charlesto n) .
Ticket prite, for individual
home games are $ 18 for
lower bowl anJ s ~ for uppe r
how L
There are aho plenty of
I!. I\~~H season tickets remain 111!:!. Season ti ckeh start as
lo;v as $70
To pl ac·c• ) nu r ticket order.
please call
I -800- THEHER )) or log on to
"1\'W.hcrdJonc .coin ,
~

Call Herb

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This
Week's
Games
Sunday's Games
Detroit at Dallas,
1 p.m.
Arizona at
Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at
Tennessee , 1 p.m.
Green Bay at
Washington, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at
Houston , 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at
Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at
Philadelphia, 1
p.m.
N.Y. Giants at
Minnesota , 1 p.m.
Carolina at
Seattle, 4:05p .m.
Atlanta at Denver,
4:05p.m.
Oakland at San
Diego, 4:15p.m.
. New England at
Pittsburgh, 4:15
p.m.
San Francisco at
Ch1 cag o. 8:30 p.m .
Open: Tampa Bay,
St. Louis, New
Orleans, Cleveland
Monday's Game
Miami atNY
Jets, 9 p.m.

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�PageB6

NASCAR WEEKEND
Newman wins another pole NASCAR drivers,
iunba~ ~imt~ -ientintl

Sunday, Octo!&gt;er 31,

BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press
HAMPTON. Ga. - Ryan Newman
will start Sunday 's NASCAR race from
a familiar spot- the pole.
Newman won his third straight pole
and eighth of the year Friday night,
grabbing the top spot for the Bass Pro
Shops MBNA 500 with a speed of
191 .575 mph in a Dodge at Atlanta
Motor Speedway.
This has become downright routine
for Newman. who has won the pole in
26 of his 113 career races. He's led that
category the last two years, and has two
more poles than anyone else this season.
"That's the toughest part. We have no
excuse now," Newman said. "We 've
proved we ' re the fastest race car on a
given lap. We have to be able to do that
for 60 laps in a row here."
Kurt Busc h. who holds a 96-point lead
over Jeff Gordon in the championship
chase, qualified 22nd at 187.722.
Gordon seeking hi s fifth NASCAR title,
will start IOth.
When it comes to qualifying, Newman
has been unbeatable on this 1.54-mile
trioval. He claimed his fourth straight
Atlanw pole. but is yet to win a Nextel
Cup race at the track.
Joe Nemechek claimed the outside of
the front row at 191.3 18 - a mere 39thousandths of a second off Newman 's
time.
Nemechek has emerged as one of the
best qualifiers on the circuit, claiming
back-to-back poles at Talladega and
Kansas City earlier this month.
"We' ve been on a roll." he said.
Elliott Sadler took the third spot at
191 .080. Truck series star Carl Edwards
will make the best start of his Nextel
Cup career, posting the fourth-fastest
.
speed ( 191.080).
Greg Biffle, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Mark
Martin, Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick

-

NASCAR NDIEL Cup
Bus Pro Shops MBNA 500
'
Unoup
IIY'IIIe A-,,...
Jamie
l'lloleV 'llllllfVIng; NCIIiundiV

29. (84) Kyle BU5011, Chevrolet, 100.780.
29. (42)
McMurrav. Dodge, 18.6.755.
30. (51) Tonv Raines, Chevrolet, 1BS.535.
31. (23) Shane Hri\lel, Do&lt;lg&amp;, 166.522.
32. (9)1&lt;1My Kahne, Dodge, 186.491 .
33. (1• Martin Tru&amp;J~ Jr.. Chevrolet, 186.447.
3&gt;1. (0) Wild Burton, Chevrolet, 186.353.
.38. (&lt;IJ) Jeff Green, Dodge, '138.228.
38. (11) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 185.965.
37. (49) Ken Schrader. Dodge, 185.847.
38. (98) Bill Elliott Dodge, 185.785.
39. (17) Matt Keneoth. Ford, provisional.
~. (15) Michael Waltrlp, Chevrolet, provislooal.
41 . (40) S1arHng Marlin, Dodge, provisionaL

AtAlllnlllUOtot&amp;paat •w
. . . . . .0111 Ga.·
1.1541. (12l Ryan ,..,..n, llodge, 191.575.
2. 101 Jr» - · Chevrolet 191 .31 8.
3. 38 EIIIOCISadlor. Ford. 191.080.
4.(119 ~Edwaldo, Foro.190.988.
5. (16 Gteg lllffte, Fool, 190.561.

Lip.....,,

6. (6) o.io Eamnardl Jr.. CheYfOiot, 159.876.

7. (8) Mart&lt; Martin, Ford, 189.740.
8. (48) Jimmie Johnson. C110111'01et, 189.500.
Q, (29) Kevin Harvict&lt;, Cl\evr&lt;&gt;,., 189.448.
to. ~~ Jof1 Gortlor1.

•

42. (5) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, provisional.
&lt;IJ. (21) Ricky Rudd, Foro, provisional.
Failed to qualify

en-. 189.260.

11 . 19)Jeremy Mayfteld. Dodge, 189.170.
12. 2) Rusty Wallace, Dodge, 138.822.
13. !25) Brian Viol&lt;aro, CheVrolet, 138.758.
14. 31) Flobtr; Gordon, Chevrolet, 138.745.
15. ~Tony Slpart, CheYrolel, 138.738.
16. 41) COSey llioiua, Dodge. 188.648.
17. !14) John Androttl, Fold, 188.818.
18. 45) Kyle Potty, tl&lt;lclge,1B8.5S4.
19. 18) BOW; Labonto. ChevrOlet, 138.296.
20. ~)Dolt Jarrett. Foro, 156.213.

44. (10) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 185.164.
45. (2'2) Scott Wimmer, Dodge, 184.603.
46. (33) Kerry e,rnhardt, Chevrolet, 184.413.
47. (09) Johnny Sauler, Dodge, 183.765.
46. (02) Hermie Sadler. Che\lrolet, 183.436.
49. (4) Mike Wallace. Chevrolet, 183.424.
50. (!14) DerrlkoCOpe, Dodge, 182.783.
51 . (96) Randy LaJoie, Ford. 182.147.
52. (13) Greg Sacks. Dodge, 182.087.

21 . 30)Jof1Burron. CheVrolel,138.085.

Z!.
Kurt Buach. Ford. 187.72'2.
,.. 23. (37) Kevin L~page, Dodge, 187.506.
24. (50) ll&gt;dd Bodine, Dodge, 187.418,
25. (77) Brendan Gaughan, Dodge, 187.316.
38. (06) Tnll'ls Kvepll, Dodge. 188.975.
V . (32) Bobby Hamllllln Jr., Che&gt;o!olot, 156.900.

53. (59) L.arry Foyt, Dodge, 181 .425.
P
54. (72) Kirk Shelmerdine, Ford, 180.528.
56. (89) Morgan Shepherd, Dodge. 176.179.
56. (80) Andy Belmont, Ford. 175.549.
57. (62) Larry Hollenbeck, Chevrolet, 171.790
58. (00) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet, no speed.

and Gordon completed the top 10.
Teammates Gordon and Johnson
the winner the last two weeks - were
back on the track just five days after a
team plane crashed while en route to the
Martinsville, Va., for last weekend 's
race.
The crash killed 10, including the son,
brother and twin nieces of team owner
Rick Hendrick, along with his general
manager and chief engine builder.
As for Hendrick's other drivers, Brian
Vickers was 13th and Terry Labonte had
to take a provisional spot after finishing
way back in 44th.
Fifty-eight drivers attempted to make
the 43-car field, the most since 59 hit the
track for the 1999 Daytona 500.

Among those sent home: Scott Riggs
and ScoH Wimmer. both failing to make
a race for the first time this year, and
Earnhardt's older brother, Kerry.
"It's the end of the year, ·and so many
teams are bringing out their test teams
and their new teams for next year,"
Nemechek said. "The sport is too com·
petitive for teams that have problems
coming into Friday. You've got to be on
your game every time you're on the
track."
Home state favorite Bill Elliott barely
made it in, claiming the 38th - and
final - spot based on time. The
Dawsonville native will race for the
sixth time this year in a limited schedule.

With heavy hearts, Hendrick
team goes back to work
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press
HAMPTON : Ga. - Jeff Gordon
gnawed at his lips, struggling to contain
the tears that were so desperate to
· escape.
· He wants to make some sense of it all,
but that will take time.
So, Gordon will try to soothe his emotional scars in the seat of a race car.
Maybe he' ll find solace at 190 mph.
Maybe he'll be able to honor those
friends who died in a plane crash last
weekend.
· "I've never been so inspired and dri'ven in my life." Gordon said Friday, his
somber look transforming to steely
determination. "I can 't think of anything
that could drive us har~er and stronger
than this loss."
Gordon and his Hendrick Motorsports
teammates went very public with their
grieving at Atlanta Motor Speedway,
appearing together just five days after
the Virginia plane crash that killed all 10
people aboard.
.
The son, brother and twin nieces of
team owner Rick Hendrick were flying
to the race in Maninsville when the
plane slammed into a mountain not far
from the ' speedway while trying to land.
The team also lost its general manager
and chief engine builder. The pilot for
another NASCAR star, Tony Stewan,
was on board, too.
"Getting through something like this is
going to take time," Gordon said. "Yeah,
there is a time when you have to move
on. I don't know when that time is."
Certainly, it won't come this weekend.
But, in a sport that carries the somber
threat of death at every turn, Gordon and
his teammates - Jimmie Johnson, Terry
Labonte and Brian Vickers - know it's
time to go back to work.
Gordon and Johnson are still in contention for the Nextel Cup championship
with only four races left in the season.
Sunday's Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500
will likely have a huge impact on their
title hopes.
"Here we are at the racetrack," said

Johnson, who has won the last two races
and is fourth in the season standings.
"We have to get to work and try to do it.
That doesn't mean the grieving isn't
going to continue, and the pain ... we're
all goin~ through a tremendous amount
of pain.'
Gordon is second in the standings,
trailin~ Kurt Busch by 96 points. It's an
imposmg deficit to overcome, but hardly
unattainable.
"I think it would be a great story to win
this championship," said Robbie
Loomis, Gordon's crew chief. "The
biggest thing that's going to help is the
support for one another; the love we can
give to one another every day, and just
doing our job.
"That's what they'd want us to do, and
we're going to do it well ."
Vickers was hit especially hard by the
tragedy.
.
His No. 25 car was owned by
Hendrick's 24-year-old son, Ricky, who
!lave up his own racing career after being
mjured in a crash. In just two years
behind the wall, the younger Hendrick
showed plenty of business savvy. In all
likelihood, he would have been running
the family 's entire operation someday.
Vickers came along with his teammates to the infield media center, but he
didn't want to answer any questions. He
made a short statement, then spent most
of his lime starin~ at the floor.
"I lost a dear fnend," Vickers said, his
voice wavering. "They will all be deeplY.
missed for a loilg time to come - unul
we all gei a chance to see them again."
Beyond the enormous personal toll,
the crash took many of the key players in
one of NASCAR's most prominent
teams.
Randy Dorton ran the engine-building
depanment, ensuring there was enough
power under the hood for Gordon to win
all four of his Cup titles and Labonte to
capture the second championship of his
career.
General manager Jeff T(\rner ran the
business side of things, overseeing a
massive operation that employs more
than 400 workers at its Charlotte, N.C.·
based compound.

Johnson managed a smile as he
recalled his first career victory at
California Speedway. While spinning his
tires to celebrate. he heard Dorton 's
voice over the ' radio saying, "Easy on
that thing, take it easy."
"I kept going and threw all the rods out
the side of the engine," Johnson said.
"The first person I saw in victory lane
was Randy. This thing was dripping oil
everywhere. I felt horrible. I destroyed
that race-winning engine."
Jeff Andrews, who was Dorton's right·
hand man, will move up to run the
engine depanment. He already was handling many of the day-to-day duties.
"Randy's organization is extraordinarily deep," said Patrick Perkins, the
team's director of marketing. " 'Randy
was the visionary, but those guy.~ below
him took care of fulfilling the vision and
setting the vision , too."
Rick Hendrick won't be attending
Sunday's race, and no orie knows when
he'll resume his role in the day-to-day .
operations. In the meantime , he 's
appointed close confidant Bobby Ri ce to
keep an eye on thing.,.
Rice, partner in a 'North Carolina
accounting firm, has long been involved
with Hendrick's massive network of car
dealerships . Those who already worked
under Turner will take on added responsibilities.
"We will miss the leadership of a person like Jeff Turner," Perkins said. "His
talents were so incredible. But he
brought us up well. We'll pick up the
slack."
While the goals haven't changed,
everyone has different perspective on
l
life.
Gordon showed off a blue)wristband
that says "Life Is A Team Sport" - a
.symbol of the bone-marrow donor orga·
nization starred by Ri ck Hendrick ~fter
he was diagnosed with leukemia.
The message never see med more
poignant.
"Take time to think about those people
you love, how you appreciate them, and
thank them while yo u can," Loomis said.
"When we're young, we think life goes
on forever."

2004

teams depend on
private planes
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
A fleet of private planes known as the "NASCAR Air
Force" has made travel easier for drivers and teams. But
Sunday's crash that killed 10 people flying to a wee aboard a
Hendrick Motorsp011s team plane showed such convemence
also can involve risks.
"We use planes just like our cars," said Ricky Rudd. o~1e of
several NASCAR Nextel Cup dri vers who me also pilots.
"We put a lot of hours in the air and have some olthe best
pilots in the country that fly these thmgs. and some ol the best
eq uipment."
The backbone of the NASCAR air fleet has been twoengine, 12-passenger aircrat\ like the. Beect: 2lXJ Kmg Air
that crashed into the s1de of a mountam 111 thiC k fog Sunday
while trying to land at a small airpon near Mmtinsville
Speedway in Virginia.
.
All 10 people aboard were killed, includmg team owner
Rick Hendrick's son. Ricky; his brother, John . and John's
two daunhters Jennifer and Kimberly. Also on the plane
were the"team:s general m&lt;mager, Jeff Turner, and its chief
engine builder, Randy Dorton. as well as Joe Jackson, an
executive with DuPont; Scott Lathram, JR. a p1lot lor
NASCAR driver Tony Stewart; and pilots Ri&lt;.:hard Tracy and
Elizabeth Morrison.
For years, nearly everyone traveled back and fonh to the
races in team vans or private cars, but the prohlerauon of pn·
vate planes has changed that.
Nextel Cup teams race 3R weekends each year, including
two a~·star events. On many of those weekends, the
Concord, N.C., Regional Airport - the closest airpon for
most teams- is buzzin\1 witl1 activity. M()re than 100 aircraft- helicopters and a1rplanes- take oft and land. terry·
ing drivers. team owners. crewmen, sponsors and tans to mrpom near the racetrack.
More aircraft. including a pair of 727 jets owned by Rou sh
Racing, fly in and out of nearby Charlotte Douglas
International Airport.
"Actually. it's not just race weekends," said Annette
Privette, a spokeswoman for the city of Concord. "Our airport has approximately 200 aircraft based there and about 60
percent of them are NASCAR-related. There's a lot of flying
back and forth to testing and pole nights and driver appear·

ances ;md races.
"It's convenient because the teams. obviously. want to
spend as much time with their families as possible."
Petty Enterprises driver Jeff Green sees private plane trav·
el as more than just a convenience.
"Taking the chance on being delayed in an airpon just
won't work," Green said. "You have to be there Friday morning for practice or you miss practice. Miss practice, and they
don't let you attempt to qualify.
' ~It 's more than just drivers. The crews. everybody has to
use private planes. We're not talking about convenience,
we're talking about necessity. To be able to test and to be able
to get to the tracks where you need to be - on top of doing
the things you need to do for your sponsors and your team youjust don't nave much choice."
Mark Martin, another driver who is also a pilot, lost his
father; stepmother and half sister in IYYll when a private
plane his father was piloting crashed in Nevada. But Martin
said he has no qualms about continuing to use his plane.
"I suppose we've been pretty lucky in a way," M.u1 in said
in an interview last year. "But everybody knows that flying,
is still safer than driving in your personal car. And we really
have no choice. We have to fly to get our jobs done."
. With the escalating use of helicopters - for short hauls and private planes. NASCAR's Air Force has a very good
safety record.
Driver Alan Kulwicki and three others were killed in the
crash of a private plane in 1993 while flying to a race in
Bristol , Tenn. Later that same year. Davey Allison died in the
.crash of his helicopter as he tried to land at Talladega
Superspeedway.
There had been no aircrati-related fatalities in NASCAR
since, but that doesn't mean there haven't been a'cidents.
In one three-week period in November 2CXJ3. Martin's
plane blew two tires taking off from a Goodyear. Ariz .. airport after racing at Phoenix, a plane carry Peny crewmen al so
blew a tire on takeoff after a test earlier in Phoenix. and uri · •
ver Tony Stewart's plane hit a deer while landing tn refuel dt
a rural Texas airport on the way to the Phoenix race. There
were no mJunes.
" Things happen but, in most cases, it's just a matter on
being inconvenienced, having to wait for repairs or hitching
a ride on somebody else's plane," Martin said. "There's still
no substitute for the private planes."
There is, however, a substitute for the small planes.
Martin's team owner, Jack Roush, bought his 727s four
years ago after starting to feel less and less comfm1able about
having up to 16 small planes in the air each race weekend.
"I have five teams and we'd have five small planes going
to the track on Thursday night or Friday and l1vc more on
Sunday morning," Roush said. "Then myself and the five
drivers were usually flying our planes in and out, too.
.
"There's tremendous congestion at these airports, ali hough ·
I think the FAA does a great job on re~ulating the air u·affic
associated with our events. Still, I didn t feel like I wanted to
continue to have the responsibility for 16 airplanes, all the
maintenance and pilot training."
Since his team has been using the big planes, with pilots
trained for commercial airlines transponing most of hi s people, Roush said he is sleeping better.
"''m confident as I can be in the safety of our planes and
the ability of our pilots, but I still breath a sigh of relief every
t1me we get through a race weekend without a problem."
Roush said.

.Hendrick tragedy could motivate GOrdon
BY JENNA FRYER

Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -· Ricky
Hendrick was like a little brother to
Jeff Gordon.
· As a 12-year-old boy, Ricky idol·
jzed Gordon w)len he began driving
for Hendrick 's father in 1992. Later,
when he tried to become a racer
himself, the four-time NASCAR
champion was hi s mentor.
Their re lationship grew. and as a

young adult Ricky provided a little
guidance of his own - ' helping
Gordon tlyough his very public
divorce two years ago and easing
him- back into the . Charlotte social
scene.
Now, Ricky's death and those of
nine others in the crash Sunday of a
Hendrick Motorsports plane, will
almost certainly affect Gordon in hi s
bid for a fifth Cup title.
How so remains to be seen, but
fellow drivers believe Gordon will
rise to the challenge. ·
·

"Jeff Gordon has exhibited over a
long period of time to be the utmost
professional ," Jeff Burton said. "He
and Ricky I'm sure did a lot of
things tdgether. I know that will be
very difficult.
.
"On the other hand , knowing Jeff
Gordon. I wouldn't be surprised to
see thi s springing him into running
better than they 've been running."
Gordon, second in th'e ch~mpi ·
o~ship standings with four races to
go, has used adversity as a motivator
before - especially when it con·

cerns Hendrick Motorsports.
He has driven for no other team
since his Cup debut, and now has a
lifetime contract and part ownershi.p.,
m the company.
He won his first series champi·
onship in 1995 and wrapped up hi s
second in 1997 -,one month after
Hendrick was diagnosed with
leukemia. Gordon added a th ird title
the next 'ea,on as He'ndrick battled
the disease that nearly killed him
and kept him away from the race
track.
•

"Jeff is extremely professional,''
Burton said. ''That team is extremely gifted. It wouldn't surprise me for
them to usc this as motivation much
as they did when Rick was qealing
with his leukemia."
It's possible the recent tragedy
also could further spark the comeback of Jimmie Johnson.
Johnson was the mo't dominant
driver for the l'ir.; t 'even months of
th e se;l \O n, then slumped whe~
NASCAR's 10-race playoff sy,tem
bega n.

...

Sunday, October 31,

Baseball

Reds piyk up
contract option
on Sean Casey
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI
Sean
Casey isn't going anywhere.
The popular first baseman
had his contract extended
through the 2006 season on
Friday, the clearest message
yet that the Cincinnati Reds
have no intention of trading
him. Instead, they picked up
an $8.5 million option for the
additional year.
''The fact that they picked
up the contract shows me they
want me to be here," Casey
said.
Shortstop Barry Larkin formally cut ties with hi s hometown team on Friday, filing
for free agency along with
infielder Juan Castro and
starting pitcher Paul Wilson.
Larkin has spent all 19 years
of his career with the Reds,
who declined to offer him
another contract two weeks
ago.
Since he came to the Reds
in a notorious 1998 trade,
Casey has become a threetime All-Star and one of base·
ball's most beloved players
- even op~nents call him
"The Mayor' because he acts
like he's close friends with

ev~'l-~n=iso been one of the
Reds' most reliable hitters.
He batted .324 with 24
homers and 99 RBis last sea·
son, when he was chosen for
his third All-Star team.
As the season wound down,
there was speculation the
Reds mtght trade Casey.
openmg first. base to . solve
~hetr logJam rn the outfield.
W1ly Mo Pena had a breakout
season after Ken GntTey .Jr.
tore h1s hamstnng w~ile chasmg ~ ball 1~ .~e nter held.
Wrth . Gnt!ey gettmg hurt
each ot the last four seasons,
il seeme9 a good fit t~ move
h1m to first base to save h1s
legs and trade Casey. Even
Casey wondered If that nught
happen.
.
''For the past few years,
there '~ alwa~s been a rumo.~
. th.at I m .g01 ~.g '?m~wher,e,
Casey. 'a1d. I hadn t heard
anythmg (from. . t.he. ,Front
otftce). I thought 1f that s the
direction_,-, that they wo.ul.d
put Gntl at hrst - th~~ that s
the busmess end of tl.
Hrs contract also played

into it. Casey made $6.8 million this year, the second on a
three-year deal. That trailed
only Griffey's $12.5 million
base salary as the biggest on
the roster.
Casey was guaranteed to
make $7.8 million next sea·
son. The club had until Nov. I
to decide whether to pick up
his option for 2006 at $8.5
million. General manager
Dan O'Brien called him
Friday to give him the news.
~ Casey. 30, has played for ·
only two organizations. He
was one of the Cleveland
Indians' top prospects when
they traded him to the Reds
on the eve of the I 998 season
opener for Dave Burba, who
was scheduled to start the
next day.
The trade confirmed that
the Reds were rebuilding and
making Casey one of their
cornerstones. He has developed into one of their leaders,
known for doing a wacky
dance in the clubhouse after
wms.
"Aw, man, I'm so excited,"
Casey said. "I'd been think·
ing about it during the season,
whether they'd pick it up. I
want to stay in Cincinnati.
"I've been here for seven
years and really feel like a
pan of the city. When you're
part of the Reds, you' re pan
of the community. It means
the world to me."
O'Brien said Friday that the
club -cteciaeO!o pick up
Casey 's option for two main
reasons.
"One is Sean's productivity
and our projections for that in
'05 and '06,'' said O' Brien.
' "And the intangible of what
Sean brings to our clubhouse
with the veteran leadership
that we anticipate him provid·
ing."
Larkin made a $700,000
base salary last season and
lobbied for a one-year ex ten·
sion. but the Reds decided to
go with younger players at
shortstop. Larkin, 40, could
retire if he doesn't find a suit·
able fit with another team.
Wilson was the Reds' top
starter last season. going 11-8
with a 4.36 ERA and a $3.5
million salary. The Reds have
told him they ' re interested in
signing him to another deal.
Castro made $1 million last
season, when he hit .244 and
made 66 starts.

~unbav ~in~ -~entinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2004

Outdoors

WEEKLY OHIO RSHING REPORT
COLUMBUS {AP) -The w&amp;ekl'JI fiShIng report prov1ded by the OI&gt;Jis•on ol
Wildlife at the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources

National Park Service
opens new center for
New River Gorge visitors
BY GEORGE GANNON

For the Associated Press

• Page 87

CENTRAL OHIO
Buckeye Lake (Farrfreld County)- For
channel catfish, use chicken trvers and
night crawlers l1shed on the bOHom for
best results Shoreline cover offers the
bestlocaUons to take crappie Use minnows beneath a bObber frshed at depthS
of three to six feet Use red worms and
wax worms when seekmg bluegill The
eastern half of the lake offers the Oest
blueg•ll f1shmg Saugeye lrshi ng is very
successful at Buckeye Lake throughOut
the year Try casting or trolling tour to s1x
inch m1nnow imitations or other shallow
running crank 08!1s
Hoover Reser&gt;Jorr (Delaware and
Franklin counties) - Are as that have
rock pries and submerged trees tor
cover are good places to fiSh for large·
mouth bass dunng the ea rly mornmg
and evening. Use slow rolling sp.nner
baits. pg-and·pig, suspending mmnow
im1ta110ns. s1x mch plas tiC worms and
INe bBII for best results . Saugeye can be
taken JUSt beneath the surface dunng
even1ng hours when casting or trolling
small crank ba1ts Use JIQS and m1nnows
in the upper end of the lake lOf crappte
Knox Lake (Knox Co unty) -Try flsh•ng the woody shor.elme cover. Areas
with multiple logs cross1ng over are
good places for largemouth bass.
Anglers should use slow rolling spmner
baits, jig-and-pigs soft ptast1c baits , and
live bait The shoreline cover generally
produces good catches of bluegill when
using larval bSIIs and small worms
f1shad beneath a bobber Channel catfiSh up to ten pounds may be taken day
or night when f1sh1ng along the bottom
with traditional Darts such as chicken livers. mght crawlers. and prepared baits
10 horsepower l1m11.
Scioto R1ver (Franklin County) - Use
l1ve baits such as sof! craws or JlQS
lipped with large minnows for smellmouth Oass. Fish the waters below the
low-head dams The Greenlawn Dam IS
a popular fish1 ng spo! as well Anglers
may catch a vanety of fish Including
largemouth bass. channel catf1sh . suckers. ana carp.

fauna, and show how local
watersheds affect the quality
of river water.
Conservation also is a main
thrust of the water-related
exhibits .
A wall of plastic, one-gallon
jugs shows how much water
the average person uses in a
day and what he could save by
being more conse·rvative.
Another computer exhibit,
possibly one of the few in the
world , shows all of the
world's watersheds.
Caltlwell said two World
War II veterans were look ing
at the maps of the watersheds
in Germany. A rather inspired
debate ensued about the proper pronunciations of cenai n
nvcrs and places .
"They really got into it," he
said.
Along with the names and
places Of the world's watersheds, the computer also has
pop-up boxe s with interesting
factoids.
Fo.r example, I 0 percent of
the U.S. population lives in
the Ohio River Watershed the body of water into which
the New Rive r ultimately
drains.
The bui \ding also was
designed with the environment in mind.
It faces south to capture
morning sunli ght and it's
heated by water funneled
through tubes in the floor. .
Lights dim automatically
and turn off automatically
when someone leaves a room.
Although an economically
sound building alone might
not draw folks off 1-64 or into
the park , Caldwell said there 's
plenty more to sec on the
pmk 's southern end.
"It's beautiful down here,"
he said. ·
The Sandstone Visitor's
·Center Hours is ope n from Y
a.m.-5 p.m. daily and is local·
ed off the Hinton/Sand stone
exii on Interstate 64.

SANDSTONE, W.Va.
Visitors to the Sandstone
Visitor 's Center along the
New River Gorge National
River are privy to a virtual trip
up the world's second oldest
nver.
When they walk in the center's front doors. they start at
the river in Blowing Rock ,
N.C., and travel north to where
the New and Gauley rivers
meet in Gauley Bridge to fonn
the Kanawha River. ·
The map stretches across the
~tone floor of the visitor's center and shows the public and
private lands that surround the
river and the watersheds in
range of the New River.
Its main focus is to show
that the New River is more
than the New River Gorge
Bridge at Fayetteville and the
rapids between Thurmond and
Fayeue Station.
"A lot of people think the
bridge is the park," said park
ranger David Caldwell.
Two visitor's centers can be
found in the park - one at
Canyon Rim on the north side
of the bridge and the other at
Grandview
in
Raleigh
County.
The center at Sandstone is
the first permanent structure
completed by the Natiooal
Park Service on. the river's
southern end .
Caldwell said the new cen·
ter was needed because when
rangers were telling people
what to see in the park , they
often directed them back
down Interstate 64.
Other than a seasonal camp
near Sandstone Falls. there
was no true infonnation center.
The center. which opened
last September. has di splays
about the New River's heritage and recreational oppor·
!unities, but Caldwell said its
aim is more scientific.
(George Gcuuum is a HTiter
Several interactive exhib1ts for the Charleston (W.Va.)
highlight the local flora and Da;/r Mail.)

NORTHEAST OHIO
Tappan Lake' (Hamson County) Saugeye stocked 1M 1999 are expected
to average about 21 mches th1s year
Casting Rat-L·Trap style lures or usmg
cran~ b811s and Jigs with m1nnows mto
shallow waters at sunrise and sunset
are best Vertrcal 1•gg1ng w1th Sonars.
C1cada"s and other J1gg1ng type lures
around the br~dges located on U S. 250
from
m1d·October
through
m1d·
November can be very effeC!IVB. Try
blaCk jigS and !WISter tailS. The White
crappie outlook IS good with many crappie averaging 8 t /2 1nches. 299 horse
power hmrt
Berlin Reservorr (Portage , Mahoning,
and Stark count•es) - N1ne to 17 inch
walleye are hitt1ng on artificial ba1ts
Crappie are also biting near the U.S
224 bndge and around downed trees
and undeiWater structure. White crappie
are larger but fewer while black crappie
are numerous. Unlimited horsepower.

SOUTHWEST OHIO
Rocky Fork Lake (H ighland County)Anglers are catch1ng 12 to 18 1nch saugeye by casting crank baits. plastic curly
ta1l jigs, and j1gging spoons. Try ftshing
the 5 to 12 foot depths around the
islands near the dam, and near the
south beach .
Caesar Creek Lake (Wanen County)
Muskie ang lers are hav1ng some
excitement with 30 to 36 mch fish by
casting large shad-colored crank ba1ts
1n the coves with standing timber. Wh1te
bass in the 9-to 12-•nch range are h!tt1ng
on curly ta1IJ1gs and blade bails. D1v1ng
groups of seagulls are often the telltale

sign !hat a school of wh1te bass IS
actively chasing small shad rear the
surface

SOUTHEAST OHIO
P1edmont Lake (Belmont County) Saugeye are be1ng caught 1n shallo w
water areas throughout the lake and are
also movtng ups1ream in the smaller

mbutanes as w.ater levels allow
Saugeye can also be lound upstream of
the bndge m the very upper end at the
lake Tw1ster ta11 JlQS (chartreuse ) t1pped
Wllh n1ght crawler or mmnow or shallow
d1v1ng crank baits are work 1ng well
Tycoon Lake (Galha County) Crapp1e up to tO 1nches as well as
blueg 111 are brtlnij well. F1sh near brush
piles. stumps . or along some ol the old.
submerged lence- rows Pearl colored
tw1slers are the hot ba1t as well as chartreuse tw1sters Tycoon Lake IS well
~nown for b1g bass An 18-tnch mm1mum
length hm1t IS 1n place tor largemouth
bass. Warm tall days should keep bass
b1!1ng. Tycoon Lake IS an etectnc motor
only take

·
~

·
•

LAKE ERIE
Surface temperatures range from 52
to 57 degrees The 1S·1nch walleye m1n·
1mum s1ze l1m1t rema1ns 1n eftect for the •
ent1re season. Ang lers are rem1nded
that th e da1ly bag hm1t for !rout and
salmon on Lake Er1e and 1ts tr~butanes •
IS 2 through May 15 2005 The mm•mum SIZ8 limit IS 12 InCheS
Western Basm - Most walleye f1shmg
afton has shifted to the area between
Huron and Lora1n As water temperatures drop shallow near shore areas and
reefs around the Bass Islands and ·
Kelleys Island will produce walleye TroU .
or cast crank baits during low light penads for best results. The best fishmg for
Yellow Perch has been from west of
Rattlesnake Island nor1h to the
US/Canada borde r east of Kelleys
Island. and north of Gull Island shoal.
Fish JUS! oft the bottom usinQ perch ·
spreaders l ipped with sh1ners. The best •
smanmouth bass l1shing has been on
the reels at the Camp Perry !Iring range, •
around the Bass Islands, Kelleys Island
and Sandusky Bay Use tube jigs , drop
shot r1gs w1th goby 1m1tations. soft craws
or shmers fo r best results
Central Bas1n - The best walleye fishing has been from west ot the sandbar
to Huron , and near shOre between
Huron and Vermilion. As temperatures ·
drop near shore fishing opportunities ,
shOuld improve
Trollmg spoons or
worm harnesses usmg divers and ·
troU1ng crank b811s have produced the
best catches. Yellow perch fishing has
been best 2 m~ l es northeast of Lorain,
east of the middle of the sandbar, within
3 miles of Vermi1iQfl, 3 miles northwest
of Fa1rport Harbor in 50 to 52 feet of
water. 3 to 4 miles north ot Cleveland in .
40 to 52 feet of water. and 4 m~es north
of Ashlabula in 55 to 60 feet of water. A ·
perch spreader lipped w1lh &amp;h1ners IS
the most popular set up The best smallmouth bass hshmg has been around
Ruggles reel. Use tube j1gs, drop shot
rigs with goby Imitations, soft craws or
sh1ners tor best results . The Lake Ene
tributanes cont1nue to nave low flow •
EtYen after last week's ra1ns. Steelhead
fishmg 1n the tnbutanes dUring sMIIpw
water requ~res light tackle and patience
Durmg low water check the deeper
tower stretches of the rivers and harbors Piers and break walls have prOduced the best action on j1gs tipped with
maggots. spinners. spoons and smau
crank baits .

OHIO RIVER
Galha County - Some hybrid st nped
bass and saugeye are be1ng caugnt
Oelow the R C Byrd locks and Dam
M1nnows and chubs are work1ng well
along w1th while or s1lver deep drvtng
crank balls. Most of the hybrid st ripers _
are being caught close to the wall . The
Oh1o River IS near normal pool and the
water 1s clea1.

'

Hours:

Twin Oaks
Convenience
Store

Mon-Fri: 5-10

Sat 6·1 o
Sun: 8·10

Nomar Garciaparra
becomes free agent
NEW YORK (AP) - While
the Boston Red Sox prepared
for their victory parade, their
former All-Star shortstop,
Nomar Garciaparra. filed for
free agency.
Until he was dealt to the
Chicago Cubs on July 31 as
· part of a four-team trade,
Garciaparra had spent hi s
entire career - 8 1/2 years with the Red Sox, who beat St.
Louis on Wednesday to complete their World · Series
sweep.
Garciaparra has said he
would consider returning to
Chicago. and general manager
Jim Hendry has already spoken with his agent, Arn
Tellem . But Qarciaparra also
wants to test the free agent
market for thdirst time in his
career.
''!' m going to experience
something I never experienced
in the offseason," Garciaparra
said on the last day of the season. "Like I said; this is one of
the places I'll consider. No
question."
But there likely will be plenty of other suitors for the fivelime All-Star and two-time AL
'batting champion. Though
Garciaparra was slowed by
injuries to his Achilles' ten·
don, left wrist and groin - he
played only 81 games - he
hit .308 with nine homers and
41 RB!s for the Red Sox and
Cubs.
Garciaparra batted .321 in
38 games with Boston and
.297 . in 43 games with the

Cubs.
In their first move since
winning their first Series title
since 1918, the Red Sox exer·
cised a $2.5 million option
Friday on third baseman Bill
Mueller instead of paying a
$500,000 buyout.
"We have tremendous ownership. We have a great fan
base. We have a great nucleus.
We have a lot of resources,"
Mueller said Wednesday
night. "Maybe we can contend
for this every single year."
The 2003 AL batting cham·
pion hit .283 with 12 homers
and 57 RBis this season.
Mueller, limited to I I0 games
by anhroscopic surgery on his
right knee, had the tying single
against the New York
Yankees' Mariano Rivera in
the ninth inning of Game 4 of
the AL ·championship series,
starring 'Boston's comeback
from an 0-3 deficit.
Boston, scheduled to be
honored in a parade Saturday,
has up to 16 players eligible
for free agency, including
pitchers Terry Adams and
Pedro Astacio, who were
among 58 players to file
Friday, raising the total to 123
of the 215 potentially eligible.
Cardinals shortstop Ed~ar
Renteria filed along wrth
cat~her Mike Matheny and ·
outfielder Ray Lankford . Re·
signing Renteria,- .29, ' Js
expected to be . one of th~
Cardinals' top priorities. He
batted .287 w1th I0 home runs ~.
and 72 RB\s this season .

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Cl

J;unba!' Qtime~ -&amp;entinel

The
and

Sunday, October 31, 2004

...

F\
BY BRIAN

J.

REED ·

BREEDCZPMYOAI LYSENTINEL .COM

LONG BOTTOM- Many
years ago, parishioners at Our
Lady of Loretto Church
could hear the horse ' s hooves

on the old wooden bridge a1
Keno - miles away - as
their pastor arrived for lhe
monthly Mass.
Since 1896, the small
frame church on Ohio 248, at
Success Road, has stood vigil
on a hill overlooking 1he
Long Bottom communily.
Although il was closed lo
regular worship in 1972, a
family with strong rools 10
1he church and the Ca1holic
faith conlinue lo look after il.
mainlaining lhe building,
grounds and cemetery. and
preserving the history of a

Our Lady of Loretto Church is located on Ohio 248 at Success
Road in Long Bottom. (Marcinko Family)

religiou s community which
mighl otherwise be forgotten.
Danny Marcinko, his wife,
Roxie . hi·s moth~r. Winifred.
and other members of the

completed

some

renovations to the church .

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Marcinko said.

The Rev. Falher Waller
Heint., pa stor ur Sacred Heart

Church in Pomeroy. said 1he
pari sh and 1hc Diocese of
Steubenville will continue 10

ltt'11IU1 C•rt""

• Dementia • Hospice .
• Rehabilitation • Respite

311 B•ck RJdgc RIC\ Bidwell, OH • (740). 446-7150

ccmclcry

is

still

active ,"

Heinz said . "The local parish
and the dioce se are commit teJ to rhat. ··
Heinz conducts mu ss at the
little rni s ~ion church twice a

year. and 1he cemelery has
seen seven burials in I 0
years. In '"facl. when Roxie's
falhcr, Rohcn: died , some of
his family were at the L:hurch
cemetery preparing his grave,
while others were at work in

1hc church. completing 1he
window replacement.
(Bnan J. Reed/ photo)
The Rev. Father Walter He inz greets Danny and Roxie Marcinko
at the door to Ou r Lady of Loretto Church. As pastor of Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy. Heinz oversees the mission church
in Long Bottom.
·

finance any repairs that arc
deemed necessary at the
church : II is the diocese
which finances the projects,
but the work is completed by
!,he Marcinko family.
Mosl recemly, the diocese
purchased lawn care equipment and new windows for
the church. Even those windows have the "'Marcinko''
touch.
Danny's brother, Otto,
made the windows from a
pattern, and carried them alop
his car all lhe way from
Texas . Once the peaked windows arrived home in Meigs
Co,unty; Winnie
painted
them , and Danny and his
brother- in-law,
David
Marcinko. installed them .
For Danny and Roxie
Marcinko, who have four
children, ~vorking to protect

Danny and David Marc1nko replaced windows at Our Lady of Loretto Church with new ones
built and delivered from Texas by their brother, Otto , and .painted by the ir mother, Win ifred
(Marcinko Family)

.OilY
SIJBPLIJS ~
:un SL RL 7 North

•

Galllr:lls, Ohio

JAMES~ENRY

Rocehits Pool f/

ATI'ORNEY and COUNSELOR at LAW

to be
and

Drtvlng

l583 St. Rt.l60 • Gallipolis, OH

will probably move away
when 1hcy'rc grow'!, too. and
won'! be here 10 help." Roxie

Long Bouom because 1hc

A~llEI'S

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon

• caD for an Appointment

our children have grown and
moved away, and the others

laler closed. and was sold.
Proceeds from lhe sale were
placed in lrusl. ~ and now

The Area's Largest
u.,._~.., Select1nn of
Top r;f rhe ~ine Spas
and 1Nui1l fdnn~ng

ARB~RS AT -GALLIPOLIS
Skilll.'d~ urliing &amp; Rehnbilitntjon Center

lhe · properly of I he Ca1holic
Diocese of Slcubcnville . The
cemetery al Our Lady of

Plains, but that new church

HOURS,
MON. - THUR. lf-9
FRI. - SAT. lf-fO
SUNDAY

380 Colonial Drive
; ,. ,.,
Bidw~n. Ohio 45614 • ~ '\k.!{t,, . ' I
or call 740-446-5001

"Our pre sence will contin ue to be maintained l"tere in

on forever, because two of

ly.
In 1he 1970s, 1he Long
' replaced
Bottom church was
by a new one buill in ;ruppers

"'' n1111 Sme
w,.,.,_

church is a . way of honoring

The churt.:h it self remain s

Lorello is _. .;,'\till open. and
well maintained by the fam'i-

¥Sandwich
¥Chips
¥Drink

oversee lhe properly because
of its "active" cemetery.

holh lhe family and lhe
church, bu1 !hey ackn.owledge 1ha1 lhis work will nm
likely conlinuc indefinitely.
"We realize !his won ' ! go

Marcinko family now oversee 1he regular care of 1he
church and cemetery. and lhis
summer.

their family's religious herilagc and !heir childhood

Shawn Layn.e
Trainer/Manager
(740) 441-9970
(740) 709-1017

• Estate Planning, WUis and Probate
• Domestic Relations
• Real Estate
• Personal Injury
• Preparation of Legal Documents
1740) 446-7889

email: atlyjamesrhenl')'@hotmall.oom

The congregation of Our Lady of Loretto Church is pictured during a 1946 May Crowning celeb ratton , (Mafcinko Famil y)
'

•

(Brian J . Reed/ photo )
Made of pa pter mach€. th ts Madonna IS one of seve ral
returne d to Our Lady of Loretto Church tn Long Bottom after
the Tuppers Plains church was closed. Its age is not known . •

,

�.

PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN
Are you an 'educated investor'?
fi~i&gt;hed

You may have
school many years ago. but
that doesn't mean you can't
continue your education . And
one of the most important
topic s you can study i·s
inve&gt;ting - becau&gt;~ educated investors are usually the
most successful ones.
Of course. you may already
be somewhat familiar with
investing. And this experi' ence can teac h you a great
deal. But it can't teach you
everything you need to know
- which is why you'll want
to further your financial education.
What can vou earn?
Should you ·learn more
about investing so that you
can identify "hot" stocks'~ In
a word. no. In manv c·a&gt;cs.
· stock "tips" are dubious and. in any case. even if you
should find a hot .-tuck. it
may already be cooling offhy
the tinu:: you invest in it.
So. what can you gain from
becoming a well-educated
investor'' Here are just a few
benefits:
• You may be more likely to
achie1e your goals - By
understanding the conce pts
of investment 4uality and
diversilication. you c·an help
build a portfolio to enable
you to make progress toward
your long -term ubjectives .
Furthermore. you can work
toward a mix of investments
that retlect yo ur indi1·idual

April
Rice

tolerance for risk.
•You may maintain realistic
expectations - By knowing
how your stocks. bonds and
governmelll securities may
perform in different economic scenarios . .you can help
avoid the type of disappointments that can lead you to
abandon your investment
strateg1es.
o You may not overreact to
today's headlines By
learnin g the key factors that
dri1·e the markets - such as
corporate earn ing s and sustainahle in economic growt h
- you may not be tempted to
ma"e hasty or ill-advised
investment decisions in
response
to
short-term
events. such as an election.
military actions. spikes in oil
prices. etc.
Sources of education
Clearly. you can help yourself by learning as much as
possible about the investment
world. And. ;IS you .probably
knuw. vuu can find investmcnt information from a
v;tri ety ofsources. You may

be able to take classes at a
local community college.
You can find seminars advertised in the newspaper. You
can choose from among a
huge ~upply of books and
magazines. You can watch
investment shows on televiston.
In fact. your biggest challenge isn't finding sources of
investment information it's finding information that
you find understandable and
suitable.
So. browse your bookstore,
surf the Internet and flip the
channels. But as you do, keep
in mind that some sources
· that appear objective actually
n1ay have a degree of selfinterest in what they're communicating to you.
You may also want to work
with an investment professional - someone who will
take the time to discuss key
issues with vo u. and who will
tailor all recommendations to
your individual needs, goals
and risk tolerance. As an
investor, you ' ll find that
there's always something
new to learn - and knowledge is power.
!April E. Rice is an inrestment representati•·e with
Ed1rard .Iones llli'I!S flllents .
/ocmed at 990A Second A1·e ..
Callipolii, phone 441-9441 .
Ed1rard .Iones has been sen ·i11g indil'idual im•esrors since
11171./nemberS!PC)

Methodist pastor was never
'Boring' to flock
BY JAMES SANDS

In 18-l.l. the Rev. E.M .
Boring arrived in Gallipolis
by steamboat to fulfill his
appointment as pastor of
what is now Grace United
Methodist Church. Boring
and his 11 ife came here from
Augusta. Ky.. where Et.ra
Marsh Bonng had been a
sem inary principal.
Boring, age 31. became
what was called a station
preacher. The first Methodist
one in Gallia hi story. All previous Methodist pastors were
circuit riders, that is to say,
they had to preach at several
churches that covered a circuit. A station preacher had
just one church.
The Borings first stop was
at the Our ·House. James
Richardson, the proprietor of
the Our House. was the steward fo r Grace Church. The
steward acted on behalf of
the trustees to care for all
church property, making sure
it was maintained as well as
managing the finances to do
the same.
Richardson
informed
Boring that since he was now
a station preacher. that he no
longer needed a horse. Hence
Richardson had sold the
Methodist horse. In due time .
however. Boring got his
horse back.
Boring\ first impre.-sion of
Gallipoli s. he told people
about -!0 years later. was the
·town sfolk see med a little
"tight" with their finances.
But on Christmas Day. 1843.
when a daughter was born to
the Borings in the Methodist
parsonage, the people of the
church outdid themselves.
Wrote Boring, "The people
vied with each other in warm.
congrmulations and substan-

tial tokens of both the day
and the occasion." Despite
the fact that Boring 's yearly
pay in 184.\ was $316. he
says that "he never lacked for
anything as the congregation
kept him supplied with
warurnbc. food and other staples ... The parsonage. though
small. was clean. neat and
cozy.
The church building. on the
other hand, was "old and
completely innocent of
paint." That building had
been erected 'in 1821 and was
50 feet by 44 feet and only
one story. In 1840, the entire
roof of the church had been
taken off by a tornado. the
latter coming the same day
that a giant Harrison for president rally was held here. A
lot of water came into the
building and no doubt did
much damage to the walls.
In 1844. Boring was called
to do the sen·ices for a man
who had died of drunkenness. The funeral was held in
the church . Attending the
worship were numerous
&gt;aloonkeepers. Boring chose
for his text. "He being dead.
yet doth he speaketh."
Boring's initial sentence in
his sermon told the audience
that the departed man had not
died of natural causes but he
was killed. Shaking themselves awaken from thi s
"Boring ser;non," they listened as Rev. Ezra said fu rther. "Saloonkecpers, you are
daily engaged in killing your-.elves and others as well."
Mrs . Boring was much
upset by her hu sband's
words. as she feared retaliation from saloonkeepers who
in 1844 probably outnumbered Methodists in the Old
French City. Much to
Boring's surprise, he was

give n a $20 gold piece for his
work at the funeral. It was
short ly after this .that two of
Gallipolis' oldest taverns,
Our House and Eagle Tavern.
became dry. In t:1ct, Eagle
TaYern was converted into a
newspaper office by the Hoy
family who printed a newspaper that demanded temperance in the Old French City.
Of his two-year pastorate
in Gallipolis, Boring said,
''Gallipolis was my maiden
appointment and hence was
my first love and like true
love only grows stronger
with increasing years."
In 1857, the Borings
moved to Galena, !II. ,
where one of his flock was
the soon to become famou s
U.S. Grant. For much of his
ministry after the Civil War,
Boring served churches in
the Chicago area. He was
one of the founders of the
Home for the Friendless in
Chicago and the Desplaines
camp meeting. He spe nt hi s
early retirement years
building an endowment
fund for the Superannuate
Relief Society. This fund
was created to care for pastors who · had become
infirm.
After hi s wife's death .
Boring moved to Evanston,
Ill. , where his children lived .
His health deteriorated. He
begged to be put into a mental institute, but his family
would have none of it. One
day he slipped up to the attic
of his son's house and hanged
himself. He was in his 78th
year.
(.lames Sands is a special
correspolldent j{1r the Su11day
Times~Sl!ntilud.

He can he

COII{{/C/ed !Jy HTiting to /070
Miliwrr Ruad, Zane."·ille.
Ohio 43701.)

Straub's new thriller is a brilliant chiller
BY CAROL DEEGAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"In the Night Room ... By
Peter Straub. Random House.
330 Page s. $21 .95.
•

0

•

Peter . . Straub brilliantly
blurs the line between reality
and fiction in his latest
thriller, "In the Night Room."
The novel is a seque l to
·'Lost Boy Lost Girl ," the
story of Manhattan no velist
Tim Underhill. who fictionalizes the disappearance of hi s
teenage nephew, Mark. to
ease the pain of losing him.
In hi s book. Tim allows
Mark to slip away into an
"Elsewhere... accom pani ed
by a beau tiful phantom
named Lucy CJe,eland. In
re alit y.
Luc;
is
Lily

Kalendar. the daughter of
murderer Joseph Kalendar.
Tim awaits the publication
of his novel (also titled "Lost
Boy Lost Giri"J while working on a new manuscript.
Trouble is. he\ seeing the
. ghost of his long-dead sister.
Apri I. who appears to be trying to warn him about ;ornething , and receiving eerie.
fragmented e-mail&gt; from
dead &lt;icquaintances.
.. Fears that his grip on sanity
may be slipping aren't lcs.-ened when young-adult nove liq Willy Bryce Patrick
shows up at one of Tim';
bookstore readings . Willy i;
running from her fiance. having discovered that he was
probab ly responsible for the
murder of her hu&gt;band and ,
young c_bughter.

Willy isn't certain why
she's come to Tim for help,
but her presence jolts him
wtth pure fear. She's one of
his characters. who has somehow come to life .
As Tim slowly helps Willy
realize that she's not real ,
they travel to the Illinois
town where Tim's nephew
disappeared. An abandoned
house had been an obsession
of Mark's. and Tim had used
it as the villain of his
nephew's disappearance.
ln. hi s novel, Tim had
wrongly
implied
that
Kalendar had kille·d his
young daughter in that house .
·'In the Night Room" is so
imaginative. intricate and
electrifying that readers will
be tempted to race through
the novel. Doil't'

Sunday, October 31, 2004

. coMMUNITY

coRNER

A reminder of when Queens passed by
If you enjoyed the calliope
concert coming from the
Delta Queen one evening last
week, you can thank Jim and
RJJth Lochary of Amesville,
former residents and frequent
visitors to Pomeroy.
Jim and Ruth were on
board the sternwheeler with
their daughters, Susan and
her husband, Steve Garguillo
of Newark, N.J., and Patty
Loehary and her son, Shane
Leep of Amesville, and their
son, Chris Lochary of
Dayton.
The trip was in honor of
Jim and Ruth's 50th wedding
anniversary, and it was Jim
who arranged for Thomas
"Jazzu" Jones to entertain his
beloved hometown on the
calliope.
It was enjoyable as always,
and for many of us, brought
back memories of the good
old days when every time the
Queen passed by Pomeroy, it
was with music of the calliope.
The
Daily
Sentinel
announced the day and time
and groups gathered down by
the river to listen to the music
and wave to the passengers.
Today, we seldo m know
when any of the three beautiful Queens pass by and
almost never hear the calliope.
Also on board ·were the
Rev. John G. Carson and his
wife Jean, of Hillsboro.
known to many here . The
retired emeritus rector of St.
Mary's Episcopal Church in
Hillsboro, and the Locharys
reflected on the many times
he served as a supply minister at Grace Church in
Pomeroy and the many families here with whom he
became acquainted.

Charlene
Hoeflich

•••
Meigs County's own Elvis
tribute
artist.
Dwight
Icenhower, has been in Las

for a production of "South
Pacific" at the Actors Guild
of Parkerburg.
Five of the local players
have parts in the production.
They are. Dixie Sayre, Bob ·
Buck. Todd Tucker, Brian
Howard and Julie Howard.
The show opens on Nov. 5
and runs through Nov. 27
every Friday and Saturday
night.
Tickets are now on sale and
information about that can be
obtained by calling (304)

485-1300
or
accessing
www.actorsguildonline.com.
Vegas for the past several
Now. in case you haven't
days. He is there to compete
·
.
for the world title of best had the opportumty to see
these local actors in
Elvis impersonator.
The contest is taking place action. you can at the
at Sam's Town USA Casino, Meigs
Chamber
of
Commerce's
an
nual
dinner
with an expected 75 artists to
compete. Saturday afternoon, on
Nov.
5 at
the
Dwight had his first competi- Middleport Church of
tion.lfhe made i\ into the top Christ Family Life Center.
IQ, he will be competing
They will be doing songs
another day. The top prize is from each of the musicals
$5,000.
they have perfor~ed and one
Incidentally, Dwight placed I ~om the .. upcommg produc.~
third in the competition in · t1on nt Bye Bye Birdie.
200 I and then came back to What tun they have.
take second place in a similar
o • •
,;
contest in Nashville. Tenn.,
And speaking of entertainla st year.
ment. don't delay getting
, , ,
you r ticket if you want to
Mike and Debbie Gilmore hear King's X at the Court
got a real surprise last Street Grill. Jacki e Welker
Saturday when their son. describes them as "the
Justin. who has been serving almighty power rock trio." ·
in Iraq since February, The performance is Saturday
walked in the door. He'll b)! and ti ckets are on sale at the
Grill.
returning there on Nov. I.

•••
Performance is addictive
and several of the River City
Players are just that addicted to the stage lights.
After months of practice
for "Annie Get Your Gun"
and performances in early
September. they rested a
week or so and then tried out

•

0

0

We hope you remembered
to change our clock, change
your smoke detector batteries
thi s weekend, and that come
Tuesday you will exercise
your right to vote.
(Charlene Hoefli ch is general manager of The Daily
Sentinel in Pomeroy.)

RSVP annual recognition luncheon set
RIO GRANDE - The four will receive awards for will give a presentation on
Retired and Senior Volunteer 15 years of service. RSVP patriotic music during the
Program (RSVP) for Gallia, will also present pins to vol- event. The luncheon ts
Jack son and Vinton counties unteers who have put in always a time for the volunwill honor its volunteers dur- I ,000 hours or 2,000 hours of teers to gather together to
ing is annual recognition lun- service during the last year. _ visit. but also to recognize
cheon Wednesday, Nov. 3, at
"Volunteering for 2,000 each other for the work they
the University of Rio hours is like working full- do throughout the year.
Grande/Rio
Grande time for a year," Rogers said.
For more information , conCommunity College.
Several volunteers will be tact Rogers at (740) 286The recognition luncheon receiving the Hours of 4918.
begins at II :30 a.m. in Service award pins .
Conference Room C in the
Rio Grande President Dr.
ATTENTION
Student Center Annex on the Barry Dorsey will offer a few
KMART SHOPPERS
Rio Grande campus.
remarks during the event.
Pg. 2 of our Octo bet 31,
"We will present several Since this is a presidential On
2004 weekly advertised circular
awards during the luncheon," election year, and the recog- the Tampax Pearl Tampons
said Susan Rogers, director nition luncheon will be held 36-40 ct. box is indicated at a
sale price of 2 for n This is
of the RSVP program.
on the day after Election Day, incorrect and should be
· Through RSVP, senior citi- the luncheon wi II have a advertised at $7 each.
zens volunteer for a variety patriotic theme.
We regret any
• inconvenience this
of projects, including educaDonna Eggers, directllr of
1
may have caused
tion, health care, nutrition , the Oak Hill Food Pantry,
our customers.
social services, public safety,
community development and
environmental awareness.
The program has difl'erent
sites in the three counties,
including a home on the Rio
Grande campus. This year.
293 senior citizens from the
area volunteered to assist
The news of the Che~hin: Village ··Buy-Ou!'' ~truck li k~? a
countle ss individuals and
hon~ chilling blast or wi nd and ()llf litth: l'hurch '&gt;hivered .
complete numerous programs
After the smoke cleared a little. we found our!'O.;]\'cs
in the region . One of those
hcwildc r~u and upprehensivc . We ah.. o found ourselves
volunteers will be singled out
without a pas10r.
for a special award during the
Well. Ged had a plan. (He was not at all surprised ). He was
luncheon.
ready with the solution before we even hc;m.l [)f the problem.
Dr. Luther Tracy. a retired
Therefore it came about that '"There was a man sent from God
whuse name was---" Steve. And so it was that in the
minister and former professor
providence of God. Pastor Steve Lillie and his lovely wifl'
at Rio Grande, will receive
Rita came to serve Cheshire Baptist Church.
this speciaf award.
Pastor Steve and Rita sing together and one of their favo rite
"He will be honored for 25
duets is "Loving God, Loving Each Oth~r". A'-'tually thi:-.
years as a volunteer," Rogers
would be a tiuing theme song for their li ves! Pastor Steve
said.
follows this cmphasi ~ in his preaching mini ~·.lry and in a down
Tracy is 91 and he is very
to earth practical way bmh he and Rit&lt;l model it for u:-. in their
lives.
daily
while
involved. with RSVP,
.
Pastor Steve i:-. a strong spiritual leader with a ~ervant heart.
also serving as a volunteer
He takes very seriously our Lord\ wurlls, " hru.\·much (/.\ ro 11
chaplain at Holzer Medical
haw! donE: it lllllo one of rhe leasr of rlu:.\e rou lim •t' dm;e ir
Center. Tracy is well known
1~mo Me" ,·, If you n.ccd .help with sorncthi.ng . c~·c n if it is
in Gallia County and around
entirely mundane. it is not beneath Pa.-.tor Stt.'vc's dignity to do
the region for all of the work
it for yo'u . He would no more consider your need too much
he has done, and all of the
trouble than if it were the Lord Je:-, us with a need . Js thi s not 1
people he has helped in his
Corinthians 13 in shoe leather?
Visitors to Our church seem to feel the warmth of the love of
career.
God in our growing cnngregation and in our pastor. Pa:-,tor
"He\ a wonderful individSteve
ha:-. a way of making every person who com e:-, through
ual who does so much for the
the
door
feel a"o if he or she is the mo~t imrmrtant person
com munity," Rogers said.
prc:-,cnl. Man y of tho~e who vi~it come back . Folh are being
RSVP will also present
reached with the Gmpcl. hclieving und rccci\·ing the Lord
awards for individuals who
Jesus. Our church is full on Sunday morning.
have given 5, 10 or 15 years
That cold chilling wind ha; hccn replaced hy the gent le
of service to RSVP. Eighteen
prc:-,encc of .rhc Holy Spirit of God. Our paMor preaches the
inspired Word , the preciou:-. blom.l and the blessed hope. ,
volunteers will
recetve
TJumk
Yrm. f .ord. fm· tmr pa.Hm:
. awards for five years of serThe members
vice. 14 will receive awards
for i0 years of 'erv ice and

iunba, lim~ ·ientind

IN THE KITCHEN

Bv J.M. HIRSCH

tage cheese. It was as deli- much improved appearance.
cious as it was beautiful.
as well as a subtle sweetness
An equally absentee class- that complemented the feta
CONCORD, N.H. - Full mate and I would sit at the cheese.
di sclosure: This one isn ' t cafe for hours. And though I
This is a great side dish for
pretty.
loved it, those meals clearly a cool autumn . dinner, and
When I struck upon the influenced him more than would go w.ell with a mild
idea of cooking something me. He went on to study and crean1y soup. perhaps of
Russian, I was hankering for Ru ssian and live in that pureed winter squash or potasomething earthy and rich. nation's far corners for years. toes.
something that would stick to
So when I recently found
my ribs but wasn 't a tired myself craving that earthy Cabbage Baked With Feta
classic American comfort but not-quite-American com(Preparation 45 minutes)
dish.
fort food. I gave him a call. A
However, I wanted some- few days later a copy of the
I firm head green cabbage,
thing that looked a lot better recipe for one of his favorite cored and finely slivered
than the gray baked cabbage I Russian dishes arrived.
8 tablespoons unsalted butended up with.
Cabbage baked with feta, ter
Russ ian food seemed a fr(lm Anya von Bremzen and
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
good choice. Not only can it John Welchman's "Please to
1/4 cup sour cream
taste quite good, it also can the Table: The Russian
2 large eggs
be visually stunning, thanks Cookbook"
1/4 cup finely chopped
(Workman
in part to its generous use of Publishing, 1990. $ 19 .95), fresh dill
ingredients such as beets, car- actually is from Moldova.
Salt and freshly ground
rots, rai sins and a variety of once par~ of the Soviet black pepper, to taste
cheeses. What a color palette. Union.
I and 113 cups finely crumI know this not because I
The recipe promise s to bled feta cheese
have tromped the food halls bring out the best in cabbage.
1/2 cup plain bread crumbs
of Russia, but because I I was inclined to believe it.
I to 2 teaspoons sweet
played hooky in high schooL With butter, oil, sour cream, Hungarian paprika
A lot.
Preheat oven to 375 F.
eggs and feta cheese among
When I wasn't in school- the ingredients, how could it
Bring a large stockpot of
and that counts as the better not be good?
water to a boil. Blanch the
pan of my senior year- my
It was delicious. and cabba-ge for 2 minutes, then
adventures often took me to offered far more tlavor than drain and transfer to a kitchen
Boston, where funky cafes you would expect from cab- towel. Pat dry.
seduced with copious cups of bage, even smothered in
Heat a large skillet over a
coffee and the sort of faux dairy. That's party due to medium llame. Add 3 tablephilosophizing
only slowly frying the cabbage spoons butte'r and the oil. Add
teenagers appreciate.
the cabbage and saute. stiruntil brown and crispy.
My favorite was Troika. a
But, as I said, thi s isn ' t ring frequently. until the cabcramped Russian restaurant Rus sian food at its most bage is nicely browned. about
across the street from attractive.
15 to 20 minutes. Set the cabHarvard . English wasn't on
The dish needs color. For a bage aside umil cool.
the menu, but a dizzying second batch I added a cup of
While the cabbage cools. in
array of zakuski (starters) julienned carrots and 1/2 cup a small bowl II' hi 'k together
was, including cucumbers in golden raisins just before the sour cream and egg~. Add
sour cream and vegetable baking. The result was ' a the sour-cream mixture to the
canapes with radishes, tomatoes and, of course, sour
2004-2005 Valley Artist Series
cream.
Sweet Adelines
The stuffed doughs - the
pirogs and pirozhkis - were
&amp; The TrebleMakers
amazing, and amazingly
cheap. But my favorite dish
Sunday , Nov. 7, 2004 • 3 pm
was a salad of chopped beets,
Fine and Performing Arts Center
diced cucumber, raisins,
University of Rio Grande
shredded carrot. tomato, marAdditional individual tickets available at S I0
Call 740-245-7364
inated mushrooms and cotASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.. . .

'

.....

Sunday, October 31,2004

(AP Photo)

Cabbage Baked With Feta is
made with a recipe from
Anya von Bremzen and John
Welchman 's "Please to the
Table: The Russian
Cookbook." To give the dish
more color, you may add
some julienned carrots and
. .i
raisins.
cabbage and mix well. Add
the di II. salt and pepper and
mix again . Transfer the cabbage mixture to a medium
casserole or baking dish.
In a small bowl combine
the feta cheese and bread
crumbs. Sprinkle the cheese
mixture over the cabbage.
Sprinkle paprika over the
cheese and bread crumbs.
·
Melt the remaining butter
and pour it evenly over the
cabbage. Bake until bubbly
and lightly browned. about
15 minutes .
Makes 6 servings.
(Recipe from Any a von
Bremzen
and , John
Welchman\ ''Please to the
Table:
The
Russian
Cookbook."
Workman
9
a ggo A os '
I

I'

I

'

"

I

$1

.

J.M. Hirsch carl be
mailed at jhirscll@ap.org.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~LYNN

ANGELL QUEEN

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

GAlliA COUNTY COMMISSIONE~
FI\A\CIAL EXPERIE\CE YOC CA~ COU\T 0\

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Kl \~~~·

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• DRY ClONING
CAll FOR PICK UP &amp;
1143 CBDIBDIR Rd. Gallipolis. OH
740-446·9585

Samelav Service II bv 1:00 a.m. Dlt IIV 5:00 a.m. Wflekdtlll
0o
"November Specials"

c:::;l

Centenarv Hours:
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Sat:8·1
Sun·Cisllll

Womens 2 pc. dress SB. OO
Womens 2 pc. dress $6.00
Men's dress shirt $1.00

PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

•

Our State Senator
• Lif~long
•
•
•
•
•
•

One

resident
Small business owner
Public school teachers, 20 years
Small business owner, 27 years
Former State Representative
Current State Senator
Former Director of the Ohio Office of
·Appalachia

us • Working for us
'

t
t
t
t
t

PagcC3

Uegetarian Cooking: Recipe for cabbage baked with feta

I[

t
Why We At Cheshire Bqptist Church t
Appreciate Our Pastor . t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
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.

Paid for hv Pfidaett-. for Ohio. Mervin Dixon. TrPilsurer. R71 Walnut StrePt

�AT THE MOVIES

6unbap limH ·6tntinel

PageC4

ON THE BOOKSHELF

Sunday, October 31, 2004

'ENDURING LOVE'
BY CHRISTY LEMIRE
AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

Jamie Fo)()( as American legend Ray Charles in the musical
biograph ical drama," Ray."

Dr. Lawrence Gordon (Cary Elwes) finds himself chained to a
rusty pipe inside a decrepit subterranean chamber in Lions
Gate Films thriller, "Saw."

BY DAVID GERMAIN

as
Andy
Kaufman in ·'Man
on the Muon" or Val Kilmer
He certainly did not feel it as Jim Morrison in "Th e·
at th e time, but director Doors." Those movies are
Taylor Hackford is enor- great technical performances
mously lucky it took 15 years that give viewers the outer
to bring hi s film biography of incarnation of their subjects
Ray Charles to the screen.
without
much
glimpse
Hackford himself concedes beneath the skin.
It was a blessing it took so
With ''Ray," Foxx delivers
long to put the project togeth- a stirring, soulful portrait of
er since he first met Charles the artist on the level of Sissy
in the late 1980s.
Spacek's Loretta Lynn in
The odds are slight that "Coal Miner 's Daughter."
Hackford could have found
The film itself has flecks
an actor back then who could and flaw s that keep it out of
have come close to Jamie the league of that Lynn
Foxx's skill, commitment biopic . Charles' boyhood
and sheer rightness for the tragedies - hi s brother 's
title role.
'
death and the· gradual loss of
"Ray" was just waiting for his eyesight - are handled
Foxx to flower as a per- rather superficially through
former, gradually easing him- sketchy flashbacks. The editself into more dramatic roles ing tends toward choppiness,
after his start in standup com- particularly in the film's
edy and such lowbrow abrupt flash-forward to round
out Charles' later years.
rdunch as "Booty Call."
the
physical
Even at 2 1/2 hours, "Ray"
Beyond
resemblance , Foxx IS so feels like a drastically
good, so earnest, so authentic reduced story, a two-disc
as Ray Charles that you prac- best-of compilation scaled
tically forget he's an actor back and crammed onto a
playing a part and start to feel single CD.
that he IS Ray Charles.
It might have played better
Primed by Foxx 's excellent as a four-hour cable ministum as a cabbie hijacked by eries, yet in the film's favor,
Tom Cruise's h1tman in "Ray" is almost always inter. "Collateral,"
Academy esting, even if the drama is
Awards voters cannot help uneven at times.
but give Foxx a best-actor
The film tracks Charles'
nomination for "Ray."
rise from teen-age keyboard
The herky-jerky head bob- jockey for clubs and house
bing, the hemmmg, hawing bands in the late 1940s,
hesitation of the voice. The through his early stumblings
smooth, playfully cocky spir- as a Nat King Cole soundit beneath the soft-spoken alike, to his ' 50s breakand seemingly deferential through, when he found his
facade. The passionate emu- voice and style in a raw, joylation of Charles' keyboard ous blend of gospel-tinged
style (a classically trained blues on such hits as "I Got a
pianist, Foxx taps h1s.musical Woman," "What'd 1Say" and
training to great effect). Even "Unchain My Heart."
the way the sweat hangs off
Foxx provides vocals for a
his brow.
couple of softer, Cole-sty led
It all screams Ray!
numbers, but Hackford wiseCharles, who died in June, ly has him lip-synch to
gave his blessing to a warts- Charles' own voice for most
and-all treatment of his life, of the songs. Imitating the
so "Ray," unflinchingly man is one thing. Imitating
depicts his introduction to the voice is another.
drugs. prolonged · heroin
The songs are pervasive,
addiction and painful cold- well-chosen and wonderfully
turkey recovery.
integrated into the action.
His tender yet troubled propelling the drama every
home life with hi s wife, bit as much as Foxx's uncanluminously played by Kerry ny embodiment of Charles.
Washington , is set alongside Some of the mu sic was newly
hi s womanizing
ways, recorded by Charles speci fi notably in hi s affair with cally for the film.
Margie Hendricks (fiercely
It would have been lovely
portrayed by Regina King ), had Charles lived to bask in
the trag ic spitfire of Charles' the adoration of fans at the
backup · singers ,
the premiere of "Ray." Charles
Raelettes.
was able to view a cut of the
The singer's kinship with tilm shortly before he died,
early collaborators such as though, allowing him to
manager Jeft Brown (Chfton appreciate the remarkable
Powell) and AtlantiC Records · ~erformance of the man stepfounder Ahmet Ertegun ping into his shoes.
(Curtis Armstrong ) and pro"Ray," a Universal release,
duc~r Je.rry Wexler (Richard is rated PG-13 for dcpictiol\
Sch1ff) IS countered by the of drug addiction. sexuality
• unsentimental busmess savvy and some thematic elements .
that prompted him to change Running time : 152 minute,.
record labels and drop Brown Three stars out of four.
for manager Joe Adams
(Harry Lcnnix) . .
PG-13- Special parental
Foxx 's performance cuts guidance strongly .~uggested
much deeper than the dead- for children under 13. Some
on impersonations of some fiUlterial may be inapproprifilm biographies, Jim Carrey ate for young·children.
AP MOVIE WRITER

~&gt; J' ~ TI t1' J' ~ TI t:J.J ' ~ TI

~ Dogs

({
··

BY DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOVIE WRITER

victims of a psychopath
known as Jigsaw, who concocts sick games to test the
morality of hi s victims. For
Lawrence, it 's the choice of
killing Adam or having his
wife (Potter) and daughter
slain instead.
Crude flashbacks detail the
killer's previous atrocities,
with Glover a police detective obsessed over bringing
Jigsaw to justice.
Wan and Whannell admit
one of their aims was shock
value, yet the instruments
and stratagems of puni shment they come up with are
grotesque without being terribly clever. And while they pat
themselves on the back for
what they think are macabre
doodads of death, they muddle up their silly creations
with cheap fast-motion
effects and clunky editing
that obscures the action.
Conversely, the shrill
exchanges
between
Lawrence and Adam and the
interplay
between
Lawrence 's wife and her tormentor are so static, they
seem like early table reads of
the script, albeit with the
actors in chains and gags.
There are no insights into
the motivations of serial
killers, no perspective on the
depths to which the human
soul will sink to preserve
itself at the expense of others.
Thi s movie just wallows in
its own unrelenting repulsiveness.
Unless you happen to relish
the image of a killer using a
stethoscope to hear the
changes in a little girl's heart
rate while he holds a gun to
her mother's head, there's no
reason you' II want to see
··saw."
"Saw," a Lions Gate
release, is rated R for strong
grisly violence and language.
Running time: 103 minutes.
One star out of four.

The fright !lick ·'Saw" ts
consistent, if nothing else.
This seri al-killer tale is
inanely plotted. ·badly written. poorly acted, coarsely
directed. hideou sly photographed and clumsi ly edited, all these ingredients leading to a yawner of a surprise
ending. To top it off. the
music's bad, too.
You could forgive all (well,
not all, or even, fractionally,
much) of the movie's flaws if
there were any chills or
scares to this sordid little horror affair.
But "Saw" director James
Wan and screenwriter Leigh
Whannell, who developed
the story together, have come
up with nothing more than an
exercise in unpleasantry and
ugliness.
"Saw" is vicious to no end.
loaded with gruesome torture
devices and scenarios that
Wan and Whannell - and
the producers they managed
to con into backing ti)e movie
- somehow thought audiences would want to see.
How such a cruelly empty
and infantile movie got made
is my stery enough. More
puzzling is why Cary Elwes~
Danny Glover and Monica
Potter would sign on as costars. The biggest question,
though, is how Whannell got
himself cast in a lead role
opposite Elwes.
If Whannell can act, he
sure doesn ' t show it . Perhaps
out of sympathy, the more
experienced cast members
don't perform much better.
Most of the movie is set in
a dingy, dirty Ja, atory. where
Dr.
Lawrence
Gordon
(Elwes) and a whiny guy
named Adam (Whannell)
awaken to find ·themselves
chained to opposite walls.
Between them is the bloody
body of a man who apparently died of a self-intlicted gunR- Restricted. Under 17
shot wound.
requires accompanying parTurns out they're the latest ent or adult guardian.

$10.00/each

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HARDCOVER
FICTION
I. "The Da Vinci Code" by
Dan Brown (Doubleday)
2. ''The Two Swords" by
R.A. Salvatore (Wizards of
the Coast)
3. "Northern Lights" by
Nora Roberts (Putnam)
4. 'The Plot Against
America" by Philip Roth
(Houghton Mifflin)
5. ' "The Five People You
Meet in Heaven" by Mitch
Alborn (Hyperion)
6. "The Dark Tower VII :
The Dark Tower" by Stephen
King (Scribner/Grant)
7. "Light on Snow" by
Anita Shreve (Little, Brown)
8; "Trace" by Patricia
Cornwell (Putnam)
9. "Shopaholic &amp; Sister"
by Sophie Kinsella (Dial)
10. "Double Shot" by
Diane
Mott
Davidson .
(Morrow)

The

BEST

Together, We Lost
885 POUNDS!

NONFICTION/

GENERAL

,.,

See Sunday Puzzle on 20

Another page opens to reveal

But when you're covering

from the bushes.
That one appears to be the
most complex, but it's the
Mississippi Rivy:r sternwheeler that is most delicate.
Closing that page too quickly,
without making sure the
steamboat is folding smoothly backward- it might need
help with a gentle pull on its
reinforced center sternwheel
piece -· will damage it irrctrievably.
The riverboat, according to
Little Simon, is the most
complex bit of paper engineering Sabuda has ever
done.
The text is the lyrics of
"America, the Beautiful,"
written by Katharine Lee
Bates a century ago.
The illustrations are as
ardent a hymn to America as
the poem. There is humor a cow pokes her head out of
the barn behind the "amber
waves of grain" and a dog
chases a cat chasing a duck in
the front of the field. But it is
belief, not irony, that couples
the pop-up of the U.S.
Capitol with the line, "And
crown thy good with brotherhood ."
The final page has a twopage spread of the Statue of
Lil:)erty and a miniature
eight-page booklet with
seven more verses and four
more pop-ups.
A'nton
Radevsky 's
"Architecture" book has six
two-page spreads with at
least three pop-ups each.
There also are plenty of
small flaps - for instance, an
exterior view of the Temple
of Hon s in Karnak, Egypt, is
on a flap that lifts to reveal a
cutaway view of the temple
- as well as un!lapped illustrations.
Add text to describe everything, and the layout gets
crowded and the print small.

museums in both New York
and Bilbao, Spain, there's
plenty to fit in .
Some of the models are so
complex or big that the reader has to help assemble them.
For instance, Notre Dame's
towers are in a pocket that
slides out from the left edge
of its page; in addition, the
arc of buttresses at the back
pulls around to be held
together by Velcro tabs.
It's fun, with a fair amount
of "wow."
Chuck Fi sc her' s "The
White House" is a prettier
book, but .simpler and somewhat less interesting. Only
two of the pop-ups are architectural , and · It relies heavily
on what amount to small
pasted-in pamphlets.
"The Girl Who Loved Tom
Gordon" may appear to be
for a young audience. But the
story, Stephen King's youngadult novel stripped to shortstory length by Peter
Abrahams, is not for anyone
prone to nightmares. Nor are
Alan Dingman's illustrations,
made 3-D and often animated
by paper engineer Kees
Moerbeck .
It's about a 9-year-old girl
who gets lost on the
Appalachian Trail. She nearly starves. She gets pneumania. She hallucinates that her
hero, pitcher Tom Gordon
(then of the Boston Red
Sox), is with her - and that
the God of the Lost, with
fangs, huge claws and a face
of stinging insects, is after
her.
It's hard to tell just what
age it's aimed at - most
likely King fans who want
everything that has his name
on it. Kids old enou.\lh to read
the original novel m1ght think
they are too old for pop-ups
- at least, that is, until they
become adults!

I. "He's Just Not That into
You" by Greg Behrendt and
Liz "' Tuccillo
(Simon
Spotlight Entertainment)
· 2. "America (The Book) : A
Citizen's
Guide ·
to
Democracy Inaction " by the
writers 6f The Daily Show,
Jon Stewart (Warner)
3. "When Will Jesus Bring
the Pork Chops''" by George
Carlin (Hyperion)
4. " How to Talk to a
Liberal" by Ann · Coulter
(Crown Forum)
5. "The South Beach Diet"
by Arthur Agatston · (Rodale
Press)
6. "C hronicles : Volume

One" by Bob Dylan (Simon
&amp; Schuster)
7. "The Purpose-Driven
Life" by Rick Warren
(Zondervan)
8. ''Your Best Life Now: 7
Steps to Living at Your Full
Potential" bv Joel Osteen
(Warner Faith) '
9 "Familv First: Your
Step-by-Step'
Plan
for
Creating a Phenomenal
Family" by Ph ilip C.
McGraw (Free Press)
10. "A Paper Life" by
O'Neal
Tatum
(HarperCollins)

MASS MARKET
PAPERBACKS
I. "Angels &amp; Demons" by
Dan Brown (Pocket)
2. "The. Big Bad Wolf' by
James Patterson (Warner)
3. "Skipping Christmas" by
John Grisham (Dell)
4. "Blow Fly" by Patricia
Cornwell (Berkley)
5. "Winner Takes All" by
Nora Roberts (Si lhouette)
. 6. ''Deception Point" by
Dan Brown (Pocket)
7. ·'Seizure" by Robin
Cook (Berkley)
8. "Split Second" by David
Balducci (Warner Vi sion)
9. 'The Tristan Betrayal"

by Robert Ludlum (Sr.
Martin's)
.10. "Digital Fortress" by
Dan Brown (St. Martin's
Press)

TRADE

•

Halloween book bag brims_
•th t • k
dt t ·
over WI riC s an rea s ~
BY RON BERTHEL

strengths and weaknesses of
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
well-known monsters.
The book separates its subWho knows what might pop jects into categories, including
up on Halloween: ghouls and manufactured monsters, superghosts, witches and were- natural monsters, monsters
wolves, boogeymen and from the beyond, and those
books?
ever-popular mutated vegetables. Readers can bone up on
Sure, books!
Popping up recently are a Mr. Glass and the Invisibl e
number of volumes - one of Man, Killer Tomatoes &lt;md the
which literally does pop up Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
that fit the mood for haunted Dracula 's
daughter
and
Halloween reading with the Grandpa Munster, and the 50lights turned up and the shades foot Woman and the Incredible
Shrinking Man. One monster. a
pulled down.
The scenes in Stephen King's native of Detroit. gets around
"The Girl Who Loved Tom on four wheels: It 's Christine, a
Gordon: A Pop-Up Book" 1958 Plymouth that's red with
(Little Simon, $24.95) virtually a mean streak.
leap off the page. This adaptaThere are sections on how to
tion of King 's scary young- classify monsters, where to tinct
adult novel features 18 colorful them (that is, pla~es to avoid),
por:ups that follow 9-year-old how to protect yourself from
Tnsha, who is lost in the woods them, and FAQ ("Which is best
for a stake, silver or wood''")
where an evil presence lurks.
For those wondering how.
Trisha has her portable radio
and finds comfort in listening their favorite monsters measure
to broadcasts of Boston Red up, there's a height compurison
Sox games, especially the chart, ranging from barely
exploits of her hero, relief measurable killer ants to
pitcher Tom Gordon. As the Godzilla. who can peer into the
days pass, Trisha imagines that top-floor windows of a 20Gordon is with her and he will story building without standing
·
save her from the unseen crea- on his tiptoes.
ture whose presence is evident
•••
The next-best thing to watchin the destruction to flora and
fauna in the woods.
Leaping from one two-page
spread is a forest of trees that
nearly obscure'our little heroine
a~ she makes her way along the
trail. The cab of an abandoned
red truck pops up just in time to
provide shelter for Trisha when
a violent thunderstorm strikes.
And finally, seemingly out of
nowhere, the monster emerges,
nostrils flaring, eyes ablaze, its
claws and teeth rezor-sharp and
ready.
The question is: Will Gordon
pop up and register another
save?

ing a hQm&gt;r mo' ie on
Halloween might be browsing
through " Honor Po,ter Art''
(Aurum Pre". S29.95 J
In thi' hu·g~ - forma! paper:
hack. ~ditors Tonv Nourman&amp;
amJ Graham Mar,h ha\'e repro:
duced in color more than I00
po'ter' from horror films
throughout eight deL·ades.
Film' range from the silent
da"ic "Noskratu" c 1922) to
1999's "The Blair Witch
Project" ''nd other recent oiTerings. Posters display films from
~cveral countrie~. including the
United Stat~'· England, Japan,
Italy.
Germany
and
Clechosim·ak ia.
Reprc,enteJ ,u·c some of the
genre's be&gt;r -known &gt;tar' Bori' Kar!off. Bela Lu~&lt;"i.
Peter Lurre. Vin.:cnt Price ' and characters ranging from
alien' to mmbic,,
There are "Frankenstein" and
··Dracula.·· muJnJnie:, and wcrewoh·e,,
"Gremlim"
and

"Freaks ... "The Unknown" ~md
''The Unin\'ited." haunted house&gt; and. of cour,e. "H&lt;~loween."
And don't forget "The
Tingler... Price's 195'1 film in
which tl)eater audiem:es got a
milcl electric shuck at appropri ate JX&gt;i nts in the movie througtr
spec·ially wired seat&gt;.

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•••

If a monster pops up in your
path, you'll want to know how
to identify it and protect yourself from it, right? Such help is
·at hand in "A Field Guide to
Monsters" (Hylas, $19.95) by
Dave Elliott.
This compact, colorful
paperback is a catalog of
creepy creatures that educates
readers about the lifestyle,
behavior, habits, habitats,

PAPERBACKS
I. "The ·Kite Runner" by
Khaled
Hosseini
(Riverhead)
2. "The Curious Incident of
the Dog in the Night-Time"
by Mark Haddon (Vintage)
3. "Sacred Stone" by Clive
Cus~ler and Craig Dirgo
(Berkley)
4. 'The Secret Life of
Bee s" by Sue Monk Kidd
(Penguin)
5. "The 9111 Commission
Report" (Norton)
6. "Reading Lolita in
Tehran " by Azar Nafisi
(Random House)
7. "Friday Night Lights" by
H.G. Bissinger (Da Capo)
R. "The Hornet's Nest" by
Jimmy Carter (Simon &amp;
Schuster)
9. 'The Time Traveler- 's
Wife" by Audrey Niffenegger
(Harcourt/Harvest)
I0. 'The South Beach Diet
Good Fats/Good Carbs
Guide" by Arthur Agatston,
M.D. (Rodale)

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•••

It's great fun to show paper
engineer Robe rt Sabuda's
newest book to adults who
aren't familiar with his work.
When they open the cover
of "America the Beautiful,"
Sabuda's paper version of the
Golden Gate Bridge springs
up in all its 3-D glory. At the
front of the two-page spread,
tiny white boats unfold on the
blue-green water: a sailboat,
a ship, two boats in between .
Jaws drop. Eyes widen.
"Wow!"
Then, after another page or
two, "This isn't for kids!"
It's labeled "not sui table
for children under 5." But if
"America" is given even to
older kids , it \ likely to be
with so me trepidation , and
faint hope that it will last
long enough for the parents
to enjoy. too.
Although published by
Little Simon , a children's
book imprint of Simon &amp;
Schu ster, this 'is no board
book with simple, sturdy
flaps and pull-tabs.
In even the least intricate of
Sabuda's stylish designs,
more than a dozen bits of
paper unfold into an astonishing and wonderful view in
white upon a colored page.
There's Mount Rushmore,
with a buffalo in the foreground and a mountain goat
on a crag in the background.

/

J'

1 :¢

"America the Beautiful: A
Pop-Up Book." By Robert
Sabuda. Little Simon. $26.95.
Pop-Up
"Arc hitecture
Book." By Anton Radevsky.
Universe. $39.95.
"The White House: A PopUp Book. " By Chuck
Fischer. Universe. $35.
"The Girl Who Loved Tom
Gordon: A Pop-Up Book."
By Stephen King. Little
Simon. $24.95.

992-6677

AU puppies have lit •twta II ~
· arewormed

EVer)' TbundaJ·):)0·6:)0
SaturclaJ·tam·l:&amp;Pm

AS~O~~~E~~:~~~~~ER

The ads for "Enduring
Love". proclaim that the film
comes from the director of
"Notting Hill." And th~t's
true, it does - but don't
expect glamorous stars trading witty banter and falling in
love .
Because "Enduring Love"
bears a stronger resemblance
to another tilm from director
Roger Michell , "Chan ging
Lanes." in which Samuel L.
Jackson and Ben Affleck
stalked each other after a traffic accident.
Craig
Here,
Daniel
becomes the object of Rhys
Ifans ' obsession after the two
get dragged into a different
kind of accident: a hot-air
balloon crash in an idyllic
patch of English countryside.
The accident, which takes
place in the fi lm 's first
moments. is vividly rendered
and strikingly shot and edited, with the dark red of the
balloon brilliantly juxtaposed
against the hri ght blue sky
and the deep green grass.
Craig 's Joe and !fans' Jed
are among a handfu l of men
who t ~ to stop. the out-ofcontrol contraptwn after 11
lurches to the gro und, then
takes off again. They dan gle
from the basket until, one by
one. each drops futilely back
to the ground - except for
the last man , who holds on
too long and ultimately falls
to his death.
From there, Michell and
playwright Joe Penhall, who
wrote the script, never let up.
In adapting Ian McEwan's
novel "Enduring Love,"
they 've molded a riveting
psychological thriller in
R - Restricted. Under 17
which most of the thrills requires accompanying parcome from not understanding ent or adult guardian.

7" ·~ 'P~ 'Pt4fde ..
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Pop-up books aren't just for kids

exactly what's thrilling you.
When scruffy, scraggly
haired Jed first calls Joe, a
professor, at home to talk
about the accident, it seems at
first that he needs the catharsis after such a traumatic
experience. He asks to meet
in a park across the street
from the loft Joe shares with
his·
girlfriend,
Claire
(Samantha Morton), to whom
Joe was goi ng to propose
marriage on that sunny day in
the country.
Joe agrees because he's
been obsessing, too - noticing round, red objects around
the apartment and making
''Close Encounters"-style
sketches of hot-air balloons.
But Jed quickly starts making cryptic comments and .
biblical
allusions
and
demanding that Joe open up
to him. Soon he's following
Joe to the bookstore and to
lunch and sitting in on his
class, insisting that something spec ial passed through
them that day.
It' s not clear what he
wants, though - whether it's
friendship or love, whether
he 's lonely or just envious of
Joe 's life - and that's much
of what makes "E nduring
Love" so fascinating . Even
when the film ·reaches its
startling cliniax, Jed 's intentions still remain a bit of a
mystery (and it would have
been nice if he'd been fleshed
out more).
"Enduring
Love,"
a
Paramount Classics release
is rated R for language, some'
violence and a disturbing
image. Running time: I00
minutes. Three stars out of
four.

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Sunday, October 31, 2004

PageC7

TRAVEL

SHOPPING, EATING AND

-

Sunday,October31,2004

SURPRISE!

-

MUSEUMS

BY ULA ILNYTZKY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· Mr. and Mrs. Keith Day

WISE-DAY WEDDING
POMEROY - Keith Day and Tamara Wise, formerly of
Meigs County, were united In marriage Oct. 21. 2004, in
-Sidney, Ohio.
Keith is a production technician at Plastipak Packaging and
his wife is a homemaker. They reside in Lima.

HUGGINS-FOREMAN
ENGAGEMENT

BRYANT 62ND
ANNIVERSARY
G. T. and Gaie Bryant of
Bidwell, Ohio will celebrate
their 62nd anniversary on
November 14th.
. ~ They were married in 1942
11t the First Church Of Christ
in Logan. West Virginia by
Rev. A.J. Coffee. They are
the parents of five sons: Gary
'Bryant of Bidwell, Ohio.
·Dale Bryant and wife Sharon ·
from Florida, Steve Bryant of
Gallipolis, Ohio, Gregory
Bryant and Cindy of
Gallipolis, Ohio, and Michael
Bryant of Gallipolis, Ohio.
They have eight grandchildren and seven great grandchildren.

MURPH'\:"S' 5OTH
ANNIVERSARY
VINTON
Robert
Lincoln and Mary Jean
Bussan Murphy will celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary with a renewal of
their vows and a reception on
Saturday, Nov. 6, 2004, at St.
Louis Catholic Church in
Gallipolis.
Church services in honor of
' Bob and Mary will be conducted
by
Monsignor
William Myers at 5:30 p.rn ..
and the reception will follow
jn the church basement from
3):30 to 9:30 p.m.
: They were married in
-Akron on Nov. 6, 1954. by
the
Rev.
William
A.
Winchester at St. Bernard
Catholic Church.
They have five daughters

Craig Foreman and Amy Huggins

GALLIPOLIS ~ Ron and Sharon Hutchins of Gallipolis
announce the engagement and upcoming marriage of thei r
daughter, Amy Beth Huggin s, to Craig Daniel Foreman, son
of Linda E. Foreman of Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Denni s W. GALLIPOLIS- Matthew T. Malone College and the Los
Ray and Misty D. Sayre were Angeles Film StuJies Center.
Foreman of Barboursville, W.Va.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Rose and Carl united in marriage on Oct. I. She is currently employed as
2004, in an intimate ceremo- a call cemer supc rvi .sor at
Cooper and Raymond and Evelyn Hutchins of Gallipolis.
Management
She is a 1995 graduate of Gallia Academy High School and ny at the Chapel at the Park in lnfoCi sion
Corp. in Gallipolis.
is enrolled at Marshall University. She is employed by the Gatlinburg, Tenn. ·
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
A reception followed the .
The groom is the son of
She has one daughter, Alyssa Huggins, age 3-1/2.
event on Oct. 2, 2004, at the Wanda and Danny Ray. and
The prospective bridegroom is the grandson of Annabel Middlt!port Church of Christ the granJson of Mabel
Hagans of Point Pleasant. and Eileen Foreman of Lorain , Family Life Center.
Mohler. He is ;• I '.192 graduOhio.
The bride is the daughter ate of Gallia Academy High
He is a 1994 graduate of Point Pleasant High School. He
of
Terry and Sharon Sayre. School/Buckeye Hills Career
graduated from Marshall University in 1998. with a degree in
safety technology. He is employed by Ohio Valley Electric granddaughter of the late Center, and 200 I graduate
Corp., Kyger Creek Plant. as the se nior HR assistant in safe- Mount Vernon and Bertha of the University of Rio
ty.
Bing. and Maxine Ke sterson Grande . He is currently
The wedding will take place Jan. I, 2005. at Pigeon Forge. and Everett Sayre, as well as employed as a profi'&gt;Sur in
Tenn. A wedding reception will be held Jan . 15. '2005. for the sister of Travis and Jared the Engli,h Department at the
friends and family.
University of Rio Grande.
Sayre.
The coup!~ plans to honShe is a 1997 graduate of
River Valley High School eymoon in Ireland, and will
and a 2000 graduate of re side in Gallipolis.

DARST-MYERS
ENGAGEMENT

'Gone with the Wind' maker Selznick
finally gets Hollywood star

GALLIPOLIS - Nicole
Fawn Darst and Brandon
King Myers are announcing
announce
their
recent
engagement and approaching
marriage.
Nicole is the daughter of
and one son: Mary Murphy
of Mexico, Coleen (Dave) Scott and Barbara Darst of
Smith of Vinton , Maureen Gallipolis, and is a student at
(Bob) Kormanik and Patti Gallipolis Career College.
(Ed) Wallen of Gallipolis,
Kevin (Laurie) Murphy of Brandon is the son of Elise
Akron. and Bridget Murphy Carroll of Gallipolis and Ellis
of Vinton. They have 15 Myers of Langsville, and is a
grandchildren and four great- student at the University of
grandchildren. ·
They are request ing no Rio Grande.
The wedding date is undegifts and that "your presence
is their present."
cided at this time.

BY BOB THOMAS
ASSOCIAT~D

'.•

'

Keeping
Gal/ia &amp;
Meigs
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992·2156
the son of the late Herbert
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Family and friends me
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PRESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES (AP) Even though he produced
"Gone with the Wind" and
other movie classics, David
0. Selznick never had his
own star on Hollywood 's
Walk of Fame.
That oversight was corrected Tuesday when the
Producers Guild sponsored
the late producer's star on
Hollywood Boulevard. a halfblock
from
Grauman's
Chinese theater where many
of his films played.
"David Selznick should
have been among the first
1.500 names when the Walk
of Fame was started in 1960,"
commented Walk impresario
Johnny Grant, adding that the
event finally "remedied that
unbelievable omission."
Daniel Selznick, who
unveiled the star, admitted
that "my father's feelings
were hurt that he wasn't
included."
Two performers frorri
"Gone with the Wind" were
among the small gathering in
front of the Roosevelt Hotel:
Ann Rutherford, who played
Scarlett's sister, and Cammee
King, the ill-fated young
daughter of Scarlett and Rhett
Butler.
R'utherford read letters from
Olivia de Havi lland, the wistful Melanie, Selznick widow

BROWNS TO CELEBRATE 50TH
. GALLIPOLIS - Richard
· and Ann Brown of Gallipolis
will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with an
open reception from 2 to 4
p.m . on Sunday, Nov. 14,
2004.
The reception, given by
their daughters Cindy Fellure
and Sandy Bledsoe, will' be
held at Grace United
Methodist Church on Second
Avenue and Cedar Street in
Gallipolis.
They were married at
Grace Church on Nov. 14.
1954, by the Rev. Paul
Niswander.
Ann is the
of
Mildred Jenkins ""''/ •&gt;•a late
Richard is
Howard

SAYRE-RAY
WEDDING

•
•

Jennifer Jones . and Rhonda
Fleming, who was disco\'ered
by the producer. "Th is giant
among
creators:·
de
Havilland wrote from Paris.
"has enriched the li\'es of generation after ge neration ."
Rutherford was asked if it
was true that the actresses in
''Gone with the Wind" wore
silk petticoats under thei•
hoop skirts. "Absolutely.'' she
replied. ''I told David he
· could save a lot of money if
he used flannel petti coats as I
did in westerns. He said
maybe the audiet)Ce wouldn 'I
see the pcllicoats, hut the
actresses would know they
were silk."
Son of pi oneer fi lmmake•
Lewis J. Selznick. David
Selznick grew up in the
movie business and at 29
headed production at RKO
studio when " King Kong'
was made and Katharine
Hepburn became a star. He
moved to MGM. run by hi&gt;
father-in-law Louis B. Mayer.
and
produced
"Dav id
Copperfield." "D inn er al
Eight," "A nna Karenina" and
"A Tale of Two Cities."
Sclznick formed his own
company. brought AI fred
Hitchcock
and
Ingrid
Bergman to Hollywood, and
made such. films as "A Star Is
Born."
"Rebecca:·
"Spellbound." ·'Duel in the
Sun" as well ~b ··Gunc with
. the Wind: · He dted 1n I~65.

PARIS - When my husband and I began planning an
ambitious trip to five
European countries, friends
encouraged us to go without
our teenage daughters.
"Leave them home' " they
exhorted. "You deserve it. "
"They'll be fine."
We never considered that
option. We've taken at least
one family vacation a year
since the girls were born ,
including trips to England,
Scotland and Italy. With our
older daughter off to college
this year. our time as a foursome was running out.
We tried to involve the girls
in planning the trip. But that
was about as easy as getting
them to stop instant-messaging while doing homework.
We left tourist books around
the house and discussed the
trip during dinner. And
although they expressed
interest - even excitement
-about going, it was impos(AP Photo)
sible to get them to partici- Tourists attend a guided tour through the 400-year-old trick water garden in front of Hellbrunn
pate in the planning.
Castle in Salzburg, Austria.
So my husband and I spent
countless hours on the both the size and-condition of Chenonceau and Amboise (www.au toeurope .com
or
Internet, researching precise a room. And although we (where Leonardo da Vinci is 888-223 -5555) offers deals
routes. daily itineraries. cul- never found our accommoda- buried) exposed them to the on rental cars worldwide,
tural and historic sights tions to be unacceptable, in a different styles of the French Eurailpasses. discount airboth must-see and off-the- few cases they were not as monarchs, while "crazy'' King fares and more.
beaten track - as well as polished as their Web images. Ludwig ll's Neuschwans-tein,
GUIDE BOOKS: Rick
lodging. car rentals and ·airFussen,
Germany, Steves' city and ·country
Our teens also made us near
fare. We ended up with an IS- aware of another important offered a whimsical contrast guide books offer no-non(AP Photo]
day journey. starting with six ingredient for a successful - a fairy-tale schloss idylli- sense advice (and humor) on
days in Paris. then a taste of family trip: The need for cally situated on a hilltop over what not to miss and what to Acrowd watches hip-hop dancers perform with the Eitfel Tower
the Loire Valley with its mag- down time.
a lake and reachable by horse- skip; where to eat and stay. in background in Paris, 111 this April 12. 2004 file photo.
nificent chateau region. and a . In Paris. we walked our drawn buggy.
Also Rick Steves' foreign
slice of Alsace-Lorraine. Our feet on· trying to see every
There were other high- language pocket-sized phrase
itinerary also included the· last church, museum and lights. too many to li st here. books are easy to use and
17th Annual
Bodensee (lake) district of park. By contrast. a trip we But our daughters wouldn't carry around. OK Eyewitness
Eastern Fall Craft Show
Bavaria: Vienna and Salzburg took last year to Italy was for the world have passed up Tra'vel Guides are a tad heavy
in Austria: and Prague. in the more relaxing. Our week in some of the more touristy but offer street-by-street
November 13th
C£ech Republic.
the Tu sca n hill s outside destinations: Monet' s gar- walking tours. Knopf City
Of course we planned with Pienza
9 am- 4 pm
sandwiched dens at Givernv (a definite Map Guides contain small
an eye toward what would between Florence and Venice A+); climbing· the EitTel foldout street maps with lists
Eastern Elementary Building
appeal to our I7- and 13- - allowed for both short day Tower; Notre Dame and of attractions.
Approximately 100 Crarters
year-olds. But we were pleas- trips (to Assisi and San Chartres cathedrals; Vienna's
PASSES: Multi-day museFOOD AND DRINK AVAILABlE
antly surprised to learn, once Gimignano) and lazy days by sumptuous 1856 Cafe Central um passes. obtainable on the
we got there , that our inter- . the pool. After this year's coffeehouse with its vaulted Web and in mu seu ms. save
Sponsored by Eastern "'lusic Boosters
ests were not that differem, more hectic vacation, our Gothic arches; the jewelry money and allow you to skip
provided that two ingredients daughters strongly endorsed vendors on the Charles long entry lines.
were in the mix: shopping at least a few slower-paced Bridge in Prague; a pricey
and eating.
gondola ride in Venice (A+);
days on future trips.
Certainly our girls were old
But despite our packed itin- and the leaning Tower of
enough to appreciate muse- erary, they gave hi~h marks Pisa.
ums and cultural sights. They to the sights we ptcked. In
Both girls had digital cameven asked to see some not Vienna and Prague, we eras, which they used nonon our list. But we were more focused on seeing as much stop to produce some of our
surprised by their interest in Art Nouveau and architecture trip's most memorable and
Europe's culinary scene. In as possible, a style known artistic photos. It was as if the
fact, finding the perfect place there as Wiener WerksHitte cameras gave them ownerfor dinner became an enjoy- and Jugendstil.
ship of the vacation, to interable daily ritual for us. We
In Vienna. our must-sees pret in their own way.
did consult our guide books included the vast Belvedere
There were also many spe(especially Rick Steve's) for (castle) museum for works by cial moments of the kind that
recommendations, but it was Schiele, Kokoschka and can't be planned - like seemore fun to pick our own Klimt. In Prague, the opulent ing their parents get giddy
from menus posted outside Obecni Dum (Municipal over dinner after a bottle of
the endless restaurants.
House) left the girls in awe. wine in a romantic garden
We should have been less especially
the
Alfonse setting in Riquewhir, south of
surprised by their desire to Mucha-de signed
mayor's Strasbourg, France. Tired. we
shop . After a!l, what teenage room. resplendent in the dec- had argued that evening over
girls wouldn 1. espectally. tn orative motifs of the Art where to eat in this perfectly
· Paris'l I'm not much of a Nouveau. It had our older preserved (if touristy) town
shopper and my husband usu- daughter exclaiming: "I never of cobbled streets and colorally orders from a catalog. want to leave this room."
washed timber buildings
but we made concessions for
Our girls were not familiar from the Middle Ages. But
short and long dives into with this homegrown Czech . the evening ended in merristore s to help~ make their artist, be st known for his ment and picture-taking to
European experience even stunnmg theater posters. record the moment.
more memorable. Although many of Sarah Bernhardt,
Or the evening we nearly
they gawked at Paris' and exhibited at the small but walked the breadth of Vienna
Galeries
Lafayette
and comprehensive
Mucha in search of the Stomach
Samaritaine, whose opulent Museum . In Vienna. they restaurant (recommended in
interiors are more opera were introduced for the first our Knopf City Map Guide ).
house than department store, time to the Au&gt;trian artist Dad reassuringly kept saying ,
it was in the 200-odd bou- Gustav Klimt and hi s exquis- "we're almost there:· after
tique s of Paris' ultram_odern ite mosaic-like paintings of every bend . We found it just
Forum Des Hailes that they intertwined figyres. To say as we thought our feet cmtld
made most of their purchases. they .were enamored of both no longer carry us. Our spirits
Accommo-dations present- early 20th-century artists were quickly lifted by a tradied our biggest challenge. would be an understatement. tional Austrian nienu 111 this
Often we thought we had
Another thrilling surprise former 1800s farmhouse. its
found THE place over the was Salzburg's Hellbrunn uneven floors, ceramic tile
Internet only to be tempted castle. where a 400-year-old stoves and rustic furniture
bv inviting images on yet trick water garden has unsus- nearly unchanged.
aiwther Web site. As a family pecting visitors squealing in
Then there was the Moulin
of four. we quickly discov- delight from the spray of RGu ge -our idea. not theirs.
ered that renting a furnished fo untains hidden in walk- We felt the girls wcr" old
apartment - for stays as ways, sculptures and bench- enough to sec a cabaret but
short as three days and start- es. The pavilion featured 111 even we weren't prepared for
ing midweek - was a sensi- the 1965 tilm, "The Sound of how much sktn gli.&gt;tened
ble and money- sav ing alter- Music," is also found on the through all the feathers.
native to a hotel. Our apart- estate grounds.
sequin s and glitter. After the
(*Except accessories - lamps, pictures, etc.)
ment iil'l?aris was just a block
In Paris, the gi rls loved the initial shock. we did · enjoy
from the Pompidou Centre, Louvre and stood a full 15 the perfectly choreographed
and gave us a chance to _eat minutes in front of the Mona , - and tasteful - production.
like Parisians - by lootmg Lisa. The Musec D'Orsay's
And our daughters' favorite
the local pati sserie and magnificent collection of number? The fullv dressed
boulangerie for breakfast Impressionist art was an even ventriloquist.
·
back at the flat, and even bigger hit .
making dinner at "home." as
They were also fascinated
we twice opted to do.
with Pari s' Rodin and Dali
Other
money-saving museums. In fact. they lo,·ed
FAVORITE TRIP-PLANoptions included booking an Dali so much that when w~ NING WER SITES : Visit
occasional qu4druple - a found another museum dedi - www.dra w bridget oe urope .co
large family room - and cated to the Spanish artist in m
(888-26X - Il.J X)
or
staying at guest houses or Vienna, they insisted on see- WW~'- venere .com for apart·
pensions. But .we also learned ing it too .
ment,, farmhouse'~ chalets
that online photos can distort
Two French chateaux. and \illas . Auto Europe

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INSIDE
Houae of the week, Page 02

Will election night coverage bring
Jim Broadbent is both sfllr and executive
1ong-awaited answers, or more questions? producer ofBBC America's 'The Young Vzsiters'
8Y FRAZIER MOORE
AP TELEVISION WRITER

I

. I

NEW YORK (AP) - To
recast a catchphrase from the
Watergate era: What will we
linow and when will we
(now it?
: That's the raging que stion as this presidential
race approaches what
should be the finish line,
yet instead may turn out to
be just another twi st in the
road.
Even as TV newscasts
bring us next Tuesday's
election results, there may
be no conclusion in store.
The
battle
between
President Bush and chal lenger John Kerry remains
so close, with the prospect
of enough voting irregularities, that analysts already
are laying out a roster of
ways the count might be disputed, delaying any declaration of a winner for days,
even weeks.
But whenever it is we find
out who won, will we know
anything else? After a race
more divisive ahd dispiri_ting
ihan any in memory, ·what
accumulated wisdom can we
cling to?
For one thing: Howard
Dean has a strong set of
lungs. For another: That,
when
he's
provoked,
Republican
convention
keynote speaker Zell Miller
might challenge his provocateur to a duel.
Otherwise, lessons from
the campaign seem in shorter supply than flu vaccine.
Any conclusion will be
argued with. After all , this
has been a race between
rival forces where common
ground seemed nonexistent.
What was courage,. what was
cowardice? Strength and
weakness?
Right
and
wrong? It all depended on
which candidate we listened
to, whose verston we
bought.
'Jihe partisan divide was
reflected in our choice of
cable news. A recent Pew
Research Center study found

that 70 percent of voters who
get most of their election
news from Fox News
Channel support Bush, while
just 21 percent support
Kerry. Voters who prefer
CNN favor Kerry over Bush,
67 . percent to 26 percent.
"Fair and balanced" was
only in the eyes of the
beholder.
In this year's crush of political coverage, the three presidential debates turned out to
be the most instructive and
most-watched telecasts.
But even then, we cou ldn 't
always tmst our eyes. When
some viewers spied that cigarette pack-sized lump
between Bush's shoulder
blades during the first
debate, it triggered wild
speculation that he ·was
wired up to get cues from an
offstage adviser. Or was it
just a pucker in the fabric of
his jacket"
Of course, that mystery
was forgotten by the third
debate, when both Bush and
Kerry were repeating their
stock phrases so faithfully
they might have been lipsynching to a prerecorded
backing track . (Ashlee
Simpson for president when
she's old enough')
Along with covering the
campaign, TV became a
blunt instrument for campaign advertising.
Nothing was sacred. The
Vietnam War was waged
again, as ads from Bush supporters attacked Kerry 's war
record. Ads .from the Kerry
side returned fire in hi s
defense.
Even the sport of windsurfing got caught in a
squall. Images of Kerry on
his board were used in a
commercial to symbolize a
political flip-flapper who
"surfs every direction on
Iraq." (The pro-Bush group
sponsoring this ad seemed to
write off any windsurfing
it
might
Republican s
offend.)
Whether he was .windsurfing, skiing or, most recently,
hunting, Kerry never made

the sporting "photo ops"
quite work to his advantage.
In contrast, Bush stuck to his
Reaganesque pursuit of
clearing brush at his
Crawford, Texas, ranch - a
routine repeated for the cameras so often, by campaign's
end he would surely have
denuded much of McLennan
County.
But the chief beneficiaries
of the 2004 race wercn 't
these candidates, nor voters.
Those who truly feasted on
the campaign are TV's
political
pundits
and
humori sts.
Then their happy worlds
collided a couple of weeks
ago, when Jon Stewart, the
satirist-host of Comedy
Central's "The Daily Show,"
appeared as a guest on
CNN's
shoutfest
"Crossfire."
There to plug a new book,
Stewart blindsided co-hosts
Paul ("On the Left") Begala
and Tucker ("On the Right")
Carlson by delivering not
jokes, hut some well-placed
jabs at their show, which he
called "partisan hackery."
"You're doing theater,
when you should be doing
debate," Stewart said, more
in sorrow than in anger.
"You have a responsibility
to the public discourse and
you fail miserably." Both
Begala and Carlson seemed
indignant to be debating this
issue with a make-believe
newsman. even as Stewart
scored one point after
another.
By now, though, maybe
even Stewart has had enough.
Back at ~is own anchor desk
on Tuesday's show, he
wailed, "One more week!
That's all we got 1" Then he
plaintively added, "I just
want it OVER!"
So do most of us . After a
painfully long campaign,
Election Day is almost here .
But the way things are going,
there· s no relief in sight.

Bv BRIDGET BYRNE
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES - Jim
Broadbent is most comfortable being British.
"I like home really,"
Broadbent says, his brow
wrinkling as he sat amid the
palms on the patio of a Los
Angeles hotel, dressed in a
jumble of clothing more suited for a stroll down a damp
English street.
"I just understand Britain
really. I get a lot of fun out of
reflecting observations of
British foibles. I don' t really
understand any other culture
in the same way."
Few projects are more
British than BBC America's
"The Young Visiters."
The much loved Victorian
comic novel was written in
1890 by 9-year-old Daisy
Ashford, who wasn't good at
spelling - hence the title but was an acute observer of
grown-ups' foibles.
The versatile 55-year-old
actor, who won an Academy
Award for his supporting role
in 200 I 's "Iris," ts both star
and executive producer of the
TV adaptation, which airs 8
p.m. EST Wednesday, Nov. 3.
He plays Alfred Salteena,
described by Daisy as "an
elderly man of 42." In the
hopes of winning the heart of
a preuy young lady, Ethel
Monticue , Salteena auempts
to introduce her into society,
despite the fact he only has a
limited acquaintance with
· one aristocrat.
And Broadbent, whqse ftlm
credits include "The Crying
Game," "Moulin Rouge,"
"Gangs of New York," ''TopsyTurvy" and most recently
"Vanity Fair" and "Vera
Drake," soon wiU return to the
big screen as Bridget's ~
the upcoming sequel "Bridget
Jones: '"The Edge of Reason."
He's aware that American
viewers unacquainted with
"The Young Visiters" - still

extremely popular in England that's his real skill. You can
-may find Daisy's tale a lit- have this slight buffoon, but
tie odd. He believes it's "gen- you really feel for him and
tie and it's charrnin~ and it's empathize with his plight as
funny and it's true,' but is a - this lonely middle-aged man
little puzzled as to how to trying to entrap this younger
.
promote it. "You can't really ·woman."
categorize it."
Yates says he kept crackmg
He says Daisy "spots the up directing scene~ bet~een
vulnerabilities and preoccu- Broadbent and Btl! Ntghy,
pations of adults. She does who portrays the absurd Earl
see that some are r~her of Clmcham.
pathetic and ridiculous, parThe Earl cons Salteena out
ticularly men impressed by of money while tutoring him
pretty young girls ... there is a in the art of social climbing,
freshness to the child's per- but does manage to mtroduce
ception of how we carry on." him to the Prin~e of Wa.les,
Playing
Salteena
m who wears - m a typt.cal
"Visiters" also demanded the Daisy Ashford observauon
skills of a true clown.
-"a rather costly crown."
"Despite the mad playfulness of Jim's performance,
On the Net:
underneath it all it's anchored
www.bbcamerica.com
by a kind of truth," says
http://www.stonesoup.com
dtrector David Yates . "!think /ash2/ashl.html

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Please vote for our brother

J Roger Walker
Qualified Full-time
Gallia County Recorder
Mal)' Walker Thompson, Jack "Ronnie" and
Rosalee "Rusty" Walker
Poid for by Mary &amp; Rusty. P.O. Bm t93. Bidwell. OH

NOTE:

Frazier Moore can be
reached at fmoore@ap.org

Bv ANN M. JOB
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Already the biggest and brawniest non-full-size pickup truck , ihe Dodge Dakota gets
even larger and brawnier for 2005.
Its ride is improved, too, and so .is its safety. The look is crisper and there are new
options, including a second V8, heated cloth seats and satellite radio.
But the base two-door Dakota with only front seats has been dropped from the lineup.
putting the lowest-priced '05 Dakota - a Club Cab with rear-hinged access doors and two
small rear seats- at more than $19,000 for manufacturer's suggested retail price, including destination charge.
The popular four-door Dakota Quad Cab with regular back seats and four front-hinged
doors is priced even higher and starts at $21,419.
In contrast, the 2005 Chevrolet Colorado starts at $15,730 for a regular cab, two-wheeldrive model with four-cylinder engine, and the 2004 Toyota Tacoma Regular Cab starts at
$13,000 for a two-wheel-drive model with four-cy linder engine.
The 2005 Dakota, which does not offer a four cylinder, "delivers full -size pickup capability in a mid-size package ... offering better fuel economy and maneuverability than a fullsize pickup," said Mike Donoughe, vice president of the body-on-frame product team at
DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler Group.
Debuted in the 1990s as a new "'mid-size" truck. the Dakota
was difficult to characterize. It was larger than .traditional
compact trucks such as the Ford Ranger and Chevrolet
S-1 0, but smaller than full-size model s such as the
Dodge Ram and Ford F-150.
Now, though, other automakcrs arc
making their small truck s larger.
The Chevrolet Colorado
and its twin GMC
Canyon, for example, debuted in
the
last

YJeight Control

model year as larger models than the S-10 and GMC Sonoma that they replaced. and
Toyota' s Tacoma pickup is bigger for ~005
And the 'OS Dakota is 3.7 inches longer than the 2004 model. for an overall length of
218.8 inches. This compares with 207 inches for the largest Colorado model and 208.1
inches for the largest '05 Tacoma.
.
Dodge officials said they wanted to appeal to truck buyers who use their vehicles every
day and like a roomier interior and strong power.
Indeed , the Dakota already was the only mid-size truck to offer a V8. For 2005, it
becomes the only one with two V8s. including a high-output version of its .U-Iiter. single overhead cam, Magnum V8.
It generates 250-plus horsepower and 300-plus foot-puumh of toryue at .1.500 rpm.
In the test Dakota Quad Cab Laramie 4X4. this engine powered the truck ;trongly, and
pleasing , confident engine sounds could be heard every time I touc hed the acc~ator
pedal.
There was no laziness to thi s vehicle as it passed others on the highway without fuss and
moved through city traffic quickly:
The only transmission for thi s engine is a five-speed automatic. and thi &gt;V8 delivers the
poorest fuel economy of the three powerplants available in I he [),.J, ota: 1-1mile' a gallon
in city drivin ~ and 18 mpg on the highway.
The rating IS the same for two- and four-wheel-drive high-output VR models. Premium
gasoline is recommended for the high-output V8.
But even Dakotas with the carryover base engine from last year- tlte :21 0-horsepower. 17-liter. single overhead cam, Magnum V6 with 235 foot-pound; of torque at 4.000
aren't exactly fuel sippers.
'T~e best fuel economy rating for a 2005 Dakota with V6 is 17 1~:2 mpg for a two-whee ldrive model with four-s peed automatic.
The V6 can be had with either the automatic or a new. six-speed manual transmission
that replaces the live speed from last year.
Note that no other mid-s ize truck offers a V8. None can rival the Dakota\ 7. 150-pou nd
towing capacity. either. Dodge officials said 60 percent of all Dakota' sold have a V8 .
The Chevy Colorado comes with a top. 220-horsepower. 3.5- liter. five-cylinder engine
capable of 225 foot-pounds of toryue . The 2005 Toyota Tacoma\ top engine- a 4-liter,

rom-

Please see Dakota, Dl
• A 12 State calling Area W/
NO ROAMING CHARGES!
• ~at1onwlde Long Distance~

____
. ..

Only

, .... IJM)

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: ZlnePfmt!atTcoQC'Jd7+4111
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. . . . . .DUnl. hr'* Kroger

355-1111
• IKII8Dtl·klr£JifKroger

288 4100

947-00H
• CIS I 'WI I•• IMide Wll lhtt

774-2220

11. .1 • ,_.Kroger

574-1000

451-0000
• WMIS&amp;r • IIWif Waf....,

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441·1133

cl'loote 1 t'M promo1•MI ellh6r l~tloc.i UnlirT'II8d CaR ..,. ITIIfllllt pr'Dfi'IOiiol'\ cr IN Uolimrled ~ 1o Mohlt ~mo'&lt;ln Cu~
boltt promohw11 uolilnUid CtH n.e mtl\illl'll tr. o&lt;1l' '"''Wib~ in 1t1" O:x* tl~'"9 ,,., at&gt;d ,,.. 1'194 tllto:Ll:.ltdll'om pat.lo.lllfd mlfll.!ltl "(.n.;n
1C Mobllt 11i' MQ~ !;1:.11"19 WI P!'O(./\llfl tor""" NtQrlll llld ~II'IOf _,. tv~t t1 1M 10~ ~Q lrt• !or $-1 Q$ Ptr I'I'IOflll'\ Olff1, fN'; ti!IIUilf
c.ll•l'lg INn ~obonll phenii\Jhted to ehl~ F'tloiHI pnemg ncludtl I SJQ rr-.1!&lt;111 ~ !Qr Md'1 pP\orw Aebattan r.. Wll-.:1 oo w.._ !lot '-"tt
t&lt;~bjtct lo .., . . ,.,.. ..,,.,.~.to~ 1M c....tO'!,... •• roupcmlld:&gt;lll Po!· t il ltietla.ooa• Oltltr rtllr&lt;llot&gt;• m.y lpj:lly SM twr. loJ detlll5 L~,... tUid'llfV'I l'ld tlllll ~ ~ ' WM:h;cin!iJl FlO.III II'III Otl,.l At~IOf\' · r" ct)tf941 of l 5S C~ l\llmtiii iUPDflliblt llor I!II.U II!IH
MaP CW'PIC1S 1n 190fCI•tmllllal'l of COOI'Ifal)e lrtl ollctual COvefiQt I'M~ ~II)' U&amp;er "*fo t'ltuf IOiinnQ ~h«Vfl II bOrdlf'.l ('If C-lli'l!iJ.,_.Il
Co~.IIIYI'III'II ~

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..

�OUSE OF TilE WEEK

&amp;unba~ !tme~ -ientinel

QEnglisb cottage stple ibeal for first borne
"!l you look at trmd.', the Slllallhonle is making a comeback if sorts, especially

_{t1r those in areas (!l high lmrd mrd constnrction costs. V}7ten people tire if that
big ho111e qficr the kids are ,~o11e, this sort (!f stylish and good looking not to
me11tion high sewiceahle plmt is what people are looking for. "-john Guy

(AP) - For couples looking
for that first home or anyone
simply ready to downsize,
APWB-182 is a home well
worth a close look. It won't be
the biggest home on the block
but its diminutive fran1e holds
just ·about everything you
might need.
·
The English cottage style
looks good from the curb, with

Architectural style:

Exterior material: fiber

English cottage

cement siding

Total square feet: 932
Garage: Two-car (optional)
Overall width: 41 ft.,

Foundation: crawlspace

Recommended lot size:
100x75 ft.

Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 1
Laundry: main level
Windows: single or

2x6 in. stud exterior walls

Roof material:
fiberglass shingles
Attic: yes
FsriMA1ED COSI' OF
CONSfRUCITON &lt;txUUDES LOT)

double-hung

Main roof pitch: 12112

Northeast $88,540 - $102,520
Southeast$78,288- $89,472
Midwest$82,948 - $95,064
Northwest$79,220- $87,608
Southwest$89,472- $97,860

CONSTRUCTION GLOSSARY
SLACK TIME
The flexibility with non-critical jobs in a home construction project .
that allows start dates to be adjusted without affecting the project
completion date.

ORDERING INFORMATION:
For a $5 study plan of this house call1·877-228-2954, send a check
.to AP House of the Week, P.O. Box 1562, New York, NY 10116-1562,
or order by credit card at www.APHouseoftheweek.com.Be sure to
include the plan number.

Dakota
from Page 01
double overhead cam V6 generates 245 horses and
282 foot-pounds of torque at
3,800 rpm .
Thanh to a stronger, fully
boxed frame and new · front
and rear suspension. the test
Dakota rode more &gt;moothly
than it' predecessors . The
shudder and shake that
accompanied
earlier
Dakotas is gone. but I sti II
e~perienced some bobbing
up and down when the
Dakota hit a pothole or large
bump in the road.
I had good views in front
of me. and the' ride was quieter, because of·extra soun.d
insulation that includes better door weather stripping, ·
thicker glaS&gt; on the front
doors and twice-as-thick
insulation on the floor and
dashboard panel. Outside
mirrors are redesig ned for
less wind noi&gt;e. too.
· Quad Cabs are at least half
of all Dakotas sold. and they
I

&gt;ti II have rear .\eats that
recline a bit, 'o back-seat
paS&gt;enge rs don't ride in
straight, upright form . Front
and rear doors open wide.
and at 5 feet 4. I didn't have
to climb up awkwardly to
get inside.
'
The Dakota Quad Cab
back seat i&gt; one of the easiest to move out of the way.
There\ no lever or loop to
tug on. Rather, a person just
slides a hand under the seat
.
cushion and Iifts the cushion
up 10 the back wall, exposing 37.1 cubic feet of cargo
space for use. This is up 7.2
cubic feet from the previous
Dakpta Quad Cab.
Quad Cab rear headroom
·1s 1mprc&gt;s1
·
· ve at ·',8 .4 mc
· hes.
This compare s with 37.9
inches in the four-door
Colorado and 38.5 inches in
the Tacoma Double Cab.
Rear-seat legroom of 36.4
inche' i' more !han the 34.7
mche&gt; of the Coforado and
32.6 inches of the Tacoma
Double Cab.
Safety is improved in a
number of areas, including
the addition of a center
shoulder belt for 'the middle
r

Sunday, October 31, 2004

its steep roof lines and shuttered windows. The composite
shingle exterior is quintessential cottage.
Once inside, this cozy plan
has what many homeowners
want: a very large kitchen with
abundant counter space and a
large dining area for family
and friends. The living room is
multi-use for entertaining or

relaxing with a book or watching a DVD. .
The bedrooms rotate in
spoke fashion off a central hallway that can be shut from the
remainder of the house through
a pocket doon.vay. This creates
an ideal situation for one of the
smaller bedrooms to be converted to a home office, reading room or hobby getaway.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

DESIGN FFATIJRES:

depth: 20 ft.

PageD2

person in the back seat of the
Quad Cab.
Also, the extra length of
the vehicle largely contributes to a longer front end
for better crashworthiness,
and side curtain airbags are
available for the first time.
There are two bed sizes on
the new Dakota. The Club
Caq comes with a 6-foot-6inch-long bed, while the
Q d c b h
5f 4
ua
a
as a - oot- inch bed. The height of the
bed sides remains at 176.1
inches, so it's not difficult to
look over the side and see
h , . h .. k bd
w at s 10 1 e p1c up e .
Dodge said 88 percent of
the buyers of the Dakota are
men. Median age is around
45 , and annua1 household
income starts at $40,000plus.
The National Hi ghway
Traffic
Safety
Administration does not provide crash test ratings for
this new Dakota. and there
has been no safety recall.
Consumer Repons maga· zine does not provide a reliabi lity ratin ~ for the newly
introduced 2005 Dakota.

ACROSS .

102 lrdgo dye

1 Town 6 'All- and the Forty
Thieves'
10 EMcllange
14 StTUggle fOr air
18 f'intos and
palominos
20 Regular
21 Old' gannent
22 y eltow pigment
24 Meeting plan
25 Peel
26 Pl1cher
27 Heavy

29 Ad(USI an Instrument

:)() Nobleman
32 Cup handle
3o4 Mr. Amaz
36 Ole down

37 Vlsuallzo
38 Material tor a po11er

39
41'
43
44
45

Seawater

Wander
Place tor cars
Ink stain
Clothes WOOl
on stage
47 Word in a teltgtam
49 Come after

52 Rural ro8!l
53 Castle feature
55 Dwelling places

59 Audibly
60 Ve&lt;y plump
62 Change direction
64 Incantation
65 Champagne
66 "Tho Staptord --"
67 Frost
69 Cirde pan
71 Flavoring tor gin
72 Holiday &amp;overage
73 Speedy car
74 Quid - (il.&lt;)
75 CIK'nll
77 Old cry
of dilappiOval
78 Chor1le
80 Ta1&lt;e In air
82 Painter
84 Kind ot sugar
85 Get out!
87 Tal grass
88 Salary hike
89 '-Ad
90 AIUidanl
92 Lotter aft&amp;! gee ·
93 Elcplollvt material
84 TV's -l'hlfl*l
96 Wrall
97 Spotted pony

99 Seize

104 Falure
105 Pavedways:abbr.
108 Cllerux
107 Nola108 Wrlnldes
11 0 Become liQuid
112 The 'lasl FronUer'

state

114 - Rica '

1151-.:e
117 LllfVII crocifix
119 Cunle(a partner
120 Prada1ory cat
121 Bani
123 Woolen fabric
125 lnj&lt;Jre
126 Nest egg Ieite"
129 Kl1t IIJp&amp;IICiago
131 Gazefte
132 False lace
133 Relinld Jet
136 Typo
138 Scottteh dance
140 Torm In golf
141 Sibilant sound
142 Hoarfroot
143 Strar&lt;l
1.&amp;5 ThorougNy
unpleasant
147 Prayer ending
149 Noted inventor
151 - Dame
152 Arab VIP
153 Hard to find
154 Smoo1hly, in rrusic
155 Trouttesomo ptanl
156 IIOllent
157 TwelviiiTQllh
158 Cotton worker

DOWN

eon-

1
2 Sooundral
3 ~tglrl

otoong

4 S8lf

5 CM'eon

6 NpytnJII

7Eagor

8 London's Big 9 'The Uttf Oucl&lt;lng'
author
10 Brtastbcne

11 Cf¥olamaztment
12 Eklelty

=

13 K*:hlngailgel
14 Old T-..nt giant
15 ~a.d

16
17

lltmlrdpart

19
In color
23 Nevada town

28 Eam

31 CeraaJ.grass

33 Islet
35 Distress call loners
38 Blockhaad
39 Money reward

40 O..ract
42 Lows
44 lloMlln tile dumps
45 Provkle lood fer
46 - de cologne
48 Newborn canines
49 Youngdeer

50
51
52
54
56
57
58

llodgtpodge
O..able (hypll.)
Adore
Followed
Miser's forte
Flll!'llr1iM name
'Frozen rain
60 Wealthy

97 Sat fClla painter
98 Wrtllng ftUdll
1DO Poker stako
101 Grtzzly
103 Spring
105 Pcn:ll
108 Fru(llll one
107 lloldng matdl
109~

111 Dtplllled
113WtlkHd
114 stljlpar
118Adlod
118Curfllnll
120 Mol1usk

122
124
125
126
127

Gilt fOr dad
Mlnorallpltng
P•

MISS

Doctme
Hor1e of a certain
color

-.

128P130 Raza

132 Subtananean

133 Rope fibtr
134
135
137
138

Struck
Mole vocaHst
lug
Kind of bean
141 Olympian QOddess

142
144
146
148
150

61 TerrRIIe
63 Gun tlfOOil (abbr.)
66 P1eced • bet
66Unrtfined
70 Cloomeoa

73 Monarch
74 Money that Ia made
75 That girl
76 A I.Ue
79 Filling
BOScaryyoll
81 Llnkl peg
63Twitl:ling

84 Mickey'. glrlrlond
85 Tartrilla
86 1lme periode (abbr.)
89 Maktdeiaya
91 -MajOr

92 Karonlna 01 Pa'llova
95 Clliota

Cap;tat ol Latvlt
Mineral
Actroas - Taylor
West 01 Munay
Society gi~. tor short

Strong Ohio families mean astronger Ohio ec:onomy!

,J Increase Ohio government spending by
more than 70% ovpr 10 years.

Every sensible Buckeye knows that. No other
social structure provides a better foundation for a
stable economy and civilized ·communities than
marriage between one man and one woman.
It's only common sense that Ohio's furure
depends on moms and d~ds having healthy, welladjusted children. In fact, every major social science
study shows that children raised with a t;1arried
mom and dad are simply better off physically,
socially, and psychologically than in any other
fomily structure. Even single parents, as hard as
they work to raise their kids, understand that.

Marriage:

0 Pass the largest tax increase 'in Ohio history.
0 Protect Ohio's FUTURE by keeping
MARRIAGE between one man and one woman

Some Ohio politicians- 'i..vho &lt;"ontinue to takt' mor: and more'

from Ohio taxpayers, and roen cost some theirjobs- are trving
to say that marriage, as we've know ir for 2000 years, will
somehow hurt our eronnmy! Come on, Ohioans know bad
politics hurts our econom~·· not th~ i nstirution of marriaf,rc.

That's just common sense.
TAKE THE COMMON SENSE TEST TODAY:

Ahealthy culture cares if kids have aMom AND Dad.
Marriage promotes a common good. That's
why it makes common sense that marriage has
always been uriiquely protected in Ohio law.

Why change that? Why deliberatek weaken
Ohio's social fabric- as well as our economy- by
watering down the institution of marriage' If two
men or rwo women can be legally "nurried,"
what's to stop three, four, or more' 1nstcad of
inventing new fonns of marriage, let's protect the
one that protects our future!
For the furure of Ohio vote YES on Issue 1.

Go to www.ohiomarnage.com and make your choice.

One Man One Woman

FOR THE FUTURE OF OHI SAY YES TO MARRIAGE
WW\\'.ohiom&lt;rriagc.com ·

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

I

,

I

'

�Page D4 • 6anbap G:unet -6mttnd

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

~rlbune-

SentinelCLASSIFIED

Regl~ter

RtY8f property 1 67 acres

ATffN[ION!
GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME!
"FIIEE APPROVED
HOME LOANS'

$0 DOWN! $0 DOWN

CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES
WELCOME
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800-37()-4965
CALL lODAY
STAFFED BY US
VETERANS

Or Fax To

Oftfoe llo(U&lt;-~

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday-Friday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW IQ WRITE AM AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ••
\"\\Ill \t I \ II \I..,

r. .__

rl

rrrou:

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Include Phone Number And Addre.s When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r ~~~:~

1

(740)388 9917

10

Hl:lJ&gt; WANfED

CLASS A COL
DRIVERS
NEW PAY SCALE

r

o'

·-------_.1
110

1

HELP WANTFD

FULL·TIME
MERCHANDISER
Peps Cola Botll ng

Company has an open ng
fo a Full! me Merchaf1d ser
Coli
e
to
room
ftxtures
many
other
An Excellent way to ea n
Female Bo rder
fo Chesh re and the su
th ngs 8642 St At 7 South money The New Avon
(
)
good home Cal 740 256
round ng area Pos hon
9am·5Pm
Call Ma yn 304 882 2645
1233
requ res heavy repel t ve
ur 4
YAHDSAU·
AVON' AI Areas To Buy or Itt ng of 50 100 pounds
PoMERov/MIDDU: Sell Shtrley Spears 304 must be a least 18 years of
Free 1/2 Pers an k ttens
age and have an excellent
long hat ed Whtte/blac~ It
675 1429
d IV ng ecord Must be
ter tra ned To good home La ge garage/yard 1st t me
ava table to work: a flex ble
BANKING
n
years
mtsc
terns
Fn
1
0
(740)256 1417
schedule w lh even ngs
29 Sat 10 30 Mon 11 1 Customer Service/Teller
wee~ends and hoi days
45657 State Route 124
Aacme between Syracuse &amp; Oak Htll Banks has lu I t me requ red
Aactne
opportumty tn our Oak H1ll
off ce lor a fnendly energet c We offer an excellent sal a y
Found 2 Black: Labs Letart
person to prov de super or and benef ts package I
A ea Male &amp; Female call Porch Sa le Men Tues
(304)895 3074 or check with WEld never used work out customs servtce process quahfled please send a
equ pment unusual tams customer transacttons and resume by no later than
An mal Shelter
posters clothtng etc
promote bank: se v ces Fr day Novembe 5 2004

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 s For Sale
725
Announcament ............................................. 030
Antiques
530
Apanmonts lor Rant
440
Auction and Flea Markel
080
Auto Pans &amp; Accaasorlaa
760
Aulo Repair
no
Autos lor Sole
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opponunity
210
Business Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homos
790
Camping Equipment
780
Cards ofThanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
190
Electrlcai!Relrlgerallon \
840
Equipment lor Renl
480
Excavating
830
Farm Equipment
610
Farms lor Rent
430
Forma lor Sa!a
330
For Leaae
490
For Sale
585
For Slile or Trade
590
Fruita lo Vagotablaa
580
Fum!ahed Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Adt
050
Hay lo Grain
840
Help Wanted
11 0
Homo Improvements
81 o
Homes lor Sale
31 0
510
Houeehold Goode
House a for Rani
410
In Memoriam
020
Insurance
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
680
Livestock
630
Lost and Found
060
Lola &amp; Acreage
350
Mlacellanooua
t70
540
Mlecellaneoua MerchandiM
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homoa lor Rant
420
Mobile Homes lor Salt
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers
740

•

Muelcallnatrumanta

570

Poraonola
Polo lor Sale
Plumbing lo Healing
Profelllonol Services
Radio TV &amp; CB Repair
Rool Eatate Wanted
Schoolo lnetrucl!on
Seed , Plant&amp; Fan!llzor
Situations Wanted
•
Space lor Rent
Sponlng Goocla
SUV 1 lor Selo
Truckalor Sale
Upholatery
van• For Sele
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy Farm Suppllea
Wanted To Do
Wanted to Rant
Yard Sal• Ga!llpolla
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale PI Pleasant

005
560
820
230
160
380
150
850
t20
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
180
470
072
074
076

accepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE etandalrde We will not knowingly IICcept anr advet1lalng In v6olatlon of the law

G)

(740)388-1100

Should have customer serv
ce or cas h•er exper ence
preferably n a bank or cred
It umon We offer opportun
ty for advancement excel
ent compensa •on and ben
efts and a great work env
onment Apply n pe son to
Oak H II Banks 201 S Font
St Oa~ H I EOE M F/DN

11110

liEu&gt; WANfED

OCCUPATIONAU
SPEECH THERAPY

PSYC.HOI.OGIST

H gh
School
Jun ors
Sen ors and Pr or Serv ce
you can Ill vacant posit ons
tn the West V rg nta Army
Nat anal Guard If you are
between the ages of 17 35
or have pr or m I tary serv
ce you won I want to pass
th s up For Opportumt es n
your area call
304 675

F•lr Ho...-ng Act of 1968
which m~~kn tt llleglll to
.ctverttM any
pr.terence llmtt.tlon or
dltcrlmloatlon baNd on
rece color religion ...
familial at.tu• or nallonal
origin or 8fiY Intention to
make any•uch
prefefft1ca limitation or
dltcrlmlnetlon

5837
WAN1HJ
To Do

1180

to

Part I me medtcal oil ce
worke entry level pos tlton
ask for John
(740)388

BOB6
Pa I T me
Computer
Techntc ans
needed
n
Gall pelts area Must have
rei abe t ansportat on Pay
based on eM per enced Must
have knowledge m al oper
altng systems &amp; hardware
conf gurattons App cants
must be outgo ng have a
good persona l ty Please
subm t esume to CLA Box
572 c/o Ga I pohs Da y
Tr bune
PO Box 469
Ga ltpol s OH 45631

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
Post ng Dare OC!obc 27 2004

Malnlenance Worker
The Un vers ty of A o
Grande mv tes appl cat ons
lor the pos I on of
Ma10tenance Work:er

Respons btl ttes of th s lull
I me 12 month pos 1 on
nclude but are not I m ted
to the performance of
45629
ma ntenance dut es such as
or fax to 740 354 9787 or
serv cmg updattng and
ematl to
repa r ng of current and new
cgr zzle@g lpeps com
plumb ng systems repa rs
NO phone calls pease
and mon tor ng of current
and new HVAC systems
CASE MANAGER
and pneuma! c systems
NEEDED
rna nta n ng control sys
Post on ava lab e n Mason
nfoC son
Management tems nstalltng and sa v c
Co WV to prov de case
ng heat pumps trou
Corp s currently accept ng
management se v cas n
bteshOotlng and epa r ng
app cat ons at our down
the home and n the com
town Gall po s local on
botler systems perform ng
mun ty to severely emot on Qual fed appl cants should
va ous bu ld ng repa rs
ally d sturbect ch ldren and be stable h ghly mottvated pa nt ng and snow remova
adolescents at 1sk of be ng nd v duals w th good com
funct ons General electr
placed outs de the home
mun cat on sk lis We offer a cal bac~ground s requ ed
Must possess va d dr ver s full benef Is package nc ud
May requ re heavy I ft ng
1cense and access to rei
ng medtea overage 401 K
able transpo tat on
Must have htgh school "
weekly bonuses and vaca
Exper ence n prov d ng
tton ever~ s111 months No
dtploma or equ valent
case man agement serv ces prev ous expe ence playa s Cart f calion n HVAC sys
preferred but not eqw ed
s necessary We are the
!ems requtred
Pos t•ons requ re a four year profess onal difference n
Appt cat ons wtl be
degree n Psych SW
teleserv cas and need great
rev ewed as race ved
Counse ng or Cnm Justtce team players to om us'
We of1er an excellent bene
Interested
cand dares All app lcants must subm t a
!It pac~age and compel t ve pease ca 1 1 877 463 6247 letter of nterest and resume
sa ary Appl cat on may be ext 2458 or app y onhne
nclud ng the names of
made n pe son or obta ned 't{WW 10foCis10n com
three references on or
from our webstte at
before Novembe 12 2004
Avon
www prestera org or a
to
ONLY
esume nclud ng cover et
ter may be subm ned by ta)C
Ms Phyll s Mason SPHA
to 399 0053 by ema I to
Director of
resumes@prestera org or
Human Aesou ces
Manage needed tor mobtle
by mal to
Un ve sty of R o Grande
home park: m Shade send
Prtltera Center
PO Box 500
resume to Country Park
HR/Mason Case Manager
A o Grande OH 45674
Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh
3375 US Route 60E
43138
Fa11 numbe 740 245 4909
Hunt ngton WV 25705
ama I pmason@rloedy
Mad Home Health Agency
EOE/AA
Inc seek ng a ful t me RN
EEO AA Emp ayer
Patent Care Coord inator for
Un V6 sty ol R o Grande and
Ga ll po hs Oh o and sur
R o Grande Com mum~ Co lege
Assoc ate pos tlon ava able
round ng area
Out es
excellent pay and bene!!
nclude establ sh ng and
POSTAL JOBS
package
nc uded
1ne s of S14 62 $20 92 h Now hlr
rna
nta
n
ng
open
Customer service and cash
ng Fo appl cat ons &amp; 1 ee
handl ng
ex per ence commun cation w th area
phystc ans and heath care
~overnment JOb nfo call
requ red please tax resume
lac It es n the i1e rvery of
Amer can Assoc of Laoor
IO
Hom e Health Servlcas We
1 913- 5 99 8042 24 h 5
740 441 8940
offe a competlt ve salary
OR
E 0 E Pease send resume
emp serv
Stop by 1312 Eastern Ave
to
Stephan e
Roger s Pr vale owned Beauty Salon
for appl cat on
Director of M rket ng 3 52 needs stylist to
work
Second Avenue Gall po s Mondays Tuesdays and
CUST SVC REP
OH 4563
Wednesdays W II pay 60%
NEEDED!
- - - - - - - - - and w ll buy all su pples
Work: From Home
Needed Part t me wotjo;.ers C entele preferred Send
BOO 210 46B9
fo ch1ld care cente hours resume 0 CLA BOx 555 PO
$500 $1 500/Month
fleJC ble HS or eqwvatent 18 Box 469 Gall po 5 OH
Part t me
years of age exper ence 45631
$2 000 $8 000 Month
w th pre schoo cht1d en p e
Fu!lt me
te red Ma or lax cove tel Re s denta l
te &amp; resume to 0 ector Fac y lor boy now h ng
War ted
D n ng
Room
Ch drens Vllage
2122 Youth Worker pos 1on Call
Serve r Musl be ou tg o ng
Jefle son
Ave nue
PI between
9 OOam 4 OOpm
se v ce o entsd A sm I hg
Pleasant WV 25550 304 f7401379 9083
face s a must No expe
675 6575 EOE
ence necessary W 11 tra n
TELE MA~ETEA S NE ED
the ght cand da e Apply n PaJamed r.s
&amp;
EMT s ED No E11pe ence OK $7
person at Hot day Inn of needed Ap o 'I at 1354 9 Pe !-"our Easy Work 1
Ga I DO S
Jackson P ko Ga po s
888 974 JOBS
Human AesourceStFTM
PO Box 299
Frank n Furnace OH

DRYWAll
A o Grande McDonatds now
h rng all sh fl

Instal F n Sh Pa ntmg
Carpententry Bathrooms
Res dental Commerc a

Direct TV
12 Months Free
Programm ng 130
Channels pus Free
Equ pment Free
Profess anal Ins a lat10n up
to 4 Rooms Free Call 1
800 523 7556 for detatls

2299

Thla newapaper will not
lcnowtngly accept
ectvertlaemente for r•t
utate which Ia ln
~i~.Uon of the law Our
ruder• •r• hereby

HOMES

FORS~LE

O"o Down Payment and
f nancmg ava fable w th
approved cred 1
Average
Fa t P 1ces
c edt qual I es you II down
Steve (740)38B8731
Salesperson
L festy e
payment has kept you from
Furn ture lui t me pos 1 on
buy ng th s s your chance
Apply n person 10 5 No Houseclean ng $1 0 00 pe to own your own home U
phone calls please
856 h (740}446 3385
you have a down payment
Thtrd Avenue Ga llpots
but would I ke to conserve 1
Wanted to Do
House we offer low down payment
programs also Great nter
Clean ng $10 per hou
est rates Local company
(740)245 5859 Good efer
The
Syracuse
Rae ne
Mortgage
Locators
ence
Reg anal Sewer D str ct w I
(740)992 7321
have a ob open ng ava lable
Wanted to do Clean off ces 2 Bedroom 1 Bath 1 Acre
n January 2005 tor the pos
Lucas Lane near PPHS
I have references &amp; expe
ton of ma ntenance labOte
Ga age Gas Furnace C fy
ence
(740)256
1227
Job cons sts of ass st ng
Water Mak:e Otfe (304)675
Super ntendent w th daly
act v t es general clean ng
and rna ntenance of equ p
men! App l cat ons may be
p eked up at the D st ct
off ce at 5th and Ma n
Streets n Rae ne at the
Mun cpa Bu ldmg Please
attach sala y requ ement
wtth
apphcat on
Appl cattons w 11 be accept
ed unt I Thursday November
11 2004

Wanted
Ass slant wtth exper ence for
phys c an off ce A un que
pas 1 on reqUir ng k:nowl
edge of computers and data
entry also lCD and CPT
codtng Re i able t ansporta
I on needed No weekends
or
hohdays
requ red
Benet Is ava !able Sa ary
negot able With eJCper ence
A flex b1e employer Mat
esume to Box 558 c/o
Palhpo s Daily Tr bune PO
Box 469 Gall pol s OH
45631

ScHOOLS

l~UCllON
GalllpoUs Career Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today I 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452

._w Qt\ poHsca eercollege com
Ace eel t&amp;o M&amp;mbe Ace ed 1ng
Co nc to nd&amp;pendllfl Co ages

INSURED
NOTHING TO SMALL

$48 000 OBO (740)208

Absolute Goldm ne
60
vendmg mach nes I e11ce1
lent local ons al or $10 995

(B00)234 69B2
ABSOLUTELY ALL
CASH II
Hershey Fnto Lay &amp; M&amp;M
Vending Ales W/Loc s

On y $9 995
1 BOO 914 9980

ou do bus ness wtth peo
le you know and NOT I
end money through th
at untl you have nvest
ated the offe n

r

PROIT.';SIONAL
SERVICB

TURNED DOWN ON
S:lCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W n

1 BBB 582 3345

Card of Thanks

In Memory

In memory of our
'Dear Mother,
and arandmother

Arline 'Davis
0ctober 28, 1090

•*
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*•
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566

We would hke to express our thanks and
heartfelt apprecJatJOn to our fam1ly and
fn ends at the re{;:ent Illness and loss of our
m01her and grandm01her Rosemary Hysell
Specml thank s 10 Dr Tayengo and the
s1aff of Pl easanl Vtlley Hospual St Marys
Hosptlal and Slafl on 4 South FISh er
Funeral Home andRe&gt; Roy McCartv Jr
To Re; and Mrs R1 ck Bourne who
comforl ed and prayed Wtlh us the
Wesleyan Btblc Hoi1nes s Church ou r
fnend Judy Poner all of Rockwell
AutomatiOn Mom s fnend'i and co
workers dad and everyone who v1stted
called 1cn1 flowers food cards and
donations
The outpounng of lo;e supporl and
thoughttulnc'i.., from e"eryonc w11l never be

lotgotten
Spcc1 al tha nks to Uncle roger and Aunt
Conntc tnd thctr family There are no
words to cx. prc % how w~: feel about you
V. e ime )OU and we wtll never forget all of
the com ton love and -; upport th at vou gave
Hrend 1 Fcrge-;on

Penny Burge Shern
ltttlc Julie LcaL:h and our I umllcs

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••

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••*

1 112 Bath
ull Basement
tddleport OH Code
17 or cal (740)992

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•*

••

•: Option # 1 The stunntng v ews htghltght the setting :*
* of this spac ous home perched on a wooded kno!l *
! o&lt;JerloOk. ng cattle &amp; estate farms that surround thiS !
! Gentlen an &lt;1 Farm Man Floor conststs of 3 bedrms !
* 2 full baths kttchen/dtotng co mbo ltv ng rm wj •
! wood burntng fireplace Muse Rm w/ Dnck paver !
! accent floormg upstal s has 2 bedrms &amp; office/ !

MOIIII..E

H~IFS

~~mr~=~ 1R:Oc~~ ~!~::~e:~~~::

:

FOR SAl[
14X70 Mob le hOme 3 bed
2 bath all appl ances some
furnttu e $6800 (7 40)245

9040
1990 141170 3 bedrooms 2
ful s ze baths Heat Pump
( 1yr old ) newly pamted

(304)BB2 2355
2000 &amp; 2001 Doublew de
both 3 bedroom 2 bath Cal
(740)709 , 166

! Day garage w/concrete floo overhead garage door !
! openers water el~tc p us sewer connectiOn to !
• septiC tank 220 welder receptacle french floor '*
! dra n butlt m storage shelvmg Consists of approx !
: 15 ac (sub]ect to survey f sold separate from Tract !
* #2) OQtion #2. The hvestock barn wJconcrete •
! poured Ooor another gravel tl()()( equ p shed plus !
! another attached run n w/ auto heated waterers bay !
• door for camper wf electr c &amp; sewer connect ons (If •
! sold as a who e) mostly all ra~ fenang w/paddocks!
! &amp; outdoor r d ng arena Cons sts of approx 12 acres !
! subJect to survey Terms Offered n 2 tracts &amp; as !
• whole sells to hghest btdder (Total Prce) above*
! $275 0001 $9 500 down per tract at ttme of sale :
* offered free &amp; &lt;~ar of ens or mortgages pnor to *
: clos ng by 12/6/2004 no cont ngenc1e:s ex st
Wm &amp; Judith Rupert III Owners
• Ooeo Tyes .10119 (rpm 56 &amp; Syn 10/31 from 2 1

For sale or rent 2 bedroom
mob e homes start ng at
$270 per month Call 740

!

992 2167

!•
: If
!

Mak:e 2 payments move n 4
yeas on note (304)736

3409

:

New Oakwood mega store
Homes
by
featur ng

Oakwood

Fleelwood

&amp;

G les One stop shoppmg

onty a1 Oakwood Homes ol

Barboursv lle WV (304)736

3409
Pr ce Reduced tocated n
Johnson s Tra1le Park 1985
Wtnd9or excel ent coml tlon
1 4x70 tra ler w lh 14x26
add hen wtth master bad
room and bath New berber
carpet dtshwasher storage
building
$13 000

Calt(304)593 376B
Stock: models at old prices
2005 models arrwlng Now
Coles
Mob le
Homes
15266 US 50 Easl Athens
Oh o 457m (740)592 1972
"Where You Gel Your
Moneys Worth

r

:

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTWLES
Sat. Nov. 6 7:00p.m.
VINTON, OHIO
Palilal List Corn, barbtr dlmtJ, lndran and

lml;&amp;
A~GE

2 acres on ln~al s Road
$15 000 74Q-245 0133
Bruner Und

741).441·1492
$500 holds your lot
Melg1 Co
Aeectsv le
water overs betwee n Oh o
R var + Forked Run Lake 10
acres $15 950 or 6 acres
$14 950 great for home or
camp sttes! Tuppe s Pia ns
off Success Ad 20 acres
$25 000 or 3 aces $13 500
co water Chester Bashan
Ad 16 acre hunt/camp tract
NOW $16 900
Great
mvestment 7 ac es So of
Aut and S8 250
Gallla Co R o G ande 8
V nton
acres $2 t 950
Dod I Ad 5 wooded acres
$14 500 co water H unters
Kyger 16 or 18 acre tracts
chmce S 17 950
More
parcels ava1lab e at each
local on We II g adly send
you maps 10 explo o each
s te Owner t nanc ng w th
sl ght markup We OOy and

*

Henry M Stan~ Jll CAl AARE GPPA Auctlon~r &amp;
R@!l E§tate Brnkf!

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sat. Nov. 6, 2004
!O:OOA.M.
Located at the Meigs C. Fmrground
Pomero), Ohio at the mtersection of St.
Rt 33 and St Rt 7 Watch for
Fairground Signs. This IS surplus or
New Bmldmg Supplies from local
conlracto~

"Buildmg Supplies"
approx 50 mtenor &amp; extenor doors all
kmds, kitchen cabmets, bathroom base
cabmets, hght fixtures, Anderson windows, Lock sets, rolls of carpet, shutters, all colors 0 H double lap vmyl
srdmg and vmyl soffit M Serpentme,
casmg &amp; baseboard trim, smks, marble
top vamty, carpet rements
Miller mig welders, Lmcoln Ranger 8
welder, 30 ton press, air nail guns,
power saws &amp; power dnlls, compressor
a1r hose, walk behmd concrete saws &amp;
power drrlls, Homehte 2" &amp; 3" \\Bier
pumps, smgle phase commerciBI packs
20 planner "/cast 1ron bed, safe, pillar
poles and lots lots more
"Tractor &amp; Eqmpment"
Ford 1920 tractor, 3pt mower, 7' Kmg
Kutter timshmg mower, 6' Jackson
Du~ce timshmg mower &amp; 6' Ground
Master gas fimshmg mower.
OWNER: Local Contractor
Dan Smiih-Auclloneer 740-949-2033
Ohio #1344
Cash PusitiVe I D
Refreshments
"Not responsible for accidents or
loss of property"
Auction

Auction

:

:

ESTATE

AUCTION

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Aucllon

Auction

;====:::;;;;::;;;:;;.:::;:;;::;;:::====:;
ANTIQUE AUCTION
Saturday November 6 2004 10 00 am
Moodtspaugh's Auct1on House
Torch Oh10
Lrn:m on From Porn roy foil 10 R 7 nor h th ough Cou l 11 ~
OhiO10 Co Rd 63 urn n!lh and P ~a~r f I ov. s 1! 11~ to &gt;\u~o:t on
Hou e
FURNITURE 001k 2 p~ ~orn ~ cup bo~ d \I ainu d op f on
-ecre ary '.I /book~ "' c: Of Wol nu ql roll de~l oal. deb} ~ de
~c: /book a , oa k cu ~d g as~ h na mallg Ch na oak &amp;
v.alnu t~pbJck uplx&gt;a rd) oak bnkt"N cuphoard oak fla wall
w n -'lnp e uph oak Jell} uph a d -'R 11.1 e eltcr ah
"'" e e e,.., hukcr~ u p b 48 !oC er ta ble mr~ oak I It top 1ce
cream coote v.l d oa k I II top c~ box neal 3 d o ce bm
oak dr. tnk oak mantle wtm rr r oak ~ ro ll de k Vtt t l pc
parlor ~ u te 3 pc onk u te sofa rocke &amp; ~h a r n ce) \li ~t
ro led am o!a PJ v ct m:uble top nr taiMs 1 .., black
marble o11k &amp; m hll I b w table~ v.a
pnt
k 2&amp; 3
Ul~ k huu k~ a~oe• (; • u~k pr nted) u a e mk ~ Jet. wJ rru~~ on
oak ~ ld t: buard t.l &amp; ~ t.t oak ahl
~~ ,.. of~ &amp; 6 " al cha rs
mahg 8 pc dm rn \U e ITabk w 15 char &amp; ~ d~Doard ) mahg
nla d ...ef\'~r oak &amp; mahg h gll11.all brds oak 111 ~ gh llcd \1-aln 1
)OU h hed ron &amp; bas~ bed ~ oak "ainu &amp; mahg drl.'~'~'"" &amp;

-'t

h ghhoy ~ 11.alnml dr n te lund 1ct marble np wash~ID.nd onl
&amp; wn lnu w11~hstumh oll.k &amp; wa nu wardro be ~ dwrry emp r~
chcs ch erry hlanke hm oak C h~ e le dre ~ er (2) cedar che 1
mahh~ van I) 11. m rror Cl rna e) hall bench Cht ld rtn~ f11rmtur~
Lwk n~ Jr k ~ ~rh&lt;~~k ~~~ph U r ~ r an t) p • n ~ra dle d up
leaf tul'ok uak able 1 p ~ ho11.ca~~ 6 sore ~uun er ~hov.~.:11~~
park bc:och m s ~ ha ~ rocl..er lamp
1 ta t"lk~ )ll d ... nl!~
&amp; m ~c pa nted Jars ro und furn r~ and 1[1 ~ mor~
P m t ~ l'l &amp; 11 lin p e c ph a d~ J~ y ph dough h x
butcher hock: tack h x farm 1ohle church pr10 d op ~ar hi
b unk~ box oot hm hou e &lt;ihulle ~ &amp; more
Gla ~w are &amp; pot erv Fen on lmpr 111 1 Carnt val Btenko
Fos or a Va so hne Smith Deprc l(ln Cr) wl Bone chma &amp; e
M Cn~ Wa Rn venw.ooJ Anl H ''~"" Cook~ J ilr~ and lo

located at the Auction Center on Rt 62 n
mason, WU. due to lack 1f parking, we haue
moued the estate ef fuelyn Jewell from
Rutland,OH to the Auction Center lo be sold
along with lead of antique furniture from
fnglan•, plus a beautiful selection of prints
and pictures from fsqulre Galleries In Tenn.
FURNITURE
3pc LR Sutte sofa !o,eseat &amp; cha1r 2pc
Vaughan LR suue 2 pc early amencan LR
Suue 1 pc se1 of MT coffee table and end
tables mauve color swtvel rocker Queen Anne
chair wrved glass chtna cabmet w/claw feet
t.:olor TV \\/remote oval dressmg
miiTor Gun t.:abmet mahogany desk beauhful

Zenith

4 pc queen stze pos1er BR sutte 4pc
mahogany BR sm1e 4 pc bookcase BR Suite
Jenny Lynn twm bed sewmg machme 5pc
dtnene sec retary dressers chests Fngtdatre
mtcrowave &amp; cart GE washer (hke new)
Kenmore dryer and more '
GLASSWARE &amp; MISC
Water se t pitcher and glasses Oh10 Indtans
wash bo,.!
&amp; pttcher green and clear
stemware owl cookte Jar old buner dtsh
f1gunne s set of chtna BR lamps collect ton of
pnnts and ptctures Ashley Belle Dolls
Cabbage Pa1ch dolls VCR gold leaf bevel
mtrror Home InteriOr towels \mens Crest
dehumtdtfier Chr1stmas decorattons yard
ornaments steel door lawn fumnure wheel
barro" plus large amount of box lots w11l be
so ld

GUNS
Sprtngfieid mode! 187 22 auto old double
I~ 0 ~1ag~
th cr~

.., It tit'

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AUCTION
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OPPORTUNITY'S

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KNOCKIN/

barrel (as 1s)
AuctiOneer's Note.
Wtll

ha vt'

2 aucLton

:

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!

Ponda

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GUNS

large auctton
nn gs so bnng a lnend

Very

Auction conducted bY:

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66
304 773 5785 OR 304 773 5447
Executor: Rltan Mahr
•• Term: Cash or check w/10

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!

Gas Wella

Cabin•

Crnk
:
WHkand Retreats
•
Hunt•r • Paradise!
VAN TRUCK
TRACTORS
FARM EQUIPMENT

ANTIQUES POWER WHEELCHAIR
SUN, NOV 21st 11 00 AM
Real E•tate Sells at 1 00 PM

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Auction conducted at Farm #2
:
:
42361 St Rt 33 Burlingham Ohto
:
* Farm 11. ApprO!. 112 •em• Thzs 15 a hunters paraotse Mostiy *
! woodland wlsome tilable lano along the creek which l'iows along !
! St Rt 33 A 'Je~ niCe old hllside tlanl style bam s s tuat&amp;d on !
* e knoll over1ook~ng eteek &amp; tltab~ bot10m below Gas well on *
! property plus Co water &amp; e1ectnc at road To get lo thiS umque :
* property take the lane lo left &amp; cross lhe first bridge then go *
:

! across 2nd bridge JUSt past the house and cross at your own :
~=e~ver~~~~at~?~~:~';,~~~;;Oacr~s

: nsk

:

! (3) 2 btdrm eablns on a p ateau stoCked pond gas we~ &amp; :
• sepbc w!Cc water at the road Reot them yea round week *
! ends or have a group retreat the cho ce s yours What a beau :
! tiful h•ltop spot witt1 a creek woods &amp; pasu.re The gas we 1wl !
* ttus tract supplies the gas to the 17 7 acre tract &amp; the 26 3 acre *
! trael across the maC! Farm 13 ADorox 26 J wooded acrn !
• w!J Bedrm brick H ~ stde ranch ftJ I bath 1vng rm d mng rm *
! kitchen wrbreakfast bar lots of cabtoetry dnve n basement :
! garage paOO 2 nn garage plus a camper cabtn all on th s !
• property ~ water 5eptiC larlk pond wooos ar1d Lots of front
Located at 42300 St Rt 33 across me road from Farm
• In The pond &amp; woodland ays beh nd and a ong Route 33
TERMS on Real Eltltt Each farm sells to 1he htghest bidder

: age

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~OOv~~~: ~f::~~~fa: :~r~~5c~:~;r:~ :
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: .nspecliOns must be dOI'Ie pnor to bidd ng sold m ~ s present as
tS conditiOn possessiOn a clos ng upon deliVery ol deed •
: OPEN HOUSE Sun November 14 2004 from 2o4 PM for
tarmsl2 &amp; U For Farm 11 view any dayUght hour (Cross
* the 2nd bridge b~ foot at vour own nsli ) o Ca I He en Burson •
Owne lor a personal nspecllOil at (740 ) 696 1028
Watch future Ids for mort DtrsOilll orooertv tnfo
~
or calf for tree brochure !II

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•

If&lt;

STANLEY &amp; SON INC

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17401775-3330
WWW srANLEYANDSON COM
Hen~ M S~n•v,!l CAl AARE GPPA

:

ITS HAMMER TIMEI ITS H~MMER TIME!t

Auctioneer &amp; r-teal Estate Broker

•
\P\KI""ol~ \"10.,

~owRJ.~r

New 2 bed oom 2 bath p
MMer, 1 Dad room apt
vate lol $4501 nonth nego Pnone 1740 446 0 390
1 able Cali £740)44 1 9755
or (740)339 2856

Auct1on

Auction

Dinner and Auction
for Jim Sellers
Sat. Nov. 6, 2004
Portland Commumt} Building
Dmner @ 3 00
Aucllon @ 6 00
1 here are sc•cral guns lo auctiOn
111cludmg, a 12ga pump Spnngfield
shot gun with I barrel a 22cal 6A
Savage R1ne tube feed , a 22cal R1ne
with chp, a 12 gauge 835 Mossburg
pump, a H and R 16ga Shot~un 20ga
N E A \Outh model smgle shot shotgun,
20ga Light 20 Hro,.nmg 270 Sa• age I
I 0 model With scope 870 Rem 3m
Mag., Other auction 1tems mclude a
full SIZe plastic truck tool hox, a poker
table "1th cha1rs, \lam old and new
huntmg and pocket knn es, an angel
collectiOn a Craft man curdles&gt; dnll
With charger, a meat sheer. a meat sa\\
and grmder lots of tools a1r conditioner,
natural gas heatmg sto\es, h1s and her
watches, 20001b ltihh wmch lm box],
1996 Chevy Cors1ca, 2 mech creepers.
A couch and -cha1r a ne" Mac Cordless
Drill set, a afghan, a We1ght Machme,
ne\\ crock pot roaster and m1xer old
chma dishes I free "heel ahgnmenl at
Roush's T1re, I free 011 &amp; change at
AB&amp;T Auto, ptzza coupons from D&amp; M
Pizza, Chnstmas decoratwns. 2 filmg
rahmets, and mam other 11ems
Dan Smllh-AuciJOneer Uh1o #I~~
Refreshments
For more mfo or to donate
call Ke~lh F1lrh @ 8~3-5360
or Manlyn Cooper @ S.B-5126

•

•
:

Auction

Auct1on

**

:

Public Auction
•••W•••***W**************************• Absolute
DATE 1 HLRS!JA\ "0\ f \IBF.R 4
Auct1on

~'Tools"

!
*
!

cau for Free Brochurellt
STANLEY • SON, INC. ® :
(740) 775-3330
:
WWW.STANLEYANOSON.COM !

Auction

Woodland

Auction

:*
:
*:

Auction

Auction

AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Call 740 388 8741 of 740 388 8880
M T V. F S 10 OOam 2 OOpm

*•*
•**
•*

•*•

2933

Card of Thanks

:*
:
:*

•••

ath 3 Car Bnck
nanached Garage 2
tory outbu ldtng Code
2704 or call (740)446

or (304)675 4024 ask for
Nancy Homestead Realty
Broker

m before sale 11me

27 Acres Offered 1n 2 Tracts
Exclus1ve 5 Bedroom, 3 Bath Home
Super Shop Garage
Block Barn
Outdoor R1d1ng Arena
Lake

next to town (740)25&amp;-6574

2003

:
:
•

k1tchen ware some wlwood handles, Worirake
diShes seaman trunk and much mort coming

••

(740)446

$400/month (304)675 5540 :

All New ltr.m5.
Some Sale5. We Have New
Cra[!sman Tools
and Bt.D Tools.

Truly Increchble Property!

No pets

~~
S./llo lhe
H/ghesl Bidder
Above $30 000
P8r Farm !II

n Po nt Pleasant

table Franklrn sew machrne dunkgan fife

!*
!

2 bedroom mobtle Clean 2BA mob e home

N1ce
home

:

drum tables,firekmg, Hull, pressed glms, old

RUPERT REAL ESTATE AUCTION

Tra le lor rent S300 monrh
M d1 ePQrt OH on SA 7
across! om sa w m t behmct
KC Auto Sa es 740 44b:

B72

3 Meigs Co Ohio

Auction

Auction

2 bedroom 2 batn ava abte
now G een lownsh p c ose
10 town (740)446 6890 tor
more nforma on

5039

:

FRIDAY, Nov. 5th 7:00P.M.

:

••

6865 (oay) or (740)379
2923

wheaJ penmes, Kennedy halves, nlver cerlifi·
cates and many more
Kuchen cab1ne1 wall }lour bm, oak dresser wl
bevled mrrror, bejfeta, Evans p1411o, round oak

: Adjoins Lake Katharine State Nature Preserve :

V ew photosf nto onl ne

oc:ated n Gall DOltS over
ng the Oh10 A ver
ver 3000 SQ tt on 3 94
eras Code 825 or call
740 )441 0323

In u~ and our mom

How precious are the
sweet memorres

(740)446 3620

SAVE SAVE SAVE

Card of Thanks

In MemDry

Ltst your home by call ng

By Owner US 35 n Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bedrooms)
Large Sun
Room
12x32
all new
Carpet Full Basement 1 2
acre lol $38 500 (304 )675

The Family of Harold J Broyles w1shes lo
express our heartfelt apprec1at10n to our
family, fnends and neighbors at the loss of
our husband, falher, grandfather and
great grandfather Spcc1althanks to
Holzer Semor Care Center staff and resi·
dents EMS, Holzer Methcal Center
Emergency Room staff, ICU staff and Dr
Ahce Dachowsk1, the Willis Funeral
Home, Pastor Alfred Holley and Pastor
Gene Harmon for the1r kmd words and
comfort at our 11me of loss and to the
Gallla County Veterans Funeral Detail fur
their kmd participation In the funeral
service Thanks to all Who visited, sent
cards, food and especmlly thanks for alf
your prayers Your lhoughlfulness was sincerely appreciated and will
never be forgotten
Wlfe·Dorolhy, Chlldren·Rick and Rhonda,
Grandchddren-Tonya and Tiffany and
Great Grandchlldren-Jaela and Natalee
Card of Thanks

'Wiienever tliere 's a need, wlietlier
its a prayer or;u.st a smde, !MLCk_ey
!S a[ways tliere !J{e person.ijtes tlie
tttfe, "'!lie (jooa Sliepari" 'We
wve you an.i5ln.n. very muc!i.
Pastor !MLC~Y !Maynard
'Deer Creek_ :J. 'W. '13 Churcli
'1/mton. Ofuo

~orvbcom
Home Ltstings

!•

NICS home St Rt t60 $400
month
$350 secur ty
deposrt No POls (740)446

Rental

w•w•w•••w•••w***********************

743

Card of Thanks

AuctiDn

Auct1on

Homes
tram
~10 000'
Forclosure VA Hud tor st
ng 1 800 749 8106 ex 1709

7080

House 3 Bedroom 1 1 2
Bath Heat Pump
new
Carpet W ndows &amp; Roof
B636
Aver Vew 12 Smth St No
2 Story 3 Bedroom l Bath Money Down to qual ty ng
Ful Basement 1200 Man Buyer S4251month why Rent
St Pt Pleasant WV call (304)675 2749
Wtll haul Sand &amp; Gravel T m (304) 675 6052 or
House n Kanauga Old
Pr ced (304) 593 1912
Reasonably
Farmers Ad Galhpol s Oh
(304)675 8635
Mason WV Bank Owned
$.40 000 2 tra tars Krodel
ll'\\\(1\1
Home 2 bedroom Flat lot
Pa rk
on
Neal
Ad
$24 900 M ke Stacie.
$675/month
nvestment
(3041542 5B8B
8USINFR;
Both
tra ers
$35 000
0 d Colony GMAC Realty
(740)441 5725
OPPOim.tNlT\

and SchOOl 2748

Card of Thanks

5 bedroom house Pomeroy
(town) 3/4 acre new roof
wmdows c/a lu rnace s d
ng porch msutat on 3/4
remodeled no land contract

4926

AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
For Info Call Isaac's Feed
740-388-8880 10am-2pm
Ever) day but Thursday and Sunday.

I&lt; I \I I .., I \II
3B A 2BA 5 129 acres
Green Townshtp c ose to
school Pr ced to sel More
nfo (740)446 7377

Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths wl
basement Vtew of rver
Cntrl
A/C
$700
mo
Gal! polls Ferry (740)446

Call Kelly {740)446 9961

VINTON, OHIO

3595
3 bedroom tu I basement
garage approx 1 ac re of
land 5 miles from town on
SA 7 @ Fve Pants call
740 416 0768 or 304 882

Call (740)446 3128

(304)675 2525

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

3

bedroom
house
tn
Syracuse with garage on
n ce lot Fmanctng ava lable
No down payment wtlh
approved credtt (740)992

CHARMING 3 be&lt;lroom 1

Huge Duplex clean 3 bed
room 1 bath d n ng star
age No pets/smoking $6t0

at or 233 Second Ave
Conven ent location
no
pets $565 month plus refer
ence &amp; depoSit (740)446

2 bedroom mob e home
outs ide of Pomeroy S250 00
ren1 $250 OOdepoSit 1 year
lease No Pets (74{))992

2923

bath Located •n Rodney
VUage Oepos I requ red

•ncluded storage butlding
$500fmonth $450ldepostl
no pets reference requ red

Auction

dwelllnp advertind In
thl• new~per ere
1v.!l1biG on •n equal
opportunity baua

nlo

I \11'1
\II\ I
\IR\1&lt;1\

11 /0 1 &amp;
11102
ram or sh ne musiC
equ pment of al ~tnds bath

POUCIES Oh•o Vallev Pubtlehing reMrVn the right to edit reJect or canul anv ed at any time Erron muet be reporttd on the flrat
be reaponelble tor no more then the coat of the apace occup'-d by 1M error and onty tiNt flratlnMf'tlon
not be liable
any lou or expenH that r11ult1 from the publication Of omt..lon ot an advtrllaement Correction wtll be made In tiM first evallable edlth:~n. • Box number
are always confidential • Cu"ent rate card appll• • All real ettllle advertlsemenhl are tubject to tha Federal Fair Hou.lng Act of 1968 • Thla ,..,,..,..,,.
Tr~bun.Sentlnel Raglater will

We are a well espected
TANDEM REHAB an tn
nat anal pract ce deal ng
house therapy company
w th ger atr cs We are tn
•Earn between 45 50K
hasfultme parttme&amp;
need of a licensed psycholo
•M n 2 years exp
PAN opportun ttes for an
g1st who IS nte ested n
• Home T me on Wee~ends
OTA COTA Bf1d SLP tn our work. ng part t me We offer a
•$500 stg n on bonus
Bidwell SNF E)(cellent ben good sta 1 ng salary and the
• Sta tat 36 cpm
ef ts compel 1ve sa ary
abtl ty to parttc pate n our
•95 °~c No touch Ire ghl
Call CJ RoD&lt; BOO 601
40 1K Ca
Psycholog•st
•NO FORCED NYC
3884 fax 800-601 3885
Trans tons at 877 734 2031
em a I tanctemrehabq@ tam or fax resume to 877 734
Call Soo-652 2362 for more pabay r com EOE
2030

P c~ up t uck: topper for Free ktttens to good home
Chevy long bed SdveralJo Male
gray
1 m 11ed
2002 Call OOtween 3pm (740)446 8924 or (740}709
9pm (740)645 0921
!880

6 Kittens to good home only Car Port Sa e
(304)895 3943

r

AUCTION Dr"e

Hambnck:
Church BARN At 7 South 5 mtles
Soulhstde call 10 tdent fy below the Dam EVERY
(304)675 7868
SATURDAY
@
6pm
(740 256 6989
Lost
around
N bert
Ad/Poplar Rtdge area 1 1/2
W.ID~NnBUY:D
year
old
male
blue
Doberman lam ly pet very
fr endty no oollar
$500 Absolute Top Dol ar U S
reward (740)367 7673
S lve and Gold Coms
Proolsets
Gold A ngs U S
1
on Y Please no games
LOST Advanttx 35mm cam
Currency M T S Co n Shop
Contact me @ Mounta n
era lost rn Spnng Valley
151
Second
Avenue
Man
PO
Box
43
area Tr ck or Treat mght
Gall pols 740 446 2842
I

4 1 2wee~ old Lab muced
pupptes to g ve away to
good home (740)446 9552

2br house lor rent
$350/month
water and
trash paid no pets Depos 1
and reference requ red

Informed that all

'
S ngle wh te profess onal
Ch tst an male 45 5 7
stocky bu ld non smoker no
drugs above average looks'
In search ol (1) lovely s ngle
Wh te or Latino Chnst an
lemale non smoke r
no
drugs 30 to 45 1 or 2 ch 1
dren ok Serous mqu es

r

Publication
Sunday Display 1 00
Thursday for Sundays

Deacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

I'ERsoNAls
_____... Lades Watch Found al RIVERSIDE

GIVEAWAY

In Next Day s Paper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
For Sunday• Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

1

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To

Ntce 1 2 &amp; 3 bedroom 1 bedroom tn Letart fur
Apartment&amp;/ retail space nished all ut ltbes patd 5
also lor rent (740)992 3702 mttes from power 'Plant
$350 00 a mon + S350 dep
304 882 2B58
4BA 2 bath house n NICe 2 BR house SR 160 4
Galhpol s
$650/ month ml N of Holzer S400 mo + Beautiful A vervtttW Ideal lor
depOSit requ red (740}441 sec:
depostt
no pets 1 or 2 peoJ:We no pets tef9f
0194 or (740)441 1184
(740)406-6865 or (740)379 ences (740}441..0181
Portland area totally remod
eled
$500
per
mo
(7.00)843 5546

..

All rMI Htate .w.tl:ltlng
In thl• new. .per Ia

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
&amp;!_iir1
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

4 bedroom house for rent

3481

2 story Coloma! 3 bdrm 1
bath Gas heat Cntrl AJC
2 story 2 bedroom 1 5 bath
S600 mo (740)446o-.3481
ktlchen w th stove &amp; refnger

aublact to th• Feder•!

Display Ads

C'.pfMOOit$ 0H

3 bedroom 1 bath ftre
place Central AJC WIO
hook up refrtdg &amp; stove

{Ohio loans Only)

992-2157

Oeatl~ir~

Word Ads

112 Ytnton Court

6300

MB 5263

-

Down Payment and
available w th
south of Gall poliS SA 7 approved credit
Awrage
Bu Jdmg parmtt avatlable credtt qualifies you If down
(740)256-8823
payment has kept you from
buy ng thts ts your chance
10 own your own hOme If
RE.uEm:IE
you have a down payment
WAMm
but would l•l&lt;e to conserve it
we offer low down payment
Want to buy a 3 bectroom 2
programs a so Greal tnter
bath home Garage base
est ratest local company
ment J.lO acres s desu
Mortgage
Locators
able All cash Close •n 2
(740)992
7321
weeks Me1gs Gall a or
Athens County (740)992

r

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
Register
~rlhune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
Call Today... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

o•~e

232 feel shore ltne 10 m les flnanc•ng

Auct1on

OHIO UNIVERSITY
SUKI'LUS AUCTION

Saturday. l'lovember 6. 9:00 a.m.
Athens, OH
A publtt: aucuon wtll be held 10 dt..,fll'r~~.: ol tht:
Oh1o Umverslty Surplus n e m~ NO rF E u.:h
quaner ts a completely new b tt(h of 'oUt pit
ttems to be sold ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD -\S
!SINO GUARANTEE Vl'tt the V. EB '"" for
a

hstmg

co mplete

wv. w ohwu eduh.. urplu~

cltck on Surplus lnformalton then Surplu~
Inventory In Stock Item~
Prn H"" th~ \H'd
before - c Ill 740 \91 0461 lrton X 00 4 UO
SALE
ORDER
Computer:-.
pnnlcn.
technology eqwpment wtll he ~old fU" ~t
begtnmng at 9 00 am unul fim sheJ At II fXJ

am two

aucuon nn g:~

Vehtcles wt II be ~old

\\Ill

ht'

LtllldlKit:d

o1

at N1

VEHICI ES sold al noon 1994 GMC D"kol t
PU Truck wffopper 199 728 mt!c&gt; ) 1994 Ford
Tempo (91417 mtle&gt;) 1992 Ford F150 Dump
Truck (4S ~Q7 mtlcs) 199:! D dge Spnlt
(108 247 m1!cs) 1991 Chc V) C"prtce (98 111
mtle:s) 1990 Dodge Ram Van (2~414 nuk~ J
1990 Chevy Cht:)etme Trud.. ( ~I 771 nll k "-l
1988 Ford Eldorado Aerotech :!5 p&lt;.t..,~~.: n gc:r
shuttle bu s (dtcsel c ngmc '~.:ru t~dAC/PA

Sys1cm ~1!40 !62 mtiesl 19~7 Dodoc Ram
Van (23 414 mtlcs) All ;ehtc!es are pt ctured
on the Oh10 Umverslt} Surplus oweb stte
COMPUTERS AND
TECHNOLOGY
EQUIPMENT
WmBook I Apple
Macmtosh/Compaq laptops ! 40+ Com pulers
.ncludmg
Gatewav/N etdma/Dcii/M 1d" es1
Mlcro/Compaqllntox!Macmtosh 75+ pnnlm
mc!udmg
HP/Epsonl Apple
LaserWrtter/
Lexmark/Canon/Xerox
:!0 Scanner..:
Umax/HP/Nikon!VtStoneer/ Kodak Data Book
computer projector panel Canon/Pana~ o mcl
Sharp fax machtnes 10 Cop1ers mcludmu
Canon/Sharp/IBM/Lamer Sony v1deo ~.:assenc
player Ptoneer la~cr dtsc "'nbrt swttch AV
can commun1catt ons ~~.:nc r Qrnphtt.:s plotter
Panasomc vtdC&lt;l rcc01dct ., '1d~.:o c 1men
overhead proJector proJector pand"' "'hde
proJectOrs vtdeo mont tots S Tc!e\J.,ton:s
Panasomc!RCA!Mttsubtsh t
19 typeY.ntcrs
Brother/Canon/Ro) a!/IB~I/01) mp wSh"rp
work stmulator mach me Ren a m lthng ~y~tem
JCt speed folder matlbox sorters
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
Arrestall Dust Collet.:lton svstem Do All DV
16 Dnll Press Host Dr. ExtractiOn carpel

machtne QSP 8 gallon &gt;hop 'ac Barco
Impress Cushtoned exam tahk GE Model
805 mcubator 2 large dt\ mg boards I00+
b1cycles
(tentatJ\ e
upon
release)
APPLIANCES Cabmet w/SS stnk Lang SS
oven on wheels GE &amp; Kenmore refrtgerator"
HotPomt oven 1 mtcrowa\ es humtdlfters
OmCE FURNISHINGS small hea- )
combo safe 6 wood floor podtUm s 18
wood/metal tables
40+ "ood desks
bookshelves 2/415 drawer h!e cabtnets me1al
top sheh es lamps loll of sofas end table&gt; &amp;
dres sers coat rack wlumbrella hol der fre e
standtng dtsplay board complete set ol
Enc)lopedla Bntanmca
TERMS Cash or ~.:heck v. l pm 11-..e l D
Checks

ove1

$1000

must

authonlatiOn

ha\ e

bani...
he

of funds a\atlable Food V.lll
Not re~pon~tble tor Joss

avmlable
or
acctdents
DIRECTIONS Rt 11/50 to
Alhens to Rt 682 f ' JI go through ltghl at
Rtchland AHmuc turn le tt
rollO\\ Mgns to Bmldmg 9

at

1I\IJ 'tHIP\1
FRill\\ 0.,0\E\!FilR ~
II\ IE 5 IHl 1'\1
LOCATION \IE\IORI-\1 II!J(,
BROAD\\ A\ S1 RH I DOll '\1 011 !'&gt;
JUKSO!'&gt; OliiO
\IRS P\l LA s II I~ "SO'\ H \S
\IOH D II'&gt; TO I IU liRE\IF" r
HO\If -1.'&lt;0 II II I OH f R Hll( Sf Ll
THF tOJ LOll 1'..(, I'F RSON II
I'ROI'I R 1\
'il'\1 lfllRSil\1 ll()l)fR'\ llE\IS
\IH!RII'OOI II \SHf R 1'\ll HR\ t R
REFRI&lt;,fRAlOR \lllROI\1\f 1
SEll I:&gt;IG \lit Hl'\f s 2 \IR
CONJ)III0'\1 RS \1-1.1'1 1:: ()l H :\
ANNE T\111 f \I l l f \\ f S I AR(,f
\IAI'U CHI:\ILLPIIO\Ril 1!11'1 F
HUTCH II API E !H sKIll Hlt.H llOOK
lASE \\Rill'\(, !JtSK I \R(,f
MHCHIN(, ( HFST -\.0.,0 \\'ill\
~IETI.I 1\ARDROIIES I '\ll I \IlLEs
-I.Nll sri."'IJS Ll\1" F! OOR HI"S
POlS A:&gt;ill P\'\S Klllll! '.. l I 1-:loOSII S
! \\IPS I OIS Of (,I \SS\1-I.Rf
BOOKS lOIs OF t RHIITE\IS
LA\\'\ \10\\tRS (,\Riltl'l 1001 S
lOTS OF ( 01 ! t l 11!11 ES 0\ I::R ltHI
BOXES Of 01 ll 1'\D NF II 11 F \IS'
5 PII FRill 1\ I '\11Qlf ITE\IS OAK
Sf A(,(, (,1 ISS St! I ERS KITl Ht '..
ClPBO.\R!J I'RI\IITI\ f FLA1 II \I I
CLPBOAR!J H\l \ IRQ\ BED H R\
NICE SINt,f R rRI::\1)1 t Sl::l\lloOG
MACHINE C.\R\ f ll 0 I.K SIDEBOARD
EXCELLEI'IT OAK SLEIGH RED '~;ICE
OAK LOIIBO\ DRI::SSI-:R S\1.\LLOAK
\\RITING DESK GRE\1 OAK 4 HOOK
HALL \IIRROR Ill LSIZE SI'OOL
BED L.\RGE C \R\ fl) OAK LO\\ 80\
DRESSER 0-I.K P.I.RLOR 1 \Ill E
PAI'\TED OAK \\ASH S IA'..D
SERPE!IITI'IE L0\1 BO\ DRESSER
PRI\1111\ E 1 DR \II ER ( HEST
1'\INTED 0 \K CHEST UR\ A 19111
POSTER BED A'\D DRF SSER E\IPIRE
CHESl QU f '\ -1. o., 'E UBR~ R\
TABU O~K r BAlK t H \IRS,
\ ICTORI \'\lilA IRS C o\ NED
ROCKERS I ICTORIA~ DOLL BED,
C-I.ST IRON Bf:"'(H Bll KET BENCH
EARL\ CASl IRO\ \I~IL BOX
MARBLE B~SE FLOOR L.l.\'tPS 01 D
GlASS \JAIL BOX Pit TLRES -l.loOD
FRAMES SMALL PRI\11 rl\ F
BLANKET CHEST f L-1.1 TO I' TRL '\K
1960 REPRINTS m 1860 HI -1.'\if.\
SENTR\ NE\\ SPA PER PORTFOLIO
GRAND\14. \lOSS~ S PRI:\TS om
SCOtT \tt;GS A"D OTHER
llEMS DH FO'IiiJ\ 8\SEII&lt;\.11
GLOVE DOLLS A"'D UOLL
FURNITliU 3 POST l ARD
ALBL\tS SO\IE JAl KSO'\ C&lt;\. RDS
CHILDRE'\S BOOKS l \lc C.UFE\
BOOKS IS Sll HOL'ETl E PI CTl RES
COSTL ME JE\\EI R\ sn ER-I.L OLD
Ql'll TS, GLOBE IRO" P \I'I::R
\\EIGHTM&lt;\.RBLES Eo\RI I I OLK -I.RT
C&lt;\.BI:II Gl&lt;\.SS L.I.\IP Sli~DI' S\!OKE
BELL SAD IRONS II'\ \IA1lH 80\
HOLDERS CAST IRO" COKE BOTTLE
OPENER COKE '\l N GLASSES ' CO KE
RLLER 1\00D POP (RUES (,()QSE
NECK KETTLE tARL\ Kll CHF'..
UTENSILS L-\.R(,E SlO'\t \!II K
CROCK COOKIE JARS So\ I Sl \lA
\ASE HLI L HSE Dt PRbSIO"
GlASS FENTON \\R'\1\-\.I I OT' OF
Rll'E \OLLECl !Ill f PL\H S BILE
\\ILl0\1 HO\IFR I AI loHI !'\
DOG\\OOll CHI'\ I. PRF ss (,! ' ' '
lOTS OF Olll L\CEA'IIl
liNENS I H S OSK\ 1\0\\S PII S \
LARGE ATTil Fl I I OF UOXES "'OT
\ E1 Ol'l '\f ll
DATE

The Rtdges and

OV. NER Ohio Unlversi1J
ww\1 ohlou edulsurplus
Check on Surplus Information Surplus
Inventory In Slock Items
SHA'o1ROCK AUCTION SER\ ICE
John Patrick "Pat' Sheridan Auctioneer
Chris Prater, Assisting Auctioneer
Email ShamrockAuelion @aol com
WEB www shamrock 11urtions com
PH 740-592-4JJO or 800 419 9122

TER\IS l &lt;\.SH OR I Ol \1 l H H K o.,()
Ol T OF S! \Tt 1'1 R'0' &lt;\.1 t lifCK'
\ItS 1\Ril S AI ( IIIJO., SF R\IU 174411
286 'NbN I \CKSO\ OHIO
PRtSTO'Ii \II Sl-I.Rn ll t riO'tt K I
II'PR&lt;\.ISF.R
lit I NSEilsr\lt mown

�Page 06 • 6tmllap 11imtt -6mtintl

Sunday, October 31 , 2004

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

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TROCKS

1997 Gray 15.1 AOHA
Gelding Dash tor Cash Bugs
Ahve '75 on papers, 30 days
barrel
training
$2000
(740)446-1310

2000 Z24 Chevy Cavalier,
48 ,000 miles, Auto, Runs &amp;
Looks
Great
$5 ,000
(304)675-5828

2002 Buick Centurv- Special 1989 Dodge 1!2 ton pick up.
Edit1on. Color- light sanddritt 8 ft . bed, 318, VB. 60,000
metallic, mileage- just under miles, new rubber, towing

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Angus
BullsTop
Performance Lines. 40 Years
Art11icial Insemination. Slate
Run Farm (740)286-5395 .
www.slaterunfarm.com

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53,000 miles, interio r- cloth
loaded· concert
sound system II, 8)11CeptionClub calves
tor sate. ally clean car. (740)446Reasonabi'Jf priced. Contact 0925.
~aughman Show Callie
(740)256-6535 or (740)256- 2003 Chrysler Sebring LXI
8884
loaded still under warranty
Club Calves. Reg Angus
Bulls. breel heifers. and bred
commercial cows. Meadow
Valley Farms. (740)2455984

BUILDING

seats,

1988 Chevy 510, Good 2002 XR 70A Honda dirtCondition, Camper Top, bike . Runs good . like new.
Auto TransmiSSion, Power rode very lillie. $1,000.
Steering, Power Brakes. Air (740)441-1417 after 5pm or
Cond. Call (304)675-3579
leave message.

package, new paint. excel-

lent condition, 3 speed over- Leer Crown used fiberglass
drive.. .
$3,000
Call topper-fits 8 toot long bed,

8am-5pm . Chevy or GMC 88·97 $250
firm . Extang vinyl tonneau
740-446·3248 after 5pm.
cover fo r 73-83 CheYy or
2001 Dodge Dakota, quad GMC long bed truck, new,
cab, blue, V-B. bug shield, never
installed
$100
w1ndow guards, 4x2 bedlin- (740)441-1971 M ·F days,
25,000 miles. 2002 19ft
er. all power 514,000, good (740)441·0816 nights and
Dul chman travel trailer condition . 60,000 miles.
weekends
excellent condition used 4
(740)44 t -0712
times. (740)379-2331
CAMPOO&amp;
96
Dodge Dakota
Mm'ORHoME&lt;;
2003 Tracker, 4x4 , 3,000 owner,Aed 72,000 orig.
miles. All eleclric, alum. miles, auto, 2 wheel dr., new 98 Golden Falcon, 31ft with
wheel. Will sell below book tires, clean truck 304-675· expando. Excellenl condi7375 or after 5pm call 304· l ion.
$11 ,000 (740)256value . (740)388-8432.

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Auction

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
AUCTION

Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Req uired, Days :
740-446·3481 : Evenings:
740-367-0502.
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
'list for Hud·subsized. 1- br,
apartment, call 675-6679

EHO

Auction

Auction

Auction

Auction

LARGE AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6'" • 9:30A.M.
LOCARON; 22492 St. Rt. 7 South, Crown City, Ohio. From Gallipolis, Oh io -- go south o n St. Rt. 7 and foll ow

~pprox. 20 miles to Auction. See Signs (or) from Huntington, West Virgin ia -- cross th e bridge into Ohio and tu rn
or North on St. Rt. 7 ··Follow approx. 18 miles to Au ctio n.
Hj"(
EOU!pMENT: Case 750 track loader w/ winch &amp; bucket, 195 7 hrs., good; ACP- 1 50 All is Cha lmers lorklih
HOCSEHOLD
"!I side shift, tri pl~ mass, fork positioner, dual pneumati c tires, w/ 900 hrs.; a,ooo lb. Clark forklift w/ pneumatic
Gooos
tne_s, ~ropane ; Al11s C_halm~rs ACP-_60 fo rklift _w/ tripl ~ mass, dual pneumatic, gas; LP-Cat 4,000 lb. forklift w/
sohd ttres; seve r~l var1ous SIZe forklift forks; m tsc. forklifts for parts; (2) 4' vibrating rollers w/ tow; forklift battery
charg~r. 36V; wmch for D-7 Caterpillar, plus 12V &amp; PTO winches; cran e for parts; Rockwell piee cleaning
macfune on trailer w/ sas powe red en sine; Sullair air com pressor w/ J.D. d iesel engine on rubber; 8 PTO water
1pump on wheels; Intern ational w ood chipper; track torq ue tool; con tractor's gang box. FARM EQUIPMENT &amp;
Appliance
SKID L_
OADER: Ford 5000 diesel, w ide-front tract or; Massey Ferguson 255 tractor, diesel. has good tires; Bobcat
743 sk1d loa~er; 6' 3 pt. R~tary cutte ~; 4 row spr ing cultivators; ~ 2' J. D. harrow; 10' wheel disc w/ cylind~r; 3 pt.
3 bottom 16 pl ow; J.D. 8 3 pt. Fla1l mower; gas powered fla1l mower; 3 pt 71 /2' bo• bl ade; log splitter on
Warehouse
~J_J~eels; bale spear. LAWN &amp; G•PDEN EQUIPMENT: HP Green Th umb rea r-t1ne tille r; gas w eedeater; Sn apper
nd1ng mower; Gravely lawn tractor w/ w eight s; wheelbarrow; Rota-ti ller; Stihl 031 &amp; 0 23 chain saw s;
1n Henderson, WV.
PreSnowbiOYifer &amp; snow blade attachment for law n tractor: Gravely &amp; other m isc. mower parts. WQODWORt{ING
owned app11canes starting at
EQUIPMENT: Deltll 10" table saw; Hine jigsaw; Wet/dry belt sander; Craftsman 12n rad ial saw; J-Une wood
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
lath e; 3 phase dr!ll press; lapid ary saw; belt sander; I~. assortm ent wood planes; w oodworki ng supplies, such
as knobs, pull s, hmges and so forth. MISC. &amp; ANTIOUL: ANTIQUES: cream separator; wood burning cook stove;
we do service work on all
pla~o rm scale; la rs e anvil w/ pat. t; several a'"!l mo boxes; MfSC: Lan dis shoe sewing m achine; Panagram
Make and Models (304)675·
sewmg mach 1n~; 80 gal. ponable &amp; 400 gal. gravity fuel tanks; extra heavy duty sto rage racks ; metal tool cage;
7999
several log cha1ns; (2) D1amond plate truck too l boxes; eightway ad justable seat for equipment ; several new
rear tru ck bumpers fo r 200 3 Fo rd pickups; approx. (20) 16' livestock panels; misc. farm gates; bu nk feeder; misc.
Goo d Used Appliances ,
good lumber; aluminum pickup ramps; trailers axles; elect ric tra nsl ormers; buzz saw blades; approx. 70 8~ 1. of
Reconditioned
and
tan m ilitary vehicl~ paint; furnaces; tool make r's microscope; sterilizer; misc. radia t ors; many new bea rings; Ig.
Guaranteed,
Washers,
assortment of cab1 ~et hing es, handles &amp; etc.; steel horses; bench &amp; tool vis_es; plus m any, many othe r items t oo
Dryers .
Ranges .
and
numerous to ment1on. 1991 OLDSMOBILE Model BB, app r o~ . 115,000 m1les, good rubber, no rust. TRUCKS &amp;
Aefr1gera1ors. Some start at
TOW DOLLY - 6~6 Army dump truCk w/ 11,000 actual m iles; 1991 lntern~tJonal dump truck, 30,000 GVW,
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
25,~0 actual m iles; _1991 Dodge 4&gt;&lt;4 Power-Ram 150 pickup w/ 4 speed transmission &amp; 85,00 0 m iles,
Vine St. . (740)446-7398
Caro_hna ~ruck ; (2). military 2'/1 ton t r~ cks f~r part~; Army Yard Dog truck w/ Detroit diesel; PSI Aircrah tug w/
Pe rkms d1esel eng1ne &amp; i!!ll w heel duve; 12 _
&amp; 17 all steel truck beds; 2-wheel tow dolly w/ brakes, like new.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
TRAILER"$ ATV BOAT &amp; CAMPER - 8'x20' tilt trailer w/ tandem axles &amp; dual wheels, p1ntle hitch; 15' 14,500
Chapel Road . Porter, Oh1o.
GVW equi pment trailer; 15' tri·a~le 21,600 GVW equ ipment trailer ; 7' &gt;&lt; 10' flatbed trailer; 2 wheel army trailer
(740)446-7444 1-877-830wj racks; Polaris 500 Ani w/ 718 m1les, 4~4, &amp; engine brake; 12' John bo at; new trolling motor; 2000 30ft. Gulf
Stream lnnsbruck camper. sleeps 6, many e.dras, nice. SHOP · FOUNDRY - TOOL &amp; DIE . OTHER EQUIP. - pLUS
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
MOTORS; PARnAL LISt 2 HP Bridgeport milling machi ne w/ power feed, 42" table; 12" rotary table for
financing, 90 days same as
B~idsepo~t; ~a.vid Round power hoist: industrial hydra_
u lic unit; (2) 6V:53 Detroit diesel, Oli11er grmding m ach ine;
cash . Visa/ Master Card .
Cmcmnat1 milling mach.ne; Hammond floor model ~nnder; Do-Al l 16 band saw w/ blade welder; gas powered
Drive~ a- little save alot.
gener.ator; Bu ffalo 15~ ~ ril l pre~s with 5/B" chuck; smg_le phase Dake 75 ton H·frame press; Deutz J cylinder 50
HP d1esel motor; 4 cyhnd er d1esel motor : seve ral dr1ll presses; tg. Racine power hacksaw; (2.) paving fabric
Sola, makes queen s1ze
stands &amp; ~pea~s for 20' &amp; 30' ~oils; opti~al d ividi~g head; ForB ing!mel ting fu rnace; misc. found~ tools &amp; e9uip .;
bed, $76. (740)992·7565
Commercial p1 p~ &amp; rod threadmg _machme w/ d1es; (2) Nabrtco deck w1nches; (~) 30' hydra uli c cylinders; smgle
phase commercial floor model gnnder; sandblast cab1net ; gas powered hydr aulic un1t; Fo sdick gear drtven dn ll
Thom psons Appliance &amp;
press w/ power feed co~lant; _ Hob_art 23 0 si ngle phase we ld e_r; Bostitch .o ntractor's ai r compressor; Di ngleberry
Repair-675· 7388 For sale,
hones; several other vano us s1ze au comp ressors, gas &amp; electnc; acetylene torcli set w/ cart; heat blower sun; air
re-conditioned
automatic
powe red ,staple machine; Magestic saw; 18; HP co ncret e saw;· (2) Gorman Rupp w ater pump W/dua l mlets &amp;
was ~ ers &amp; ctryers, relt~ge ra­
outlets w ith Deutz diesel engines; power washer w/ gas motor on rub ber; phase converter; cho p saw; tool post
tors, gas and electric
grinder; ve ry large amount o1 misc. hand &amp; power tools of all kinds, plus accessories; vises; work benches, pl us
ranges , a1r conditioners, and
much m orel
·
wrmger washers. Will do . AUQ!ONEER'S NOTE· This auction will include many good &amp; us~ful item s. Some very hard to f in"d &amp; unusual
repairs on major brandS 1n
items included. There are several4 ft. by 4 ft. co ntainers that are full of items to be sold, which have never been
shop or at your home.
unpacke d or seen by auctioneer as of da te of t his printing! The PSI ai rcraft tug &amp; Nabrico power winches are
consigned and sell su bject to not bemg sold pnor. TERMS • CONDITIONS; Cash or check with proper 1.0.
Used Furniture S1ore 130
Announce ments day of auction take precedence over any &amp; all ads.
Bulav111e Pike, appliances,
Nan
Owner
dressers, twm , full . queen.
, Sale Conducted By:
ktng mattresses , Clressers,
oouches. dinettes, !ecliners.
grave monumen ts, much
more
(740)446·4782
IU A l"t ~ANO "I ICIION
Galllpohs, OH . Hrs 11-3 (M-

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fit

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JUiLLERAl

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American Legion Post 27

Elliott Appliances

will have nominations for the
Veterans Service Commission
at regular meet

446·8051

Kanauga, Ohio

Monday, Nov. 1 7:30 pm
MOHAWK
ANNIVERSARY MONTH
Celebrating 126 years
of
Quality Flooring

For Rent

Oct. 3rd - Nov. 6th

5 Room House
1015 Bulaville Pike
441-9831

Vanco Floor Covering
1378 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis , OH 45631

740-446-0137

Basket Bingo
November 2

Discount Shipping
Supplies
Don't pay retail anymore

• Bubble Wrap
• Peanuts
• Bubble Envelopes
• Packing tape &amp; more

Mid deport American
Legion
Doors open 4:00
Starts at 6:30

All retired Baskets

AUCnONS
Located at Henderson
Community Bldg
Auctions at 6:00
Sat. , Oct. 30th, Sal. Nov. 6th,
Sal., Nov. 13th, Sat. Nov. 20th,
Sal., Nov. 27th
Special Christmas Safes·
Thursday, November 4th
and Thursday, November 18th
Auctioneer Lonnie E. Neal

The Lynch Agency and Eslal~
Planning Paralegals
Invite you to the first an nual

Join the 6-Time National
Chee rleader Champion
Al l Stars Unlimited Twinkle
Stars Cheer Team

Emergency Change
Attn: All Harrison Twp
Voters
New poling location

Tessa , Sarah &amp; Becky Rothgeb
are signing up girls grades K to 4

Will be located in the New
Township 's Community Room/Fire
Bldg . located on Little Bullskin Rd.
• Located between Lewis Ad &amp;
Johnson Rd. Turnoffs.
Terry Cremeens
f\'Jrrison Twp. Clerk

on

Monday, 11 / 1

6:30 pm at the
Parkfront Diner,
Downtown Gallipolis
P.S. O nly 6 spots left on the youth
team for 5th &amp; 6th graders

Call Becky at 446-1251

SENIOR DAY
November 11 , 2004
11 am - to6pm
322 Second Avenu e
Ga llipolis, Ohio
Join us for a day of FREE
Information to all
SENIORS!
Informational Classes
Lunch and Refreshments
Door Prizes
Reference Center
RSVP 1·866·734-8401
Don 't miss out on this valuable
information! I

Mollohan Carpet
"Quality at low cost"
FALL SALE
Drive a Little· Save a Lot
388·0173 or 446· 7444

Call 740·992· 0276
or email
esatkins@charter.net

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Reaeh 3 Counties

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Auction

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Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

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AUCTION LOCATION: All properties will be sold at the Lewis Fami ly Restaurant located
al 966 East Main St. in Jackson, Ohio. (Watch for signs.)

Heavy Equipment • Farm Equipment · Camper • Trailers · AN • Trucks &amp; Tugs • 4 Forklifts •
Large Amount of Shop Equipment &amp; Tools • Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment • Antiques

BIG SCREEN TV'S
All appliances 10% off

AUCTIONEER: U:SI.I E A. l.EMLt:Y
740-3118-HIIS
APPRE)ITJCE AUCTIONEER: .JOSH
BOIJIMER
CASHIAPPROHD CHECK ONLY
NO £MOKING PL EASE
"NOT RESPONS IBLE FOR AC('IDE NTS OR
LOST PROI't: RTY!"

Commercial Land • 45 Acre Lake
Woodland Surrounded by State Forest
Pasture Land • Building Sites
Recreational Hunting Land
Thursday, November 4th • 6:00 PM

See ou r new show room full of

Sizes 40" &amp; Up

,.THIS IS THE SECONI&gt; SALE OF ITEMS
FROM THE FORMER WAGON WH EEL
ANTIQUES, MRS. OOROTHY
BROYLES,OW:-IER.
ROUNI&gt; OAK TABLE, IILAN KET CHEST,
HOTEL CABINET W/PIGEON HOLES. 2
MA)ITELS. CAST IRON LALNI&gt;RY STOVE,
BABY CRIB &amp; CRADLE, HALL TREE. 1924
MCCASKEY CASH REGISTE R. PRIMATIVE
COUNTRY STORE FLOU R BIN. PHILCO
FLOOR MODEL RADIO. OLD GALLIPOLIS
STREET SIGNS, CAST IRON FLOOR LAMPS,
IS J UMBO. PEANUT JARS. ICE TONGS,
BUCKEYE IMPLEMENT SEAT (CANTON,OHIOl. SOIL TEST KIT. STOR E .JARS,
RUGGY JA CK, BARN LANTERNS, CAST
IRON (GRISWOLIJ, I'AVO RITE, BELKNAP),
APPLE PEELER, HORSE COttARS,
CARNIVAL CHALKWARE. Ilf. PRESS ION
GL\SS, WHITE MOI')ITAJ )I ICE C' RUM
FRE EZER, RLGG \' STOOl., MARIII. F.~. AIR
CHIEF TA RL E TOI' RAOIO, GI.ASS TO
INCLUilE HEIS EY &amp;/PRESS CUT,
TOBY MUGS, COLLECTIOI\ OF OC'CU PIEll
JAPA N, OLD BOTTLES, .JEWEL HA,
ROCKWELL I'LATES, SE\'ERAI. FAI\C\' OIL
LAMPS, LUCK\' JOE UAI\ KS.
STONEWAR E iJU(;S. CROCK, J ARS.
SPITOONI, MII. K BOTTLES, IIL:TTONS,
OLD BOOKS, WASfl UOARilS. ANTIQUE
TOOLS, SA D IRONS, COl\ &amp; SII H P
BELLS, FEED SACKS, EA Rl.\' MM;AZI\ES,
EGG BASKET, CROSS CVT SAil'S.
SMALL SEA RS HBI.E S.AII. 411
PLANER/JOINTER, I) RI I.L PRt:SS. MA)IY
MORE PCS. OF 1\JCE GLASSII'ARE. ~ lOR E
NOT LI STED ....

Auction

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCES
Prices starting at $1295

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 6:30PM
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 ST. RT. SHH (OLD RT. 35)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Jackson - Athens -·Vinton Counties

AUCTIONEERi LESLIE LEMLEY

Sticks &amp; Stones
Logging &amp; Fi rewood
We accept CAA and HEAP
740-446-6783
740·645·2480

Auction

2,087 ACRES

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AUCTION

:Boo~'. · ~SI~ide~'-F_r•_•_o_e_tiv_• ~

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

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(740)446-4514

Polled Hereford Bulls &amp;
Discount shipping Supplies,
SlJPI'I.IES
Heretords call (304)882Save B1g !!!
2426 after 6pm
Bubble wrap, peanuts, bub·
ble envelopes, tape &amp; more . Block, brick, sewer pipes,
67'=4~
-00.;;9;.;8;...- : - - : - - - . , 6789
Call (740)992-0276 or email windows , lintels, etc. Claude Reg1stered Angus-Bu ll, Born - - - - - - - - ii
Champion-Hill, 76 Suburban, 454/400 tu rbo.
4x4
esatkins @charter.net
Winters, Rio Grande, OH 3/2000,
3000c hom Saugahatchee- All or part $700 (304)674FOR SALE
Call740·245-5 12 t .
2BA. CI A, refngerator/stove
Bull and Rita-Daughter. 010 1
M IS(.UJ.ANW!JS
--included,
washer/dryer
Proven-Breeder,
Gentle
1998 GMC Jimmy SLS,
MEROlANDISE
10 min from
hook-up.
$ 1.300 call (304)576-2752
89 Ford Escort, 2 door, runs great condition, pwr seal,
Holzer. (740)441·0194 or
2 6x8 dog kennels, good
HAY. &amp;
good, $3,500, ca ll {740)992· windows, Jocks, sunroof,
(740)44 1· 1184
AKC Beagle puppies $125 ,
cond ition, can be used
GRt\.IN
1958
106K
miles,
asking
can see at t 473 Hannan
Applications be1ng taken for together, dog house includ~---~--,..1
$6,350.00.
740
446-8910.
Public Notice
Trace Ad., Patriot, or call
very clean 1 bedroom in ed. (740)256·6647
MaroR
CYCLFSi
(740)379·9063. No Sunday For Sale: 1200 lb. Round 93 BM W 325i. Custom
country setting vet close to
bates of mixed hay. Call afler cover. new tires &amp; extra
LEGAL NOTICE
4WHEEU&lt;:RS
Bowf l e~~: Extreme. new co n~ Sales.
town . Washer, dryer, sto11e.
wheels. Priced to Sf:)ll under
Rio
Grande
dition. Paid $1500, asking
fridge included. Water and
AKC Beagle pups, good
blue
book,
$3,500.
$600. (740)388.0366
2000 Honda 4-wheeler. 4 Community College is
garbage included. Total elechunting stock. $100. Call
(740)446-9555.
a special
wheel drive. 3.000 miles, holding
tric with AC . Tenant pay elec- Computer with Speakers (740)256-6278
Board meeting to
excellent
co
ndition.
$2.900.
tric. $300 deposit, $375 per and Printer. 5 piece Dining
review legal issues on
93 Pontiac Firebird, e)llcel· (740)446-3117
month. No pets. No smok· Room set . Ladies 10 speed AKC Black temle Lab pupWednesday ,
condition.
(740)742-lent
ing. 740-446-2205 or 740- Bicycle Calt (740)446'2188 pies. Shots, wormed &amp; dew
2000
Honda
Foreman , November
17th at
7004
claws
removed
.
$200
.
446-9585 ask for Virginia .
$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
450es, yellow, winch , new 11:30 a.m. in room 216
For sale Fire Wood (740)441-0130.
Jeep's,
Eel.
Police
tires, lock in/out, 4x4, great of bob Evans Farms
BEAUTIFUL
APART· (304)882-2S37
97 Chevy S- 10 Blazer
AKC Black Lab pups. Shots. lmpoundsl Cars from $500
condition . $3,200 {740)245- Hall, Rio Grande, Ohio.
AT
BUDGET Gray Couch &amp; Love Sea t
MENTS
$4395: 98 Dodge Dakota E)(
wo..rmed, parents
HIPS for listings 800~39 1 ·5227
9099
October 31 , 2004
PRICES AT JACKSON $150, Black Swivel TV
Cab $4195; 2000 Ford
EXT
3901
NAFC
O.F.A. ce rtified.
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Stand $10, Green Glider
Ranger $3695: 96 Dodge E11
champion
bloodline .
Drive from $344 to $442. Rocker $5 (304)882-3129
1988 Dodge Aries LE, must Cab 4)(4 $4595: 94 Jeep
(740)643·200 1
Real Estate
Real Estate
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
see to appreci ale, wel l Wrang ler $3 195: 95 Ford
74o-446·256 8.
Equal Hotpoi nl dryer $160, Maytag AK C Bosto n Terrie r pups optioned, askmg $1095 F250 $3 t 95; 98 Dodge
washing machine $75, 5 . 7wk wormed &amp; shots 3 OBO. (740)949-2693
Housing Opportunity.
Caravan $2695; 97 Jeep
drawer chest $20, be1ge tem~·le $19a.o0. (740)388·
Grand Chero kee $4 t95; 95
1994 Lincoln Continenta l Chev 4x4 PU $3295; 96
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· couch $20, orange recliner 8743
$10, entertainment center .:....:...._ _ _ _ __
Executive. 87.000 miles. Dodge Dakota 4)(4 PU
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!'
To wnhouse
apartme nts. $25, 4 chair &amp; table $50, 5 AKC Golden Retriever pup- e)(cellent cond ition inside $3500.
B&amp;D Auto Sales,
$4 .000
Call
bookcase
$20. pies. bot h parents on prem~ and out.
anct/or small houses FOR shelf
Hwy t60N . 740)446-6865
RE NT Call (740)441·1111 ~740)446-4426
ises.
Ready 11·16-04 . (740)379·2531
$300, will hold with deposit.
for application &amp; mformation
1996
Cadillac
Deville. 99 Hyundai Elantra $3,995
JET
(740)256·1686
AERATION MOTORS
89,000 miles, e.11cellent con- miles 96 .391 .
95 Olds
Efficiency apt. lor rent
$350/month inclu des water, Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In German Rott's 6 Female left. dition $6,000. Long Burner Cu!lass SL $3,995 mites
burner
$500. 87.857
sewer &amp; trash . No pets. Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- $200 Parents on premises wood
(304)937-231 0
(740 )379· 9405 .
800·537·9528.
99 Geo Metro $2.995 mi tes
(740)446-43 13.
Golden Retriever, Bulldog 1997 Plymouth Breeze. 78,836 . 4 Brush Hogs 5ft.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed$400. each. 5ft &amp; 6tt Blades
Kindlewood lNOOd burner. 2 mix. Call for appointment. 109,000 miles, power winroom apartments at Village
$175
(740)379-2639
bl owe rs. 36&gt;&lt;32x 17 sides
dow/brakes. $1600 060.
Manor
and
Rive rside
Southern Au to Sales
outside me::isure menls, aApa rtments in Middleport.
Mt. Kerr pu ppies. Wil l make {740)388·0343
2nd Avenue
inch stove pipe. (740)446From $295-$444. CaU 740good squirrel dogs. $100.00 2000 Bwck LeSabre. V6,
(740)446-8554
0922
992-5064. Equal Housing
each (740)742-92 17
sedan,
4-door
limited,
Opportunit ies.
ove r
Marble
collection
80.000
m11es
,
garage
kept. Ford 87 Mustang, 2 .3, 5
Please stop in &amp; give one of
2,000, from the 1930's and
58.500 00. (740)949-221 7 Speed , wrecked, $500 080
these
dogs
a
homeMeigs
Middleport,
North
4th 40's, ~ot of rare ones $2500;
?AM- 10PM
call(304)675-8872
Aven ue. 2 be droom, fur- Remington 1100 16 GA, Co. Dog Pound or call 740992-3779.
Dalmatian,
male,
nished apar lment. Deposit Vent Rib $750: also some
and references. No Pets . chicken coops, wooden 4 vrs; Rottweller, male, 3 yrs :
Auction
Auction
2 Jack Russell, 1 1/2 yrs, 2
(7 40)992-01 65
rounds , with spring loaded
1/2 mos .. mixed Brittany
doors,
excellent
$45.
Spaniel puppies; Collie.
One bedroom apa rtment. ,
(7 40)533-3870
no pel s, in Pomeroy,
4yrs: SharPae pupp'Jf, 5 mos.
(740)992·5858
NEW AND USED STEEL
Reg istered Min Pin puppies
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
lor sale. Black and Rust 5
One bedroom garage apart- Fo r
Concrete,
Angle,
ment. kitchen· f urnished. Channel. Fla t Bar, Steel weeks-old, 3 females , one
1-866-460-3958
male $250 Wilt be ve ry
$400, (740)9 92-3823
Grating
For
Dra ins.
i
Computer
sm all, lather 711bs mother
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
91 lbs, Mot he r AK C AN D
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Toasters, 2 Large refrigerators, Coffee
Sc rap Metals Open Monday,
Auction
Auction
CKC, Fattier CKC 576-2002
Are now taking Applications
Tu esday. Wedn esday &amp;
tables, Chairs, Typewriters, Sleeping cot,
for 2BR , 3BR &amp; 48A. ,
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed Wo tf/S. Husk y pups, parents
IStuffr!d animals, Small charcoal grill, School
Applications
are
taken
Thursday.
Sa turd ay
&amp; on premises, call (7 40)742Mondav thru Friday, from
desks, File cabinet, Many house items,
Sunday. (740) 446-7300
1 12 1 or 740-742-3019.
9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office 1s
small chest freezer, Gas cook stove,
I \1(\t ..., ! 1'1'1 II "
Located at 1151 Evergreen Pole Barn 30x50x1 OFT
Drive Point Pleasa nt, WV $6395. incl udes Paint ed
,\.II\ I \ IO&lt;"
2 exercise bikes, Lamp shades, Metal
Ph one No is (304)675-5806. Metal, Plans. Instruction
kitchen cabinet, Kenmore sewing machine,
E.H.O
__
r.10
....
.
.
.
.
Several electronic pieces. One storage unit
(937)S59-8385
EQuu&gt;\I!ENf
Small 1br Apt $300/month
. lull of items. Too many to list.
plus Deposi t No Pets, on Mt
REAL ARMY
2001
John
Deere
790,
4x4,
Something lor everyone.
Ve rnon Ave. Pt. . Pleas.
CAMOUFLAGE
Sam Somerville'9, S1nce 1964 . 30 HP tractor with front end
::130
_4_1_77_3_·6_06
_1- : : - - -by Sandyville, wv PO, Satellites, load er. 3 pt. h1lch &amp; PTO,
Tara
Townhouse TV SalesJinatallatlon (304)273- 460
Food will be available.
hour s.
$12,000.
5655
(740) 245-9044
Ap artments, Very Spac1ous.
Come and support your Fire
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors , CA, 1 Sears pull behi nd dump
John
Deere
A
1948
2
stick
Department!
112 Bath , Newl y Carpeted. cart , Amana 18 ft. refrigeraPuller,
rebuilt.
very
competi·
Adult Poo l &amp; Baby Poo l, tor, mobile home steps
For information call 740· 38B·8102
11ve, $3.750. (740)742-3020
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No 30")(27". {740)388-8997.

2 bedroom. unfurnished
apartment, all utilities· paid.
$500/month, S500/deposit.
(740)446-1637 until 5pm,
(740)446-4616Jalter 5pm.

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

FOR SALE

1 and 2 bedroom apart- For Sale Steel traps fur
ments, furnished and unfur- stretchers good shape
niShed. security depoSit (740)379-2380
required. no pets, 740-992L.C. Smith double barrel , 20
2218.

Singer Stant-0-MaUc sewing
machine 500 in 3 drawer
cabinet,many extras. button
holer, even f~ed decorative
Stitch disc&amp; more
gauge, vent nb, field grade. Glass punch bowl w/ 30
1 BR apartmenl wfd hookup (740)388.0366
assorted glass designed
$290 per monlh + depoSit.
cups 304·675-2827 or740·
Sun Valley Apartment, new
709·0620.
owners. (740)339.0362
Vent Free, 3-Piaque Gas
1BR, washer/dryer hook-up, Antique Birds-Eye Maple Heater. (propane or Natural}
nea r
Holzer
Hosp1tal. Chest of Drawers and 29" Manual Control $143.95
$299/month. (740i339·0362 High OaM Clover shape Vent Free. 5-Piaque Gas
Table must see both $1 00 Heater.
(Automati c
2 bedroom apl. Centenary each (304) 773·61 63
Control)
Thermostats
Road close to hospital. bath.
$239.95
or
sell.
Riverine
stove.
refrigerator, Buv
aluminum Fiberated Pai nt
hookup. Antiques, 1 1:24 East Main (Great lor Mobile Homes)
washer/dryer
S400/mo nth,
security on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 5-gat. Bucket $29.95
deposit required, reference 992-2526 Russ Moore,
Paint Plus Hardware
required, no pets, call owner.
675-4084
(740)446-9442 after s·oo.
Ebay, Ebay, Ebay

Sunday, ·october 31 , 2004

A Very Large Land Offering With Something For Everyone!
JACKSON COUNTY
1 032 Acres Selling in 22 Tracts
Commercial Land - 45 Ac. Lake - Recreational Land
Building Sites - Pasture Land

.

.

'

217 AC. Wl45 AC. LAKE SELLING IN 6 TRACTS · 192 Ac. wlstacked koke lots of woods &amp; shoreline- great
deve&lt;&gt;pmen1potential - FM! - 5 Ac. Bldg. Sttes overlooking lake. LOCATED • 10 miles West of Jackson on the
Jackson/Pike County Line on Big Rock Rd. (Walch lor signs.)
175 AC. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY in Jackson Corporation limrt selling in 10 tracts ranging from 18 Ac. to
67.3 Ac. Fronting on McCarty Lane between Rt. 32 and 35. Great for oommerciaVbuslness/resldentlal deveklpment. All utitrtles at property. Zoned B-1.
390AC. jo1nlng Liberty Wildlife Refuge. LOCATED . on Jackson/Pike County Line 9 miles West of Jackson, OH
on Wickline Rd. Beautiful scenic lam full of ,..ldl~e and """""lion opportunities.
10.5 ACRES ·Wooded building srte wAots ollrontage. LOCATED - 10 mites' West of Jackson, OH , 3 mtles from
Rt. 32 on Allen Rd.
45 ACRES · A super tract of wooded laf1d. LOCATED - on Jacksbn!Scioto County Line on Bear Run Rd .
195 ACRES selling in 3 tracts of 87 Ac. - 72Ac. - 35 Ac. All properties have pasture. woods . seclusion . 87 Aae
tract has a pond, good Rd. access to alt properties LOCATED· 9 miles West of Jackson on Sickles Rd.

' ATHENS COUNTY
944 Acres Selling In 2 Tracts of 173 Ac. and 772 Ac.
Surrounded by zaleski State Forest
Near community of M ineral, uhio, 15 mi les West of A thens, O h io on King Hollow ~d .
A great opportunity to create your own preserve wflots of woods , creek. panoram1c views
Som e interi o r priva te

roads

VINTON COUNTY
111 Acres Selling in 8 Tracts
Woods • Pasture Land • Nice Buildin Sites

•

I
••

40 ACRES - Reclaimed pasture land and woods seclud e d wtth access off Car-r "'R"
,d:'-g"e-i:RC,d----'

10.4 ACRES ~ Pasture land w /pond. beautiful b uilding site w/nice view on Ca rr Ridge Rd .

38.5 ACRES · Scenic wooded property near Radcliff, OH on Radcliff Rd .

•

10.9 ~CR~S ~ wlsuper sa ndst~n e tu nnel , a railroad bed bei ng 60 'x791 3' A very un1qu e prope rty good
for trail nd1ng. LOCATED 1 m 1le off Rt. 32 and cross1 ng Rt. 32 o n Thompsonville Rd

3 SMAU.POTeiTW.BLDG.SITES -rn RL 32&lt;nJ Tv.p Rd 3 en om !) &lt;i3.4ilc. -2.3ilc . .f!£1 Pc. Greatl..oc31onl
4.9 ACRES - Suf!E!r building sit~ wlwoods and &lt;Jis of frontage on Rt. 50 East of McArthur. OH approx. 6 miles.

BUY ANY INDIVIDUAL, TRACT, COMBINATION OF
TRACTS OR WHOLE PROPERTY
PREVIEW MEETIN_G OAT ES · You may ca ll our office for 1nformatior. brochures and maps and
walk land at your le1sure Agents w1ll be available to speak w ith you by phone or you c an a tt end a
prev1ew meeting by going to 231 E. Main St. in Jackson , Ohio and talk one on o ne w /an agent and
receive informat1on on th e following dat es : Wednesda/s . October 13 . 20 27 from 2 00 PM to 5:

DO PM and Saturday October 23rd from 9:00AM to t ·oo PM

WI L S 0 N f.llll:l(
-

REAL ESTATE, INC. -

l'iiiiil
I!!!!!J

Wil son - H a r v ey
A u c ti o n Crnull

HILLSBORO • SPRINGFIELD • "COLUMBUS
MARK WU. SONt MARVIN WILSON• JEFf HARVEY

Other t1 mes by Appoint ment.

· For Terms, Directions,
Brochures, Maps, Info.
Ca111-800-450-3440

~alltpolts

L-···

1\atlp ~rtbune The Daily Sentinel joint ~leasant ~egister

-~~~.~~-~~---··-···-··--J~L~~-~?.·-···-···-··--J~)..~.:~¥~:-...._...1

�Page 08 • ilunba!' Ql:imrs -&amp;rntinrl

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

l-IOLZER

-CLINIC.

News that matters to you and
your family from Holzer Clinic.

WITH BREAST CANCER; EARLY
DETECTION IS KEY
women
m
150 men will face the diagnosis of breast cancer
their life. After lung cancer, breast cancer is
second most common cause of death due to
jcartcer in women. Last year 211300 new cases of
lhn~a~t cancer were reported in the U. S., in
2003, 3900 American women died of breast can. Over the last 20 years there has been a
jdecre&lt;asnlg mortality from this disease. If detectearly, small breast cancers that have not yet
kn•·,.,.r to the lymph nodes are associated with a
I 0 year survival rate of over 90%.
When it comes to breast cancer, early
is key. If detected early, patients with
lbn~ast cancer have more treatment options, such
breast conservation surgery and minimally
vasive diagnostic procedures. At Holzer Clinic
JOutpatlertts can undergo a mammotome or stereolta&lt;:tlc breast biopsy, using a needle guided by a
under local anesthesia resulting in
significant change in the appearance of the
For early tumors breast conservation sur. or lumpectomy in conjunction with radiation
orn••r!&gt;Tnl offers survival rates equal to mastectomy
removal of the entire breast. Sentinal ""''~n

a
way
assessing for the presence of cancer cells in the
lymph nodes of a breast cancer patient and
reduces the chance of developing arm swelling or
lymphedema. '
At Holzer Clinic we manage patients with
oblems as a team, consisting of family
necologists, internists, general surons,
ical oncologists, radiation oncologist,
radiologists, plastic surgeons, lymphedema specialists and pathologist. Each cas~ is individualized.

11

All women over age 20 should perform
monthly self-breast exams.
11
All women over age 40 should have yearly screening mammograms.
11
Clinical beast exams by a health care professional are recommended every 3 years for
women ag~ 20 to 39 and yearly thereafter.
11
Women with strong family history of
breast cancer or other genetic risks should be
screened earlier and discuss options for breast
cancer reduction strategies with their doctor.

RE:VII NDEI&lt;
October is Breast
Cancer Awareness
Month

Since breast cancer is such a common
health hazard and is very treatable if diagnosed .
early, I cannot emphasize enough the simple

CORF

I

:I
I
I

women can

~·

Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility
A new service has been added to the
Holzer Clinic therapy department. The Holzer
Clinic CORF opened it's doors on pecember 19,
2003. CORF stands for Comprehensive
Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility. This type of
therapy program is Medicare certified. The
CORF is able to provide another venue for
receiving a comprehensive outpatient physical
therapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy
program. The CORF is different in that nursing
services and social work services are also available. The CORF is located on the Holzer'Ciinic
Sycamore Campus in Gallipolis.
The benefits to those patients that qualify
for CORF admission are several. Depending on
medical status a patient may be able to go home
from the hospital in 3 or 4 days after a total joint
surgery. This enables the patient to avoid a
lengthy inpatient stay by receiving therapy at the
CORF. The next patient will be able to receive

nursing services to monitor skin/incision site and ·
educate on signs and symptoms of infection without having to stay in the hospital. Another patient
may benefit from counseling services to assist
them in dealing with a change in life roles resulting from a stroke. Still another patient may benefit from having physical therapy, occupational
therapy
and speech therapy availableQ in the head
.
mJury program.

Clinic Orthopedic surgeon is the Medical
Director. The rest of the staff includes Jodi
Sickels, PT CORF Manager, Lia Barte, OTA,
Ronnie Morrison, PTA, Ellen Gibson, MSW,
Susan Caldwell, RN, Chris Clary, receptionist
Brooke Sauer OT and Traci Sisson SLP.

Patients are seen by physician referral. If
Other benefits allow the therapist to spend
you or a family member could benefit from a
more direct one-on-one time with each patient.
The CORF program is tailored to each' patient's
therapy program because of a recent illness,
needs. Some patients may require only 1-2 hours injury, fall or surgery or you are just generally
of therapy, while others may require a full day of
deconditioned please feel free to contact us at
services. All of these scenarios can be accomplished. The CORF also has a therapeutic pool , 441-3560. We can assist you in getting the physiavailable.
cian referral. Please continue to read this section
The CORF staff has an extensive background in rehabilitation. Dr. Penix, a Holzer

for further CORF updates.

St~te-ofthe-art
•

servzces
Close to Home

740.446.54 74

~~JiOLZBR c,,,,,/or

•

· ~ CANCER CARE

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