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Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

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ALLEY 001'

o

v

1

PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

42 Unduly
43 Ronw1 nied
45 Egypt's

B1rrler (
Just 1 11118 Mrghbor
8 C.rgo
47 NoUtrel
houler
tone.
11 Ryon of
50 To be, to
fllml
Henri
13 Unreturned 51 Puffin's kin
'
......
52 "lly pi" ot
14 C.noua Info
oong
15 Temple city 54 Goolles'
of Japan
concern
16 Whiz Ieider 58 Slugger'a
' 17 Regret
·atot
18 Cutro'a
59 Po• near
country
Pikes Peek
20 Entered
60 Hair
tom
~ 44 Compolgn
doll
lo~ndlllon • 10 Require
topic
22 Brazilian · 61 Longlrlg
12 Thelma's 48 Pl.ylng
port
82 Common
, movie
c.~rd
,.
24 Worker'siD
abbr.
portner
47 ' Big olell
25 Ginnie 63 Writer 19 Kerchief
town
26 Foul mood
Bombeck . 21 Sooner city 48 C.rloonlll
28 Shih's lind
22 Incorrectly
Goldberg
32 Anllyato'
DOWN
23 Ellrly
48 Quill
concerns
marollll
llmlllr
33 Vortex
1 Stir-fry pan 24 Halrd- SO Mo.
34 LIVH
2 Whichever 25 Fine aproy
llptnll
35 Litterbug • 3 Auguat
27 Not In .uH 53 LL.D. holcl37 "-Well
sign
28 Goucho'a ·
er
Thll Endo 4 l'utert
· rope
58 SurfiCe
Well"
5 Long atory 30 Ohio city
tnnaport
39 Rocker port 6 Kind of
31 Yerno'o .
58 Dutch olr·
40
and
fishing
aldpptr
line
k
7 GllrilpHI
38 Throng
57 Hot IUb
41 lmon or
8 Change
38 Drlnko
Diamond. 8 Flu aympnalllly
1

Devils, White Falcons roll1to vic.tory; 81

.-

NE'A Crouword Puzzil!

BRIDOI!

~p football!

Friday, October 4, 2002

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Dealer: South
Vulnerable : F.a!I·We.!lt
$ou111

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OpeninJie'ad: &amp; 10

If ducking

Ann Landers died
carl ier this year. I
agree wholeheartedly
with this comment of
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
hers : "All married
l"',;::::r=;-;:-:-'"-'----::::;--1-------------------, couples should lejlrn
r.
· ·
I
the art of battle as
.@
UST IN
.I I&gt;ON'T
they should learn the .
2
.._-LL....J..L.. · -""~ ..~ ~~~\
Llt':e" IT, GOULI&gt;
s~ art of making love.
., ·-... ~
Nl Good battle is ·objec::.
YOU PUT Me" IN
tjve and honest -.
§ 'i never · ·vicious or
'
TOlJ'~ w1Tt4
~iia cruel . Good battle is
&lt;!I
Dl:ALITY
~a healthy and construe,...,
·
~ ~ tive. iind brings to a
INI&gt;I~e",TLY?
~
mat'riage the principle
of equal partnershi'p."
Married couples
••••
rarely do well' at toplevel bnct.se. At the
BARNEY
·moment, though,
ALL. H15M8TS !!
Denmark .has two
world-class pairs in
Sabine and lens Auken, and Dor.the and
Peter. Schultz, This
deal features a great
piece of table pres- •
ence by Dorthe.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
North responded to
by Lull Campos
one heart with a limit
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are crealed from quotalions by famoua
raise, promising four
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
or more trumps and
•
Today's clue: H fiquals M
•
10- 12 support points.
THE BORN LOSER
West found lhe befit
" c YJHZACHZV . AFCXM c
'
attack,
the spade 10,
'
00 '&lt;OU 1-\t\VE: !'&lt;NY
f&gt;.NY ~1-N.Jms
NN-\ .. , NOI\IE:. Of 'Ell\
apparently
leaving
y czu I
Y
F
D
W
W
XZYZO
D
1\Ul{\~ V~.&gt;,JN&lt;,LL.) ~
~ GR.t:t\1-Ut'&lt;ICLf.~ 7
IS THkT 1-\0T I '
declarer wuh four un-.
· ;~voidable losers: one ·
L o zxT F
L~C iN H
w D T M c x· 1
spade, two hearts and
006 club. However,
.I
D '0 N N Z.G DoN C Z S. "
afler declarer won ·
·
,
p J F x ' so N eM z·
with dummy 's ace ·
·'
and played ov-rrump to
•
'
her king, . w. est dePREVIOUS SOLU.TION- "The Delroit Quane! played Brahms
"
last nlghl. Brahms lost."
cided to duck -- and
- Anonymows crlllc, Quoted by Bennett Cell
af ter a momentary re'
'
vealing pause. (One
WOlD
THAT' DAILY
RIG NATE
assumes West either
GAM I
PUUUI
I'l'\ GOING TO SNEAK
FILI'\ING K.IDS WALKING
wasn't . watching or
INTO THE CAFETE~IA
HR.OUGH THE HALLWo\'&lt;'S
couldn't read East's O Rearrange letfers of the '
I'.ND WATCf1 Tf1E KIT iS '&lt;'AWN CITY! TO
signal
at trick one. lf ·
four scrambled words · be·.
CHEN STAFF PREPARE
1'\AK.E A GOOD .DOCUTODAY'S LUNCH 1
t'IENTAR'( I NEED SEHIN'D
West knows that East lew to form four simple words.
THE 5tENES FOOTAGE!
is encouraging a
I
spade con tin u at~on, . L__,·,.:.J-i-A~T.;.,.i-s_,u.::........:o;.
· -1
2
he .should win imme, r 1: ! 1 1 1
. diately with the heart
. ! . . .
.
ace .and lead a second
s!Jade to defeat the .
E D 'R 0 R
contract.)
B"acking her judg. .
.
ment of the trump ~=:::::==~~;::;.
PEANUTS
layout, · declarer ,. .,
w R 0 C E ~~a~
I had a chance to
out for •
played a low diamond
. _ . collage deb'!te team: Iwasn't sure
j4
itwasagoodthing,butacounseto dummy's 10, re- .
THIS 15 M'&lt; I!.EPORT
IF T~EV FELL FROM
.
turned
a
diamond
to
.
.
.
lor said -that opportunities .were
0~ AUTVM~ WHE~ THE
ROCKS, WE'D ALL BE
her
ace
(I'm
betting
~
often
things you hadn't noticea the
LE~VES BE61N TO FALL
· IN TROUBLE!
Wesl railed to drop
DANE E D _firsttinie------.
!=ROM THE TREES.:.
the queen), continuea . 1 .
16
CcmiMio t~. chuckle quoted
1
.
.
by fillirlg · in the miss! no warda
with a third diamond •
. ycu 'devolcp from •top No.3 below.
·to dummy's king, and
discarded her spade
PRINT NUMBERED LETT-i'RS IN
loser on dummy' s , :~~T~H~ES~E~S;Q~U=A~RE~S~::;:;:':;.;:;;::;=~=~::;=:=*~
dian.w nd jack. Now
.oft UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
Dorthe Schultz had
W
TO GET ANSWER
•
only three losers: two
SC~-LETS ANSWERS
hearts and one club.
Gallop- Yo~th : $1iyly- Jaunty- THOUGHT
One overweight woman after strenuous exercise
9R&lt;ATHIO IN 11-1ilOLGH
class: "If I could lose thirty pounds I'd be. down to the
Tile NOSt. .. . 0\JT
weight
I never THOUGHT I'd be!"
TliilOIJGHTHeMOUT\L

Hometown News for Ciallla, Mason &amp; Meigs cOunties .

•
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

f$YCJilmY

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1--rl!ri-lr--,--,1-.I ,.
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HA HAHA
HA HA!

IN T\I~OOGH Tile NOSE. ..
0\J'T 'TH~UGH T\10 ...

.I Is I I
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Saturday, Oct 5, 2002

·'
oping" new interes1. Act on .it
In ·the year ahead you 'll
while you have 'plcmy of intake a more active role in a
spirutionto cn\;ouhlgc you.
social organization you're ci.·
CAPRICORN (D~c. 22-Jan:
19) -- There's llolhin •g like
ther a Par I oI. .now or w·11
1 be
JOining. [leneflls w111 develop
mal.erial motivation to get you
froln /'Y,OUr new in~o lv.e ments
lo try hariler than ever 111 .
and will affecl a nsc Ill your
achieving Y&lt;iur aims ibday.
popul;1ri1y.
Wit'h thai carrot dangling in
Lilli{ A (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) · front of you, you can cover
-Take advantage of this bene- · more ground than usual.
fk day 10 spend time Joing · AQU.ARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
something social with eilher
19) --Some plans you've refriends or family . Being with
cently de veloped, which relhMe you lpve will gladden
quire the support from otl;crs,
the heart and bring joy lo the'
can ·be 'advanced today·. so ·
long us you don't present
soul. Trying to patch l1p a
hroken rolnance? The Astrathem too forcefully. Use the
Graph Matchmaker can help
soft sell . ·
·
'
you undel'stund what to do to
' PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch .
· mak~ 1he relationship work.
20) ,. Owing lo ,I he way a
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker,
chain of unrelated events un- ·
c/o thi s ncwspape.r, P.O. Box. fold today· u secret desire ·
167. Wkkliffe. OH 44092.
you've been lt urbori ng may
· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
~e"llne !l rea lity . Just when
22) -- If you fi i1d yourself in a
~uu'rc not looki ng, 1hings can
delicate silualion today. let·
uppcn.
!he olher guy/ga l take the .. ·
ARIES (March 2l -April' 19)
lead. You 'II fare be ncr bv
-- An important decision that
&lt;lay ing out of I he fray. md sfwill have a direcl effect on
lently and'quielly fi gming out
yo u. even though it may ll¢
what needs 1o he done. .
· made by S&lt;Hneonc cl.sc. Iouks
SAGITTA F~ IUS (Nov. 23like it will be dcddcd in your,
Dec. 21) --You'll hcw.c an.opfavor 10day. '
portunity 1oday lo take some
TAURUS (Apri l 20-May
pDSi lh c steps toward devcl20) :·Any job you lake on InBY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

I'VE Gr01'11\ C.!!1"
. OUI OF HERE I

·· ·

Wl-!0 WANT!l 10 HI;.I&gt;P Me i.OOK

FOR CORNF\.AKe!5'1"HA1" L-OOK

\.IKE:

CEL.ei!RIIIES?

,,
•

day will end up being produclive and will yield good resuits due lo the procedures
you choose to use. Whal you
accomplish will be noticed by
"person you may want to impre".
•
.
.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. ll'll be the modus operandi
you usc in dealing with others·
today thai will win you lheir
respect. und .~llegiance. It ';"ill
&lt;~lso go u long way towurd lmproving your status with your
peers.
.
CANCER .(June 21-July 22)
.. If you're looking for something to do today. utilfze your.
artistic .abilities Io spruce up
your abode. Any creative
changes you make at this time
should produce the types of
· results you like.
,..
., LEO (July. 23-Aug. 22) .•. ·
"--· A:ctivitie 1 thut require mental
dexterity and imaginative
thinking will be your cup of
tea today,,cspeciully if you invalve yourself with an associate .who ·pos~esses equal tal-

Pomeooy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pt. Pleasant • Octobers. 2002
.

What's inside

Meigs Co. sheriff's
department layoffs
. in ·effect foday

i:'

BY BRIAN {
Staff writer

·REED .

POMEROY, ,Ohio -. With
fewer sheriff's deputies now
on the road, · Meigs County
residents should be more vigilant in protecting themselves
an!l their property, Sheriff
,Ralph Trussell said Friday.
At midnight Saturday, citing insufficient funds in his
salaries li.ne item, Trussell

Football Friday, 81

Deaths
Ruby Jewell Duncan, ~1
Details, A3

reduced his
staff
of
deputies to
six, leaving
s o m e
overnigh t
shifts and
Sundays at
least partially unstal'fed
until the end
Trusaell
of the year.
Last month,
Trussell issued layoff notices
to 19. employees, including
deputies, dispatchers and jail
staff, giving Friday as their
last day of work.
Earlier this week, he said he
would be able to retain six

'·

50 CENTS • Vol. 1 , No . 7

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'

full-time deputies on the payroll through t~e. end of the
month' and maybe beyond,
using funds set aside for vacation payments several deputies
declined and funds from an
overtime grant from the state.
Trussell said yesterday a
deputy will work the dis-

· least filter phone· call s to
determine the emerge.ilcy's
status, so we can call and get
someone there· as quickly as
we can, if necessary. lf the
call is not deemed an emergency, residents will be asked
to come into the department
during business hours to file a
report, ifneeded."
patcher's desk during the
"Because we will be workovernight shift, at least ·some
nights, to receive calls. That ing short:staffed, it will also be
necessary for residents to be
deputy, however, will not be especially vigilant in protectable to respond to calls, ipg themselves and their propTrussell said, and will only be erty," Trussell said. "I would
able to determine the nature advise residents to be especialof the call and seek help from· ly careful about locking their
a11other agency, if necessary. homes' doors and windows,
· "This will allow us · to at and keeping their car keys with

'

them at all times."
Tru ssell said the idea of
"neighborhood watch" will
also be more important in
light of the deputies' layoffs.
"Neighbors should watch
orie another 's property, and
advise one another if they are
going to be away for an
extended period of time,"
Trussell. said. ."And residents
should keep a neighbor's telephone number on hand in the
event of an emergency, so
they have someone to call if
they need'help."
The county jail, now used
as a three-day holding facility,
has also been closed.

Man sentenced in

,accidental death
Bv 'BRIAN J. REED
Staff wrijer

ney, John Lentes, immediately after the indictment
---'-'-----~-.
.-- was filed last week . .I
POMEROY, Ohio _ A
Boling, 21, :-vas the driv~r
Pomeroy rvan was sentenced of a Toyota PI~kup truck m
to five years in: prison for his , an Aug. 18 acc1d~nt on U.S.
role in the August death of a Rout~ 33, whtch · ktlled
Racipe woman.
' Bntm . D. Beva~, 19.
Common Pleas Court Accordmg to the Oh~o State
Judge Fred w. Crow .lll sen- Highway Patrol, Bohng was
tenced John P. Boling to five tr.avehng east on 33 when
years in prison on a charge hts truck went off the left
of a~gravated vehicular Side of the road, struck. a
'homictde, a third-degree dramage P'pe and went aufelony, and one year on a borne, entenng the northcharge of possession of bound lane of the roadway,
OxyCi:mtin a fifth-degree and rollmg t-.vo and a h.alf
felony. Th~ one-year sen- times before coming. to a
tence on the dntg r;harge was stop . . Bevan was . _eJected
suspended, and Boling was _ from the truck and dted four :
· orderetl to participate in the days late~. :
.
Community
Corrections
In addttlon to sentencmg
program for five years fol- him to prison, Crow also
lowing his release from ordere~ Bo.hng to pay
prison.
Bevan s fa!'~IIy $53,000 to
· Boling was indicted on the cover medical . and . funer~l .
H1s drt'ler s
charges d!lring the most expenses.
recent session of the Meigs license was suspended for
County Grand Jury. He had · life.
appeared on the charges, and
Boling was remanded to
other traffic-related offens- sheriff's custody' for transes, in County Court earlier portation
to
Orient
this summer. He entered a Reception Center, where he
written guilty plea to the will begin his five-year sencharges, through his altor- tenc~.

Weather
High: 70s, Low: 50s
Details, A2

Star Grange
. barbecue •
·sunday
SALEM CENTER:, Ohio
- Star Grange 778 will
host a chicken barbeque
with entertainment and
membership recognition
·.
Sunday. .
Serving will be from 1 I·
a.m to 2 p.m: There will be
entertainment from noon to
I p.m. and membership
recognition at I p.m. Meet
the c~an
. ·dates night will be
held · :30 p.m. All candidates o public office are
' invited t participate.

Smoke rolls out of the cannon as Robert Long lodks on Friday during the
of Battle Days
In Point Pleasant, W.Va. The 3-pound replica cost nearly $10,000 and was donated' to the Point
Pleasant Chapter of the,Sons of the American Revolut~o-\Dan Hermes)

Kids experience living
history at·Battle Days

Inside ·...
• Vinton Co. murder
trial continues, Page A2
• You say tomato, Page

BY DAN HERMeS
Staff writer

AS .

• Syracuse hires new
police officers, Page AS
• The murals of
. Portsmouth, Page A6

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Mason County school children were treated to a day of
living history Friday with ihe
Clpemng of Battle Days 2002.
First-person exhibits featuring Ch1ef Cornstalk, "Mad"
AniJ.e Bailey, and several
other presentations kept children in awe at Tu-Endie-Wei
State Park as cannon shots
roared and the smell of venison cooking over a campfire
lingered in the air. ·
Robert Long and Jack Coles
of Point Pleasant's Chapter of
Sons of the American
Revolution were operating the
"Loud Towd" 3-pound cannon, a $10,000 replica from
the Revolutionary War ( 177 5-:
. 83) time period.
."Seven to l 0 percenl of
Civil War injuries were from
weapons blowing up," I.,ong
said. ''It was a dangerous
affair."
"The kid's like this," Coles
said. "This gives them a go&lt;id
environment to see how
things were done back then
first-hand."
Longhunters showed children the importance of' har-

Lotteries
OHIO
'"'.
Buckeye 5: 9·22-19-ll-37
Pick 3: 3·6-1
·
Pick 4: 6·6·7-0
Pick 3 day: 8·1·0
Pick 4 day: 5·4-5"5
W.VAto

..

Daily l: 2-8-6
Daily 4: 4-4-7-6
Cash 25: 9•12-13·17·20·24

Index
1 Sections - 11 Pa1es

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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84-5
B6
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ohio·River access area
dedication set fOr Monday
BY KEVIN KELLY

News editor
CROWN CITY, Ohio _
In use since cbnstruction
was mostly cpmpleted last
s~ri~g. the . K.H. Butler
F1s~mg. Acce~s Area on the
Ohio R1ver w!ll be dedicated
by state and federal officials
at 5:~0 p.m. Monday.
.
AJomt proJeCt of the OhiO
Departme~t .o f . Natural
Resources . Y'.lldh fe and
watercraft dtvtstons, a~d ~he
U.S._ Fish and_ Wtldltfe
Servtce, the area IS expected
to attract more boaters and
an.?lers to the _area. .
.
'the constdenrtton was
that there was no good
access at that ,fn~ of the
Greenup pool,_ sa1d Jun
Marshall, ~Istnct !'lana.g~r
for O~NR s Wildhfe ~lVIs1on . This area ~rovtdes
better acc_ess to the nve~. ~d
we were mterested m gtvmg
anglers improved access to
the fishing opportun,ities in

-.

Dan Cutler of Huntington portrays Chief Cornstalk at Tu-EndieWel Friday during a living history p-resentation. (Dan Hermes)
vesting deer and other game
animals, not only for food, but
for clothing and other needs.
Surveyors showed how it was
done in the period, and that
one aspect most likely helped
start the war with the Indians:
"Once surveyors got out
there, the Indians knew something was up," said Scott
Sarver, the senior director of

faciliti es and program s at
Virginia's Explorer Park.
"This is my ninth year here at
Battle Days and we show
what life was like for 1he ordinary man .
"This is the general ion that
needs lo · know about it,"
Sanier said about the children
•
Please see History, A3

'

the area."
1
The site is along Ohio
Route 7, about fqur miles
south of the Robert C. Byrd
Locks and Dam.
·
Property purchase began
in 1998 and constru,ction on
the $2.07 million project,
which provides a boat ramp
and areas for fishing, started
· in 2000. The bulk of the a
work was fini shed e'arlier
this year, but landscaping
remains to be done and a
contractor has been hired,
Marsha:tl said.
·
"We're siill doing some
final touches," he said .
"Finalization is an ongoing
process.''
"The positive factor is that
it's good for the economy
and will bring a lot of boasters
to
Eureka
and
Gallipolis," . Marshall said.
"One of the imponant things
to point out is that the people
and sportsmen of Ohio paid
Please see River, A3

Holzer Medical Cent~r salutes
·'

Neighbor H.e lping Neighbo-:A block party fundraiser to benefit the victims of the
May 8 tornado disaster in Gallia County.
I

Featuring ... Food.. .Music ... Fun

\

. _4pm-10pm

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Second Avenue and Court Street
Admission
•

Donation - $5.00 Minimum

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Discover the Holzer Difference

Saturday, October 5

1

en~iRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
.. You are likely ttl far~ better
today than usual in any com·
mercial dealings you have. If
it fits into your hst qf aclivities, tend to anything that in·
volvcs money.

•

Donation

www.holzer:org .
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(

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I •

�iatutbap lt.-·imttud
Saturday, Oct. 5

•
M•nlllold ]wtu• I • .

:·\

'·Page A2

···
S~ra ·~-·IJ#;,
T-ll~s ~~ '
f-iurries .. ~~~· .
~~· ·
Cb.Jdy

McARTHUR, Ohio (AP)- A man
accused of killing a 20-year-old man
wanted to leave his wife so he and a
woman could share a place with \'Je victim's girlfriend, the girlfriend testified
on Friday.
· Dana Bostic said Gregory McKnight
discussed moving in with what she
called his girlfriend, Lisa Perkins, three
days after her boyfriend, Gregory
Julious, disappeared.
McKnight, 75; is on trial in •Vinton
County Common Pleas Coun for killing
Gregory Julious of Chillicothe· and
Emily Murray, 20, a Kenyon College
student. Remains of both were found on
propeny owned by McKnight and .his
wife near Ray, aVinton County village
east of Chillicothe, in December 2000.
He faces the death penalty if convicted of killing Murray in a case that has
generated debate over death penalty
costs.
Bostic, 24, of Chi.)licothe, last saw her
boyfriend May 12, 2000. He an(!
McKnight had been at the couple's
home when Bostic went to pic~ up her

•

s, 2()()2

Obituaries.

Local Briefs

:1

'

Ruby Jewell
Duncan
'

Duncan: and a son, Calvin
Duncan. •
She is survived by four
sons. Bryant E. Duncan of
.
VINTON - Ruby Jewell Vinton, John W. Duncan of
Duncan, 91, ofVinton. passed Vinton, De'nni s Duncan Jr. of
·
Thursday, October 3~ Thomasville, Georgia, and
. at ·Hol ze r Medical Jess1e Duncan of Vinton; a
daughter. Francis Miller of
r.
She was blltn July
1911 . Rio Grande: two sisters,
: in Wintleld, West Virginia. 10 Mabel Tl)ompson and · Ruth
the parents of Leander
d Arthur.. IJ?t~ of Hunt.ington,
Eva Anhur.
an West V1rgm1a: and a b1g famShe attended th Rod
.ily of ~randehildren, great.Ch h
·
e
ney grandchildren and great, u~c of God. and had great-grandchildren.
worked for m~ny y~ars as a
Services will be 1 (J.m.
•house cleaner for var1ous doc- Monday. October y, 2002, at
tors m the Gallipolis area. . · the . McCoy-Moore Funeral
Jewell was a very specml fiome in· Vinton. Burial wiJI
person and was loved by all follow in Vinton Memorial. who knew her. She will be Park. Friends may call at the
.truly missed.
,
funeral home from S to 8 p.m.
. In addttion to her parents, Sunday, October 6, 2002.
she was pr.;,ceded in death by
·
her · hu sband , Lave M.
-Paid notice
•

son.
J ulioils' cause of death likely will not be
When she returned about an hour. determined.
Iatc;r, he and McKnight were gone and ' Bostic said she and Julious went out
the door was unlocked, Julious' belong- . with McKnight and his · wife two or
ings and identification had been left three weeks before Julious disappeared.
behind.
· "
Kathryn McKnight, McKnight's wife,
. Bostic paged McKnight that night te.stifK:d on !hlirsday that she had never
several times before he finally called. heard ~?f Jul~ous.
.
.
He gave his phone to Julious, who told · Bostic satd ~erkins . moved tn the
Bostic he was at a party in ·columbus week after Juhous d1sappeared ~nd
and would be home later.
·
stayed w1th he~ until Au&amp;ust. McKnight
. T'wo days later, McKnighi showed up never moved 1~, she satd. Instead, he
at Bostic's apartment looking for ~d h1s fam1ly m June. moved about 80
.
.
' .. .
m1Ies away _to Gamb1er, the home of
Juhous. McKm~ht t~ld Bostic he took Kenyon College, to be with his ailing
Juhous to Cmcmna(1, but he ~ould not mother-in-law.
Th(ee other witnesses testified on
tell her ex~ctly where, she testified. .
!3o.shc did not 1mtlally repon Juh.ous Friday that they saw Murray's car !Jext
rrussmg because sh~ thought he m1ght to the trailer owned by the McKnights a
h~ve. left her, she sa1d. He was reponed few days after she disappeared.
·
rmSSl.ng ~n June 12, 2000..
.
Judge Jeffrey Simmons ruled . in
Juhous bone~ and teeth we~ found !n August that prosecutors couJd not seek
three Jocatwns around the trader, sever- the death penalty in Murray's d.eath
a! days after Murray's body was recov- because Vinton· County might not be
ered. on Dec. 9, 2000, more than a able to afford a proper prosecution and
month after she was .reponed missing. pay for McKnight's defense. Simmons
An anthropologist has testified that later changed his mind.

n.

Apple Butter Festival

•

Ohio • West Virginia Briefs
Hickam to 'visit
Coalwood

West Virginia weather
Saturday, Oct. 5

P.4.
OHIO

·w.

Ohio moving up
list with West
· Nile cases

VA

Inc.

&lt;til. .. . . . . . . .

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

civic center. The EPA awarded the towns a $200,000 grant
· for the project in. 200 I.
She also visited Harpers
COALWOOD, W.Va. (AP) Ferry, where ·she spoke to
--"- Author Homer Hickam fifth-graders at C.W. Shipley
plans to return to his home- Elementary and tested water
tow.n Saturday for the first samples from the Potomac
time since spring floodwaters River with a field science Jab.
devastated the southern West That event was held to celeVirginia community.
brate the upcomin~ 30th
Hickam, a retired NASA anniversary of the Clean
engineer now living m Water Act.
Huntsville,
Ala.,
put
Coalwood in the national
spotli!lhl .with his autobiographical novel "Rocket
Boys: A Memoir." The book,
which led to the 1999 movie
"October Sky," te)ls . of the
rocket Hickam and his high
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
school friends built that won a - Louisiana once had the
national science fair in 1960. largest number of West Nile
After the May 2 floOd dam- cases of any state, but it has
aged nearly 90 percent of the been surpassed by Ohio,
homes in Coalwood, Hickam Michigan and Illinois.
and his wife Linda launched a
As of Friday, Ohio reponed
fund-raising effort to help his five confirmed cases and 307
hometown rebuild.
Hickiun plans to launch a probable cases, including 14
rocket and sign autographs de)lths, according to the Ohio
Saturday during the rourth Department of Health.
.
annual October 'Sky Festival,
On . Thursday, Illinois offi·
organized by the Cape cials reported 639 cases and
Coalwood
Restoration 36 deaths, and Michigan, 379
Association.Thisyear'sevent cases and 28
deaths.
is exj)Ccted to draw at least ,~o~isiana, meanwhile, has
3,000 people, said organizer "''llld 293 cases and 14 deaths.

Cloudy

Showt11 T·ltorm•

F11ln

Fluni11 .

$1t)w

Ice

Sunny Ski•es roll1•n
··nto Ml.d Ohl·o
''al
ey Peg~yBlevins.
.
Vl
·

.

~·

H1ckam will be joined. by
fellow Rocket Boys Ehlly
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rose and 1ipurtY 0' Dell'
WEATHIR FoRICAIT
· Cam;&gt;ll1 Caroll s father Red,
Today... Decreasing clouds. Cooler with highs in the lower and Btl.l Bol~. who helped
70s. Nonhwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
·
them build thetr rockets.
Saturday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s~ Light
and variable winds.
·Sunday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 70s. Nonheast
winds oto 1.0 mph becoming south late in the moming.
Su.nday mght...Partly cloudy. A slight chance of showers
CHARLES TOWN w v
after midnight. Lows in the lower 50s. Chance of rain 20 per' · a.
cent.
·
(AP)
.
Environmental
· Protection .
Agency
. h
h
f
Mon d ay... A sI•g I c ance o
showers in the Administrator
Christie
morning ... Otherwise partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 60s. Whitman · toured a brownChance of rain 20 percent.
fields site and tested water
Monday night... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s.
samples with ·schoolchildren
Tuesday... Mostly clear. Highs in the upper 60s.
Friday during a swing through
EXTENDED FoRECAST
West Virginia's Eastern
,
Wednesday ... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in Panhandle.
the upper 60s.
Whitman
stopped . in
Thursday... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in Charles Town to pnuse a joint
the lower 70s.
·
·,
·
effon between tlie town and
Friday... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in the neighboring Ranson to develmid 70s.
o~ a former Maytag site into a

. Of Ohio's cases, 181 are
from · Cuyahoga County,
where Cleveland is Joca~
H.ealth
departm~nt
spokesman Kristopher Weiss .
said on Friday that health officials are not sure why there
ha.ve been so many cases in
Cuyahoga County.
' Health offic~als suspect the
virus has moved into the state
along Lake Erie's south shore,
he sal' d.
As of Wednesday, the federai Centers for Disease Control
reported 2,631 West Nile
virus cases and 136 deaths in
34 states.

Several . Ohio congressmen
announced,cppposition Friday
to a proposed landfill in
nonheast Ohio that they say
would endanger a main
source of drinking water.
Sens. Mike DeWine and
George Voinovich, and Reps.
Ralph Regula and Bob Ney,
all Republicans, wrote 'to the
U.S.
Army .CQrps of
Engineers and Gov. Bob Taft
to · express their .opposition.
The
letter
follows
a
September public hearing on
the issue. ·
The congressmen are concerned that the proJ?Osed 345acre landfill near Wilmont
and Dundee, which are in
nonheast Ohio south. of
Canton, will threaten one of
the area's main resources for
drinking water and disrupt

oppose Ohio
landfill · ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -

/

Over 14 Dealers Including

· MTS COIN _SHOP ·

of Gallipolis .~

.TODAY!·
9AM -4PM
Watch Anthony Shackelford of Falling WatetS, WV
Tonight~~ 731 p.m.

'Holiday Inn Galfipolis
BUYING &amp; SELLING '
COINS ·&amp; CUR~ENCY .

•

Plene pll)l responilbly.

Win up to $10,000,~ 1n ~,, IJonN. pl1~r on tb1 Pawerbllllnllut Mi~tm1i1t Blmt Show. .

Free Admission - Free Parking
Show In Conference Room

;AEP - 25.27 .
'DuPont - 38.06
Federal ~ogul - .5t
·Arch Coal - 16.55
I:JSB -17.40
:Akzo- 32.58
.AmTech/SBC - 21'.62 Gannett-69.15 ·
·Ashland Inc. - 25.63
General Electric'- 24.01
GKNLY•.:... ~. 90
:AT&amp;:T - ,11 .56
•Bank One - 35.01
·Harley Davidson - 46.99
BLI - 13.62 · - 'P
'Kmart ..,... .44
•
Bob Evans- 23.71 ' Kroger- 12.80
BorgWarner - 45.44 . Lid. -13.73
NSC- 20.90 .
Champion ~ 2.39
"charming Shops - 5.66 OaK Hill Financial-'- 21 .70
City Holding- 25.36
OVB- 21
Col - 21:65
·
~BT- 32.69
Peoples - 25. 15
DG'- ·13.64

.\--~ Szechuan House
· Under New Ownership

~-~-------~~---------~

:~ 2,oo or~::~WITIIg.oo orr:
----------1-- -~- ·----·
1WITU A120.00 PURCUAli' I I

"

.'

I

I

. Pepsico - 37
Premier- 6.40 ·
Rockwell - t6.13
Rocky Boots - 4.99
AD Shell- 41 .48
Sears - 37:64
Wai·Mart- 5f,75
Wendy's - 34.37
Worthinglon - 19.28
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
d.ay's transactions

.

~atudmp
•

· ·

1

POMEROY
Civil
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common Plea'
Coun by Home Nationa l .
B&lt;jllk, Racine. against John R.
Hill . Racine, and others, ·ami
by Home Nati onal Bank
against Tir)lothy L. Ball. Long
Bottom. and others.
The case of Home National
Bank against Brady Huffman.
Jr.. has been di smi ssed.

Scout event set

'

·File
disSolutions,
divorces

Chamber meets

Fall forestry
Workshop
. Slated

Monday, and again following the dedication. The tours
will be offered by ODNR's
wate~;eraft and wildlife units.
from Page AI
Speakers set for the cere.m~m
y include Scott . Zody,
for this .·
· "Those people, the users ODNR deputy director;
. through the · fees the)' have · William Hartwig, regional
director of the U.S . Fish and
· p~id, have provided the
opportuni'ty for it to be Wildlife Service; !(en Alvey,
acting chief of the state's
· there," t)e said.
Boat tours .of the river and · wat'ercraft division; · · and
·. points of ' inter\!st will be Mi~hael Budzik, chief of
offered · from 3 to 5 p.m. · ODNR's wildlife division•.

Reader s·ervic:es · . · ·

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH '1!)631. ·

Our main corlcern in al~ stories i.S to be Seco nd-.class postage paid at
accurate:' H you know of an error in a 'Gallipolis.
.
s1ory. please call one of our newsrooms . .M~tmber: The Associated Press, the
"'
·
,
/\ .
- west Virginia Press Association, and

:

w.uT, MANACIMINT

·

...

·
.

Our main nu~ are:
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
l!:nb11o.1r • Gallipolis, OH
Postmaster: Send address correc· .
, lions to the Gallipolis 9aily Tribune,
· (7AO) 446·2342
Sentinel '• Pomeroy, OH
· 825 Thlfd Avenue, Ga tlfpoiiS, OH
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One-time applicatloil nece~sary. _

..•

Gallia County landfill .

·
'
With the recent warnings pertaining tQ Wesi·Nile Virus,
Gallia County Landfill, in copjunction wlth the Gallia
County..Health Departf!1ent, wiU:be Spo'llsoring a reduced
rate collectton penod for .scr.apttres. Tires collected during
this period will be trucked off site by Waste Management,
Inc. to a processing facility and be prepared for beneficial '
reuse into our new section of landfill. This. period wi!l
begtn on September 251h, 2002 with the last. day being
October 9th, 2002. Collection times will be during normal
business hour~ Monday-Friday 7:60 a.rri,- 3:00 p.m. Tires
must be free of .debns and· m~d. The person hauling the
ttems to the facility wtll be responsible for. all offloading.
The cost wtll be as follows: · · . .
'

.

.

.

Passenger Car tire (derlrjlrned up to and including 15''
ID) - $1.00 each or $1 00/ton
.
·
Pa.l lsenger Car Tire Including rim- $1, 75 · each or
$175/ton
.
Small Truck Tires (derimmed 16" to ' 17.5": JD) - $1.75
each or $175/ton
·· .
·
,
Small Truck Tires with rim- $2.75 each or $275/ton ,
Large Truck Tires (derlmmed 19.5" to 24.5" 10 and &lt;
.12: ply)- $3.50 each o.r- $350/ton
·
Large Truck Tires with rim- $7,00 each or $700/ton' ·

·- ....

;

B-ail denied for
alleged U.N. shooter
NEW YORK (AP) - A
man accused of emptying a
pistol outside the United
Nations was held without bail
FridaY after a prosecutor said
he "threw away whatever life
he had" to promote his political views about Nonh Korea.
The FBI said in a coun document that Steve Kim. a
postal worker from Illinois.
cased the U.N. headquarters
in September betore firing a
.357 revolver into the air
Th~rsday. The FBI also said
said Kim ate very little .tor
two days betore the shooting
because he thought an empty
stomach would improve his
SflrVi.val ,prospects if he was
shot and needed surgery.
Kim, 57, a naturalized u.s.
citizen who ·is a native of
Korea, was charged with car"

.

rying a firearm and making a
violent attack on toreign offi-·
cials. No plea was entered.
No one was injured, but
two bullets struck the building and U.N. Security Chief
Michael McCann said several
shots narrowly misSfd U.N.
employees.
-- U.S. Secret Service agents
arrested Kim in the compound just outside 1he building, where they said he had
dropped his pi stol.

FRI
TUES BARGAIN NIGHT
$3.75 ADMISSION

BOX OFFICE OPENS

6:30PM -·MON- FRI
&amp; 12:30 PM SAl· SUN

MATINEES ARE SHOWNoQN
SAT &amp;
ONLY
MY

..

GREEK WEDDING
7:15 &amp; 9:15

.
•Oregbn·man arrested
.

for ~layings c;&gt;f two., girls
'

1

.

SISTERS (A)
.
7:20 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES: SAT &amp; SU~ 1:20 &amp; J:2lf

OREGON CITY, . )ore . appeared two months apan ·
(AP) - A man was arfested ' last · winteJ&lt;. Theil' '•bodies
Friday on charges he mur- were found ·in August :
dered two Oregon City 'gii:ls Ashley 's in a steel drum ·
whose bodies Were found in buried· under a eoncrete slab,
his back yard .Qver fhe sum- Miranda's in .a box, wrapped
mer.
in a pl.astic. bag in a shed.
·. Ward . Weaver 39, was
The younger Weaver has a
. already in jail on charges of liislory .of 'v.iolence, . sub- ·
~api n g his son's girlfriend.
stance abuse and attacks on
The girls, Ashley Pond, 12, young girls stretching to the
and Miranda Gaddis, 13, clis- . 1980s.
'

1

. Our e·mail addresses are:
[tobllll&lt; • Gallipolis, OH
news@mydafly1rlbune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH ·
·news@mydallysentlnel.com
l\raiBirr • Pt. P.leasanl, WV
· news@mydailyregfster.com

• •

RIVer

m;imel) ~~enhne.l

Correction Policy

•

•

A190.00 PUI&lt;CUA« I

· Mall Subscription
Inside County
13 Weeks.. . . .......... '29.85
26 Weeks .... . .......... . '59.70
52 Weeks.'............ . . 't19.40

Outside County
13 Weeks....... .'...... , . '50.05
26 Weeks.....
. . 'tOO.IO
· · (USPS 436-840)
. . '200.20
Ohlo.Valley Publishing Co. · · 52 Weeks.
Published every Saturday, 825 Third

~

STARRING GOLOIE HAWN

BARBERSHOP (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:15
.MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15
I

THE FOUR FEATHERS
7o00 &amp; 9o30

(PG1~)

MATINEES SAT .-.suN t :OO &amp; 3:30
STARRING HEATH LEDGER lo

WOuld Like To welcome...

Tires
than 24,5"
are. not permitted.
. larger
'
.
·In addition, in order to ensure uninterrupted' service at our
facility, resident "free day" has been.postponed until construction of our new section of landfill is complete. Gallia
County Landfill with sponsor 2 more "free days" before
the end of the year. The next "free day''. is anllcipated to
be in Mid-November. A notice will be placed in the paper
to the next free day. We apologize for any inconven-

.. 304-675-7650 .
PVH Medical OftiCtl Building, SUb 21a .. POIIt Pl~asant, WV 25550
I

I

•

File suits

. POMEROY - A marriage
·. GALLIPOLIS - Recently hcense has been issued in
lodged in the Galli a County Meigs County Probate Coull
POM EROY - Girl Scout'
jail by Gallia County sheriff's to Kevin Dale Cowdery,&gt; 36.
will
celebrate a "Blast from
deputies were Richard Wayne and Marsha Sue Kimes. 45.
the Past" celeb r&lt;~ti o n of the
Brumfield, Crown City, con- both of Reedsville.
Scouts founder. Juliette
Girl
tempt of coun; Kenneth D.
Low. from I:30 to 4'p.m., Oc1.
Collins, Bidwell, warrant s on
domestic violence and failure
12, at the Meigs Multipurpose
to appear; Cindy N. Queen,
Senior Center. All past and
Crown City, domestic viopresent scouts and leaders are
lence..
invited. Songs. games and a
Arrested by deputies on
craft project are pan of the
indictments were: Jerry W.
POMEROY - An action celebration. Information . and
Abbott, Gallipolis, possession for di ssolution of marriage
of cocaine; Phillip Howell , has been ti led in Meigs preregistration are available
Gallipolis, felony driving County Common Pleas Coun by calling Brenda Neutzling.
under the influence; Tony R. by
Rayll)ond · Michael 992-6679, or Patty Pickens at
Adkins, Crown City, fposses- Johnson . Middlepon. and 992-2 161.
.sion of drugs: and Michael Jennifer Noel
Johnson,
Alan Harvey, Gallipolis. Clarksburg. W.Va.
obstructing justice.
Actions . lot divorce have
·
been . filed . by Larry W.
Parsons, Middlepon, against
POMEROY
Jimmy
Cynthia Dawn Parsons. Stewart, R-Aihens·, and Jim
Middleport; Brinley F. Seth, Pancake, D-Nelsonville. canPomeroy. against Sheila A. didates for the 92nd House of
GALLIPOLIS - Amy M.
Seth. Middlepon; Charles R:'" Representatives seat , will
Siders, 28, 321 Perkins Road,
H1sle,. Dexter. agamst Brenda speak at the oeneral memberLOGAN - The Meigs, M. H1~le: Bethel: and Ronald ship luncheo';, of the Meigs
Gallipolis, wa~ citecl for driving under suspension and Athens, Vinton and Hocking Lee Wilhams, Rac me.a~amst Coumy
Chamber · of
failure to control by Gallipolis Soil and Water Conservation Deborah Lcann Wjlhams.
·
.
Commerce at noon on Oct. 8.
City Police following a onei Di.stricts iq conjunction with Racine .
car accident Thursday on thev MeadWestvaco and the Ohio
Dissolutions have ·been at Overbrook Center.
200 block of Founh Avenue: Department . ol Natural granted to Judith A. Lee and
Officers said Perkins was Resources'
Division of Forest A. Lee, Sr.; Casey L.
southboond at 2: I 8 p.m. when Forestry are sponso:ring a fall Biggs and Jame~ . N. Biggs:
the .car she drove struck a forestry workshop on Oct 23. and Bonita Lynn Conley and
• Holzer Medical Center
parked car owned by Douglas 4-7 p.m. at ·Hocking State Michael Allen Conley.
Discharges Oct. 3 ~ none·.
L. Moses, 596 Hall and Davis Forest in Hocking County.
The case of Carrie, Megan
Binh .- Mr. and Mrs. Josh
Road, Thurman.
·The wQrkshop will include Phalin against Joshua Phalin
Markin, daughter, Cheshire.
Both cars had disabling a tour of several forest sites has been dismissed.
(Published with permission )
and a discussion on prescribed ·
damage, officers s aid.

History

;steyt"Biand stirs a cauldron of apple 'butter at the Pleasant
jVafley,Un i~ed Met~odis\ Church 's booth, Friday afternoon at the
.Apple Butter Festtval in Salem. W,Va. (AP)

www wvlottc&gt;ry com

·I

fire and i1s use as a forest
management 100!. pine thinning, use of low-impact
equipment, best foresl management practices , and a
regeneration harvest.
Dinner will also be served.
Cost of 1he workshop is
$10 per perso~ ith registratiOn due by Oct. 15. To register, or for more· information,
contact the Meigs SWCD at
992-6647 or at 33 101 Hiland
RQlld, Pomeroy.

Ucense issued

Placed in jail.

Bailey was born in 1742
in England and around 1761
settled nl'ar Slaliton, Va . She·
from Page AI
married Richard . Trotter.
who was killed at the Battle
on hand.
of Point Pleasant. Anne'
Becky
Smith
of immediately set out ro
Huntington put on the
"Mad" Anne Bailey eJChibit avenge her husband's death·
. and · loves spreading the and became a frontier scout.
She lll(\rried John Bailey
word about the role women
took during the period.
sperll her re!"aining years in
"Mad Anne Bailey and I Gallipolis, where she died in·
have a lot in common,"
Smith said between presen- 1825.
"She was quite a gal and
tation~. "I fouqd a real love
for her and I can relate . I people need to know what
wanted to ·bring tier alive.'' . she 'did," Smith added.

•'

..

GALLIPOLIS - Darrell
Haney. 49,510 Gabriel Road,
Bidwell, was cited for assllred
clear distance by the GlllJiaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol following a
three-vehicle accident Friday
on Ohio Route 160 near the
imersection with County
Road 3 (Bulaville Pike).
Troopers said Haney )Was
southbound at 8:50a.m. when
he was unable to S\Op in time
and struck the rear of a
stopped car driven by Russell
T. Ragan, 36, 3524 ·Ohio
Route 160, Gallipolis. The
collision forced Ragan's car
into the rear of a car stopped
ahead of him driven by Junior
A. Dotson, 71, 3310 Ohio
Route 850, Bidwell.
All vehicles had functional
damage, troopers said.
·
Cathy L. Stover, 31, 2592
Ohio Route 325 Nonh,
Bidwell, was cited for failure
to control by the patrol fol.lowing a one-car accident
Thursday on 325 near Rio
Grande.
Troopers said · Stover wa~
nonhbound at 3:30a.m. when
she fell asleep, causing tlie car
to travel off the right side of
the road twice and ovenum
off the left side of the road.
The car had functional damage, troopers said.

Also ci1ed by police
Thursday were Michael E.
Johnson, 1435 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis, loud )llusic from a
motor vehicle; and Christie E.
Cremeans,
30,
address
unknown, disorderly after
warning and assault
Cited by· police Friday were
Brett A. Taylor, 19, 1319
Gage Road, Patriot, assured
clear distance: and Steven· F.
Fannin, 48, 460 Quail Creek
Drive, Gallipoli s, failure . to
obey a traffic control device.

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IOOihe

It's Not A Good Buy
' Without Itl

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Citations issued

Driver ticketed

'·· Local Stocks ·

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HMCnotes ·

COngaessmen

COl SHOW
~

rural communities.
The, landfill prqj)osal must
be approved by both the Ohio
Environmental
Protection·
Agency and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.

~body.

EPA chief visits .
I
Mountl n State .

J;aturba!' t!tmn -J;mttntl • Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

•

Octob•r s. 1002

Witness says defendant in Vinton Co.
murder trial wanted to leave·wife

Ohio weather

SunflY Pt.Ckludy

Ia

,Ohio • West

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Saturday, October

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' PLEASANT
I
VALLEY
HOSPITAL •.
)\

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Opinion

October s. 2002

SelurUy, October 5, 2002

Community Calendar
Public Meetings.

NO,,,

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-2342 • FAX {740) 446-3008
· www.mydailytribune.com
.

Page AS

PageA4

AL~.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

i

'Bette Pearce

Andrew Carter

Managing Editor

Asst. Managing Editor

Letters Jo thP editor are 1\'e/come. Tlw,1· should be less than
3()() ll'mrls..411 letters are .w /Jject to editing and must be
si~tred and inrlude add r&lt;•.u and telephone numbe r. No
w't.&lt; igtied fetters ,,.if/ be publi.&lt;hed. Letters should be in good
taste. addres.liin~ issues. 11 01 persmwlitr"t!s.
··
.
Th e opinions expressed in tire column below .a re the colisensus of the Ohio Va //t•r Publishing Cu. editurial board.
1m le~:.'i olhenril·e noted.

s

NATIONAL VIEW

·Is this sil

•

Opposition to project gives
environmentalists a bad name

Chain .of life

Be·sure and vote

TODAY IN HISTORY

ll

This is the letter George Bush .doesn}t want to get

•

SunciiY. Oct. • .
CADMUS - Cadmus High SchGol
raunton, 10 a.m. until4 p.m. Lunch et
12:30 p.m.

grove of hardwood. trees
shading the area part of the
News editor
I""
t"
day and are surrounded by a
ifS IVa S
RACINE;
When variety of herbs ·which probTburaclay, Oct. 10 .
Delbert VanMeter goes out a~ly contribute to keeping
CENTENARY
Green
to pick his tomatoes, he nQt · the bugs away. .
.
Elementary School Fall Carnival,
•
.only
takes
along
a
basket
to
VanMeter
satd
he
tted
the
5:30 to 8 p.m.
·
ut them in but a ladder so plants to ~e ~sua! three-foot
.
. Frtct.y, Oct. 11
stakes thmking that would
an. reach them ·
GALLIPOLIS - Harvest Moon .
ec
k
· hI. Then •as
The two plants which eep them stratg
Natlvo Ameflcan Pow W&lt;Ni from 10
stand in the middle of his ihey grew to th~ top.. of the
a.m. to dark to run through Sunday at
wife's herb garden are near- stake, he JUSt w1red an~ther
the Gallla County Fairgrounds. Coats
will be collected and funds raised go
Iy 12 feet taiL
one on to support th~ vm~.
to the Cheyenne RMir Reservation In
.
VanMeter
contends
that
VanMeter and h1s w1fe,
· South Dakota. Sponsored by the
he's done nothing special to Opal, returne~ to Metgs
Native American Education and
make then grow to that County about SIX years ago
Development Assoc:lation, a 09n·
pmltl organization.
.
height.
afl~r he retired ~nd have
"I just gave them plenty of buill a beau~fu~ bnck ho~e
water when it was 'dry and an on top of a h1ll m Bowman s
.
occasional shot of Miracle Run.
Mary Dobbins will ce~te her
Gro.
.
The house. is located ~n
89th birthday Monday, Oct. 7, Cards
"They're Supersonics and f~an~ whtch has ·been ~n
may be setn to 1474 Campaign
I guess they just want to live h1~ fam1ly for several generRoad, !lidwell, Ohio 45614-9444.
up to their name."
attons.The Tribune welcomes terns for
The plants, given to bim
Whtle he left here to find
the community calendar from non.
•
by
a
Letart
cOilsin,
have
prowork
about 30 years ago and
profit organizations. Hems must be
duced all summer and still · lived in Gahanna most of
submitted tn writing and can be
mailed to the Tribune; 825 Third Ave.,
have. plenty of both ripe and tha.t time, he said they
Gallipolis, Oh., 45631; faxed to (740)
green
tomatoes h,anging on always knew that some~ay
446-3008;
or
a-mailed
to
the
vines.
•
.
they would return to Me1gs Delbert VanMeter climbs a ladder to ·pick his tomatoes from
newsO mydallytribune.com. Because
the nearly 12 foot viAes. (Charlene Hoeflich)
They
are
located
in
a
County.
of the large wtume ot community

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BY CIWILENE ltoEJ:uc:H

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card S.howers

news and to ensure accuracy, ~ems
can not be taken over the telephone.
community calendar 1s published
as a !rae service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce ineetings and
· 'llleeclay, Oct. 1
special events. Calender Items canGALLIPOLIS -Holzer Clinic not be guaranteed to run a spacific
Retirees wiN meet for lunch at the . number of days
•
Down Under restaurant at noon.

Senl.ors Group·5

OUR READERS' VIEWS

in Montana, $270,000.
answered any of these allegations and
• Therapeutic horseback riding m ignores our request that he participate in
California, $150,000.
an uncensored public forum to address
• The Rocky Mountain News, Denver, on seisDear Editor:
• Dolphin replacement project in them. However, in an April I0, 1998,
mic exploration of the Canyons of. the Ancients
Sunday, Oct 6 is Ufe Chain Sunday
Washington
State, $4 million.
. Tribun~ letter to the editor, he wrote, in ·
/I{a tiona/ Monument: If self-styled environmentalists
across the nation. Block after block, a
A
project
to
see
if
public
transit
bus~s part, "l am writing to let the citizens of
•
line of people of diverse faiths can be
ever stop to wonder why they ' re sometimes regardseen
holding up signs with the message and trams can run on soybeans m Gallia County know that I have no
ed as mindlessly obstructionist, they need only conMissouri, $I .million.
intention of engaging in a letter writing
that "abortion kills babies."
sider the determined effort being made to delay or
•
ft.
proJeCt
to
pull
~eeds
.from
the
contest
with my detractors or involving
This movement is not part of
Nav1dad
and
Lavaca
nvers
m
Texas,
myself
in
dirty politics."
preverlt a small seismic mappirig project in the
Operatiqn Rescue. No laws an~ broken.
.
In our opinion, what Montgomery
Canyon of the Ancients National Monument:''
No participants go to jail. Their homes $300,000:
Acc:ordmg
to
the
June
tssue
of
the
calls
"dirty politics" can actually be
When President Clinton declared the 164,000-acre
and savings accounts are not seiied. Life
Chain has no formal ties to the pro-life Washmgton. Ttmes, th~re are ne3!1Y among the most reliable .information in
monument, it was with provisions concerning oil
organizations, but is endorsed by sever- 8,000 suc~-like pork proJects amounung an election. Far 'from deceptive, infor·
and natural gas that might be found there.
al. It is not political, it is not Hands to $15 btlhon tucke~ away m ~e ren:tote mation letters to the editor ean be more
Existing oil and gas leases, which cover about 80
corners of congressional spe~dmg billS. ace rate than those touting the virtues of
Across America. It is no fad.
You can let your congress1onal repreu d'dat
·
percent of the land, would be honored .. And no new
It is done by committed pastors and sentative, Ted Strickland, know your a can 1 ~·
.
leases would be granted, except to promote conserhundreds of thousands of people who thoughts about this use of tax dollars by
Information letters are far more likely
stand six to eight feet apart from each calling the Capitol switchboard at 1- than vo~e:for advocacy ad.s to focus on
vation or to prevent leases near unleased land from
other along a pre-determined route for 202-224-3121.
past pohc1es of those runm~~ for offi~e.
" draining natural resources.
• .
an
hour
on
Sunday
afternoon.
It
is
a
Bob Murphy What voters know and pohucal pundits
· ... According to the environmental assessment,, the.
good testimony for people of all faiths to
Vinton . and politicians miss is that an accurate
purpose of the survey is to produce a 3-D map of
speak on behalf of the unborn while they
•
attack, response and coun1erattac.k
underground oil and gas - ·not for the purpose of
solemnly pray orsing. .
Dirty
politics?
makes it possible for voters tn.ll}ake ail
prOducing oil and gas from those I ,870 acres, but
Life Chain was .started by business·
·
informed decision.
,. · ·
ma11 Royce Dunn in Yuba City; Calif., in
Dear Editor:
.
because a map with holes in it is less useful than a:
Harlan W. Northup
1987. Twenty-five hundred residents of
Harold Montgomery is now seeking,
· complete map.
·
James A. Northup
Yuba
and
Su.
t
ter
counties
stretched
three
.
for
the second time·, a third term as a
·oaUipolis
... Though Canyons of the Ancients is rich in
miles across the brid~e joining the citie~ Gallia . County · commissioner.
archaeological artifacts, that hardly means that every
of Yuba and Marysville, Calif:, to fonn Montgomery was defeated for a third
square foot of it is covere.d with them. :.. There will . the first-ever "human chain of life."
term as county commissioner in the genbe an archaeological monitor on the project in case
When we see others exercising their era! election of November 1998.
Dear Editor:
freedom of expression, you can't help
In letters to the editor, over. the past
new sites are discovered while it is under way. There
There is going to be a lot at stake for
but be encouraged. .
. .
. . . · few years, we have allege'&lt;! unethical Mason County on Nov. 5 wheri voters ·
will be a wildlife monitor as well.
Come out Sunday and JOID us m the and unlawful happenings occurring dur- go to the poles. Sen. Oshel Craigo and
war for the unborn. ·
ing Montgomery's two terms as a coun- Delegate Lisa Smith are facing off in the
'
Jim and Harriet Davison ty commissioner in the '90s. In those letSenatorial District, of which
~
Gallipolis ters, we .called attention to, among other Fourth
Mason County is a part of.
v
·
d
things, such allegations as:
The vote.rs need to look very cl.o~.ely at
10Ur t_ax 0 ars
• Signed a five-year renewal solid each
BY TH E ASSOCI ATED PRESS •
•
cand1date and · dec1de wh1Ch one
waste .contract with a company, which at
Today is Saturday, Oct. 5, the 278th day of 2002. There are
can
do
the most for the county. Words·
Dear Editor:
that time, was under a 17-count indict'
. 87 days left in the year.
'
mean
nothing
if they cannot be backed
Congress, as u~ual, is loading up .its ment for fraud and was in bankruptcy.
Today's Highlight in Hi story:
spending bills with "riders" tucked away
• Approved, without competitive bid- up with action.
On Oct. 5, 1962, the Beatles' first hit, "Love Me Do," was
It is a shame that both cannot win.
in
remote
comers
with
loads
of
pork;
the
ding, the spending of over $100,000 of
, first released in the. United Ki11gdom.
But,
I must vote for the one that can help
usual giveaways, to gain votes for the public funds to out-of-county billing
On this date:
Mason County the most. l urge each
primary bill. (Quid pro quo).
services for EMS.
In 1830, the 21st president of the United States, Chester
•
A
tattoo
removal
program
in
Obispo
• A $100,'()()() handwritten' check to voter to take the time to look closely ai
Arthur, was born in Fairfield, Vt.
.
County, Calif., $50,000.
county commissioners from the county 's the candidates and then vote for Mason
In 1892, the Dalton Ga~g . notorious for its traln robberies,
•
A
bike
trail
in
North
Dakota,
solid waste contractor disappeared for County r,!!gardless of your party affiliawas practically wiped out while attempting to rob a pair of ·
tion.
·
$500,000.
62
days.
banks in Cof(eyville, Kan.
.
The
Center
on
Obesity
at
West
·
•
Be ·sure and vote on Nov. 5. ·
• Unethical hiring practices (nepotism
In 1921 , the World Series was broadcast on radio for the
Virginia
University,
$2
million.
ruled).
and
cronyism
·
Clifford Oliver·
first time.
•
An
effort
to
combat
"Goth
Cult.ure"
Up
to
this
time,
Montgomery
has
not
.
Point Pleasant
. In 1931, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon completed the
first non-stop llight acr0 ss the Pacific Ocean, arriving in
Washington state some 41 hours after leaving Japan:·
: In 1937, President Roosevelt called for a "quarantine" of
. RUSHER'S. VIEW
aggressor !lations.
.
· ·
: In 1941 ,. foriner Supreme Court Justice bouis D. Brandeis
- .. the first Jewi sh member of the nation's highest court died in Washington at age 84.
In 1947. Pres ident Truman delivered the first televised
White House address.
·
In 1953. Earl Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief justice
BY WIWAM RusHER
dency, should be so misguided as to ing at last the bottomless misery that
of the United Stines, succeeding Fred M. Vinson.
Baghdad, Iraq
launch an· attack upon my country, it ·nation has inflicted on the people of
In 1986, Ameri can Eugene Hasenfus was captured by
·July I, 2004
will of course be necessary for us to Palestine. But future negotiations on
Sandinista ·soldiers after the weapons pla!le he was flying in
Hon. George W. Bush
respond with every means at our com- that subjecJ, amon15 the United States,
was shot down over southern Nicaragua.
The White House
mand.
Iraq and the other mterested nations of
· In 1988. Democrat Lloyd Bentsen lambasted Republican
Washington, D.C.
I realize, of course, that the United the Middle East (and indee~ the world)
Dan Quayle during their vice-presidential debate, telling
Dear Mr: President;
States has the· military means to destroy will undoubtedly reflect the realization
Quayle. "Senator. you ' re no Jack Kennedy."
.
It is my solemn duty to inform you Iraq many times over. But from this that the ,United States can no longer
· Ten ·years auo : Both houses of Congress voted to overmle
that what is often called a "weapon of time forward you will have to decide afford tQ ·impose . its will unilaterally
President
Bush's
veto
of
a
measure
tore-regulate
cable
televimass destruction" has been placed in whether that satisfaction will be worth up(Jn the.region.
.,
·
.
.
ston compamcs.
one pf your . major cit!es. You will the consequent and' inevitable loss of
Fmally, I urge you most strong~
Five years ago : The White House released videotapes of
understand why I cannot be more several hundred thousand innoce'nt consider the new developmeRHI!ai- has
President Clinton greeting supporters at 44 coffee klatches;
explicit. The nature of the weapon Ameri&amp;n · lives. The choice is yours: prompted this letter, not as a blow to
Republicans seized on the tapes as proof that Clint.on hac!
(whether chemical , biological or peace with iraq, or measureless tragedy America's strength or. pqlicies, but as
raised campaign donations at the White House in violation.of
nuclear); which particular city it is in; , for both our nations.
opening new prospects for a true aad
the law.
·
and how it came to be placed there -Let me add that, contrary to your gov- lasting ~ace between the United States
. One year ago: Tabloid photo ed~tor Robert Stevens died ·
all of these are questions which must, ernment's propaganda, the government and the other nations of the world. It
from inhaled anthrax,' the first of a series of anthrax cases in
for the time being, remain unanswered. · of Iraq is 'mature and responsible, and · was precisely that preference for negoFlorida, New York , New Jersey and Washington. American
Suffice it to say that if it is detonated, has no intention of abusing the advan- tiation over war that animated those statesman Mike Mansfield died in Washington, D.C., at age
the certain result will be the death of tage that the purely defensive weapon I including many of your European allies,
98.Barry Bonds set a. new mark for home runs in a single sea. hundreds of thousands of Americans.
have described might otherwise give .us .. your domestic opponents and even · '
son . hiiting numbers 71 and 72. but San Francisco. was6ltm1- '
That is why I am pleased to assure That is to say, we will not use the threat some in your own .party - who, just
nated from the playoffs with an I 1-10 loss to the Los Angele s
you that tho~e in charge of this weapon of detonatin,~.: it as .a means (for exam, two years ago, succeeded in halting
Dodger, . Moses Maione was inducted into the Basketball Hall
are under the control of the government pie) of expanding Iraq's control over America's headlong rush to war against
of Fame.
'
of Iraq; and that they- and we ·- have Middle Eastern oil at the ex;pense of Iraq.
Today's Birthdays: "f.amil y Circus" cartoonist Bil Keane is
no inte~tion whatsoever ?f de~onating Kuwait or Sau.di,Arabia -· though both · Truly, Allah is merciful.
80. Actress Glynis Joluls is 79. Comedian Bill Dana is 78.
thts ternbie weapon. Our mtenuons are of these nations, and no doubt others,
Siqcereiy yours,
Actress Diane Cilento is 69. The . president of the Czech
purely defensive . As long as the United are likely to see the wisdom of concertSaddam,Hussein
Repu bl il:, Vaclav Have l, is 66.' Country sing~ Johnny Duncan
States refrains from attacking Iraq, or ing their policies more closely with ours
is 64. Rh ythm-and-blues .,i nger Arlene Smith (The Chantels)
causing others to do so, you can be con- hereafter.
(William Rusher is a Distinguished
is 61. Si nger Richa rd Street is 60 .. Singer-musician Steve
fident that no harm will come to the resWe will not even use the existence· of Fellow of the Claremont btstitute for
idents of the city in question . But if you, this weapon as a means. of iesolving the the Study of Sta~esmm1ship and
Miller is 59. Rock 'i nger Brian Jp hnson (AC!DC) is 55. Actor
or any successor of yours in the presi - festering problem of Israel, and reliev- Political Philosophy.)
Jeff Conaway is 52. Ac tress Karen Allen is 51.
~

Monday, Oct. 7
JACKSON
Gallia·Vinton
· Educational Servtc:e Canter Bualness
AdVIIofy Council, 5:30 p.m., Lewis
Family Aestaurant.
GALLIPOLIS - Monthly dinner
meeting at Gallla County Senior
Resource Canter, 6 p,m.
Th n day, Oct. a
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
District Ubrary Board ol :rrustees, 5
p,m., Bos..ro Memorial Ubrary.
. GALLIPOLIS TRIAD/SALT
Committee, 10 a.m., Gallla County
Senior Resource Canter, to hear
iepOrts !rom the sheriff's department
and city pollee.
.
~.Oct. I
GALLIPOLIS
Parkinson
Support Group, 2 p.m., library of
Grace Un~ed Methodist Church. FOr
mora Information, call ~.
· Sltlinlay, Oct. 12
PATRIOT- Patriot.Masonic LOdge
496, F&amp;AM, Friendship Widows and
Past Mastera Night, Community
Blliklers and Servtc:e Pins awards.
Refreshments available at 6:30 p.m.
'llleeclay, Oct. 15
GALLIPOLIS - Travel Club, 3:30
p.m .. Gallia County Santor ReS\)urce
Center, to discuss upcoming trips and
malie trav&amp;l plans for 2003.
'
Wed~. Oct. 16
RIO GRANDE ....,. Gallia-Vinton
Educational
Service
Center
Governing Board, 7 p.m., Human
Resource Building at Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
. . Tuesday, Oct. 29
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Stroke
Support Group, 12:30 p.m., Gallla
County Senior Resource Center.

.Reunions

Area man's tomato vines keep
•
growing ... and growing ... .and grovytng

'

Battle.Days Pagean~ raises $2,000 for Toys for Tots
CHRIS MYERS
StaH writer

nesses followed suit. It was Battle Days Committee.
ca~."
then tliat the Toys for . Tots
Each year, 200 to 250 chil- · On a personal note, . ,
began buying new toys for the -dren receive Christmas "gifts Simpkins said that sbe is very
POINT PLEASANT_ The . kids,
• '· ·
from Toys for Tots.
. . :1 proud of the children who !)ave
The. members began plan'We help as many farruhes volunteered for Toys.
Battle Days pageant is over, but ning . additional 'fund-ratsers, as we possibly can," · said'
thanks to the generosity of its iilcluding the Annual Teens for Simpkins. "It is not uncommon · The Teens for Tots Christmas
sponsors. children of disadvan- Tots Concert . and the Battle for us to receive calls for help program is scheduled Dec. I.
~~ed f3Jl1ilies will wake up to Days Pageant.
·
.
on Christmas Eve. That's why Additional infonnatlon will be
.gifts under their Christmas tree
The Christmas concert is we keep a few toys back just in publisht;d as plans are finalized
· this year.
.
.
comprised of · area school
. The .pageant is one of the choirs that gather together and
fundr;risers for the sing Ouistmas carols for the
majot
. plans
nearing completion.
'BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Mason County Toys for Tots community. The admission fee
News editor
A new. tank and pumping sta,program
estab~isha,I .22 Y~ and any other donations go to
- - - - - - - - - - :.-:, tion are in the plans and
ago
by
Paula
Sunpkins, coordi- Toys for.Tots.
,
funding of the project is being
nator,
Brian
Billings,
fund-raisThis
year's
Battle
Days
SYRACUSE- Three part- pursued. Wingett announced
ing chair, and David Jarvis, . pageant sponsors were: .Gold
525 Nortp Avenue
time police officers were that Tim Linn of Linn
treaSurer.
sponsor,
Lisa
Smith,
candidate
hired by Syracuse" Village Engineering will meet wiih
Middleport, Ohio
Over the years, Simpkins has for State Senate, Brady Paxton,
Council following Thursday the Syracuse Water Board
recruited · other members, candidate for House of
ni~t's resignation of officer Monday night.
including Denise Buchanan Delegates, Turnpike ·of
Mtchael Ash.
He also talked about the
and Sara Stricklen. When Gallipolis, Holzer Clinic of
. They are Cliff Thomas, . Syracuse Elementary School
Simpkins' daughter, Brandy Gallipolis, Jo Alin Thomas,
Adam Smith, and Paul
R;~£~· Each orie will work propeny, reported it is being
Barkey, became olct. enough, "This Little Light of Mine," .
u · 1 30 hours a week, and surveyed and that as soon as
she 8lso joined ihe volunteer Rick and Sue Handley,
can be contacted through · certain property lines ue
staff, 8s did the children of Nationwide Insurance, Health
their . pagers, clerk·treasurer determined, It will. be turned
Aid Phannacy of New Haven,
other adult volunteers.
Sharon Cotterill reported.
over to ihe village.
And as the number of dedi· Noms Northup Dodae, Main
The numbers are Thomas,
Repair of the tennis courts
cated volunteers increased, the Street Photoimmhy, French Art
740-.576-8~62; Smith, 740- . wm be handled by Myers ·
p!'O$f&amp;D} itSelf grew.
Colony,
Body Shop,
Stmpkins remembers the 8 0 b'5 M ·"' t Fo • Pi za
S76-8SSO; and Reynolds, Paving, it was re~rted.
.
ar...e'
xs z
Conditions under which she Den, Subway
740-.576-6130.
Trick or treat ntght was set
. of Point
and Billings began collecting · Pleasant, Four Seasons·Aorist,
· Winterization of ihe fire for Oct. 31 from 6 to 7 p.m.
Public Welcome • for more information
department headquarters was
Second readings were given
toys.
·
Flower Nook, Point Pleasant
"When we first started the fioral and Gifts," Victoria's
discussed wiih Eber Pickens, to two ordinances, one an
call Pastor James E. Keesee 992·9052
toys for tots, we didn't have ~d-Bridal, Srtllth Buick·
Sr., fire chief, being given emergency contingency plan
money to buy new toys, so we ·p _ . · ·and the Point Pleasant
permission to, S,Pend up to for the Board of Public
Nursery Available
set up barrels and stood outside
$300 on the proJect. He was Affairs, and the second relatihe · old
Pennyfare
.a!so auihorized to purchase ing to the containment and
.12 pair of fire gloves for the collection of garbage and rub·
.SuPermarket," she said. (The . .- -. .- -...---------------~~-.,
PVH Well1less C~nter is 'there
fJremen.
·
bish.
·
· ·
Rita Ban met w!th C.o~ncil
Needed. repairs to the pool
now.)
"People dropped off tlsed&gt;
· to ask about a semor citizens were discussed · and Eber
toys
and we cleaned them and
. •
·
· . ,
-.· ·discount for cable service. Pickens Jr., councilman will , bagged
them for the chil'She was advised that ihe vii- get estimates and present
. dren," she added. ''1be build1age has no contract for such a them to Council.
ing we used then had no, heat
discount with the cable com- • Mayor Larry Laven?er
or hot water and we nearly
p~~bert Wingett, grants presiddeddb ab the., mee:~ froze to death. · We used a
number of different buildings
administrator discussed the att)ln e Y ouncl mem
·
Pickens, Mony Wood, Donna
over the "Years until the Point
water improvement project Peterson, Eric Cunningham
Pleasant Presbyterian Chureh
.noting that the preliminary and Mike VanMeter.
opened up · their fellowship
' hall for the members to use.'
Meet .Paul Reed, President
The Point Pleas~! R9tary
Club began donating money
of Farmers Bank•.
to the toys · campaign and
other organizations and busi"I think the reascin people choose to bank with .
Fanners Bank is the same reason why people
work here, they know we have a strong commit·
,.
l'
ment
to family values over corporate values.
I'
I'
I
'IEDIC\L
I
It's not just aU about the bOttom line. We meas,.
I
I'
ure our success not by how much we take out or
I
I'
OFI· FRI\C ( 0\II'HIIII· \SI\ F I \ \Ill.\&lt; . \IH
I'
community but by how much we put 'nto ·
our
I
I
'
\\1&gt;
SI'I ·. ('J \1.1 'I \IIIli&lt; \I. \1\ '\ \(;1-.\11 '\I
our community, which In turn makes Fa,rmers
I'
Bank a nic~ place to work and to bani!;."
936 SR 160 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Paul has been with Farmers Bank for 26 years.
·
Telephone: 740-446-9620
.
He started at the bank when he was a senior at
Accepting Aetna and all payor sources affiliated with
Meigs High School through a work study program .
Pleasant Valley Hospital and Holzl!r Medtcal Center
He continued part time while he obtained his &lt;Iegree
.
in finance from Ohio University. In July of 1981 he came to work at the bank full time. In
GERALD E. VALLEE, M.D.
NICHOLAS V. LANDRY, D.O.
September ,of 1992 he was made bank president apd in Janullry of 21!(&gt;0 he also obtained the
,.r
BALUSAMY SUBBIAH, M.D.
title of CEO.
&gt; •
·
FAMrLY MEDICINE SERVICES
1. Pedlatrl&lt;s and Adolescent Medicine
INTERNAL MEDICINE &amp;
He has continued to work on his educatidnal creiientials over.the years earning a degree
2. Gynecology/Pap smears; birth control &amp; teenage
PULMON;\RY DISEASE
from the Oniversity of Delaware's graduate school of banking in 1988 , and Louisiana State
maniiJiement
THOMAS
P.
P~CE,
M.D.
University's professiopal master of banking program in 2002.
·
3. Preventive medicine, adult/geriatric
.
OFFICE
GYNECOLOGY
4. Osteopathic manlpuladoil medicine
Paul is married and resides in Middleport with hi~ wife, I,.aurie, and children Katie and
(Employment, sports &amp; other hiJilry rehabllltadop)
.GENE H. ABELS, M.D.
Ben.
Katie is a sophomore at Meigs High School and parti~ipates in Varsity Cheerieading.
!. Welaht controf &amp; cholesterol maniiJiement, blood
CARDIO &amp; INTERNAL MEDICINE
Ben is in the 3rd gm&lt;le, and is.a second year Cub Scout.
·
pressure, diabetes, elc.
·.
.
.

•

BY

COZZA

Syracuse hires .
·new police officers
are

LafiY'S

R
•
Yt
' 0. .u r n ·

.o rs

'

'

PL\Z .\

.

.

6. Pre-employment, D.O.T., sports/school &amp; 1eneral
physical exams
7. Minor sul'l"rles, skln.tumors &amp; moles, suturing &amp;
JacerauOn ra,re
·

PEDIATRIC PATIENTS SEEN
SAME DAY IF POSSIBLE

ON SITE FOR OUR PATIENTS' CONVENIENCE:
1.
2.
3.
4.

·Complete Lab
Mammognuils
Pap Smears
X·ray

S.
6.
7.
\ 8..

Ultrasound
Cardiac stress testing/mo.nltors
Lung Testing (PFf's) ·
DEXA Bone Density S£ans
.

\

Paul has been involved in scouting ~ince 1968 among other activities. He was the past
master of the Pomeroy/Racine Masonic Lodge, and actively involved in the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce holding the office of treasurer; vice-president and presider,t He has
been .the president of the Meigs Cou9ty
Community Improvement Cmporation since
1995 He attends Grace Episcopal Church with
his family. He also enjOys traveling with his
family and home·improvement projects such as
~ We 're.Your Bank for Cifo.,.
· _ house restoration.
.
1
Member FDIC

IF'BJ FarJDers Bank

·'

'' .

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

River Cities -·

Inside:

. Saturday, October 5, ~

Big Blacks fall to Logan, Page 82
Raiders top Coal Grove, Page 82
1VC action, Page 82

•

Floodwall murals depid ~rtsmouth history

PageB1

,Scoreboard, Page 83
~aturday,

.

BY KATE ROBERTS ,

nursing schools that ·have use their phone or faxes."
served the area.
Retired teacher Linaa
Dafford and his crew have Switzer, who lives across the
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio _ averaged four to five murals street from the mural for vetA wall built after a devastat _ each summer for a total of 52 erans, recently started keeppanels.
ing a guest book, which
.
11
ing (}()d has become an art isThe last murals to be com- already is tilled with visitors
tic jewel in an Ohio River
town that otherwise is like so pleted are Ponsmouth at twi-· from as far away . as France
many others, with empty light · fr?m the Kentucky. side an.~ New Zealand.
sto~efronts and memories of of the nver and a memonal to . The tounst.~ tell me they
more prosperous times.
veterans .
. ... .
~!ke the town, Switzer said.
The 2.000-foot-long ·con- , Several of the murals ar~ Some areas need w be
crete floodwall was buill after . base,d on photographs found spruced up, but, they like the
flooding in 1937 killed ·one m archives or offered by res1- people and they re shock~d at
Portsmouth resident and d.ents. Dafford. made . them the quality of the murals.
forced 10,000 others from mto transparencies, proJected
In addition to steady. fD?t
their homes
them on the wall and traced and ve hi cle traffic, OhiO
Muralist ·Robert Datford of them \\iith charcoal or his River tourboats have made
Lafayette, La., has spent near- pamtbrush to get _a ~ery bas1c Ponsmouth a regular stop,
Iy a decade covering the 20- o~~hne for the pamtmg. .
and one company now offers
foot-tall wall with latex paint,
There have been Urnes . carnage ndes from the dock
helping chronic.le the town 's wh~re It was qUite. an event. al.ong the murals.
past. with pictures that range We d ha~e sca~fold1~g up and
The Portsmouth_Motorcycle
from a winter scene of a vii- pl ~y mus1c while we re domg Club, wh1ch 1s JUSt beyond the
!age to paintings of the mod- projections;-and ~eople would end of the floodwall •. has been
eril hospital and university
come out and Sit and dnnk an unofflcml secunty force
"It was ju~t a dirty old ~all, coff~~ or Coke .or beer and and was provided with securi!iark and gloomy and not very talk. Dafford sa1d. .
ty badges by the advtsory
nice to look at" said Ava
Because the artists used board. A 1913 photograph
Chaboudy, who_' along with photographs, some residents from the club is the subject of
her husband Dr. Louis made It mto the murals, a mural panel.
Chaboudy -'formed a 21- although Dafford said he genChaboudy said he had. spamember mural advisory board erally tned to av01d usmg rec- ken . to t~e club president
after seeing .similar paintings o~~1zable ~aces.
.
about calling pohce ~~ club
elsewhere. The group rai sed
I was very qutet about members saw SO!IlCOne spraynearly $750,000 for the pro- incorporating _local people, in¥ graffiti on the murals.
· ject about 90 miles south of because I was fOnstantly pres'Th1s
guy
named
Columbus.
·
sured by some people to paint . Hollywood - nobody goes
The Portsmouth Floodwall them in," he said. "The ones I by their real name there Murals, which are nearly half included are people ·who told me they 'd call the police,
a tnile long, have brought helped me or just were there at but he said, 'We'd .probably
• some life and ·much-needed the time I needed them. It's the play with them a little first.'
tourism into the town whose people who brought us iced tea I'm not exactly sure what· he
heyday came and went with when it was hot out, or let us meant, but I figured it was
the shoe factories that called
the area home before leaving
in the 1970s in search of
cheaper labor.
Dafford, who had ·done
other large-scale projects irr
New Orleans, Lafayette, La.;
Steubenville, Ohio, Canada
· •• Haste, •• Crlllh Cllecl
and Europe, started in the
spring of 1993 and has
worked with a rotating crew
of artists - usyally four or
five worked, on it at any one
time. Dafford, his wife, Cissy,
216 Upper River Rd • .
and daughters Ciel, 20, and
Miriam, 18, moved to
Gallipolis, Ohio
204 W. 2nd Street
· Ponsmouth for the summer
'Ia Mile south of
Pomeroy, Ohio
and spent the next nine there.
the Silver Bridge
992-0481
. Dafford said committee
446-2404
LlcoMt CCT0007T.oGI
members thought it would be
UcenHtctoooTr-ondDo1
LlcoMtCIT!IDIIIDOe
a five-year project. He es.ti- L,!;!L~&lt;::-:c:.!.I7!!100~41;!000!!!.::w~oo=.•----=---~'""'"--_;,.J
mated six or seven years.
"Here we are, ten years later
and my daughters - who
were little girls when we started - are in college now," he
said.
Dafford has become a part
of the community he was
hired to depict.
"It's a beautiful place, phys- Computer Technologies
ically, and it's so pleasant and
so easy to get along, I've
• Cisco Academy
·
found places to hang out and
• A+ Certification
people to hang out with," he
said.
-Nurse Aide
The murals have provided a
- Intravenous (IV) Therapy for LPN
sense of identity and pride.
Working so closely with com-Welding
. munity members also has sub- EMT Basic
jected Dafford to unsolicited
advice.
- Basic Machine Shop
· One · panel depicting Roy
- Computer .Aided Drafting
Rogers sparked much discussion. On it, Rogers - who
- Computer Aided Manufacturing
was born and rai sed near
Ponsmouth - sits astride his
horse, Trigger, as it rears up.
The image was taken from a
· T-shin Dafford had at age six.
For More Information
He repainted Rogers' . face
three times after residents told
contact the
him his original painting didAdult Education Office at
n't look anything like the
Hollywood cowboy.
(740) 245-5334
''We eventually got a big
cardboard cutout advertisement and p~inted from that.
When Dale Evans ·and her
son, Rusty. saw the mural, she
said it was Ihe best ponrait
EXPO
she 'd ever seen (Jf Roy. I'm
still not 100 percent happy
wit I) it, but I guess vou can't
Meigs County Fairgrounds ~
argue with that," he said.
Porl'smouth-area
Other
Town £.Country rxpo Commktee
natives on the mural include
would like to thank these businesses and lndl\llduals
Branch Rickey, the Brooklyn
for their monetary contributions to rxpo •oz. ·
Dodgers ge neral manager
Norris Northup Dodge
Home National Bank
who signed Jackie Robinson
Taylor Team of Dealerships Baum Lumber
to a big league contract in
Turnpike of Gallipolis
Irvine's Camper Sales
1947; Vern Riffe, who served
Gene Johnson Chevrolet
Farmers Bank"
as speaker of the Ohio House
• Hart's Tech Center
Jim Sheets
for . 20 years; and Julia
Mark 's Plumjng &amp; Heali ng
Mick Davenpon
Marlowe, a Shakespearean
Gheen's Painting
Jividen Power Equipment
actress from the early 1900s. .
Fisher Funeral Home
Mural subjects were chosen
We would also like to tfumk:
by the advisory board. On
Big Bend Farm Anliques Club
Seoul Troop 245 .
some, Dafford was only given
Kcefcr ~s Service Center .
Seoul Troop 299 &amp; Pack 249
a concept, such as the hi story ·
Eichinger Trailer Sales
Meigs Counfy Master·
of meuicine in Portsmouth. ·
A&amp;D A.ulo Uphol stery Plus
Gardeners
First Class Trash Servir.:e
He designed side-by-s ide
Kenny Longstreth
Carmichael 's Farm &amp; LaWn
surge ry scenes. On the left is
Legion Pos1 #39
Meigs Cqu nly Highway DepL
Do-h Renlal Ce01er
Dr. Thomas Waller, the area's
Brown \ lf:H~oidermy
Quilt Show Helpers
11rst physician, performing an
Ridenour Gas
Jiv1dcn· ~ Power Equipment
operat ion in tile patient 's
. Meigt Coum y Agriculture Sociely
home. On the right is the identica l image of a doctor, only
AND ALL WHO HELPED IN ANY WAY.
the doctor is working in a r
. DallasK Weber,
modern operating room. The
Pn•sidenl
border shows hospitals and
Associated Press

'

'

1'Casli

. SA1URDAY' s

HIGIDlGHTS
Prep Football
l'lllm

Artist Robert Dafford of Lafayette, La., poses In front 9f a mural depicting a twilight scene of
Portsmouth, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2002, on the floodwall in Portsmouth, Ohio. The mural is a
personal favorite of the artist. (AP)
better not to ask," Chaboudy
said.
So far, three minor incidents
with graffiti have been easily
removed.
"I feel we ' ve accomplished
a lot here. You see that by the
people who come talk to us,"
said Dafford, who has a half-

dozen works in . progress in
Kentucky and Louisiana and
is starting another in Ne:w
Jersey.
"They never thought their
history would be on something so big and that they'd be
so proud of. They never knew
how important art could be in

IHm
Gallia Academy
Logan
Mariefta .
Athens
Point Pleasant
Warren

there life.
·My goal was for regular
people in- a very culturally
deprived area to say. 'We
think this is a great idea. We
need more art, art is great, art
is wonderful. We need more
art.' It's heartwarming beyond
words."

3-4

~·

Jackson

().3
().3

().7

().4 .

2-5

3-1
2-1

..

IHm
M
All
Wellston
2-0 5-2
Nelsonville,York.
2-0 4-3
Belpre
1-1
5-2
. 1·1 1~
Vinton County
().2 3-4.
Alexander
().2
Meigs
3-4
'
Hocking Division
1llmn
M
All
2-0 4-3
Waterft1«1
Federal Hocking
2-0 2-5
Trimble
1-1 4-3
Miller
1-1'
1-6
().2 2-5·
Eastern
().2 ().7
Southern
Friday's Games .
NelsonviHe-York 14, Meigs 6
f't$ral Hocking 14,. Eastern 6
Miller 8, Southern 0
Vinton "County 16, Alexander 6
Wellston 22, Belpre 12
Waterford 42, Trimble 7
'.

Non-league
2002 BUICl Cntlrv

'14,900

c....
'14,900 .

· 2001 ChiVY llaztr

'18,900

USED CARS
1997 Cadillac Deville .... :... :...... $10,900
1999 Ford Ta!JrUs ............... ........ $8,900
1997 Olds Cutla.ss ....... ........ ....... $7,~
1994 Chevy Caprice .................. $6,99
'

'

.

1998 Buick ParkAvenue, ........... $8,900
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT LS .... $13,900
2002 Buick LeSabre ........ :.-..... $14,000
2001 Chevy Mali~u LS ............... $9,900

' '

USED TRUCKS
1999 Chevy Blazer 2 Door. ...... $13,900
2000 Chevy S10 Ext Cab .......... $1 0,900
1997 Ford Expedition.:............. $11 ,900
1999 Dodge Ram 4x4 Pickup .... $14,900

2002 Cadillac Escalade ........... $30,900
2000 Chevy '/don Ext Cab 4x4 .$19,900
1996 GMC Sonoma ........ ........... $5,850
2000 Chevy Tracker ............. ...... $7,990

Motors@

7 40·992-6614

•

• Pomeroy, Oh
1•888-DON-TATE
Hours: .

9-6 Mon- Frt
9-4 Sat, Closed Sun

'

_ aurc.;

...
,;:·:;:.:~.

IHm
All
Wahama
6-0
Ironton
6-1
Symmes Valley
5-2
Oak Hill
2-5
South Gallia
2-5
Hannan
1-4
Friday's Games
Wahama 37, Duval14
Buffalo 61 , South Gallia 35
Ironton 39, Cov. Holmes, Ky. 14
. Syrrme5 Valsy 15, Llmsvle \laley 14
Sclotoville 44, Oak Hill16
Hannan is IDLE

Barrett sets
WVa. TD .
reception .
:record

Tax &amp; Tltle tees not induded. All prices Include rebates. Not respOnsible for typographical errors.

t)~

NOW AV
FOR YOUR
PROFESSIONAL COMFORT NEEDS

300 2nd Ave. Gallipolis
740-441-9010
Mon- Thur 9:30 - 6:00

Frh- 9'30 - 8:00; Sat 9'.30 - 5:00
· Closed Sun.

MARTINSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)
Martinsburg
junior
wide
receiver
Brandon Barrett " set a
West Virginia state record
for touchdown receptions
in a game Friday night by
catching six in
the
Bulldogs ' 75-3 win over
Sherando, Va .
The previous record was
fiv\. by set by Lucas
Taylor in 1997 and tied by
Jeff Clark in 1999.
Barrett scored on plays
of 29 , I 0, 35, 18, 8 and
31. He caught three TO
passe s in each half for
Martin sburg (6-0) for the
-win over Sherando (3-2).
"Our passing game was
o.n," Barrett said. He
. ended the night with I 0
catches for 176 yards .
Barrett is no stranger to
state records. He tied the
West Vi~a state playoff record with thr.e e
touchdowns in a 43-21
win .over Parkersburg
South in the state quarterfinals. He ha~ 18 receiving tom;hdown s · this sea-

son. ,
~

•

S1mmons,
Blue Devils
rush·past
Warren
•

Staff report

All
6-1
5-2
6-1
5-2 ,
2-4

4-0
3-0

Friday's Games
Gallia Academy 48, WaiTen 21
Logan 40, Point Pleasant 7
Portsmoutl1 22, Athens o
Marietta 29, Jackson 7

'

, .
t ·,.--.K---.p--=l~i
i -n~g~S~h~
. oce==c~.

•

1-1
1-1

4-3

Ohio Division

4~~-v'!(\1~

I

5-2

TVC

Rea_l Training for Real Life

•

All

2-0
2-0

SEOAL

'

ti[[Payd;!

C2

1M

2-5
().2 3-4
"Fai~and
().2 1-6
Friday's Gamea
River Valley 20, Coal Grove 7
Chesapeake 36, Fairtand 6
.Rook Hill 46, South Point 7

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

!h

ovc

Rook Hill
Chesapeake
River Valley
South Point
-Coal Grove

. CASH

~~

Football Friday

October 5, 1001

South 6allia running back Zack Lee (23) breaks through an arm tackle by Buffalo's Matt
Casto during the third quarter of Friday 'night's' game at Rebel Aeld' in MercerviJie. The
Bisons won the game, 61-35. (Andrew Carter) ·
·

BUffalo l'egroUps
to beat Rebels
•

Bv BuocH CooPER
Staff writer
MERCERVILLE, Ohio A Buffalo fumble early, followed by a blocked Buffalo
punt for the first score of the
game ... things seemed to be
going South Gallia'a way.
But, in the end, it only
seemed like so as the Bison
rolled to a ~tory over
the Rebels.
A 26 point second quarter
would hft the Bison to an
advantage the Rebels wou'ldn't be able to overcome.
Zack Lee led the Rebels
(2-4) with 114 yards on 22
carries, while Bernie Fulks
had 88 yards in the fourth
quarter on four carries.
The Bison (2-3) fumbled
the ball away on the s.econd
play of their first drive, but
would get the ball.
. Buffalo's second drive of South Gallia quarterback Josh Waugh, left. confers with
the game, though, ended head coach Donnie Saunders during Friday's game. (Andrew
when a Bison punt was Carter)
blocked by Jake Workman at
the Bison 15-yard· line and
Warson also had a· pair of some yards on the ground
recovered in the endzone by touchdown receptions from and then, following a pitch
Zeph Clary for the first score. quarterback Joey Tulley for from Waugh, met up with
of the game as Sout,h Galha '60 and 21 yards in the sec- Brandon Caldwell for a six
led 7-0.
ond quarter.
. yard score.
Dustin Briscoe also had 94
From there, things began
Waugh had 66 yards on 7to go bad for the Rebels.
'yards on eight rushes for of-13 passing and three interLess than a minute after Buffalo.
ceptions.
the South Gallia score, the
Most of Buffalo's touchAt that po int, Buffalo's
Bi son scored on a fake to downs came on big plays.
lead-was cut to 19, 40-2 1. ·
Daniel Watson for a 64 yard
The Rebels. attempted tQ
The Bison would answer
'run and touchdown.
mount a comeback begin - later in the third quarter with
The Bisonhit paydirt again ning late in the second quar- two more touchdowns, a 71
, Jater in the opening quarter ter and down 40-7.
yard run by Watson and a 70
as Jason Smith broke a numA 22 yard pass from Josh yard run by Briscoe. ·
ber of South Gallia would-be Waugh to Jason Merrick set
The Rebels would have two
tacklers to score from 71 Up a quarterback keeper from more touchdowns late in the
yards out.
one yard out by Waugh with game on a 27 yard run by
Smith finished with nine . 13 seconds left until the half Brandon Coburn and a 50 ·
carries for 98 yards and three to put . the Rebels on the yard carry by Fulks, but by
touchdowns, while Daniel board again.
that point, Buffalo had aJready
Watson led Bison on the
The Rebels then scored on mounted a sizable lead.
ground with four carries for their first drive of the second
The Rebels will next travel
135 yards (33 :8 yards per half as Lee began to pick up to Wahama before returning
carry).
I
I

Warriors on a 4-yard run
with 8:59 remaining in the
VINCENT, Ohio ·- 1'y · fir~ t quarter.
Simmons smashed his own
After that, however, it was
·...
all
Blue
school rushing record
Devils.
and Gallia
Travis
Academy
McKinniss
completed a
capped a 9sweep nf
play, SOWashington
yard drive
County foes
with a 30Friday ,
yard scordefeating
mg pass to
Warren 48Tom Bose
21
Bote
with 5~ 27•to
Simmons
in
.
play in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic first period. Simmons had
the key play · of the drive
League play at Vincent.
The Blue Devils (6-1, 3-0 with a 16-yard run.
SEOAL) handed Marietta
McKinniss put the Devils
its first loss of the season ahead with a 27 -yard scorlast Friday, knocking off the ing ,run at the I:59 mark.
Tigers 21 -7 at Memorial (l Simmons exploded for a
Field.
76-yard touchdown run with
Simmons, who rushed for II :46 to play in the second
a GAHS record 280 yards quarter that put the Blue
against Point Pleasant on Devils ahead 21-7 . .
Bose and McJ(inniss •
. Sept. 13, piled up 323 yards
and three . touchdowns on hooked up again for a 32just 13 carries against yard touchdown pass play
Warren as the Blue Devils with 5:02 remaining to pad
won their fourth consecutive the GAHS lead at 28.-7.
game.
McKinniss connected on
He scored on. runs of 76, 7 -of-9 passes for 133 yards
II and 99 yards, respective- and the two scores.
ly. Simmons had a 51-yard
Mike Davis capped the
touchdown run called back onslaught with a · 5-yard
scoring run with 33 seconds
due to a holding pepalty.
As a team, Gallia to play in the first half. .
Academy amassed 453
Warren (0-7, 0-3 SEOAL)
yards rushing and 586 total scored on the opening drive
of the ·third quarter with
yards.
Simmqns has rushed for Carson Leach. hitting Marc
1,055 yards this year. His Smith for 35 yards and a
older brother, Ike, rushed for touchdown at the 9:28 mark.
1,032 . yards during his
Simmons answered the
senior season in 2000.
Warren score with tt6uchThe GAHS single-season down runs of II and 99
rushing record .is I ,249 ·yards, re ~ .,ectively, in the
yafds
set
by
Heath fourth quarter.
Hutchinson in 1994.
Leach found Alloway on a
Gallia Academy actually 21-yard scoring pass with
fell behind early in the game 2:37 left in the game to
before exploding for 35 round out the scoring.
Galli a Academy travels to
points in the first half. Scott
Alloway, who finished with Portsmouth next Friday. The
86 yards rusl\ing and two Trojans
(7-0)
blanked
touchdowns, scored for the Athens 22-0 Friday night.

-

.

.

1

White Falco·n. s
·improve to 6-0
Staff report

Gabe Lambert added 39
yards. John Barton had 34
yards on the ground. .
Lamben also threw for 61
yards and a touchdown. Zerkle
was 3-of-8
for 37 yards.
Wahama
jumped out
to a 19-0 lead
. ~.r by halftime.
0:$·, .· • ... 'J Anthony
Mitchell .
caught a 61yard pass

GRIFFITHSVILLE, W.Va.
- Wahama, ranked No ~ 5 in
the most recent Class A state
poll, continued its win-·
ning . ways
Friday
night, dismantling a
tough Duval
squad, 3714.
Wahama
f r o m
(6-0) had to
Lambert for
R. Mitchell o v e r c o me
Jordan
the game •s
159 yards in
first score
P.enalties to keep th~ir with 9:26left in the first quarter.
record unblemished . .
..
,
Lambert added a 5-yard ·
A lesser. team w.~uld ve touchdown run at the 7:1 r
folded thetr tents,. ~~ad l1lliik of the second quarter and
coach Ed Cr&lt;!mley·satd. We Zerkle scored on a 10-yard run
were determmed. We dom1- . as time-ran.in the fJTSt half.
nated a really good football
team tonight. You can't sinJordan scored on a 1-yard
gle anypody out. Everybody .pl~nge m. the thud to extend !he
played really well."
· Wiiliarna lead to 25.{). Bran~h
. ·
.
scored from II yards out wtth
Th~; White Falcons out- I0: 56 to play in thefourth.
gamed Duval, 586-244,
. ,
.
.
rushing for 447 yards.
Duval s Joe. L.acy tossed
. h II
h d f
the. f1rst of h1 s two touchRyan M ttc
e rus e . or down passes to Brandon
.1_34 yards. on JUSt mne car- McClure wih 8:07 left in the
nes. Justin Jordan added fourth, and then found Josh
,127 yards on 12 rush~s. Graley on a 9-yard pass with
Jeshua Branch rushed for -3 52 seconds remaining
·
yards ort five cames. Chad
Zerkle had 48 yards rushing.
Wahama. plays host to
South Gallta next Fnday.

:.2.
"·

. '

..., .... '

I
I

-' I

..

�Page 82 • 6aturbap ~imff·&amp;tntintl

Saturday, Ocotber

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

5, 2002

ins roll over Big Blacks, 40;.7
BY

off the punt in very heavy
traffic .
The effort was a great one,
but due· to the oncoming rush,
LOG AN, Ohio The the ball made it just to the
Logan Chieftains scored three Point !6.
Again, it took the Logan
times in the opening quarter
and never looked back in eleven just one play to cash in
posting a lopsided 40-7 vic to- as junior tailback Austin Rohr
ry over the Point Pleasant Big ran • r~ht through the Big
Blacks in an SEOAL contest Black ' defense for a 16-yard
played here ;
touchdown run. Pippin conThe Chieftains showed verted the extra pomt and in
remarkable ability to run and just two minutes and sixteen
cut in the mud. while the local seconds the Big Blacks were
boys were just ttie opposite, as down by a pair of touchthey slipped, slid, and fumbled downs.
"Well, we sure didn't start the
their .way through the muddy
iurf at Bill Sauer Field. ·
way 1 wanted us to," said PPHS
The1bosts ran for 236 yards Head Coach Steve Safford.
on . the night, while the Big "It's tough ~nough to play here,
Blacks managed just 133 but when you get down by two
yards on the ground. The touchdowns in the first two
· locals also fumble.d the foot- minutes of play_· it becomes
ball some six 'times in the con~ dam near impossible."
test, losing three ofthose.
Point went three and out on
The slide started early for the their next possession, and as
Big Blacks as they fumbled on unbelievable as it sounds and
their first offensive play with as unbelievable as it was to
Logan recovering at the Point l8 see, it took the Chieftains just
yard line. It took the Chiefuiins two plays to score their third
just Ofle play to capitalize on the touchdown. Rohr ran once
turnover as Josh Bailey bolted for no gain, and then on sec·
over right tackle and rambled ond down, the fleet junior out
the IS yards to pay dirt.
ran the Big Black defenders to
Jonathan Pippin's PAT was the .end zone for his second
good, and Logan led 7-0 with touchdown of the night.
just 21 seconds gone in the
Point showed a little offense
contest. ·
on their next possession, picking
On their next · possession, up their initial first down of the
the Big . Blacks lost ~ight game when Kevin Thompson
yards in three plays and were ran for seven on fust down and
forced to punt. The snap Nick Duncan bullied his way for
sailed over punter Kevin . six on second down.
Hudnall's head and the big
Bui, as fate would have it, the
guy chased it back to the end locals fumbled on two straight
line: where he managed to get plays - · recove~g their own
RtCK StMPKINS
rimes-Sentinel correspondent

&gt;

''

fumble on the flfSt one, but los· over from !here.
ing th~ second to Logan at the
Logan scored again when
Chiefu!in 43 yard line.
sophomore Justin Pack ran
• The hosts made it 4 for 4 with one over from the three yard
this scoring'drive, although it did · line just four seconds into the
take a little longer than the fust final quaner. The 'try for two
three. The Chieftains covered the ·was no' good, however and
57 yards in 12 plays, with Rohr with 11 :56 showing on the .
again doing the damage with his cliJck, it was 40-0.
!-yard dive over the top. Rohr
After forcing a Logan punt,
carriedtheballseventimesin.this the ·Point offensive squad
· drive, but the biggest play of the finally put together a scoring
drive was a 16-yard cornp~tion drive. Starting on their own
from t::JFrback David Ellis to 26, the Big Blacks marched
Steve
.
74 yards on I 0 plays to put
Logan started. the second their only touchdown on the
half much like they ended the board. Ntc .Dalton hauled in a
fust. They received the sec- 20-yard
aerial
from
ond half kickoff and moved Thompson to give the locals
.the ball from
50 to the the score.
Point 15, but a fine oJx:n .field
Rohr emerged ~s the game,s
tackle by Dustin "Hit Man" leading rusher With 163 yards
Baker on a fourtlr and four . on 18 carries.
play lost two yards alid the
_Kevin ThoJ!ipson led the
Big Blacks took over on Btg Bl~cks wtth 85 yards on
downs.
24 cames.
Kevin Thompson picked up· Thompson also completed 6
11 yard for Point to give the of 18 passes for SO yarcjs.
locals a first down at the 28, . Dalton had 2 catches for 27
but the wheel~ fell off again as yards, while Nick Duncan
the Blacks eventually · found also caught a pair for 20
· themselves with a fourth. yards.
down at their own 22 yard
Defensively for the loc~s.
line.
Jesse Nott had an mtercepuon
Again, the snap was high and James Markham recovand· it chased Hudnall all the ered a Logan fumble. J.D.
way back to his end zone. He Thompson re~orded 11 tru:kpicked ·the ball up at the goal les for the Btg Blacks while
line and attempted to ~'! it Seth M~theny was . right
and kick it at the same lime. behmd Wit~ 8 ~tops.
Again, the effort was a vahant
Derek Kinnrurd had 6 tackone, but the rush was too les whtle Lee Reynolds had?·
much and a gang of Dustin Baker had 4, as . dtd
Chieftains tackled him at the Daniel "Big Mac" Tench.
four. It took just two play.s to
Point will_travel to Jackson Point quarterback Kevin. Thompson tries to turn the corner dur·
score, as Batley P?unded II t~ next week m the final road ing the Big Blacks' game at Logan Friday. The Chieftains won,
4(}7. (Barry Miller.. Logan Daily News)
the one before Ellis sneaked 11 game of the season.

'the

hold off Eastern
Miller tops Southern Lancers·
.
.

'
tact knocked down . the by Marc Sicilian with IS car-.
Times-Sentinel correspondent
Southern receiver in the end· ries for 6 r yards and an extra
zone.
point conversion. Keith
RACINE _ In a battle of
Similarly, Southern pushed Moore carried 13 times for 40
inside the 25-yard line, but and Mauro had nine carries .
the winless, Miller scored lost the ba)l on downs on a for 31 yards.
once in the second quarter quarierbaciC sack by Bart
Miller ran the ball 42 times
· and left Southern alone in the Spencer and Darrell Wilson, for 141 yards as a team. .
cellar, spoiling th'e Tornado then an. incomplete pass that
Miller also gained 41 yards
homecoming 8-0 Friday night went in and out of the hands · in the air with Wilson receivbefore a large crowd at the of Justin Allen at the 19-yard ing the 36-yarder for the
damp Roger Lee Adams line. Allen went up for the touchdown,
Zack
and
Memorial Field.
pass, but Miller defenders Osborne catching another for
Time ·running out was the hammered him and the ball five yards.
·
theme of the night for fell to the ground.
Southern (0-7J gained 41
Southern, which came close
As time crept below the yards on the ground and 75 in
both at the end of the first half one-minute mark Miller took the air. Teaford had 19 carries
and also at the end of the a . knee around the two for 33 yards. Matt Thomas the
remaining Tornado time outs. converted lineman at fullback
game. ·
A twist on that plot and per- Quarterback Curt Mauro then had five carries for 12 yards.
haps an. omen to the finale dropped back to . run ou't the
Phil Pierce had a good night
w~s that time literally did run clock twice scrlirnbling later··· at. quarterback and· had great
out at the oS!art of the fourth . ally, then cutting back across numbers going into some des·
quarter when the Southern the grain and upfield . .Mauro peration passes in the last
scoreboard operation went up nearly broke what ended up a quarter. He still ef\ded up with
in sparks and officials had to · 35-yard run to end the game. 6-of-12 passing for 75 yards.
Without a doubt, Southern
keep time on the field.
Justin Allen one pass for 27
With 7:45 left in the second played its best ball .of the sea- yarps. Kyle McKeever had .
quarter, Miller convened on son, but a couple costly mis- one recpetion for six yards. .
' fourth down for a 36-yard takes may have been the dif- Buddy Young caught three
touchdol!!n pass by quarter- ,
· h
Wh t t passes for 25 yards and Aaron
a se
back Matt Mauro to tight end · ,erence tnt e game.
Darrell Wilson . Mark Sicilian up Miller field position, in the Sellers had one catch for 17
·
early , parts of the game was a yards.
scored on fhe two-point con- ball snapped over punter Jake • Defensively, Adam Johnson
version.
Neaseis head inside the 15.
had a sack. Tommy 'Shep~d
Southern pushed · the ball
From that point on, had a fumble recovery and an
inside the ten at the end of the Southei'n played with its back interception. · Shepard had · a
half on passes to Justin Allen 10 the wall, often · making 19-yard interce)Jtion return.
and Kyle McKeever, plus a some big plays and nearly
Southern
travels
to
couple good runs from Derek digging put of the hole.
Waterford next Friday. ·
Teaford. Time rim out as conMiller ( 1-6) rushing was Jed
.

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

Prep 'Roundup

River Valley nets third win .

BY DEREK TAYLOR

Staff wr~er

STEWART, Ohio - The
most important five minutes.·
of any game are the first five
of the second half.
Ask any coach and he'll tell
you that in a heartbeat. Better
yet, as. Federal Hocking head
football coach K~ith Price. .
Price saw his Lancers
squad held to just 56 yards of
tOtal offense in the first half,
w.atched Eastern tailback
Bryan Minear rut) for 131
first half yards and then saw,
in the aforementioned important five minutes, h-is team
come together as a unit.
Taking the second half kickoff with the game tied at six,
the Lancers engineered a 10play, 61-yard drive that not
only more than doubled their
offensive output for the game
to that point, but gave them the
lead for good in a 14-6 win on
a rain-soaked homecoming.
It was the first homecoming win in six years for
Federal Hocking, and more
importantly to the Tri-Valley
Conference, put the Lancers
on top of the standings with a
2-0 mark.
·
"This is the best feeling
I've probably ever had as . a
coach," Price said. 'This was
a big step for us as a team. All
the problems we've had aileviated themselves and you
saw a team come together as
an 11-man unit-tonight."
Though unavailable for
comment, Eastern coach Pat

Newland had to be as disap- the three-yards and a puddle
pointed as ·Price was elated, of mud offensive scheme in
as he saw his team drop its the rain on the deciding drive,
fifth straight and drop to 2-5 keyed by a 30-yard bootleg
mi the year, 0-2 in the TVC. from Butcher, until Ollom ·
Things starteo well for the punched it in. from the three
Eagles, however. After tak· wtth 7:28 left m the frame. . .
f
E
h d
in~ the opening kicko f, astern a no answer.
After setting the pace for a
Mmear busted a 72-yard run
on their third play from career night rushing the ball,
scrimmage, giving Eastern Minear was held silent much
the 15all at the· Federal 25. of the second half. He man- ·
However, the next play saw aged just 14 second half
Eastern cough up the football· yards on nine carries, and got
forthe first of what weuld be little help from backfield
a season-high seven times on mates Ken Amsbary and
the night, giving possession Brandon Scarbrough.
and momentum to the hosts.
Even so Eastern had a ·
Even so, it was Eastern who chance to tie the game .with
would eventually draw flfSt · 7:26 left in the fourth as
bloOd, as Minear dominated a Amsbary gained 36 yards on
five-minute, eight second a scramble of his own which
drive and capped it _with. a put the ball at the. Lancer 9.
five-yard run to paydut w1th Three more plays netted only
2:141eft in the flfStquarter.
four yards, however; and on
Though Fed Hock would fourth and goal from the ~ve
not mount a serious scoring Amsbary spotted semor
threat through mo!ll. of the Brandon Buckley in the endfirst half, · the Lancers got zone but the reciever lost his
themselves together just in footing· and any chance of
time to put together a drive hauling in the pass, leading :
late in the second quarter that to a turnover on downs. "
gave them all the momentum
From there, it was Ball's
going into the intermission. tum. After being held to just
. After quarterback Kenton 40 yards' rushing on 14 earButcher started things off with ries, the Lancer star back
a 10-yard run to -_the Eastern busted through the middle, .
33, Cody Ball ana Seth Ollom running over around and
took turns grinding up yardage through Eastern defenders
until Butcher, on a second ana for a • 58-yard gain on first
14 call, took a naked bootleg and .I 0 from the five.
into the endzone from '15
The run all but sealed the :
yards out. The iry for a two- deal, and Ball finished th·e ~
point conversion failed, cn:at- night with 17 rushe_s for I00
mg an up~ tor-grabs sttuauon yards, keeping hts seven
out of the second half gate.
game streak of 100-yard
The Lancers used more of rushing nights intact.

'
Pomeroy' Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Saturday, October 5, 2002

·scoreboard
Buffalo 61, South Gatlta 35
Buffalo
14 26 14
7 - 61
South Gallia
7 7 7 14 - 35
. Scoring summary
·
First Quarter ,
SG - Zeph Clary recovers blocked
punt (Rafael The len kick) 7:34.
B - Daniel Watson 64 run (Patrick
Hart kick) 6:39
B - Jason Smith 72 run (Hart kick)
1:46
Second Quarter

~

B - Smith 18 run (Hart kick) 1t :54
B - Smith 5 I run (kick blocked)
1021
B - Watson 60 pass from Joey
Tulley (run failed) 7:25
B - Watson 21 pass from Tulley
(Hart k1ck) 3 58
SG - Josh Waugh 1 run (Thelen
kick) :13
Third Quarter
SG - Brandon Caldwell.6 pass
from lack Lee (Thelen kick) 6:46
B -Watson 71 . run (Nathan
Hesch! from Tulley) 3:43
B- Dustin Briscoe 70 run (kick
blocked) :19
'
Fourth Quarter
B - Chad Stotts 65 interception
return (Hart klck) 8:57
·
,
SG - Brandon Coburn 27 run (run
failed) 7:50
SG - Bern1e Fulks 50 run (Seth
Williamson run) 2:59

•

•

•
•

'

Second quarter
G - Ty Simmons 76 run (Donnie
Johnson run) 11 :46 ·
G -Tom Bose 32 pass from Travis
McKinniss (Dustin Hall kick) 5:02
G - Mike Davis 5 run (Dustin Hall
kick) :33
Third quarter
W - Marc Sm~h 35 pass from
Carson Leach (Adam Schaad kick) ·
9:28
·
Fourth quarter
G - Ty Simmons 11 run (kick failed)
t 1:17
G - Ty Simmons 99 run (Dustin
Hall kick) 3:44
W - Scott Alloway 21 pass from
Carson Leach (Adam Schaad kick)
2:37
'
, Team Statistics

G
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-a«·int ·
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
Punts-yards

20
453
133
586
7·9·0
2·1
5·49
0·0

tn~rba!' muntf ·illtllltnfl • Page 83

River Valley 20. Coal Grove 7
FH- Kenton Butcher 15 run (pass
McArthur Vinton County 16, Albany
River Valley
6 14 0
0 - 20
failed ) :5 1
Alexander 6
,. ~
1
Coal Grove
070 0- 7
Third quarter .
Millersport 7, Lancaster F1sher
Scoring summary
FH - Seth Ollom 3 run (Cody Ball Cath. 0
Firat Quarter
run) 7:28
Nelsonville-York 14, Pomeroy Meigs
RV,- Joey Graham 1 run (kick
6
blocked) 6:04
Glime Stat11tlca
New Concord John Glenn 27,
Second Querter
·
E
FH
Zanesville W. Muskingum 12 ·
CG - Cody Chaffin 10 run (Dan First Downs
13 7
New Lew:ington 12, Warsaw River
Cordle kK:k) 5:02
·
·
Rushes-Yards 39·207
42·166
ViewO
RV - Joey Graham 43 run (run Passing Yard~ 13
0
Portsmouth 22 , The Plains Athens 0
failed) 4:20
·
· Total yards
227
166
ShAdyside
49 ,
Zanesville
. RV- Jesse Ward 5 run (Raysean Comp·att-int
1·7-f!
0-1-{J
Rosecrans ·a
Allen pass from Joey Graham) 1:29
Fumbtes-toSI
7-2
3-0
Steubehvi!te 21 , Zanesville 7 ·
Penalties-Yards 3·28
7·45
Stewa.rt Federal Hacking 14,
. Team StatleUca
Punts·Avg.
4·28.5
6·37.5
Reedsville Eastern 6
First downs
16
8
Thornville Sheridan 35, Zanesville
Rushes·1ards 46·224 · 39·144
Ohio Prep Football
Maysville 7 ·•
Pass1ng yards · 70
92
.
Frlaoy'a Reaufta
Waterford 42, Glouster Trimble 7
Jotal yards
294
236
Amanda·Ciearcreek 24 , Bloorri·
Waverly 33, Wheelersburg 21
Cmp·A«-lnt
4·5·0
4·14·2 • Carroll 0
Wellston 22, Belpre 12
Fumbles-lost
3-1
2-0
· Ashville Teays Valley 21, Canal
Woodsfiel&lt;;l Monr,oe Central 6,
Penallies·yards 6·80
6·50
Winchester 17
Sarahsville Shenandoah 0
Punts-average 3-45.7
3·17.3
Bainbridge Paint Valley 49,
Individual Loaders
Chillicothe Zane Trace 0
W.Va. Prep Football
Rushing River Valley : Joey
Chillicothe Unioto 22, Chillicothe
Friday's Results · ·
Graham 19-85, Allen Brown 10-58, Huntington Ross 21
Bridgeport 22. Robert C. Byrd, 21 ,
Jeremy Stroud 5·16, Jesse Ward 7Circleville 20, Circleville Logan Elm OT
25, BuMy Geiger 2·25, Adam Durst 3· 13
Brooke 13, Buckeye Local. Ohio 10
15, Coal Grove: Cody Chaffin 29·122.
Crooksville 19, Philo 0
Buffalo 61 . South Gallia, Ohio 35
Justin Hyland 4·9, Tim Ellio« 3'21,
Dresden
Tri-Valley
19,
Cabell Midland 27, Huntinglon 12
Ryan Turvey !·minus 7, Gary Moore McConnelsville Morgan 12
Calhoun County 27, Wirl County 0 ·
2-minus 1.
Fairfield Union 7 , Hamilton Valley
Capilal14 , f&gt;arkersburg 8
Passing River Valley: · Joey Twp. 6
Chapmanville 42, Gilbert 24
Graham 4-5-0 70. Coat Grove: Ryan
Gallipolis Gallia.48, Vincent Warren
Clay County 18, Tucker County o
Turvey 4·14-2 92.
21
Fort Hill, Md. 17 , Hedgesville 14 ..
Receiving - River Valley: Burly
Hemlock Miller 8, Racine Southern
George
Washington 28 , Greenbrier
Geiger 2·25, Ryan Spalding 1·34, 0 .
'
.East o
Raysean Allen 1·11 . Coal Grove:
Lancaster 53, Grove City ·Central
Grahon 40. Liberty Harrison 12
Patrick Roush 3·88, Tim Ellio« t -4.
Crossing 6 ·
Gree nbrier West 32, Su mmers
Lancaster Fairfield Ur\ion 7, County 12
Hamillon 1\vp. 6
Guyan Valley 14, Hamlin 6
til Iller B, Southern 0
Logan 40, Point Pleasant, W.Va., 7
Herbert Hoover 23, Poca 20
Miller
080
0 - 8
Marie«a 29, Jackson 7
Hundred 79, Bishop Donahue 19
Southern
000
0-0

w

10
39
205
244
11·29-2
3·1 ..
5·45
4·159

Wahama 37, Duval 14
. 7 12 6 12 '- 37
Duval
. 0 · 0 0 14- 14
Scoring summary
First quarter
W - Anthony Mitchell 61 pass from
Team Statistics
Lambert (A. Mitchell kick) 9:26
Buf
SG
Second quarter
First Downs
12
17
vv - ~amber! 5 run (kick failed)
Rushes-yards ·· 28·337
48·266
7:11
Passi ng yards
81
75
W - Chad Zerkle 10 run (pass
.Total yards
397 •
441
failed ) 0:00
Comp-a«·int . 3·5· 1
9-17·3
Third quarter
.Fumbles-los!
5-3.
7·3
. W - Justin JO&lt;dan 1 run (kiek
Pen~llies-yards 11 -90
9-65
failed) 3:12
Fourth quaMer
Individual Statistics
W- Jeshua Branch 11 run 10:56
Rushing: B - Daniel Watson 4·
0 - Brandon McClure 9 pass from
135, Jason Smith 9·98, Dustin Joe Laoy (run failed) 8:07
Briscoe 8·94, Joey Tulley 2· 18, Kyle
W - Brandon gagnon 12 iun (run
Chapman · 1·1. t:Jrelt Reed 2-(·4) .. failed) 5:57
'_
. .
Cory Legg 2·(·5).
0 ~ Josh Graley 9 pass from Lacy
SG - lack Lee 22,114, Bernie (Lacy run) :52
Fulks 4·88, Brandon Coburn 3,24,
Team Statistics
Jos h Waugh 10·22, Jake Workman 4·
·
W
0
13, . Curtis ·Waugh 2-10. Dustin First Downs
19
O'Brien 3·(-5).
'
.
Rushes-yards 53-447
31·74
Passing: B- Joey Tulley 3-3·1, 81 , Passing ywds
98
57
Breit Reed 0·2·0·0:
Total yards
586
244
SG - Josh Waugh 7· 13·3-66, Zack -Comp-an-int
4·10,0
5-14·1
Lee 1 +0·6, Seth Williamson 1·2·0-3; Fumbl e~·losl
1;-1
1-1
Bernie Fulks 0-1-0-0. ·
Penalties•yards 16-159
3·15 '
Receiving : 'B - Daniel Watson I · Punts-yards
1·32 :.
3-96
8 1.
. lndvldual Stals
•
·•
SG - Jason Merrick 2·25, Brandon
Rushing' W - Ryan Mitchell 9-1.34,
Caldwell2· 18. Zack Lee H6;·DustiQ Jordan 12-127, Jeshua, Brimch 5:53,
O 'Briwn 1-16.
Cllad Zerkle 5·48, Gabe Lam~ert 13·
39, · John · Barton 3-34, Brandon
Gallla 48, Warren 21
, Gagnon 4·18. Aaron Faulk 2-(-6); D
GAHS
· 13 22 0 13 - 48
d · Cox 12·50, Mark Carnes 5·
Warren
·7 o.; 7
7 - 21
16, · . ~ Kinde,r s.9: Ryan Kinder 2·0,
Scoring summary
Joe .acy 4·(· 1)
.
First quiuter
•
sing: W - Chad Zerkle 3·8·0·
W - Scolt Alloway 4 run (Adam . 37·0, Gabe Lamber.l1·2·0·61-1; DSchaad kick) 8:59
· · Joe Lacy .s-14-1·57·2
G- rom Bose 30,pass from TraVIS
F.teceiving: w:.... A. Mitchell 3·89: R.
McKinniss (Dustin Hall kick) 5:27
Milch.ell 1.-9: D - Brandon McG!ure
G -Travis McKinniss· 27 run (kick 2-38, Graley 2·23, &lt;:;ames ·1·6
failed) I :59
·
W~hama

Ia

..

. Scoring summary ·
Second quarter
M - Wilson 36· pass from Mauro
(Sicilian run) 7:45

Hurricane 44 , South Charleston 6

Iaeger 36. West Side 6
Independence 30, Richwood 28
James Monroe 82, Midland Tra11 6
Keyser 42, Hampshire 6
Logan . Ohio 40 , Point Pleasant 7
Magnolia 14, Sf. Clairsville, Ohio 0
Marsh Fork 12, Montcalm 6
Martinsburg 75 , Sherando, Va. 3
Matewan 50, Burch 8
Meadow Bridge 32, Valley Fayet\e
24 •
~oorefie ld 33 . Southern Garrell.
Md. 26
Morgantown 14. Wheeling Park 0
Mount Hope 58. Gauley Bridge 2
Musselman 45. Jefferson 33
Nicholas County 19. Brax ton .
Cou~ty 13
North Marion 16, East fai,rmont 7
Parkersburg South 36, Nitro 14
Petersburg 31 . Westmar, Md. 7 .
Philip Barbour 42, Lincoln 14

Princetori 16. Woodrow Wilson 14

Ravenswood 32 . Ritchie County 8
Ripley 36, Spring Valley t 7
Riverside 47, Sr' Albans 7
Shady Spring 63 , PikeView 6
, :
· Sherman 20. Uberty Raleigh 14
Sissonville 21 . Roane County 0
South Harnson 46 , Doddridg!3'
County 0
University 42, Elkins 0

Valley Wetzel 3, East Hardy 0
Van 34 , Big Creek 0
Wahama37, Duval14 •
Williamson 36 . Shelby Valley, Ky. 8
.. Williamstown 54 , St. Marys 14
Winfield 13, Sea« 6
Wyoming East 8, Oak Hill7

ANY SIZE DOUBLE-HUNG

Team Statistics

&amp;
M
, 6
7
31·41
42-141
75
41
t 16
182
Comp-~n-inl
6-14-0
2·4-1 ·
Penalties
7·35
8·50
Punls·avg
7-30.4
4·26.5
Individual Statistics
Rushing: M - Sicilian t8·61 , Mauro
9-31, Moore 13·40; S - 'l'eaford 19·
33, Thomas 5-12
Passing: M- Mauro 2·4·t ·41'1 ; S
- Pierce 6·12·0·75·0, Teaford 0-2·0·
0-0
Receiving: M Wilson 1· 36, .
. Osborne 1·5; S- Young 3·25, Allen
1·27, Sellers 1-17, McKeever 1-6 ·

$229.00

First Downs .
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total Yards

INSTALLED

·-·

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
TILT-IN .FOR EASY CLEANING

l-800-291 ~5600

Federal Hocking 14, Eastern 6 •
Eastern
. 600
0 - 6
Fed. Hocking 0 6 8
0 - 14
Second quarter
'Firat quarter
E - Bryan Minear 5 run (pass ) .
failed) 2 : 1~
.
.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
FRpE IN-HOME ESTIMATES .
POMEROY, OHIO

FINANCING AVAILABLE
wv #023477

L.------------....i"-------------....;-~-,.....-:.....1

Second quarter

2003'S
Cherr Truck Dealert
Pontiac Dealer!
Gltf Dealert

Brand New 2003 Pontiac Sunfire
Sun &amp; Sound
• Sunroof

OVI
'1111 20DJ

5UV

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• CD System
• Rear Spoiler

.
Chery Trutlts And
ears In St«k Nowt
200J Pontiaes

In 5toet Nowt

of season; Meigs falls to ~-Y
Staff report

COAL GROVE
River
Valley scored on iis opening
kickoff and quarterback Joey
~faham led the Ra.iders in the
atr and on the ground to lead
his team to a 20· 7 win over
Coal Grove.
It's the Raiders first win in
the Ohio Valley Conference.
Oraham was 4-of-5 passing
for 70 yards and had 19 carries for 85 yards rushing.
Allan Brown had 10 carries
for 58 yards for River yaney
(3·4, l-1 OVC).
For the Hornets (3-4, 0-2),
Cody Chaffin led all rushers
with 122 yards on · 29
attempts.
Graham led the Raiders
down the field on their first
drive, which began on ·rhejr
own 30-yard. line. which was.

capped off . by a Graham
touchdown.
Graham was 3-for-3 passing for 59 yards on the drive.
Coal Grove tied the game
on a Chaffin 10 yard run in
the second quarter, before
touchdown runs by Graham
(43 yards) and Jessie Ward
(five yards) gave the Raiders
a 20-7 lead at halftime as neither team scored in the second
half.
The Raiders play host to ·
·Rock Hill next in the first of
three home games to end their
season.

the Buckeyes' 14-6 win over
Meigs.
In the third quarter, Adam
VanDyke caught a touchdown
pass from Jason Meade for
the first points of the game for
Nelspnville.
The Buckeyes extended
their lead to 14-0 on a another
TO pass, this one to Brandon
Maiden from 66-yards out in
the fourth quarter.
.
Meade finished with J67
yards on 6-of-12 passing.
Meigs ·finally got on the
scoreboard later in the founh
as Jeremy Roush pounded
one in.
Roush led the Marauders
(3-4, 0-2 TVC Ohio) with 116
·yards on 25 carries, while
VanDyke had 19 carries for
74
yards to lead NelsonvillePOMEROY
Nelsonville-York broke a York (4-3, 2-0 TVC Ohio).
scoreless first half with a pair
Meigs travels to Alexander
of second half touchdowns in Oct. 11.

HAS NOW BEGUN.!
KING CARIBOU
WOLVERINE•
INSULATED
GORETEX"
WATERPROOF 8"
SPORT BOOT

5

NOW
15417

(R... SID.OO)

109'7

(R... SIJI.M)

• 270 HP 6 Cylinder
• 16" Aluminum Wheels
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• CO System
• Ta&lt;es, Tags, Title Fees extra. Rebate included in sate price of new vehicle listed where applicable. "On approved credit. On .selected models. Not responsible for tYpographical errors.
Prices Good OCtoller 2nq Through October 6th .
·

.....

Buick

@

It's all goo'CI

WI'U.IIIHIII"

Federal Hocklna 14,
Melp&amp;

AipiB~ · Fai rpl a in

CHIVIOLIT

"''

(Z;&gt; Oldsmobile.

ftll PIDD
COUNTRY

eaae&amp;till~
' Rt 21 Churctl Str&amp;jll

.

I '

·'

Route z Bypaaa • Point pleasant WV

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm • Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

Take 1·77 to Ripley FAiRPLAiN Interchange
(exit 132)Tum North on Rt. 2t,
Dealership is 3 miles on left

675-7870 • Mon-Sat9·7,Sun 12-5

I

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·--

-~ -

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- ------;:---"._.._ _______
.

,

~ .-~

........

----~---....:..-,---,.----.....C....:..-----..--•-"-"""'""- '·~--~-

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Pomeroy • . Middleport •

. '--

OH •

r ~ 1r• 0.i:
~ r == 1r ~ l.r.o_...!..~iiiiiii_...l r
I
Saturday, October 5, 2002

"Pt. Pleasant, WV

'(Ertbune - Sentinel -

1 Bedroom Apartment,
Khchtn Furnished,
.All
Electric. $300 Month, DepOsit Required Near High
SchOOl (304)875-3100 Or
(304)675-5509

FI&lt;Owood. Cui your own
(304)895.3287

'

case, $150: full size VIOlin tn Interior, spo1ler, 4 new Hres, while, $2,000

I

j

r

L.--,;;4-;,WDs~;:,-.,J

"'--'!'"'-----,.1-

In O{le Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR A NOW ONLINE
\

utrtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

Call TDdGV~~··

or Fax To

446-3008

or Fax To

I"7An\

WRITE AN AD

Successful Ads
Should Include Theft Items
To
Get Response ...

Lr
_ _.PERso_
- -·N•A•LS_

r
~~:::
_.I

ed, washer access 2 bed-

Why wa 1t? Start meetlng
OhiOsmgles tonight cantoll
free 1·900-766-2623 ex t
1621

C-1 Beer Carry Oi,Jt permit
for sale Chester Township
Metgs County, send teners
of mterest to The Da1ly
Sent1nel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

r

GIVEAWAY

1 year old male German
Shepard· Chow m1x good
farm dog (740)379-9207 1.
1/2 year old male We1mera·
ner gentle (740)379-2316
13 roosters, k1ttens- white &amp;
black to good homes,
(740)992-4265 • •

t

Lu.&lt;AND
FOUND

FOUND· 2 male puppies, 4

!9 month s old , on H1dden
Valley dnve, 1 Brown &amp;
B(ack, 1 Brown &amp; Wh1te
(7&lt;10)441-181 9
FOUND- Vinton Area Large
male shor t hatred dog
Go l der,~
Retnever. very
fnendly Call (740)388-8466
(740)388-9017

i

70

~

YARDSALE

YANnSALE·
GAw~·ous
313 Georges Creek Road
Saturday &amp; Monday 9-5 00
Sonday Noon-5 90
4 family ya rd sate 10/71QJ8 9-4 30, brand name
clothes, Home lnter1 or &amp;
somethmg 101 everyone
4371 Cherry Rrdge Road
Aro Grande
41 Garf1eld Avenue. Galllpohs, Satu rday- Sunday October 5th-6th 9-5pm , TV s recl(ner, computer, toys
clothes, 2 tam1ly sale
708 2nd, October 3, 4, 5
oPens @ 9arn. Old Chnst·
mas 11ghts and ornaments·
mce w1nte r cloth mg , m1sc
1tems Aa1n postpones
77 State Street, Saturd ay &amp;
Sunday 9-6 boys toys &amp;
clothes. ladles s1zes 3-8
Clay TownhOuse, Lovers
Lane, October 4th &amp; 5th,
Barnes. McCarty, Donnet
Friday Sa turday, Sunday,
House hold hunt1ng, pet
Ra1n or s1ne adul1 clo1hmg
2· 112 m1les !rom Holzer. follow s1gr'i on 160 Bulav1lle &amp;
Kemper Hollow Road
Fnday- Satu rday, 9am·3pm
B1cycles Sony Plays tat1on
Pub dart board , por tabl e
basketball system teenage
and ,adult cloth1ng 204 Kmeon Dnve
harage Sale· · October
4,5,&amp;6 th, 79 Brook Dnve
JUSt off 588 1n Rodney
Watch tor s1gns Ram or
sh1ne 9-4pm
lns1de Sale - October
through October 5, 9amspm, 14728 State Route
554, Btdwell Gravely mower. Troybultt ti ller. antiques,
lurMure, Nasca r Coliecllons. 1 500 to 2,000 \/Ideas
&amp; games p1ctu res, Fenton
glass , ca ndles flowe rs,
tools &amp; MISC
Mulll-family yard sale adult
&amp; ch1ldrens clothing, toys,
houseware s etc todd ler
bed Fnday &amp; Saturday 9-3
ra m c8nc els until next week
300 3rd Avenl!.e
Oc tob,er 4 and 5 aown
Route 7 ' nght on Orcha rd
' Hrll Road fqJ_t ow signs Furnrture
Ws:stern book s
tools. clothes

I

HELPWANml

~.,r.m_IID_.J&gt;_·W·A·NilD-·1

ac!ob" 5 &amp; 6, Huge 5 taml· L.--·s·1N-A---• Gallipolis located home
ly yard sale, 554 Jay Drive, Would you l1ke to JOin our health agency seek_tng 4
Spnng Valley Lad1es Jeans ded1cated team of care·gl\1· qualified Individual to pef&amp; clothmg 10-26 (lots of 18 ers? If you are a nurse aldet form chart audits Apply a1
&amp; up) some men teen &amp; and would like an opportunl ~ 3084 State Route ~ 60,
ch1ldrens clothmg Beanres, ty to work at the area's pre- GalllpoHs, or phone toll free
puZZles COs, kn1ck knacks, mtere Alzhetmer's care Ia· 1-866-441-1393.
new portable 5" TV, couch ctilty, please call Sce{liC
&amp; chatr lamp table 3 old H1Hs Nursmg Center today Help wanted caring for the
school seats, trunks, dress· at (740)446-7150 and a·sk elderly, Darst Group Home,
er &amp; rockm g chair plus for Jayne Darling Or stop npw paytng mln1mum wage,
much more 8am·5pm
by m person and pick up an new shtfts 7am-3pm, 7am_ _ _ _ ___:_ _ _ appltcatton We ar.e located 5pm , 3pm-11pm, 11pm·
Sale· (ra1n or shme) Fndav 1n Gallipolis, (behmd the ?am, call 740·992·5023
&amp; Saturday, 1478 Gree n Spnng Val ley c 1nema)
Ingram Barge Company wtll
valley Dnve off Evergreen
be accept1ng appllcattons
Household, clol hes good
for Deckhands at the Ashstuff!
Iam:! KY Dept tor Employ074
YARD SALE·
ment Se&lt;;:urity, 1844 Carter
PoMF.ROl'iMIDDtE
Avenue.~, Ashland, Kentucky,
41105-2620 on 10n/2002
through 10/8/2002 from
Carport sate- house next to
8 OOam till 3 OOpm. Heavy
Carleton School 5 fa m1 ty
Iabor background 18 prefe rclothes (all Sizes), electronred (i e farmi ng, loggmg,
rc's. housewares,
be dconstruction, etc) You must
spread, curtams rugs, m1shave a Socl81 Securtty to
cellaneous, Monday Oct 7,
We offer: '
apply EOE, MJFN
ratn or shrne, beg1nmng
9am
Ingram Barge Company wtll
• $500 sign on
be accepting applications
Ga rage Sale- Oct tst, 2nd,
for Deckhands at the Po1nt
3rd , Halloween 1tems nrce
bonus
Pleasant, WV Employment
c1o1hes &amp; g1tts 33400 New
Secunty,
225 S1xth Street,
Lima Ad , Rutland, rai n or • Up to $7/hour
Point Pleasant, 'IN 25550sh1ne
0039 on 10/812002 through
Garage sate- ra1n or stime, • Paid training
1019/2002 from 8 ooam tilt
lots of kmck necks power
OOpm Heavy labor beckwheel s S1tverado tru ck, • Paid vacation ..ground Is preferred (1 e
etc , Fn &amp; Sat , end of
Iarmlng, loggrng construe·
Leadmg Cre ek turn left Trtus
IIon. eIc ) u,ou mus1 have a
Ad ., Dale Eilts res1dence
Socta I Secuny
I Io appy
I
EOE,
MIFN
Start
your
new
Huge yard sale- Oc t 3rd ,
4th &amp; 5th 32263 Hysell Run
Jewelry Salesperson FTIPT
job today!
Ad . Pomeroy, Ohto, 41h
Must be dependable outgobr1dge on left follow signs
Ing, enJoy worktng wtth the
Large sale· decoraltve &amp;
public &amp; have excellent
math sktlls Apply at Acqulshousehold tte ms, boys'
Call
It1ons, 151 2nd A\lenue,
clothes s1ze 7·10, g1rls 5·7,
1·877·463·6247
Gall1pol1s No phone call s
Holly Lane near Holzer·
please
MeigS Clinic. Oc1 4th ,
ext. 2454'
! Oam-6pm 5th 9am -lpm
LPN'S
Oct 4 &amp; 5, 9am 5pm, State
~
Are
you looking for a chal·
Route 124 2nd house past Are you look1ng for a tun lange? Would you l1ke lhe
Church ot God, (Nadrne and exc1trng wofk atmos· challenge to use your nursHudson residence, ) Sears phere? Are you mterested m ing skills to "make a differcab 1net sewmg machtne compettt1ve wages with sh11t ence?• If so, consider what
and weekend differentials? the n9\\' leadership team at
w1th cha1r ra1 n or sh1ne
Then perhaps Overbrook Rocksprings Rehabilitation
YARIJSA!£.
Rehabilitation Center Is Center has to offer: ComPr. Pu:AsANr
the place .tor you We offer petltlve Salary, Flexible
an excellent benefits pack- Schedul111g, Educat1onal asMason WV October 4th &amp; age mclud1ng med1cal and s1 stance, Job sattsfactton.
5th 3rd Street (Bestde Ll dental for FT and PT em- For a limited l imo only
brary) Sam-?. household ployees. We are currently Rocksp rings Aehab1hlal1on•
1tems, clothes. stereo, exer· hmng LPNS lor 12 holrr Genter 1s oHerIng a $2000
c1se eqUipment, b1ke, other sh1fts For more Information sign -on bonus for (PN s
m1sc 1tern s Plus Candle please contact Krlstle Mad· For more lnlormalion please
spec1als Great scents avatl· den, LPN, Staff Develop- contact Debbie Stewart,
men! al (740) 992-6472 or Assistant Director of Nursable at sale priCeS
slop by 333 Page '51 , Mid- mg . 740-992· 6606 Equal
Yard Sale Ra1n or Sh1ne dleport, OhiO and fill out an Opportunity Employer EnOctober 3 &amp; 4th Sam·5pm appbcatton
couragmg Workplace D1ver·
October 5th 8-12 1 miles --------~
SIIY
ATTN
Point
Pleasant
out Leon Baden Road from
At 87 Tony and Dusty Postal posttions Clerks/car· McClure's Restaurant now
rlers/sorters No -exp re- h ~rmg all 3 locations, full., or
Sm11h Residence
quired Benefits For exam , part-time pick up appllcaWANIE&gt;
salary, and testing lnforma· tton at locaflon &amp; bnng back
TO BUY
lkln call (630)393 -3032 Ext between
9 30am
&amp;
782 8am-8pm 7 days
•o
• .00a(ll, Mo nd ay Ihru 5 alAb solute Top~ Dollar :~ U.S
urday
Silver Gold Cams, Proof- AVONt All Aretist To Buy or
Need Extra Cuh?
sets. Diamonds,
Gold Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304Part-Time
cleaners needed.
Am gs,
U $ ' Currency,- 675· 1429
M T S Co1n Shop, 151 Sec· ::::.:'-.:.::=::' - - - - -- Call (304)675·4218 Lea\le
ond Avenue, Galtlpol 1s, 740· BabySitter needed In Beale Message
446·2842
School 0 1stnct Early morn·
NOW HIRING
1ngs to put k1d s on bus and
Make up to $7/hour
baby all day C~ll (~04)675 Paid tratnmg
c:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ,8_::15:::5:.;__ _ _ __ __
Call 1-877-463-6247
1:
e)(t 2458
110
Dommo's Now Hiring all lo·
H FJ_.P WANTED
cat1ons Pt Pleasant, Galhp·
1
OTIC OfA
olts, Eleanor Safe drivers,
ACCESS TO A PCf
must be 18 Apply m person •' PAN Opportunillealll
_al:..:l::.oca=ll::.onc:s::__ _ __ _ ProgreSSIVe Step Aeh. b
$1 000- $4,500 PT/FT
S8rvlces has exCitmg PAN
Onlme Tralnlng 1
Dn\ler wanted, local compa- opportunities tor theraptsts
ny seeks dell\lery dnver. and assistants In Gallipolis
www betterltfetoday com
Must be fam111ar with sur· See what Progressi ve Step
.;..
.free Report
roundmg counties Experl· Rehab has to offer
1·800-884-4965
ence preferreD, but not re- Organized, dynamrc 1n·
Addressers wanted lmmed1· qwred Non- COL Hours
house rehab items, NICe faatety! No experience neces- Mondpy- Friday 8-Spm.
cilities m great locat1ons, ex·
sary Work at home Call Send rBsUmes to Sparkle
pet1e nced, friendly and pro·
(405)447·6397
Supply Company, P:O Box
fess10na1 staff Excellent
Apply at ~ounty Corner 278, Gallipohs, OH 45831
PAN rates Please Call An·
Cafe 1n Letart)l· lpm., Sen· · EA$Y WORK' EXCELLENT dra M1ller, Staffing Coordi_
PAYI
ous lnqwres Only ' .
nator at 1-866-563-61 30,
lax (614)923· 3802 or a-mall
Assemble products
Overbrook Rehabtf1tat1on
reS umelito Amlller@ Extenat home
Center IS curre ntl ~ accept·
dlcare com EOE
Call Toll Free
1ng apphcat1ons ,tOr a pa'rtlrme (8 hours a w.eek) Acll\1· I 800-467-5566 Ex/ 1'2110 Part·t1me babys1tter needed)
lty Assistan t Apptica!IOns Full/ Part-lime COL drtvers, Ord nance area 304-674·
rny be P1cked·, uP at ~33 good pay Insurance 401k 613f
Page Street, Mlddlepqrf,'~bh vacatron and home eve~
Part· tlme AN only- vls1!1ng
45760 or phone Mrke Ur1res, . nings 'Call ( 740)286 _14 Eij
children with spec1al medl·
Actrv 1ty Director at ,(740)
992 6472 ror·more mforma- Need 7 lad1es to sell Avon cal needs, paid by VISitlmlle(740)446·3358
age, phone (740)992-6626
110 n

Looking
for a job?

a

t

I

bath upstairs. outside &amp;torage. Deposit &amp; Rent
(1.110)245·9595
..
,
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
cts AT JACKSbN ES-

Includes Free Yard Sale Signl
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
O"oer 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Delctlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 DIVI

ll"o

663 3rd Duplex, unlurnish-

992·2157

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

3tm &amp; balh, furnished ap1
al utiHiies paid ,excepl alec.
$i75.00 a mon. 304-6751¥5

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (30~) 675-1333

•

TATES,

52 Westwood Drive
from $297 to $383. Walk to
sh&lt;lP &amp; rnovlea. Call 740446·2588. Equal Housln~
O~portunily.
-

, P9UCIES: Ohio V1ltt~ Pu~lthlng ~"the right to edit, rtjtct, or cencel 1ny lid 11 any time. Errors muat be reported on the fiflt day ot
Trlbune-S.ntinef-Aeglater will bt ruponaiba. for nom~ than the; c011t of the .p~~ee occupMd by 1M error 1nd only the first lnMftlon We
tny lou or expen.. thllt rMUitl from tt. pubiiCIItlon or oml•eton' of •n .ctv.rtiMfMftl. eon.ctlon wiii!M m.Se In the flret •nll•ble edition
eontldentlel. • Current rtte Ctlrd IPP.IIH. • All rat ..~m. advertiHmlntl
to lh• Feclet1il F•lr Houelng ACI of 1968.
IICCepltl only t.lp Wllnted .a
...ndan:t.. W. wiH
In wlol.. lon of th• ltlw

.. ••w•v-

ro

•rw

ffiH WANml

I~r.i il__

PT Tax prepare"rs needed
for busy ta:c off1ce, Pomeroy
location We will train, compurer skills required Send
resume to : The Dally Sentlnel, P.O. Box 729-13 Porn·
eroy. Ohio 45769
Temporary help, S5 hr to
care for my mother I~
Cheshtre, 7 days a week,
6am-11am,
5pm·9pm,
(740)367.0302
The Galli a Couhty Local
School Drstnct, ftscal agent
for the Galha County ~Help
Me Grow" Program, IS acceptthg resumes for tile rot·
loWing part-lime position
Help Me Grow FarrHiy Support Specialist to provide
family support to parents of
1nIanti toddlers btrth to three
w1th d1sabllltlesl delays or at
•nsk" Th ts w111 1nc""""'
1··"- pa·
rent supr;x&gt;rt groups\ parent
tra Intog s, paren t Io pa rent
suppo rt and parenI educa·
uon Quahflcatlons Parent
of a Child With a dlsablltty/
d9tay or at ~nsk" . experrence working wtth younll
children and therr families,
ability to communic"te with
families and an understand·
1ng of holistic, family centared services Please send
resume by Oclober 11,
2002 10 Gallta County Help
Me Grow, P:O. Box 943,
Gallipolis, OH 46631 .
The Meigs SoU and Water
Conservation Distnct 1s ac·
cepting appl1catlons for a
Lead 1ng Creek Watershed
Coordinator To recet\le a
copy of the Job Description
and appllcal!on, please call
740-992-4282 or stop by
our office at 33101 Hiland
Ad Pomeroy,Ohio 4576 9
after October 7
Appllca!Ions are due by close of
busmesa on October 23,
2002
- - - - - - -- Tobacco Grant- seeking II·
censedlcertifled'degreed In·
d1vlduat with excellent communtcat1on
skills.
20hourslwk, no benef1ts,
(740)992-6626 ,
Truck Drlvera, Immediate
hire, class A COL required,
excellent pay, expenence
required Earn up to $1 ,000
per week.Call 304-675' 4005
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
plasma donors,,.earn $50 to
$60 per week for 2 or 3
hours weekly Celt 810 Life
Plasma Service. 740-592-

Ji66-i:5~1,;,.-~-----,
8~

1140

'fRAINING

L---iiiiiiiiii--rl
Gatllpolll CerMr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367,
1·800-214-()452,
Reg 190-05· 12748

11M

sOoch 51 , Middleport, Oh
2 tlD Furnished Apt U!IIHI..
Pild, Depoan &amp; Aelarences,
No Pall. (740) 992'l165

WANJED

Iro

w.11ANJE).o.[)(J
_ _...

It

Private duty home care Will . - - , · - - : . : - - , - - ,
care tor the &amp;!derfy and run
errands
Call
Patsy
(740)245-0339
--------Top to Bottom Cleaning.
Service, "professional, resl- All ,.., ntate tldvertl•lng
In thle new.pilper t•
dentlal, office cleanmQ, also
•ub}ectto the Flder1l
yard &amp; gutter. at an affordsF•lr Ho~lng Act ol1t68
ble pncp (740)992-2979
mak• It Illegal to
w111 pressure wash houses, which•dvertl"
"•ny
trailers , and decks Call
praferenc•, llmitlltlan or
441 -4238 ask for Ron or
dl•crtmlnlllon biNd on
leaw message
race, color, religion, Hk
famlllllltatu• or natlol"'ll
origin, or any Intention to
iii:~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
make any •uch
B~
preference, limitation or
OPPoRn.JNI'I'\'
discrimination "

r

~s~ I~.,t.•a__:.~.Rmr
.....

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO recommends that
you do busmess With people
you knoh'i,;and NOT to send ,~,
moneY th ugh the mall until
you have mvest1gated the
offering

Gracious living. 1 Jnd 2
._~bedroom apartments al VII·
~""'''"'"'
lags Manor and Rive!llldt
Apartment&amp; In Middleport
··
From $278-$348. Gall 740- Beautllul Fireplace Mantel
94
2202
992-5064 Equel Housing $300.00 9Opportunlllet.
Buy or sell Rlve" ne An"·
"
"
Honeysuckle Hilla Apart· ques. 1124 East Main on
menls located behind Colo- SA 124 E. POmeroy, 74().nial Drive behind Highway 992·2526 Russ Moore,
Palrol Post 3 BA now avail· ilown:jji:e~
1 ~...;____

r

•

,. r

Informed thel'lll
dwelling• advertiHd In
thle MWeRapel' Ire
av•llabJe on.1n equal

SERVIO'll

·--..iiiililiiliiiiii-_.1

2 pnvate rooms a\latlable
October 15 for 2 elderly iadies, spactous house, nice
scenef1, Owned and oper·
ated ...t&gt;y : ~-acttv~ty d1rector
(740)256-9315
Foreclosure! 4 bedroom, 4
Bath just $14,900 For llstTURNED DOWN ON
mg caii 1·80D-719·3001 Ext
SOCIAL SECORITY ISSI? F144
No Fee Unless We Wm'
1-888·582-3345
Hunttng and Fishing Cabin
back pf\rt of Tycoon Lake
on Edema Trail (740)446·
1360

r10

H~

, Middleport,
New · Manager's . Speci al, ~15 per month plus depos16x80 3 bed
~. 1r. runt mcludes water, sew~: . red~ced t~:·nly er &amp; trash , (740)992-Q175
$27,900 delivered and set 3br House located m Me,
'up You sa\le over $6,000 son, WV $495 + Utilities·_
including urw;ierPIMrng, an. No Pets (3Q4)773-5881
chars, vapor. barner, 1 set fi- 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olt\le St,
berglass s1eps, 20' of ullllly $325 mo (I~0)446·3945
lines ,under home. all tnstalled, One only, CQies's Mo· 7 roon'ts, 2 bath, Gallipolis ,
bile Homes, U.S 50 East, No pets, water 6a1d, $550 .
month,' deposit &amp; referen~: sAthens, OhiO 45701
(740)388-, 100
/ ;
Must Sell- factory mistake
Clean 3 bedroom house 1rr '
2002 3 BR· 2 BA. W1ll sacn·
flee, many extras, very nice country No pets, wate~ !.u r.~. ' 1
Save $8,900 00 (304)736· nlshed $450 monlh,
deposll (740)245-5064 :
3888, 1·888·736-3332
House at 512 4th Avenue, •
Repo's and .Used homes S550 month &amp; deposit, no
Company
LtquidaiiOn p9ts, (740)441 _1519
across the natton $500 !:::::::.:~::c:::.:..::::.:...__
down and take over pay- House lor rent 1n SyracusQ
menls (740)446-3570
Oh1o $475.00 a mon +
$475 00 dep no pets 304· ,
Wanted- No Cred1t Custom- 675-5332
ers to Fturchase New home
under Government fmanc· House for sale or rent, $375
tng program $1200 rncome mo., 101 Pleasant Ridge
required Call to pre-quahly Pomeroy, (740)698-6783
(740)446·3384
Older 2 Story Farm House '
Wanted Local company 3br bath 1/2 3 m11es frorn ,
wants to purchase 1• 10 Rio Grande College. Newly •
acre Sites for new homes renovated No 1ns1de pets
Call (740)446-3093
Must haw good references •
$550 month $500 deposrt1 We have approxrmatety 10 1( .30::=4:r;)6~7::5:c-7.':6:::24:__ _ __
used homes for under $2,000, call 1-800-837-3236 One bedroom house, Ra; ..•
c1ne, Oh1o (740) 992-5039
formto
Taking appllcattons, small 1 . :.
bedroom home Middleport; refere nces &amp; depos1t re - ..
qulred, $300 per month. ,
Building lor rani, located a! (17,;,;;4;1:0).::9:;:92~-:::,6:,;15::4~'!'"'-..;
28 Cedar Street, can be
used for office or small resMoFORBILEnf!~ •
1au&lt;ant (740)256-6661
"""''
•

2

-::
Country setting- 314 acre
Watch the deer wh1le your
only 5 m1nutes from downtown Gallipolis 3 bedrooms
full dry basement. central
air, very neat home Home(740)446-0369,
Work
~(7_4.::0')44
=6-'-9-'-7"53"----For Sale By Owner Ranch
S!yle Home 3 BR 1 5 Baths
Excellent - L o cation
$6 •
9 900 00
(740) 446·7825

~

, 1,98'7, ~Gt81d Arh "1 985
Dodge Artes tor parts, can
her~J~ rUn; Wh rlpoot wastter,
•(V40)446'-75 after 6:00.

' ~t:S!~~~~~~~ ' 3

I

Land Contact- deposit re·
qulred 3 bedroom, 2·H2
·
bath , farm house- In Patnot
$69,000 3 bedroom, 1-112
ASking $79,900 (740)379bath , 2 car garage 10 minutes from Holzers, Ohio 9887
Peace, Quite, Private Coun(304)675-2364
try Living wtth Spacious
2 bedroom house, $24,000 V1ew 2 m1les from Route 7
In Gallipolis, 911 4th Ave- and 33, on Yost Road, Aa·
nue Call (740)446-8585
c1 ne , Oh 2 5 Acres sur·
•ounds !his "orne wh ich ol2 bedroom , 1 bath on, acre
rr
fers 3brl 2bs, hardwood
On blacklop road near Rio
•
Grande (740 )44B-Q6B9
floors , large rooms, new
kitchen, d1ning room . ll\l1ng
2 bedroom, 1 ,bath, 1 car room pius full basement
garage. Fenced back yard. with garage, 30'x36' newer
Cool, tree· shaded lot local· outbuilding with concrete
ed at 107 Bastlan1 Drive floor and o\lerslzed garage
_
c_a_ll _,_7( _4_0')4_4_6_·0_1_23_ _ _ doors, concrete driveway,
Plalns-Chesler
3 Bedroom newt~ remod· Tuppers
Bled , tn Mlddlepon, call Tom Watar $139 000 Owner Fl·
5 m
nanclng to qualtlled buyers
Anderson a•e
11
r p.
992 3348
Additional acreage avalla·
::::::.· ='-"------- ble. (740)992-5072
3 Bedroom with garage on "'-'"-"?-~:!:'-~"-"'--~
appro)Cimately , acre On PRICE REDUCED 3 bed·
Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry room, 2 balh Brlck Ranch
(304)675-5-'l&gt;'ll..,
on 1 5 flat acres, newer car·
pet, doors an appliances,
3 bedroom, 2 belh, ranch full basement (partially fin-

"'---ioFOiRiiiSiiiALEiiiiii-.,;1
"

Or:Je Bedroom Apartment in
'Pt ' Pleasant. Furnished.
Very clean and nice No
Pels Phone (304)675·1388

~a;~~~;~~:;o~::clo~~~r~

,

~a~drooms! ll'·~loors. CA. 1

112 Bat~! N,wty' Carpeted,
A&lt;lull PoOl &amp; Baby Pool, Patio, S1art $375/Mo No Pets,
Lease PlUs Security Oepos1t
Requtred, Days· 74D-446-.
3481 , Evenings· 74Q-3670502. '

rOO '

&lt;

r ~~INGS

l'!li

i

___

~&amp;

ACREAGE

112 acre lol on Tycoon Lake
w/ 12)(60 Trailer $16,500 00
(740) 247-1100

i

~~

Clmper &amp; Boat Storage
Aintal Mason Co Fair
Grounds Wed &amp; Sat 9AM5PM (304)675-5463. AI 62
North PoJnt Pleasant

~

12x60 2 bedroom, 1 balh,
on a rented lot. A1Ver - v1e~ ...
$1500 OBO. (740)446-7695 •
(740)645'll51 (cell)
_ _ _ __ _ __ ___..
2 bedroom all electnc mo~ •
bile home Spring Valley
Area, $350 rent) $250 de·
postt No pets (740)441·
6954 (304)675·2900 •

up, or.der here and earn
$$$. 800·2~2640
OR Trimmer, used one time,
$200 (740)441-8299

LAMARCE BEAUTY SHOPPE

r..,

'90· Plymoulh Sundance,
good condlt1on, h1gh mile·
age, $500 or best offer. 1989 Harley Davidson custom soft tall $11 .500.00
(740)992-20n
992·2209
95 Ford Asprre. AIG, 5speed, 51mpg, $1 ,000 1995 Yamaha Kodiak 400
(740)446-1225
o4x4 , 1.200 actual miles:
$3,000 (304)675-5906
96 Camero, T-tops, $6,895
~(7_40..;)_388_'l_f_6_9_ _:__
1999 Honda Racon 2504x2 , excellent condition,
97 Marquis LS, $9,800; 73 used tess than 100 hours,
Maverlck, runs good, $500. $2100. (7,!0)379-2695
Firm (740)44Hl586
-99-:F:::Ire'-:-b:--'lrd-:-.-sl:-lve-r,:-V:--6:-.-5=-- 2001 Kawasaki Prairie 400
4x4 , accesiOfles, ,adult rldspeed, . tiiVcruise, A1r, CD. den, low hours, $3,995 ~rm ,
PS, ASS-brakes, dual air· (740)992-()(}78

ar_2~!5ll~r2--~-~--.,I6~~g!rt!:.=':~!In~r~=

'Motorized wheelchair 14
speed blender. used. one
11me, 6-1/2 fool Christmas
Rw &amp;
1roe used 1 time and lrlmGRAIN
min~• (740,,......,...9
~
.___;~....;_.;...-_ _ _- . Exoellenl corn silage SlandNEW AND USED STlEL lng, delivered or stored.
SIHI Beams, Pipe Rebar (740)379-2181
For Concrete, Angle, Chan·
nel, Flat Bar, Steel Graflng
For Draine, Driveways &amp; lrlljllo--·A~u·ro·os---,
Walkwlyl. l&amp;L SCrap MelFOR"··_
als Open Moilday, Tuesday, ·---iiiii""'-"'-iiiio-rl
Wednaoday &amp; Friday, llam· 4.30pm. Closed Thursday, 1966 Uncoln Continenlal, 4
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. door, project car, $900
(740)44&amp;--7300
(740)446·1240
Pool !able, oiale lop, red
cloth, excellent condition,
Pool !able Ping P&lt;lng !able,
wnh net Included, $800, elso slallonary bike, $50. Cali
(740)
.w6·2018

-:-:--,--'-:-:-::--~

1964 Moroedee 190E, 94KI
mlloe,
good condilion,
$2,600
Negollable
(740)367·7491

"-="'-'--.;..;.;;.;...____

ao.ooo

M radials $t2,000

improve your child's reading skills at any age.

• Read the newspaper to your child regularly.
• Explain what you're reading and encourage
a discussion.
• Read the newspaper together as a family.

(304)89 5-3882

• Let children choose what they want to read.

Gars lrom $500, pollee lm- 1997 Marada MX-1 sport,
1rto• wllh 1~ Men,uise•.
pounds for sale I For llsling
1-800-719-3001 ext 3901
cove!ll, goodlesl 1n excel len! coodHion, garage kepi
, Uvely's Auto Sales
Trailer has spare tire All for
92 Dodge Oynasly, $1000. $7,000 Gall (740)446-2444
Mercury Topaz, $750, Baas boat. loaded with u 9•
Gao Mallo, $650; lraa,
OBO
54 ,000
90 Chevy Cavalier, $750,
87 Dodge Daylona, $650;
87 Pontiac Bonneville $600·
90 POntiac Grand Am $900;
91 Plymou1h Acclaim, $950;
90 Chevy Cavalier, $800;
89 Chevy Celebrily, $700, Engine lol"94·97 ·Ford As·
89 Ford Thundarbi&lt;d, $1000 plre, 47,000 actual miles,
$100; Gray carpet for 97-99
Call (740)388·9303
Jeep
Wrangler,
$50
(740)446-4766
TitucKs

• . Encourage your children to read the news'"'"''"'' on their own.

88

j

r'o

r

Caring People...

mHIDTHIDIIDCE/
REFRIGERHTIOR
-POSITIOD

ing

individuals

team.
flexible

For appt. call

2 Blue Eyes· Female· 40 tbs .

begins with

Wearing burgandy collar·

FRIENDS DAY

Monday 9/2~02
Last seen Tombleson Run· ·

on Sunday, October
Sunday Evening

Oct. 6

scheduling

Special Singing Nightly
Nursery Provided ·'

• Arbors at Galli olis.
HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Caring People...
The
SENIOR CARE CENTER

Difference

If interested, please call

8 am

Marue Short at
1-740-446-500 I
- 4:30pm - Monday through Friday

I foloi 7Pr Senior Care Center offers campetuive
cvmpen~atiorr m a {n endl). profes~wnal

atmosphere that supports your growth and
development.

An Eq1ml Opporwmt} Employer

12-Noon

Hunters Safety
Course
Oct. 12 Noon till 5:00
Oct. 13 Noon till 6:00

.

Call Noreen Saunders

446-4612

Mickey
We L,p,ye You

MAIN STREET CAFE_

Sale

103 Liberty St.
2002

Charlie Lilly

GOSPEL SING

&amp;

The Poor Side Band
Sat. nlghl

7

Fort Randolph
October

9pm·1am

Loti of aeaaonal ttema and misc.

public

Cost$6.00

competitive

441-8320 or 446-7112 at

7,

2002 5:30 pm

Bring your own lawn chairs .

Racine American Legion
STEAK and NOODE DINNER
October 6th at 11 :00 am .

and

For More Info...

with

Stephanie Kemper, SDC at

Happy 60th Birthday

6 pm

ARIEL Theatre .4~6 Second Ave.

call 895·3692

nursing

Please contact

First Match

'

9:30 am Worship Service
Mon-Wed 7pm

be having a

our

Registration required

Needs daily medication please

• : will

join

12·hour shifts

401K and paid vacat1on . EOE

6

Shirley Road area

9am •

to

Excellent health and dental Insurance,

Factory &amp; Slug

Real Band-Real Theatre

Oct. 7,

offer

wages, including pay for experience.

Broad Run Gun Club

2401 Jefferson Ave .

Monday,

We

•
REVIVAL

REWARD • LOST DOG

Yard

Dependable, energetic car·

Difference

Answers to 'Tasha'

$10 advance
$12 at the door
Info: 740·4_
46-2787

RD's/LPD's
Wanted:

The

Totally White Siberian Husky

Oct 19 7:30 pm

HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
;::::;:;::;:::;::::;;:;..;::;::;::::;:::::::=;;

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

years of experience

675·8070

&lt;;LASS IFl EDS!

riO

446·2342 • 992·2156 • 675·1333
--.
·.

·.
I •

I

are some simple tips you can use to help

~

Perm Special Thur. Nov. 30th

ELVIS

'

you, it' s a great learning tool for kids. Here

1987 Buick Park Ave. No
FOR SALE
ruet. new tires. looks great. L--.,;iiiiiiiiio-pl Aolor lor 1990 Dodge Oal\0- ..,.,..-..,.,....-.;.. .
1
Walerllne Spacial: 314 200 $800. Neg. (304)576-2501
HOME
PSI $2 1 00 Par 100, 1• 200
f993 Fo&lt;d f50, 6 cylinder, ta- New for $20, If no an·
menage
IMPRoVEMENTS
PSI 535 00 Par 100, All 1966 Chrysler 51h Avenue 4WD, runs good, $1,550 swer, leave
(740)446-9429
Brua Comprosalon Fltllnga LoadedOLOS ii 1- ·s d (740)448-&lt;\999
"-I I ~\ I I I "In StOCk
1990
our ng a •
Cuslom Building &amp; Remod·
RON EVANS ENTE~PRIB- den Loaded
1995 Chevrolet Blazer, 4 ftp;;;;~~;;;;;;~ ellng, all types of home repair, over 18 years experl·
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800- 992.()622
door,
4x4,
$5,800
HoME
ence,
free estimates, fully
537-9528
1989 Guliass Supreme LS, (740)446-0425
,
IMFRoVEIIENI'S Insured, no job to big or
front wheel drive, rebuilt en- 1995 GMG Sierra X 71 Limsmall, (740)992-1119
Watkins Products; double gina and transaxle, many
BASEMENT
lied Edl!kln eX1ended cab
srrength white &amp; dark vantt· new parts, have receipts, 4x4 folly loaded 77,000
WATERPROOF.lNG
"Wtnter: Utlllt1es, Increases~
ta, spices, aalve~. liniments converted to A134A air, au· mllea Prlce$12.50000
Uncondlrlonal lifetime guarLet Custom Bu1ld1ng &amp; Re·
and other products, call to overdrive, power every· 985·3675
antee LOcal references furmC?CJehng help you, call
(740)949-3027
lhlhg, excellent Inside and
nished ·Established 1975
(740)992-1119,
lor alllypos
asking
$2200~00, 95 Dodge 1500, shortbed Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446oul,
(all !Illes) (740)992-3076
K \ plckup 318 cu In 5-speod, 0870, Rogers Basement of home repai r at affordable
stove,
costs w1th a Free esti mate
new dual exhaust, · tires, Waterproofing.
1990 Buick Riviera 3.6 llt01, alhocl&lt;s, ball jolnls, clulch,
to start.
pump,
$5,300
Pearl White, sunroof, all• fuel
power op11ona, very good &lt;740)446-4316 after 5prn
C&amp;C GenQrsl Home Maintecond $2800 304· 773-9557
•
nance· Painting, vinyl sld·
IN MEMORY
lng, carpentry, doors, win· ReStdentral or commeraal
Block, brick, sewer pipet, 1996 Ford Aspire, good oar,
claws, baths, fJlfJblle home wiring, new stirvlce or rewindows, llnteta; etc. Claude 40mpg, regularly serviced
repair and more For free pa!rs. Master Ucensed elecWinters, Rio Grande, OH KBB $2,200. Will sale
$1,450 (740)446·0198
In Memory of
estimate call Chat, 740-992- tncran R1denour Electrical,
Goll740-245-5121.
6323
1995 Grand Prix SE, 98K,
Made Priddy on her
WV000306, 304·675-1786
4-door, PW, PL, teal blue,
birthday. October 5th
Clean Car, (740)448-4279
Sadly m1ssed
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
1998 Ford Escorl, auto, 2
but not forgolten .
AKC Boston Terrier pups,
door, 4 cyl. , economical·
Happy Birthday
born 618102. 1 male/ 2 lemaies, $250. (740)448-7573 runs good, $1 ,500, 1995 '::L:o:v:•:~:o:u:r:F:ann:=:l~::!
Mercury Tracer, 4 door, au- ..
after 5pm
10, 4 cyl ' $1,200, 1993 PlyHELP WANTED
- - - - - - - - - mouth Voyager, V-6, auto,
Boxer pups, full blooded, looks and runs good,
$100 Gall (740)441-0315 $1,500, (740)742-2367
after 6pm
SENIOR CARE CENTER
1996 Neon, 65,000 miles,
Labradors· 2 year old, yel- A/G, till, $2350. OBO
low, male, neutered, $200, (740)256·1875
5·112 year old, yellow, male,
accepting
neutered, $200. 4 year old, 1996 Satum, 74K, like new, Now
applications
for
chocolate, female, not $3,795: 1996 Contour,
spayed, $275 (740)245· 109K, $2,495; 1998 Malibu, mainta.nance posi·
9577
53K,
$5,695: 12 olher !ton
for
local
- - , - - - - - - - cars/ trucks starting at supermkt
chain.
Rallerlor pups 6wks old $350 COOK MOTORS Electncal &amp; refng·
$100. (304)675-7946
(740)446'l103
eralion experience
Aeglslered Pll Bull pups, All 1997 Seabnng JXI converti- needed.
Excellent
shols &amp; wormed. (740)245- ble, leather Interior, need benefit
package:
9497
payoff, excellent condl110n, Vacation,
insur$9,000 (740)446-1225
ance,
profit
sl'laring
Ttny Yorkshire pups, 2
If interested, please call
males,
$400
each 1999 Lincoln Nav1gator, pkg. and competi·
Martie Short at
loaded with TV system, tlve
76
wage,
etc.
(740)256-64 anytime
51 ,000 miles, new tires,
1-740-446-500
I
Send resume to:
~Walker pups for sate, UKC $28,000 OBO, 992-2209
Sam- 4.30pm - Monday through Fnday
Ohio Valley
PKC registered
Super
slakes qualified. (740)446- - -:-- - - - - - - Supermarkets Inc.
Parfs or whole car for sale
Holzer Semor Care Center offers conrpeflfrve
0689
P.O.Boxn2
- - - - - - - - - 78 LTD, 87 Pontiac Grand
compensanon ln a friendly. proje!&gt;sional
Gallipolis, OH
Wlemaraners. 1st shots, Am, 83 Pontiac 6000; 94
45631 or
atmosphere that supports your growth and
tails docked dew claws re· Chevy Corsica, also campcall 740-446-9312
development. An Equal Opportunir~ Empluyer.
moved, 3 males, $300 er, sleeps 4 or 5, sits In
ext.
116
(740)446-4412
pickup call (740)256·1631

recently spayed disappeared

,

Not only is the newspaper informative for

j,jiijpo;b;;;;;.;:rsFOR;;;;&amp;:;..,.M••OIURS
~--.,~

First Church of God

675·3040

r

(

(304)546- 92 Dodge Convers1on Van,
1 owner, Iota of new parts
- - - - -- - - - $2,500 304-675-6693
89 Dodge Daytona, $200
cO.::BO
..::,
. (::_7.:_40::);:25:..:6:..64::..:.:.7;:6_ _
Mo'roRcYu.t:S

Come Visit Karen Jarrell

r

'

dillon $1 f ,OOO
2562

BULLETIN BOARD

I

.

Ol!l1ngr~m !able &amp; 6 chairs,

china cabinet, 4 ptece bedroom su1te, rechner gun
2 !railer lois, $125 monlh cabinal, (740)742-1800
plus ulllllles, (740)256-1015 OIRECTV, SO lwo TV hook-

1

r

6500 BTU LP gas healing
stove, warms 5 rooms, $295
(740)247-3373

___

{·,

2 &amp; 5 acres home sites,
Eastern Local School Dis·
trlct, UtilitieS available, Bp·
pro\led road, sorry no trail2 bedroom mobtle home, no '
tshed), 2 car garage, At 33 ers (740) 985 -3595
pels, $250 mon1h, $250 de;
abo\le
New
Ha\len
Mason Co 73 + acres posit (740)446·4051
(304)882· 3897
o,:::.;:;::.:::.:::::._ ___ Pond, c1ty water, electric
Puvate country house, great Very n~ee trailer Included 3 bedroom mob1te home for
lor lamlly, 6 bedrooms, 2 Great Hunting, timber Nice rent , Pomeroy area, no
0 1!!s,_,(1_!7_:4!:!,0)!!9::-:92~·~58~58~-­
baths, s1ttmg area, ll\lmg development for home site ~P:!!.
room . kitchen &amp; dmmg $150,000. (304)862-31 31
96 14x761ralier, 2 bedroom,
room, basement, swimming
2 bath, all electnc, no pets~
STAR
ESpool, new barn, new porch- MOANING
740)446 "1062;
es, approx ' 5 acres TATES- 3 10 6 acre lois lo- $400 monlh (
cated at Bashan Road &amp; Accepting applications$90,000 (740)742·1049
Morntngstar Roads, Racine 1/2 ~edroom trailer tor rent/
Oh
Prrced from $25 ,000 to $300 depoSif, $300 ~
MODFOILER.,1_1~
All have road month , references, no pets,
___
i3AI.J!.
, $39 000
frontage, Tuppers Plains- (740)992-0078
12x24ft add on room for Chester Water, County Ap· For rent· mobile home In
Mobile Home Carpeted, pro\/Bd Bu1ld1ng Lots. Fea· country, 2 bedroom 2 bath 1
paneled.
Mu st
move turing a 6.6 acre lot $29,000 $350Jmonth plus deposit, •
and a 5 acre lol $25,000 (740)742-2357 ar 740.742•
$3.000. (304)675-8714
Owner Financmg to quail· 2396.
12x60 3 bedroom w/cfa fled buyers (740)992-5072
Two bedroom trailer fof
washe r &amp; dryer, stove
Must sale immediately 35 rent , (740)441-9455
$5,495, 740-992-2167
acres on Sandhill Ad call
14x50 1994 Fairmont, 2 304·695·3807
At\urJMmrs
bedroom. smooth top range,
roaRENr
tn
"
t
"-..
slde-by·srde
refngerator,
w/d, cia, small front porch &amp;
l and 2 bedrd'om apart· :
deck, $6500, (740)696-0105
ments, furnished and untur· .
10
nrshed, secunty dtlposll ie~ 989 Spruce Ridge 14)(70,
qurred , no pets 740-9923 bedroom. 2 bath, 12x40
2218
porch w/roof. must be , _3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
mo\led,
&lt;740)74 2· 271 3 Homes From $199/Mo, 4% Small furn1shed apt All utll·
leave message.
Down, 30 " Years at 8 5% Jt1 es paid except Electnc. No
Good used 1995 14x70, 2 APR. For Listings, 8()()-319- Pets, Security Deposit Aebr , vinyl siding/shingle &lt;ool, 3323 Ex! 1709.
qulred
$275.
Month. ,
call Harold 74().-:!80.994lJ - ,
(304)67,5-1365

• 1997 Ford F-150, 4x4, 5
speed, 6 cylinder, excellent
condition, 1976 Wilderness
camper, exceUent condition,
awning, furnace, air; 1991
Olds Cutlass Supreme,
good condition Call be·
!ween 2 OOpm and 5.30pm.
(740)446-9954

Antique rocking chair, $100;
Smger tredle sewtng ma·
Chine, $150, fuel all burner
lor lurnaco gun lype, $50.
Twin Rlv.,. Tower lor old· (740)367-n29.
erly/ disabled.
Blackberry syrup, $3 pint,
Now accep1ing appllcal•ons . (304)895-3408 (304)895·
lor 1 br, ali ulllllles paid v30::7.:9:__ _ __ _~
HUD ·assisted, carpeted -apartment rent Is 30% of COOL DOWN, Central Air
your adjusted Income call Conditioners and Heat
304-675-6879 be1wean 8- Pumps If you don't call us
4·~o pm weekdays EHO
we both lose. Free estlmales. (740)446·6308 and
Upstairs, One Bedroom 1-BOQ:291-0D98.
Apartment at 651 2nd A\le •
Gallipolis. $350 per month D1amond engagement rtngplus deposit, Water and matchmg wedding ring 1/5
Trash included In rent; Call ~carat, stze 6, $250 negotlaOebb1e or Judy at (740)446- ble, corpound bow with
7323 at Bossard Library
s1ghts &amp; arrows, $50.
(740)379 2360

#

$10,700 OBO. (740)441 ·
9865 after 5pm weekdays,
weekends anytime
2000 Ford Ranger extend·
-~---,----- ed cab, 4-WO., V-6, oH road
2001 Mercury Cougar ZN, package, step- aide, AI, AC,
fully loaded , Zinc Yellow 32,300
miles
Pay-off
304-882. 2842
$17,!;00 Will sell lor
-'-'--- - - " - ' -- -- - $f8 ,900 (304)675-2790
2001 Mi1subish1 Echpsa AS
16k mi., alloy whls, theft 86 Chevy 4x4 , 305 V-8, au·
1oc Sspd ~~n (304)n 3- to air, 3 Inch lift, $6000
,.
' ~" .
5235 or (304)67 5-0226
304-895·3364 or 304-895·
71 EL Gamino 55 EJL Con· 34-41

I

able Rant starts $3101
M~-OIAND&amp;:H.
-·~rnonlh. Low &amp; moderate In·
tn.~o"'....u ... .Al,.l!.U\Ji)
come Equal Housing Opportunlly. (740)446-3344 or
TOO 1-800-750-D760.
1 sloker slove, $500; 1 pellei stove, $700, ptus 6 begs
of pellets. pipe &amp; pad,
(740)379-9380
11740 Case Skid Loader,
rei- s3soo. (740)643-0508

~~·~p~po~rtu~n~lty~bne;::•·=~

Start Your Busrness Today Prime Shopptng Cen·
ter Space A\lallable Ar Af·
fordable Rate 2 Nice Executl\le Offices Newly Remodejed. Sprtng Valley Pia·
za Call (740fl.4&amp;.3481.

j

Thl• neowep8plr ¥fill not
knowlngtyacc•pt
adve~rtiHrMnt• for re•l
Ht.te which I• In
Yl'ot,..atlderson,~••~te

with lighting &amp; dresser to
match (like new) original
price, $3,()()(). $99S, Modern
dmg room !able (glass) &amp;
chairs, $75; WOOd lwn caplains bed wllh draw- &amp;
-·,
end dask· 6 monlha old,
$299 Gall (740)36M502
Used furnitura store,· 130
Bulavlllo Pike we sell mal·
tresses, bunk beds, dress·
J!!ll, _couches, appliances,
irluch more. Grave manu·
menta. (740)448-4782 Gal·
llpolls, OH

i

1996 Claylon 14x60 2 br 2br. Re'ferences &amp; Deposit.
glamour bath, all elec cen· No Pels (304)675-5162
tral atr 304-675-8180 leave
3 bedroom, 2-t /2 bath, '
message if no answer
2 car garage, furnished, ·
2000 sq. ft home on 1 acre, Kanauga • Mobile Homes
10 m1nutes from hospital (740)441'l310
St1ll under construction 4 3 bedroom bnck hoUse on
Bedrooms/. 2 Bath wl1h Mercerville Road $500
swlmmtng pool (740)446· monlh , (7~0)2 56 · 1417 or "
3570
;
(740)256-6228

r·o .

style, open floor house plan,
To Do
covered front porch Side
1.,.1!11_______. sundeck, appr01c 1 mtle from
town on State Route 588
A&amp;E Con1trucllon
Buill In 1995 on 1 2 acres
Roofing, concrele, siding,
(740)983- 0730 or (740)446•
remodeling, decks, painting, 6161
dry wall metal buildings,
pole barns&amp; footers
Attracttve, spac1ous one
(304)674.0118
story bnck ranch style
home, attached CO\Iered
All types of masonry brick, carport , 3 bedroomS, herd·
block &amp; stone 20 yrs Expe· wood floors throughout, full
nence free estimate
basement, central heating/
1-:!M'-773-9550
coolmg, new heat pump, 1.4
Georges Portable Sawmill, acres, located on quret
don't haul your logs to the country road 1f2 m1le !rom
high school, 1o mtles Irom
mill Just call 304-675-,957.
Galltpohs on Little Kyger
HouSecleaning,
reliable, Road Contact (740)446M nest and ha\le teferences 3157 or (740)446-1387
w1th 20 years of experience
Gall aHer 5 OOpm (740)446- For sale by owner 2 BR , livIng room, ktt, d1n1ng room,
2506
bath and utlh~. partial base·
M&amp;M Pressure Washing &amp; ment, pat10 lfnd front porch,
Pamtrng Decks, Trailers, little over 112 acre, 3 car ga·
Houses, Boats, Lots, Etc rage, In Bashan close to
Ca ll
for
Estimates new highway go1ng 1n
1740)368-1532
$68,000 00
(740) 949 ·2~52 call e\le·
Nutter Constructi on WV
n1ngs or lea\le message
03 1734 General Contractor,
re s1dent 1al &amp; Commerctal Country Home with 11·112
consvuct1on, new houses &amp; acres 3/4br 2ba., "2' Carroofs, sidtng, _windows, ect Garage, above ground PQ,OI.
No Job to big or to sm~ll Handcrafted kitchen cabi·
F&lt;ee es ti mate~ (3Q4)593· nets Off Leon Baden Rd.
1607 or (304)882·2114
(304)458-1560

:

HOMES
FOR SALE

2

Rooms and
Furnished
Balh, Upstairs, Clean, Aol·
erences and Deposit Reqolred No Palo (740)448· tS19

HD UUII!y trailer, $275 OBO. leave massega ,
leave .message if not home. Fair calve&amp;- A-I aired, Heat
(740}446·9794
Seeker plus Who Made
Who, black &amp; hatter broken,
independenl Harbalife Dis- (740)867-6637
tributor, Call For Product Or
Black Angus , bulls,
Opportunity (740)441 1982 Reg
·
yearlings &amp; older bloodlines
JET
N Bar EXT., Rila Fullback &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
Widespread ~nile guaran·
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
l n loed 51000 304•372•2389 .
Rapalred,
New
&amp;
Aebulll
ch apeI Aoad, Porter, Ohio
(740)446·7444 1..S77·830· Stock. Call Ron Evflns. 1- Reg. Quarter' Horses.
9162 Free EsUma!es, Eoay 800-537-9528
Black/while gelding 3yrs.
financing, 90 days same 88 _ __:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ $1200., Palomino &gt; S!ud
cash VIsa/ Masler Card
2yrs., Gray/White avera 1yr •
Drtve· a·li~l e save alot.
Martin Model U40G Unvent· $1600. Eac'h Weanllngs
ed gas healer wHh bklwer Stud and Filly $1500. Each.
Queen solid Oak well bed $350. (304)675-6951
(304) 576-3.2 16 or (304)546-

c4.:.563c:_l.:.(7.:.40c:)446-:..:..:.::_:_73::98::___
Good Used Appliances, Re·
condltiohed and Guaranload. Washers, Dryels,
Ranges, and Refngaro!ors,
_ Skeggs
Some sian at
595
Appliances, 78 V1ne S!.,,
(740)446-7398

nilnth, appliances furnishltd· Centenary Road. Call
(740)446-9442

l\egtster

Sentinel

Ofcfee~~~
HOW

a'bedroom apartment, $375

t'

,_-----------:----....

~~

314 olio Violin In WOOden 2000 Alero, whrte with gray Grumman atep van, 14 H.
(740)379case, $150. (740)44&amp;0893 AMIFM cassette wHh CD, , 22 18
For sale-- two (matchmg)
power, 43.000 miles Warllowered Lazy-boy !ocf&lt;e!ll,
ranly 1o 100,000 miles, Ex·
VANS &amp;
t740)949·2674
cellent cond1tron, asking

·

Appliances. ~ndllloned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
f\~lriQrBIOnl, Up To 90 Days
Guaranteed! We Sell New
MllyaylaMg Appliances, French Free Information on lndivwA
1 Bed room
partments C
aytag, 740-446-n95
..,.
I.JvEsnxx
Starttng at $289/mo, Waihual Computerized Astro&amp;ogl-o~ Orver Hookup, Stove Beds- comple1e, ~ . re- cal HoiOSCOjl88. In- "
.altd A!Mrlgerator. (740)441 - cllner, spring &amp; mattress, etudes Deacrlptlons, price 1 112 year old white laying
1 ~19.
microwave,
microwave Ust &amp; Definitions. Send . $~ hens,
50t
a piece,
i br apllor ron! $100 880 s1and (740)446-9742
for Postage to: Poss•bilitieo, (740)985-395&lt;3
dep &amp;$300. a mon. all uti! GE washer, heavy duly PO Box 138, Pomer&lt;l')l, Oh • - - - - - -- included :!OH75-3654
$96, Whirlpool Dryer, heavy 45769 ,
possiblll- 20-70 pound pigs, $20-S25
each (740~
duly, $95, GE electric lles022002Dyahoocom
2 :BA gare~. stove/ ret~
···•
range,
$95,
GE
Rel&lt;igeranE
n ..
etltor·, Central Alr. No pets
u
Cabinet Stereo $50 4 year old AeglsterB(:t ....uar• Aiferencel Deposit re· tor, almond, $95, Whirlpool folding ~erclse bike $25 ter horae Excellent trail
. qulred. (740)446-433Sioave relngeralor, white, nice, Phone (304)882-2755
horse (740)441 -9670
$195, Uprlgh1 freezer, $150,
meseage
Whtrlpool washer/ Dryer set, Grubb's Plano. Tuning &amp; Angus Bull Calves for sale·
2 BA, $325 monlh, $300 de- $300, also have lurni!Ure Repairs. Problems? Need 5 high quallly pure bred An·
pOsit, close to University of now Skaggs Appliances, 76 Tuned? Call The Plano Or. gus Bull calves (740)669·
Rio Grande, (740)245-9060 Vine Sl ree1, Gallipolis, OH 740-448-4525
9507 or (740)646'l200

CLASSIFIED
.

6lltlll'llap U:tmn ·6mtt~l .• Page B5

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

,,

I

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'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Ple~sant, WV

Page 86 • 6aturbaP QI:imri -iPrntinrt

BETTY

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

WAK~ UP- YOU'RE
llUffiiN(; YOIJR ~I'ES
8EIIiNO YOUR EYE~I05

' ';J~I.ISTt.t :-

-

'

Saturday, October 5, 2002

ACROSS

ALDER

TEMPO

52 Zlgug

Hello, dolly Cl

COUI'II •

1 Ac:tr.a Capshaw
5 Pod veg-

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hera

Vulnf!rab lf!: Ni!ilh!:r

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O'JSfUNCllONAL I'AmiL'f

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UNIT .. .

Nortk

F.nt

1•

Pa!!S

1•

PIU

2•

Pa1'1

4•

Pau

Pau

PUI

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0

't\'eu

attMt
· 55 Hlka
58 Monateur'a

.(-U1)
Pill
12 lltod-waxtod 59 Untruth
t'SO Klrghll:
13 Con~
range
14 Roe '
61 Squadron
t5 Admire
62 .Coal mea16 Data
eure
_
17 H - ' 63 Satarru~nder
18 Squlnttod · 54 Burglar'a
20 Vanity '
target
22 Egg on
23 Not hla or
DOWN

• · 42

•

54 F.-.ckly
Kluegar'a

24 Dainty
27 Extremely
31 Boot part
3-4 Opening
35 Coul'l
atatement
38 Hurry n up
38 ta In debt

Opening lu d: • Q

0

2 choices
A. J. Toynbee. a
British hi storian ,
wrote: " We ·human
beings do have some ·.
ge nuine freedom of
choice and therefore
so me effeci ive con·trol over our own destinies. lam not a determinist. Bul I also
believe that the decisive choice is seldom
the latest choice in
the series. More often
th an not, it will ·turn
out to be some choice' '
' · made relatively far
back in the past."
One can relate that
to bridge . Often, you ·
will have the chance
to win or. to duck a
trick. That choice
might gove rn your
PEANUTS
destiny. And that key
deci sion arise s surprisingly often at t_he
first trick.
Against . four
spades, West lead s
the heart queen. How
should South procee d? What is dummy's most valuable
spot-card?
Declarer has four
potential losers (one
heart, two diamonds
and one dub), but can.
THE BORN LOSER
. see 10 tricks (five
spades, one heart and ·
v--l..OOK fo..\ T~M 1WI-\'&lt; Mu::,T 't'l.~ r::::;;::;;;:;;;::----::C£..-:-;;;E,-::f'::::O:;: :f',, . v--'&lt;(N\, BUT Tf-It:'&gt; l~ 01'-LL'&lt; TI-\E:"'1 four clubs).
DO H\J\1 R.lDlC.ULOU::&gt;, ScUSouth ducked the
f-1('~ JL&gt;~T
PR.E.-6/&gt;J;\( WI'\RM-uP DRILL!
trick (the key
first
~~'IING&gt; E.ND ZOf\IE.
K!\PPY f-\E
play),
won the heart ·
C.ELQ;i!f\TIOIF
C.i\\.lGf-1T 1\
continuation , drew
Pi\~ IN
trumps ending in
\f-\C.. END
hand, and led a club·
ZON£: 1
to dummy 's jack.
When that won , as
I
dummy had no sidesuit entry, declarer
played a low club to
his queen. West won
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
with the king, but
with South's diamond
king safe from attack,
declarer
collected
IT'S
A
SCAM
--~
r~ey
JVST
•• •
those 10 tricks.
se~ve
Note that if South
.&gt;H~IMP~
wins trick one, when
·A ve~Y
PINN~
West is in with the
SMAl-L
club ki ns, he can con~Z.9?
tinue wtth a heart to
~e.
the king, and East
will shift to a dia..' ·~
. '.
mond , netting those
four defensive winners. Al so, if East has
king-nine-fifth of
SOUPTONUTZ
hearts, he can defeat
the contract by overI .
. taking the heart queen
An episiLe IS a
with the king at trick
babY AposTLe ...
one. -- but how many
defenders would find
that play?·

:it

1 HeaHh-lood
buy
2 Good-bye
3 Buyer
4 Coma lol'lh
5 Roman

Haal'a
requeat
23 PenUum
producer
25 Uaeaa
whip
28 MldMat

37 Tough fiber
39 Weigh
anchor
43 Social rank
45 Llka

Bull~a

• 46 Dnlgn
49 St-henge
· !req...,tar
50 Hoda--

etete

28

poet

backer

6 Uncteund

coualnl

28

40 Pen need

Stlmpy'a

4·1 Cry of dla-

7 Game onlclot
8 Accept ·
9 High deHI'I
of Asia
10 Keen
11 Hamlet or
Ophelia
19 Efectrlc llah

30

ne up the

miiy

42 FHIIve

OCCIIIOnl
44 More, to
Pablo
46 Nowa artlcle
49 Cagea

--~--~

.

buddy

dem
47 "Mir&amp;. -"

PIICiae

phone
·
31 Experiment
wHh
32 MilS .
Piggy' a

word

51 lllrdl of Ill
52 Mlnl-ptey
53 Portion OUI
56 Tavem hire·

57 Lemon -

33 Clolrvoy-

ence

------~

CELEBRITY CIPHER '

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by Luis Campos

·

.

Celebrtty Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the Ciph!l'r stands lor another.

Todsy's clue: C equsls N

EJJUR

"BP

HR

FJ E E G NJ J T
PFL
HNHG

.

BO

PFL

UL L A

HCT

PFWJN

ZHWM

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r:::::=·=;--;:;;;;c;:;;;:;--:r;:;;;---,

BUT WHY you'RE HIE
DO YOU
PRINCIPAL'S
WANT TO !&gt;ECRETAR'(,
FiLM
MRS . SHIPULSKII
ME? EVERYSODY
SA'(S '(OU
RUN THE .

YOLI'fi:E THE
REALLY? POWER BEHIND
• THE THRONE'·
YOUR DESK
i&gt; THE NERVE
CENTEII. OF
THE iJHOLE

SCHOOL'

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' TO BE VERY , VERY

-

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High: 70s, Low: 50s
Details. A1

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. W.VA.
Daily 3: 7-5-5
Daily 4: 5-3-7-8

Powerball: 14-19-22-39-43
Powerball: 12
Power ·Play: 2

I

I

Index

"You don't get along with your
brotherwhywouldyouwantanew
_ _ _ _ . -~ baby?" the mother quizzed the six
. - - - - - - - _ , y e a r old "Well," ·he sighed, "With
. f__,...:C:..,:..:.A..:.M.;...:..P_.I:........:,r..,...~, three you - -.;. a - - -I"

1 1 Is 1 -

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6

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L -l.....JL-...l-..J_J.......J

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News editor

~

~~' j

Helping hands

.. SOAR, formerly known as the
OxyContin Task Force, was formed in
April in response to an mcrease m
abuse of the pain killerOxyContin, the
so-called "hillbilly heroin" local
authorities have blamed for a corresponding rise in crime, including a
.robbery at a .Gallipolis pharmacy ip
February.
But recognizing that OxyContin is
only the current drug fad, SOAR's
organizers expanded its focus to all
· substance abuse.
.
.
SOAR's mission, as recommended
by its treatment committee, is to create
a home for recovering abusers to help
them become drug-free through .a
combination of rules, available com-

•

munity counseling and spiritual guidance.
The home would be modeled in part
on a facility in Sidney directed by Ivan
Paske. a former Athens nightclub
owner and recovered abuser. Faske,
who addressed SOAR at one of Its
Gallipolis meetings this summer, is
expected to be the guest speaker when
SOAR meets in Jackson again in
January. Moore said.
The group will meet in Pomeroy
Oct. 24, time and location to be
announced, he said.
Realizing the project needs a regional approach, Moore -said SOAR is
Please see SOAR. A5

MeiJs chamber's
'(rulse to nowhere'
set for Oct. 25
BY CHARLENE HO~FUCH .

News editor
POMEROY, Ohio
Witches, goblins, ghosts and
more.
You can see them all
boarding the Rubles' partybarge stmmwheeler at the
Pomeroy levee on Oct. 25.
It's time for the the fourth.
annual m~uera~ "cruise
to nowhere, a Halloween
,..eve~ of .the , Meigs County
Chamber _of Coinmeri;e _and
Tourism Board.
· Boarding will begin at

6:30 p.m. with the cruise to
be held from 7 to II p.m.
.
Tickets are on sale now
and going fast, according to
Courtney Butcher of the
Chamber office. The cost of $20 each includes not only
the four-hour fun cruise, but
finger foods and music by a
local DJ . for dancin'g.
·
'This will be a sell-out,"
said Butcher, in encouraging
residents who want tickets to
pick them up .soon at . the .
Cliamlieniffice. They:: M!'

Please see CruiSe. AS

9

G)

Compll!!lte the chuckle quoted
by filling in rhe miuing words

you develop from stec No. 3 below.

PR INT NUMBERED LETTE RS IN
THESE SQUARE S

~~{c:~~~~ER LETTERS

ro /

1

/a

j

/

I·

j

. 4 SediORI - 2ol Pllpl

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region

Sports

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

C2
D1-6
insert
C6
A4
AS
A2
81-6

Weather
Q

A6 ·

. A2

2002. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY KEVIN KELLY

News editor
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio The generosity of Gallia
County residents towarclthose coping with disaster
was on display Saturday in
downtown Gallipolis as
crowds turned out for the
"Neighbors
Helping
Neighbors" benefit organized to assist people affected by the May 8 tornado in
Raccoon and Springfield
townships.
"We' re delighted with the
turnout," said Jean Houck,
executive director of United
Way of Galli a CountY. as she
described the event s early
hours .
The benefit started' in the
late afternoon on a blocked
section of Court Street
between Second and Third
avenues and ran until midnight.
rai sed
· by
Funds
'Neighbors
Helping

Neighbors" will go to the er like for this for communitornado victims, who lost ty unity," said Jackson .
their homes and possess_ions
A committee of represenand are still putting their tatives from churches,
lives back together. Any Unitec;l Way, Holzer Medical
remaining fund s will go Center, Gallia County
toward a fund to help people Chamber of Commerce,
affected by future disasters. Community lniprov,emeQt
"It's not about us," said Cotporation, VISTA and
Terry
Galli an,
whose local media banded together
John .Simmons and his daughter, Johnna,, 3, attended the
Adamsville Road residence to plan "Neighbor Helping
Colonial Ball. They are from Cincinnati, Ohio., where he is a ~
was destroyed by the toma- Neighbor" based on the
memtJer of the Ohio Color Guard and National Society of the
do. "This is -about what hap- "Pickin' Up the Pieces" benSons
of the American Revolution . (Dan Hermes) .
pens to someone else. I think efit staged in the same toeawe might be able to be better tion for victims of the
prepared .for events in the · August 200 I downtown fire
future .and -to provide assis- that displaced several resltance when something hap- dents.
pens to people."
"It rea !I y started some'X)f course, we don 't want thing great for the communito see this happen again," ty," said Jackson, who was
added Jenni Bryant, a neigh- impressed with the turnout,
from Mary Ball, the mother
BY DAN HERMES
,..J
bor of Gallian and his wife · given comp_etition from a . Staff writ_er ·
of George Washington, the
Delane, whose home was . televised Ohzo State football
country' s first president.
also lost in the di saster.
game and other weekend
"I can't think of anything
POINT
PLEASANT, more important than to celeThe move to aid victims activities.
W.Va. - To say that B. brate our heritage in a good
started almost immediately
"Old people like me
Rice Aston has long blood- old-fashioned way," Astan
after the tornado, when New remember when we didn't
lines
would be a dire under"
Life Lutheran Church was have television and we d1d .
said during the Colonial
statement.
made available · to the Red · things like this all the time,"
Governor
's reception at the
Aston was the honorary
Cross for use as a relief cen- he added with a smile .
Colonial Governor for the Mason County Action
ter. New Life's pastor, the
Ronnie Hutchins of
Battle Days observance and Group Senior Center. "If we
Rev. John Jackson, and other Gallipolis, in between sheis a 13th generation could duplicate this all over
church and community lead- ing roast pork on the ~ooker
American . Among his the Un ited States, we ' d
ers believed help should be he donated for use zn the
descendants are CoL Joseph have something."
extended to the victims.
benefit , echoed Jackson's
Ast6n' s wife, Ursula, also
Ball and Elizabeth Romney.
"I thi~k . the bi!;gest thing
Please see Benefit, AS
He's collaterally desce nded
Please see Speaker, AS
about tht s ts workzng togeth-

Battle Days speaker .
cites colonial heritage

Adjust - Order - Cower- Deaden -AROUND

GARFIELD
'!'HAT

·'

0

'30UNI75
KlNI7A G0017

'

CRUNCH
CRUNCH
CRUNCH

Holzer Medical Center salutes

I had a chance· to try out for collage debate team. I
wasn't sure it was a good thing , but a counselor ~aid
that opportunities were often things you hadn't noticed
the first time AROUND .
.

ARLO&amp;

HAVI: A &amp;OYVL- OF
ROCK5, 01711:!

OHIO
Superlollo: 13-15-18-23-33-45
Bonus Ball: 7
Kicker: 5-()-6-2-8-9
Buckeye 5: 1-2-4-19-34
Pick 3: Q-5-5
Pick 4: 8-6-4--1
Pick 3 day: 3-3-7
Pick 4 day: 9-()-9-6

I ·1SAVILE
I
1 1 1 r
.

to create a residential treatment facility for recovering
substance abusers,
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio- An outreach
met at Holzer
to area counties by an organization try-~1··~~
Medical Centering to establish help for victims qf drug
Jackson on Sept. 2ti
"'
abuse ha~ ·started and earned support
and explained its
from Jackson County officials in . its
purpose to county
first outing.
commi ssioners, a
Southeast Ohio Advocates for
representative from
Recovery (SOAR) will also meet in
Moore
HMC, mental health
Meigs County later this month to outprofessionals and
line its purpose and gauge interest concerned citizens.
"The Jackson commissioners were
• from authorities and the community,
~ry
receptive, as -was the representasaid Richard Moore, SOAR's vice
tive from Holzer," ·said Moore. a
president
'
·Gallipolis
city conunissioner.
The group, whose immediate goal is
BY KEVIN KEU,Y

' Gallia residents
turn out to help
tornado
victims

Lotteries

-.

s=
"""'~ ~

! '0 L\~ K:l 1-\~\IE A

'

Neighbors helping neighbors

Weather

SENSITIVE .

. .

THE GRIZZWELLS
~m-lliU~

"NERVE CENTERS" TENP

.rnA

Cover AM The
Major SUbjeclll

SOAR reaches out for area support

Ffonnie Hutchins hands .Lorie Neal, director of the Gallia County Ch~mber of Com;nerc_e, ~
slice of roast pork from his cooker during the "Neighbors .Helpmg Neighbors benefit
Saturday for victims of the May 8 tornado in Galli a County. (Kevm Kelly)
..

..

NEWSPAPERS

i 1.25 • Vol. l7. No. l4

SUIL!&gt;ING.!
· ~r

You

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Calli polis • Pl. Pleasant • October 6, 2002

Ruby Jewell Duncan, 91
Elaine Burde~ Ro4se.~-. 87
Joy.ce A. Morns, 74
· Details. A6

$f'f;CIA/.-

""-

Cattlemen to host
trade show, A2

Deaths

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I sometimes think I shall never
view 1 A French film lacking Gerard Depardlau. •

- John Updike

JACKSON, Ohio (AP) -,The mayor of Jackson, 0hio,
said budget problems uncov-.
ered in a state audit could
result in the layoffs of 60
workers this year.
The audit, released in June,
showed city officials had
been improperly using utility
funds for their operating budget. The misspending totaled
about $6 million for 1989
through 200 I.
That meant municipal utility custon)ers in the community 65 miles southeast . of
Columbus were paying too
much because rates were
based. on the cost of providing all government services
rather thae just the cost of
utilities.
In re~j\}rise, city Auditor
Carl B~ett Jr., with ,City
Council's approval, trimsferred about $6 'million from
the general fund back into the
utility accounts.
He said the tran sfer put the
budget $.5.7 milli on in deficit.
: Mayor Tom Evans said the
city government c·a nnot oper&lt;itl: in_a deficit, meaning lay_,'()ti~~~police officers, fire/ t;ghiel$'f · street workers and
·: , ~lepeijl' e]llployees are neces-"

Herd thumps
Kent, Bl

., ·'"::c ity Council's president,
Dennis f!odge, said the threat
.-- of iayOffs was another part of
an ongoing feud .

DWJJZR . "

DWJYIFJ

Mayor: Layoffs
expected

INSIDE

, ..,,

Y W B ·T L R•

VJYKYLPR

Ohio valley Publishing co.

Na-a

SPORIS

JANIS

.Nelghb•r Helping Nelg ..bor_
A block party fundraiser to benefit the victims of the
May 8 tornado disaster in Gallic County.

~~------.

HaLOOo ... 2 PICKILI:';OUT .
~.fV~P)(II) "€-R-_::~::_!__.-;

l t: " C~UNC~

Featuring ... Fapd...Music ... Fun

•

\ Hoher Difference

Saturday, OCtober 5
. 4 pm- 10 pm ..
Second Avenue.and Court .;;+r,.....t

1•
~~~:_~~~~~~~~-~~;~~~~o-5F--~~bt

Admission

I

www .~olzer.org

Donation - $5.00 Minimum .

I .

•

, I

'

J

I

.

·•

.,.

'&gt;- -

--· ·---.v---

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