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                  <text>.Friday, Sept. 7, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Skyline Speedway honors 60's racing legend Mack Clingan
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
0\IP CORRESPONDENT

''Titis is til&lt;' !&gt;est little
dirt ll'olCk in America. I
,,, g/,td the )!.OOd Lord
ga11e me thr cl~t~nce 10
come l~orck and see tllis
place another tiulf. I
have a lot '!fgre&lt;lt

STEWART- Aug. 31 w~'
Mack C lingan night at Skyline
Speedway in Stewart, the place
that the legendary racer dominated in the early to midJ960s, and later as a car owner
with driven such as Dean
Mast, Jim Fizer, Doc Dawson III J:IIIOI'iCS from ill'l'l'."
and most recognizably Steve
Ungar.
Racer Mack Clingan
At one point Steve Ungar,
now nf Belpre, and son Rick cancer in .his ot her lung. H owUngar both drove Clingan cars. eYer, his sp irits coul d not have
Hilton Wolfe Jr. and family been higher at the tribmc.
ofRacin.e were part of the cer:
It was if he had just climbed
emonies to honor Clingan," and om of the Long Brothers Spealso participated in a breakfast cial after one of his many vicwith . the 79-year old racing tories.
" l raced here when it didn 't
lege nd.
"This is the best li ttle dirt pay much of anythi ng .. , not
track in America ," C ling:Jtl like the races today," Clmgan
proudly stated of Skyline, eyes said. " Of course it didn't cost as
gleaming in the August South- much, eitht'r. Cars then j ust
cost a fraction of what they do
ern Ohio sun.
"I am glad the good Lord now.
"I have raced all over the
gave me the cha nce to come
back and see this place another coun try but this is the finest
time. I have a lo t of great mem- irack I've ra ced on. And I've

M&lt;"Guire. Harold McGilton,
"Also. you h~Vl' to alwJys Jim Fizer, Paul Barnes, and
w;mt to be the bt~t to succeed." Frankit&gt; Btirris - to n:une :1
Clingan bog.nt racing at the few.
old Sportsman Speedway with
C li ng:m was accom panied
ll'r thl· next c.i.ty.

beat me, an d (Clingan
paused)
he did beat me."
man who once dominated this
As the crowd chu ckled,
~peed way for many, many years.
offered some advice.
Clingan
This man literally owned this
"Som etimes sonleone will
track. He was the one to beat.
just
be better than you. Yolt'll
• "As a kid, I watched this man
win many races here and at find that in hfe and you just
other tracks in the area, arid have to work harder the next
many of you have h:id this same time.''
The bo unty C lingan was
pleasure. For those of you who
talking
about went to Herman
didn't get to see him race, you
missed seeing one of America's Wise of Atlanta, who. had a
greatest drivers. I introd uce to winged super modified No. 77.
you the legen dary Mack Clin- Wise late r drove a regular
to

sprint car and even went raci ng

gan."
You could have heard a pin
drop when Clingan stepped to
the microphone. Every driver
focused a respectful eye toward
the elder champion and time
stood still.
'
Clingan., suffering from
lung cancer, has had open heart
surgery, has had one lung
removed and is now battling

USAC · (Uni ted States Auto
Club) later in his career.
"If you really enjoy racing,
find a 'way to keep doing it,
Clingan said. "You have to have
something in your life to enj oy,
and it is a whole lot better than
tippin' the bottle every Friday
an d Saturday night, and in most
cases you feel a whole lot bet-

grandd;1Ughters.

Although he wasn't in the

Stt've

Ungar was to be on hand, but cock-pit Aug. 25 was another
Ungar's wife suffered a stroke victory for Mack Clingan at

at mid-week and he

SPORIS

MONEY

Rail excursions

Prep football
action results

Bossard Memorial
Library receiveS
grant

was

Skyline Speedway.
unable to attend.
~very llltemion of JUSt being a
Clingan &lt;till resides in his
And the crowd cheered one
to Skyline by his wife Charcar owner. Ht' canH.~ away that
night with his first victory as J letw, daughter Lisa, and his hometown of Cleveland . last time.
drivt'r back in 1951, driving J

•

tmts

'3') Furd coupe he and a friend

J;iving ·TrtJst S~minar. ·

had put together.
The friend failed to tmke the
grade in qualifYin g and the heat
and after Mark oflered a few
suggestions, the short-Jived dri ver said, "All right, you're the
Mack won the consy , and

Oh io V.lllc•y Puhli,hin);: (o.

to go faster so these guys
behind me don't run over
me.'' H e did, and also went on

C.111ipuli .. • l'cmwmy • l~t . l'll'il .. illll • \l'I'IPmho•r '-'. llllll

Time... to EXPO!

Get The Facts
At This FREE

reme mbers thinking, " I have

Ea~To

to ·win th e feature.
Clingan was hooked and
from thar time on he was THE .
driver. Mack drove open wheel cars of all types on both
asphalt and dirt, but his prefer-

Understand
Educational
Seminar

en ce was din. His main love

became sprint cars, where he

Kevin L. Pottmeyer

Engineering

Engines

About 75 SEIU District
1199 bargaining unit memGALLIPOLIS - Pickets bers at Scenic Hills struck
remain in place at the Aug. 31 following a 52-4
entrJnces to a local nursing vote, said Carol Young, orgahome after a bargammg ses- nizer for SEIU, which repreSion between Its manage-.__ sents 18,000 wo rkers in
· ment and workers represent- O hio, West Virginia and Kened by Servite Employees tucky who are mostly
International Union failed to employed in the health care
field.
end a week-old strike.
Scenic Hills Nursing Ccnill
SE JU 's district office in
ter man agem ent sa id . th e Columbus announced a press
fac ility
remain s
staffed conference will be sl&lt;lged ·at
arou nd the clock so res ident~ the strike site Tuesday at 2
"co ntin ue to receive the high p.m. District President Dave
quality care that is a standard R egan is expected to speak:
Young said a bargaining
ai: o ur facility,u said Integrated
Health Services spokesman session Thursday at Lowe
Hotel in Point Pleasant,
Robert Gill.
IHS, based in Sparks, Md., W.Va., failed after she said
operates Scenic Hills; a 100- Scenic Hills management
bed facility th at opened on asked for more concessions.
Young said initially a twoBuck Ridge R oad in August

t

Safeway spo nso rship carried
Clingan to 3 I ':'ins circa 1966.
That year Lou Blaney and
the Long Brothers of Quaker
City ordered Alfater C hassis
for their chassis of choice. Both

Presented for any family who would like to:
Keep control of their money and keep others from deciding their wishes.
Avoid the expense, delay and publicity of probate.
Avoid court control of their estate.
Protect their moriey and family if they should become disabled.

teams won many races, but

Clingan was recognized as on e
of the winningest drivers in
the nation chat season. ·
By the time Clingan had
landed th e Long Brothers ride,
he had alre~dy had a stellar
career. When Larry Dicbon
vacated the No. 55 Clingan
was the logical choice to fill
the cockpit. It was du ring this
time that torr id battles were
waged between C lingan , J.D.
Leas, Steve Ungar, Wayne

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Reservations requested but not required
Our office is located at 407 Second St., Marietta
_Call740-373·7784 or 800-745-6441
Intended for educational purposes only.

7 • a::sopm ·
HolldaJ Inn • 450 Pike St.

Gallipolis, Ohio

1981.

CREATIVE- A square piece of material with a face painted on it and then filled with straw pulled to the center and tied makes
a great scarecrow head . Here , Lee-Anna Hudson of Pomeroy looks over one that has been completed in preparation for makIng one herself for the EXPO contest. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

reg10n .

TIMESSENTINEL STAFF

The event's main goals are to
promote the family, examine .
the benefits of living in a rural
area with access to larger towns,
identifYing the region's past,

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ments, analyze the importance
of local businesses - · namely
the area's productive agricultur- .
al firms (dairy, cattle, greenhouse, veget&lt;~ble, and field
crops), discuss the multirude of
clubs, activities and talents of the
citizenry, and discover ways to
utilize the historic attributes of
Meigs, Mason, Gallia and
Athens counties.
contests. ·
The annual event, which
Planned activities begin at 10
originated six years ago, was a.m. ancl consist of new car and
driveformed by a group of con- truck displays, a classic
cerned citizens, and members of in, an antique car show, a petting
the Big Bend Antique Trac- zoo, wildlife mount displays, an
tor/Equipment Club and antique tractor pull, live musical
Meigs County Senior Fair entertainment, flower arrange.lloard, whose goal · was to ment and open dahlia shows, a
(lCCel)tuate the positive attribuk make-your-own · scarecrow
. es of living within the Big Be~ contest, a rock climbing wall,

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gardening classes, and a plethora
of other interesting happenings.
· ~o included will be a veget&lt;~ble display that showcases the
area's longest ear of corn, tallest
stalk of corn, largest diameter
sunflower, and largest pumpkin
or squash.
Quilt enthusia.rs will have the

opportunity to . view a myriad
of colorful bedspreads during
the quilt display/show, which
will be held inside the Senior
Fair Building. The first 'place
quilt will garner $50; second ·
place, $40; third place, $30;
fourth place, $20; and fifth place,

Please see Big Bend. AI

POMEROY The
P.resident of Meigs Co un ty's Board of Co unty
Commissioners has asked
the co unty Board of
H ealth w rec ons id er a
proposed ban on smokin g

in public.
At FridJy 's regula r commi ssio n ers' meeting, J eff
Thornton read a s tate~
m ent:
'' Five years ago, I wanted

to have prayer before th e
co mmis sio n ers' meeting,

arrd was told it was ill egal
and that the com mi ssion -

ers would b e sued. It was
my right to pray, so I d1d.

and

non-smokers

have

rights. Prop erty owners
and taxpayers certainly
·
have rights.
"Whil e smoking is bad
for one's health , it is a
cho ice. Government must
re member they arc here to

se rve th e people. While
the healt h department is
needed, and has great programs , I would advise
th em to discontinu e the

plan of action for a smoking ban ."
' Thornton ~ and Commissioners J im

Sh eets an d

Mick Davenport, attended
a publi c meeting on
Thursday, . whi ch allowed

Please see Ben. A&amp;

the featured speaker;' Rio Grande Preoident Barry M. Dorsey announced.
"His remarks about Rio Grande's role in
higher educa tion in Ohio will set the tone
for the cOnvocation ."

Musical selections ftom the university's
Grande Chorale will punctuate an agenda
of testi mony from faculty, st1ff, board
members .and students about th e impor-

tance of Rio Grande in th eir Jives.

Dr. Linda Sigismondi, president of the
Faculty Association, will lead a trio of dulcimer pe rformers who include Kara

Lewis, director of the Madog Center for
Welsh Studies, and Roy Moses, one of the
basketball players .who played with the legendary Bevo Francis.
A 6:30 p.m. Alumni Memorial Bell
Tower dedication will follow the convoca-

Please see Rio. AI

Hol•er Medical Equip1111ent, Inc.

00000 04IIOOOCDOCIIG'
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SCARECROW CREATIONS - Friday afternoon, children at
NET, an outreach program of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish, practiced how to make scarecrows under the direction
of Dee Rader, standing, and Mars Kitchen . The children will be
entering the competition at the Big Bend Town and Country
EXPO next weekend.

.~od's

'
RIO GRANDE
- "Still Changing
Lives After 125 Years" is the theme for the
University ofR.io Grande's 125th an niversary celebration on Thursday, which starts
at 2 p.m. with a convocation i~ the John
W Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center.
"We are pleased that Roderi ck G. W
C hu, chanceUor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, has accepted our invit&lt;~tion to be

(it) Oldsmobile.

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Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries · .

BY BRIAN

TIMES-SENTINEL· STAFF

. "Our county was founded on God and country.
We pledge liberty and justice for all . That. is freedom. Smqkers have rights

University of Rio Grande celebrates·125 years

Details, A3

2001 Chevy

Offi«al urges
health board to
withdraw proposal

present an d future achieve-

Now that last month's Meigs
County Fair is a fading memory, Rocksprings Fairgrounds
will once again reverberate with
activity as the 20Ql Big Bend
Town &amp; Country EXPO takes
center stage next Saturday and
Sunday for a weekend full of
musical entertainment, commercial exhibits and various

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Trailblazer LS 4 Door 4x4

lbomton voices
smoking ban ,

BY TONY M. LEActt

OCK
SPRINGSIt's
EXPO
time again.

Piuse see Stltke, AI

-J~,O~~SitiOIIlO--, ·-­

:l.T-r'-'•-next ·. weekend

Brand New 2001 Ponllac
Sunllre Sun &amp; Sound

KEVIN KELLY

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

First City Estate Planning, Inc.

and

Vul \r• . Nn '\II

8T

Gregory A. Gentry

sponsored by:

Special No. 55 of Don and
Dean Long. The br illiant
Omaha Orange and White
Alfater Chassis with Miles

sJ.25

Scenic Hills
strike enters
second week

·:·~.Big_Be.nd showcase.,.~.

~1,950*

entint

- -

driver."

won a lot of.races here."
ories from here."
enjoyed the most success.
"Once
they
paid
a
guy
$500
At the drivers' meeting,
Mu ch of that success ca me
track promoter Al Harshbarge r to co m·e from Atlanta, Gt'orgia aboard the Long Brothers

introduced Clingan as "the

two

TEMPO

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PageAl
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:i~~~~~~~hn_e_a_~~~-e_nt_ia_•e_I______________~~·~~~~4C!j~l~l!_
____~--------~s~un~d~~~·~~~~~m~"--''~·~l~~~
TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
Giveaway set

pastoring in Troy,_ Ohi?,
while attending semmary m
the
U.S.
BIDWELL - A clothing
Reservations can be made
giveaway is set for Sept. 14by
sending your name and
15 at Garden of My Heart
Holy Tabernacle's new she!-. church's name along with a
check for $8 for each person
terhouse at 4950 Ohio 850.
attending.
Bring a sack lunch
The giveaway is I 0 a.m. A
beans and hot dogs giveaway for your child. Nursery will
will be at I p.m., the same be provide'd. ·
time gospel singing begins. . Make checks payable to
The event is sponsored by Athens District UMW and
Garden of My Heart Holy mail to Becky Carpenter,
Tabernacle and On Fire for 25210 State ~oute 180,
Rockbridge, Ohio 43149 . .
God Ministries.
' Reservations are due Sept.

Special meeting

to.

Masterworks
to meet

GALLIPOLIS City
Commission will meet in
special session Monday at 7
p.m. in tlie Gallipolis Municipal courtroom.
An executive session to
discuss contracts is scheduled.

RIO GRANDE - Masterworks, a choral group of
singers, will meet for the first
time this year at the University of Rio Grande's Berry
Fine and Performing Arts
Center Room 115 for its first
rehearsal Monday from 7-9
p.m.
Director Merv Murdock
welcomes all community
members to sing with Masterworks. No audition is
necessary. Rehearsals are
planned every Monday from
7-9 p.m., with a concert
planned for Dec. 2 at. 3 p.m.
For more information, call
Murdock at 245-740_5.

Classic bike
show
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
Chapter 3750 Harley Owners Group's fifth classic bike
show is Sunday at the Gallipolis HOG Clubhouse,
.Prospect Church Road. General admission is SI 0, including door prize ticket and free
food while the supply lasts. ·
Beve rages are available and
live music by Bad Influence
is featured. Registration
begins at nqon and ends at 2
p.m.
The winning ticket for a
2001 883 Sporster will be
drawn after awards are presented. Winner need not · be
present.
.
.
The second ticket drawn IS
for $300 in cash; the third for
a motorcycle lift jacket; th.e
lfourth for a leather jacket;
and the fifth for $50 in cash.
Winners must be present to
claim these prizes.
A cash prize and trophy
will be given for best of
. show. Trophies will be' presented for first, second and
third- place winners in all
classes.

Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Children Services
Board meeting is Tuesday at
noon at Children Services
office, 83 Shawnee Lane,
Board
President
Kail
Burleson announced.

Welsh event
RIO GRANDE - The
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies is sponsoring a dinner at the University of Rio
Grande on Sept. 16 at 5:30"in
the Student Center Annex,
Conference Room C.
The featured entertainment is Sian Phillips, a
f'.lmous Welsh fiddler. Reservations should be made with
the Welsh Center by Sept. 12.
For more information, call
Kara Lewis at 245-7186, or
toll free 1-800-282-720 I,
extension 7186.

ing a one-car accident Friday
on U.S. 33.
Troopers said Smith was
westbound in Bedford Township at 7:47 a.m. when the
car he drove went off the left
side of the road, came back
across the road, went over to
the right and struck · an
embankment.
The car was moderately
damaged.
Tro_opers cited John R.
Qualls, 64, 143 Church St.,
Bidwell, for failure to control
following · a one-car accident
Friday on Cheshire Township
Road 633 (Story's Run).
Troopers said Qualls was
' westbound at 3:30 p,m. when
the car he drove crossed the
center line, went off the left
side of the road and struck a
tree. The car then rolled over
onto its side.
The car was moderately
damaged.

GALLIPOLIS :..... Gallia
Academy High School Choir
Boosters meet Tuesday at 6
p .m. in the GAHS choir
room to discuss fund-raisers
for 2001-02.
All choir parents are urged
to attend.

UMWomen
BELPRE - Athens District
United . Methodist
Women are observing District Day Sept. 15 at Rockland
United
Methodist
Church in Belpre, starting
with registration and coffee
time at 9 a.m.
The meeting is at 9:30 and
concludes at 3 p.m.
Guest speaker is the Rev.
.Israel Kamudiandu from
Zimbabwe. He is currently

•!Columbuo let-/118" I

Drivers ticketed

t~
Ali&amp;..
V\ID-~:
·

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main &lt;OOCUJiin ollstorleo Is 10 bt
.accurate. If you know of an error In a
story, &lt;all the neworoom at (740) 4462342 or Pomeroy: (740) !192-llS!. We wtU
check your laformation and make I
corredJon ir warnnted.

Newa o.p.rtmtnta

Gallpolla
The main number ·t• 446·ll4l.

Deportment mention!.,.,
M...&amp;illtl Edttor---lll&lt;L 118
City Edttor....- ..- ------E•L Ill
Llfestyle....,_ ............---······lll&lt;L UO
Sports ................-----E&gt;L Ill
News .................. ,_______ llJ&lt;L 119
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u Hcood clu1 mailinJ m1ttcr It
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Maablr: The ASIOCilted Preu, lnd tiM: Oh1o
N!'!~-~~llion.

POSI'MASTIR: Send llldreu ccmw;Uoos to n.e
S11ndly-limes Sentinel, llS Th ird An.,
Gallipolii,Ohio _.5631 .

s~~~TIS

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The n11in number Is 99l-l155.
Dtp~~rtml:nl txttnslonlare:

For mora Information, cell 1·800·
HRBLOCK, vlalt hrblock.com or contact
your local oHlca.

,.

1

i

i

Indian teachers adapt to U.S.

Please send me free lnf,or~nat:lort·:
about the H&amp;R BLOCK Income ........-,
Course.

' death of his 8-month-old son.
: Zebdee McDowell, 39, ofAkron, was charged Friday in the death
~,.two months ago of his son,Jaicynth McDowell. He was jailed to
•~await an arraignment.
.
: ~ Police Capt. Elizabeth Daugherty said McDowell would not talk
:; to officen after his arrest Friday; but in an earlier interview with
; ~detectives denied any wrongdoing.
Police said the charges resulted from medical 'evidence and from
; twitness statements.

Name _________________________

:t•

Add~aa_·---------------------

'~

i';.~

c~------------------

statti ...:.....____ ZIP Code_...;____

:;
;

•
House fire kill
. s supemsor

CINCINNATI (AP) -

A

disp~te between two neighbon over

The 6th U.S. Cirruit Court ofAppeals on Friday ordered a lower
court 1to determine how much Mayfield Heights should pay resident Sanford]. Berger, who won his lawsuit against a city order to
cut the grass and weeds.
Berger's lawyer, Bruce ElfVin, said the .fees will total at least
$250,000 and could go as high as'$270,000. L. Bryan Carr, a lawyer
for Mayfield ·Heights, said he will argue when the case goes back
before U.S. District Judge David Katz that the city owes Berger

Officer's sentence suspended

CINCINNATI (AP) -A po~ce officer in suburban Norwood

was given a suspended jail sentence Friday and fined $750 for jeop-:
ardizing an undercover drug investigation by leaking confidential ·

po~ce

5?

~·

Feed StopBrian-IJnroe-

for buying my
2001 Market Lamb

~ Z'autect:

Fair reports going to auditor

His interests:
General Orthopedlcl
Lower Extl•nlty Surgery

Joint Rtpl1cement

1

'
•lure.
Nu;ety-four fain, including
independent "'·
•ms, will be au·d·Ited
.,
said Kim Norris, spokeswoman for Auditor Jim. Petro. The audits
probably will start by the .end of this year and will take about two

~~ the past

12 yean, the auditor's office contracted with the

••;.:

Orthopedic Excellence for all
the Mid-Ohio Valley.
.

;.••

~

.~

••
,.••

lloll! . . -

MAILstJISCRim'ONS
"""' .... Cou~

Dr. Shute joins orthopedic surgeons
w..."""'Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD, .
.1-J~~ Hanington, MD, and Arnold /'enlx, MD,

•

•

PremiUm ·
lradl •
III'IIWHd
Plllllflel
Place Yo ur Orde rs Tod ay'

Cheater Landmark
St. Rt. 7 Chester
985-3700

Gallia County Health Department

FREE

Parenting
Class
September 18th, 2001
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
Topic:
Bonding
With

Your
Child

G~LLIA

Call:
446-8538
to sign up·
for the
class.

COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SEPTEMBER 14 - 15 - 16
. HOURS 8 A.M. TO 5 P.M. DAILY

"FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING"

OUTSIDE SPACES 10' FRONTAGE $6 A DAY
INSIDE SPACES $18 AND UP-- RESERVED IN ADVANCE
• FOR lNFORMAnON AND RESERVATION CALL 740·246-6341 OR 740·446-4120

•·.

~

·~

PRE-SEASON
SPECIAL!

r
.~
·-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~;:;;~~~~~~;:~~~~~~~
500 I'"
"C''LE'r.1.A1 MARKET '
T'HE F'RE'J\.TC'H
lll

center, was pronounced dead about
minutes of Hamilton County Common ,'·•
·' afte
. r firefin.t..ters
pulled him from the rwo-stoty home Friday after- Pleas C:Ourt found Da~els guilty
11
"
of
!' noon.
·
,
,.
h a nusdemeanor vernon of the
: : The fire apparendy started on .?&gt;e. first tl?or.
.
c arge~
• • "There was extensive damage, 5ald distriCt ~ ChiefRob Ross.
; ''They have to sift through everything, and figure out what they
: can, piece by piece."
'
··

:•
:
:

·in hammocks and on plarforms
in the trees to protest the logging of a 292 acres plot ofland
in Zaleski State Forest, 70 miles
southeast of Columbus.
The council is against logging of any type but was particularly upset about Zaleski, a
popular hiking spot and home
to some endangered wildlife.

THANK YOU

'COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio county fair.; will be audited b): the
state's auditing department instead of the Department of Agncul-

Regional
Orthopedic ,center

ZALESKI (AP) - Three
protesters climbed down from
trees Friday in a southeast
0 hio state forest after a week's
demonstration against loggin~.
Vinton County sheriff's
deputies arrested two of the
protesters, said Andy Ware, a
spokesman . for the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources'
Division
of
Forestry. The third demonstrator left the site.
·
Susan Heitker and Matt
Glass were charged with criminal trespassing and released on
bond, the sheriff's office said.
Authorities planned to try to
locate the third demonstrator,
Ware said.
Members of the Buckeye
Forest Council spent the week

CLEVELAND (AP) - lri January, an astrologer told Arun Nagpal he would go over.;eas within a few months and succeed.
. At the time, Nagpal had no plans to leave India, where he'd spent
' more than 20 yean teaching chentistry at the high school and college level.
.
But in March, recruiters from the Cleveland Municipal School
District arrived, seeking certified math and science teachers to end
a shortage here. Nine months after the prediction, Nagpal said he
wants to stay in his new country.
·
.---.......:--------------,
The students "will get a lot from me and I will get a lot from
them," said Nagpal, who teaches chemistry and physics at John F.
Kennedy High School and would like to tackle biology lessons as
well.

information.
·
Lt. Steve Daniels, a 22-year veteran, was given a suspended 15-day
, jail sentence for his no contest plea July 31 to a misdemeanor charge
· of obstructing justice. He could have been sentenced to up to 90
days iii jail.
.
.
Daniels, 44, remains on suspension with pay from his $55,000-ayear
job. He faces administrative proceedings next week in
AKRON (AP) -A veteran police-fire dispatch supervisor was Norwood and could lose his job.
h
He was orioinaJiy indicted on a felony charge of obstructingjusThomas Shumaker,orne.
53, a civilian supervisor at the city's safety tice, but Judge William Mathews

:·~edina~~his
::~ommunications
I~

Gerald Shute, MD

:Protestors come
down from trees

i manslaughter and felony child endangering in the alleged shaking

02001 H6R 81oak TnleNIOH, lno.

618 E. Main Street
1Pomeroy, OH 45769
1-800-HRBLOCK or
1(7
40) 992·6674 .

plant.
The explosion at about 11 p.m. set off an alarm that could be
heard several miles away. causing concern among area residents, said
Russ · Decker Allen County Emergency Management Agency
director.
'
.
.
"When the explosion happened, there was one b1g explosiOn that .
rattled the windows" said Pat Good, who lives about a mile-and-ahalf from the plant. '

spring to scrape together revenue fo r the
state's $45 billion budget.
"We are already operating under the
tightest budget in nearly a decade," Taft
said. "Many state agencies are reducing
the level of operations just to live within
their current budget."
Figures cited by Justice Andy Douglas
in his opinion indicate the rulin g would
qm about $331 additional dollars per
student each year. Given Qhio's 1.8 million students, that would mean ·about
$595 million a year, according to the
Department of Education .
ChiefJustice Thomas Moyer on Thursday· night said, based on evidence in the
case, he believed the figure would be
$300 million to $400 million annually.
..

i . . Dad cited "1n Shaking death
no~~~~ppeals
Judges Martha Craig Daughtrey; ~an Norris and
ii AKRON. (AP) - A man has been charged with involuntary Lawrence
Zatkoff said Berger is entitled to the money because he
won the suit.

H&amp;R BLOCK

CLINIC

.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Maintenance worken found more than
$17,000 in cash Tuesday as they repaired the walls of a barn in the
Cuyahoga Valley National Park.
"We will dig through the proper;)' records, locate the hein of former ownen and try to determine who should get the money;· said
Chief Ranger Brian McHugh, who wouldn't reveal further details
about the money.
·
·
·
·
·
"We have to have things to ask .anyone who tries to c)aim the
money."h e saJ"d.
·
.
The bam is part of an 1891 homestead built by A.J. Savacoal, park
Property Manager Dee Strickland said. The park bought the property in 1998 from the late Robert Hopkins, who owned it since
1969.

now

I

HOLZER

~i 5~:: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :j:: ~ .

General Mau&amp;er · · · · - -EaL UOI
New•-·-·······-.. •••..-···-··Ed.IIOl
-~-............ - .........or EJt 1106

Leak causes BP plant blist

Regional Orthopedic Center

WeeQ.....................................................SIOS-36
• • OWide Gallil CouatJ

S17,000 found in bam·

LIMA (AP) -A leak in a hydrogen line caused an explosion late the high grass and vines.on a vacant lot became a seven-year court
Friday at a BP chemical plant, officials said.
.
battle that
could cost·a Cleveland suburb at least $250,000 in
No one was injured and the hydrogen did not escape beyond the attorneys' fees.
·

1

Announces the ·Newest
Addition to the

~ ::~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~
~2

Highs in the upper 80s. South
· The National Weather Ser- wind around 10 mph.
. • vice says scattered showers
Sunday
night.. :Partly
, and thunderstorms along with cloudy. A 30 percent chance
, )Jnseasonably warm tempera- of showers late. Lows in the
··' tures are expected for the tri- mid 60s.
county area on M9.!/;..day.
Monday.. . Mostly cloudy
'• Increasingly moist, unstable with a chance of showers and
!air will move into the region thunderstorms. Highs . near
~as the low moves slowly east. 80.
::Yhis will keep a chance of
Monday
night ... Mostly
:'showers and thunderstorms in cloudy with a ~hance · of
:the forecast into early next showers and thunderstorms.
::Week.
Lows 59 to 65 .
~ Temperatures will remain
Extended forecast:
•on the warm side. Highs SunTuesday... Mostly cloudy. A
:a.y will be in the low to mid chance of showers and thun•JlOs and Sunday night from
~~he mid 60 s to near 70 .
derstorms during. the day.
~ Southwest flow between Highs in the upper 70s.
~igh pressure in the east and
Wednesday.. .Partly cloudy.
~peveloping low pressure in Lows in ' the upper 50s and
:the west was drawing warm, high s in the upper 70s.
:humid air toward Ohio and
Thursday... Mostly
clear.
;Xvest Virginia.
Lows in the mid 50s an·d
~ Sunrise Sunday will be at highs near 80.
Friday... Partly cloudy. · Lows
i :06 a.m.
· ·
Weather forecast:
in the upper 50s and highs
· · Sund~y... Mostly
sunny. near 80.

51.2 billion. Th at would be on top of
record spending on education of about
S14 billion this year and next.
Gov. Dob Taft, at a news conference less
than 24 hours after the court's ruling, said
he was waiting for accurate figures before
deciding how to pay for it.
He immediately ruled out an increase
of Ohio's m:Jjor taxes, such as sales or
income taxes.
He Jlso said he wouldn't support raising money by installing electronic slot
machines at Ohio's seven racetracks.
But he said he wouldn't rule out tapping a portion of the state's $1 billion
rainy day fund, especially because of the
slumping economy. He also suggested the
state could raise money by closing certain
tax loopholes, a strategy he used last

~_:__ ~~--1L1Jt-dispute-may-costsuburb

Holzer Clinic

home carrk:r M:rYicc il .vlillble.
The Sully Tina..Senllncl will not be IUpOIIIfbk
far ldvMCt plymtntl made 10 caTicn.
PubliWr IUCI'Yel lhl: ri&amp;hl to adjUJt ra&amp;ea Wrinl
w 111blcriptD ~ Sub«ription n1e ~
II"IIIJ be implcr.enlccl by cbanpna lhc dLII'IliOtl of
lht: subttripeion.

Ice

Flurries

BY THE ASSOC[ATED PRESS

'

Sunday, ~ptemHr 9, 1001

Department ofAgric1~ture and allowed the department to conduct
the audits.
.
'The decision stems from an audit of the Delaware County Fair
that Petro's office made public this week. The report recommended
improvements to the fair's operations and accounting procedures.

:-stormy weather set to return

Learn about recent tax law changes.
Make sure you pay as little as necessary
while complying with the new tax laws. An . :
income tax course from H&amp;R Block covers
everything from completing a basic 1040 to
handling complex schedules.

&amp;unbap~attmt. 6mttnel

(UsPS IIJ.Uil)
eo.nn.atty Nnrlpeptr lloldlnii.JDC.
PubJi1hed nery Sunday, 825 fhinl A'lt..,
Oallipoli1 Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publdhina
Company.'Srcond d .. pCiiUJe paid It Galtipolil,
Ohio.

Rain

; '

TiMESSENTINEL STAFF

Don't get penalized or pay too much.

\ ot,

~
· ,~ -... •. .·

~ ..,.~,...

•
Bv BRIAN J. REED

s.h~:ip~R=o=a=d~6=8,~j~·u=st~n=o~rt=h~o~f~~~~446~~-3~2~48~FO~R~MO~R~E~IN~F~O~.~~~~~~·I~/2~a~c~re~l~oL~~~

•

.

Taft, Proctor to attend ·33 groundbreaking

DARWIN Paul L.
Smith, 42, Whitehall, was
cited for failure to control by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol follow-

..

··-~~~===:J==:==~==l
r"r..

Crasft
inJures two

inside the Meigs County
Courthouse.

W. VA.

•

Council meets

Meeting set

I•

• -

[ Monoftold IW/81 '

Street repaln

Choir Boosten

COLUMllUS (AP) - Ten yean after
Ohio 's school- funding lawsuit began,
stare officials on Friday were trying to
answer a new version of the same question: How much will fixing the problem
cost?
In a 4-3 decision, the Ohio Supreme
Col!rt on Thursday ordered the .state to
spend additional money on educa~ion to
make its school-funding system constitutional. It wants the state to further redu ce
the gap between rich and poor districts.
The court did not specifY a complete
dollar amount, but said the state should
increase basic state aid for students as well
as · speed up a new funding program for
poor districts.
Early estimates ranged from an additional $400 miUion a year to as much as

,

On display now at the Gallipolis Foodland is a 101-pound_ watermelon grow~ in Crown City 'by
the Ben 'Troyer family. Foodland is donating it to the Gall!a County Senior· Citizen Center. Pictured from left. are Kevin Eastman, store manager Jeff Hart, produce manager Ron Warner, Bob
Eastman and Brent Eastman. (Matt Rodgers photo)

PageA3

State back to· calculating cost of funding fix

Sunday, Sept. 9

n.

MIDDLEPORT - Mid-.- - dleport merch~
meet
Monday at 5:30 p.m. at
Office Service &amp; Supply.
Information is available by
PORTLAND - A Portcalling Donna Tillis at 992land-area man was taken to a
6376 or Jill Curry at 992Huntington, W.Va., hospital
7075.
by LifeFlight following a
two-car collision Friday on
Ohio 124 near Portland, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
POMEROY
Main
State Highway Patrol reportStreet · will be · closed on
ed.
Monday due to repair work
Transported from the scene
being· performed by the
of the 8:14 a.m. crash to
Ohio Department of'TransCabell Huntington Hospital
portation.
was Gayle A. Price, 91, 57995
Parking meters along both
Ohio 124, according to the
sides of the street will be
report.
hooded and eastbound traffic
Troopers said Price pulled .
will be diverted through the
onto 124 from a private driPomeroy Parking Lot and
veway and collided with a
·westbound traffic through
northbound • car driven by
" Street. .
Second
Mildred A. Kridel, 63, Long
The work is ' estimated to
Bottom.
last around five to six hours.
Krid~l was also injured and
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital by Meigs EMS.
Both cars were severely
POMEROY Meigs
damaged, and Price was cited County Republican Party
for failure to yi,eld.
meets at 7:30 p.m. Monday

-.

Ohio weather

summer, allowing the project
Shade in Athens County.
Preparation work delayed to proceed.
A
DARWIN
Gov.
Bob
Tali
the start of construction on the
MIDDLEPORT
The first section of the highand
Ohio
Department
of
project;
much of that work w~
conversational Spanish class
way is expected to be complettaught by Norma Torres will Transportation Director Gor- held up because of a lawsuit
begin Monday at 7 p.m. at don Proctor will attend a filed by project opjJOnerits in ed in September 2003. A secthe Middleport Church of groundbreaking ceremony for U.S. District Court. That law- ond phase is scheduled for ~id
Christ, Room 204, at the the U.S. 33 Athens-to-Darwin suit was overturned earlier this opening later this month.
Family Life Center, Fifth and project on Sept. "18.
ODOT
District
10
Main, Middleport.
Emphasis will be learning spokesman Chris Davis said
'how to speak Spanish the Friday that the two mel! will
way you learned how to deliver keynote addresses at the
speak English, through learn- event, beginning at 2:30p.m. at
Newly constructed
ing words and phrases and the end of the existing fourl600 sq.
borne.
practicing with others in the lane it Darwin.
Dream kitchen, custom
·
class.
The contract for the first of
oak cabinets, storoae
· For more information, call· two phases of the project was
galore, center Island,
992-2914.
awarded earlier this summer to
J BR's, l·lll baths,
Sntith &amp; Johnson ConstrueDR, LR with ftreplace,
tion Co., Columbus.
massive bullt.ln
· Cost for the fint phase is
liiiiMIDIATI POSSESSION .
book""'•• central air,
·
O
FER
laundry
room,
RACINE - Racine Vii- $33.3 million. Th e project
SltS,IOO OR BIST Ill
· attachedZ.ll2ear
!age
Council's
regular · involves a six-mile stretch of
Take SR 160 to SR 554 ·TR-Io Bulavllle
•ar-, huge front
"'
h'gh
b
Pike·
TR·IO
Pro1pect
Chureh
Rd
•
TR
•
• .,..Located on a
monthly meeting is Monday Super .wo 1 way etween
pon:h.
111 new houH on L after Swango Rd.
at 7 p.m. at the municipal Darwin and Alexander TownFollow algna. CALL (740) 446-4514 or
quiet country road,

·Merchants
to meet

Ohio

~~-,Unb~ ~imes- jentiud

biggun

A

• h 0 flereel
5pan1s

building.

,.• .

~otis
ta!eer
Co
...... "Careers Close To Home"
.

Career Information Is Just a click away...

�•
PageAl
R
:i~~~~~~~hn_e_a_~~~-e_nt_ia_•e_I______________~~·~~~~4C!j~l~l!_
____~--------~s~un~d~~~·~~~~~m~"--''~·~l~~~
TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
Giveaway set

pastoring in Troy,_ Ohi?,
while attending semmary m
the
U.S.
BIDWELL - A clothing
Reservations can be made
giveaway is set for Sept. 14by
sending your name and
15 at Garden of My Heart
Holy Tabernacle's new she!-. church's name along with a
check for $8 for each person
terhouse at 4950 Ohio 850.
attending.
Bring a sack lunch
The giveaway is I 0 a.m. A
beans and hot dogs giveaway for your child. Nursery will
will be at I p.m., the same be provide'd. ·
time gospel singing begins. . Make checks payable to
The event is sponsored by Athens District UMW and
Garden of My Heart Holy mail to Becky Carpenter,
Tabernacle and On Fire for 25210 State ~oute 180,
Rockbridge, Ohio 43149 . .
God Ministries.
' Reservations are due Sept.

Special meeting

to.

Masterworks
to meet

GALLIPOLIS City
Commission will meet in
special session Monday at 7
p.m. in tlie Gallipolis Municipal courtroom.
An executive session to
discuss contracts is scheduled.

RIO GRANDE - Masterworks, a choral group of
singers, will meet for the first
time this year at the University of Rio Grande's Berry
Fine and Performing Arts
Center Room 115 for its first
rehearsal Monday from 7-9
p.m.
Director Merv Murdock
welcomes all community
members to sing with Masterworks. No audition is
necessary. Rehearsals are
planned every Monday from
7-9 p.m., with a concert
planned for Dec. 2 at. 3 p.m.
For more information, call
Murdock at 245-740_5.

Classic bike
show
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
Chapter 3750 Harley Owners Group's fifth classic bike
show is Sunday at the Gallipolis HOG Clubhouse,
.Prospect Church Road. General admission is SI 0, including door prize ticket and free
food while the supply lasts. ·
Beve rages are available and
live music by Bad Influence
is featured. Registration
begins at nqon and ends at 2
p.m.
The winning ticket for a
2001 883 Sporster will be
drawn after awards are presented. Winner need not · be
present.
.
.
The second ticket drawn IS
for $300 in cash; the third for
a motorcycle lift jacket; th.e
lfourth for a leather jacket;
and the fifth for $50 in cash.
Winners must be present to
claim these prizes.
A cash prize and trophy
will be given for best of
. show. Trophies will be' presented for first, second and
third- place winners in all
classes.

Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Children Services
Board meeting is Tuesday at
noon at Children Services
office, 83 Shawnee Lane,
Board
President
Kail
Burleson announced.

Welsh event
RIO GRANDE - The
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies is sponsoring a dinner at the University of Rio
Grande on Sept. 16 at 5:30"in
the Student Center Annex,
Conference Room C.
The featured entertainment is Sian Phillips, a
f'.lmous Welsh fiddler. Reservations should be made with
the Welsh Center by Sept. 12.
For more information, call
Kara Lewis at 245-7186, or
toll free 1-800-282-720 I,
extension 7186.

ing a one-car accident Friday
on U.S. 33.
Troopers said Smith was
westbound in Bedford Township at 7:47 a.m. when the
car he drove went off the left
side of the road, came back
across the road, went over to
the right and struck · an
embankment.
The car was moderately
damaged.
Tro_opers cited John R.
Qualls, 64, 143 Church St.,
Bidwell, for failure to control
following · a one-car accident
Friday on Cheshire Township
Road 633 (Story's Run).
Troopers said Qualls was
' westbound at 3:30 p,m. when
the car he drove crossed the
center line, went off the left
side of the road and struck a
tree. The car then rolled over
onto its side.
The car was moderately
damaged.

GALLIPOLIS :..... Gallia
Academy High School Choir
Boosters meet Tuesday at 6
p .m. in the GAHS choir
room to discuss fund-raisers
for 2001-02.
All choir parents are urged
to attend.

UMWomen
BELPRE - Athens District
United . Methodist
Women are observing District Day Sept. 15 at Rockland
United
Methodist
Church in Belpre, starting
with registration and coffee
time at 9 a.m.
The meeting is at 9:30 and
concludes at 3 p.m.
Guest speaker is the Rev.
.Israel Kamudiandu from
Zimbabwe. He is currently

•!Columbuo let-/118" I

Drivers ticketed

t~
Ali&amp;..
V\ID-~:
·

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main &lt;OOCUJiin ollstorleo Is 10 bt
.accurate. If you know of an error In a
story, &lt;all the neworoom at (740) 4462342 or Pomeroy: (740) !192-llS!. We wtU
check your laformation and make I
corredJon ir warnnted.

Newa o.p.rtmtnta

Gallpolla
The main number ·t• 446·ll4l.

Deportment mention!.,.,
M...&amp;illtl Edttor---lll&lt;L 118
City Edttor....- ..- ------E•L Ill
Llfestyle....,_ ............---······lll&lt;L UO
Sports ................-----E&gt;L Ill
News .................. ,_______ llJ&lt;L 119
To Send E-Mili

Ente~

u Hcood clu1 mailinJ m1ttcr It
Pomeroy, Ohio ~ off'~ee.
.
Maablr: The ASIOCilted Preu, lnd tiM: Oh1o
N!'!~-~~llion.

POSI'MASTIR: Send llldreu ccmw;Uoos to n.e
S11ndly-limes Sentinel, llS Th ird An.,
Gallipolii,Ohio _.5631 .

s~~~TIS

·

11 CmlerorMolor...,.

One Wcek .....................................................SI.lS
One Year ............................. :....................... ~.00
SINGLE COP'/ PRICE

~~~~Pii;'i;y";;;'i 'j;;;;;it~·i;·;;;~..!~

•

galtribunt@turtkloet.Mm

Newa Deportment
Pamoroy
The n11in number Is 99l-l155.
Dtp~~rtml:nl txttnslonlare:

For mora Information, cell 1·800·
HRBLOCK, vlalt hrblock.com or contact
your local oHlca.

,.

1

i

i

Indian teachers adapt to U.S.

Please send me free lnf,or~nat:lort·:
about the H&amp;R BLOCK Income ........-,
Course.

' death of his 8-month-old son.
: Zebdee McDowell, 39, ofAkron, was charged Friday in the death
~,.two months ago of his son,Jaicynth McDowell. He was jailed to
•~await an arraignment.
.
: ~ Police Capt. Elizabeth Daugherty said McDowell would not talk
:; to officen after his arrest Friday; but in an earlier interview with
; ~detectives denied any wrongdoing.
Police said the charges resulted from medical 'evidence and from
; twitness statements.

Name _________________________

:t•

Add~aa_·---------------------

'~

i';.~

c~------------------

statti ...:.....____ ZIP Code_...;____

:;
;

•
House fire kill
. s supemsor

CINCINNATI (AP) -

A

disp~te between two neighbon over

The 6th U.S. Cirruit Court ofAppeals on Friday ordered a lower
court 1to determine how much Mayfield Heights should pay resident Sanford]. Berger, who won his lawsuit against a city order to
cut the grass and weeds.
Berger's lawyer, Bruce ElfVin, said the .fees will total at least
$250,000 and could go as high as'$270,000. L. Bryan Carr, a lawyer
for Mayfield ·Heights, said he will argue when the case goes back
before U.S. District Judge David Katz that the city owes Berger

Officer's sentence suspended

CINCINNATI (AP) -A po~ce officer in suburban Norwood

was given a suspended jail sentence Friday and fined $750 for jeop-:
ardizing an undercover drug investigation by leaking confidential ·

po~ce

5?

~·

Feed StopBrian-IJnroe-

for buying my
2001 Market Lamb

~ Z'autect:

Fair reports going to auditor

His interests:
General Orthopedlcl
Lower Extl•nlty Surgery

Joint Rtpl1cement

1

'
•lure.
Nu;ety-four fain, including
independent "'·
•ms, will be au·d·Ited
.,
said Kim Norris, spokeswoman for Auditor Jim. Petro. The audits
probably will start by the .end of this year and will take about two

~~ the past

12 yean, the auditor's office contracted with the

••;.:

Orthopedic Excellence for all
the Mid-Ohio Valley.
.

;.••

~

.~

••
,.••

lloll! . . -

MAILstJISCRim'ONS
"""' .... Cou~

Dr. Shute joins orthopedic surgeons
w..."""'Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD, .
.1-J~~ Hanington, MD, and Arnold /'enlx, MD,

•

•

PremiUm ·
lradl •
III'IIWHd
Plllllflel
Place Yo ur Orde rs Tod ay'

Cheater Landmark
St. Rt. 7 Chester
985-3700

Gallia County Health Department

FREE

Parenting
Class
September 18th, 2001
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
Topic:
Bonding
With

Your
Child

G~LLIA

Call:
446-8538
to sign up·
for the
class.

COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SEPTEMBER 14 - 15 - 16
. HOURS 8 A.M. TO 5 P.M. DAILY

"FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING"

OUTSIDE SPACES 10' FRONTAGE $6 A DAY
INSIDE SPACES $18 AND UP-- RESERVED IN ADVANCE
• FOR lNFORMAnON AND RESERVATION CALL 740·246-6341 OR 740·446-4120

•·.

~

·~

PRE-SEASON
SPECIAL!

r
.~
·-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~;:;;~~~~~~;:~~~~~~~
500 I'"
"C''LE'r.1.A1 MARKET '
T'HE F'RE'J\.TC'H
lll

center, was pronounced dead about
minutes of Hamilton County Common ,'·•
·' afte
. r firefin.t..ters
pulled him from the rwo-stoty home Friday after- Pleas C:Ourt found Da~els guilty
11
"
of
!' noon.
·
,
,.
h a nusdemeanor vernon of the
: : The fire apparendy started on .?&gt;e. first tl?or.
.
c arge~
• • "There was extensive damage, 5ald distriCt ~ ChiefRob Ross.
; ''They have to sift through everything, and figure out what they
: can, piece by piece."
'
··

:•
:
:

·in hammocks and on plarforms
in the trees to protest the logging of a 292 acres plot ofland
in Zaleski State Forest, 70 miles
southeast of Columbus.
The council is against logging of any type but was particularly upset about Zaleski, a
popular hiking spot and home
to some endangered wildlife.

THANK YOU

'COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio county fair.; will be audited b): the
state's auditing department instead of the Department of Agncul-

Regional
Orthopedic ,center

ZALESKI (AP) - Three
protesters climbed down from
trees Friday in a southeast
0 hio state forest after a week's
demonstration against loggin~.
Vinton County sheriff's
deputies arrested two of the
protesters, said Andy Ware, a
spokesman . for the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources'
Division
of
Forestry. The third demonstrator left the site.
·
Susan Heitker and Matt
Glass were charged with criminal trespassing and released on
bond, the sheriff's office said.
Authorities planned to try to
locate the third demonstrator,
Ware said.
Members of the Buckeye
Forest Council spent the week

CLEVELAND (AP) - lri January, an astrologer told Arun Nagpal he would go over.;eas within a few months and succeed.
. At the time, Nagpal had no plans to leave India, where he'd spent
' more than 20 yean teaching chentistry at the high school and college level.
.
But in March, recruiters from the Cleveland Municipal School
District arrived, seeking certified math and science teachers to end
a shortage here. Nine months after the prediction, Nagpal said he
wants to stay in his new country.
·
.---.......:--------------,
The students "will get a lot from me and I will get a lot from
them," said Nagpal, who teaches chemistry and physics at John F.
Kennedy High School and would like to tackle biology lessons as
well.

information.
·
Lt. Steve Daniels, a 22-year veteran, was given a suspended 15-day
, jail sentence for his no contest plea July 31 to a misdemeanor charge
· of obstructing justice. He could have been sentenced to up to 90
days iii jail.
.
.
Daniels, 44, remains on suspension with pay from his $55,000-ayear
job. He faces administrative proceedings next week in
AKRON (AP) -A veteran police-fire dispatch supervisor was Norwood and could lose his job.
h
He was orioinaJiy indicted on a felony charge of obstructingjusThomas Shumaker,orne.
53, a civilian supervisor at the city's safety tice, but Judge William Mathews

:·~edina~~his
::~ommunications
I~

Gerald Shute, MD

:Protestors come
down from trees

i manslaughter and felony child endangering in the alleged shaking

02001 H6R 81oak TnleNIOH, lno.

618 E. Main Street
1Pomeroy, OH 45769
1-800-HRBLOCK or
1(7
40) 992·6674 .

plant.
The explosion at about 11 p.m. set off an alarm that could be
heard several miles away. causing concern among area residents, said
Russ · Decker Allen County Emergency Management Agency
director.
'
.
.
"When the explosion happened, there was one b1g explosiOn that .
rattled the windows" said Pat Good, who lives about a mile-and-ahalf from the plant. '

spring to scrape together revenue fo r the
state's $45 billion budget.
"We are already operating under the
tightest budget in nearly a decade," Taft
said. "Many state agencies are reducing
the level of operations just to live within
their current budget."
Figures cited by Justice Andy Douglas
in his opinion indicate the rulin g would
qm about $331 additional dollars per
student each year. Given Qhio's 1.8 million students, that would mean ·about
$595 million a year, according to the
Department of Education .
ChiefJustice Thomas Moyer on Thursday· night said, based on evidence in the
case, he believed the figure would be
$300 million to $400 million annually.
..

i . . Dad cited "1n Shaking death
no~~~~ppeals
Judges Martha Craig Daughtrey; ~an Norris and
ii AKRON. (AP) - A man has been charged with involuntary Lawrence
Zatkoff said Berger is entitled to the money because he
won the suit.

H&amp;R BLOCK

CLINIC

.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Maintenance worken found more than
$17,000 in cash Tuesday as they repaired the walls of a barn in the
Cuyahoga Valley National Park.
"We will dig through the proper;)' records, locate the hein of former ownen and try to determine who should get the money;· said
Chief Ranger Brian McHugh, who wouldn't reveal further details
about the money.
·
·
·
·
·
"We have to have things to ask .anyone who tries to c)aim the
money."h e saJ"d.
·
.
The bam is part of an 1891 homestead built by A.J. Savacoal, park
Property Manager Dee Strickland said. The park bought the property in 1998 from the late Robert Hopkins, who owned it since
1969.

now

I

HOLZER

~i 5~:: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :j:: ~ .

General Mau&amp;er · · · · - -EaL UOI
New•-·-·······-.. •••..-···-··Ed.IIOl
-~-............ - .........or EJt 1106

Leak causes BP plant blist

Regional Orthopedic Center

WeeQ.....................................................SIOS-36
• • OWide Gallil CouatJ

S17,000 found in bam·

LIMA (AP) -A leak in a hydrogen line caused an explosion late the high grass and vines.on a vacant lot became a seven-year court
Friday at a BP chemical plant, officials said.
.
battle that
could cost·a Cleveland suburb at least $250,000 in
No one was injured and the hydrogen did not escape beyond the attorneys' fees.
·

1

Announces the ·Newest
Addition to the

~ ::~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~
~2

Highs in the upper 80s. South
· The National Weather Ser- wind around 10 mph.
. • vice says scattered showers
Sunday
night.. :Partly
, and thunderstorms along with cloudy. A 30 percent chance
, )Jnseasonably warm tempera- of showers late. Lows in the
··' tures are expected for the tri- mid 60s.
county area on M9.!/;..day.
Monday.. . Mostly cloudy
'• Increasingly moist, unstable with a chance of showers and
!air will move into the region thunderstorms. Highs . near
~as the low moves slowly east. 80.
::Yhis will keep a chance of
Monday
night ... Mostly
:'showers and thunderstorms in cloudy with a ~hance · of
:the forecast into early next showers and thunderstorms.
::Week.
Lows 59 to 65 .
~ Temperatures will remain
Extended forecast:
•on the warm side. Highs SunTuesday... Mostly cloudy. A
:a.y will be in the low to mid chance of showers and thun•JlOs and Sunday night from
~~he mid 60 s to near 70 .
derstorms during. the day.
~ Southwest flow between Highs in the upper 70s.
~igh pressure in the east and
Wednesday.. .Partly cloudy.
~peveloping low pressure in Lows in ' the upper 50s and
:the west was drawing warm, high s in the upper 70s.
:humid air toward Ohio and
Thursday... Mostly
clear.
;Xvest Virginia.
Lows in the mid 50s an·d
~ Sunrise Sunday will be at highs near 80.
Friday... Partly cloudy. · Lows
i :06 a.m.
· ·
Weather forecast:
in the upper 50s and highs
· · Sund~y... Mostly
sunny. near 80.

51.2 billion. Th at would be on top of
record spending on education of about
S14 billion this year and next.
Gov. Dob Taft, at a news conference less
than 24 hours after the court's ruling, said
he was waiting for accurate figures before
deciding how to pay for it.
He immediately ruled out an increase
of Ohio's m:Jjor taxes, such as sales or
income taxes.
He Jlso said he wouldn't support raising money by installing electronic slot
machines at Ohio's seven racetracks.
But he said he wouldn't rule out tapping a portion of the state's $1 billion
rainy day fund, especially because of the
slumping economy. He also suggested the
state could raise money by closing certain
tax loopholes, a strategy he used last

~_:__ ~~--1L1Jt-dispute-may-costsuburb

Holzer Clinic

home carrk:r M:rYicc il .vlillble.
The Sully Tina..Senllncl will not be IUpOIIIfbk
far ldvMCt plymtntl made 10 caTicn.
PubliWr IUCI'Yel lhl: ri&amp;hl to adjUJt ra&amp;ea Wrinl
w 111blcriptD ~ Sub«ription n1e ~
II"IIIJ be implcr.enlccl by cbanpna lhc dLII'IliOtl of
lht: subttripeion.

Ice

Flurries

BY THE ASSOC[ATED PRESS

'

Sunday, ~ptemHr 9, 1001

Department ofAgric1~ture and allowed the department to conduct
the audits.
.
'The decision stems from an audit of the Delaware County Fair
that Petro's office made public this week. The report recommended
improvements to the fair's operations and accounting procedures.

:-stormy weather set to return

Learn about recent tax law changes.
Make sure you pay as little as necessary
while complying with the new tax laws. An . :
income tax course from H&amp;R Block covers
everything from completing a basic 1040 to
handling complex schedules.

&amp;unbap~attmt. 6mttnel

(UsPS IIJ.Uil)
eo.nn.atty Nnrlpeptr lloldlnii.JDC.
PubJi1hed nery Sunday, 825 fhinl A'lt..,
Oallipoli1 Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publdhina
Company.'Srcond d .. pCiiUJe paid It Galtipolil,
Ohio.

Rain

; '

TiMESSENTINEL STAFF

Don't get penalized or pay too much.

\ ot,

~
· ,~ -... •. .·

~ ..,.~,...

•
Bv BRIAN J. REED

s.h~:ip~R=o=a=d~6=8,~j~·u=st~n=o~rt=h~o~f~~~~446~~-3~2~48~FO~R~MO~R~E~IN~F~O~.~~~~~~·I~/2~a~c~re~l~oL~~~

•

.

Taft, Proctor to attend ·33 groundbreaking

DARWIN Paul L.
Smith, 42, Whitehall, was
cited for failure to control by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol follow-

..

··-~~~===:J==:==~==l
r"r..

Crasft
inJures two

inside the Meigs County
Courthouse.

W. VA.

•

Council meets

Meeting set

I•

• -

[ Monoftold IW/81 '

Street repaln

Choir Boosten

COLUMllUS (AP) - Ten yean after
Ohio 's school- funding lawsuit began,
stare officials on Friday were trying to
answer a new version of the same question: How much will fixing the problem
cost?
In a 4-3 decision, the Ohio Supreme
Col!rt on Thursday ordered the .state to
spend additional money on educa~ion to
make its school-funding system constitutional. It wants the state to further redu ce
the gap between rich and poor districts.
The court did not specifY a complete
dollar amount, but said the state should
increase basic state aid for students as well
as · speed up a new funding program for
poor districts.
Early estimates ranged from an additional $400 miUion a year to as much as

,

On display now at the Gallipolis Foodland is a 101-pound_ watermelon grow~ in Crown City 'by
the Ben 'Troyer family. Foodland is donating it to the Gall!a County Senior· Citizen Center. Pictured from left. are Kevin Eastman, store manager Jeff Hart, produce manager Ron Warner, Bob
Eastman and Brent Eastman. (Matt Rodgers photo)

PageA3

State back to· calculating cost of funding fix

Sunday, Sept. 9

n.

MIDDLEPORT - Mid-.- - dleport merch~
meet
Monday at 5:30 p.m. at
Office Service &amp; Supply.
Information is available by
PORTLAND - A Portcalling Donna Tillis at 992land-area man was taken to a
6376 or Jill Curry at 992Huntington, W.Va., hospital
7075.
by LifeFlight following a
two-car collision Friday on
Ohio 124 near Portland, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
POMEROY
Main
State Highway Patrol reportStreet · will be · closed on
ed.
Monday due to repair work
Transported from the scene
being· performed by the
of the 8:14 a.m. crash to
Ohio Department of'TransCabell Huntington Hospital
portation.
was Gayle A. Price, 91, 57995
Parking meters along both
Ohio 124, according to the
sides of the street will be
report.
hooded and eastbound traffic
Troopers said Price pulled .
will be diverted through the
onto 124 from a private driPomeroy Parking Lot and
veway and collided with a
·westbound traffic through
northbound • car driven by
" Street. .
Second
Mildred A. Kridel, 63, Long
The work is ' estimated to
Bottom.
last around five to six hours.
Krid~l was also injured and
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital by Meigs EMS.
Both cars were severely
POMEROY Meigs
damaged, and Price was cited County Republican Party
for failure to yi,eld.
meets at 7:30 p.m. Monday

-.

Ohio weather

summer, allowing the project
Shade in Athens County.
Preparation work delayed to proceed.
A
DARWIN
Gov.
Bob
Tali
the start of construction on the
MIDDLEPORT
The first section of the highand
Ohio
Department
of
project;
much of that work w~
conversational Spanish class
way is expected to be complettaught by Norma Torres will Transportation Director Gor- held up because of a lawsuit
begin Monday at 7 p.m. at don Proctor will attend a filed by project opjJOnerits in ed in September 2003. A secthe Middleport Church of groundbreaking ceremony for U.S. District Court. That law- ond phase is scheduled for ~id
Christ, Room 204, at the the U.S. 33 Athens-to-Darwin suit was overturned earlier this opening later this month.
Family Life Center, Fifth and project on Sept. "18.
ODOT
District
10
Main, Middleport.
Emphasis will be learning spokesman Chris Davis said
'how to speak Spanish the Friday that the two mel! will
way you learned how to deliver keynote addresses at the
speak English, through learn- event, beginning at 2:30p.m. at
Newly constructed
ing words and phrases and the end of the existing fourl600 sq.
borne.
practicing with others in the lane it Darwin.
Dream kitchen, custom
·
class.
The contract for the first of
oak cabinets, storoae
· For more information, call· two phases of the project was
galore, center Island,
992-2914.
awarded earlier this summer to
J BR's, l·lll baths,
Sntith &amp; Johnson ConstrueDR, LR with ftreplace,
tion Co., Columbus.
massive bullt.ln
· Cost for the fint phase is
liiiiMIDIATI POSSESSION .
book""'•• central air,
·
O
FER
laundry
room,
RACINE - Racine Vii- $33.3 million. Th e project
SltS,IOO OR BIST Ill
· attachedZ.ll2ear
!age
Council's
regular · involves a six-mile stretch of
Take SR 160 to SR 554 ·TR-Io Bulavllle
•ar-, huge front
"'
h'gh
b
Pike·
TR·IO
Pro1pect
Chureh
Rd
•
TR
•
• .,..Located on a
monthly meeting is Monday Super .wo 1 way etween
pon:h.
111 new houH on L after Swango Rd.
at 7 p.m. at the municipal Darwin and Alexander TownFollow algna. CALL (740) 446-4514 or
quiet country road,

·Merchants
to meet

Ohio

~~-,Unb~ ~imes- jentiud

biggun

A

• h 0 flereel
5pan1s

building.

,.• .

~otis
ta!eer
Co
...... "Careers Close To Home"
.

Career Information Is Just a click away...

�Opinion

PageA4.

West Vlrgl_n_i_a____

Sunday, September 9, 1001

.

Higher production not being characterized as a boom

West Virginia weather
Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleaaant, w. Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

CHARLESTON (AP) - The energy
sc~re prompted by California's rolling
blackouts means coal operators are digging in West Virginia and other states to
meet a new demand.
·
Operaton are also finding that even
their higher sulfur coal has a market,'and
can be sold for nearly double the price it ·
was bringing last year.
"There is still a great demand out there
fof coal," S:lys Mike Perilli, a Summenville-based coal broker. "I think it's
going to be good for another year."
According to figures compiled by the
U.S. .Energy Information Agency, the
nation's operators have produced nearly
7 percent more coal between January and.
Sept. 1 than during the_same period last
year.The figure reverses a two-year rnend.
Mines located west of the Mississippi

A.ccuWeathe .. forecast for

IN FINDIN6

AC~FOR

Co.

fttiTICS?.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing EdHor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

Sunday, Sept. 9

AHYLVGK

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

'

Utters to thf UUtw tJn w~k,_. Tllfy Jlundd IN Ins tluut. JOO wtwds. AU kllln
au subj«:t ,, l!dilin6 tmd '"'"'1M ~1f11d lll'f.d IMivri•IJlJdnu ••4 t•Wplwla• •.-!Hr.
No NAJig11rtl l~tt•n will h pu&amp;lhlud. lAflin 11fould H ill pod 11Ut1, GlldnniiiJ

isrutr, lfOI ~f'rOMUlifl,

.

Tht opiniorl.r tXptYIHil ill t/11 (:Oflilftll btlow., tlu eOJtlliUIU oflilt Oltlo MllltJ
hbliJitirtg Co. 'I Hilorio./ botud, ,,.,_, otlwrwh• ft{JIH.

VA.

NATIONAL VIEW

0-·~·.
sno.e.. ~-·

Sumy "!. Cloudy

Mexican trnckers may
have free rnn of US.
• Daily News, Los Angeles, otl Mexican trucks and safe~·
ty: The unions' grip on the Democratic Party made itself
clear last week when all 50 Senate Democrats - and 20

The unions hate NAFTA even though it has done no
. demonstrable harm to their interests and the Teamsters certal'nly don 't want any compen·u·on on th e road . ...
which Pres1'dent Bush has
The Denlocrats ' bill ·
promised to veto- wou ld require M extcan
true k s to meet .
·
d on ana di an
stricter sa fiety re gulations th an t h ose Impose
or American trucks already doing business in the U.S.
It's plainly discriminatory. ...
There is something racially insensitive about that attitude,
and it's aU the harder to understand since so many Democ3 rnilli "ll gal .
.
rats can't wait to grant amnesty to
' on I e
grants from Mex_ito.
ha
I fro ' M .
Is it the party s position t t peop e
m
ext co can
cross the border without restriction as long as they don't
- _ _..bt:inlg..tneir..tlr.uc:ksi:_ _ _ _ _ _ _

c

unnn-

0

u· R

B • b "ld · b k
rtng Ul tngs ac
Dear Editor·.
I was saddened to hear of the fire that
struck downtown Gallipolis in early
August. This wonderful river town has
always been a favorite of mine with its
row of 19 th century buildings facing .
h p bl'
d
1 k'
h
t e u tc quare an over oo mg t e
broad Ohio River.
L'tste d m
· t h e N atlon
· a[ R eg1ster
·
of
Historic Places in 1980 for its excellent
·
1
f
·
d
·
·1
examp es o rest enna1 an d commercta
1 cture as well as 1'ts place 1·n the
arch"t
e
·
early settlement of Ohio, the historic
district provides residents and visitors
alike with a sense of place unsurpassed
by many communities statewide.
.
The city of Gallipolis .has !on~ recogthe va:,e
rt.ch
. ' tt rea trme . m mterest m tstone preservation when It chose to par· ·
· h c ·fi d l
1G

s

~~z;t

o~t~

hertt~gei/n

R E A D E R s ' v IE ws
ing out of a garage or driveway, watch
for children walking to the school bus.
M
t'm
1· es walkt'ng or bicycling chi!
anyare pay1'ng more attent 1'0 n to getdren
tlh·n~ to schoa]ol, ~and less attention to
t eu person sa.ety.
Also, watch for children walking in
rhe street, especially if there are no sidewalks, a·nd fior cht'ldren congregating
b
Ch'ld
.
1 ren are somenmes
near us stops.
Unaware Of the dangers they f:ace when
lk '
li
ffi D ·
wa mg or eye ng c1ose to tra tc. nvers need to be aware of this and pay
close attention to children who may
not be paying close attention . themselves.
Motorists also have a responsibility to
know the meaning of a flashing light
system on school buses. The yellow and
red lights are designed to help ens ure
the safety of both motorists and chi!dren. Yellow flashing lights indicate the
b
. p
.
t
t
M 0 to . t
us ts reparmg · 0 sop.
ns s
down
to stop.
Rea flasfiing lights and the extended
SlOP arm on· a school bus indicate the
bus has stopped for children to get on
or off the bus. Motorists approaching
from either direction are required to
stop at least 10 feet from a stopped
school bus until the bus resumes
motion. If a school bus is stopped on a
road divided into four or more lanes,
only traffic driving in the same direction as the bus must stop.
Parents have an additional responsibility to school bus safety. Children
should be taught school bus safety
before they step into a school bus for
the first time, and this responsibility lies
with the parent. It is important for chi!dren to learn how to stay safe both in
and outside the school bus Statistics
show students are actually a; .a greater
risk standing outside a bus than riding
in a bus.
Students should arrive. at the bus stop
at least five minutes before the bus is
due to pick them up. While waiting for
the bus, they should stand at least three
giant ·Steps away from the curb, and line
up away from the street. Before stepping into the bus, children should wait
until the bus stops, the door opens, and
the driver gives permission. Parents
should encourage their children to sit
quietly in their sear and follow the driver's instructions on bus safety.
When exiting the bus, care should be
taken to check that clothing with drawstrings and book bags with srraps do
not get caught in the handrails or
doors ~ Additionally, students sho uld
never go back for anything left on the
bus, and never bend down near or
under the bus to pick up something
that has fallen .
Passengers should always walk in
front o( the bus when they must cross a
street to get on or off the bus. Child,r~n
should wal.k far enough in front of'the
bus that they can see the driver, whi' h
is about 10 feet in front. Children
should never walk behind a school bus.
and ' stay :it least three feet away from
the side of a bus.
With the cooperation of motorists,
parents, and children, we can help make
the bus ride to and from school as safe
as possible for our ,hildren, and make
this a safe school year throughout Ohio.
Lt. Richard E. Grau
State Highway Patrol
Gallipolis

~-------~~tmtcletnpl-at
_ef&gt;r&lt;tonl~tt
;a·rret,renratll~il.neg-Jito--c•~ai~ri'lbolveer£n0 __s_hould . sl()W
··
· . .
.
. r

is nothing but crude, base politics in the service of
foolish, backward economics.

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

CIMy

T·Siolma

Rain

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2001. There are
113 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 9, 1976, Communist Chinese leader Mao Tse·
tung di ed in Beijing at age 82.
On this date :
In 1776, the second Continental Congress made the term
"United States" official, replacing "United Colonies."
In 1850, California became the 31st state of the union.
In 1926, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) was
created by the Radio Corporation of America.
In 1943, Allied forces landed at Salerno and Taranto during
World War II .
In 1948, the People's Democratic Republic of Korea
(North Korea) was created .
. In 1956, Elvis PresJey made the first of three appearances
on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
In 1957, President Eisenhower signed into law the first
civil rights· bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction.
In 1971 , prisoners seized control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo. N.Y., beginning
a siege th at ended up claiming 43 lives.
· In 1990, Liberian President Samuel K. Doe was killed after
being captured by rebels.
In 1993, PlO leaders and Israel agreed to recognize each
other, clearing the way for a peace accord.
Ten yea rs ago: Boxer Mike Tyson was indicted in Indianap.olis on a charge of raping Desiree Washington, a beauty
pageant contestant. (Tyson was later convicted.)
Five years ago: Promising safer skies, Presi,dent Clinton
issued.orders to tighten airport security and chailenged Con- .
gress to support a $1. 1 billion anti-terrorism crackdown.
Keepin g her word not to cooperate with Whitewater prose- .
cutors, Susan McDougal was led away to jail for contempt of.
. court, denyin g she was trying to protect Clinton with her
silence.
One year ago: President Clinton proposed spending about
$1.6 billion to help communities recover from recent Western wildfires. Ven us Williams beat Lindsay Davenport 6-4, 75 for th e U.S. Open women's singles championship, her first
Grand Slam title.
· Today 's Birthdays : Actor Cliff Robertson is 76. Jazz musician Elvin Jo nes is 74. Actress Sylvia Miles is 69. Actor Topol
is 66. R&amp;l3 si nger Luther Simmons is 59. Singer Inez Foxx is
59. Singer Dee Dee Sharp is 56. Singer-musician Billy Preston is 55. Rock singer-musician Doug Ingle (Iron Butterfly)
. is 55. Country singer Freddy Weller is 54. Football .commentator Joe Theismann is 52. Actor-comedian Michad Keaton
·is 50. Actor Tom Wopat is 50. Actress Angela Cartwright is
49. Musi cian ~producer Dave Stewart is 49. Actor Hugh
Grant is 41. Acior Adam Sandler is 35. Actor David Bennent
is 35. Rock singe r Paul Durham (Black Lab) is 33. Rapper
Dray (Das EFX) is 31. Actor Goran Visnjic is ·29. Actress
Michelle Williams is 21 .
, Tho ught for Today: "Obstacles are those frightful things
yo u see when you take your eyes off the goal." - Hannah
More, English author and social reform er ( 1745- 1833).

'"We're not talking boom times," said
John Grasser, a spokesman with the
National Mming Association.
Although 'the Bush · administration is
considered a friend of coal, that "doesn't
mean we were going to see dramatic
increases in the use of coal," Grasser said.
Increased usage won 't occur until utilities· start building more coal-fired plants
and exports reboJJnd.
Producers in West Virginia's northern
high sulfur regions have enjoyed a greater
percentage increase than their counterparts in the south this year.
The agency rep'orts 'production is up
more dian 8 percent in the north to
more than 27 million tons. Southern coal
field production is behind last year's pace
by 1.6 million tons, to about 81 million
tons.

Police knew that lain falsified evidence

Aurrioo

• custocly .
FUgl"tives .back In

opedratehwi rhin a 20d-milN.e zhonAmeno.rth oFf theTbodrdAger. But
un er t e 8-year-o1
ort
encan ree ra e
teement, they are supposed to get open access to all of the
country by Jan. 1.

River have increased production by
about 8 percent. Mines east of the river
are up nearly 5 percent.
West Virginia, the nation's second
largest producer, has had about a 1 percent gain since Janua ry. The.agency said
state producers mined about 108 million
tons of coal.
Wyoming, the nation's largest producer, posted a 7.3 percent_gain . Operators
there have mined about ~42 million tons
of coal since January.
The agency's statistics are based on railcar loadings and information supplied by
the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration. The information is considered
an accurate reflection of production .
In an industry defined by boom and
bust cycles, the current upswing isn't
being called a boom.

02001

Open access?

protectionist Republicans - voted to break a filibuster
blocking a vote on a bill te impose harsh regulations. on
M elcican trucks operating in the u.s.
Und.er current Ia\'&lt;, Melcican truckers are only allowed to .

Se. . ;. .pte_.~ -~e_,~-!

su--nd•...;....Y·

grants admmtstered by the
Htstone PreservatiOn Office. It was ~uc~ a
grant that asSISted m the re~abthtatto~
of the bandstand m the Pubhc Square.
The ctty can now. place another
feather 10 Its cap as we JUSt learned that
the National Park Se~ice approved t?e
expans~on.ofthe Nattonal Regtster histone dtstnct on Aug. 22,2001.
As plans are made to ~butld, I strongly encou~age .constderauon of the reuse
of the htstonc storefronts damaged by
the fire alo~ Second Avenue. The~e are
meplaceable res.o~rce~ that provtde a
cohesive. and dtstmcttve look to the
commumty. They .can be b:ou~t back
to hfe, and thetr mcl~s 10 ". m the
National Register of Htstonc Places
~akes .them eligible for some assistance,
mcludmg a 20 percent mvestme~t tax
credit when rehabtbtated according to
estabhshed standards.
.. .
Destgn work and rehabthtatton costs
may also be supported through limited
grant funds available to Gallipohs as a
Certtfi~d Local Government.
.
I thmk. back to an article, .whtch
appeared . m the Columbus Dtspatch
right after the fire. It was reported that
a Mr. Ken Holley lamented the fact that
the opportumty to capture the tdeal
photograph of the city in his mind's eye
was lost as a result of the fire. That
opportunity will only be lost if we let it
to slip away.
Franco Ruffini
Deputy State
Historic Preservation Officer
Columbus

Keep this in mind
Dear Editor:
The familiar sight of yellow buses
back on our roadways signals the
beginning of another school year.
Please keep in mind that there are many .
special concerns to be considered when
sharing the road with school buses.
Children, motorists, and parents need
to be made aware of the possible dangers both inside· and around a school
bus and how to avoid them. This will
do a great deal to ensure the safety of
children on school buses. While school
buses remain thf safest mode of transport on Ohto roads, crashes do occur.
In 2000, there were 2,082 school buses
crashes in Ohio. The State l'lighway
Patrol would like .to see this number
drop.
Motorists can do their part by starting to think about school bus safety the
moment the car is started. When back-

an~pr~are

50,000 non-smokers every year,
acco'rding to the Centers for Disease .
C ontrol and Prevention, making it the
third leading cause of preventable ·death

ini~u:d~~~:~.Y·a

report issued bv_
1997
,.
the California Environmental Protec~
tion Agency estimated that each year in
the United States, secondhand smoke..
exposure causes 1 ,900 to 2 ,700 deaths .
due t.o sudden infant death syndrome. ·
In view of this information, the ,
Clean l.ndoor Air regulation being considered by. the Meigs County Board of
· ·
Health has th e . potential to save lives:,
These local health e~perts are charged
with protecting the health and safety of
the community they represent. Now,
they have the , opportunity to protect
the public, including restaurant and bar
employees, from the hazardous health
effects of secondhand smoke.
,
A recent study,
in The

Bowles said he often had dif- with Zain between 1987 and under false pretenses.
ferences of opinion with Zain, 1989.
He was initially accused of
but
that
he
was
never
actually
WAYNE (AP) - A fugitive from the Wa,yne County Jail
Prosecutors · say Zain, 50, five counts of fraud, but
ordered to report a scientific made up much of the evidence Raleigh County Circuit Judge
~ho was captured Friday says he was "tripping on LSD" the
position with which he dis- that he testified to in triats H.L. Kirkpatrick merged the
night he attacked a guard and escaped.
agreed.
"That's why I did it;' Joseph Franklin Cook, 22, of Ceredo
across West Virginia until he left first two counts at the prosecu"I
do
recall
one
time
when
the State Police in 1989 to tion's request. Defense lawyers
said Friday.
there was a new system we accept a job in Texas. He nbw
The hallucinogenic drug had been placed on the sticky side
had argued the similar counts
were trying to evaluate,"
works
for
a
state-run
environmight be viewed as improper
of postage stamps on letters sent to him at the jail, &lt;Cook said.
Bowles said. Zain "was very
Sgt. Rex Varney of the Wayne County Sheriff's Department
mental laboratory in Aorida.
double jeopardy - trying a
said police will investigate Cook's comments about the LSD.
~::~tolepo:!:n:ci:;~~ ~ insistent that I call it his way."
Zain is charged with four defendant tWice for the same
Another State Police lab
Angeles County Sheriff's
of obtaining money crime.
counts
technician testified Friday that
S
I
Department, W"
.
- part of a 1993 Zain did very little lab work
review team ordered into the himself. but usually wrote the
liHUNTI NGh.TON (Ak P)k-b Ak CabelldCound~ womban who West Virginia lab by the state reports and conclusions from
re used to 1et er pet s un e illed an teste wr ra ies must S
C
other officers' tests.
stay in jail.
upreme ourt.
It was a practice for other
· Cabell County Circuit Judge David Pancake on Friday
However, the jury never
heard much of what . 'Linhart. officers to review each other's
ordered Robbyn Sarvas, 44, tp remain "in custody until she h d
bo
k
a to say a ut am s wor . lab work, but Zain kept his
.purges herself of contempt."
ft d c
1
b.
d work to himself, said Trooper
h
k
k
b
ld
·
K
.
a
er
e1ense
awyen
o
~ecte
. harts• propose d testlAuthorities say t e s un it 9-year-o Quin.cie nsmer at ·that 1 m
·
Brent Myers, who worked
Ritter Park on Aug. 22.
h
mony was a surprise to t em.
, Sarvas had asked Pancake to release her so she could look for
"'n
vve •ve never h eard or seen . ~J:IldCI:I:Illl~~~
ner pet so the girl could stop taking painful rabies vaccinations w ha t h e got up an d stare
·t d
that started Sept. 1.
talking about today, about suecess frequency," said Tom
Smith.
Linhart did testifY that he
, HUNTINGTON (AP) - A 9-year-old boy accused of was troubled by what appeared
c)taSing a group of children with an 8-inch knife after school to be a pattern of changes on
for buying my
Thursday has been .suspended.
.
lab work reports where the
2001 Market Hog
· The boy allegedly chased a group of five students who actu~ test data could not be
·
fro
10
7
of the work
been made to the Hlmti:n~ton
sheets, by itself, is not necess:ir- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
:Jedd Flowers, director
communications for Cabell Coun- ily suspicious," Linhart said. r
ty Schools, said education officials question whether the act "But it seemed that that direcviolated the · Safe Schools Act since the boy had already left tion in which the alteration
Cammack Elementary School when the incident occurred
was being done was always
against the defendant ... and in
favor of the state's case."
.
Linhart said his review also
·MARTINSVILLE',Va. (AP) -A Martinsville grand jury on turned up instances of "misFriday .indicted a West Virginia m~ on charges of first-degree leading conclusions in the way
murder in a 1998 killing.
test data was reported.",
· , A firefighter found the body of Richard Ross, 52, on Sept.
"He tended to suggest
12, 1998, in his back yard in Martinsville. He had been shot in . greater weight for the data,
the back of the head, police said.
stmnger results. than could real· Zakee Tahlib, 40, qf Beaver, W.Va., was indicted Friday on ly be obtained from the data;'
charges of first-degree murder, robbery, conspiracy to commit Linhart said.
robbery, using a fire arm in ·a robbery and possessing a firearm
In other cases, data that tend~ a convicted felon. Tahlib is also known as Kenneth Wayne ed to point toWard a suspect's
Williamson, officials said. ·
innocence was ignored, he
· Ramzee Arabee Shareef, 47, of Martinsville pleaded guilty said.
Aug. 31 to the capital murder of Ross, as well as robbery and
Also testifying Friday was
use of a firearm to commit murder. The terms ofShareef's plea State Police Trooper Jeffiey A.
· a[rea dy servmg
· 25 years m
· W:all ens Bowles, who ·worked WJ'th
agreement are sea] ed . H e IS
Everyone's Invited to see how the men and women of AEP's Gavin Plant
Ridge State Prison for a robbery in Henry County.
Zain in the serology lab.
BECKLEY (AP) - A Los
Angeles County forensic scientist who led an investigation
into West Virginia's crime lab
operations said Friday he was
struck by the serology lab's
"remari:able
success· rate"
d ~
F d
un
er
LOrmer
supervtsor
re
Zain
R~nald R . Lumart, assistant

Skunk's owner till ·n ··a···

z· . ,

QU
THANK Y

Oh'IO Valle·. Y
Check Cash'lnQ

School offidals suspend youth

1~~~p~~~J~~~~~~~~~~J:--t-~~~m~~a~ge~~m~~to~~;·:_:o~'(!~l~~~~iilpliii'i~llli-~~~~~~'the~~k-~t]
are
.
to secondhand. smoke, such as workers.
in bars and restaurants, can see their risk
of lung cancer triple.
We know that the damage caused by
spending two hours in the non-smok- .
ing section of a smoking restaurant
equates to smoking . two cigarettes
yourself. Spend eight hours working in
a smoking environment and you have
smoked six. cigarettes without ever·
lighting a single one. In fact, Ohio still ·
r~nks 40 in the nation for protecting
workers from secondhand smoke expo".
sure, behind the tobacco producing
states of Virginia, Georgia and South
Carolina.
..
While some fear a negative econom- .
ic impact on bar and restaurant tev- "
enues, dozens of reputable studies from
across the country show that there is no
negative economic impact on businesh
es when smoking is prohibited. Here in .
Ohio, many restaurants have already.
gone smoke-free and felt .no financial,
loss. Keep in mind, nearly 75 percent of
Ohioans are non-smokers.
We urge .Meigs Cqunty health officials to join hundreds of communities
across the country in protecting the
public from the dangers of secondhand
smoke. This . is not a smoker's rights
issue. This is not an economic issue, It's
a health issue.
Tracy Sabetta
Project Director
Tobacco-Free' 0 hio
Dublin

Not affiliated

Dear Editor:
The Meigs County Tuberculosis (TB)
Office would like to thank the residents
of Meigs County for rhe warm welcome we have received throughout the
years during our clinics, held in all areas
of the county.
In order to continue this convenient
service to our residents, we are asking
again, as we did five years ago, to support our upcoming levy that will be on
the ballot Nov. 6, 2001.
Many residents are not aware that the
Meigs County TB Office is a totally
separate county ·office from the Health
Department. We are not funded by any
Health Department mpney.
Thank you ~gain for your continued
support of the Tuberculosis Levy which
incidentally has been on the ballot and
serving the citizens of Meigs County
since the early 1950s.
Dear Editor:
Connie Cotterill, R.N.
Second- hand smoke kills more than
Pomeroy
I

Supports ban

..'

'

~~" 're invite~{,

State man indicted in slaying-

tb stttenA-

GAVIN PLANT'S
\OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, September 15,2001
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.

turn Ohio coal into electricity to power all the things we use
at work, school and home.

·Workers evacuated after ~~~~~';Q'u1
thlorine leaks from plant ~ Jan Smith ~ .

·

.

.

~

on behalf at

~

We'll have lots df fun, enjoy some good food,
and learn a few things about energy and the
environment. There'll be plant tours, informative displays and activities for children.

HUNTINGTON (AP) "It smelled a ltttle hke ~
~Members of the staff of Holzer Medical Center will
About 30 workers were .evac- bleach," said Carrie Lara, who ~
~
be conducting health screenings during the.open
uated an~ nearby rest dents lives within a block of . the ~
~
house. We'll be giving away a General Gavin stuffed
were advtsed to shelter m plant. "So we just brought the ~
~
bear, created for us by the Ohio River Bear Company,
place for about two hours kids inside."
~
~
and other prizes.
Friday after chlorine leaked
C.l. Thornburg specializes ..,.
from the C. I. Thornburg Co. . h d. 'b ·
'f
· ,.
' ,.
I
1
m t e tstn utton o engt- ~
~
~verythlf!g/s free of charge, so please join us on
. n~~:t7~gton Deputy Fire nmed products, fitti.ngs, ~
~
Saturday, Sept. 15, anytime from 10 a.m. unti12
.C hiefTim Provaznik said the ptpes, treatment chemtcals ~ ~uU 7flt/4Dtt ~
p.m. The plant is located on Ohio Route 7 at
Louie the Lightning Bug will bt on
company reported a cylinder . and valves for water an.d IIIII
IIIII
Cheshire, Ohio.
was leaking in a chlorine wastewater treatment plants. . . . ,' -' -' -' -' -' -. . · .hand to greet kids of all ages.
room at the plant at 4:21 p.m.
Two workers took the
{Casual dresi, please- no open-toed shoes.)
ON
YOUR
SIDE
I
.
,cylinder outside, and the
.remaining workers were evacA Lot of People know a LIHie About Insurance.
&amp;
uated.
·
.
The Rest have Nationwide• A9ents.
. A chlorine cloud about 70
&amp;
We're there when you need us. We're a
feet in diameter · dissipated
' after firefighters sprayed it
•-:::::~ sln;le source .for ALL your Insurance needs.
• Auto • Home • Financial Procluctt • Business
with water.
Residents living within two
Call me... Stop bv... • Irs your cholcel
blocks of the plant were asked
•
to go inside . their homes and
turn off any heat or air condiNationwide~
tioning units.
Insurance &amp;
•
PB and S Chemicals of St.
Financial Services
www.aep.com
Albans, a hazardous materials
firm, removed the leaking

Stanley HlrriSOI,

Harrison Fanns
lor bllllnu my
2001 Gallll CO . ,.
Markel Hoa

PI..ANT TOURS • HEALTH SCREENINGS • FUN GAMES
FOOD REFRESHMENTS •INFORMATIVE PRESENTATIONS

eyli~jdei.

. ' No injuries were reported.

.

U1e tn1uranoe undeiWI'itten by Nationwldt Ult lnaurance ~·
, Nallonwlde Mutuallnaurance
and Artlllaled Compe.nlet,

Homo Olli&lt;»'

YOM 11/0o

�Opinion

PageA4.

West Vlrgl_n_i_a____

Sunday, September 9, 1001

.

Higher production not being characterized as a boom

West Virginia weather
Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleaaant, w. Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

CHARLESTON (AP) - The energy
sc~re prompted by California's rolling
blackouts means coal operators are digging in West Virginia and other states to
meet a new demand.
·
Operaton are also finding that even
their higher sulfur coal has a market,'and
can be sold for nearly double the price it ·
was bringing last year.
"There is still a great demand out there
fof coal," S:lys Mike Perilli, a Summenville-based coal broker. "I think it's
going to be good for another year."
According to figures compiled by the
U.S. .Energy Information Agency, the
nation's operators have produced nearly
7 percent more coal between January and.
Sept. 1 than during the_same period last
year.The figure reverses a two-year rnend.
Mines located west of the Mississippi

A.ccuWeathe .. forecast for

IN FINDIN6

AC~FOR

Co.

fttiTICS?.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing EdHor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

Sunday, Sept. 9

AHYLVGK

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

'

Utters to thf UUtw tJn w~k,_. Tllfy Jlundd IN Ins tluut. JOO wtwds. AU kllln
au subj«:t ,, l!dilin6 tmd '"'"'1M ~1f11d lll'f.d IMivri•IJlJdnu ••4 t•Wplwla• •.-!Hr.
No NAJig11rtl l~tt•n will h pu&amp;lhlud. lAflin 11fould H ill pod 11Ut1, GlldnniiiJ

isrutr, lfOI ~f'rOMUlifl,

.

Tht opiniorl.r tXptYIHil ill t/11 (:Oflilftll btlow., tlu eOJtlliUIU oflilt Oltlo MllltJ
hbliJitirtg Co. 'I Hilorio./ botud, ,,.,_, otlwrwh• ft{JIH.

VA.

NATIONAL VIEW

0-·~·.
sno.e.. ~-·

Sumy "!. Cloudy

Mexican trnckers may
have free rnn of US.
• Daily News, Los Angeles, otl Mexican trucks and safe~·
ty: The unions' grip on the Democratic Party made itself
clear last week when all 50 Senate Democrats - and 20

The unions hate NAFTA even though it has done no
. demonstrable harm to their interests and the Teamsters certal'nly don 't want any compen·u·on on th e road . ...
which Pres1'dent Bush has
The Denlocrats ' bill ·
promised to veto- wou ld require M extcan
true k s to meet .
·
d on ana di an
stricter sa fiety re gulations th an t h ose Impose
or American trucks already doing business in the U.S.
It's plainly discriminatory. ...
There is something racially insensitive about that attitude,
and it's aU the harder to understand since so many Democ3 rnilli "ll gal .
.
rats can't wait to grant amnesty to
' on I e
grants from Mex_ito.
ha
I fro ' M .
Is it the party s position t t peop e
m
ext co can
cross the border without restriction as long as they don't
- _ _..bt:inlg..tneir..tlr.uc:ksi:_ _ _ _ _ _ _

c

unnn-

0

u· R

B • b "ld · b k
rtng Ul tngs ac
Dear Editor·.
I was saddened to hear of the fire that
struck downtown Gallipolis in early
August. This wonderful river town has
always been a favorite of mine with its
row of 19 th century buildings facing .
h p bl'
d
1 k'
h
t e u tc quare an over oo mg t e
broad Ohio River.
L'tste d m
· t h e N atlon
· a[ R eg1ster
·
of
Historic Places in 1980 for its excellent
·
1
f
·
d
·
·1
examp es o rest enna1 an d commercta
1 cture as well as 1'ts place 1·n the
arch"t
e
·
early settlement of Ohio, the historic
district provides residents and visitors
alike with a sense of place unsurpassed
by many communities statewide.
.
The city of Gallipolis .has !on~ recogthe va:,e
rt.ch
. ' tt rea trme . m mterest m tstone preservation when It chose to par· ·
· h c ·fi d l
1G

s

~~z;t

o~t~

hertt~gei/n

R E A D E R s ' v IE ws
ing out of a garage or driveway, watch
for children walking to the school bus.
M
t'm
1· es walkt'ng or bicycling chi!
anyare pay1'ng more attent 1'0 n to getdren
tlh·n~ to schoa]ol, ~and less attention to
t eu person sa.ety.
Also, watch for children walking in
rhe street, especially if there are no sidewalks, a·nd fior cht'ldren congregating
b
Ch'ld
.
1 ren are somenmes
near us stops.
Unaware Of the dangers they f:ace when
lk '
li
ffi D ·
wa mg or eye ng c1ose to tra tc. nvers need to be aware of this and pay
close attention to children who may
not be paying close attention . themselves.
Motorists also have a responsibility to
know the meaning of a flashing light
system on school buses. The yellow and
red lights are designed to help ens ure
the safety of both motorists and chi!dren. Yellow flashing lights indicate the
b
. p
.
t
t
M 0 to . t
us ts reparmg · 0 sop.
ns s
down
to stop.
Rea flasfiing lights and the extended
SlOP arm on· a school bus indicate the
bus has stopped for children to get on
or off the bus. Motorists approaching
from either direction are required to
stop at least 10 feet from a stopped
school bus until the bus resumes
motion. If a school bus is stopped on a
road divided into four or more lanes,
only traffic driving in the same direction as the bus must stop.
Parents have an additional responsibility to school bus safety. Children
should be taught school bus safety
before they step into a school bus for
the first time, and this responsibility lies
with the parent. It is important for chi!dren to learn how to stay safe both in
and outside the school bus Statistics
show students are actually a; .a greater
risk standing outside a bus than riding
in a bus.
Students should arrive. at the bus stop
at least five minutes before the bus is
due to pick them up. While waiting for
the bus, they should stand at least three
giant ·Steps away from the curb, and line
up away from the street. Before stepping into the bus, children should wait
until the bus stops, the door opens, and
the driver gives permission. Parents
should encourage their children to sit
quietly in their sear and follow the driver's instructions on bus safety.
When exiting the bus, care should be
taken to check that clothing with drawstrings and book bags with srraps do
not get caught in the handrails or
doors ~ Additionally, students sho uld
never go back for anything left on the
bus, and never bend down near or
under the bus to pick up something
that has fallen .
Passengers should always walk in
front o( the bus when they must cross a
street to get on or off the bus. Child,r~n
should wal.k far enough in front of'the
bus that they can see the driver, whi' h
is about 10 feet in front. Children
should never walk behind a school bus.
and ' stay :it least three feet away from
the side of a bus.
With the cooperation of motorists,
parents, and children, we can help make
the bus ride to and from school as safe
as possible for our ,hildren, and make
this a safe school year throughout Ohio.
Lt. Richard E. Grau
State Highway Patrol
Gallipolis

~-------~~tmtcletnpl-at
_ef&gt;r&lt;tonl~tt
;a·rret,renratll~il.neg-Jito--c•~ai~ri'lbolveer£n0 __s_hould . sl()W
··
· . .
.
. r

is nothing but crude, base politics in the service of
foolish, backward economics.

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

CIMy

T·Siolma

Rain

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2001. There are
113 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 9, 1976, Communist Chinese leader Mao Tse·
tung di ed in Beijing at age 82.
On this date :
In 1776, the second Continental Congress made the term
"United States" official, replacing "United Colonies."
In 1850, California became the 31st state of the union.
In 1926, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) was
created by the Radio Corporation of America.
In 1943, Allied forces landed at Salerno and Taranto during
World War II .
In 1948, the People's Democratic Republic of Korea
(North Korea) was created .
. In 1956, Elvis PresJey made the first of three appearances
on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
In 1957, President Eisenhower signed into law the first
civil rights· bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction.
In 1971 , prisoners seized control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo. N.Y., beginning
a siege th at ended up claiming 43 lives.
· In 1990, Liberian President Samuel K. Doe was killed after
being captured by rebels.
In 1993, PlO leaders and Israel agreed to recognize each
other, clearing the way for a peace accord.
Ten yea rs ago: Boxer Mike Tyson was indicted in Indianap.olis on a charge of raping Desiree Washington, a beauty
pageant contestant. (Tyson was later convicted.)
Five years ago: Promising safer skies, Presi,dent Clinton
issued.orders to tighten airport security and chailenged Con- .
gress to support a $1. 1 billion anti-terrorism crackdown.
Keepin g her word not to cooperate with Whitewater prose- .
cutors, Susan McDougal was led away to jail for contempt of.
. court, denyin g she was trying to protect Clinton with her
silence.
One year ago: President Clinton proposed spending about
$1.6 billion to help communities recover from recent Western wildfires. Ven us Williams beat Lindsay Davenport 6-4, 75 for th e U.S. Open women's singles championship, her first
Grand Slam title.
· Today 's Birthdays : Actor Cliff Robertson is 76. Jazz musician Elvin Jo nes is 74. Actress Sylvia Miles is 69. Actor Topol
is 66. R&amp;l3 si nger Luther Simmons is 59. Singer Inez Foxx is
59. Singer Dee Dee Sharp is 56. Singer-musician Billy Preston is 55. Rock singer-musician Doug Ingle (Iron Butterfly)
. is 55. Country singer Freddy Weller is 54. Football .commentator Joe Theismann is 52. Actor-comedian Michad Keaton
·is 50. Actor Tom Wopat is 50. Actress Angela Cartwright is
49. Musi cian ~producer Dave Stewart is 49. Actor Hugh
Grant is 41. Acior Adam Sandler is 35. Actor David Bennent
is 35. Rock singe r Paul Durham (Black Lab) is 33. Rapper
Dray (Das EFX) is 31. Actor Goran Visnjic is ·29. Actress
Michelle Williams is 21 .
, Tho ught for Today: "Obstacles are those frightful things
yo u see when you take your eyes off the goal." - Hannah
More, English author and social reform er ( 1745- 1833).

'"We're not talking boom times," said
John Grasser, a spokesman with the
National Mming Association.
Although 'the Bush · administration is
considered a friend of coal, that "doesn't
mean we were going to see dramatic
increases in the use of coal," Grasser said.
Increased usage won 't occur until utilities· start building more coal-fired plants
and exports reboJJnd.
Producers in West Virginia's northern
high sulfur regions have enjoyed a greater
percentage increase than their counterparts in the south this year.
The agency rep'orts 'production is up
more dian 8 percent in the north to
more than 27 million tons. Southern coal
field production is behind last year's pace
by 1.6 million tons, to about 81 million
tons.

Police knew that lain falsified evidence

Aurrioo

• custocly .
FUgl"tives .back In

opedratehwi rhin a 20d-milN.e zhonAmeno.rth oFf theTbodrdAger. But
un er t e 8-year-o1
ort
encan ree ra e
teement, they are supposed to get open access to all of the
country by Jan. 1.

River have increased production by
about 8 percent. Mines east of the river
are up nearly 5 percent.
West Virginia, the nation's second
largest producer, has had about a 1 percent gain since Janua ry. The.agency said
state producers mined about 108 million
tons of coal.
Wyoming, the nation's largest producer, posted a 7.3 percent_gain . Operators
there have mined about ~42 million tons
of coal since January.
The agency's statistics are based on railcar loadings and information supplied by
the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration. The information is considered
an accurate reflection of production .
In an industry defined by boom and
bust cycles, the current upswing isn't
being called a boom.

02001

Open access?

protectionist Republicans - voted to break a filibuster
blocking a vote on a bill te impose harsh regulations. on
M elcican trucks operating in the u.s.
Und.er current Ia\'&lt;, Melcican truckers are only allowed to .

Se. . ;. .pte_.~ -~e_,~-!

su--nd•...;....Y·

grants admmtstered by the
Htstone PreservatiOn Office. It was ~uc~ a
grant that asSISted m the re~abthtatto~
of the bandstand m the Pubhc Square.
The ctty can now. place another
feather 10 Its cap as we JUSt learned that
the National Park Se~ice approved t?e
expans~on.ofthe Nattonal Regtster histone dtstnct on Aug. 22,2001.
As plans are made to ~butld, I strongly encou~age .constderauon of the reuse
of the htstonc storefronts damaged by
the fire alo~ Second Avenue. The~e are
meplaceable res.o~rce~ that provtde a
cohesive. and dtstmcttve look to the
commumty. They .can be b:ou~t back
to hfe, and thetr mcl~s 10 ". m the
National Register of Htstonc Places
~akes .them eligible for some assistance,
mcludmg a 20 percent mvestme~t tax
credit when rehabtbtated according to
estabhshed standards.
.. .
Destgn work and rehabthtatton costs
may also be supported through limited
grant funds available to Gallipohs as a
Certtfi~d Local Government.
.
I thmk. back to an article, .whtch
appeared . m the Columbus Dtspatch
right after the fire. It was reported that
a Mr. Ken Holley lamented the fact that
the opportumty to capture the tdeal
photograph of the city in his mind's eye
was lost as a result of the fire. That
opportunity will only be lost if we let it
to slip away.
Franco Ruffini
Deputy State
Historic Preservation Officer
Columbus

Keep this in mind
Dear Editor:
The familiar sight of yellow buses
back on our roadways signals the
beginning of another school year.
Please keep in mind that there are many .
special concerns to be considered when
sharing the road with school buses.
Children, motorists, and parents need
to be made aware of the possible dangers both inside· and around a school
bus and how to avoid them. This will
do a great deal to ensure the safety of
children on school buses. While school
buses remain thf safest mode of transport on Ohto roads, crashes do occur.
In 2000, there were 2,082 school buses
crashes in Ohio. The State l'lighway
Patrol would like .to see this number
drop.
Motorists can do their part by starting to think about school bus safety the
moment the car is started. When back-

an~pr~are

50,000 non-smokers every year,
acco'rding to the Centers for Disease .
C ontrol and Prevention, making it the
third leading cause of preventable ·death

ini~u:d~~~:~.Y·a

report issued bv_
1997
,.
the California Environmental Protec~
tion Agency estimated that each year in
the United States, secondhand smoke..
exposure causes 1 ,900 to 2 ,700 deaths .
due t.o sudden infant death syndrome. ·
In view of this information, the ,
Clean l.ndoor Air regulation being considered by. the Meigs County Board of
· ·
Health has th e . potential to save lives:,
These local health e~perts are charged
with protecting the health and safety of
the community they represent. Now,
they have the , opportunity to protect
the public, including restaurant and bar
employees, from the hazardous health
effects of secondhand smoke.
,
A recent study,
in The

Bowles said he often had dif- with Zain between 1987 and under false pretenses.
ferences of opinion with Zain, 1989.
He was initially accused of
but
that
he
was
never
actually
WAYNE (AP) - A fugitive from the Wa,yne County Jail
Prosecutors · say Zain, 50, five counts of fraud, but
ordered to report a scientific made up much of the evidence Raleigh County Circuit Judge
~ho was captured Friday says he was "tripping on LSD" the
position with which he dis- that he testified to in triats H.L. Kirkpatrick merged the
night he attacked a guard and escaped.
agreed.
"That's why I did it;' Joseph Franklin Cook, 22, of Ceredo
across West Virginia until he left first two counts at the prosecu"I
do
recall
one
time
when
the State Police in 1989 to tion's request. Defense lawyers
said Friday.
there was a new system we accept a job in Texas. He nbw
The hallucinogenic drug had been placed on the sticky side
had argued the similar counts
were trying to evaluate,"
works
for
a
state-run
environmight be viewed as improper
of postage stamps on letters sent to him at the jail, &lt;Cook said.
Bowles said. Zain "was very
Sgt. Rex Varney of the Wayne County Sheriff's Department
mental laboratory in Aorida.
double jeopardy - trying a
said police will investigate Cook's comments about the LSD.
~::~tolepo:!:n:ci:;~~ ~ insistent that I call it his way."
Zain is charged with four defendant tWice for the same
Another State Police lab
Angeles County Sheriff's
of obtaining money crime.
counts
technician testified Friday that
S
I
Department, W"
.
- part of a 1993 Zain did very little lab work
review team ordered into the himself. but usually wrote the
liHUNTI NGh.TON (Ak P)k-b Ak CabelldCound~ womban who West Virginia lab by the state reports and conclusions from
re used to 1et er pet s un e illed an teste wr ra ies must S
C
other officers' tests.
stay in jail.
upreme ourt.
It was a practice for other
· Cabell County Circuit Judge David Pancake on Friday
However, the jury never
heard much of what . 'Linhart. officers to review each other's
ordered Robbyn Sarvas, 44, tp remain "in custody until she h d
bo
k
a to say a ut am s wor . lab work, but Zain kept his
.purges herself of contempt."
ft d c
1
b.
d work to himself, said Trooper
h
k
k
b
ld
·
K
.
a
er
e1ense
awyen
o
~ecte
. harts• propose d testlAuthorities say t e s un it 9-year-o Quin.cie nsmer at ·that 1 m
·
Brent Myers, who worked
Ritter Park on Aug. 22.
h
mony was a surprise to t em.
, Sarvas had asked Pancake to release her so she could look for
"'n
vve •ve never h eard or seen . ~J:IldCI:I:Illl~~~
ner pet so the girl could stop taking painful rabies vaccinations w ha t h e got up an d stare
·t d
that started Sept. 1.
talking about today, about suecess frequency," said Tom
Smith.
Linhart did testifY that he
, HUNTINGTON (AP) - A 9-year-old boy accused of was troubled by what appeared
c)taSing a group of children with an 8-inch knife after school to be a pattern of changes on
for buying my
Thursday has been .suspended.
.
lab work reports where the
2001 Market Hog
· The boy allegedly chased a group of five students who actu~ test data could not be
·
fro
10
7
of the work
been made to the Hlmti:n~ton
sheets, by itself, is not necess:ir- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
:Jedd Flowers, director
communications for Cabell Coun- ily suspicious," Linhart said. r
ty Schools, said education officials question whether the act "But it seemed that that direcviolated the · Safe Schools Act since the boy had already left tion in which the alteration
Cammack Elementary School when the incident occurred
was being done was always
against the defendant ... and in
favor of the state's case."
.
Linhart said his review also
·MARTINSVILLE',Va. (AP) -A Martinsville grand jury on turned up instances of "misFriday .indicted a West Virginia m~ on charges of first-degree leading conclusions in the way
murder in a 1998 killing.
test data was reported.",
· , A firefighter found the body of Richard Ross, 52, on Sept.
"He tended to suggest
12, 1998, in his back yard in Martinsville. He had been shot in . greater weight for the data,
the back of the head, police said.
stmnger results. than could real· Zakee Tahlib, 40, qf Beaver, W.Va., was indicted Friday on ly be obtained from the data;'
charges of first-degree murder, robbery, conspiracy to commit Linhart said.
robbery, using a fire arm in ·a robbery and possessing a firearm
In other cases, data that tend~ a convicted felon. Tahlib is also known as Kenneth Wayne ed to point toWard a suspect's
Williamson, officials said. ·
innocence was ignored, he
· Ramzee Arabee Shareef, 47, of Martinsville pleaded guilty said.
Aug. 31 to the capital murder of Ross, as well as robbery and
Also testifying Friday was
use of a firearm to commit murder. The terms ofShareef's plea State Police Trooper Jeffiey A.
· a[rea dy servmg
· 25 years m
· W:all ens Bowles, who ·worked WJ'th
agreement are sea] ed . H e IS
Everyone's Invited to see how the men and women of AEP's Gavin Plant
Ridge State Prison for a robbery in Henry County.
Zain in the serology lab.
BECKLEY (AP) - A Los
Angeles County forensic scientist who led an investigation
into West Virginia's crime lab
operations said Friday he was
struck by the serology lab's
"remari:able
success· rate"
d ~
F d
un
er
LOrmer
supervtsor
re
Zain
R~nald R . Lumart, assistant

Skunk's owner till ·n ··a···

z· . ,

QU
THANK Y

Oh'IO Valle·. Y
Check Cash'lnQ

School offidals suspend youth

1~~~p~~~J~~~~~~~~~~J:--t-~~~m~~a~ge~~m~~to~~;·:_:o~'(!~l~~~~iilpliii'i~llli-~~~~~~'the~~k-~t]
are
.
to secondhand. smoke, such as workers.
in bars and restaurants, can see their risk
of lung cancer triple.
We know that the damage caused by
spending two hours in the non-smok- .
ing section of a smoking restaurant
equates to smoking . two cigarettes
yourself. Spend eight hours working in
a smoking environment and you have
smoked six. cigarettes without ever·
lighting a single one. In fact, Ohio still ·
r~nks 40 in the nation for protecting
workers from secondhand smoke expo".
sure, behind the tobacco producing
states of Virginia, Georgia and South
Carolina.
..
While some fear a negative econom- .
ic impact on bar and restaurant tev- "
enues, dozens of reputable studies from
across the country show that there is no
negative economic impact on businesh
es when smoking is prohibited. Here in .
Ohio, many restaurants have already.
gone smoke-free and felt .no financial,
loss. Keep in mind, nearly 75 percent of
Ohioans are non-smokers.
We urge .Meigs Cqunty health officials to join hundreds of communities
across the country in protecting the
public from the dangers of secondhand
smoke. This . is not a smoker's rights
issue. This is not an economic issue, It's
a health issue.
Tracy Sabetta
Project Director
Tobacco-Free' 0 hio
Dublin

Not affiliated

Dear Editor:
The Meigs County Tuberculosis (TB)
Office would like to thank the residents
of Meigs County for rhe warm welcome we have received throughout the
years during our clinics, held in all areas
of the county.
In order to continue this convenient
service to our residents, we are asking
again, as we did five years ago, to support our upcoming levy that will be on
the ballot Nov. 6, 2001.
Many residents are not aware that the
Meigs County TB Office is a totally
separate county ·office from the Health
Department. We are not funded by any
Health Department mpney.
Thank you ~gain for your continued
support of the Tuberculosis Levy which
incidentally has been on the ballot and
serving the citizens of Meigs County
since the early 1950s.
Dear Editor:
Connie Cotterill, R.N.
Second- hand smoke kills more than
Pomeroy
I

Supports ban

..'

'

~~" 're invite~{,

State man indicted in slaying-

tb stttenA-

GAVIN PLANT'S
\OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, September 15,2001
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.

turn Ohio coal into electricity to power all the things we use
at work, school and home.

·Workers evacuated after ~~~~~';Q'u1
thlorine leaks from plant ~ Jan Smith ~ .

·

.

.

~

on behalf at

~

We'll have lots df fun, enjoy some good food,
and learn a few things about energy and the
environment. There'll be plant tours, informative displays and activities for children.

HUNTINGTON (AP) "It smelled a ltttle hke ~
~Members of the staff of Holzer Medical Center will
About 30 workers were .evac- bleach," said Carrie Lara, who ~
~
be conducting health screenings during the.open
uated an~ nearby rest dents lives within a block of . the ~
~
house. We'll be giving away a General Gavin stuffed
were advtsed to shelter m plant. "So we just brought the ~
~
bear, created for us by the Ohio River Bear Company,
place for about two hours kids inside."
~
~
and other prizes.
Friday after chlorine leaked
C.l. Thornburg specializes ..,.
from the C. I. Thornburg Co. . h d. 'b ·
'f
· ,.
' ,.
I
1
m t e tstn utton o engt- ~
~
~verythlf!g/s free of charge, so please join us on
. n~~:t7~gton Deputy Fire nmed products, fitti.ngs, ~
~
Saturday, Sept. 15, anytime from 10 a.m. unti12
.C hiefTim Provaznik said the ptpes, treatment chemtcals ~ ~uU 7flt/4Dtt ~
p.m. The plant is located on Ohio Route 7 at
Louie the Lightning Bug will bt on
company reported a cylinder . and valves for water an.d IIIII
IIIII
Cheshire, Ohio.
was leaking in a chlorine wastewater treatment plants. . . . ,' -' -' -' -' -' -. . · .hand to greet kids of all ages.
room at the plant at 4:21 p.m.
Two workers took the
{Casual dresi, please- no open-toed shoes.)
ON
YOUR
SIDE
I
.
,cylinder outside, and the
.remaining workers were evacA Lot of People know a LIHie About Insurance.
&amp;
uated.
·
.
The Rest have Nationwide• A9ents.
. A chlorine cloud about 70
&amp;
We're there when you need us. We're a
feet in diameter · dissipated
' after firefighters sprayed it
•-:::::~ sln;le source .for ALL your Insurance needs.
• Auto • Home • Financial Procluctt • Business
with water.
Residents living within two
Call me... Stop bv... • Irs your cholcel
blocks of the plant were asked
•
to go inside . their homes and
turn off any heat or air condiNationwide~
tioning units.
Insurance &amp;
•
PB and S Chemicals of St.
Financial Services
www.aep.com
Albans, a hazardous materials
firm, removed the leaking

Stanley HlrriSOI,

Harrison Fanns
lor bllllnu my
2001 Gallll CO . ,.
Markel Hoa

PI..ANT TOURS • HEALTH SCREENINGS • FUN GAMES
FOOD REFRESHMENTS •INFORMATIVE PRESENTATIONS

eyli~jdei.

. ' No injuries were reported.

.

U1e tn1uranoe undeiWI'itten by Nationwldt Ult lnaurance ~·
, Nallonwlde Mutuallnaurance
and Artlllaled Compe.nlet,

Homo Olli&lt;»'

YOM 11/0o

�Page A6 • &amp;unbaJ&gt; ilrtmrB' -&amp;rntinel

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

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Nation • World

I
i

Obituaries

Deaths

William David 'Skinny' Lehew

Dianna Mae France

Gallia fTian jailed .
on several charges

POMEROY -William David "Skinny" Lehew, 74, died
GA LLIPO LIS - Dianna Mae France, 45, Gallipolis, died
GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot- nesses in the area, officers found
Fnday, September 7, 2001 at his residence on Spring Avenue in
Saturday, Sept. 8, 200 I at her residence.
area man remained in.the Gallia Wolford at Third and Cedar
·
Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-Halley- Wood" Pomeroy. He clied on his birthday.
He was born September 7, \927, son of the late Theodore County jail Saturday following Street, where he "Gppeared
Funeral Home.
his Friday arrest on several intoxicated," the report said.
and Veda Leifheit Lehew Davis.
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School, served in the charges arising from two alleged Gallia County EMS was called
U.S. Air Force, and attended Potomac State College, where he hitskip accidents, Gallipolis City to conduct an evaluation. He
was later transported by EMS to
SHADE - Hollie V Hayes, 66, Shade, di ed Friday, Aug. 31 , played football and basketbalL He also attended the University Police reported;
Rick D. Wolford, 37, 3176 the ER.
of Rio Grande.
2001 at Hospice of Cincinnati in Hamilton.
Officers and the deputy went
He ·worked_ as a truck driver for.Marchi Distributing Com- Boggs Road, was arrested by
Born March 8, 1935 in Meib" c;ounty, son of the late Garold
and Audra Hawk Hayes, he retired from Jaguar Cars Inc., as a pany, Galhpohs. for several years. He also operated several bars police and a Gallia County to the hospital when Wolford
sheriff's deputy at Holzer Med- was released, where Wolford
.district service mariage r, and was a bus driver for Alexander in Meigs County.
ical Center after he was released allegedly resisted arrest. He was
Skinny was an avid sports fan .
Local School District. .
from the emergency room Fri- res"trained and taken to the jail,
He was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church.
He was a member of th e Athens Pentecostal Church.
officers said.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret; four children, Ted day. officers said.
Surviving are his wi fe, Linda S. Hayes; five children, Diana
Officers said they were
Wolford was later charged
Dixo n of Dayton, Thomas Stevers of Albany, Kimberly (Timo- (Becky) of Chillicothe,John (Alice) ofJackson, Cheryl of Syrawith
driving under the influat
3:21
p.m.
that
a
informed
thy) Tice of Hamilton, Tanya· Lynn (William) Morris of Fair- cuse, and Billy of Pomeroy; six grandchildren Nate lan
field, and Paul Anthony (Rae Jean) Mett of Suffolk, Va.; II Matthew, Amy, Sarah and David; a brother. B~b Qea~) of black pickup truck had alleged- ence, driving under suspension,
ly struck a vehicle on the 700 · reckless operation, hitskip and
Columbus; and three m~ces.
·
I grandchildren and five great - grand c hildre~; two sisters, Colleen
(Floyd) Brickles am! LaDonna Garoldene (james) Boyd of
S~rvices will be 1 p.m. on Tuesday, September II, 2001 at block of Fourth Avenue. Offi- ·resisting arrest.
Officer~ said the vehicles
Shade.:
· ·
Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Pastor William Mid- cers went to the scene and startsearching
for
the
suspect
allegedly
damaged by Wolford
ed
He was also prececied in death by his brother; Ronald Hayes. dleswarth offiCiating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove Ceme- ·
vehicle.
included a Chevrolet Suburban
Servi ces were held Monday, Sept. 3, 2001 at Hughes- tery.
parked on Fourth, and a minicall
on
a
hitskip
in
Another
Friends may call at the ' funeral home on Monday, September
Moquin Funeral Home, Atherls. Burial was in Burlingham
the area of Fourth and Locust van parked at Fourth and
10, 2001 from 7-9 p.m.
Cemetery.
was soon received, fol- LOcust.
Street
Meri10ri al contnbutio!]s may be made to the Alexander
lowed shortly after by a call
Cited by officers in separate
Scholarship Fund, 6091 Ayers Road, Albany, Ohio 45701, or to
from a residence on the 500 incidents Friday were Charles P.
Hospice of Ci~cinnati , 896 N.W. Washington Blvd., Hamilton,
block
of Third Avenue that a Lewis Ill, 34, Ohio 850, SidREEDSVILLE- bale E. Smith, 68, of Reedsville, clied FriOhio 45013.
day. September 7, 2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg man had exited a black pickup well, for disordedy by intoxicaWest Virginia,
' and ran through the caller's tion, and Mitchell W. Waugh,
33, 3375 Ohio 7, Pomeroy, for
He was born March 12, 1933 in Parkersburg, son of the late backyard.
speaking
to
several
witAfter
assault.
'
GALLIPOLIS - Freda Maycel Hill, 85, Gallipolis, died Fri- Claude and Gladys Rockhold Smith. .
He was retired from the US. Army Corps of Engineers with
day, Sept. 7, 2001 at Arbors of Gallipolis.
31
years of service, and was a U.S. Navy veteran of the Korean
· Born Dec. 4, 1915 in Alkol, W.Va., daughter of the late WinA church service under the
fi eld Was hington Hill and Lulia Davis Hill, she was a home- Conflict. He had been a member of the Reedsville Fire
direction of Frank Vaughn is
Department since 1958. He was a member of Reedsville
maker, and a member of Chapel Hill Church of Christ.
Sunday at 10a.m. and festivities
She was also .preceded in death by her husband, Arlie J JHill; Church of Christ, and a member of Coolville Maso nic Lodge
will
wrap-up around 5 p.m.
Page
Al
·
F&amp;AM No. 337 for 43 years.
,
and by four brothers and a sister.
The EXPO is a free event
H e is survived by his wife of 49 yea rs, Thelma Jean Smith; a
Surviving are a daughrer,Jo (Ab) Stauffer of Marietta; a son,
and
food will be available at rea$10.
Marvin R . "Jim" (Freda) Cottrell of Addison; and three grand- son and dau ghter-in-law, Mark and Connie Smith of
Quilters can .also bring in a sonable prices for hungry specReedsville; -a daughter and son-in-law, Teresa and John Smith
sons, three great-grandsons and three great-granddaughters.
tators and exhibitors alike.
Services .will be 2 p.m. Monday in Chapel Hill Church of of Reedsv!lle; a daughter, Jodi Bissell of Reedsville; a sister and 12-1/2 inch square block, any
For more information on the
Christ, with Evangelist Bob Winton officiating. Burial will be brother-in-law, Darlene and Marvin Reed of Reedsville· five pattern, and the top three blocks .
EXPO, contact Meigs County
in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Frje_nds may call at Waugh- , grandchildren, Melissa and Brandon Smith, Shelby and Brock will be awarded prizes. Only
Agent Hal Kneen at
Extension
Halley-Wood Funeral Home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday, and at the Sm1th, and -Darc1 B1ssell, all of Reedsville; and his mother-inone block per person is allow~d. .992-66%.
·
· ·
law, O live Smith of Reedsville.
chu rch Monday, one hour p1ior to services.
·
In addition to his parents, he ;vas preceded. in death by his
father-m- law, Melvin R . Smith.
which lawmalcers have bickered
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, September 10, 2001 in
for most of the year, and
over
PROCTORVILLE - .Lora Hughes, 79, Proctorvill~. died Wh1te Funeral Home, Coolville, with the Rev. Philip Sturm
increasing a special taX on coal
Satu rday, Sept. 8, 2001 at her residence. ·
officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday,
companies to set aside more
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Herman C . September 9, 200 1 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
money
for land reclamation.
Hughes.
Burial will be in Reedsville C~metery, where military serSurviving are a son, Clifford Skip Hughes ofProctorville; five v~ees will be conducted by Tuppers Plains VFW. .
A Masonic service will be conducted in the funeral home on
daughters, Leona Mae Chafin of Logan, W.Va., Shirley Ann
Dotson ofWayne,W.Va., Linda Lou Cates ofTexas, Wanda June Sunday, September 9, 2001 at 7 p.m.
•
Barboza of Mame, and
Henson of Chesapeake; and
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributi· HIS can be made to
1--~~~~~~~!!U~~.2f.hltgg~_I!,J~_fu~~~m!&lt;i.I!s.---i~~~~;::~~C~:h~u~rch
of Christ Building Fund, P.O. Box 93,
I·
Switzer, W.Va.
45772 . . ·
- ·- - - CHARLESTON (AP) . Services &gt;Vill be 11 a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home,
family
court, mine reclamation
· Proctorville. Entombment will be in Rome Cemetery. Friends .
bonds and redistricting are
may call at the funeral hom e from 6- 9 p.m. Sunday.
ment District) National
among the items Gov. Bob Wise
Resources Assistance Coun- wants the West Virginia Legislacil as Meigs County's dele - ture to consider next week.
plan to ensure that our resifrom hgeAl
gate.
Wise · on Friday officially
dents continue to receive the
The council will plan called the Legislature into spec
high quality care that is a s tan ~ residents both in favor of, environmental
clean- up cia! session with 11 items on the
from Page AI
dard at uur facility" was imple- and in opposition to, the projects under H.B. 3 and
agenda.
mented when the strike proposed ban to voice their Issue One, which was
The issues include establishing
year labor agreement was .on · began.
opinions.
approved by voters in 2000 . a system of family court judges,
. the table, but. Scenic Hills
"During the strike, we have
Davenport said Friday
The commissioners honwanted a three-year contract.
made arrangements to be fully that tho se . attending the
"They would also not sign · staffed 24 hours a · day, seven meeting . were misinformed ored Kenny Wiggins, who
off on previously agreed days a week," the statement that the commissioners have retired last week as program Auto- Owners Insurance
items," she said. " Nothing was reads.
authority over the board of manager for the Meigs
Lire Home Car Business
accomplished and we are still
"Scenic Hills can assure our health, its policies or its County Recycling and Litter Prevention program ,
7~ "'1/6 'Pt~lf. 'Pea;tfe.
on strike."
residents and their families that budget.
with
the
"Friend
of
Meigs
The primary issue· in new the strike will have absolutely· . "The Board of Health
INSURANCE PLUS
contract talks is an a!rordable no impact on the quality of operates under th-e authori-. County" award, and with a
. health care plan for workers, care we offer, and no impact ty of the Ohio Revised luncheon reception.
AGENCIES, INC.
Paula
S.
Wood
was
hired
Young said. SEJU has present- on the ability of family mem- Code," Davenport said.
ed a plan it believes will save hers to visit their loved ones," "The commissioners have Friday to replace Wiggins as · 114 Court Pomeroy
Scenic Hills money, she added. th e statement said.
no authority over th e board program manager.
No further talks were schedThe board also:
Since the strike began, of health or the health
uled as of Friday, Young said, replacement workers have department."
• Approved payment of
The board of health's pro- bills in the amount of
.and SEIU plans to file addi- been brought in from a Daytional unfair labor practice too agency, Young said.
posal.' to
be
decided $205,616.3"0, $13 ,135.90 of
complaints against the center.
Scenic Hills is now advertis- Wednesday, would ban which reptesents general
" I can't really discuss the ing to fill a number of posi- smoking frojTl all public fund expenditures;
details of negotiations," said tions, including CNAs, cooks, · places, including privately• Approved appropriations
Gill, who provided a statement and aides in clietary, house- owned businesses, and out- adjusqnents for the commu- .
that said a "comprehensive keeping, laundry ,and activities. doors within 20 feet . of al). nity .corrections program,
entrance to a public place.
The proposal also pro- . the sheriff's department,
vi des for fines of up to $500 and MR/DD board;
relations, will officially present
• Approved a contract
for those who violate the
the tower to Dorsey on behalf ban.
between the Meigs County
·
of aU Rio Grande alumni. ·
In other business, the Department of •Job and
from Page AI
Richard Munyan o( the alumcom missio ne rs appointed .Family Services and the
Did you know that millions of Americans now wear
ni board chaired the Bell Tower
University
of
Rio
1
hi
Joe
Bolin
of
Rutland
to
tion to celebrate contributions Committee.
Grande/Crossroads
Program
enses
w
ch they need replace only every week or
serve on the District 18
from alumni over Rio
At 8 p.m., Doug Getvert,
the
amount
of
or longer? These lenses are termed "disposables •
(B uckeye
Hills/Hocking in
Grande's 125 years of history.
carillonneur for the Washing$79,096.85.
IIRroF~ortunately forfus, disposables are available tO fit a
Alumni, Bell Tower donors ton M emorial National Caril- Valley Regional Developo the public. These lenses have been a
builders, and Rio Grand~ lon, will present musical selecfor people who have had problems in the past with
administrators will be present tions on Rio Grande's carillon.
ldeplorseltsgu_,ar cleaning .of their contacts or with heavy
to dedicate the tower.
" It's a huge celebration in
Jack Fin ch, president of the Rio Grande and all members
When disposable contact lenses were first developed
alumni board of directors, and of the public are invited ' to
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
only a small number of companies offer.ed them and with
Susan Haft, director of alunmi attend," D~rsey added.

l:lollie V. Hayes

Dale E. Smith

Freda Maycel Hill

Big Bend
frOm

Lora Hughes

Agenda set
for special
legislative
SeSSIOn

Ban

Strike

~laying

susped arrested

. SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -A man who escaped
·~ mto Mex1co after allegedly killing three teen-agers was
arrested at the border while trying to re-enter the United
States, authorities said.
. Alfred "Wizard" _Flores, 21, was found Thursday among a
group of Illegal ahens who had entered the United States
· near the border city ofTecate.
~ He ':"as jailed without bail Friday in San Bernardino, said
shenff s spokesman Chip Patterson.
' Flores is-suspected of the March murders of Ri cardo Tor. res, 15;JasonVan Kleef, 18; and Alexander Ayala, 17, in Rialto, as well as a murder in Los Angeles County last November
Patterson said.
'

Cliff plunge kills five

Nation's unemployment rate swells
WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's unemployment rate swelled to
4. 9 percent in August as job losses in
manufacturing passed I million for the
yearlong national slowdown . The
incre~se in ~he _
monthly jobless rate was
the b1ggest m SIX years.
The ~port Friday virtually guarantee_d
further mterest rate cuts by the Federal
Reserve to try to revive the- economy,
analysts said.
. Businesses slashed 113,000 jobs from
their payrolls last month, the Labor
Department reported. The jobless rate
rose by 0.4 percentage point from 4.5

percent in July, the level it had held since
April.
"The slowdown is real and it's affecting roo many lives and we're concerned
about it," President Bush said at the
White House after meeting with anxious Rep\lblican leaders.
·
· The jobless report sent stocks tumbling on Wall Street. The Dow Jones
industrial average closed down almost
235 po.ints, coming within striking disran ee of its low for the year. The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index closed at its
lowest level in nearly three years.
'"'Ugly' is not a strong enough term ro

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP)- A car racing down an airstrip
.. at a pecan farm plunged off a 200-foot cliff at the end of the
'~ runway, killing five people.
.•
Two women and three men, all believed to be in their 20s
·
died in the crash Thursday night.
· ·
', cide is a lesser offense than murder or manslaughter.
The cause of the accident was under investigation.
The runway is used by airplanes that spray the orchards at
the farm.
~
DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. announced the
·" ."They were up ~here on the airport runway traveling at a
h1gh rate of speed, SheriffJuan Hernandez said. "They came death sentence for its struggling Oldsmobile division· in
. to th~ end of the runway, were not able to stop and ran off December. Now the execution date has been set.
GM said Friday that it would end production of the
the chff."
·
·
Oldsmobile line with the 2004 model year, though production of the Intrigue and Aurora will end sooner. The company said the line has not been profitable.
Oldsmobile is th e oldest automotive brand name in U.S.
MIAMI (AP) -Tropical Storm Erin regained strength in
·
the AtlantiC Oceari on Friday, regenerating two days after it history.
It
was
named
for
its
founder,
Ransom
E.
Olds,
who
started
weakened to a. tropical wave. ,
~rin 's maximum sustained winds were near 40 mph late the Oids Motor Vehicle Co. in Lansing in 1897. Worldwide,
only the Daimler name - of Daimler, Mercedes-Benz and
Fnday. The storm did not immediately threaten land.
At 11 p.m .. EDT, Erin was about 57 5 miles southeast of now DaimlerChrysler - is older.
- Bermuda. Erin was moving north- northwest about 7 mph
. and wai expected to continue on that course for the next 24
.. hours, hurricane specialist Jack Beven said.
DURBAN, South Africa (AP) -- Delegates to a ·U.N.
Also Friday, a new tropical depression formed in the eastracism
conference appeared to agree on a final declaration
ern Atlantic.
Saturday, b_reaking deadlocks over how to deal with slavery
· and the M1ddle East that had threatened to derail the gathermg,
The a~reement would clear the way for a global plan to
c
NEW YORK (AP) - ,An 8-year-old boy was charged with
fight
rac1sm. It came after talks were extended beyond Fri. mmmally negligent homicide Friday for allegedly stabbing
to death a 4-year-old neighbor who-police say had been bul- day's scheduled close to allow delegates time to overcome the
lied for more than a year.
. . bitter impasses. The United States and Israel had pulled out of
The suspeces 9-year-old brother was charged with assault the conference ·o n Monday because of proposed wording
for his role in the attack, police · said. Both were charged as calling Israel a racist state.
"My understanding is that there has been consensus, that
juveniles.
Police said the 8-year-old stabbed Emanuel Barima in the there has been general agreement on these two texts," South
African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma told deln~ck_ - ~iercing his jugular vein - as the boy played with
egates .
. hiS stster m the hall outside their Bronx apartment Wednes. The accord's reached Saturday on slavery and the Middle
day. Tests were being done to determine whether a set of
East still need to be voted on by a final session' of the delehouse keys or a pen was the murder weapon.
gates .
.: The brothers are among the youngest people ever charged
,:jfi the United States in a slaying. Criminally negligent homi-

Oldsmobile out in 2004

(740) 446-7283

1

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AT

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Corne~

of Georaes Crook &amp; Bulavllle roads
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With Guest SPeaker

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Evanl!ellst RaY Stal!no

.arsecu-rity surpluses oeing tappea,
-~ Democrats say Bush should solve problem
&gt;
~
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Democrats say it is up . to

from
New Vork CitY

on track to violate an oft- will use the turn of events
stated pledge to leave Social against them. Democrats
Security funds untoucbed.
have blamed the problem on
It prompted an alarmed the 10-year, $1.3~ trillion tax
House
Speaker Dennis cut Bush -pushed through
Hastert, R-111.. and Senate Congress .
Minority Leader Trent Lott,
''It's .refreshing to see
R-Mis,., to discuss options
someone in the administrafor avoiding that scenario at
an abruptly called meeting . tion owning .up to the prob. )em, even though the presiwith Bush.
Republicans, especially in dent hasn't," said Douglas

·: President Bush to suggest a
! solution now that his budget
: chief has told lawmakers part
; of this year's Social Security
.; surplus may have to be
~ diverted to pay for other
;; programs.
: White House budget
. ~: director Mitchell Daniels
: delivered the news privately

•••
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I

No Lord, revue lhli work In lhe midst of the years"

/&gt; --------------~--------~----------~----------------

SundaY SePtember 9 ·Wednesday SePtember 12
SundaY Service: 6:30Pm
Mondall • Wednesdall l:OOPm
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NO Lord. revue lhll work In rhe mldsr of lhe 11ears"

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a-year-old held in stabbing

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Ohio River Embroidery·

Conferenc:e reaches accord _

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

describe this report,"" said Joel Naroff,
president and chief economist of Naroff
Economic Advisors. "It was brutal."
The unemployment report tends to
indicate wh.ere the economy has been
rather than where it is going.The jobless
rate often continues rising even after the
economy starts to improve, reflecting the
fact that businesses are afraid to hire back
workers until they are certain the
rebound is sustainable.
But economists were worried about
the report's effect on consumers, whose
spending has kept the economy alloat
·
during the sluggish past year.

, Tropical storm gains strength

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�Page A6 • &amp;unbaJ&gt; ilrtmrB' -&amp;rntinel

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

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Nation • World

I
i

Obituaries

Deaths

William David 'Skinny' Lehew

Dianna Mae France

Gallia fTian jailed .
on several charges

POMEROY -William David "Skinny" Lehew, 74, died
GA LLIPO LIS - Dianna Mae France, 45, Gallipolis, died
GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot- nesses in the area, officers found
Fnday, September 7, 2001 at his residence on Spring Avenue in
Saturday, Sept. 8, 200 I at her residence.
area man remained in.the Gallia Wolford at Third and Cedar
·
Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-Halley- Wood" Pomeroy. He clied on his birthday.
He was born September 7, \927, son of the late Theodore County jail Saturday following Street, where he "Gppeared
Funeral Home.
his Friday arrest on several intoxicated," the report said.
and Veda Leifheit Lehew Davis.
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School, served in the charges arising from two alleged Gallia County EMS was called
U.S. Air Force, and attended Potomac State College, where he hitskip accidents, Gallipolis City to conduct an evaluation. He
was later transported by EMS to
SHADE - Hollie V Hayes, 66, Shade, di ed Friday, Aug. 31 , played football and basketbalL He also attended the University Police reported;
Rick D. Wolford, 37, 3176 the ER.
of Rio Grande.
2001 at Hospice of Cincinnati in Hamilton.
Officers and the deputy went
He ·worked_ as a truck driver for.Marchi Distributing Com- Boggs Road, was arrested by
Born March 8, 1935 in Meib" c;ounty, son of the late Garold
and Audra Hawk Hayes, he retired from Jaguar Cars Inc., as a pany, Galhpohs. for several years. He also operated several bars police and a Gallia County to the hospital when Wolford
sheriff's deputy at Holzer Med- was released, where Wolford
.district service mariage r, and was a bus driver for Alexander in Meigs County.
ical Center after he was released allegedly resisted arrest. He was
Skinny was an avid sports fan .
Local School District. .
from the emergency room Fri- res"trained and taken to the jail,
He was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church.
He was a member of th e Athens Pentecostal Church.
officers said.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret; four children, Ted day. officers said.
Surviving are his wi fe, Linda S. Hayes; five children, Diana
Officers said they were
Wolford was later charged
Dixo n of Dayton, Thomas Stevers of Albany, Kimberly (Timo- (Becky) of Chillicothe,John (Alice) ofJackson, Cheryl of Syrawith
driving under the influat
3:21
p.m.
that
a
informed
thy) Tice of Hamilton, Tanya· Lynn (William) Morris of Fair- cuse, and Billy of Pomeroy; six grandchildren Nate lan
field, and Paul Anthony (Rae Jean) Mett of Suffolk, Va.; II Matthew, Amy, Sarah and David; a brother. B~b Qea~) of black pickup truck had alleged- ence, driving under suspension,
ly struck a vehicle on the 700 · reckless operation, hitskip and
Columbus; and three m~ces.
·
I grandchildren and five great - grand c hildre~; two sisters, Colleen
(Floyd) Brickles am! LaDonna Garoldene (james) Boyd of
S~rvices will be 1 p.m. on Tuesday, September II, 2001 at block of Fourth Avenue. Offi- ·resisting arrest.
Officer~ said the vehicles
Shade.:
· ·
Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Pastor William Mid- cers went to the scene and startsearching
for
the
suspect
allegedly
damaged by Wolford
ed
He was also prececied in death by his brother; Ronald Hayes. dleswarth offiCiating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove Ceme- ·
vehicle.
included a Chevrolet Suburban
Servi ces were held Monday, Sept. 3, 2001 at Hughes- tery.
parked on Fourth, and a minicall
on
a
hitskip
in
Another
Friends may call at the ' funeral home on Monday, September
Moquin Funeral Home, Atherls. Burial was in Burlingham
the area of Fourth and Locust van parked at Fourth and
10, 2001 from 7-9 p.m.
Cemetery.
was soon received, fol- LOcust.
Street
Meri10ri al contnbutio!]s may be made to the Alexander
lowed shortly after by a call
Cited by officers in separate
Scholarship Fund, 6091 Ayers Road, Albany, Ohio 45701, or to
from a residence on the 500 incidents Friday were Charles P.
Hospice of Ci~cinnati , 896 N.W. Washington Blvd., Hamilton,
block
of Third Avenue that a Lewis Ill, 34, Ohio 850, SidREEDSVILLE- bale E. Smith, 68, of Reedsville, clied FriOhio 45013.
day. September 7, 2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg man had exited a black pickup well, for disordedy by intoxicaWest Virginia,
' and ran through the caller's tion, and Mitchell W. Waugh,
33, 3375 Ohio 7, Pomeroy, for
He was born March 12, 1933 in Parkersburg, son of the late backyard.
speaking
to
several
witAfter
assault.
'
GALLIPOLIS - Freda Maycel Hill, 85, Gallipolis, died Fri- Claude and Gladys Rockhold Smith. .
He was retired from the US. Army Corps of Engineers with
day, Sept. 7, 2001 at Arbors of Gallipolis.
31
years of service, and was a U.S. Navy veteran of the Korean
· Born Dec. 4, 1915 in Alkol, W.Va., daughter of the late WinA church service under the
fi eld Was hington Hill and Lulia Davis Hill, she was a home- Conflict. He had been a member of the Reedsville Fire
direction of Frank Vaughn is
Department since 1958. He was a member of Reedsville
maker, and a member of Chapel Hill Church of Christ.
Sunday at 10a.m. and festivities
She was also .preceded in death by her husband, Arlie J JHill; Church of Christ, and a member of Coolville Maso nic Lodge
will
wrap-up around 5 p.m.
Page
Al
·
F&amp;AM No. 337 for 43 years.
,
and by four brothers and a sister.
The EXPO is a free event
H e is survived by his wife of 49 yea rs, Thelma Jean Smith; a
Surviving are a daughrer,Jo (Ab) Stauffer of Marietta; a son,
and
food will be available at rea$10.
Marvin R . "Jim" (Freda) Cottrell of Addison; and three grand- son and dau ghter-in-law, Mark and Connie Smith of
Quilters can .also bring in a sonable prices for hungry specReedsville; -a daughter and son-in-law, Teresa and John Smith
sons, three great-grandsons and three great-granddaughters.
tators and exhibitors alike.
Services .will be 2 p.m. Monday in Chapel Hill Church of of Reedsv!lle; a daughter, Jodi Bissell of Reedsville; a sister and 12-1/2 inch square block, any
For more information on the
Christ, with Evangelist Bob Winton officiating. Burial will be brother-in-law, Darlene and Marvin Reed of Reedsville· five pattern, and the top three blocks .
EXPO, contact Meigs County
in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Frje_nds may call at Waugh- , grandchildren, Melissa and Brandon Smith, Shelby and Brock will be awarded prizes. Only
Agent Hal Kneen at
Extension
Halley-Wood Funeral Home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday, and at the Sm1th, and -Darc1 B1ssell, all of Reedsville; and his mother-inone block per person is allow~d. .992-66%.
·
· ·
law, O live Smith of Reedsville.
chu rch Monday, one hour p1ior to services.
·
In addition to his parents, he ;vas preceded. in death by his
father-m- law, Melvin R . Smith.
which lawmalcers have bickered
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, September 10, 2001 in
for most of the year, and
over
PROCTORVILLE - .Lora Hughes, 79, Proctorvill~. died Wh1te Funeral Home, Coolville, with the Rev. Philip Sturm
increasing a special taX on coal
Satu rday, Sept. 8, 2001 at her residence. ·
officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday,
companies to set aside more
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Herman C . September 9, 200 1 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
money
for land reclamation.
Hughes.
Burial will be in Reedsville C~metery, where military serSurviving are a son, Clifford Skip Hughes ofProctorville; five v~ees will be conducted by Tuppers Plains VFW. .
A Masonic service will be conducted in the funeral home on
daughters, Leona Mae Chafin of Logan, W.Va., Shirley Ann
Dotson ofWayne,W.Va., Linda Lou Cates ofTexas, Wanda June Sunday, September 9, 2001 at 7 p.m.
•
Barboza of Mame, and
Henson of Chesapeake; and
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributi· HIS can be made to
1--~~~~~~~!!U~~.2f.hltgg~_I!,J~_fu~~~m!&lt;i.I!s.---i~~~~;::~~C~:h~u~rch
of Christ Building Fund, P.O. Box 93,
I·
Switzer, W.Va.
45772 . . ·
- ·- - - CHARLESTON (AP) . Services &gt;Vill be 11 a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home,
family
court, mine reclamation
· Proctorville. Entombment will be in Rome Cemetery. Friends .
bonds and redistricting are
may call at the funeral hom e from 6- 9 p.m. Sunday.
ment District) National
among the items Gov. Bob Wise
Resources Assistance Coun- wants the West Virginia Legislacil as Meigs County's dele - ture to consider next week.
plan to ensure that our resifrom hgeAl
gate.
Wise · on Friday officially
dents continue to receive the
The council will plan called the Legislature into spec
high quality care that is a s tan ~ residents both in favor of, environmental
clean- up cia! session with 11 items on the
from Page AI
dard at uur facility" was imple- and in opposition to, the projects under H.B. 3 and
agenda.
mented when the strike proposed ban to voice their Issue One, which was
The issues include establishing
year labor agreement was .on · began.
opinions.
approved by voters in 2000 . a system of family court judges,
. the table, but. Scenic Hills
"During the strike, we have
Davenport said Friday
The commissioners honwanted a three-year contract.
made arrangements to be fully that tho se . attending the
"They would also not sign · staffed 24 hours a · day, seven meeting . were misinformed ored Kenny Wiggins, who
off on previously agreed days a week," the statement that the commissioners have retired last week as program Auto- Owners Insurance
items," she said. " Nothing was reads.
authority over the board of manager for the Meigs
Lire Home Car Business
accomplished and we are still
"Scenic Hills can assure our health, its policies or its County Recycling and Litter Prevention program ,
7~ "'1/6 'Pt~lf. 'Pea;tfe.
on strike."
residents and their families that budget.
with
the
"Friend
of
Meigs
The primary issue· in new the strike will have absolutely· . "The Board of Health
INSURANCE PLUS
contract talks is an a!rordable no impact on the quality of operates under th-e authori-. County" award, and with a
. health care plan for workers, care we offer, and no impact ty of the Ohio Revised luncheon reception.
AGENCIES, INC.
Paula
S.
Wood
was
hired
Young said. SEJU has present- on the ability of family mem- Code," Davenport said.
ed a plan it believes will save hers to visit their loved ones," "The commissioners have Friday to replace Wiggins as · 114 Court Pomeroy
Scenic Hills money, she added. th e statement said.
no authority over th e board program manager.
No further talks were schedThe board also:
Since the strike began, of health or the health
uled as of Friday, Young said, replacement workers have department."
• Approved payment of
The board of health's pro- bills in the amount of
.and SEIU plans to file addi- been brought in from a Daytional unfair labor practice too agency, Young said.
posal.' to
be
decided $205,616.3"0, $13 ,135.90 of
complaints against the center.
Scenic Hills is now advertis- Wednesday, would ban which reptesents general
" I can't really discuss the ing to fill a number of posi- smoking frojTl all public fund expenditures;
details of negotiations," said tions, including CNAs, cooks, · places, including privately• Approved appropriations
Gill, who provided a statement and aides in clietary, house- owned businesses, and out- adjusqnents for the commu- .
that said a "comprehensive keeping, laundry ,and activities. doors within 20 feet . of al). nity .corrections program,
entrance to a public place.
The proposal also pro- . the sheriff's department,
vi des for fines of up to $500 and MR/DD board;
relations, will officially present
• Approved a contract
for those who violate the
the tower to Dorsey on behalf ban.
between the Meigs County
·
of aU Rio Grande alumni. ·
In other business, the Department of •Job and
from Page AI
Richard Munyan o( the alumcom missio ne rs appointed .Family Services and the
Did you know that millions of Americans now wear
ni board chaired the Bell Tower
University
of
Rio
1
hi
Joe
Bolin
of
Rutland
to
tion to celebrate contributions Committee.
Grande/Crossroads
Program
enses
w
ch they need replace only every week or
serve on the District 18
from alumni over Rio
At 8 p.m., Doug Getvert,
the
amount
of
or longer? These lenses are termed "disposables •
(B uckeye
Hills/Hocking in
Grande's 125 years of history.
carillonneur for the Washing$79,096.85.
IIRroF~ortunately forfus, disposables are available tO fit a
Alumni, Bell Tower donors ton M emorial National Caril- Valley Regional Developo the public. These lenses have been a
builders, and Rio Grand~ lon, will present musical selecfor people who have had problems in the past with
administrators will be present tions on Rio Grande's carillon.
ldeplorseltsgu_,ar cleaning .of their contacts or with heavy
to dedicate the tower.
" It's a huge celebration in
Jack Fin ch, president of the Rio Grande and all members
When disposable contact lenses were first developed
alumni board of directors, and of the public are invited ' to
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
only a small number of companies offer.ed them and with
Susan Haft, director of alunmi attend," D~rsey added.

l:lollie V. Hayes

Dale E. Smith

Freda Maycel Hill

Big Bend
frOm

Lora Hughes

Agenda set
for special
legislative
SeSSIOn

Ban

Strike

~laying

susped arrested

. SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -A man who escaped
·~ mto Mex1co after allegedly killing three teen-agers was
arrested at the border while trying to re-enter the United
States, authorities said.
. Alfred "Wizard" _Flores, 21, was found Thursday among a
group of Illegal ahens who had entered the United States
· near the border city ofTecate.
~ He ':"as jailed without bail Friday in San Bernardino, said
shenff s spokesman Chip Patterson.
' Flores is-suspected of the March murders of Ri cardo Tor. res, 15;JasonVan Kleef, 18; and Alexander Ayala, 17, in Rialto, as well as a murder in Los Angeles County last November
Patterson said.
'

Cliff plunge kills five

Nation's unemployment rate swells
WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's unemployment rate swelled to
4. 9 percent in August as job losses in
manufacturing passed I million for the
yearlong national slowdown . The
incre~se in ~he _
monthly jobless rate was
the b1ggest m SIX years.
The ~port Friday virtually guarantee_d
further mterest rate cuts by the Federal
Reserve to try to revive the- economy,
analysts said.
. Businesses slashed 113,000 jobs from
their payrolls last month, the Labor
Department reported. The jobless rate
rose by 0.4 percentage point from 4.5

percent in July, the level it had held since
April.
"The slowdown is real and it's affecting roo many lives and we're concerned
about it," President Bush said at the
White House after meeting with anxious Rep\lblican leaders.
·
· The jobless report sent stocks tumbling on Wall Street. The Dow Jones
industrial average closed down almost
235 po.ints, coming within striking disran ee of its low for the year. The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index closed at its
lowest level in nearly three years.
'"'Ugly' is not a strong enough term ro

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP)- A car racing down an airstrip
.. at a pecan farm plunged off a 200-foot cliff at the end of the
'~ runway, killing five people.
.•
Two women and three men, all believed to be in their 20s
·
died in the crash Thursday night.
· ·
', cide is a lesser offense than murder or manslaughter.
The cause of the accident was under investigation.
The runway is used by airplanes that spray the orchards at
the farm.
~
DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. announced the
·" ."They were up ~here on the airport runway traveling at a
h1gh rate of speed, SheriffJuan Hernandez said. "They came death sentence for its struggling Oldsmobile division· in
. to th~ end of the runway, were not able to stop and ran off December. Now the execution date has been set.
GM said Friday that it would end production of the
the chff."
·
·
Oldsmobile line with the 2004 model year, though production of the Intrigue and Aurora will end sooner. The company said the line has not been profitable.
Oldsmobile is th e oldest automotive brand name in U.S.
MIAMI (AP) -Tropical Storm Erin regained strength in
·
the AtlantiC Oceari on Friday, regenerating two days after it history.
It
was
named
for
its
founder,
Ransom
E.
Olds,
who
started
weakened to a. tropical wave. ,
~rin 's maximum sustained winds were near 40 mph late the Oids Motor Vehicle Co. in Lansing in 1897. Worldwide,
only the Daimler name - of Daimler, Mercedes-Benz and
Fnday. The storm did not immediately threaten land.
At 11 p.m .. EDT, Erin was about 57 5 miles southeast of now DaimlerChrysler - is older.
- Bermuda. Erin was moving north- northwest about 7 mph
. and wai expected to continue on that course for the next 24
.. hours, hurricane specialist Jack Beven said.
DURBAN, South Africa (AP) -- Delegates to a ·U.N.
Also Friday, a new tropical depression formed in the eastracism
conference appeared to agree on a final declaration
ern Atlantic.
Saturday, b_reaking deadlocks over how to deal with slavery
· and the M1ddle East that had threatened to derail the gathermg,
The a~reement would clear the way for a global plan to
c
NEW YORK (AP) - ,An 8-year-old boy was charged with
fight
rac1sm. It came after talks were extended beyond Fri. mmmally negligent homicide Friday for allegedly stabbing
to death a 4-year-old neighbor who-police say had been bul- day's scheduled close to allow delegates time to overcome the
lied for more than a year.
. . bitter impasses. The United States and Israel had pulled out of
The suspeces 9-year-old brother was charged with assault the conference ·o n Monday because of proposed wording
for his role in the attack, police · said. Both were charged as calling Israel a racist state.
"My understanding is that there has been consensus, that
juveniles.
Police said the 8-year-old stabbed Emanuel Barima in the there has been general agreement on these two texts," South
African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma told deln~ck_ - ~iercing his jugular vein - as the boy played with
egates .
. hiS stster m the hall outside their Bronx apartment Wednes. The accord's reached Saturday on slavery and the Middle
day. Tests were being done to determine whether a set of
East still need to be voted on by a final session' of the delehouse keys or a pen was the murder weapon.
gates .
.: The brothers are among the youngest people ever charged
,:jfi the United States in a slaying. Criminally negligent homi-

Oldsmobile out in 2004

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.arsecu-rity surpluses oeing tappea,
-~ Democrats say Bush should solve problem
&gt;
~
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Democrats say it is up . to

from
New Vork CitY

on track to violate an oft- will use the turn of events
stated pledge to leave Social against them. Democrats
Security funds untoucbed.
have blamed the problem on
It prompted an alarmed the 10-year, $1.3~ trillion tax
House
Speaker Dennis cut Bush -pushed through
Hastert, R-111.. and Senate Congress .
Minority Leader Trent Lott,
''It's .refreshing to see
R-Mis,., to discuss options
someone in the administrafor avoiding that scenario at
an abruptly called meeting . tion owning .up to the prob. )em, even though the presiwith Bush.
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·: President Bush to suggest a
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.; surplus may have to be
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;; programs.
: White House budget
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: delivered the news privately

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describe this report,"" said Joel Naroff,
president and chief economist of Naroff
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The unemployment report tends to
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rather than where it is going.The jobless
rate often continues rising even after the
economy starts to improve, reflecting the
fact that businesses are afraid to hire back
workers until they are certain the
rebound is sustainable.
But economists were worried about
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spending has kept the economy alloat
·
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, Tropical storm gains strength

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Page A8 • t.unbap t:lmff -t.tntlnrl

friends car

Hair from Ji'mmy Hoffa. found in
.

DETROIT (AP) - · In a break in unidentified sources.
O'Brien has maintained Hoffa
one of the nation's biggest unsolved
cases, a hair from Jimmy Hoffa was never was in the car, and he repeatedfound iri a car that a longtime friend ly has denied any role in Hoffa's disapwas driving the day the former Team- pearance.
" We have re-interviewed Mr.
sters boss vanished 26 years ago, The
O'Brien, but I can't say anything more
Detroit News reported Friday.
FBI scientists matched DNA from about that," said John E. Bell Jr., agent
hair taken from Hoffa's brush with in charge of the Detroit FBI bureau.
Hoffa, the legendary Teamsters presthat of a strand found in the borrowed
car that Charles "Chuckie" O'Brien ident from 1957 until 1971, disaphad been using on July 30, 1975, the peared from a Detroit-area restaurant
newspaper reported, citing ~o and is presumed dead. He was 62. His

son, James P. Hoffa, is now Teamsters
president. .
·
The younger Hoffa said at a news
conference Friday that he had been in
contact with the FBI during the past
year abOut the DNA evidence.
"We'd always hoped there would be
a deathbed confession;· he said. "It
hasn't happened yet. Hopefully,
through DNA, we now have a breakthrough."
.
Hoffa said he had not talked to
O'Brien in 26 years. But he said he

confronted O'Brien shortly after his
father's disappearance and asked:
'"Where were you? How do you
explain yourself?' His reaction was to
run out of the room."
Hoffa disappeared after going to the
Machus Red Fox restaurant in
Bloomfield Township, supposedly for a
meeting with reputed Mafia figure
Anthony Giacalone and New Jersey
Teamsters boss and underworld associate Anthony Provenzano.
Neither man showed up; both said

no meeting had been scheduled.
The car O'Brien was using was
owned by Giacalone's son Joe.
Investigators believe Hoffa was
picked up outside the restaurant and
killed. Despite a huge investigation, his
body has not been found.
Investigators and Hoffa family
members· have said that O'Brien, who
had been taken in by Hoffa as a child,
was one of the few people who cotlld
h0ve persuaded Hoffa to·get into a car
that afternoon.

Fonner Miami officers
_S&amp;P hits lowest level of year on unemployment numbers
aca1secl of planting guns
· MIAMI (AP) - In the
city's worst police scandal
since the days of "Miami
Vice," 13 current and former
officers were accused by federal prosecutors Friday of
planting guns, lying to investigators and othetwise trying
to cover up four shootings in
which three people died.
In one of the· shootings, a
SWAT team fired 123 bullets into an apartment dur-·
ing a 1996 drug raid and
then lied about finding a
gun in the hand of the dead
73-year-old man inside, the
Fpi said.
The . investigation also
involved the deaths of ~o
young black men who were
shot in the back by officers
after stealing purses on a
highway ramp.
All of those charged were
veterans assigned to SWAT
teams, narcotics units or special crime-suppression teams
in the late 1990s.
Prosecutors said that in at
least three 'cases, police
planted guns at the scene to
justify shootings by officers.
"These officers put a stain
on the badge of every hardworking, honest, faithful,
. honorable police office who
·p utS' his or her life · on the
line every single day," U.S.
Attorney Guy Lewis said.
· Lewis said the

shootings, they lied about
what they saw, they falsified
reports, they tampered with
'
cnme
scenes."
He also said the officers
stole money, guns and other
property from people in
unrelated cases and later
· planted the weapons at
police-involved shootings.
Eleve n officers were
arrested Friday on an indictment charging them ' in a
plot to obstruct justice and
violat~ civil rights. Two
retired officers pleaded
guilty to conspiracy earlier
this week and are cooperating with investigators.
"This is painful, but this is
something we have to go·
through to get better," Police
Chief Raul Martinez said.
. Miami Mayor Joe Carollo
said he .sent a letter to Lewis
urging the Justice Department to launch a "top to
bottom review" of the
Miami Police Department.
He said he did not know
how soon the probe could
be carried out, saying he was
sure "the U.S. Attorney
. woulil take the right steps." ·
The mayor also said he
expected more officers to be
charged.
All but one o( the H
indicted officers were freed
on S100;000 bail. If convict-

Administration .backs EPA
nominee amid questions
over.his record in Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's spokesman
said Friday the administration stands behind its nominee for chief enforcement
.officer of the Environmenbl
Protection Agency, despite
EPA investigators raising
questions . about Donald
Schregardus' record in Ohio.
"President Bush and the
administration believe that he
is the right man for the job,
and will continue to push for
his nominalion," spokesman
Ari Fleischer told reporters.
Schregardus, a former
director of the Ohio EPA,
won approval from the Sen. ate Environment ·and Public
Works
Committee
in
August, with four Democrats
·dissenting, to ·become the
federal EPA's assistant administrator for enfor&amp;ement and
compliance.
But with the release of an
EPA report last week, the
committee's chairman, Sen.
James Jefforw of Vermont,
who previously supported
Schregardus, is promising to
return to the nomination and
possibly tie it up for at least
several mouths. Democrats
and envir~nmental groups
are stepping up their campaigns against Schregardus. ·
"The Bush Adrninisr;ration
is backing a nominee who
has been found liable for violating the very laws he is now
supposed to enforce;' Laura
Chapin, a spokeswoman for
Environmental
Working
. Group, said Friday. ''This is an
· embarrassment to the very
notion of public service, and
completely undermines the
lip service this adrnirustration
has paid to supporting
.enforcement of our nation's
I

environmental laws."
The report faulted Ohio's
environmental agency, when
it was led by Schregardus, in .
several areas, including failure
to implement the second
phase of a federal acid rain
program. It also. warned the
EPA might take control of
the Ohio agency's enforcement power if its handling of
federal programs does not
improve.
Aeisclrer found a silver lining, however, noting the
report found that Ohio's
criminal enforcement program is among the best in the
nation.

A' staff of over

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state-of-the-art care,

NEW YORK (AP) - A
worse-than-expected unem:
ployment report ignited
another dizzying selloff Friday, sending the Dow Jones
industrials tumbling more
than 230 points .and the Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index to its
· lowest level in nearly three
years.
Analysts blamed the losses
on Wall Street's growing fears
that the economy is worsening and more bad news,
rather than a turnaround, is
ahead.
"The unemptoyment rate
was higher than we anticipat·ed and people are concerned
that the economic slowdown
isn't showing signs of recovery," said Robert Harrington,
head oflisted block trading at
UBS Warburg. "People were
looking for a third-quarter
turnaround and that's not
happening, now the fourth
quarter is a question mark
~nd we've pushed projections
out to 2002."
The Dow closed down
234.99, ·or 2.4 percent, at
9,605.85, its lowest close
since April 4, but still 216
points above its weakest finish
for the year.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index fell 20.62, or 1. 9 per-

lost nearly 12 percent and the
S&amp;P has fallen 8 percent.
. . The selling Friday began
early in the session on a
Labor Department report
showing the nation's unemployment rate soared to 4.9
percent in August-· its highest level in nearly four years
and businesses slashed
113,000 jobs as the slumping
economy continued to hammer the labor market.
Investors punished retailers
Friday out of fear the slowdown would hurt consumer
spending and confidence.
Consu mer spending accounts
for ~a-thirds of the economy, and Wall Street is terrified
that .any decrease could put
already fragile businesses in
even . worse positions than
they are now.

Home Depot dropped
$2.60, or 6 percent, to
$40.95, while WalcMart lost
$1.15 to $46.22.
. "People are getting increasingly concerned that the
consumer, who has held the
economy up so far, will begin
to retrench and the economy
will lose what litrle momentum it has and this will turn
into a recession," said Bob

zechuan
.Chinese Ke~~tazu~aJrzt

•

of
three major benchmarks

since April 4, down 17.94,
nearly 1.1
percent,
1,687.70, about 49 poil~tsl
from its 2001 low point.
For the week, the Dow lost
nearly 3.5 percent, the Nasdaq fell 6.5 percent and the
S&amp;P dropped 4.2 percent. In
the last two weeks, the Dow
has tumbled nearly 8 percent,
the Nasdaq coml'osite has

~""'-"'''

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YOU

40 446-7227

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Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446·1711

L."'"''''~

All

.s.EO

·!-egan
tlttarietta
Gallia Academy
Jackson
Athens
' Point Pleasant
Warren
· River Valley

o-o
o-o
o-o

3-0
3·0
2·1
0·0
2·1
0·0
2·1'
0·0
1·2
•
0·0
1·2
0·0
0·3

Friday's Games
N. Marion 34, Pt. Pleasant
20
lrohton 27, Gallia Academy 7
Meigs 27, 1iver Valley 7
Jackson 50, Vinton County
12
Marietta 55, Hamilton 7
Logan 13, Zanesville 0
Athens 27, Alexander 0
Prkersburg So. 27, Warren
19

M

All
1·2
1·2
1·2
1·2
0-3
0·3

· Hocking Division

· m

All
3.0
2-1
2-1
1-2
0·3 '
0·3

Frlday's.Games ·"
Eastern 30, Wahama 8
Meigs 27, River Valley 7
-Southam 18, South Gallia-12Jeickson 50, Vinton County 12
Waver1y 34, Wellston 30
Beme Union 40, Miller 0
SE Ross 7, Trimble 6 .
Fairfield Union 42, N-York 26
Waterford 20, Frontier 6
Athens 27, Alexander 0
Zane Trace 42, Fed Hocking 0
Belpre 47, Fort Frye 27

rum

All

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wah am a
Hannan
South Geillia

3·0
2·1
2·1
1·2
0·3
0-3

'

Friday's Games
Eastern ·30, Wahama 8
Buffalo-Putnam 54, Hannan
.6
Southam 18, South Gallla 13
·Oak Hill22, Rock Hill 0
Ri)lerside 49, Ripley 20
Ravenswood 22, Roane Co.

BY R. SHAWN lEwiS .
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy's high-flyin' circus
act started srrong Friday, but
the Ironton Fighting Tigers
and the sweltering heat ultimately proved too much in a
27-7 defeat.
Gallipolis came out sizzling
as senior quarterback David
Brodeur hooked up with
wideout Josh Perry on a 71yard bomb on the ~econd play
from scrimmage.
"He (Perry) was by them
by, like, five yarw," Brodeur
said. "I was, like, 'here it

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The Blue Devil defense
stuffed the Tigers on the
ensuing possession and held
tight throughout the first
quarter. The thousands of
Gallia Academy faithful who
braved ·temperatures in the
mid-90s undoubtedly sensed
an upset.
But then the perennial
powerhouse that is Ironton
decided enough was eno ugh .
The Tigers launched a 12.play, 91-yard drive that featured Ironton football at its
smashmouth best.
"They executed real well
tonight on ~o or three long
drives," said GAHS Coach
.
'
Brent Saunders. "They don't
do anything fancy:'
Early in the second quarter,
Gallipolis appeared to have ·
the i:lrive derailed. But on
fourth-and-15 from the Blue
Devil 25, a Donnie Johnson
whiff cost Gallia Academy siX
points.
.Johnson and fellow defensive back Andre· Geiger ,converged on Ironton receiver
Josh Sands near the Gallipolis
· 4, and it seemed inevitable

Please see GAHS, Bl

TUPPERS PLAINS
Garrett Karr ran for 110 yards
and threw for 123 more as the
Eastern Eagles came alive in
the second half to defeat visit-'
irig Wahama by a 30-8 margin
Friday at the
Meigs
County
. school.
Karr tossed
a
15-yard
scoring pass
il' the opening period
.before leadmg
the
Karr · . Eagles
to
four second- half touchdowns
to turn away the White Falcons' upset bid.
Coach Scott Christman's
heavily favored Eastern eleven
led by a mere 6-0 margin .at
the half before exploding for
24 unanswered points over
the final two quarters to
remain unbeaten on the season with their third straight
Wlfl;

Wahama fell ·to 1- 2 ·on .the
year, but not before giving the
Eagles a mild scare during the
. game's first 24 minutes.
·
" We came out flat and
weren't executing during the
first half;' Christman slated.
" We made some mental mistakes and experienced difficulry . adj usting to their
(Wahama) stunts in the opehing half,
we made the ~

FAST GETAWAY - Gallia Academy quarterback David Brodeur scrambles away from the
pressure In Friday's loss to the Ironton Tigers. (Doug Shipley)
'

Please see Easles, Bl

Is ·it time for football to. return to Rio Grande?
.

· The athletic fields at the University of Rio Grande have been, for
the majority of the summer anyway,
lined in that familiar grid of parallel
and perpendicular marks spaced five
yards apart, giving ·the impression of
· a facility just waiting for two-a-days
and blocking sleds.
· The only problem is that those
DAN'S RANT
fields are only g1¥1tly worn, having
borne no more offense than the
ball team si nce 1951, but if one lis. rhythmic march of tennis shoes
tens, he/she can hear the soft whisworn by those attending band
pers wanting to wake up the echoes
camp. They haven't been chewed up and bring college football back to
by cleats and hours of offensive, the House That Bevo Built.
defensive, and special teams drills.
In talking to students at the uniRio Grande hasn't fielded a foote

Dan

Polcyn

versi ty over the past three years, I've
heard many say, "I wish Rio had
football." Their reasons are certainly
varied, from those who would like
the chat)ce ·to co'm pete intercollegiately· that such a program would
provide, to students w.fw think that
a team -..yould make Rio "seem
more like a real college,", but I have
heard. both male and female students e.xpress the se ntiment.
Although nobody seems to have a
straight answer for why a program
doesn't materialize, most of the
whispers are about money, namely
equipment and travel.
The
equipm ent , costs
are

Hawks

Ohio State
arne
eady???

a

Point Pleasant
Proctorville
South Charleston

"

BY GARY CLARK ·'
OVP SPORTS STAFF

comes, Perry.' ''

: IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) {{yle McCann threw a careet~igh four touchdown passes
and Chris Smith returned an
\nterception for a score as
COLUMBUS (AP)-The
Iowa beat Miami of Ohio 44Jim Tressel era at Ohio State
j 9 Saturcby.
got under way \vith a whim: Miami had stayed with
per.
Michigan into the l ourth
Jonathari Wells rushed for
quarter a week ago but was
119 yards and scored ~ice
iio match for Iowa and fell to
but
the 24th-ranked Buck0-2 for rhe first · time 'since
eyes, favored by four touch1994. Iowa (2-0) held the
do:wns, were less than impresc
RedHawks to 26 yarw and
sive
in a 28-14 victory over
one first down in the first half
Akron on Saturday.
~nd led 44-0 fl\idway through
.. Th.e Zips made things
~he third quarter,
interesting
on Rickie Coble's
· McCann threw touchdown
87-yard interception return in
passes of 18 and 32 yards to
the fourth quarter. · Coble's ·
pallas Clark, 15. yards to Jerereturn
matched the · second
my Allen and 52 ·yards to
longest by an opponerit in the
Kahlil Hill. The senior · had
history of 79-year-old Ohio
never before thrown more
Stadium,
which was rededithan ~o _touchdown passes in
cated prior to the game after a
game. He finished 13-of-16 •
three- year, · $210 million
for 201 yat:w with one interreconstruction project.
ception.
A crowd of 102,602 in the
. Miami broke the ·s hutout
when · quarterback
Ben . · expanded stadium was the
Roethlisberger ran 80 yards
hu-gest ever to watch an OhiQ
\ State home g~111e. ·
tpr a third-quarter TD.

your health•.··

·'·

30-8

unavoidable, but most of that is in
start-up. Even Ohio State doesn't
purchase 100 new helmets per season. ·
.
.
Travelwise, Rio is already a member of the American Mideast Con~
ference, half of whose menibers
already play footbal(The number of
overnight trips would be small, and
most small college teams travel with
fewer than 60 players to away trips
anyway.
Rio's success in basketball is proof
that small sc hools play sports at a
high level. Those who have argued
that Rio's enrollment is too small

Please see Polcyn, BJ

6

We'll have you
feeli~g better •bou

·.

IHm

Non-league

of Colors!

~

Gallipolis
Pomeroy

SEOAL

. !=astern
0·0
.Southern
0·0
Waterforc,l
0·0
Trimble
0·0
Federal Hocking 0·0
Miller
0·0

River Road, Gallipolis, OH 45631

FALL LINE

~

Ja~

Prep Football

Eagles
soar past
Falcons,

uiet Devi s

HIGHLIGHTS

· rum

Your stop lor a fine dlnlrfg
cuisine exparlencel

~ JeftSIDIIh

HOLZER
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SUNDAY's

·

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Page 81
Sunda~Septe~nbert,l001

Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0·0
Nelsonville·York 0·0
Wellston
0·0
Alexander
0·0.
Vinton County 0·0

Bob''s Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.

on behalf 01
~ Slanlev Harrison,
~ Harrison Farms
~ lor bovina mv

NCAA denieil MU appeal, Page B3
High school football, Page B2-B5
Outdoors, ~age B7

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f b •
or uylng
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1998

Inside:

Ohio Division

s~ ';D8Ce
cent, to 1,'08~.78, its weakest. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
finish this year and lowest jj

cl~b.t"cr?a~~:tr
index fell the least

Barker, investment consultant
at Dain Rauscher. '
So far the U.S. economy
has m~naged to steet clear of
a
rec·ession,
commonly
defined as rwo consecutive
quarters of negative growth,
though the nation's second
quarter GDP growth checked
in at only 0.2 percent - its
slowest pace ill eight year~. ·

&lt;

·,

. .IJ

·, j,

WVU gets ugly

win over Ohio

JUBILEE- First-year Ohio State coact] Jlm Tressel celebrates'
the Buckeyes' first touchdown against Akron Saturday in the
first quarter at Ohio Stadium. (AP)
Ohio State quarterback
Steve Bellisari threw two
· touchdown passes but fumbled three times and hadpasses go t hrough the hands of
defe nders three other times.
One of Bellisari's passes was

thrown direct! y to Akron free
safety John .Fuller but the ball
squirted through his hands
and into those of Chris Vance
who completed a 61-yard end

Please see os~. Bl
)

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) Avon ·
Cobourne rushed for 173 .
yards and scored ~i ce in
the fourth quarter to lead
.West Virginia to a 20-3
victory over O hio on Saturday.
Cobou rn e was the only
bright spot on offense fo r
WestVirginia ' (l-1), which .
struggled for the second
straight game under new
coach Rich Rodriguez's
·no-huddle system.
It was the second-best
. career
effort
for
Cobo urne, . a junior who
· gained 210 yards against
Pittsburgh in 1999.
O hio (0-2) managed
only a 26-yard field goal by
Kevin · Kerr to avoid
becoming the first shutout
victim for West Virginia in
fou~ years.
'
The Bobcats, who were
outgaincd 350 yards to

.,

310, kept the game close
u~til they had ~o fourthqu arter turnovers.
Ohio's C hris Knaack
fumbled after a 35-yard
pass play and West Virc
gmt a's Angel
Estrada
recovered at the West Virginia 5.
·The Mounta(rieers then
drove th~ length of the
field.
During the drive, West
Virginia's longest play from
scrimmage all day - 28
yards - came on a busted
play. Brad Lewis floated a
pass to Seth Abraham
down the right sideline to
th~ Ohio 27.
Cobourne ran the ball
on four of the next five
plays, including a 4-yard
TD run on fourth-andgoal for a 10-3 lead wi.t h
13:45 left ih the game.

wvu. Pllp 12

.

�•

'\
Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

Page A8 • t.unbap t:lmff -t.tntlnrl

friends car

Hair from Ji'mmy Hoffa. found in
.

DETROIT (AP) - · In a break in unidentified sources.
O'Brien has maintained Hoffa
one of the nation's biggest unsolved
cases, a hair from Jimmy Hoffa was never was in the car, and he repeatedfound iri a car that a longtime friend ly has denied any role in Hoffa's disapwas driving the day the former Team- pearance.
" We have re-interviewed Mr.
sters boss vanished 26 years ago, The
O'Brien, but I can't say anything more
Detroit News reported Friday.
FBI scientists matched DNA from about that," said John E. Bell Jr., agent
hair taken from Hoffa's brush with in charge of the Detroit FBI bureau.
Hoffa, the legendary Teamsters presthat of a strand found in the borrowed
car that Charles "Chuckie" O'Brien ident from 1957 until 1971, disaphad been using on July 30, 1975, the peared from a Detroit-area restaurant
newspaper reported, citing ~o and is presumed dead. He was 62. His

son, James P. Hoffa, is now Teamsters
president. .
·
The younger Hoffa said at a news
conference Friday that he had been in
contact with the FBI during the past
year abOut the DNA evidence.
"We'd always hoped there would be
a deathbed confession;· he said. "It
hasn't happened yet. Hopefully,
through DNA, we now have a breakthrough."
.
Hoffa said he had not talked to
O'Brien in 26 years. But he said he

confronted O'Brien shortly after his
father's disappearance and asked:
'"Where were you? How do you
explain yourself?' His reaction was to
run out of the room."
Hoffa disappeared after going to the
Machus Red Fox restaurant in
Bloomfield Township, supposedly for a
meeting with reputed Mafia figure
Anthony Giacalone and New Jersey
Teamsters boss and underworld associate Anthony Provenzano.
Neither man showed up; both said

no meeting had been scheduled.
The car O'Brien was using was
owned by Giacalone's son Joe.
Investigators believe Hoffa was
picked up outside the restaurant and
killed. Despite a huge investigation, his
body has not been found.
Investigators and Hoffa family
members· have said that O'Brien, who
had been taken in by Hoffa as a child,
was one of the few people who cotlld
h0ve persuaded Hoffa to·get into a car
that afternoon.

Fonner Miami officers
_S&amp;P hits lowest level of year on unemployment numbers
aca1secl of planting guns
· MIAMI (AP) - In the
city's worst police scandal
since the days of "Miami
Vice," 13 current and former
officers were accused by federal prosecutors Friday of
planting guns, lying to investigators and othetwise trying
to cover up four shootings in
which three people died.
In one of the· shootings, a
SWAT team fired 123 bullets into an apartment dur-·
ing a 1996 drug raid and
then lied about finding a
gun in the hand of the dead
73-year-old man inside, the
Fpi said.
The . investigation also
involved the deaths of ~o
young black men who were
shot in the back by officers
after stealing purses on a
highway ramp.
All of those charged were
veterans assigned to SWAT
teams, narcotics units or special crime-suppression teams
in the late 1990s.
Prosecutors said that in at
least three 'cases, police
planted guns at the scene to
justify shootings by officers.
"These officers put a stain
on the badge of every hardworking, honest, faithful,
. honorable police office who
·p utS' his or her life · on the
line every single day," U.S.
Attorney Guy Lewis said.
· Lewis said the

shootings, they lied about
what they saw, they falsified
reports, they tampered with
'
cnme
scenes."
He also said the officers
stole money, guns and other
property from people in
unrelated cases and later
· planted the weapons at
police-involved shootings.
Eleve n officers were
arrested Friday on an indictment charging them ' in a
plot to obstruct justice and
violat~ civil rights. Two
retired officers pleaded
guilty to conspiracy earlier
this week and are cooperating with investigators.
"This is painful, but this is
something we have to go·
through to get better," Police
Chief Raul Martinez said.
. Miami Mayor Joe Carollo
said he .sent a letter to Lewis
urging the Justice Department to launch a "top to
bottom review" of the
Miami Police Department.
He said he did not know
how soon the probe could
be carried out, saying he was
sure "the U.S. Attorney
. woulil take the right steps." ·
The mayor also said he
expected more officers to be
charged.
All but one o( the H
indicted officers were freed
on S100;000 bail. If convict-

Administration .backs EPA
nominee amid questions
over.his record in Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's spokesman
said Friday the administration stands behind its nominee for chief enforcement
.officer of the Environmenbl
Protection Agency, despite
EPA investigators raising
questions . about Donald
Schregardus' record in Ohio.
"President Bush and the
administration believe that he
is the right man for the job,
and will continue to push for
his nominalion," spokesman
Ari Fleischer told reporters.
Schregardus, a former
director of the Ohio EPA,
won approval from the Sen. ate Environment ·and Public
Works
Committee
in
August, with four Democrats
·dissenting, to ·become the
federal EPA's assistant administrator for enfor&amp;ement and
compliance.
But with the release of an
EPA report last week, the
committee's chairman, Sen.
James Jefforw of Vermont,
who previously supported
Schregardus, is promising to
return to the nomination and
possibly tie it up for at least
several mouths. Democrats
and envir~nmental groups
are stepping up their campaigns against Schregardus. ·
"The Bush Adrninisr;ration
is backing a nominee who
has been found liable for violating the very laws he is now
supposed to enforce;' Laura
Chapin, a spokeswoman for
Environmental
Working
. Group, said Friday. ''This is an
· embarrassment to the very
notion of public service, and
completely undermines the
lip service this adrnirustration
has paid to supporting
.enforcement of our nation's
I

environmental laws."
The report faulted Ohio's
environmental agency, when
it was led by Schregardus, in .
several areas, including failure
to implement the second
phase of a federal acid rain
program. It also. warned the
EPA might take control of
the Ohio agency's enforcement power if its handling of
federal programs does not
improve.
Aeisclrer found a silver lining, however, noting the
report found that Ohio's
criminal enforcement program is among the best in the
nation.

A' staff of over

1()() doctors in 26
specialties provide

state-of-the-art care,

NEW YORK (AP) - A
worse-than-expected unem:
ployment report ignited
another dizzying selloff Friday, sending the Dow Jones
industrials tumbling more
than 230 points .and the Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index to its
· lowest level in nearly three
years.
Analysts blamed the losses
on Wall Street's growing fears
that the economy is worsening and more bad news,
rather than a turnaround, is
ahead.
"The unemptoyment rate
was higher than we anticipat·ed and people are concerned
that the economic slowdown
isn't showing signs of recovery," said Robert Harrington,
head oflisted block trading at
UBS Warburg. "People were
looking for a third-quarter
turnaround and that's not
happening, now the fourth
quarter is a question mark
~nd we've pushed projections
out to 2002."
The Dow closed down
234.99, ·or 2.4 percent, at
9,605.85, its lowest close
since April 4, but still 216
points above its weakest finish
for the year.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index fell 20.62, or 1. 9 per-

lost nearly 12 percent and the
S&amp;P has fallen 8 percent.
. . The selling Friday began
early in the session on a
Labor Department report
showing the nation's unemployment rate soared to 4.9
percent in August-· its highest level in nearly four years
and businesses slashed
113,000 jobs as the slumping
economy continued to hammer the labor market.
Investors punished retailers
Friday out of fear the slowdown would hurt consumer
spending and confidence.
Consu mer spending accounts
for ~a-thirds of the economy, and Wall Street is terrified
that .any decrease could put
already fragile businesses in
even . worse positions than
they are now.

Home Depot dropped
$2.60, or 6 percent, to
$40.95, while WalcMart lost
$1.15 to $46.22.
. "People are getting increasingly concerned that the
consumer, who has held the
economy up so far, will begin
to retrench and the economy
will lose what litrle momentum it has and this will turn
into a recession," said Bob

zechuan
.Chinese Ke~~tazu~aJrzt

•

of
three major benchmarks

since April 4, down 17.94,
nearly 1.1
percent,
1,687.70, about 49 poil~tsl
from its 2001 low point.
For the week, the Dow lost
nearly 3.5 percent, the Nasdaq fell 6.5 percent and the
S&amp;P dropped 4.2 percent. In
the last two weeks, the Dow
has tumbled nearly 8 percent,
the Nasdaq coml'osite has

~""'-"'''

· ~THANK

YOU

40 446-7227

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tfotli#ol/4 Sttne ~· ..

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~ &amp;,ee 'NJtl4tJ«. ~

. 2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446·1711

L."'"''''~

All

.s.EO

·!-egan
tlttarietta
Gallia Academy
Jackson
Athens
' Point Pleasant
Warren
· River Valley

o-o
o-o
o-o

3-0
3·0
2·1
0·0
2·1
0·0
2·1'
0·0
1·2
•
0·0
1·2
0·0
0·3

Friday's Games
N. Marion 34, Pt. Pleasant
20
lrohton 27, Gallia Academy 7
Meigs 27, 1iver Valley 7
Jackson 50, Vinton County
12
Marietta 55, Hamilton 7
Logan 13, Zanesville 0
Athens 27, Alexander 0
Prkersburg So. 27, Warren
19

M

All
1·2
1·2
1·2
1·2
0-3
0·3

· Hocking Division

· m

All
3.0
2-1
2-1
1-2
0·3 '
0·3

Frlday's.Games ·"
Eastern 30, Wahama 8
Meigs 27, River Valley 7
-Southam 18, South Gallia-12Jeickson 50, Vinton County 12
Waver1y 34, Wellston 30
Beme Union 40, Miller 0
SE Ross 7, Trimble 6 .
Fairfield Union 42, N-York 26
Waterford 20, Frontier 6
Athens 27, Alexander 0
Zane Trace 42, Fed Hocking 0
Belpre 47, Fort Frye 27

rum

All

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wah am a
Hannan
South Geillia

3·0
2·1
2·1
1·2
0·3
0-3

'

Friday's Games
Eastern ·30, Wahama 8
Buffalo-Putnam 54, Hannan
.6
Southam 18, South Gallla 13
·Oak Hill22, Rock Hill 0
Ri)lerside 49, Ripley 20
Ravenswood 22, Roane Co.

BY R. SHAWN lEwiS .
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy's high-flyin' circus
act started srrong Friday, but
the Ironton Fighting Tigers
and the sweltering heat ultimately proved too much in a
27-7 defeat.
Gallipolis came out sizzling
as senior quarterback David
Brodeur hooked up with
wideout Josh Perry on a 71yard bomb on the ~econd play
from scrimmage.
"He (Perry) was by them
by, like, five yarw," Brodeur
said. "I was, like, 'here it

Iowa dubs Red·
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The Blue Devil defense
stuffed the Tigers on the
ensuing possession and held
tight throughout the first
quarter. The thousands of
Gallia Academy faithful who
braved ·temperatures in the
mid-90s undoubtedly sensed
an upset.
But then the perennial
powerhouse that is Ironton
decided enough was eno ugh .
The Tigers launched a 12.play, 91-yard drive that featured Ironton football at its
smashmouth best.
"They executed real well
tonight on ~o or three long
drives," said GAHS Coach
.
'
Brent Saunders. "They don't
do anything fancy:'
Early in the second quarter,
Gallipolis appeared to have ·
the i:lrive derailed. But on
fourth-and-15 from the Blue
Devil 25, a Donnie Johnson
whiff cost Gallia Academy siX
points.
.Johnson and fellow defensive back Andre· Geiger ,converged on Ironton receiver
Josh Sands near the Gallipolis
· 4, and it seemed inevitable

Please see GAHS, Bl

TUPPERS PLAINS
Garrett Karr ran for 110 yards
and threw for 123 more as the
Eastern Eagles came alive in
the second half to defeat visit-'
irig Wahama by a 30-8 margin
Friday at the
Meigs
County
. school.
Karr tossed
a
15-yard
scoring pass
il' the opening period
.before leadmg
the
Karr · . Eagles
to
four second- half touchdowns
to turn away the White Falcons' upset bid.
Coach Scott Christman's
heavily favored Eastern eleven
led by a mere 6-0 margin .at
the half before exploding for
24 unanswered points over
the final two quarters to
remain unbeaten on the season with their third straight
Wlfl;

Wahama fell ·to 1- 2 ·on .the
year, but not before giving the
Eagles a mild scare during the
. game's first 24 minutes.
·
" We came out flat and
weren't executing during the
first half;' Christman slated.
" We made some mental mistakes and experienced difficulry . adj usting to their
(Wahama) stunts in the opehing half,
we made the ~

FAST GETAWAY - Gallia Academy quarterback David Brodeur scrambles away from the
pressure In Friday's loss to the Ironton Tigers. (Doug Shipley)
'

Please see Easles, Bl

Is ·it time for football to. return to Rio Grande?
.

· The athletic fields at the University of Rio Grande have been, for
the majority of the summer anyway,
lined in that familiar grid of parallel
and perpendicular marks spaced five
yards apart, giving ·the impression of
· a facility just waiting for two-a-days
and blocking sleds.
· The only problem is that those
DAN'S RANT
fields are only g1¥1tly worn, having
borne no more offense than the
ball team si nce 1951, but if one lis. rhythmic march of tennis shoes
tens, he/she can hear the soft whisworn by those attending band
pers wanting to wake up the echoes
camp. They haven't been chewed up and bring college football back to
by cleats and hours of offensive, the House That Bevo Built.
defensive, and special teams drills.
In talking to students at the uniRio Grande hasn't fielded a foote

Dan

Polcyn

versi ty over the past three years, I've
heard many say, "I wish Rio had
football." Their reasons are certainly
varied, from those who would like
the chat)ce ·to co'm pete intercollegiately· that such a program would
provide, to students w.fw think that
a team -..yould make Rio "seem
more like a real college,", but I have
heard. both male and female students e.xpress the se ntiment.
Although nobody seems to have a
straight answer for why a program
doesn't materialize, most of the
whispers are about money, namely
equipment and travel.
The
equipm ent , costs
are

Hawks

Ohio State
arne
eady???

a

Point Pleasant
Proctorville
South Charleston

"

BY GARY CLARK ·'
OVP SPORTS STAFF

comes, Perry.' ''

: IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) {{yle McCann threw a careet~igh four touchdown passes
and Chris Smith returned an
\nterception for a score as
COLUMBUS (AP)-The
Iowa beat Miami of Ohio 44Jim Tressel era at Ohio State
j 9 Saturcby.
got under way \vith a whim: Miami had stayed with
per.
Michigan into the l ourth
Jonathari Wells rushed for
quarter a week ago but was
119 yards and scored ~ice
iio match for Iowa and fell to
but
the 24th-ranked Buck0-2 for rhe first · time 'since
eyes, favored by four touch1994. Iowa (2-0) held the
do:wns, were less than impresc
RedHawks to 26 yarw and
sive
in a 28-14 victory over
one first down in the first half
Akron on Saturday.
~nd led 44-0 fl\idway through
.. Th.e Zips made things
~he third quarter,
interesting
on Rickie Coble's
· McCann threw touchdown
87-yard interception return in
passes of 18 and 32 yards to
the fourth quarter. · Coble's ·
pallas Clark, 15. yards to Jerereturn
matched the · second
my Allen and 52 ·yards to
longest by an opponerit in the
Kahlil Hill. The senior · had
history of 79-year-old Ohio
never before thrown more
Stadium,
which was rededithan ~o _touchdown passes in
cated prior to the game after a
game. He finished 13-of-16 •
three- year, · $210 million
for 201 yat:w with one interreconstruction project.
ception.
A crowd of 102,602 in the
. Miami broke the ·s hutout
when · quarterback
Ben . · expanded stadium was the
Roethlisberger ran 80 yards
hu-gest ever to watch an OhiQ
\ State home g~111e. ·
tpr a third-quarter TD.

your health•.··

·'·

30-8

unavoidable, but most of that is in
start-up. Even Ohio State doesn't
purchase 100 new helmets per season. ·
.
.
Travelwise, Rio is already a member of the American Mideast Con~
ference, half of whose menibers
already play footbal(The number of
overnight trips would be small, and
most small college teams travel with
fewer than 60 players to away trips
anyway.
Rio's success in basketball is proof
that small sc hools play sports at a
high level. Those who have argued
that Rio's enrollment is too small

Please see Polcyn, BJ

6

We'll have you
feeli~g better •bou

·.

IHm

Non-league

of Colors!

~

Gallipolis
Pomeroy

SEOAL

. !=astern
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.Southern
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~

Ja~

Prep Football

Eagles
soar past
Falcons,

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Page 81
Sunda~Septe~nbert,l001

Belpre
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Vinton County 0·0

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s~ ';D8Ce
cent, to 1,'08~.78, its weakest. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
finish this year and lowest jj

cl~b.t"cr?a~~:tr
index fell the least

Barker, investment consultant
at Dain Rauscher. '
So far the U.S. economy
has m~naged to steet clear of
a
rec·ession,
commonly
defined as rwo consecutive
quarters of negative growth,
though the nation's second
quarter GDP growth checked
in at only 0.2 percent - its
slowest pace ill eight year~. ·

&lt;

·,

. .IJ

·, j,

WVU gets ugly

win over Ohio

JUBILEE- First-year Ohio State coact] Jlm Tressel celebrates'
the Buckeyes' first touchdown against Akron Saturday in the
first quarter at Ohio Stadium. (AP)
Ohio State quarterback
Steve Bellisari threw two
· touchdown passes but fumbled three times and hadpasses go t hrough the hands of
defe nders three other times.
One of Bellisari's passes was

thrown direct! y to Akron free
safety John .Fuller but the ball
squirted through his hands
and into those of Chris Vance
who completed a 61-yard end

Please see os~. Bl
)

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) Avon ·
Cobourne rushed for 173 .
yards and scored ~i ce in
the fourth quarter to lead
.West Virginia to a 20-3
victory over O hio on Saturday.
Cobou rn e was the only
bright spot on offense fo r
WestVirginia ' (l-1), which .
struggled for the second
straight game under new
coach Rich Rodriguez's
·no-huddle system.
It was the second-best
. career
effort
for
Cobo urne, . a junior who
· gained 210 yards against
Pittsburgh in 1999.
O hio (0-2) managed
only a 26-yard field goal by
Kevin · Kerr to avoid
becoming the first shutout
victim for West Virginia in
fou~ years.
'
The Bobcats, who were
outgaincd 350 yards to

.,

310, kept the game close
u~til they had ~o fourthqu arter turnovers.
Ohio's C hris Knaack
fumbled after a 35-yard
pass play and West Virc
gmt a's Angel
Estrada
recovered at the West Virginia 5.
·The Mounta(rieers then
drove th~ length of the
field.
During the drive, West
Virginia's longest play from
scrimmage all day - 28
yards - came on a busted
play. Brad Lewis floated a
pass to Seth Abraham
down the right sideline to
th~ Ohio 27.
Cobourne ran the ball
on four of the next five
plays, including a 4-yard
TD run on fourth-andgoal for a 10-3 lead wi.t h
13:45 left ih the game.

wvu. Pllp 12

.

�.,_

Page 82 ~ &amp;unba!? Ql;imtf-&amp;tntintl

osu

SEOAL-TVC FOOTBALL

for the ~core on the next play
to make it 21-0 in the second
quarter.
Payne had a ,17-yard run,
from Page 81
Bob Hendry carried for 16
touchdown play.
yards and Frye flipped a 23Dethel finished 7 -of-14 for 61 yards.
• BY DAN POLCYN
Backup quarterback· Scott yard pass to tight end Tim
Ki cker Patrick Boothe hit 4-of-5 extra point kicks.
OVP SPORTS STAFF
M cMullen lost a fumbled Ritley late in the first halffor
·
Tyler Baisden amassed 77 yards in mop-up dury.
McARTHUR - Jac kson' David Swisher turned in his secsnap, also had a defender drop Akron. Frye, a redshirt freshThe
I
ron
men
were
also
missing
starting
linemen
Craig
Waugh
ond 200-yard game of the season and scored five touchdowns as
a pass and was victimized on man making his first career
and Eric McGhee. both of whom are expected to return f?r
the Ironmen blasted Vinton County 50- 12 Friday.
Coble's broken-field return.
start, then lofted a pass into
Swisher ca rried 13 times and amassed 202 yards as the Jack- next week.
After Coble's touchdown the back of the end zone
Coach Joe Hemsley's Vinton County squad started five freshson ground game dominated again to the tune of 457 yards.
with 7:48 left, the Zi ps ( 1- 1)
Tailback Lee Adkins, filling in for the injured Erron Brennan, men.
where Jake Schifino beat correcovered an onside kick and
Ja ckson now gears ·up for a much tougher opponent when
also
tallied 94 yards on the night. Brennan sat out with a
nerback Cie Grant for the
drove to the Ohio State 28
they travel to Gallia Academy next Fnday to ope? SEGAL play.
catc h, barely getting his foot banged- up should er and other medical co ncern s.
before running out of downs.
The
Blue Devils will enter the game 2-1 after fallmg to Ironton,
·
"I
thought
our
kids
played
a
lot
harder
tonight,"
said
Jackson
inbounds for the 15-yard TD
Bellisari, who hit on 15-of.
head coach Randy Layton, referrin g back to the lronmen's week ~~24 passes for 246 yards, com- ' catch.
"We
wanted
to
go
in
to
the
Gallipolis
game
with
a
little
bit
of
Both teams had other two 'loss to Waverly. "We executed our offense tonight and kept
pleted a 12-yard pass to Jamar
momentum," said Layton. "We feel like we have done tltat
the drives going."
Martin matching the opportunities to score.
"Swisher ran th e ball welL We got Lee Adkins back into the tonight Our kids are ex) ted to come up with a big w~~ like that.
The Buckeyes drove to the
number of catches the fulloffense, he gave us a little extra added punch from the tailback We knoW we have a big test next week at Gallipolis.
Akron 18 late in !he first half,
back had all of last season.position," he added.
_
and a 14-yarder to Ricky but freshman Mike Nugent
Things started to go wrong for the Vikings (0-3) early on, as
Brvant to set up Wells' 14- missed a 35-yard fiel~ "goal they fumbled the opening kickoff after a big Jackson hit. The
ya;d sco rin g run on t,he attempt.
Ironmen recovered the ball at th e VC 24 and scored four plays
Bellisari fumbled a snap on later on a two-yard Swisher plunge.
Buckeyes' second possession.
Wells sidestepped one tackler first down at the Akron 14 on
The Vikings· did answer strongly, driving 7 1 yards and scoring
and then hopped into the end the first drive of the third 15 plays later on a deep slant from freshman quarterback Chris
zone while avoiding another quarter with Akron's Chris Bethel to Shade Huntley which covered 15 yards on fourth and
opponent.
Smith recovering.
seven.
Chris Vance's IS-yard punt
That was the last time Vinton Co unty would see paydirt untjl....
Bellisari was bhndsided by
return to the Akron 36 p_ut linebacker Ryan Myers on a the fourth quarter when josh Ruckell scored on a two-yard run.
Ohio State in position to blitz on the next Ohio State .
In between those scores, Swisher ran off scoring runs of 6ve,
score on a five-play drive.
32,
76, and 44 yards. His 76-yarder came on the 6rst play from
possession . Bellisari's fumble
Tight e!1d Ben Hartsock, sat on the ground and Martin scrimmage in the third quarter. He took the belly play into the
who also had just one catch
left side and cut back to the right sideline after gaining eight
recovered for the Buckeyes.
last year, had a 15-yard grab
yards. He was sprung free to the end zone as tight end Zach
After Ohio State punted,
and Bellisari then hit Martin
Haller made a key dvwnfield block to finish the run.
Akron drove to the. Ohio
'on a short pass in the left flat
Adkins also had a 33-yard touchdown run in the second quarwith Martin diving into the State 14 but Zac Derr missed ter.
.
end zone for the 10-yard a 3 7 -yard field goal attempt.
Sophomore T.J McDonald scored the other Jackson TD on a
Vance's pass through fuller's six-yard run in the fourth quarter. He also ran for the following
touchdown .
Akron's .'Brandon · Payne hands made . it 28- 7 in the PAT.
muffed a punt midway third quarter. .
The Jackson defensive front, led by Kevin Wiseman and RAMBUN' MAN- Jackson's David Swisher takes the handoff
Frye finished 15-of-31 · Swisher kept constant pressure on Berhel, forcing rushed throws. from Michael Holdren for his first touchdown Friday. (Dan Polcyn)
through the first half, with
.Ohio State's Jason Bond passes for 134 yards and Payne
falling on it at the Zips 1. had 75 yards rushing on 13
Wells plowed up tlie middle carries for the Zips.
"They're a hard-hittin' team," Brodeur
bave the Tigers pinned deep twice to start
the second half, but the Blue Devils were said. "We got really tired."
for a 13-3 lead.
caUed for illegal procedure on both kicks.
He said the Tigers changed their strateOn the ensuing kickoff, ·
Jones launched th~ ball 63 yards in the gy after the scoring bomb.
from Page 81
West Virginia's Quincy Wil"They dropped their (defensive) bac!q,''
air on the third boot, but the Tigers still
son knocked the ball from
one of them would knock the ball ended up with good field position on he said. "And they had some good coverfrom Page 81
their 30.
·
age."
Jason Caesar's grasp and Lewis down.
On its next series. Ohio Daniels recovered at the Ohio
That left Brodeur scrambling - a lot.
"On the fourth-and-long, Donnie
Then the Ironton backfield took confaked a punt on fourth down 18.
Johnson had a perfect chance to knock troL The potent combination of White, The Tigers sacked the signal-caller four
from its 27, but West Virginia's
Cobourne then ran the ball the ball down, but he missed and the kid Tyler Scior and Maurice Murphy assault- times, shackling . Brodeur with - 26 yards
·
ed Gallipolis defenders with reckless rushing in the process.
'Scott Gyorko tackled Joe three straight times, scoring (Sands) scored," Saunders said.
"I'U feel it after tonight,'' he said.
The Blue Devils ran standout halfback abandon.
Mohler behind the line of on a pitch to the right from 3
The
end
result?
Anot\ler
White
touchBut
Brodeur wasn't the only Blue Devil
Bobby
Jones
to
start
their
next
possession,
scrimmage. That led to Bren- yards out with 9:48 remaining
rusher who felt the Tigers' bite.
:
and then Brodeur tried Jo' take to the air down.
den Rauh's 29-yard field goal to close the scoring.
White, who carried 12 times for 98
Ironton (3-0) held Jones to -61 yards on
again.
final quarter.
This time, however, the end result was a . yards, capped the scoring with a 37- yard 11 carries. The standout senior had rack~d
Wahama avoided the shutout
· . Brodeur's pass was picked bolt early in the fourth quarter. Lutz's up 373 yards in blowouts against Meigs
with 3:27 to play when Branand returned to the point-after failed.
and Coal Grove.
~-SL--~ruLHa~ns.o~r~W•~4L-BJue~levil~~9~----- Several mistakes cost the
yards to set up a 6-yard scoring
Ironton loaded up its power backfield, · (2-1) a chance to beat the Tigers for the team, Saunders said. "But we've got lot
half and did a much better pass frOm Aaron Faulk to Adam and five plays later fullback Matt White first time since 1984.
of work to do ahead of us."
'
job."
Rickard. Faulk again hooked rumbled imo the end zone on a 9-yard
The fumble bug wasn't in town Friday,
The \\C.Ork continues next Friday as the
Karr and the Eagles marched up with Rickard for the two- romp.
but penalties and "breakdowns by the Blue Devils open SEOAL play against
77 yards in I 0 plays on ihe point conversion to make ihe
offensive
line" hampered Gallipolis' arch-rival Jackson at Memorial Field.
Penalties played a· major factor in Friopening drive of ihe game to finally tally 30-8.
chances of beating the Tigers for the first Game time is 7:30 p.m.
day's outcome.
take an early 6-0 advantage ·
"Most teams try and key on
Placekicker Bobby Jones appeared to time since 1984, Saunders said.
before ihose mental mistakes Karr, so we threw ihe ball a lit-.
that Christman alluded to tle more tonight than usual to
began to plague ' the Eastern try to spread the defense out
Bibbee Motors
Bibbee Motors
offense. A fumble, an intercep- some and Karr came through
N ow At Two L oc&lt;J ti ons
SR 1
812 Farson St.
tion and a couple of costly for us in a big way;• said Christpenalties hampered ihe home man.
Tuppers Plains. OH
Belpre. OH
team ihroughout ihe remainder . Eastern racked up 20 first
l140J 667-3350
17401423-9650
of ·ihe half, but ihe Eastern downs on the night, while gainSee
Jerry
Bib
bee
Clark
Reed
Doc
Hayman
defense more than made up for ing 390 yards in total offense.
ihe lack of offensive points in
While Karr ran for 110 yards
,ihe first two periods. ·
, on 13 carries, Gibbs tallied 72
"We allowed iliem (Eastern) yards in only. six tries for ihe.
to run up and down ihe field, bulk of ihe Eagles 267 yards on
but managed to come up wiih ihe ground. Karr added 123
ihe big plays when we needed yards passing on 10-of-19' aeriihem ihe most in the first half, a1s with Lyons hauling down six
Falcon coach Ed Cromley said. receptions for 66 yards.
"They are very aggressive, and
The Eastern defense bottled
V6 Auto. A/C, Leather,
in ihe end I believe it was their up .ihe White Falcons for the
Loaded, 4x4,
size ihat wore us down. We kept better part of ihe game wiih
after them throughout the Wahama managingjust 39 yards
RasPberrY. 8Sk
entire game, but they have an in~otal offense until its final two
outstanding team and we sim- possessions. A 44-yard Hankin•
ply could not contain them for son run and a 55-yard Brandon
Gagnon in the games final five
four quarters."
The Eagles first touchdown minutes lifted the WHS offense
8888101
came with 7:32 remaining in production to net 157 yards.
the first quarter when Karr
Gagnon finished with 59
'tossed a 15-yard scoring strike yards on ihe ground in two carto Chris Lyons. Eastern would ries while Hankinson totaled 41
not reach the endzone again yards in 11 attempts. Hankinson
until the opening drive of the completed 5-of- 11 passes for 24
third period with Brad Parker yards, while Faulk added one
bursting through the middle of completion for six yards. Justin
4x4, Auto, 4 Cvl.,
the line for a 3-yard touchdown Jordan caught two passes for 17
Rosewo.od w/ Maroon
24k
Miles,
Convertible
gallop to give the Eagles a 12-0 -yards, while Rickard gathered
Leather, Loaded.
three for 12 yards for the White
edge.
lOk Miles
RJ. Gibbs extended the host Falcons.
teams 'lead to 18-0 later in the
Eastern will visit Parkersburg
third stanza with a 36-yard Catholic next Saturday for its
WI Hill
scoring jaunt before a 5-yard next outing, while Wahama also
Karr run and a Bryan Minear plays on ·Sarurday evening at
IVIIrllllnkl
3-yard gallop boosted · the Williamson.
1r
Eagles advantage to 30-0 in the

Jackson pummels Vinton County

,.

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

..

HIVI

tiereD

Cln&amp; Trucu
10 Cllaeu From ·

Pomeroy • MiddlQPOrt • Gallipolis; Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

·.Marshall's NCAA appeal denied
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) -The
NCAA denied Marshall University's
appeal Friday to fully reinstate 14 studentathletes suspended last week: for taking
· extra work benefits .
. . The decision came after the NCAA
"held a telephone conference call appeal
hearing on Thursday. The university is
.now waiting to see if the NCAA will issue
sanctions against the school, President Dan
, Angel said.
.
. , "We do not anticipate that any future
. NCAA actions will be taken regarding
student-athletes," Angel said. ''We do want
.. to make it clear that there are two separate
,,and distinct decisions that will be made by
,the NCAA.
"The first decision was related to stu-

dent-athlete eligibili ty.That chapter is now
closed," he said.
Under the NCAA's order, 10 football
players are required to miss three games
this season and two players are required to
nuss one game.
Also, two men's basketball players are
required to miss eight games of their season.
Four players missed last week's football
opener against the University of Florida.
Because of the number of players
involved, the National Collegiate Athletic
Association will allow Marshall to stagger
the suspensions so _that aU the players will
not miss the same games.
Marshall has refused to release the players' names or provide specifics on the

infractions. Angel said federal privacy laws
prevent him from releasing any information.
The university is also barred from releasing information under NCAA rules until
the organization releases its public report.
Angel said the students involved are
repaying the money.
Marshall self-reported the violations in
February 2000 after discovering several
_student-athletes . had received extra work
benefits . The NCAA notifieq Marshall in
July of its intention to investigate the violations.
"Th~ decision on the Letter of Inquiry
will deal with possible institutional sanctions; ' Angel said. "We do not expect that
decision until much later this fall."

&amp;unba!? Ql;imt!l -&amp;rntintl• Page 83

e

YSPECIALS
'

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNSON
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

~North
Marion
grinds
Point
Pleasant
.
'

•

•

Bv IAN BECKER

them on their heels a little bit
,'
OVP SPORTS STAFF
and was able to get May some
~ POINT PLEASANT
big runs. He had an outstand~ After sticking with North ing night for us."
~ Marion through the first half,
While North Marion had a
' Point Pleasant simply wore dominating performance run. iiown in the second half en ning the ball (gaining 368
: route to a 34-20 loss to North yards for the game), it did an
:· Marion ·at Sanders Memorial equally impressive job of stop:: field Friday. . . .
ping Point's ground game. The
1• • After cap1tahzmg
on t":o Big Bl~cks gained just 120
. : Ra1der turnovers, the B1g yards on 37 carries, with junior
~lacks (1-2) found themselves . qua~terback Kevin _Thompson
leadmg the way w1th 81 yards
1 ~own JUSt 14-1 ~ at mternus:; S!on. North Manon, how~ver, on 16 attempts.
•_opened the second half With a
Because the Raiders defense
,.. punishing nine-play, 77 -yard was so a.;lept at stopping the
, " Se&lt;mng dnve to pull ah~ad 21- run , the Big Blacks were
I 0. Each yard of that dnve was forced to change their game- g;uned on the ground, settmg plan and throw the ball.
.. the . t~ne for the rest of _the Thompson did an admirable
game m wh1ch North . Manon job passing, connecting on 10gained 247 yards in the sec- of-19 for 126 yards and two
· ond-half alone.
touchdowns.
·., "'fh~y J.ust _o ut-manned us
"They were taking die run
phystcally, Pomt ~ead coach away from us; so we decided to
Steve Safford satd. We could- open it up and stay in the
..n't win the war in the trench- gam' e the best we could,'' Safes."
ford said. "I was really pleased
·;· Fullback Ryan May led the with the way Kevin played. He
· 'Raiders with a game-high 202 was a warrior tonight. We had
yards on 17 carries , while some great catches, but we also
, . senior tailback Mike Potoczny had some drops. so his numhad 124 yards on 20 attempts. bers could have been better."
, , qn North Marion's second
After allowing a North Mar,: j:lriv~ after ~ntermiss~on, May ion touchdown on its opening
pad five stra1ght cames for 71 drive, The Big Blacks drove
'·,yards. U1ter in the fourth quar- down the field on the strengrh
___.Jer...thcl!ruising_6-foot-1, 225- : of- three-Thompson- big- plays.
·;,POund sophomore had four The first of which came on an
- consecutive rushes for 42 yards 18-yard pass from Thompson
•. ~nd then put th_e Ra1ders {2-1) to junior tight end Seth Math.,,ahead 34-17 With a three-yard eny. Three plays later on third
·. touchdown run..
down, Thompson moved the
' · "We were getting some nice chains with a 20-yard run to
blocking at the point of the Raider 20-yard line. Three
attack,'' Ra.ider "head coach plays later with the Big Blacks
.perry Wh1te. We caught in need of a first- down,

i

COOLING OFF -Point's Matt Warner (11) cools off during a
time-out during Friday night's loss to North Marion . Kevin
Thompson (~) and also listens to instruction from head coach
Steve Safford. (ian Becker)
Thompson dropped back into total to five through three .
the pocket, broke a tackle,

regrouped~a~nfidet11fcfionfnfieicit~ed~wufit~~~~~~~~~~~

ag:un with~
score at 7-7.
Senior tailback Matt Warner
scored the Big Black's second
touchdown on a 12-yard pass
from Thompso.n with 10:36
left in the fourth .Junior Branson Barkey connected on two
field goals, pushing his season-

better," Salford said. "Our kids
hung in there and battled. We
just got out-manned in the
trenches."
The Big Blacks open
SEGAL play next Friday when
they host Marietta at 7:30p.m.

..
=·.:~~--------------~------------------~--ball at Rio would not cost Ohio Weslyan University,
......-·
. anything in the way of ath- Capital University, John .
'

.."".

,."",..

Polcyn

letic scholarships because
NAIA Division II doesn't
Page 81
;•
require football scholar~· for football should l).ote
...
ships.
_
~hat the enrollment at
extra
football
Every
,.Mount Union, THE class enrollment would be paying
~rogram of small college to come to Rio and take a
;.football, is just 2,200.
chance at playing just a little
~ The question that has to bit more.
~e asked is "l&gt;oes a football
If football brings just 60
!:Program benefit the college students to the university
::ntore than it harms it?"
' ~ho would have otherwise ·
, The positives of bringing gone elsewhere, that's · a
: football back to URG are three percent increase in
• numerous.
enrollment at a school
•
: As has been p&lt;;&gt;inted out which hovers around an
: by many pundits, the hill enrollment number of 2000 .
: behind Lyne Center and
Tht pool of potential
: Wood Hall provides a great players is right at hand too.
: natural stadium arrangeNot counting the Jeff
I
1 ment.
Mullins's and Josh Cordell's
I Even if it rook a couple of who have earned NCAA
: years to get the facility up to Division I football, scholar: par, I doubt that many of ships, many local ~layers
: the local high scllools would · have gone away from the
:·deny a college team the area (in just the past 10
: opportunity to use their years) to play collegiately at
1
' facilities in the interim.
places such as Muskingum
Financially speaking, foot- College, Marietta College,
1

...

from

Carroll University, Heidleberg College, . Morehead
State University, Mount
Union , and Otterbein College.
None of those schools
award football grants-in-aid,
yet young men still want to
give it a shot.
Some of those players
don't play out th.eir college
careers,- ending up back in
the area, sometimes attending Rio Grande.
If Rio were a football
option to begin with; maybe
those careers could play out
to their potential.

'I

L,..,,..,lr-1DDDDDDDDDDDDD
'
0

THANK YOUB
Arbors of ~allipolis

For Purchasmg My 2001
Market Hog At The
.Gallia Co. Jr. Fair ·

g.

. ~1(. ~
~ &amp; Sf~MU 4~";ii etJ-

DODDDODDD~....~~....,~~L..J

Congratulations,
Mike .Sergent
Gene Johnson Of
Gene ~ohnson .
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Mike Sergent .
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
August.
1616 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, OH'
446·3672

.'

••

�.,_

Page 82 ~ &amp;unba!? Ql;imtf-&amp;tntintl

osu

SEOAL-TVC FOOTBALL

for the ~core on the next play
to make it 21-0 in the second
quarter.
Payne had a ,17-yard run,
from Page 81
Bob Hendry carried for 16
touchdown play.
yards and Frye flipped a 23Dethel finished 7 -of-14 for 61 yards.
• BY DAN POLCYN
Backup quarterback· Scott yard pass to tight end Tim
Ki cker Patrick Boothe hit 4-of-5 extra point kicks.
OVP SPORTS STAFF
M cMullen lost a fumbled Ritley late in the first halffor
·
Tyler Baisden amassed 77 yards in mop-up dury.
McARTHUR - Jac kson' David Swisher turned in his secsnap, also had a defender drop Akron. Frye, a redshirt freshThe
I
ron
men
were
also
missing
starting
linemen
Craig
Waugh
ond 200-yard game of the season and scored five touchdowns as
a pass and was victimized on man making his first career
and Eric McGhee. both of whom are expected to return f?r
the Ironmen blasted Vinton County 50- 12 Friday.
Coble's broken-field return.
start, then lofted a pass into
Swisher ca rried 13 times and amassed 202 yards as the Jack- next week.
After Coble's touchdown the back of the end zone
Coach Joe Hemsley's Vinton County squad started five freshson ground game dominated again to the tune of 457 yards.
with 7:48 left, the Zi ps ( 1- 1)
Tailback Lee Adkins, filling in for the injured Erron Brennan, men.
where Jake Schifino beat correcovered an onside kick and
Ja ckson now gears ·up for a much tougher opponent when
also
tallied 94 yards on the night. Brennan sat out with a
nerback Cie Grant for the
drove to the Ohio State 28
they travel to Gallia Academy next Fnday to ope? SEGAL play.
catc h, barely getting his foot banged- up should er and other medical co ncern s.
before running out of downs.
The
Blue Devils will enter the game 2-1 after fallmg to Ironton,
·
"I
thought
our
kids
played
a
lot
harder
tonight,"
said
Jackson
inbounds for the 15-yard TD
Bellisari, who hit on 15-of.
head coach Randy Layton, referrin g back to the lronmen's week ~~24 passes for 246 yards, com- ' catch.
"We
wanted
to
go
in
to
the
Gallipolis
game
with
a
little
bit
of
Both teams had other two 'loss to Waverly. "We executed our offense tonight and kept
pleted a 12-yard pass to Jamar
momentum," said Layton. "We feel like we have done tltat
the drives going."
Martin matching the opportunities to score.
"Swisher ran th e ball welL We got Lee Adkins back into the tonight Our kids are ex) ted to come up with a big w~~ like that.
The Buckeyes drove to the
number of catches the fulloffense, he gave us a little extra added punch from the tailback We knoW we have a big test next week at Gallipolis.
Akron 18 late in !he first half,
back had all of last season.position," he added.
_
and a 14-yarder to Ricky but freshman Mike Nugent
Things started to go wrong for the Vikings (0-3) early on, as
Brvant to set up Wells' 14- missed a 35-yard fiel~ "goal they fumbled the opening kickoff after a big Jackson hit. The
ya;d sco rin g run on t,he attempt.
Ironmen recovered the ball at th e VC 24 and scored four plays
Bellisari fumbled a snap on later on a two-yard Swisher plunge.
Buckeyes' second possession.
Wells sidestepped one tackler first down at the Akron 14 on
The Vikings· did answer strongly, driving 7 1 yards and scoring
and then hopped into the end the first drive of the third 15 plays later on a deep slant from freshman quarterback Chris
zone while avoiding another quarter with Akron's Chris Bethel to Shade Huntley which covered 15 yards on fourth and
opponent.
Smith recovering.
seven.
Chris Vance's IS-yard punt
That was the last time Vinton Co unty would see paydirt untjl....
Bellisari was bhndsided by
return to the Akron 36 p_ut linebacker Ryan Myers on a the fourth quarter when josh Ruckell scored on a two-yard run.
Ohio State in position to blitz on the next Ohio State .
In between those scores, Swisher ran off scoring runs of 6ve,
score on a five-play drive.
32,
76, and 44 yards. His 76-yarder came on the 6rst play from
possession . Bellisari's fumble
Tight e!1d Ben Hartsock, sat on the ground and Martin scrimmage in the third quarter. He took the belly play into the
who also had just one catch
left side and cut back to the right sideline after gaining eight
recovered for the Buckeyes.
last year, had a 15-yard grab
yards. He was sprung free to the end zone as tight end Zach
After Ohio State punted,
and Bellisari then hit Martin
Haller made a key dvwnfield block to finish the run.
Akron drove to the. Ohio
'on a short pass in the left flat
Adkins also had a 33-yard touchdown run in the second quarwith Martin diving into the State 14 but Zac Derr missed ter.
.
end zone for the 10-yard a 3 7 -yard field goal attempt.
Sophomore T.J McDonald scored the other Jackson TD on a
Vance's pass through fuller's six-yard run in the fourth quarter. He also ran for the following
touchdown .
Akron's .'Brandon · Payne hands made . it 28- 7 in the PAT.
muffed a punt midway third quarter. .
The Jackson defensive front, led by Kevin Wiseman and RAMBUN' MAN- Jackson's David Swisher takes the handoff
Frye finished 15-of-31 · Swisher kept constant pressure on Berhel, forcing rushed throws. from Michael Holdren for his first touchdown Friday. (Dan Polcyn)
through the first half, with
.Ohio State's Jason Bond passes for 134 yards and Payne
falling on it at the Zips 1. had 75 yards rushing on 13
Wells plowed up tlie middle carries for the Zips.
"They're a hard-hittin' team," Brodeur
bave the Tigers pinned deep twice to start
the second half, but the Blue Devils were said. "We got really tired."
for a 13-3 lead.
caUed for illegal procedure on both kicks.
He said the Tigers changed their strateOn the ensuing kickoff, ·
Jones launched th~ ball 63 yards in the gy after the scoring bomb.
from Page 81
West Virginia's Quincy Wil"They dropped their (defensive) bac!q,''
air on the third boot, but the Tigers still
son knocked the ball from
one of them would knock the ball ended up with good field position on he said. "And they had some good coverfrom Page 81
their 30.
·
age."
Jason Caesar's grasp and Lewis down.
On its next series. Ohio Daniels recovered at the Ohio
That left Brodeur scrambling - a lot.
"On the fourth-and-long, Donnie
Then the Ironton backfield took confaked a punt on fourth down 18.
Johnson had a perfect chance to knock troL The potent combination of White, The Tigers sacked the signal-caller four
from its 27, but West Virginia's
Cobourne then ran the ball the ball down, but he missed and the kid Tyler Scior and Maurice Murphy assault- times, shackling . Brodeur with - 26 yards
·
ed Gallipolis defenders with reckless rushing in the process.
'Scott Gyorko tackled Joe three straight times, scoring (Sands) scored," Saunders said.
"I'U feel it after tonight,'' he said.
The Blue Devils ran standout halfback abandon.
Mohler behind the line of on a pitch to the right from 3
The
end
result?
Anot\ler
White
touchBut
Brodeur wasn't the only Blue Devil
Bobby
Jones
to
start
their
next
possession,
scrimmage. That led to Bren- yards out with 9:48 remaining
rusher who felt the Tigers' bite.
:
and then Brodeur tried Jo' take to the air down.
den Rauh's 29-yard field goal to close the scoring.
White, who carried 12 times for 98
Ironton (3-0) held Jones to -61 yards on
again.
final quarter.
This time, however, the end result was a . yards, capped the scoring with a 37- yard 11 carries. The standout senior had rack~d
Wahama avoided the shutout
· . Brodeur's pass was picked bolt early in the fourth quarter. Lutz's up 373 yards in blowouts against Meigs
with 3:27 to play when Branand returned to the point-after failed.
and Coal Grove.
~-SL--~ruLHa~ns.o~r~W•~4L-BJue~levil~~9~----- Several mistakes cost the
yards to set up a 6-yard scoring
Ironton loaded up its power backfield, · (2-1) a chance to beat the Tigers for the team, Saunders said. "But we've got lot
half and did a much better pass frOm Aaron Faulk to Adam and five plays later fullback Matt White first time since 1984.
of work to do ahead of us."
'
job."
Rickard. Faulk again hooked rumbled imo the end zone on a 9-yard
The fumble bug wasn't in town Friday,
The \\C.Ork continues next Friday as the
Karr and the Eagles marched up with Rickard for the two- romp.
but penalties and "breakdowns by the Blue Devils open SEOAL play against
77 yards in I 0 plays on ihe point conversion to make ihe
offensive
line" hampered Gallipolis' arch-rival Jackson at Memorial Field.
Penalties played a· major factor in Friopening drive of ihe game to finally tally 30-8.
chances of beating the Tigers for the first Game time is 7:30 p.m.
day's outcome.
take an early 6-0 advantage ·
"Most teams try and key on
Placekicker Bobby Jones appeared to time since 1984, Saunders said.
before ihose mental mistakes Karr, so we threw ihe ball a lit-.
that Christman alluded to tle more tonight than usual to
began to plague ' the Eastern try to spread the defense out
Bibbee Motors
Bibbee Motors
offense. A fumble, an intercep- some and Karr came through
N ow At Two L oc&lt;J ti ons
SR 1
812 Farson St.
tion and a couple of costly for us in a big way;• said Christpenalties hampered ihe home man.
Tuppers Plains. OH
Belpre. OH
team ihroughout ihe remainder . Eastern racked up 20 first
l140J 667-3350
17401423-9650
of ·ihe half, but ihe Eastern downs on the night, while gainSee
Jerry
Bib
bee
Clark
Reed
Doc
Hayman
defense more than made up for ing 390 yards in total offense.
ihe lack of offensive points in
While Karr ran for 110 yards
,ihe first two periods. ·
, on 13 carries, Gibbs tallied 72
"We allowed iliem (Eastern) yards in only. six tries for ihe.
to run up and down ihe field, bulk of ihe Eagles 267 yards on
but managed to come up wiih ihe ground. Karr added 123
ihe big plays when we needed yards passing on 10-of-19' aeriihem ihe most in the first half, a1s with Lyons hauling down six
Falcon coach Ed Cromley said. receptions for 66 yards.
"They are very aggressive, and
The Eastern defense bottled
V6 Auto. A/C, Leather,
in ihe end I believe it was their up .ihe White Falcons for the
Loaded, 4x4,
size ihat wore us down. We kept better part of ihe game wiih
after them throughout the Wahama managingjust 39 yards
RasPberrY. 8Sk
entire game, but they have an in~otal offense until its final two
outstanding team and we sim- possessions. A 44-yard Hankin•
ply could not contain them for son run and a 55-yard Brandon
Gagnon in the games final five
four quarters."
The Eagles first touchdown minutes lifted the WHS offense
8888101
came with 7:32 remaining in production to net 157 yards.
the first quarter when Karr
Gagnon finished with 59
'tossed a 15-yard scoring strike yards on ihe ground in two carto Chris Lyons. Eastern would ries while Hankinson totaled 41
not reach the endzone again yards in 11 attempts. Hankinson
until the opening drive of the completed 5-of- 11 passes for 24
third period with Brad Parker yards, while Faulk added one
bursting through the middle of completion for six yards. Justin
4x4, Auto, 4 Cvl.,
the line for a 3-yard touchdown Jordan caught two passes for 17
Rosewo.od w/ Maroon
24k
Miles,
Convertible
gallop to give the Eagles a 12-0 -yards, while Rickard gathered
Leather, Loaded.
three for 12 yards for the White
edge.
lOk Miles
RJ. Gibbs extended the host Falcons.
teams 'lead to 18-0 later in the
Eastern will visit Parkersburg
third stanza with a 36-yard Catholic next Saturday for its
WI Hill
scoring jaunt before a 5-yard next outing, while Wahama also
Karr run and a Bryan Minear plays on ·Sarurday evening at
IVIIrllllnkl
3-yard gallop boosted · the Williamson.
1r
Eagles advantage to 30-0 in the

Jackson pummels Vinton County

,.

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. Sunday, Sept 9, 2001

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

..

HIVI

tiereD

Cln&amp; Trucu
10 Cllaeu From ·

Pomeroy • MiddlQPOrt • Gallipolis; Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

·.Marshall's NCAA appeal denied
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) -The
NCAA denied Marshall University's
appeal Friday to fully reinstate 14 studentathletes suspended last week: for taking
· extra work benefits .
. . The decision came after the NCAA
"held a telephone conference call appeal
hearing on Thursday. The university is
.now waiting to see if the NCAA will issue
sanctions against the school, President Dan
, Angel said.
.
. , "We do not anticipate that any future
. NCAA actions will be taken regarding
student-athletes," Angel said. ''We do want
.. to make it clear that there are two separate
,,and distinct decisions that will be made by
,the NCAA.
"The first decision was related to stu-

dent-athlete eligibili ty.That chapter is now
closed," he said.
Under the NCAA's order, 10 football
players are required to miss three games
this season and two players are required to
nuss one game.
Also, two men's basketball players are
required to miss eight games of their season.
Four players missed last week's football
opener against the University of Florida.
Because of the number of players
involved, the National Collegiate Athletic
Association will allow Marshall to stagger
the suspensions so _that aU the players will
not miss the same games.
Marshall has refused to release the players' names or provide specifics on the

infractions. Angel said federal privacy laws
prevent him from releasing any information.
The university is also barred from releasing information under NCAA rules until
the organization releases its public report.
Angel said the students involved are
repaying the money.
Marshall self-reported the violations in
February 2000 after discovering several
_student-athletes . had received extra work
benefits . The NCAA notifieq Marshall in
July of its intention to investigate the violations.
"Th~ decision on the Letter of Inquiry
will deal with possible institutional sanctions; ' Angel said. "We do not expect that
decision until much later this fall."

&amp;unba!? Ql;imt!l -&amp;rntintl• Page 83

e

YSPECIALS
'

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNSON
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

~North
Marion
grinds
Point
Pleasant
.
'

•

•

Bv IAN BECKER

them on their heels a little bit
,'
OVP SPORTS STAFF
and was able to get May some
~ POINT PLEASANT
big runs. He had an outstand~ After sticking with North ing night for us."
~ Marion through the first half,
While North Marion had a
' Point Pleasant simply wore dominating performance run. iiown in the second half en ning the ball (gaining 368
: route to a 34-20 loss to North yards for the game), it did an
:· Marion ·at Sanders Memorial equally impressive job of stop:: field Friday. . . .
ping Point's ground game. The
1• • After cap1tahzmg
on t":o Big Bl~cks gained just 120
. : Ra1der turnovers, the B1g yards on 37 carries, with junior
~lacks (1-2) found themselves . qua~terback Kevin _Thompson
leadmg the way w1th 81 yards
1 ~own JUSt 14-1 ~ at mternus:; S!on. North Manon, how~ver, on 16 attempts.
•_opened the second half With a
Because the Raiders defense
,.. punishing nine-play, 77 -yard was so a.;lept at stopping the
, " Se&lt;mng dnve to pull ah~ad 21- run , the Big Blacks were
I 0. Each yard of that dnve was forced to change their game- g;uned on the ground, settmg plan and throw the ball.
.. the . t~ne for the rest of _the Thompson did an admirable
game m wh1ch North . Manon job passing, connecting on 10gained 247 yards in the sec- of-19 for 126 yards and two
· ond-half alone.
touchdowns.
·., "'fh~y J.ust _o ut-manned us
"They were taking die run
phystcally, Pomt ~ead coach away from us; so we decided to
Steve Safford satd. We could- open it up and stay in the
..n't win the war in the trench- gam' e the best we could,'' Safes."
ford said. "I was really pleased
·;· Fullback Ryan May led the with the way Kevin played. He
· 'Raiders with a game-high 202 was a warrior tonight. We had
yards on 17 carries , while some great catches, but we also
, . senior tailback Mike Potoczny had some drops. so his numhad 124 yards on 20 attempts. bers could have been better."
, , qn North Marion's second
After allowing a North Mar,: j:lriv~ after ~ntermiss~on, May ion touchdown on its opening
pad five stra1ght cames for 71 drive, The Big Blacks drove
'·,yards. U1ter in the fourth quar- down the field on the strengrh
___.Jer...thcl!ruising_6-foot-1, 225- : of- three-Thompson- big- plays.
·;,POund sophomore had four The first of which came on an
- consecutive rushes for 42 yards 18-yard pass from Thompson
•. ~nd then put th_e Ra1ders {2-1) to junior tight end Seth Math.,,ahead 34-17 With a three-yard eny. Three plays later on third
·. touchdown run..
down, Thompson moved the
' · "We were getting some nice chains with a 20-yard run to
blocking at the point of the Raider 20-yard line. Three
attack,'' Ra.ider "head coach plays later with the Big Blacks
.perry Wh1te. We caught in need of a first- down,

i

COOLING OFF -Point's Matt Warner (11) cools off during a
time-out during Friday night's loss to North Marion . Kevin
Thompson (~) and also listens to instruction from head coach
Steve Safford. (ian Becker)
Thompson dropped back into total to five through three .
the pocket, broke a tackle,

regrouped~a~nfidet11fcfionfnfieicit~ed~wufit~~~~~~~~~~~

ag:un with~
score at 7-7.
Senior tailback Matt Warner
scored the Big Black's second
touchdown on a 12-yard pass
from Thompso.n with 10:36
left in the fourth .Junior Branson Barkey connected on two
field goals, pushing his season-

better," Salford said. "Our kids
hung in there and battled. We
just got out-manned in the
trenches."
The Big Blacks open
SEGAL play next Friday when
they host Marietta at 7:30p.m.

..
=·.:~~--------------~------------------~--ball at Rio would not cost Ohio Weslyan University,
......-·
. anything in the way of ath- Capital University, John .
'

.."".

,."",..

Polcyn

letic scholarships because
NAIA Division II doesn't
Page 81
;•
require football scholar~· for football should l).ote
...
ships.
_
~hat the enrollment at
extra
football
Every
,.Mount Union, THE class enrollment would be paying
~rogram of small college to come to Rio and take a
;.football, is just 2,200.
chance at playing just a little
~ The question that has to bit more.
~e asked is "l&gt;oes a football
If football brings just 60
!:Program benefit the college students to the university
::ntore than it harms it?"
' ~ho would have otherwise ·
, The positives of bringing gone elsewhere, that's · a
: football back to URG are three percent increase in
• numerous.
enrollment at a school
•
: As has been p&lt;;&gt;inted out which hovers around an
: by many pundits, the hill enrollment number of 2000 .
: behind Lyne Center and
Tht pool of potential
: Wood Hall provides a great players is right at hand too.
: natural stadium arrangeNot counting the Jeff
I
1 ment.
Mullins's and Josh Cordell's
I Even if it rook a couple of who have earned NCAA
: years to get the facility up to Division I football, scholar: par, I doubt that many of ships, many local ~layers
: the local high scllools would · have gone away from the
:·deny a college team the area (in just the past 10
: opportunity to use their years) to play collegiately at
1
' facilities in the interim.
places such as Muskingum
Financially speaking, foot- College, Marietta College,
1

...

from

Carroll University, Heidleberg College, . Morehead
State University, Mount
Union , and Otterbein College.
None of those schools
award football grants-in-aid,
yet young men still want to
give it a shot.
Some of those players
don't play out th.eir college
careers,- ending up back in
the area, sometimes attending Rio Grande.
If Rio were a football
option to begin with; maybe
those careers could play out
to their potential.

'I

L,..,,..,lr-1DDDDDDDDDDDDD
'
0

THANK YOUB
Arbors of ~allipolis

For Purchasmg My 2001
Market Hog At The
.Gallia Co. Jr. Fair ·

g.

. ~1(. ~
~ &amp; Sf~MU 4~";ii etJ-

DODDDODDD~....~~....,~~L..J

Congratulations,
Mike .Sergent
Gene Johnson Of
Gene ~ohnson .
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Mike Sergent .
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
August.
1616 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, OH'
446·3672

.'

••

�,.

Page 84 • &amp;unba!' IB:imr• -&amp;tntind

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

BY ScoTT WOLFE

62-yard foot race to the endzone. The extra point ·
OVP CORRESPONDENT
run ruled, but the Rebels led 6-0 at the 8:31 in the
MERCERVILlE- It took 48 minutes and over- second period.
time to decide a winner, but when the dust had setThat perfection turned to bitterness as on the next
tied, the Southern Tornadoes claimed a dramatic 18- play Pierce rolled out of the pocket looking for his
12 win over the South Gallia Rebels Friday night in intended target. Debating whether to run or pass,
area high school football action at South Gallia High Pierce let it fly, but South Gallia's Dusty Halley made
School. Southern is now 2-1 overall and South Gal- the read and picked it off. Halley broke two initial
lia drops to 0-3.
.
tackles then had a clean passage to the endzone with
Somhern 's Brandon Pierce burst through the hne several Southern defenders in tow.
from four yards out on ihe sixth play in overtime to
A penalty on the SGHS sideline moved the ball
give Southern the win. That score was set up by four back five yards on the conversion and Southern
Matt Ash runs which garnered one first down and stopped the run with the score 12-0 with just 25 secgave the Tornadoes a first and goal situation on the onds left in the half.
The South Gallia defense was the story of the
eight. Ash ran it to the four and P1erce firushed for
night as they contained Southern's running game and
the Southern win.
Since South Gallia won the coin toss and failed to put pressure on Pierce in the backfield. The Rebels
had several sacks for huge chunks of negative
score, Southern's score was final.
Perhapssendinganomenofthingstocome,South yardage. Zeph Clary had three sacks, and Anthony BIG GAIN - .Southern's Matt Ash breaks aW!lY for
Gallia Coach Donnie Saunders said before the game, Lane had one, while Randy Spurlock had a fumble yards In the Tornadoes' overtime win Friday. (Scott
' "We just have to get 'ready' and the first two games recovery.
·
Wolfe)
we were not ready to play when the first whistle · The second half started m·· ch like the first, sort of
blew. We've got young kids, but that is no excuse.You hum-drum until Zack Lee had an interception that sea~ in the left corner. Ash scored on th~ initial conhave to be ready to play and hopefully tonight we · thwarted a Southern drive. Southern turned things vers1on, but a procedure penalty caUed It back, then
will. The young kids ... we have to give them confi- around when on the next play Ru5sell Krider had a on the replay Pierce rolled out to pass, but was forced
dence and show them they can play. We-can't make fumble recovery to secure the ball (or the Tornadoes. to scramble and was stopped short for a 12- 12 t1e at
mistakes."
On the first play from scrimmage, Pierce, the 5:14 mark._ In less than. a rrunute and a half,
Those last words were what proved to be the undaunted from his previous throw and interception, Southern ~d p1cked up two scores both at the hands
Rebeh downfall in what was otherwise a tremendous rifled a 43 yard pass to a speeding IJrice Hill on the of SGHS rrustakes.
effort from the Mercerville dan.
left sideline for Southern's first score. The Wes BurAgam, Dusty Halley had a 23 yard return to the 45
Jake Workman rushed IS times for 65 yards to lead rows kick was blocked by Anthony Lane and Sam yard line.
the Rebels who overall rushed 34 times for 96 yards. Spear, leaving the 'score at 12-6 at the 6:47 mark.
A Workman run pushed the ball to the SHS 35, but
Southern 's Mart Ash rushed 11 times for 89 yards
Matt Thomas saved a touchdown when he three plays later Aaron &lt;;&gt;hlinger grabbed an mter'after being slowed much of the first half with an stopped Steve Pelfrey on the kickoff return. Pelfrey ception arid ran it back to the SGHS 40 yard line.
'
had a 20-yard return to give SGHS the ball at their
South Gall.a worked the ball mstde the 20 yard
injury.
The tim half was ugly, but.South Gallia turned the · ~wn 44-yard line.
line but ~ork~an _fumbled after a pic'kup o~ abqut
ugly duckling into a golden egg, capitalizing on
A penalt}' and big stop by '!yler Little put the three. Bnce H1ll ptcked up the ball and ran lt back
Southern miscues to take command late in the first Rebels in a tough 3rd and 15, setting the stage for a 83 yards to paydut, however the run was null1fied by
half The Rebels led at the half 12-0.
Matt Ash interception. Three plays later, Ash picked a holdmg call.
.
.
The game went mto overt1me after the teams batSouth Gallia drew first blood when Josh Waugh up his blockers and weaved through th_e Gallia
threaded a pass to Jason Merrick and Merrick won a defense diving across the endzone marker for the ded to a 12-12 t1e m regulatiOn.

Fackler TD~s help Marauders trip Raiders
out. Fackler added the kick and kickoff and put ·together a Lee and Roush one each for
OVP CORRESPONDENT
a 7-0 Meigs lead with 2:14 nine-play, 65-yard dtive for the six yards.
"After the first two games, it
score. Once again, it was PackPOMEROY - Derrick remaining . .
"Buzzy" Fackler caught three
On the next drive, River Val- ler who was on the receiving would have been easy for the
touchdown passes to ignite a ley moved irito Marauder terri: end of ~ 40-yard halfback kids to give up," Marauder
'struggling M eigs Marauder tory, but once again coughed option by Jeremy Roush for coach Mike Chancey said. "But
offense and lead the Marauders up the football and Fackler the score.The kick was blocked they stuck together, a lot of
to a 27-7 win over River Valley recovered for Meigs at their but Meigs held a 20-0 lead kids were banged up and hurt,
but they all play with SI:'at
Friday evening at Bob Roberts own 37-yard line. Five plays with 6:38 re!llaining.
.The Raiders came right back effort. I'm proud of the way
Field in Pomeroy.
later, Kyle Hannan found a
.
The win was the first in three wide open Fackler from 37 and put toiether a ten play, 66- ' they played tonight:'
~an Brown_led the R:uders
tries for Meigs, and jhe seventh yards out for the score. Buzz's yard drive with Marcum going
.
in a row-oveF-the-lr-neighbors~kick was ttue for a 14-0 Meigs the- final - three yards- for- the- wtth-5.1- yat:ds. m seven
fi-om Gallia County. River Val- lead at the 9:46 mark of the score. Jolin Polcyn's kick made Marcum added 39 yards m
it a 20-7 score with I :57 left in
l ey drops to 0-3, and the loss first half.
was their 34th in a row.
River Valley received a big the third period.
Meigs closed out the scoring
· The aiders won the toss and break with 4:20 left in the half
received the opening kickoff, when Blake Marcum blocked a when Hannan found Fackler in
two plays later the raiders Fackler punt, Adam Darst the end zone on a fourth and
coughed up the football with picked up the ball and returned four play from five yards out.
Meigs recovering at the Raider it six yards to the Marauder 15. Fackler ad~ed his 2lst point of
25-yard line. T he Marauders But the Marauder defense stiff- the night on the extra poinl;s
drove tO' the nine-yard line, but ened and Jessie Ward was with 4:00 remaining.
Roush led the Marauder
the drive sputtered and Fackler stuffed at th~ line for no gain
attempted a 24-yard field goal. on fourth and one to give the ground attack with·91 yards in
But Fackler's field goal attempt ball over to Meigs on downs. · 21 carries, Lee added 78 in
was blocked by the middle of
On the second play, Maraud- nine carries. Hannan was nine
the·Raider line.
er senior Tyson Lee broke a of 17 in the air with an· inter~
After an exchange of punts, couple of tackles and was off to ception for I 00 yards and two
the Raiders fumbled the ball the races 91 yards for the score, scores. Roush was two of two
once again with the Maraud- only to have the play nullifi~ for 66 yards and a score and
'ers' Jason Rosier recovering for by a Meigs penalty. The two Fackler failed to complete his
Meigs at the Raider 16. Three teams went into the locker one attempt.
Fackler pulled in eight passes
plays later, Jeremy: Roush car- room at the half with Meigs on
for 145 yards, Brandon Ramsried for his third consecutive top 14-0.
time to score from five yards
Meigs took the second half burg added one for nine and

Bv DAVE HARRIS

eight carries. Joey Graham
completed 1-of-5 for 29 yards,
that was to Darst.
"The kids really played
hard," Raider coach Larry
Carter said. "But the breaks
didn't go our way. I thought we
hit hard, especially in the second half, but we can't be turn- .
ing the ball over like we did."
Meigs will host Ravenswood
in their first ever
· next

•

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Sunday, Sept 9, 2001 •'

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

~unbfiP

1J::imr!! -&amp;rntinrl • Page 85

Ohio, West Virginia High School Football Scores

Buffalo
tramples
Hannan

Ohio H;gh School FOOCball
By The Associated Press

CoshoctOO JS. Millersburg W. Holmes 7
COvington '5. New Paris National Trail 0

Friday'I Resutts
/IN. Coventry 28, lodi Cloverleaf 12
N&lt;r. Rrestone 20. Sdrberton 0
Amhefst Sreele 41, V&amp;fmHion 14
Al1na .... Bradfo&lt;tl6

Crooksville 16, Warsaw Aivef V18W 9, 20T
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 10, Rittman 0
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 28.

Cresdine 27, Greenwich S. Coot. 18

Strongsville 21
Cuyahoga Hts. 39, Kirtland 9
Astlland Crestview 64, Lucas 6
Danville 69, Cr&amp;ston Norwa~ne 6
Ashtabula U.k.- 34 , Cle. HIS. 0
Day. Chamlnade-Jutieflne 34, Brampton,
Athens 37, Albany Alexander 0
Omario (Can.) St. Thomas 0
Attica Seneca E. 22, MoniOO'Iille 21
Defiance 28. Lima Shawnee 1
Aurora 29, lndepondence' 21
DeGraff A - 21, Vettow sp.;ngs 6
Bainbridge Paint Valley 39. Greenf1eld Delaware Hayes 7, Hilliard Darby 6
t£-Ciain 32
Delphos Jefferson 42, Bluffl:on 1
fl1!dlon! 14, Kent Roosevelt 7
Delphos St. Jom's 12. Rockford Parkway 1
Bedford Hts. Chane! 30, AV&lt;XO u.•e 13
Delta 33. Bryan 7
Bellaire St. JOhn's 49, Bowerston Cononon Do&amp;a Hardin Northern 47, Findlay Uberty valley 0
' Benton 0
'
B&amp;llafon~lne Benjamin Logan 27, Lewis- DreSden Tri·Valley 20, Philo 12
town lnd1an Lake 12
E. Clinton 48. Clennont NE 13
llellevue 20, Clyde o
E. li\/81Jl00142, Salem 8
Belmont Union Local41 , Sl. Clairsville 22
E~ PaJesUne 24, Now MlddleiOwn Spring.
~loit W. Branch 21 , Alliance Martington
22
llelpre 47, Beverly Fl. Frye 27
East 34, Ashland (Ky.) Fairview 13
Berea 19, Olmsted Falls 17
Edison 26, Wellington 14
Benin Center Western Rosorve 42, Sebring Etmo&lt;o Woodmore 45, ukeskJe Danbury 0
0'
Elyria 34, Lorain Admiral King 6 Elyria
BlOom-cam&gt;! 41, Chllliootha Unioto a
Cath. 29, Port Clinton 8
Brool&lt;lyn 14, lAGrange Keystone 12
Erie(Pa.) Mercyhurst Prep 29, Coonoeut 7
Brunswick 21 , sandusky 0
Euclid 30, Cle. VASJ 27
BYesville Meadowbrook 32, W. Lafayette fairfield Union 42, Nefsonvitle-.York 26
RidgeWOOd 26
Fairport Ha- Harding 26, VIenna Math·
can. McKinley 38, Watardown, Ontario ews 20
(C8n.} 7
Fairview Park Fairview 53, Shettield Brook·
can. S. 28, Navarre Fairless o
side 0
Qinal Fulton NW 14, Norton 0
Fostoria 44, Genoa 6
Canal Winchester 33, Baltimor' Uberty Fredericktown 28, Grandview 22, OT
Union 23
Gibsonburg 16, Bascom HopeweA·Loudon
C;jrey 36, N. Robinson Col. Crawford 12 . 7
·
. CQsstown Miami E. 29, N. Lewisburg Triad Gnadenhutten l~dian Valley 12, cambridge

1\iltwerp 8, Tol. Ottawa Hills 7

FROM OVP STAFF

REPORTS
ASHTON - Despite
digging itself a 15-0 deficit,
Hannan had a chance to gain
some early momentum Friday at home against BuffaloPutnam.
With 6:30 left in the sec.;nd.quarter, senior defensive
lineman John Woods blcx:lred
a Bison punt from the Buffalo-Putnam 25-yard line. .
Woods then recovered the
ball at the four, but the Wildcats were unable to cross the
goal-line in fuur attempts.
The Bison then put
together a 98-yard scoring
drive capped by a 50-yard
Jason Smith run. With a 21-0
lead, the Bison rolled to a 546 victory to better their
record to 3-0. Hannan fell to
0-3.
"We had some chances
eorly, but we're young and
still have to learn how to
capitalize;' said Hannan head
coach Kent Price.
Smith led the Bison with
130 yards 'on just eight carries. Junior Kirk Murray.
who scored the Wildcats'
lone · score with a. 60-yard
run in the fourth quarter.
Murray paced Hannan with
I 02 yards on nine rushes,
while Shannon Gay had 35
yards on seven attempts and
Woods added 49 yards on
three tries.
Buffalo-Putnam also beat
Hannan with special teams.
Billy Gritt opened the second halfwith a 60-yard kickoff return and scored another"touchdown eight minutes
later on a 45-yard punt
return. The Bison slammed
the door just before the end
of the third quarter when
Tollllllj Hdtchinson inter~
cepted an errant Gay pass
and bolted 50-yards to Widen

o

11

.

castalia Margaretta 43, Bloomdale Elm·
wood 0
Contott&gt;urg 63, Marion Gath. 8

Ch!lgrin Falls 35, Gartleld Hts. Trinlry a
Chardon 48, Middleburg His. Midpark 0
Cha~ler1and W. Geauga 20. Twinsburg 13
Ct\'illlcothe Zane Trace 42, Stewart Federal
Hocking 0
Cll\. Anderson 42, Cln. Winton Woods 26
Cin. Colerain 38, Lakota E. 0
Cirl . Elder 48, Cln. Westem Hills 6
Cin . Glen Este 28, C1n. Walnut HiMs 6
Cin. Hills Chr. Acad. 27, Cin. SUmmit CounI'Y ·Day 7
·
~hi. Indian Hlll35. Cln. Reading 18
Ci~. McNicholao 27, LOveland 14
Cin. Moell_&amp;r 20, Indianapolis (Ind.) Aoncalli
6 '
Cir(. MI . Healthy 23, Cin. Withrow 21
Gin. N. COllege Hill 25, Cln. Country Day 7
Cin. ~rlnceton 35, Milford 12
Gin. ~un::ell Marian 37, Amelia 8 .
Cin. Roger Bacon 42, Covington (Ky.} Holy
CroBS 6
Cin. St. Xavier 2t , Indianapolis (Ind.)
Cslhedml 0
Cin·. Turpin 14, Mason 0
Clr\. Woodward 21, Cin. Hughes 0
Ci" Wyoming 55, Cin . Doer Park 6
Cle. Cent. Gath. 27, Beachwood 14
Cloi. &lt;:&lt;&gt;linwood 26, Cle. John Martihall 0
Cle. E. 25, Cle. S. 0
Cle. Glenvilht 68, Cle. Rhodes 0
Coldwater 30, New Bremen 7
Collins Western Reserve 21, Oberlin Firelands 0
Cots. Academy 23, Amanda-Cioarcroek 8
Cors. Beechcrott 63, Cols. V'lhelstone 0
Col$. Bexley 21, New Albony 0
Colo, Brtggs 14, C&lt;&gt;s. E. 6
Cols.ln&lt;lapendonce 51, Cols. Wesl6
Col~. Mifflin 41 , C&lt;&gt;s. South 13
Cols. Ready 17, C&lt;&gt;s. Centennial 0
--,:;ols. St. Chanes 27, Whitehaii-Veanlng 24
Columbiana Crestview 58, Ashtabula SIS.
John &amp; Paul 0
Columbus Grove 27, Ada 0
Cojoley 29, orrville 12

7

Goshen 28, Blanchester 22
Gratton MicMew 32, Westlake 19

Granville 28, Ashville Teays Valley 0
Green 7, Dover 6
Grove City 32, To!. St. John's 0
Hamnton 37, W. Chester lAkota W. J5
Hamler Patrick Herwy 41, Montpelier 1
Harl()ve!lon United 20, Mineral Ridge 15
Heath 48, Ullca 24
Hebron Lakewood 21, Pataskala Watkins
Memorial g
Hicksville 29, Tot. Christian 0
Hilliard Davk:lson 32, Gahanna UrtCOin 19
Hubbard 34, Slouthers 0
Hudson 32, Akr. Spring. 2
Ironton 27, Gallipolis Gallla 7
Jackson 50, McArthur VInton County 12
Johnstown Northridge 47, Mlllerspon 12
Kenton 15, Celina 14
Lancaster 38, Chillicothe 0
Leavittsburg LaBrae 40, Jefferson Area 34
lebanon 40, Day. Dunbar 34
Leetonia 27, N. Jackson Jackson·MIIton 6
Leipsic 34, Vanlue 6
·
Lexington 33, Bucyrus 14
Liberty Cenler 54. Metamora Evergreen 36
Uma Cenl Cath. 21, Haviland Wayne_
Trace 12
Lima Sr. 28, Cols. Franklin HIS. 7
Uttle Miami 34, Lemon-Monroe 8
logan 13, zanesville a
lorain Cloarviow 41, LOrain Cstli. 26
lorain MidVIew 32, Westlake 19
Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas 35, Akr. E. 8
Lowell\itlle 53, AndOver Pymatunlng Valley

Marysville.19. Bellefontaine 10
Mawllon Jacl&lt;son 18. Tol. Sl. Francb 13
Massillon Tustaw 23, Dctjlestown Ch6ppewa 7
Massillon WaShongton 59. Ator. Garlleld 0
Maumee 21 , Tot Bowsher 6
Mayfield 58. Eastlake N. 14
McComb 49, AO&lt;:odfo 0
McDormott Scioto NW 26, Piketon 14
McDonald 12, Voongo. Ll&gt;or1y 8
Mechanic:sburg 58. Enon Greenan 6
Medina Buckeye 27, A--on 7
Medina Highland 20, Clo. Orange 17
Middlefield cardinal 55, ~ lodgemont o
Milan Edison 26, Wefl lngton 14
M~fOfd Center Fairbanks 56, Ridgeway
Ridgomonla
MinfOfd 57, Chillicothe Huntington Rosa 8
Mogadore 34. ~ter Waterloo 0
Mogadore Fleld 20. Ravenna SE 7
Morral Ridgedale 41 , Gallon Northmor 7
N. Can . Hoover 28, Louisville 13

N. Lima S . Range 34, Columbiana 7
N. Otm!llod 22, lakewood 8
N. Ridgovffte 33, Bay V!tago Bey 32, OT
Napoleon 13, Bowling Green 1a
New lexington 60, McConnelsville Morgan
43
.
New Richmond 36, Hill-., 0
New WaShington Buckeye Cont. 36, Plymouth o
Newark 31, Thomas Worthington 0
Newarl&lt; Licking VaHey 20, Logan Elm 0
~ewoomorstown 50. Csdiz HarriOOQ Cent.
Newlon Falls 25. Orwell Grand Valley 2
Northwood 45, Tol. WOOdward 32
Ook Ha- H , Pemberville Eastwood 7
Ook Hill 22, lronlon Rock Hill 0
Oregon S1rilch 34, Millbury lAke 28, 20T
Painesville Aivar'Sida 21; Painesville Harvey 9
Pandora-Gilboa 54, Cory-Rawoon 7
Parkersburg f!N. V8.) S. 27, VIncent Warren
19
Panna 21, N. Aoyatlon 14
.
Panna His. Holy Name 20, Garfield Hta. 19
Peninsula WOOdridge 25, GarrettsVille 7
Peny 36, Geneva 0
Perrysburg 65, Tot Wallo 8
PH:korington 42, Groveport Madlaon 0
Plain City Jonathan Alder 24, Colo. Hao11ey
21
Poland 17, Youngo. Wilson
Pomeroy Meigs 27, Chilshlre Hover VOlley 7
Portsmouth 25, Portsmouth W. 14
•
Racine Southem 19, S. Gallla 12, OT
Richfield Revere 19. Brecksville o
Richmond Dale SE 7, Gkluster Trtn\bie 8

a

Richmond Hta. t4, Newbury 13, OT
Rtctiwood N. Union 7, Marion Elgin 6
Rocky R~ 26, Parma Normandy 18
Rocky fllver Lutheran w.. 42, Clo. HIS.
Lu1h&amp;ran E. 16

Aoaslord 39, Otsego 14
S . Cha-Jon Southoaotom 49, Madison
~insO

Sandusky Perl&lt;ins 55, Norwalk 1•
Sarahsville Shenandoah 27, Old Washington Buckeye Trail6
Sharon (Pa.)24, Voongs. Mooney 0
Shelby 42, Ashland 9
.
Sherwood Fairview 30, .A.rchbold 19
Sidney 36, Day. Maadowdale o
Solon 31 , Mentor 0
Southington Chalker 27, Magnolia Sandy
Valley 14
Spencerville a:!, Lima Perry 6
Sp.;ng. Kent"') Ridge 13, Spring. Calh.
•
Cent 0
Sp.;ng. N. JS, Day. Belmont 12
Spring. NE 34, LOndon 21
Spring. l'lW 12, Jamestown Greonevlow 7
St. Marya MOrnooial 33, 011awa·Gtand0r114
St. Parla Graham 47, Spring. Shawnee 12
~ville JS, Wheeling f!N. va.) Pari&lt; a
Stow 41,1W. Konmote 0
Sugar Grove Berna Union -40, HemlOCk
MillerO
'
SuHivan Black Aivt1o- 81, Ollortin 8
Summit Station Licking His. 17, JohnstownMonroe t3
Sunbury Big Walnut 42, Gallon 15
~camore Mohawk 41, Mt. Blanchard
Ri•ordale 0
Sytvanla Northvlaw 14, Tal. Rogers 0
Tallmadge 36, Akr. N. 0
ThorrMHo Sheridan 21, New Concord John
Glenn q
11ffln Calvert JS, Sandusky Sl. Mary's 2t
11ffln C¢k!m)llan 35, Fremonl A008 7
Tal. Cant. Calli. 17, Tot Whllmer 14
Tal. Sian 28, Sylvania Soutlivfaw 7
Toronto 21, ,Howard Eutl&lt;nox 0
Unlonlown Lake 30, Chagrin Falls Kenston
27
Upper AtlinqJon 34, Flndtay 21
Upper Safl&lt;!Usky 28, Bucyrus Wynlord 6
Urlchavllla Ctaymonl27, Com&gt;lton 19
Van Well JS, Wapal&lt;oneta 7
w. Jai!Br110r1 .co, Cols. World Harvest 18
W. llberly·5alem 14, Troy Chriotian 7
WadaWortff 34, Medina 7
Wamtn Champion 25, Burton Beri&lt;Ohlre 17
Wam1n Harding 70, M.M. (Can.) Robinson

Waverly 34, Wellston 30
WellsvHie 32, Lisbon 14
WestervHie S. 31, Reynoldsburg 21
Wheelersburg 42, Lucasll'ille Valley 14

Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 56, Tot Ubbey
8
Willard 34. Huron 25
Williamsburg 34, Clarksville Clinton·Massie
33
Williamsport Westfall 18, Circleville 13
Willooghbi',S. 17, WickliWe 7
Windham 54, Rootstown B
Woodsfield Monroe Cen1. 42, Hannibal
Rivero
Wooster 56, New Philadelphia 14
Wooster Triway 19, Apple Creek
Wsynadale6
Worthington Kiboume 30, Dublin Scioto 6
Xenia 23, Cin. LaSalle 20
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 41 , NikJs McKin·
loy 14
Youngs. Boardman 10, Youngs. Chaney 7
Yourlgs. Ursuline 54. Alliance 0
Zanesville Maysville 20, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 17
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 2a. Sugarcreek Garaway 6
Wnl VIrginia Score1
Bath County. Va. 41 , Easl Hardy 13
Berkeley Springs 13, Beall, Md. 8
Bridgeport 30, Lewis County 7
Buffalo 54, Hannan 6
Cabell Midland 34, South Char1eston 0
Calhoun County 42, Doddridge County 0

Cameron 14. Wast Greene, Pa. 6
Clay County 47,51. Marys 0
East Fal""ont 41, Nicholas County 20
Edison, Ohio, 39, Weir 13
Fayetteville 26, Meadow Bndge 8
Frankfort 20, Hedgesville 17
Gauley Bridge 54, Monlcalm 18
George Washington 65. Nitro 22 ·
Gllbor168, Big Creek 30
Greenbrier Easl 30, Bluefield 6
Guyan Valley 30, Duval 6

Hamlin 30. Tygarts Valfey 0
Hampshire 38. James Wood. Va. 12
Herber1 Hoover 6, Princeton 0
Highlands, Pa. 16, Brooke 14
Hurr'ieana 22, St Albans 14
lndepehoence 27, Greenbrier West 7
James Monroe 27, Richwood 7
Jefferson 3,loudoun Valley, Va. 0

Keyser 16. Southern Garrett. Md. 12
Liberty Raleigh 48, Pike VIew 17
Linc~n 17, Tucker County 14 (OT)
Logan 6, Huntington 3
Loudoon County, Va. 15, usselman 14
Ma!JlOiia 10, Williamstown 7
Man 36, Oceana 12
Mar11nsb\Jrg 32. Qak Glen 15
Midland Trail 42 , Braxton County 13
Moorefield 58. Petersburg 6
MOfgantown 43, Fairmont Senior 7

Mount Hope 51, Burch 6
Mount V i e~ 31, Wyoming EasJ 14
North Marion 34, Point Pleasant 20
Oak Hill 63, Matewan 14
Paden City 16, Madonna 6 ·
Parkersburg 26. John Marshall 22
Parkersburg South 21 , Warren Local , Oh io,
19
Pendleton County 40 , Pocahontas County
28
Phllip Barbour 32, South Harrison 18
Preston 30, Elkins 24 (OT)
Ravenswood 22. Roane County 6
Reedsville Eastern, Ohio 30, Wahama 8
Riverside 4~. Ripley 20
Robert C . Byrd21, GraftonO

Scott 26, Chapmanville 0
Shady Spring 15, Summei'S COunty 14

Shennan 64. Marsh Fork 20
Sissonville 25, Winfield B
Steubenville, Ohio 35, Wheeling Park 0
Tyler COnsolidated 14, Ritchie County 6
University 34, Buckhannon-Upshur 7
Valle&gt;" Welle! 25, Hundred 0
Wayne 25, Poca 22
Webster County 6, Uberty Harrison 0
Williamson 26, Van 24
Win County 33, Gilmer County 18
Woodrow Wilson 12, Spring Valley 9 (30T)

THE TRAIL.

0
Wam1n Howland 28, Cortland lakeview 0
Wam1n .IFK 42, Glrara 28
Warrensville 40, lorain Soulhvlew 7

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RIVER FRONT HONDA
438 St'ATE ROUTE 7 N • OAUIPOLIS, OH 45831

8

lyndhursl Boush 36, Maple HIS. 0 ··
Macedonia Nordonla 46, Ravenna 3
Madison 34, Ashlabula Edgewood 13
Manslield Madison 30, Mounl Vernon 7
Mansllold Sr. 46, Cola. Northland 2
Mantua Crestwood 17, Slreelsboro 14
Maria Stein Marion local 24, St. Henry 7
Marietta 55, Cols. Hamlllorl Twp. 7
Marion Harding 28, Dublin Co!tman 20
Marion Pleasant 55, C8rdlngton--Uncoln 8
Marion River Valley 21 , Mt Gilead 12
Martins Feny 13 Steubenville Calli. Conl6

Washington C.H. 33. Kings Mills K1ngs 13
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 40, Wilming·
lon7
Watet1ord 20, New Matamoras Frootier 6
Wauseon 43, Swanton 42. 20T

'

•uur •ntr• r•••

(740) 446-2240

hOndi.COm BEA~E RUII A'IllS~ !IEHWJI00US TOOII£AATE FORVOORS.tJ'tTY,RUOVOIJROWNEII'SioWII.JAL j(Wfo'{S
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~~~ $URF'(ES OA Pl8.JC ~S. o\NO ME'IER CAR~ Pt.$Sf:NGE.RS Cf4 YOU~ ATV ~~EA E~ IN STUNT A~ 01'1 A~ AT UCtSSWE
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.,''•

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in Gallipolis on Friday, September 7
You'll find us right behind the
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•
•

.

.,'

~

2001 Buick LeSabre
Cuslom Sedan

2001 Chevy Blazer

Power-Seal, CO, System.
Power Windows &amp; Locks

• P0\¥81 Sea~ Windows &amp; Locksc

LT 4 Door 4x4

818,850* .. ~1,950*
• CD System, Alum. Wheels
• Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

Tilt Steering, Cruise

.

'

• Taxes, Tags, Ttlle Fees extra. Rebalo Included in sale price or new vehldelistad where awlicable. "On approved cred~ On selet:led modtll. Not respooaible (or typograplllcalenors.
Prices Good SOplembor 51h Through Sep1em.bor 9th.
•·
.

...

CHIVIIOUT

.'

&lt;Z) Oldsmobile
IIBID IBIIIIIIIOOe'

•

)

-·-

...

-I

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�,.

Page 84 • &amp;unba!' IB:imr• -&amp;tntind

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

BY ScoTT WOLFE

62-yard foot race to the endzone. The extra point ·
OVP CORRESPONDENT
run ruled, but the Rebels led 6-0 at the 8:31 in the
MERCERVILlE- It took 48 minutes and over- second period.
time to decide a winner, but when the dust had setThat perfection turned to bitterness as on the next
tied, the Southern Tornadoes claimed a dramatic 18- play Pierce rolled out of the pocket looking for his
12 win over the South Gallia Rebels Friday night in intended target. Debating whether to run or pass,
area high school football action at South Gallia High Pierce let it fly, but South Gallia's Dusty Halley made
School. Southern is now 2-1 overall and South Gal- the read and picked it off. Halley broke two initial
lia drops to 0-3.
.
tackles then had a clean passage to the endzone with
Somhern 's Brandon Pierce burst through the hne several Southern defenders in tow.
from four yards out on ihe sixth play in overtime to
A penalty on the SGHS sideline moved the ball
give Southern the win. That score was set up by four back five yards on the conversion and Southern
Matt Ash runs which garnered one first down and stopped the run with the score 12-0 with just 25 secgave the Tornadoes a first and goal situation on the onds left in the half.
The South Gallia defense was the story of the
eight. Ash ran it to the four and P1erce firushed for
night as they contained Southern's running game and
the Southern win.
Since South Gallia won the coin toss and failed to put pressure on Pierce in the backfield. The Rebels
had several sacks for huge chunks of negative
score, Southern's score was final.
Perhapssendinganomenofthingstocome,South yardage. Zeph Clary had three sacks, and Anthony BIG GAIN - .Southern's Matt Ash breaks aW!lY for
Gallia Coach Donnie Saunders said before the game, Lane had one, while Randy Spurlock had a fumble yards In the Tornadoes' overtime win Friday. (Scott
' "We just have to get 'ready' and the first two games recovery.
·
Wolfe)
we were not ready to play when the first whistle · The second half started m·· ch like the first, sort of
blew. We've got young kids, but that is no excuse.You hum-drum until Zack Lee had an interception that sea~ in the left corner. Ash scored on th~ initial conhave to be ready to play and hopefully tonight we · thwarted a Southern drive. Southern turned things vers1on, but a procedure penalty caUed It back, then
will. The young kids ... we have to give them confi- around when on the next play Ru5sell Krider had a on the replay Pierce rolled out to pass, but was forced
dence and show them they can play. We-can't make fumble recovery to secure the ball (or the Tornadoes. to scramble and was stopped short for a 12- 12 t1e at
mistakes."
On the first play from scrimmage, Pierce, the 5:14 mark._ In less than. a rrunute and a half,
Those last words were what proved to be the undaunted from his previous throw and interception, Southern ~d p1cked up two scores both at the hands
Rebeh downfall in what was otherwise a tremendous rifled a 43 yard pass to a speeding IJrice Hill on the of SGHS rrustakes.
effort from the Mercerville dan.
left sideline for Southern's first score. The Wes BurAgam, Dusty Halley had a 23 yard return to the 45
Jake Workman rushed IS times for 65 yards to lead rows kick was blocked by Anthony Lane and Sam yard line.
the Rebels who overall rushed 34 times for 96 yards. Spear, leaving the 'score at 12-6 at the 6:47 mark.
A Workman run pushed the ball to the SHS 35, but
Southern 's Mart Ash rushed 11 times for 89 yards
Matt Thomas saved a touchdown when he three plays later Aaron &lt;;&gt;hlinger grabbed an mter'after being slowed much of the first half with an stopped Steve Pelfrey on the kickoff return. Pelfrey ception arid ran it back to the SGHS 40 yard line.
'
had a 20-yard return to give SGHS the ball at their
South Gall.a worked the ball mstde the 20 yard
injury.
The tim half was ugly, but.South Gallia turned the · ~wn 44-yard line.
line but ~ork~an _fumbled after a pic'kup o~ abqut
ugly duckling into a golden egg, capitalizing on
A penalt}' and big stop by '!yler Little put the three. Bnce H1ll ptcked up the ball and ran lt back
Southern miscues to take command late in the first Rebels in a tough 3rd and 15, setting the stage for a 83 yards to paydut, however the run was null1fied by
half The Rebels led at the half 12-0.
Matt Ash interception. Three plays later, Ash picked a holdmg call.
.
.
The game went mto overt1me after the teams batSouth Gallia drew first blood when Josh Waugh up his blockers and weaved through th_e Gallia
threaded a pass to Jason Merrick and Merrick won a defense diving across the endzone marker for the ded to a 12-12 t1e m regulatiOn.

Fackler TD~s help Marauders trip Raiders
out. Fackler added the kick and kickoff and put ·together a Lee and Roush one each for
OVP CORRESPONDENT
a 7-0 Meigs lead with 2:14 nine-play, 65-yard dtive for the six yards.
"After the first two games, it
score. Once again, it was PackPOMEROY - Derrick remaining . .
"Buzzy" Fackler caught three
On the next drive, River Val- ler who was on the receiving would have been easy for the
touchdown passes to ignite a ley moved irito Marauder terri: end of ~ 40-yard halfback kids to give up," Marauder
'struggling M eigs Marauder tory, but once again coughed option by Jeremy Roush for coach Mike Chancey said. "But
offense and lead the Marauders up the football and Fackler the score.The kick was blocked they stuck together, a lot of
to a 27-7 win over River Valley recovered for Meigs at their but Meigs held a 20-0 lead kids were banged up and hurt,
but they all play with SI:'at
Friday evening at Bob Roberts own 37-yard line. Five plays with 6:38 re!llaining.
.The Raiders came right back effort. I'm proud of the way
Field in Pomeroy.
later, Kyle Hannan found a
.
The win was the first in three wide open Fackler from 37 and put toiether a ten play, 66- ' they played tonight:'
~an Brown_led the R:uders
tries for Meigs, and jhe seventh yards out for the score. Buzz's yard drive with Marcum going
.
in a row-oveF-the-lr-neighbors~kick was ttue for a 14-0 Meigs the- final - three yards- for- the- wtth-5.1- yat:ds. m seven
fi-om Gallia County. River Val- lead at the 9:46 mark of the score. Jolin Polcyn's kick made Marcum added 39 yards m
it a 20-7 score with I :57 left in
l ey drops to 0-3, and the loss first half.
was their 34th in a row.
River Valley received a big the third period.
Meigs closed out the scoring
· The aiders won the toss and break with 4:20 left in the half
received the opening kickoff, when Blake Marcum blocked a when Hannan found Fackler in
two plays later the raiders Fackler punt, Adam Darst the end zone on a fourth and
coughed up the football with picked up the ball and returned four play from five yards out.
Meigs recovering at the Raider it six yards to the Marauder 15. Fackler ad~ed his 2lst point of
25-yard line. T he Marauders But the Marauder defense stiff- the night on the extra poinl;s
drove tO' the nine-yard line, but ened and Jessie Ward was with 4:00 remaining.
Roush led the Marauder
the drive sputtered and Fackler stuffed at th~ line for no gain
attempted a 24-yard field goal. on fourth and one to give the ground attack with·91 yards in
But Fackler's field goal attempt ball over to Meigs on downs. · 21 carries, Lee added 78 in
was blocked by the middle of
On the second play, Maraud- nine carries. Hannan was nine
the·Raider line.
er senior Tyson Lee broke a of 17 in the air with an· inter~
After an exchange of punts, couple of tackles and was off to ception for I 00 yards and two
the Raiders fumbled the ball the races 91 yards for the score, scores. Roush was two of two
once again with the Maraud- only to have the play nullifi~ for 66 yards and a score and
'ers' Jason Rosier recovering for by a Meigs penalty. The two Fackler failed to complete his
Meigs at the Raider 16. Three teams went into the locker one attempt.
Fackler pulled in eight passes
plays later, Jeremy: Roush car- room at the half with Meigs on
for 145 yards, Brandon Ramsried for his third consecutive top 14-0.
time to score from five yards
Meigs took the second half burg added one for nine and

Bv DAVE HARRIS

eight carries. Joey Graham
completed 1-of-5 for 29 yards,
that was to Darst.
"The kids really played
hard," Raider coach Larry
Carter said. "But the breaks
didn't go our way. I thought we
hit hard, especially in the second half, but we can't be turn- .
ing the ball over like we did."
Meigs will host Ravenswood
in their first ever
· next

•

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Sunday, Sept 9, 2001 •'

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

~unbfiP

1J::imr!! -&amp;rntinrl • Page 85

Ohio, West Virginia High School Football Scores

Buffalo
tramples
Hannan

Ohio H;gh School FOOCball
By The Associated Press

CoshoctOO JS. Millersburg W. Holmes 7
COvington '5. New Paris National Trail 0

Friday'I Resutts
/IN. Coventry 28, lodi Cloverleaf 12
N&lt;r. Rrestone 20. Sdrberton 0
Amhefst Sreele 41, V&amp;fmHion 14
Al1na .... Bradfo&lt;tl6

Crooksville 16, Warsaw Aivef V18W 9, 20T
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 10, Rittman 0
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 28.

Cresdine 27, Greenwich S. Coot. 18

Strongsville 21
Cuyahoga Hts. 39, Kirtland 9
Astlland Crestview 64, Lucas 6
Danville 69, Cr&amp;ston Norwa~ne 6
Ashtabula U.k.- 34 , Cle. HIS. 0
Day. Chamlnade-Jutieflne 34, Brampton,
Athens 37, Albany Alexander 0
Omario (Can.) St. Thomas 0
Attica Seneca E. 22, MoniOO'Iille 21
Defiance 28. Lima Shawnee 1
Aurora 29, lndepondence' 21
DeGraff A - 21, Vettow sp.;ngs 6
Bainbridge Paint Valley 39. Greenf1eld Delaware Hayes 7, Hilliard Darby 6
t£-Ciain 32
Delphos Jefferson 42, Bluffl:on 1
fl1!dlon! 14, Kent Roosevelt 7
Delphos St. Jom's 12. Rockford Parkway 1
Bedford Hts. Chane! 30, AV&lt;XO u.•e 13
Delta 33. Bryan 7
Bellaire St. JOhn's 49, Bowerston Cononon Do&amp;a Hardin Northern 47, Findlay Uberty valley 0
' Benton 0
'
B&amp;llafon~lne Benjamin Logan 27, Lewis- DreSden Tri·Valley 20, Philo 12
town lnd1an Lake 12
E. Clinton 48. Clennont NE 13
llellevue 20, Clyde o
E. li\/81Jl00142, Salem 8
Belmont Union Local41 , Sl. Clairsville 22
E~ PaJesUne 24, Now MlddleiOwn Spring.
~loit W. Branch 21 , Alliance Martington
22
llelpre 47, Beverly Fl. Frye 27
East 34, Ashland (Ky.) Fairview 13
Berea 19, Olmsted Falls 17
Edison 26, Wellington 14
Benin Center Western Rosorve 42, Sebring Etmo&lt;o Woodmore 45, ukeskJe Danbury 0
0'
Elyria 34, Lorain Admiral King 6 Elyria
BlOom-cam&gt;! 41, Chllliootha Unioto a
Cath. 29, Port Clinton 8
Brool&lt;lyn 14, lAGrange Keystone 12
Erie(Pa.) Mercyhurst Prep 29, Coonoeut 7
Brunswick 21 , sandusky 0
Euclid 30, Cle. VASJ 27
BYesville Meadowbrook 32, W. Lafayette fairfield Union 42, Nefsonvitle-.York 26
RidgeWOOd 26
Fairport Ha- Harding 26, VIenna Math·
can. McKinley 38, Watardown, Ontario ews 20
(C8n.} 7
Fairview Park Fairview 53, Shettield Brook·
can. S. 28, Navarre Fairless o
side 0
Qinal Fulton NW 14, Norton 0
Fostoria 44, Genoa 6
Canal Winchester 33, Baltimor' Uberty Fredericktown 28, Grandview 22, OT
Union 23
Gibsonburg 16, Bascom HopeweA·Loudon
C;jrey 36, N. Robinson Col. Crawford 12 . 7
·
. CQsstown Miami E. 29, N. Lewisburg Triad Gnadenhutten l~dian Valley 12, cambridge

1\iltwerp 8, Tol. Ottawa Hills 7

FROM OVP STAFF

REPORTS
ASHTON - Despite
digging itself a 15-0 deficit,
Hannan had a chance to gain
some early momentum Friday at home against BuffaloPutnam.
With 6:30 left in the sec.;nd.quarter, senior defensive
lineman John Woods blcx:lred
a Bison punt from the Buffalo-Putnam 25-yard line. .
Woods then recovered the
ball at the four, but the Wildcats were unable to cross the
goal-line in fuur attempts.
The Bison then put
together a 98-yard scoring
drive capped by a 50-yard
Jason Smith run. With a 21-0
lead, the Bison rolled to a 546 victory to better their
record to 3-0. Hannan fell to
0-3.
"We had some chances
eorly, but we're young and
still have to learn how to
capitalize;' said Hannan head
coach Kent Price.
Smith led the Bison with
130 yards 'on just eight carries. Junior Kirk Murray.
who scored the Wildcats'
lone · score with a. 60-yard
run in the fourth quarter.
Murray paced Hannan with
I 02 yards on nine rushes,
while Shannon Gay had 35
yards on seven attempts and
Woods added 49 yards on
three tries.
Buffalo-Putnam also beat
Hannan with special teams.
Billy Gritt opened the second halfwith a 60-yard kickoff return and scored another"touchdown eight minutes
later on a 45-yard punt
return. The Bison slammed
the door just before the end
of the third quarter when
Tollllllj Hdtchinson inter~
cepted an errant Gay pass
and bolted 50-yards to Widen

o

11

.

castalia Margaretta 43, Bloomdale Elm·
wood 0
Contott&gt;urg 63, Marion Gath. 8

Ch!lgrin Falls 35, Gartleld Hts. Trinlry a
Chardon 48, Middleburg His. Midpark 0
Cha~ler1and W. Geauga 20. Twinsburg 13
Ct\'illlcothe Zane Trace 42, Stewart Federal
Hocking 0
Cll\. Anderson 42, Cln. Winton Woods 26
Cin. Colerain 38, Lakota E. 0
Cirl . Elder 48, Cln. Westem Hills 6
Cin . Glen Este 28, C1n. Walnut HiMs 6
Cin. Hills Chr. Acad. 27, Cin. SUmmit CounI'Y ·Day 7
·
~hi. Indian Hlll35. Cln. Reading 18
Ci~. McNicholao 27, LOveland 14
Cin. Moell_&amp;r 20, Indianapolis (Ind.) Aoncalli
6 '
Cir(. MI . Healthy 23, Cin. Withrow 21
Gin. N. COllege Hill 25, Cln. Country Day 7
Cin. ~rlnceton 35, Milford 12
Gin. ~un::ell Marian 37, Amelia 8 .
Cin. Roger Bacon 42, Covington (Ky.} Holy
CroBS 6
Cin. St. Xavier 2t , Indianapolis (Ind.)
Cslhedml 0
Cin·. Turpin 14, Mason 0
Clr\. Woodward 21, Cin. Hughes 0
Ci" Wyoming 55, Cin . Doer Park 6
Cle. Cent. Gath. 27, Beachwood 14
Cloi. &lt;:&lt;&gt;linwood 26, Cle. John Martihall 0
Cle. E. 25, Cle. S. 0
Cle. Glenvilht 68, Cle. Rhodes 0
Coldwater 30, New Bremen 7
Collins Western Reserve 21, Oberlin Firelands 0
Cots. Academy 23, Amanda-Cioarcroek 8
Cors. Beechcrott 63, Cols. V'lhelstone 0
Col$. Bexley 21, New Albony 0
Colo, Brtggs 14, C&lt;&gt;s. E. 6
Cols.ln&lt;lapendonce 51, Cols. Wesl6
Col~. Mifflin 41 , C&lt;&gt;s. South 13
Cols. Ready 17, C&lt;&gt;s. Centennial 0
--,:;ols. St. Chanes 27, Whitehaii-Veanlng 24
Columbiana Crestview 58, Ashtabula SIS.
John &amp; Paul 0
Columbus Grove 27, Ada 0
Cojoley 29, orrville 12

7

Goshen 28, Blanchester 22
Gratton MicMew 32, Westlake 19

Granville 28, Ashville Teays Valley 0
Green 7, Dover 6
Grove City 32, To!. St. John's 0
Hamnton 37, W. Chester lAkota W. J5
Hamler Patrick Herwy 41, Montpelier 1
Harl()ve!lon United 20, Mineral Ridge 15
Heath 48, Ullca 24
Hebron Lakewood 21, Pataskala Watkins
Memorial g
Hicksville 29, Tot. Christian 0
Hilliard Davk:lson 32, Gahanna UrtCOin 19
Hubbard 34, Slouthers 0
Hudson 32, Akr. Spring. 2
Ironton 27, Gallipolis Gallla 7
Jackson 50, McArthur VInton County 12
Johnstown Northridge 47, Mlllerspon 12
Kenton 15, Celina 14
Lancaster 38, Chillicothe 0
Leavittsburg LaBrae 40, Jefferson Area 34
lebanon 40, Day. Dunbar 34
Leetonia 27, N. Jackson Jackson·MIIton 6
Leipsic 34, Vanlue 6
·
Lexington 33, Bucyrus 14
Liberty Cenler 54. Metamora Evergreen 36
Uma Cenl Cath. 21, Haviland Wayne_
Trace 12
Lima Sr. 28, Cols. Franklin HIS. 7
Uttle Miami 34, Lemon-Monroe 8
logan 13, zanesville a
lorain Cloarviow 41, LOrain Cstli. 26
lorain MidVIew 32, Westlake 19
Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas 35, Akr. E. 8
Lowell\itlle 53, AndOver Pymatunlng Valley

Marysville.19. Bellefontaine 10
Mawllon Jacl&lt;son 18. Tol. Sl. Francb 13
Massillon Tustaw 23, Dctjlestown Ch6ppewa 7
Massillon WaShongton 59. Ator. Garlleld 0
Maumee 21 , Tot Bowsher 6
Mayfield 58. Eastlake N. 14
McComb 49, AO&lt;:odfo 0
McDormott Scioto NW 26, Piketon 14
McDonald 12, Voongo. Ll&gt;or1y 8
Mechanic:sburg 58. Enon Greenan 6
Medina Buckeye 27, A--on 7
Medina Highland 20, Clo. Orange 17
Middlefield cardinal 55, ~ lodgemont o
Milan Edison 26, Wefl lngton 14
M~fOfd Center Fairbanks 56, Ridgeway
Ridgomonla
MinfOfd 57, Chillicothe Huntington Rosa 8
Mogadore 34. ~ter Waterloo 0
Mogadore Fleld 20. Ravenna SE 7
Morral Ridgedale 41 , Gallon Northmor 7
N. Can . Hoover 28, Louisville 13

N. Lima S . Range 34, Columbiana 7
N. Otm!llod 22, lakewood 8
N. Ridgovffte 33, Bay V!tago Bey 32, OT
Napoleon 13, Bowling Green 1a
New lexington 60, McConnelsville Morgan
43
.
New Richmond 36, Hill-., 0
New WaShington Buckeye Cont. 36, Plymouth o
Newark 31, Thomas Worthington 0
Newarl&lt; Licking VaHey 20, Logan Elm 0
~ewoomorstown 50. Csdiz HarriOOQ Cent.
Newlon Falls 25. Orwell Grand Valley 2
Northwood 45, Tol. WOOdward 32
Ook Ha- H , Pemberville Eastwood 7
Ook Hill 22, lronlon Rock Hill 0
Oregon S1rilch 34, Millbury lAke 28, 20T
Painesville Aivar'Sida 21; Painesville Harvey 9
Pandora-Gilboa 54, Cory-Rawoon 7
Parkersburg f!N. V8.) S. 27, VIncent Warren
19
Panna 21, N. Aoyatlon 14
.
Panna His. Holy Name 20, Garfield Hta. 19
Peninsula WOOdridge 25, GarrettsVille 7
Peny 36, Geneva 0
Perrysburg 65, Tot Wallo 8
PH:korington 42, Groveport Madlaon 0
Plain City Jonathan Alder 24, Colo. Hao11ey
21
Poland 17, Youngo. Wilson
Pomeroy Meigs 27, Chilshlre Hover VOlley 7
Portsmouth 25, Portsmouth W. 14
•
Racine Southem 19, S. Gallla 12, OT
Richfield Revere 19. Brecksville o
Richmond Dale SE 7, Gkluster Trtn\bie 8

a

Richmond Hta. t4, Newbury 13, OT
Rtctiwood N. Union 7, Marion Elgin 6
Rocky R~ 26, Parma Normandy 18
Rocky fllver Lutheran w.. 42, Clo. HIS.
Lu1h&amp;ran E. 16

Aoaslord 39, Otsego 14
S . Cha-Jon Southoaotom 49, Madison
~insO

Sandusky Perl&lt;ins 55, Norwalk 1•
Sarahsville Shenandoah 27, Old Washington Buckeye Trail6
Sharon (Pa.)24, Voongs. Mooney 0
Shelby 42, Ashland 9
.
Sherwood Fairview 30, .A.rchbold 19
Sidney 36, Day. Maadowdale o
Solon 31 , Mentor 0
Southington Chalker 27, Magnolia Sandy
Valley 14
Spencerville a:!, Lima Perry 6
Sp.;ng. Kent"') Ridge 13, Spring. Calh.
•
Cent 0
Sp.;ng. N. JS, Day. Belmont 12
Spring. NE 34, LOndon 21
Spring. l'lW 12, Jamestown Greonevlow 7
St. Marya MOrnooial 33, 011awa·Gtand0r114
St. Parla Graham 47, Spring. Shawnee 12
~ville JS, Wheeling f!N. va.) Pari&lt; a
Stow 41,1W. Konmote 0
Sugar Grove Berna Union -40, HemlOCk
MillerO
'
SuHivan Black Aivt1o- 81, Ollortin 8
Summit Station Licking His. 17, JohnstownMonroe t3
Sunbury Big Walnut 42, Gallon 15
~camore Mohawk 41, Mt. Blanchard
Ri•ordale 0
Sytvanla Northvlaw 14, Tal. Rogers 0
Tallmadge 36, Akr. N. 0
ThorrMHo Sheridan 21, New Concord John
Glenn q
11ffln Calvert JS, Sandusky Sl. Mary's 2t
11ffln C¢k!m)llan 35, Fremonl A008 7
Tal. Cant. Calli. 17, Tot Whllmer 14
Tal. Sian 28, Sylvania Soutlivfaw 7
Toronto 21, ,Howard Eutl&lt;nox 0
Unlonlown Lake 30, Chagrin Falls Kenston
27
Upper AtlinqJon 34, Flndtay 21
Upper Safl&lt;!Usky 28, Bucyrus Wynlord 6
Urlchavllla Ctaymonl27, Com&gt;lton 19
Van Well JS, Wapal&lt;oneta 7
w. Jai!Br110r1 .co, Cols. World Harvest 18
W. llberly·5alem 14, Troy Chriotian 7
WadaWortff 34, Medina 7
Wamtn Champion 25, Burton Beri&lt;Ohlre 17
Wam1n Harding 70, M.M. (Can.) Robinson

Waverly 34, Wellston 30
WellsvHie 32, Lisbon 14
WestervHie S. 31, Reynoldsburg 21
Wheelersburg 42, Lucasll'ille Valley 14

Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 56, Tot Ubbey
8
Willard 34. Huron 25
Williamsburg 34, Clarksville Clinton·Massie
33
Williamsport Westfall 18, Circleville 13
Willooghbi',S. 17, WickliWe 7
Windham 54, Rootstown B
Woodsfield Monroe Cen1. 42, Hannibal
Rivero
Wooster 56, New Philadelphia 14
Wooster Triway 19, Apple Creek
Wsynadale6
Worthington Kiboume 30, Dublin Scioto 6
Xenia 23, Cin. LaSalle 20
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 41 , NikJs McKin·
loy 14
Youngs. Boardman 10, Youngs. Chaney 7
Yourlgs. Ursuline 54. Alliance 0
Zanesville Maysville 20, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 17
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 2a. Sugarcreek Garaway 6
Wnl VIrginia Score1
Bath County. Va. 41 , Easl Hardy 13
Berkeley Springs 13, Beall, Md. 8
Bridgeport 30, Lewis County 7
Buffalo 54, Hannan 6
Cabell Midland 34, South Char1eston 0
Calhoun County 42, Doddridge County 0

Cameron 14. Wast Greene, Pa. 6
Clay County 47,51. Marys 0
East Fal""ont 41, Nicholas County 20
Edison, Ohio, 39, Weir 13
Fayetteville 26, Meadow Bndge 8
Frankfort 20, Hedgesville 17
Gauley Bridge 54, Monlcalm 18
George Washington 65. Nitro 22 ·
Gllbor168, Big Creek 30
Greenbrier Easl 30, Bluefield 6
Guyan Valley 30, Duval 6

Hamlin 30. Tygarts Valfey 0
Hampshire 38. James Wood. Va. 12
Herber1 Hoover 6, Princeton 0
Highlands, Pa. 16, Brooke 14
Hurr'ieana 22, St Albans 14
lndepehoence 27, Greenbrier West 7
James Monroe 27, Richwood 7
Jefferson 3,loudoun Valley, Va. 0

Keyser 16. Southern Garrett. Md. 12
Liberty Raleigh 48, Pike VIew 17
Linc~n 17, Tucker County 14 (OT)
Logan 6, Huntington 3
Loudoon County, Va. 15, usselman 14
Ma!JlOiia 10, Williamstown 7
Man 36, Oceana 12
Mar11nsb\Jrg 32. Qak Glen 15
Midland Trail 42 , Braxton County 13
Moorefield 58. Petersburg 6
MOfgantown 43, Fairmont Senior 7

Mount Hope 51, Burch 6
Mount V i e~ 31, Wyoming EasJ 14
North Marion 34, Point Pleasant 20
Oak Hill 63, Matewan 14
Paden City 16, Madonna 6 ·
Parkersburg 26. John Marshall 22
Parkersburg South 21 , Warren Local , Oh io,
19
Pendleton County 40 , Pocahontas County
28
Phllip Barbour 32, South Harrison 18
Preston 30, Elkins 24 (OT)
Ravenswood 22. Roane County 6
Reedsville Eastern, Ohio 30, Wahama 8
Riverside 4~. Ripley 20
Robert C . Byrd21, GraftonO

Scott 26, Chapmanville 0
Shady Spring 15, Summei'S COunty 14

Shennan 64. Marsh Fork 20
Sissonville 25, Winfield B
Steubenville, Ohio 35, Wheeling Park 0
Tyler COnsolidated 14, Ritchie County 6
University 34, Buckhannon-Upshur 7
Valle&gt;" Welle! 25, Hundred 0
Wayne 25, Poca 22
Webster County 6, Uberty Harrison 0
Williamson 26, Van 24
Win County 33, Gilmer County 18
Woodrow Wilson 12, Spring Valley 9 (30T)

THE TRAIL.

0
Wam1n Howland 28, Cortland lakeview 0
Wam1n .IFK 42, Glrara 28
Warrensville 40, lorain Soulhvlew 7

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lyndhursl Boush 36, Maple HIS. 0 ··
Macedonia Nordonla 46, Ravenna 3
Madison 34, Ashlabula Edgewood 13
Manslield Madison 30, Mounl Vernon 7
Mansllold Sr. 46, Cola. Northland 2
Mantua Crestwood 17, Slreelsboro 14
Maria Stein Marion local 24, St. Henry 7
Marietta 55, Cols. Hamlllorl Twp. 7
Marion Harding 28, Dublin Co!tman 20
Marion Pleasant 55, C8rdlngton--Uncoln 8
Marion River Valley 21 , Mt Gilead 12
Martins Feny 13 Steubenville Calli. Conl6

Washington C.H. 33. Kings Mills K1ngs 13
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 40, Wilming·
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Wauseon 43, Swanton 42. 20T

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Page 86 • ji!tunbap

~imrs-ji!trntinrl

The 2001 NASCAR Y/in&lt;lOO

Ct.!&gt;

The loud booing began the
second Tony Stewart hit the stage
at driver introductions. He
smiled and waved to the crowd,
hiding his deep disappointment
behind dark sunglaSses.
The negative reaction doesn't
compare to the vicious llooing
Jeff Gordon receives, but the
three-time Winston Cup champion deals with it Try as he
might, Stewart can't get beyond
it.
:·1 hate it and I can't understand it," he said. 'The last thing
I want to do before I get in a car
is go through driver introductions and hear half the place
booing me. It makes me wonder
what I've done to make them
hate me so much, and it's a diflicult thing to be the last thing you
hear before the race." ·

s.c (Wam BurtooJ

Sept. B - Ct-evrotet """'" Gallo
400,Richm&lt;lr&lt;J, va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshi"' :m,

MBNA.roin 400. Dover,

Oet
Sept. 30 - Protec1ion One 400,
Kansas Ci1y. Ka/1.
();t 7 - UAW-GM Ouali1y 500.
Cor\00!1j, N.C.
O::t 14 - Old Dominion 500, Mar·
tins\lille. Va
Ocl21 - EASports500, Taltadega,
Ala.
O::t 28 Ariz .

Phoenix 500, Avondale,

Nov. 4 -

Pop Secret Microwa\11!

400 , ~N .C .

Nov. 11 - Pemzoil 400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga .
Driver Standings
1. Jeff Gordon .
. . 3,708.

2. Ricky Rudd . . . . . . . . 3,366.
3. SlerHng Marlin

·. . . . 3,230.

4. Dale Jarrett . . . . . . . 3,21 5.
5. Tonv Stewart ...... 3,21 D.
6. Bobby Labonte ...... 3, 117.
7. Date Eamnardt; Jr... . 3,079.

There's a sensitive side to
Stewart, a fiery and short-fused

8. Rusty Wallace ...... 3,060.
9. Ke11in Harvick , . . . . . . 3,055.

10 . Johnny Benson . .. .. 2,964.
11 . Steve Park .
. ..
12. Mark Martin ... . ...
13 Jeff Burton ....... .
14. Bill Elliott . . . . . . .
15. Matt Kflnseth . .
.
16 . Jimmy Spencer . . .. .
17. Ward Burton . .. ....

30-year-old driver as well
known for tantrums and bad
behavior as he is for being the
b~t rookie in history and accu-

2.859.
2,842.
2.841 .
2,805.
2.n1.
2,696.
2.585.

muIating 12 career victories in
fewer than three seasons on the
circuit.

18. E11ioH Sadler .. .. . . . 2,559.
19 . Ken Schrader .. .... 2.503.
20 . Bobby Hamilton . ... 2,484.
21 . Jeremy Mayfield .... 2,483.

22. Jerry Nadeau .. . ... 2,435.
23. Terry Labonte .. . ...
24. Dave Blaney ... . ...
25. Ricky Craven .. . .. .
26. Kurt Busch ....... .
27. Michael Waltrip .....
28. Robert Pressley . . . .
29. JohnAndretti .. . ...
30. Brett Bodine .......
31 Casey Atwood . .

.

32. Todd Bodine .......
33. Mike Skinner . . . .
34. Stacy Corilpton .....
35. Joe Nemechek .
.
36. Ron. Homaday ... . .
37. Jason Leffler . ... . .
38. Mike Wallace .. . ...
39. Kevin Lepage .
40, Buckshot Jones . . . .
NOTE: Doesn't include
day's race .

2.309.
2,307.
2.280.
2,234.
2.187.
2,1 B1.
2,141 .
2,086.
2,031.
1,984.
1,862.
1,827.
1,824.
1,797.
1,721.
1,619.
1,391.
t ,297.
Satur-

much of his time at the track
these days holed up in his trailer
or motorhome, scared that when
he comes out he'll do or say
something to offend someone.
J.D. Gibbs, president of Joe
Gibbs Racing. said that might be
the best thing for him rigi:Jt now.
"We've talked to him and said
he 's taking so much heat, let's just
take a step back and let it blow
over;' Gibbs said. "And it will,
people forget if you just treat
them right and with respect.
Right now, he just has to be
careful ,"
There's a carry-over onto the
·track, where he fears aggressive
actions could get him into even
more trouble with NASCAR.
On probation for the rest of the
year - punislunent for ignoring
a black flag at Daytona in July.
then angrily confronting a
reporter and a NASCAR official
- Stewart could be suspended
for another infraction.
"I'm scared to walk through
the garage area and have one of
my shoelaces be untied because
I'm going to make somebody
mad with it," he said. "I'm scared
to death of touchingjeff Gordon
because if I do, then all his fans
who already don't like me, what
are . they going to do to me

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and driW&lt; poll! starodir9s:
Aug t9 - Pepsi 400, flrool&lt;¥1.
Moch (St""'"':J Mar'on)
Aug 25 - Sl&lt;lrpie 500, Bristol,
Tem (Tony Stewart)
Sept. 2 - Sou1hem 500. Da~ngton.

Loudon
Sept. 23 -

~

Stewart makes noise, hears plenty as well

pareuthesas,

in

There's a notion among fans ·
that he Ihd Gordon are bitter
rivals, fueled mostly by a trio of
on-track confrontations.
Stewart has been branded the
bad guy of the story line, earning
him angry receptions from Gordon loyalists. When he spun
Gordon out on pit road at Bristo! Motor Speedway in March
- an action that drew him a
$10,000 fine and six months on
probation - the hatred toWard
Stewart accelerated.
In truth, the rivalry ~tween

SENSITIVE STEWART- Tony Stewart (20) does a burn-out in
front of the grandstands after winning the NASCAR Sharpie
500 at Bristol Motor Speedway Aug. 25. The loud booing started the second Stewart hit the stage during driver introductions. He smiled and waved to the crowd despite it, hiding his
deep disappointment behind dark sunglasses. (AP)

IS 'IDUI

FIRESTDIIE
WILDERNESS AT
REPLACEMENT ·
.HEADQUARTERS!

P155/80A13
P175/BOR13 ................... $31.00
P185/75R14 ........... ........ $33.119
Pi95/75R14 ... ................ $35.99
P205/75R15 .......... ......... $38.99

Reooo,....

. .,will arrive sometime early Friday attar·
· noon. This lake Is also a good place to fish
· · for channet catfish, smallmouth bass and
,.. ••bluegill as the water temperature drops. ·

Chan,.. caHtllh I rom 10 1o 20 inchee can
"'be caught using llhrtmp, night crawlers and
chicken livers fished on the

1om area of Mojgo Courtly. Moot llbundant
are baa on top.wtllor kno onctca1fisl1 on
cut boila.
OHIO IIIVER ·

CEHTIIAL OHIO
ANTRIM LAKE - Thio 40-acre lake in
Antrim Park In northern Columbus wit! be
.-·,stockod with approximately 2,500 13-inch
raln - 1rout on Friday, Sept 7th. Th1a
stocking is open to all anglers. The lruck

10

bottofn.

For

Belto.ille &amp; Racine - Tho river at
thMe 1WO poc1o II o1 normal and clar11y. Hybrid llripod baa aro being caught
on tead-haadod )iga,- calfish are t&gt;tUng liVe bal1, bluegll, and goldlioh.
LAKE ERIE
Western Basin - Yellow perch continues

to be the matn meal Of! Westem l:ako Erie.
Fishing stowed a bit OVM th' week@ncl with

easterty winds. However, many anglens
sHII caught fisn with good numberS o1 ttmM
catches. Mllll\' good tocatiooo are being
reported Including a mile north ot the TOle-

. smallmouth bess, try using crank baits end
'" tubas . J!fuegitts may be caught. on night
. .c rawleroau-- by a bollbar. No boats
are pennlllod on thi11ako.
,
'"BUCKEYE LAKE - Hybrid s1rtped bass, .

do Water Intake, SOUiheast and no&lt;1heast
o1 Ketleys Island, A, B and c cans o1 the
Aoef Complex, Ra1tlosnake and GrM&lt;t
Islands, ncf1h o1 Wast Sistot, off C8dar
Point A lillie farther ..... best locatiooo

.. crappie, saugeye and largemouth bass

are off just Old Woman Creek and CranberTy Creek, and .3 to 4 miles ncl1h ol
Lorain. Uoe1ake shiners an pen:h apr&amp;aders fished on or near bottom. walleye fish.

fishtng Improves this mon1h as wa1er tempera1uros decHne. Hybrid s1ripefs can be
1.. caught using chicken livers fished on the
" bcHom or trolling lml1a11on shad crank baits
.••. parttcutarty In the no wake zone between
, Cranbeny Maroh and 8m Island. la'IIO· mouth baas can be caughl around Gran": bony Maroh and Maple Swamp _using

ing romaine lair. Smallmooth baa are
beginning to 1um on with good numberS
now being landed around Kelleys Island
and the Baas tSiando. The&lt;e 111 legal bag
limM ol five with a minimum length requirecrank balls, CArolina rtgs, and sptrmer ment of 14 Inches. Softcraws are the pre. bells. Channel caHish can ~caught at forrod bolt
"night ualng praparod 1&gt;111 and cut bolt, Central Basin - YellOw perth Hllhlng Ia
. Saugeyea can bo caught on a variety ol good. Hoi spoil include 3 .to 4 mila nOrth
·artlltctat balttland mrmowa. To calch crap- of Edgew.ster tn 431o 52 loet of water, 4 to
" plea, uoe live mtmowa beneath a bollbar 5 miiH nOrth o1 Eas11ake tn 45 to 55 feet o1
or small jigs jigged vert~lly near Cranbar- wa1er, and 2 to 4 mllaa . . - t ol Falrry Maroh.
port In 48 to 53 1ea1 o1 wtllor. Smattmouth
IOUTHI!AST OHIO
baullohlng lo good 2 mllaa Dullrom Fair.' WOOdbUry Wildlife llreo Ponda - Early port to Genova tn 18 to 32 taat o1 ·
_ •• •· momlng and evening lllhermtn haVe bMn ond 1 to 2 mHoo o1 eon-ut In
· catching tarvtmouth baa on optnner1, tB to 27 leal o1 · Angtn ora uolng
· - tw111or tat II, 11111 buzz 111111.
jlgo, jigs Upped wttn min.-, perth r1ge or
Tuocorawu River- Both ohoro and bolt trolling omolt- balttl. ~ and 11111,•. ongtero In tho Coohocton ccumy oru. held trout !111\lng hu otcwtd o1 1118. Bitt
.• llaY&lt;I bMn oalohtng cllaMtl catfilh on opotallavolnaludod141o15mi1Hnonhol
111nk balta. M l n - r ~go ""' o1ao C-nd In 881o 12 foot o1 wator, and 17
', ta~ng tho occulonll oougoye.
lo 20 mlloo northtut olllohllbuloln 70 to
' F - Aun Llko - Boat angl... wor1&lt;1ng 72 loe1 of wettr. Angtero ora flllhlng 35 to
" ,tho COYH In tho uppor and of the lake are . 55 lett down, trotting jot dlvora oil planer
, -'catching lorgomoylh baa on top-wafer bolrdl, lnd dlpay dlvora with.gold, fire-dot,
. turao. A ..w 1rou1 are btlng caughl In the oMmp, and conluolon colored otlngor
· '" dHpor walor near tho dam on night opoono. Till llllltlud bog llmH lo1w0 per
crawlsrl, - · ond lllmon eggo.
day from Sop!tmber through Aprt1.
Shlda River ·- Shora anglora havo bMn
catching a vartoty olllllh In the Long Bot·

DUNBAR, W.Va. - Georgia Chambers has been fishing
all her life.
·
She occasionally catches a
few, but admits her skills as an
angler-aren 't her greatest traits.
. "I fish around a lot, but I'm
not a good fisherman at all,"
she said." I've been going since
I was a kid . I love the water
and swimming and go 1 to
Ohio and fish at my camp
near Salt Fork Lake."
Chambers' angling lu ck
took a huge rurn for the better on a recent trip to Alaska
with friends . On the final
evening of the trip, she
hooked the last fish the party
was to catch in the two-week
excursion a halibut that
weighed more than 300
pounds .
Slfe was accompanying the
Simmons family of Charleston
- Lonnie, Ralph and Phillip:
"They've been tr ir1g to get
me to go since I met them,"
she said. "I've been going to
Canada. This year, my sons
encouraged me to go. So I
went. And I'm telling you, I
lived in luxury for two weeks.
We had a great time.We got to
spend a lot of time on boats
and airplanes:'
·
Chambers said it was .cold in

Alaska, and it rained much of
the time.
"The only thing that bothered me was my hands, until I
started wearing gloves," she
said.
Her good fri~nd Larry
Gainer of Dunbar said Chambers was still walking on
clouds days after their return.
"Catching that fish was really something she was excited
about," said Gainer, who had
photographs of the catch
enlarged.
. The group was fishing ·off
Kodiak Island and was spending two-day stints fishing different areas, mostly for salmon.
" We would stay two nights
at a place and then go on," she
said. "We fished on a river
during our first stop arid didn't
do any good. Oh, we caught a
few little old fish like we have
around here.
"Then we took a little plane
out and over to one place on a
small river and got our limit of
salmon there in less than an
hour. Those fish were running
30 to 40 pounds apiece. On
that segment of our trip, we
went out in a small boat and
the guide grilled our salmon
along the river for lunch that
day. It was wonderful;' Cham-

W.Va. Fishing Report

•
'•, "',".'

.. -r•
'' ~.
I,

• • CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - The
' 1 West
VIrginia fishing
report
: :. released T~ursday by the Division

bers said.
As their trip wound down
on the final evening, the party
stopped fishing and assembled
inside the cabin of th e chartered boat. But Chambers was
rel uctant to give up, knowing
they were leaving to return
home the next morning.
So she went back out there
to try for a final catch. And
that's when she hooked the
big one that didn't get away.
"The Lord told me to go on'
back out there," she told one
of her friends.''I'm glad I did."
It took between an hourand-a-half and two hours to
land the fish, whkh had been
hooked at a depth of about 90
feet.
''I'm weaker than those men
at reeling it in," said Chambers. "So eventually I had a

' ,' BEECH FORK -

Lake Is at sum·
: ,; .mer recreation level. Lake and tall' • water
slightly murky. The camp·
area ana the upper end of
' •
Fork are still discolored. but
are catching some nice
spolled bass In
throwing spinners
the deeper part
catching
catfish on
S~LtQe11~ and hybrid
taken on jigs

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1999 BUllER, 4DR 4114, Blue, weU equipped ......J14,900
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1997 TRftDSPORT Red, greg .leather, rear H/C ............. 34k
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1998JimmY SU 4Dr Blackwilhgrag leather ............ 4x4
1997 CHRYSLER CODCORDE 54k local owner ........ $8995
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2001 GRHDD Hm SE 4dr Bright Red, PW, co Player ..........
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friend who helped me hold
the pole up. We finally got th e
fish up near the outside of the
boat.
"The guide went after a net
and when we got the fish to
the boat, he sai d he couldn 't .
use the net because it was too
big. So they got the rope and
finally got him up close
enough to throw a rope (gaff
hook) into him.
:' It was really fighting. They
had to wrestle and wrestle
with it a long time. And then,
it took four young men to lift
it up onto the deck. I was in
shock and didn 't know what
to think."
The fish was so big that a
crane had to be used to pick it
up. The fish was filleted and
vacuum-packed so it could be
shipped back to West Virginia.

NEXT DOOR TOWAL-MART
2001 (fSIIBRE CUSTOm Fadorg Demo 7,1100 miles.....- ...
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9. 2001

Ohio Fishing Report Dunbar woman·makes catch of a lifetime
COLUMBUS, 0!1lo (AP) - Tho ~
flsltlng report pro.ided by the OMslon of
Wild1ile o1 the Ohio Oepar1ment of Natural

, ..

next .
If it sounds as if Stewart is
looking for sympathy, he's not
He understands he'sjudged by
his infractions, but firmly defends
his actions.
Hit:tiJlg Gordon on pit road?
That WBS payback for the spin
Gordon sent him into minutes
before. Vehemently arguing
about the black flag? He has a
right to his opinion and believed "he w.lS being unfairly penalized.
Looking back, he . regrets
nothing. If he ~ould change it,
he'd learn to be a better liar.
"If those thing; make me a bad
guy. then yeah, I guess I'm a bad
guy;' Stewart said. "Before now,
I'd never once gotten in trouble
for defending myself or for arguing what I believe to be a valid
point. So I guess I bette~ learn to
start saying what everyone want&lt;
to 'hear rather than the truth."
Gordon, whose mouth rarely
get&lt; him in trouble, thinks that
might be a good approach for
Stewart
" Sometimes he says some
thing; that get him in trouble;•
Gordon said. "That's kind of
caught Tony. unfortunately. in a
bad situation. Tony is probably a
much better guy than people
perceive him ·to be"

thetwo is virtually nonexistent , and charming," he said. "People
"""
d h
- bl
think 1 don't care, but what
1 ony an 1 ave no pro ems
with each other, we just.race one they're missing is that I acrually
h
another hard and we've gotten care too muc inti' one ~npther a cc;mple of
"People think I'm just an
times;' Gordon said. "A guy as angry, mean person. But I'm not
good and strong as Tony, you're - I' m just frus trated because I
b
th him 1
try to make everybody happy
going to attle wi
· a ot.·
"I think we have a lot of and I can't, no matter what I do."
·
The two siruations have crealrespect for each other, and our ed a sadness Stewart can't hide
fans probably rival one another
r
th
ythin 1se"
and a mounting frustration that
•ar more an an
ge has him feeling as ifhe's walking
Then there's.Stewart's icy rela- on eggshells.
tionship with the media, spurred
When not in the car, he spends
on by his sarcasm and candor.
When Stewart believes he is r---~or-------------------------------.
being genuine and honest, he's
often received as being rude and
arrogant.
He insist&lt; he doesn't mean to
come across that way.
"The way thing; are these days 1'--..a
is you're supposed to say the
right thing; and be sweet and
AI'NIAOIIAN
charming, but I don't know anyTill ltllOIUCfS ·
thing apout raCing that's sweet

In-

Page 87

\

NASCAR

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings
schedule (winners

'sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

".. .. ai)ght

•i '
~

•••'

~

•"
"••

"

AUTOMOTIVE
,.,......,,.... ,..,... ,.,..,,....,c-••
_

mrr•• •••...

I

a~muaa

•'n•
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••

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Page 86 • ji!tunbap

~imrs-ji!trntinrl

The 2001 NASCAR Y/in&lt;lOO

Ct.!&gt;

The loud booing began the
second Tony Stewart hit the stage
at driver introductions. He
smiled and waved to the crowd,
hiding his deep disappointment
behind dark sunglaSses.
The negative reaction doesn't
compare to the vicious llooing
Jeff Gordon receives, but the
three-time Winston Cup champion deals with it Try as he
might, Stewart can't get beyond
it.
:·1 hate it and I can't understand it," he said. 'The last thing
I want to do before I get in a car
is go through driver introductions and hear half the place
booing me. It makes me wonder
what I've done to make them
hate me so much, and it's a diflicult thing to be the last thing you
hear before the race." ·

s.c (Wam BurtooJ

Sept. B - Ct-evrotet """'" Gallo
400,Richm&lt;lr&lt;J, va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshi"' :m,

MBNA.roin 400. Dover,

Oet
Sept. 30 - Protec1ion One 400,
Kansas Ci1y. Ka/1.
();t 7 - UAW-GM Ouali1y 500.
Cor\00!1j, N.C.
O::t 14 - Old Dominion 500, Mar·
tins\lille. Va
Ocl21 - EASports500, Taltadega,
Ala.
O::t 28 Ariz .

Phoenix 500, Avondale,

Nov. 4 -

Pop Secret Microwa\11!

400 , ~N .C .

Nov. 11 - Pemzoil 400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga .
Driver Standings
1. Jeff Gordon .
. . 3,708.

2. Ricky Rudd . . . . . . . . 3,366.
3. SlerHng Marlin

·. . . . 3,230.

4. Dale Jarrett . . . . . . . 3,21 5.
5. Tonv Stewart ...... 3,21 D.
6. Bobby Labonte ...... 3, 117.
7. Date Eamnardt; Jr... . 3,079.

There's a sensitive side to
Stewart, a fiery and short-fused

8. Rusty Wallace ...... 3,060.
9. Ke11in Harvick , . . . . . . 3,055.

10 . Johnny Benson . .. .. 2,964.
11 . Steve Park .
. ..
12. Mark Martin ... . ...
13 Jeff Burton ....... .
14. Bill Elliott . . . . . . .
15. Matt Kflnseth . .
.
16 . Jimmy Spencer . . .. .
17. Ward Burton . .. ....

30-year-old driver as well
known for tantrums and bad
behavior as he is for being the
b~t rookie in history and accu-

2.859.
2,842.
2.841 .
2,805.
2.n1.
2,696.
2.585.

muIating 12 career victories in
fewer than three seasons on the
circuit.

18. E11ioH Sadler .. .. . . . 2,559.
19 . Ken Schrader .. .... 2.503.
20 . Bobby Hamilton . ... 2,484.
21 . Jeremy Mayfield .... 2,483.

22. Jerry Nadeau .. . ... 2,435.
23. Terry Labonte .. . ...
24. Dave Blaney ... . ...
25. Ricky Craven .. . .. .
26. Kurt Busch ....... .
27. Michael Waltrip .....
28. Robert Pressley . . . .
29. JohnAndretti .. . ...
30. Brett Bodine .......
31 Casey Atwood . .

.

32. Todd Bodine .......
33. Mike Skinner . . . .
34. Stacy Corilpton .....
35. Joe Nemechek .
.
36. Ron. Homaday ... . .
37. Jason Leffler . ... . .
38. Mike Wallace .. . ...
39. Kevin Lepage .
40, Buckshot Jones . . . .
NOTE: Doesn't include
day's race .

2.309.
2,307.
2.280.
2,234.
2.187.
2,1 B1.
2,141 .
2,086.
2,031.
1,984.
1,862.
1,827.
1,824.
1,797.
1,721.
1,619.
1,391.
t ,297.
Satur-

much of his time at the track
these days holed up in his trailer
or motorhome, scared that when
he comes out he'll do or say
something to offend someone.
J.D. Gibbs, president of Joe
Gibbs Racing. said that might be
the best thing for him rigi:Jt now.
"We've talked to him and said
he 's taking so much heat, let's just
take a step back and let it blow
over;' Gibbs said. "And it will,
people forget if you just treat
them right and with respect.
Right now, he just has to be
careful ,"
There's a carry-over onto the
·track, where he fears aggressive
actions could get him into even
more trouble with NASCAR.
On probation for the rest of the
year - punislunent for ignoring
a black flag at Daytona in July.
then angrily confronting a
reporter and a NASCAR official
- Stewart could be suspended
for another infraction.
"I'm scared to walk through
the garage area and have one of
my shoelaces be untied because
I'm going to make somebody
mad with it," he said. "I'm scared
to death of touchingjeff Gordon
because if I do, then all his fans
who already don't like me, what
are . they going to do to me

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and driW&lt; poll! starodir9s:
Aug t9 - Pepsi 400, flrool&lt;¥1.
Moch (St""'"':J Mar'on)
Aug 25 - Sl&lt;lrpie 500, Bristol,
Tem (Tony Stewart)
Sept. 2 - Sou1hem 500. Da~ngton.

Loudon
Sept. 23 -

~

Stewart makes noise, hears plenty as well

pareuthesas,

in

There's a notion among fans ·
that he Ihd Gordon are bitter
rivals, fueled mostly by a trio of
on-track confrontations.
Stewart has been branded the
bad guy of the story line, earning
him angry receptions from Gordon loyalists. When he spun
Gordon out on pit road at Bristo! Motor Speedway in March
- an action that drew him a
$10,000 fine and six months on
probation - the hatred toWard
Stewart accelerated.
In truth, the rivalry ~tween

SENSITIVE STEWART- Tony Stewart (20) does a burn-out in
front of the grandstands after winning the NASCAR Sharpie
500 at Bristol Motor Speedway Aug. 25. The loud booing started the second Stewart hit the stage during driver introductions. He smiled and waved to the crowd despite it, hiding his
deep disappointment behind dark sunglasses. (AP)

IS 'IDUI

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WILDERNESS AT
REPLACEMENT ·
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P155/80A13
P175/BOR13 ................... $31.00
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Reooo,....

. .,will arrive sometime early Friday attar·
· noon. This lake Is also a good place to fish
· · for channet catfish, smallmouth bass and
,.. ••bluegill as the water temperature drops. ·

Chan,.. caHtllh I rom 10 1o 20 inchee can
"'be caught using llhrtmp, night crawlers and
chicken livers fished on the

1om area of Mojgo Courtly. Moot llbundant
are baa on top.wtllor kno onctca1fisl1 on
cut boila.
OHIO IIIVER ·

CEHTIIAL OHIO
ANTRIM LAKE - Thio 40-acre lake in
Antrim Park In northern Columbus wit! be
.-·,stockod with approximately 2,500 13-inch
raln - 1rout on Friday, Sept 7th. Th1a
stocking is open to all anglers. The lruck

10

bottofn.

For

Belto.ille &amp; Racine - Tho river at
thMe 1WO poc1o II o1 normal and clar11y. Hybrid llripod baa aro being caught
on tead-haadod )iga,- calfish are t&gt;tUng liVe bal1, bluegll, and goldlioh.
LAKE ERIE
Western Basin - Yellow perch continues

to be the matn meal Of! Westem l:ako Erie.
Fishing stowed a bit OVM th' week@ncl with

easterty winds. However, many anglens
sHII caught fisn with good numberS o1 ttmM
catches. Mllll\' good tocatiooo are being
reported Including a mile north ot the TOle-

. smallmouth bess, try using crank baits end
'" tubas . J!fuegitts may be caught. on night
. .c rawleroau-- by a bollbar. No boats
are pennlllod on thi11ako.
,
'"BUCKEYE LAKE - Hybrid s1rtped bass, .

do Water Intake, SOUiheast and no&lt;1heast
o1 Ketleys Island, A, B and c cans o1 the
Aoef Complex, Ra1tlosnake and GrM&lt;t
Islands, ncf1h o1 Wast Sistot, off C8dar
Point A lillie farther ..... best locatiooo

.. crappie, saugeye and largemouth bass

are off just Old Woman Creek and CranberTy Creek, and .3 to 4 miles ncl1h ol
Lorain. Uoe1ake shiners an pen:h apr&amp;aders fished on or near bottom. walleye fish.

fishtng Improves this mon1h as wa1er tempera1uros decHne. Hybrid s1ripefs can be
1.. caught using chicken livers fished on the
" bcHom or trolling lml1a11on shad crank baits
.••. parttcutarty In the no wake zone between
, Cranbeny Maroh and 8m Island. la'IIO· mouth baas can be caughl around Gran": bony Maroh and Maple Swamp _using

ing romaine lair. Smallmooth baa are
beginning to 1um on with good numberS
now being landed around Kelleys Island
and the Baas tSiando. The&lt;e 111 legal bag
limM ol five with a minimum length requirecrank balls, CArolina rtgs, and sptrmer ment of 14 Inches. Softcraws are the pre. bells. Channel caHish can ~caught at forrod bolt
"night ualng praparod 1&gt;111 and cut bolt, Central Basin - YellOw perth Hllhlng Ia
. Saugeyea can bo caught on a variety ol good. Hoi spoil include 3 .to 4 mila nOrth
·artlltctat balttland mrmowa. To calch crap- of Edgew.ster tn 431o 52 loet of water, 4 to
" plea, uoe live mtmowa beneath a bollbar 5 miiH nOrth o1 Eas11ake tn 45 to 55 feet o1
or small jigs jigged vert~lly near Cranbar- wa1er, and 2 to 4 mllaa . . - t ol Falrry Maroh.
port In 48 to 53 1ea1 o1 wtllor. Smattmouth
IOUTHI!AST OHIO
baullohlng lo good 2 mllaa Dullrom Fair.' WOOdbUry Wildlife llreo Ponda - Early port to Genova tn 18 to 32 taat o1 ·
_ •• •· momlng and evening lllhermtn haVe bMn ond 1 to 2 mHoo o1 eon-ut In
· catching tarvtmouth baa on optnner1, tB to 27 leal o1 · Angtn ora uolng
· - tw111or tat II, 11111 buzz 111111.
jlgo, jigs Upped wttn min.-, perth r1ge or
Tuocorawu River- Both ohoro and bolt trolling omolt- balttl. ~ and 11111,•. ongtero In tho Coohocton ccumy oru. held trout !111\lng hu otcwtd o1 1118. Bitt
.• llaY&lt;I bMn oalohtng cllaMtl catfilh on opotallavolnaludod141o15mi1Hnonhol
111nk balta. M l n - r ~go ""' o1ao C-nd In 881o 12 foot o1 wator, and 17
', ta~ng tho occulonll oougoye.
lo 20 mlloo northtut olllohllbuloln 70 to
' F - Aun Llko - Boat angl... wor1&lt;1ng 72 loe1 of wettr. Angtero ora flllhlng 35 to
" ,tho COYH In tho uppor and of the lake are . 55 lett down, trotting jot dlvora oil planer
, -'catching lorgomoylh baa on top-wafer bolrdl, lnd dlpay dlvora with.gold, fire-dot,
. turao. A ..w 1rou1 are btlng caughl In the oMmp, and conluolon colored otlngor
· '" dHpor walor near tho dam on night opoono. Till llllltlud bog llmH lo1w0 per
crawlsrl, - · ond lllmon eggo.
day from Sop!tmber through Aprt1.
Shlda River ·- Shora anglora havo bMn
catching a vartoty olllllh In the Long Bot·

DUNBAR, W.Va. - Georgia Chambers has been fishing
all her life.
·
She occasionally catches a
few, but admits her skills as an
angler-aren 't her greatest traits.
. "I fish around a lot, but I'm
not a good fisherman at all,"
she said." I've been going since
I was a kid . I love the water
and swimming and go 1 to
Ohio and fish at my camp
near Salt Fork Lake."
Chambers' angling lu ck
took a huge rurn for the better on a recent trip to Alaska
with friends . On the final
evening of the trip, she
hooked the last fish the party
was to catch in the two-week
excursion a halibut that
weighed more than 300
pounds .
Slfe was accompanying the
Simmons family of Charleston
- Lonnie, Ralph and Phillip:
"They've been tr ir1g to get
me to go since I met them,"
she said. "I've been going to
Canada. This year, my sons
encouraged me to go. So I
went. And I'm telling you, I
lived in luxury for two weeks.
We had a great time.We got to
spend a lot of time on boats
and airplanes:'
·
Chambers said it was .cold in

Alaska, and it rained much of
the time.
"The only thing that bothered me was my hands, until I
started wearing gloves," she
said.
Her good fri~nd Larry
Gainer of Dunbar said Chambers was still walking on
clouds days after their return.
"Catching that fish was really something she was excited
about," said Gainer, who had
photographs of the catch
enlarged.
. The group was fishing ·off
Kodiak Island and was spending two-day stints fishing different areas, mostly for salmon.
" We would stay two nights
at a place and then go on," she
said. "We fished on a river
during our first stop arid didn't
do any good. Oh, we caught a
few little old fish like we have
around here.
"Then we took a little plane
out and over to one place on a
small river and got our limit of
salmon there in less than an
hour. Those fish were running
30 to 40 pounds apiece. On
that segment of our trip, we
went out in a small boat and
the guide grilled our salmon
along the river for lunch that
day. It was wonderful;' Cham-

W.Va. Fishing Report

•
'•, "',".'

.. -r•
'' ~.
I,

• • CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - The
' 1 West
VIrginia fishing
report
: :. released T~ursday by the Division

bers said.
As their trip wound down
on the final evening, the party
stopped fishing and assembled
inside the cabin of th e chartered boat. But Chambers was
rel uctant to give up, knowing
they were leaving to return
home the next morning.
So she went back out there
to try for a final catch. And
that's when she hooked the
big one that didn't get away.
"The Lord told me to go on'
back out there," she told one
of her friends.''I'm glad I did."
It took between an hourand-a-half and two hours to
land the fish, whkh had been
hooked at a depth of about 90
feet.
''I'm weaker than those men
at reeling it in," said Chambers. "So eventually I had a

' ,' BEECH FORK -

Lake Is at sum·
: ,; .mer recreation level. Lake and tall' • water
slightly murky. The camp·
area ana the upper end of
' •
Fork are still discolored. but
are catching some nice
spolled bass In
throwing spinners
the deeper part
catching
catfish on
S~LtQe11~ and hybrid
taken on jigs

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..............i ••••••

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friend who helped me hold
the pole up. We finally got th e
fish up near the outside of the
boat.
"The guide went after a net
and when we got the fish to
the boat, he sai d he couldn 't .
use the net because it was too
big. So they got the rope and
finally got him up close
enough to throw a rope (gaff
hook) into him.
:' It was really fighting. They
had to wrestle and wrestle
with it a long time. And then,
it took four young men to lift
it up onto the deck. I was in
shock and didn 't know what
to think."
The fish was so big that a
crane had to be used to pick it
up. The fish was filleted and
vacuum-packed so it could be
shipped back to West Virginia.

NEXT DOOR TOWAL-MART
2001 (fSIIBRE CUSTOm Fadorg Demo 7,1100 miles.....- ...
IIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIIII~IIIIIIM

• ·•-of Natural Resources:

SIW II 01 WI. Ffil COMI'Uff IIITAIIJ

P1 85/80A14 BLK •
P195/60A14 BLK .......$50.99
P185/70R14 AWL ...... $48.99
P195/70R14 AWL ...... $51.99
P205/70R14 AWL ...... $54.99
P215teOR14 AWL ...... $57.99

9. 2001

Ohio Fishing Report Dunbar woman·makes catch of a lifetime
COLUMBUS, 0!1lo (AP) - Tho ~
flsltlng report pro.ided by the OMslon of
Wild1ile o1 the Ohio Oepar1ment of Natural

, ..

next .
If it sounds as if Stewart is
looking for sympathy, he's not
He understands he'sjudged by
his infractions, but firmly defends
his actions.
Hit:tiJlg Gordon on pit road?
That WBS payback for the spin
Gordon sent him into minutes
before. Vehemently arguing
about the black flag? He has a
right to his opinion and believed "he w.lS being unfairly penalized.
Looking back, he . regrets
nothing. If he ~ould change it,
he'd learn to be a better liar.
"If those thing; make me a bad
guy. then yeah, I guess I'm a bad
guy;' Stewart said. "Before now,
I'd never once gotten in trouble
for defending myself or for arguing what I believe to be a valid
point. So I guess I bette~ learn to
start saying what everyone want&lt;
to 'hear rather than the truth."
Gordon, whose mouth rarely
get&lt; him in trouble, thinks that
might be a good approach for
Stewart
" Sometimes he says some
thing; that get him in trouble;•
Gordon said. "That's kind of
caught Tony. unfortunately. in a
bad situation. Tony is probably a
much better guy than people
perceive him ·to be"

thetwo is virtually nonexistent , and charming," he said. "People
"""
d h
- bl
think 1 don't care, but what
1 ony an 1 ave no pro ems
with each other, we just.race one they're missing is that I acrually
h
another hard and we've gotten care too muc inti' one ~npther a cc;mple of
"People think I'm just an
times;' Gordon said. "A guy as angry, mean person. But I'm not
good and strong as Tony, you're - I' m just frus trated because I
b
th him 1
try to make everybody happy
going to attle wi
· a ot.·
"I think we have a lot of and I can't, no matter what I do."
·
The two siruations have crealrespect for each other, and our ed a sadness Stewart can't hide
fans probably rival one another
r
th
ythin 1se"
and a mounting frustration that
•ar more an an
ge has him feeling as ifhe's walking
Then there's.Stewart's icy rela- on eggshells.
tionship with the media, spurred
When not in the car, he spends
on by his sarcasm and candor.
When Stewart believes he is r---~or-------------------------------.
being genuine and honest, he's
often received as being rude and
arrogant.
He insist&lt; he doesn't mean to
come across that way.
"The way thing; are these days 1'--..a
is you're supposed to say the
right thing; and be sweet and
AI'NIAOIIAN
charming, but I don't know anyTill ltllOIUCfS ·
thing apout raCing that's sweet

In-

Page 87

\

NASCAR

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings
schedule (winners

'sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

".. .. ai)ght

•i '
~

•••'

~

•"
"••

"

AUTOMOTIVE
,.,......,,.... ,..,... ,.,..,,....,c-••
_

mrr•• •••...

I

a~muaa

•'n•
'

f,

,.

••

•

�Page 88 • &amp;unbap t!:imtf -iotntintl ·

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv- -

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Opener could be big downer for Patriots, Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) -Fat the car," }&gt;atriots linebacker fumbled 17 times, most in the
"Before the game, I'D give their season with a drubbing by
the .Patriots, it's pretty straight- Bryan Cox said. " In order to NFL.
him a hug," Milloy ~1id. " 1hope .the Cleveland Browns in the
forward: Stop Corey Dillon and beat them, you've got to stop
" If we let him get going, he I get a chance to blitz him one inaugural game at Paul Brown
they can stop aU those worries him. It's just that simple."
' can be very productive," Milloy or two times and the outcome is Stadium. Fans immediately
about another demoralizing 0He's· right. Even thoug1• Dil- said. "Our emphasis is to try to in my fa\!(lr."
abandoned them to an 0-6 start.
for-September.
lon hJd his best season yet in get to him early and try to rattle
While the two high school
The Bengals have a chance
It's pretty simple for the Ben- 2000, the Bengals finished with him like any quarterback."
teammates get reunited, Kima for a decent start this year gals, too: win or else.
another 4-12 record because he
Milloy and Kima are friends will get ac'luainted with what four of the first seven opponents
A lot of optimism will get was the only threat in a one- &amp;om their grade school days. it's like to lead the NFL's most had losing records last year. Of
ground into the new Kentucky dimensional offense.
They played on the same high woeful team. The seasori opener . course, they've had similar
oluegrass at Paul Bt:Own StadiThf Patriots want to let Kitna school team in Tacoma, Wash:, didn't even sell. out il) Cincin- chanc~ in the past I 0 years, and
um on Sunday when two decide the game. In a dozen and are looking forward to play- · nati, where fans expect an I 1th blown ·them aU.
downtrodden teams line up and sl;lrts for Seattle last season, he ing against each other for the straight losing season. ·· ·
A lot is riding on the first
find out if there's any reason to threw 19 interceptions and first time.
Last year, the Bengals opened game.
believe that things have
•
•
changed.
"Every year, everybody starts
offthinking, 'Why not? We have
jwt as good a chance as everybody else,"' Patriots safety
Lawyer Milloy said. " It's definitely a big point of emphasis,
trying to get that first win to just
get into the race. This is what it's
all about."
The Bengals are at it, too. The
NFL's worst team since 1991
has added an unfamiliar word to
its daily vocabulary - coach
Dick LeBeau has started referring to the upcoming "championship season."
"There's a purpose for us
Gallipolis, Ohio
252 Upper River Road
using that word," LeBeau said.
"It is a championship season."
THERE ' S ON L Y ONE
J The playoff musings sure
seem amusing, coming from
these two teams.
The Patriots are in a symmetrical slide.Their total number of
wins has dropped &amp;om 11 in
1996 to 10, 9, 8 and 5 over the
last four seasons. The Bengals
haven't had a winning season
since 1990, let alone a champi..
onship season, and have won a
total of I 1 games in the past
( 0) 1001 Model
(?) 1001 Dako! ·
three years.
fUJI Size'
RAM
-....
ckups 1e It In • •--'Pickups
left
In
stock.
I
......,.'
Last year, New England lost
Some unlta priced
..,. Some unite priced ....
its first four games, setting up a
JilL $1.500 I!&gt;E.LOW
...oll...o. $150.0 BELOW a.,
lost season. The Bengals went 0""",..1NVOICE.I
- ,...INVOIC~I
3 in September,. which was
nothing new - they're 7-31 in
""(
the month since 1999, setting
U) 1001 Dodl&amp;e
(I) 1001 Jeep
bp a lost decade.
uraJ\Ilo left In Stoc
WranQ!er left In stocl(.
One of them will get a tem$1500BELOW
$250BELOW
porary reprieve this year.
INVOICE!
INVOICEI
"Both teams are looking at
'
each other and thinking this is a
great opportunity to start the
sea59n With a win," Bengais·
linebacker Brian Simmons said.
"We feel we've gotten better,
but until-yo•u-re:lp-sc&gt;me-benefit,- -H- - j
it's just you
it. Ybu 've
got to win to assure yourself of

••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••

Dodge~Diffurent.

it."

800-446-0842

Jeep

WE HAVE 29 PRE .. OWNED SUV'S
.
.

•

VAWEI
IN STOCK AND READY FOR lltU\EDIATE DELIVERY.
Jeep Cherokees, Ford.Explorers, S-10 Blazers, Durango's, and MORE!

'
1l PRE·OWNED MINI VANS

18 PRE.. OWNED PICKUPS

IN STOCII AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! ."
. Town 81 Country, Caravans, Windst&amp;rs, Astro's :

'mSTOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVEAYI
Big Ones, Little Ones, 4x4's, 4x2's,

And Morel

We Have Them Alii

West Virginia

suspends

rugby team
MORGANTOWN, WVa.
(AP) - Citing allegations of
inappropriate behavior that one
official says "have been building .
over time;· West Virginia University on Friday suspended its
30-mernber Rugby Club.
The club cannot meet, recruit
new members or engage in any
social or competitive activities
\mtil further notice.
Based on the allegations of
other students, school officials
decided to investigate the club's
activities and ·membership, said
Ken Gray, vice president for
student affairs.
The club's officers and their
faculty adviser have been notified of the suspension.
WVU officials would not
identifY either the student who
serves as president or the adviser, who was out of town Friday.
School spokeswoman Becky
Lo&amp;tead would not elaborate
on the accusations against the
team but said some stem for the
club's annual spring, tournament in Morgantown.
"The
tournament,
we
understand, may have involved
some inappropriate actions
before, during or after;' she said.
"We just need to look into all
the matters that have been

-toftgUNI-

for OliO of- wnlcfeo?
Call lor tho ~.. of tho
Unit (IOOJ1182. then go

Owner Mike 'Northup

toourwbaltell

www.norrtanorthupdodge.com

and LIM our MtY flgu,.. cek:ui•IOrt

Manager Pete Somerville

Sales Team: AI Durst Neal ~ John .fsundera Joe TUlia Larry Pierce
Jamie Adamson Sherman Green Jimmy HamiHon

. d"

'·

'I

C1
Sunday. September 1. lOOt · :

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Paper trail of
names gets
wife curious
DEAR ABBY: I have
been married for 17 years. I
recently foun4 slips of paper
with women's names and
telephone numbers among
receipts my husband asked
me to file . When I asked
him who these women
were, he claims he doesn't
know and I should shut up.
He frequently leaves the
house two to four hours at a
time. Also, money is missing
our joint bank
from
account.
Abby, he swears he is noc
cheating. Is he?- WANTING TO KNOW THE
TRUTH IN RHODE
ISLAND
DEAR
WANTING:
• Only hef can answer · that.
Whethe~JOr not the prol;llem
· is another" woman., something is up, and he 's certainly not leveling with you.
Offer him the option of
talking things out with a
marriage counselor. If he
refuses , talk to a lawyer
about protecting yourself
before· any more assets disappear from your joint
account.
DEAR ABBY: The letter
from "No Name, No

.

.

dad and
stepmother, hit me hard. I
could have written that
same letter . verbatim 20
years ago when I was 15.
· My mother, too, gave my
father custody of my
younger brother and sister
and me. Our dad had also ·
remarried. We lived with
him and our stepmother.
She was fixated on our .
behavior with regard to
household chores, meals and
neatness.
. Unfortunately, our father
1hought we were lying
:when we described the
beatings, severe punishments
· and emotional abuse that
increased over the years usually when he was absent.
bur stepmother was a
~·yeller." Dad always took
her directions and advice.
We kids were too scared out'
of our wits to talk in detail
~o our natural mother or
pther relatives, who suspect'~ d what was going on but
)lever took action.
. It has taken years of ther. apy to recover from wha~
happened to us . I had to forgive myself for being unable
~o protect my brother and ·
siner, but I finally became
ihe "fighter" in the house
on long crusade to get my
father to wake up. At last he
did - but not until serious
aamage had been done . .
: Please urge "No Name" to
!tart talking and KEEP
l'ALKING until someone
listens! Her mother and
grandmother also have a
responsibility to step in
without hesitation. They
~ust be asked to act on
. behalf of her, her brother
and sister. ·she should be
specific about what is going
on at home, even if she's
scared to "tell." She was very
· brave to write that letter,
and that's exactly ·the kind .
of courage it takes to get
through stuff like this. ONCE A '~NO-NAME"
l'OO
IV,i!4,ll .ONCE A NONA;MJi: Well said.

"'

.

BREAK TIME - A Shay steam locomotive stops at the Cass. W.Va. train station to discharge passengers completeing its scenic round trip excursion to
Bald Knob. The authentic old lumber town of Cass Includes a c'ountry store, restaurant, museum and 13 company town cabins which can be rented. (AP)
•

W.Uz. offirs variety .of
rail mountain, riverside
rail excursions

~IONS

•
.BY JENI'jiFER BUNDY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER

HEAT
BRIDGE,
W.Va.
Seven-yearold Nichol as
was mesme r-

it was hard to tell what he
star ing at.
It could have bee n the •
rails sliding away benea th
him , Shavers Fork flow in g low over a rocky bed
on his left, or the rhodo dendron and wildflowers
blooming
along
the
tracks.
Or he co uld have been
watching for the . black

Buckner
ized.
Sitting on a cooler ln
t~e en!lineer's cab with
Is · ace "'p ressed dose to
th·e ttain's front window,
Plelise see Rail. Cl
1------~------------------------·--~

-~,--.-~~-~~i~~~~~ No Phone," the 15-

a

. raiSe •

~'

'

•• • ••• • •• •••

•

As for how the game will play
out, everyone!s thinking the
same thing. Dillon will determine it.
The slashing, stiff-arming
running back set an NFL record
with 278 yards in a game last
season and established a Bengals
season record with 1,435 overall. He's the focus of a revamped
offense featuring Jon Kitna at
quarterback.
"He's the motor that drives

· Celebrations begin on C2

"The first game of the season
is always different;' Kitna said.
"Teams are a little more amped
up. The speed cranks up two,
three or four times what It was
in the preseason . Really, I don't
know if the intensity for the
home opener is matched
throughout the season, except
for when the playoffi start.
"This is special, but at th~
same time, it's not a make-orbreak game."
Oh, yes, it is.

~ I -.....,

-

Inside:
'

&gt;

BLOWING STEAM - A Shaysteam locomotive returns to the Cass, W.Va. trl!ln station
after climbing Bald Knob above the old lumber town of Cass. The Cass Scenic Railroad
Is the most well-known of West VIrginia's rail excursions, operating on the eastern slope
of the state's mountains, In an-·area known as the Potomac Highlands. (AP)

Rail.excursions .in.Vlkst Virginia
hontas Counly.
Contact: http://www.neume·
S~veral rail excursions ·
dla.neti 7/8cassrr/ or phone 304·
operate in West Virginia. 456-4300 or.1·800-CALL-WVA.
Food aitd Lodging: The town of
Excursions are o(fered .by:
Cass
Includes a country store,
CABS SCENIC RAILROAD
restaurant
and museum. Thirteen
STATE PARK
This authentic remnant of a log· former company houses are avail·
glng train cllrnlls from the former able for dilJ)I and weekly rental.
lumber town ot Caas to West Vir· Lodging al86·lt·avallable at eever·
glnla's second-highest peak, Bald al nearby "l9tels, bed and break·
lasts or cabins. See· www.poca·
Knob, elevauon 4,842 teet.
Shay steam loeomotlves pull hontascountywv.com for a com·
plete listing. ,
open-air and covered cars.
SChedule: Dally through Sept.
DUAellf a GREENBRIER
3. Friday through Sunday In SepVALLEY RAILROAD
tember and some weekends In
The
railroad offers three sepa,October. An ail-day train runs from·
Casa to Spruce on Sept. 24 and rate trips In Pocahontas and Aan·
dolph counties. ·
Oct. I .
• The Tygart Alver Flyer offers
Cost: AduHs, $13·$21. Children,
5·12, $8-$13. The ail-day train to eight trips, ranging from a two·
hour, 24-mlle ride to a 6.5-hour,
Spruce costs $40 per person.
location: Casa, on state Route 85-mlle trip.
66 and state Acute 28192 In Poca·
Schedule: Saturdays and. Sun·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

days, May through October. Satur·
days only on the '(!leeks of Sept. 8
and 15. Tre wlnfer sc;hedule has
not been set. ·
Cost: Adults, $15·$21 . Over 60,
$13·$18. Children. 3to 11 . $9·$13.
Reserved seats on the observe·
lion-lounge car are $25·$32.
.
• The Cheat Mountain Salamander offers eight trips from three
departure points, all hugging the
Shaver's Fork of the Cheat Alver
and visiting the High Falls of
Cheat. The shortest trip Is 28 miles
and takea 2.5 hours. The longest
Is 88 miles and takes 8.5 hours.
Schedule: Wednesday through
Sunday, May through LabOr Day.
Weekends ·until Sept. 23. Wednes·
day through Sunday until the end
of October. The winter schedule
has not been set.
Cost: Adults, $15·$26. Over 60, .

Pleese see W.Va.. Cl

KEE!liNG WATCH- Sisters Shelby Harman, 7, left.' and
Julia Harman, 4, of Flemington, W.Va., watch the track
ahead looking for possible deer or an occasional .bear
while riding the Cheat Mountain Salamander rail excursion. The Salamander runs eight trips of various lengths
from tl\ree departure points and travels along the
Shaver's Fork of the Cheat River in West Virginia. (AP)

Cou le owns one of only a f~w
Mo el T Ford pick-up convertible
The pickup, b earing the
license "Roy's '27" is just
POMEROY - If you see one of several antique ·cars
a black and yellow 1927 occupying the garage. at the
Model T Ford pickup truck• Grueser hom e on Rock·convertible - that's right, a
springs, Road .
convertible
crumng
Owned · by the Gruesers
down the road some sunny
for a dozen years or so, the
afternoon, give a wave.
It's probably Roy and pickup was in good shape
Opal Grueser out for a when they bought it. Roy
said it needed no cosmetic
drive. '
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
OVP NEWS STAFF

work at all and required
only some
mechanical
adjustments . It cruises along
about 35 miles an hour and
has a top speed of about 40,
typical of most Model T .
Fords.
.,
The
couple
recently
PICKUP
CONVERTIBU:
-Opal
and Roy Grueser of Pomeroy own .
transported the ·antique
truck to New Philadelphia one of only a few 1927 Model T Ford pickup truck convertibles. At
the recent Model T Ford Club conv,ention held In l)lew Philadelphia,.
there were 312 vehicles with only four being pickup convertibles.
Ph11e ...·Pick-up, Cl

•'

I

•

�Page 88 • &amp;unbap t!:imtf -iotntintl ·

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv- -

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

Opener could be big downer for Patriots, Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) -Fat the car," }&gt;atriots linebacker fumbled 17 times, most in the
"Before the game, I'D give their season with a drubbing by
the .Patriots, it's pretty straight- Bryan Cox said. " In order to NFL.
him a hug," Milloy ~1id. " 1hope .the Cleveland Browns in the
forward: Stop Corey Dillon and beat them, you've got to stop
" If we let him get going, he I get a chance to blitz him one inaugural game at Paul Brown
they can stop aU those worries him. It's just that simple."
' can be very productive," Milloy or two times and the outcome is Stadium. Fans immediately
about another demoralizing 0He's· right. Even thoug1• Dil- said. "Our emphasis is to try to in my fa\!(lr."
abandoned them to an 0-6 start.
for-September.
lon hJd his best season yet in get to him early and try to rattle
While the two high school
The Bengals have a chance
It's pretty simple for the Ben- 2000, the Bengals finished with him like any quarterback."
teammates get reunited, Kima for a decent start this year gals, too: win or else.
another 4-12 record because he
Milloy and Kima are friends will get ac'luainted with what four of the first seven opponents
A lot of optimism will get was the only threat in a one- &amp;om their grade school days. it's like to lead the NFL's most had losing records last year. Of
ground into the new Kentucky dimensional offense.
They played on the same high woeful team. The seasori opener . course, they've had similar
oluegrass at Paul Bt:Own StadiThf Patriots want to let Kitna school team in Tacoma, Wash:, didn't even sell. out il) Cincin- chanc~ in the past I 0 years, and
um on Sunday when two decide the game. In a dozen and are looking forward to play- · nati, where fans expect an I 1th blown ·them aU.
downtrodden teams line up and sl;lrts for Seattle last season, he ing against each other for the straight losing season. ·· ·
A lot is riding on the first
find out if there's any reason to threw 19 interceptions and first time.
Last year, the Bengals opened game.
believe that things have
•
•
changed.
"Every year, everybody starts
offthinking, 'Why not? We have
jwt as good a chance as everybody else,"' Patriots safety
Lawyer Milloy said. " It's definitely a big point of emphasis,
trying to get that first win to just
get into the race. This is what it's
all about."
The Bengals are at it, too. The
NFL's worst team since 1991
has added an unfamiliar word to
its daily vocabulary - coach
Dick LeBeau has started referring to the upcoming "championship season."
"There's a purpose for us
Gallipolis, Ohio
252 Upper River Road
using that word," LeBeau said.
"It is a championship season."
THERE ' S ON L Y ONE
J The playoff musings sure
seem amusing, coming from
these two teams.
The Patriots are in a symmetrical slide.Their total number of
wins has dropped &amp;om 11 in
1996 to 10, 9, 8 and 5 over the
last four seasons. The Bengals
haven't had a winning season
since 1990, let alone a champi..
onship season, and have won a
total of I 1 games in the past
( 0) 1001 Model
(?) 1001 Dako! ·
three years.
fUJI Size'
RAM
-....
ckups 1e It In • •--'Pickups
left
In
stock.
I
......,.'
Last year, New England lost
Some unlta priced
..,. Some unite priced ....
its first four games, setting up a
JilL $1.500 I!&gt;E.LOW
...oll...o. $150.0 BELOW a.,
lost season. The Bengals went 0""",..1NVOICE.I
- ,...INVOIC~I
3 in September,. which was
nothing new - they're 7-31 in
""(
the month since 1999, setting
U) 1001 Dodl&amp;e
(I) 1001 Jeep
bp a lost decade.
uraJ\Ilo left In Stoc
WranQ!er left In stocl(.
One of them will get a tem$1500BELOW
$250BELOW
porary reprieve this year.
INVOICE!
INVOICEI
"Both teams are looking at
'
each other and thinking this is a
great opportunity to start the
sea59n With a win," Bengais·
linebacker Brian Simmons said.
"We feel we've gotten better,
but until-yo•u-re:lp-sc&gt;me-benefit,- -H- - j
it's just you
it. Ybu 've
got to win to assure yourself of

••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••

Dodge~Diffurent.

it."

800-446-0842

Jeep

WE HAVE 29 PRE .. OWNED SUV'S
.
.

•

VAWEI
IN STOCK AND READY FOR lltU\EDIATE DELIVERY.
Jeep Cherokees, Ford.Explorers, S-10 Blazers, Durango's, and MORE!

'
1l PRE·OWNED MINI VANS

18 PRE.. OWNED PICKUPS

IN STOCII AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! ."
. Town 81 Country, Caravans, Windst&amp;rs, Astro's :

'mSTOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVEAYI
Big Ones, Little Ones, 4x4's, 4x2's,

And Morel

We Have Them Alii

West Virginia

suspends

rugby team
MORGANTOWN, WVa.
(AP) - Citing allegations of
inappropriate behavior that one
official says "have been building .
over time;· West Virginia University on Friday suspended its
30-mernber Rugby Club.
The club cannot meet, recruit
new members or engage in any
social or competitive activities
\mtil further notice.
Based on the allegations of
other students, school officials
decided to investigate the club's
activities and ·membership, said
Ken Gray, vice president for
student affairs.
The club's officers and their
faculty adviser have been notified of the suspension.
WVU officials would not
identifY either the student who
serves as president or the adviser, who was out of town Friday.
School spokeswoman Becky
Lo&amp;tead would not elaborate
on the accusations against the
team but said some stem for the
club's annual spring, tournament in Morgantown.
"The
tournament,
we
understand, may have involved
some inappropriate actions
before, during or after;' she said.
"We just need to look into all
the matters that have been

-toftgUNI-

for OliO of- wnlcfeo?
Call lor tho ~.. of tho
Unit (IOOJ1182. then go

Owner Mike 'Northup

toourwbaltell

www.norrtanorthupdodge.com

and LIM our MtY flgu,.. cek:ui•IOrt

Manager Pete Somerville

Sales Team: AI Durst Neal ~ John .fsundera Joe TUlia Larry Pierce
Jamie Adamson Sherman Green Jimmy HamiHon

. d"

'·

'I

C1
Sunday. September 1. lOOt · :

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Paper trail of
names gets
wife curious
DEAR ABBY: I have
been married for 17 years. I
recently foun4 slips of paper
with women's names and
telephone numbers among
receipts my husband asked
me to file . When I asked
him who these women
were, he claims he doesn't
know and I should shut up.
He frequently leaves the
house two to four hours at a
time. Also, money is missing
our joint bank
from
account.
Abby, he swears he is noc
cheating. Is he?- WANTING TO KNOW THE
TRUTH IN RHODE
ISLAND
DEAR
WANTING:
• Only hef can answer · that.
Whethe~JOr not the prol;llem
· is another" woman., something is up, and he 's certainly not leveling with you.
Offer him the option of
talking things out with a
marriage counselor. If he
refuses , talk to a lawyer
about protecting yourself
before· any more assets disappear from your joint
account.
DEAR ABBY: The letter
from "No Name, No

.

.

dad and
stepmother, hit me hard. I
could have written that
same letter . verbatim 20
years ago when I was 15.
· My mother, too, gave my
father custody of my
younger brother and sister
and me. Our dad had also ·
remarried. We lived with
him and our stepmother.
She was fixated on our .
behavior with regard to
household chores, meals and
neatness.
. Unfortunately, our father
1hought we were lying
:when we described the
beatings, severe punishments
· and emotional abuse that
increased over the years usually when he was absent.
bur stepmother was a
~·yeller." Dad always took
her directions and advice.
We kids were too scared out'
of our wits to talk in detail
~o our natural mother or
pther relatives, who suspect'~ d what was going on but
)lever took action.
. It has taken years of ther. apy to recover from wha~
happened to us . I had to forgive myself for being unable
~o protect my brother and ·
siner, but I finally became
ihe "fighter" in the house
on long crusade to get my
father to wake up. At last he
did - but not until serious
aamage had been done . .
: Please urge "No Name" to
!tart talking and KEEP
l'ALKING until someone
listens! Her mother and
grandmother also have a
responsibility to step in
without hesitation. They
~ust be asked to act on
. behalf of her, her brother
and sister. ·she should be
specific about what is going
on at home, even if she's
scared to "tell." She was very
· brave to write that letter,
and that's exactly ·the kind .
of courage it takes to get
through stuff like this. ONCE A '~NO-NAME"
l'OO
IV,i!4,ll .ONCE A NONA;MJi: Well said.

"'

.

BREAK TIME - A Shay steam locomotive stops at the Cass. W.Va. train station to discharge passengers completeing its scenic round trip excursion to
Bald Knob. The authentic old lumber town of Cass Includes a c'ountry store, restaurant, museum and 13 company town cabins which can be rented. (AP)
•

W.Uz. offirs variety .of
rail mountain, riverside
rail excursions

~IONS

•
.BY JENI'jiFER BUNDY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER

HEAT
BRIDGE,
W.Va.
Seven-yearold Nichol as
was mesme r-

it was hard to tell what he
star ing at.
It could have bee n the •
rails sliding away benea th
him , Shavers Fork flow in g low over a rocky bed
on his left, or the rhodo dendron and wildflowers
blooming
along
the
tracks.
Or he co uld have been
watching for the . black

Buckner
ized.
Sitting on a cooler ln
t~e en!lineer's cab with
Is · ace "'p ressed dose to
th·e ttain's front window,
Plelise see Rail. Cl
1------~------------------------·--~

-~,--.-~~-~~i~~~~~ No Phone," the 15-

a

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•

As for how the game will play
out, everyone!s thinking the
same thing. Dillon will determine it.
The slashing, stiff-arming
running back set an NFL record
with 278 yards in a game last
season and established a Bengals
season record with 1,435 overall. He's the focus of a revamped
offense featuring Jon Kitna at
quarterback.
"He's the motor that drives

· Celebrations begin on C2

"The first game of the season
is always different;' Kitna said.
"Teams are a little more amped
up. The speed cranks up two,
three or four times what It was
in the preseason . Really, I don't
know if the intensity for the
home opener is matched
throughout the season, except
for when the playoffi start.
"This is special, but at th~
same time, it's not a make-orbreak game."
Oh, yes, it is.

~ I -.....,

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Inside:
'

&gt;

BLOWING STEAM - A Shaysteam locomotive returns to the Cass, W.Va. trl!ln station
after climbing Bald Knob above the old lumber town of Cass. The Cass Scenic Railroad
Is the most well-known of West VIrginia's rail excursions, operating on the eastern slope
of the state's mountains, In an-·area known as the Potomac Highlands. (AP)

Rail.excursions .in.Vlkst Virginia
hontas Counly.
Contact: http://www.neume·
S~veral rail excursions ·
dla.neti 7/8cassrr/ or phone 304·
operate in West Virginia. 456-4300 or.1·800-CALL-WVA.
Food aitd Lodging: The town of
Excursions are o(fered .by:
Cass
Includes a country store,
CABS SCENIC RAILROAD
restaurant
and museum. Thirteen
STATE PARK
This authentic remnant of a log· former company houses are avail·
glng train cllrnlls from the former able for dilJ)I and weekly rental.
lumber town ot Caas to West Vir· Lodging al86·lt·avallable at eever·
glnla's second-highest peak, Bald al nearby "l9tels, bed and break·
lasts or cabins. See· www.poca·
Knob, elevauon 4,842 teet.
Shay steam loeomotlves pull hontascountywv.com for a com·
plete listing. ,
open-air and covered cars.
SChedule: Dally through Sept.
DUAellf a GREENBRIER
3. Friday through Sunday In SepVALLEY RAILROAD
tember and some weekends In
The
railroad offers three sepa,October. An ail-day train runs from·
Casa to Spruce on Sept. 24 and rate trips In Pocahontas and Aan·
dolph counties. ·
Oct. I .
• The Tygart Alver Flyer offers
Cost: AduHs, $13·$21. Children,
5·12, $8-$13. The ail-day train to eight trips, ranging from a two·
hour, 24-mlle ride to a 6.5-hour,
Spruce costs $40 per person.
location: Casa, on state Route 85-mlle trip.
66 and state Acute 28192 In Poca·
Schedule: Saturdays and. Sun·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

days, May through October. Satur·
days only on the '(!leeks of Sept. 8
and 15. Tre wlnfer sc;hedule has
not been set. ·
Cost: Adults, $15·$21 . Over 60,
$13·$18. Children. 3to 11 . $9·$13.
Reserved seats on the observe·
lion-lounge car are $25·$32.
.
• The Cheat Mountain Salamander offers eight trips from three
departure points, all hugging the
Shaver's Fork of the Cheat Alver
and visiting the High Falls of
Cheat. The shortest trip Is 28 miles
and takea 2.5 hours. The longest
Is 88 miles and takes 8.5 hours.
Schedule: Wednesday through
Sunday, May through LabOr Day.
Weekends ·until Sept. 23. Wednes·
day through Sunday until the end
of October. The winter schedule
has not been set.
Cost: Adults, $15·$26. Over 60, .

Pleese see W.Va.. Cl

KEE!liNG WATCH- Sisters Shelby Harman, 7, left.' and
Julia Harman, 4, of Flemington, W.Va., watch the track
ahead looking for possible deer or an occasional .bear
while riding the Cheat Mountain Salamander rail excursion. The Salamander runs eight trips of various lengths
from tl\ree departure points and travels along the
Shaver's Fork of the Cheat River in West Virginia. (AP)

Cou le owns one of only a f~w
Mo el T Ford pick-up convertible
The pickup, b earing the
license "Roy's '27" is just
POMEROY - If you see one of several antique ·cars
a black and yellow 1927 occupying the garage. at the
Model T Ford pickup truck• Grueser hom e on Rock·convertible - that's right, a
springs, Road .
convertible
crumng
Owned · by the Gruesers
down the road some sunny
for a dozen years or so, the
afternoon, give a wave.
It's probably Roy and pickup was in good shape
Opal Grueser out for a when they bought it. Roy
said it needed no cosmetic
drive. '
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
OVP NEWS STAFF

work at all and required
only some
mechanical
adjustments . It cruises along
about 35 miles an hour and
has a top speed of about 40,
typical of most Model T .
Fords.
.,
The
couple
recently
PICKUP
CONVERTIBU:
-Opal
and Roy Grueser of Pomeroy own .
transported the ·antique
truck to New Philadelphia one of only a few 1927 Model T Ford pickup truck convertibles. At
the recent Model T Ford Club conv,ention held In l)lew Philadelphia,.
there were 312 vehicles with only four being pickup convertibles.
Ph11e ...·Pick-up, Cl

•'

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�. PageCl

· Sunday, ~pt. 9, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

&amp;unbnp 'l!:tnJt!l :&amp;rntintl • Page C3

sundayi September 9, 1001

FLASHBACKS

BIRTHDAYS

BY Tf!E ASSOCIATED PRESS

Actor Peler Scolari is 47. Actress
Ward is 44. Singer Ben
Rache'
Celebrity birthdays for
Folds ot Ben Folds Five is 35. Guithe week of Sept. 9-15:
tarist Larry Lalonde of Primus is
33. Singer Liam Gallagher of
Sept. 9: Actor Ciff Robertson is. Oasis is 29. Actor Paul Walker
76. Actor Topol {"Fiddler on the ("The Fast and the Furious") is 28.
Roof") is 66. Actor Michael Keaton
Sept. 13: SingE~r Peter Cetera is
is 50. Actor Tom Wopat is 50. 57. Actress JacqueUne Bisset is
Musician-producer Dave Stewart 57. Actress Nell Carter is 53.
{Eurythmics) is 49. Actress Angela Singer Randy Jones of the Village
Cartwright ("The Danny Thomas People is 49. Record producerShow," "lost In Space") is 49. musician Don Was Is 49. Actress
Actor Hugh Grant is 41 . _Actor- Jean Smart is 42. Drummer Steve
comedian Adam Sandfer os 35. Perkins of Porno for Pyros and
Actor Goran Visnjic {"ER") is 29. Jane's Addiction is '34. Singer ·
Actress MiclieUe Williams {"Daw- Fiona Apple is 24. Actor Ben Savson's Creek") is 21 . .
.
age {"Boy Meets World") is 21 .
Sept. 10: Actress Fay Wra,y os
Sept. 14: Singer-actress Joey
94. Singer Jose Feliciano is 56. Heatherton is 57. Actor Sam Neill
Guitarist Joe Perry of Aerosmith is is 54. Singer Jon 'Bowzer" Bau51 . Actress Amy Irving is 48. Direc- man of Sha Na Na is 54. Singer
tor Chris Columbus is 43. Actor Barry Cowsill ofThe Cowsllls is 47 . .
Colin Firth is 41 . Rapper Big Actress Mary Crosby Is 42. Singer
Daddy Kane is 33. Director Guy Morten Harket of A-ha· Is 42 .
Ritchie is 33. Actor'Ryan Phillippe Actress. Faith · Ford ("Murphy
ls27.
Brown") is 37. Actor Dan Cortese
Sept. 11 : Actor Earl Holliman is is 33. Bassist .Craig Montoya of
73. Movie director Brian De Palma Everclear is 31 . Rapper Nas is 28.
is 61. Drummer Mickey Hart of the
Sept. 15: Actor Jackie Cooper is
Grateful Dead is 58. Actress Kristy 79. Comedian Norm Crosby is 74.
McNichol is 39: Aciress VIrginia Actor-sportsCaster Merlin Olsen is
Madsen is 38. Musician Moby is 61. Actor Tommy Lee Jones is 55.
36. Singer Harry Connick Jr. is 34. Movie director Oliver Stone is 55.
Actress Laura Wright {"G uiding OJ Kay Gee of Naughty By Nature
Lighr) is 31. Singer Brad Fischetti is 32. Actor Josh Charles {"Sports
of LFO is 26.
Night") Is 30. Singer lvette Sosa of
Sept. 12: Actor ian Holm {"Char- Ede.n;s
Crush is 25.
iots of Fire") is 70. Country singer
George Jones is 70. Actress linda
Gray is 61. Singer Barry Whole os
57. Actor Joe Pantollano is 50.
Drummer Nell Peart of Rush is 49.

er and was fined $600. The
Entertainment highlights photographer was taking
during Sept. 9-15:
Hutchence's picture outside a
ln 1956, Elvis Presley made hotel where Hutchen cc had
his fim of three appearances on spent the night with the
"The Ed Sullivan Show." H e estranged wife of singer llob
sang "Love Me Tender," Geldof.
"Hound Dog," " Don't De
In 1996, rapper . Tupac
Cruel" and "Ready Teddy."
Shakur died in Las Vegas of
In 1959, "Bonanza " made its gunshot wounds he suffered six
· TV debut on NBC
d1y' earlier.
In I 966, the comedy show
Al so in 1996, Wal-Mart
"The Monkees" made i'ts bann ed Sheryl Crow's selfdebut on NBC. The show fea- titled album because of the
tured a rock group that was song "Love Is A Good T hing,"
supposed to be the American which m entions children
version ofThe Deatles.
killin g each other "with a gun
In 1974, "Little House .on they bought at the Wal- Ma rt
the Prairie" made its TV debut disco unt 11tores.''
on NBC.
Al'o in 1\!%, Oa' i' abruptly
In 1978, the TV sitcom ~;a nceled. its U.S. tour two" Mork .&amp; Mindy," starring Pam thirds of th e way into it.
. Dawber and J\obin Williams,
premiered ori ABC.
In 1979, ABBA began its first
North American tour. .
In 1987, CBS news anchor
Dan Rather walked off the set
of the "CBS Evening News"
because a tennis tournament
ran long. T he nerwork went to
blacl( for six minutes when the
tourname.n t ended and Rather
was nowhere to be found.
In 1993,"The X-Files"made
68 Years In Business
its debut on Fox.
1
In 1995 , INXS singer
Tawney ewe ers
Michael Htttchence pleaded
422 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH
h
gui)ry to hitting a photograp - • • • • • • • • • • •

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kendra Michelle King and Kurt Stephen Palmer

Johnson 25th

King-Palmer engagement
\

GALLIPOLIS- Lenuille and Connie Johnson of Gallipolis
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary on Aug. 29, 200 I. ·
Lenuille is the son of the late Clayton and Berry Johnson of
Gallipolis.
:
Connie is the daughter of Alma and the late Frank Mayse of
Gallipolis. .
.
Th~y were united in maniage Aug. 29,1976.They have three
children: Tonya (Eugene) Caldwell of Middleport, and daughter, Katdynn; M elissa (Brian) Jacobs-Johnson of Middleport,
and daughter Alexia; and Pam Johnson Gamic Cain), who
resides with her parents.
The occasion was marked with a fami ly gathering and recep.tion given by their children .

G IV EN, W.Va.- Michael R . and Lurinda J. King of Given
are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Kendra Michelle King, to Kurt Stephen Palmer
of. Ravenswood. Kurt .......
is the son of Steve Palmer and Vickie
Ftelds.
. The bride-to-be is currently attending Mountaineer Beauty
College and will obtain her degree in cosmetolosr in December. Sh e plans to b~ employed a~ His and Her Hair Care of
Ripley after graduation.
The prospective bridegroom is currently employeq with
Relco of Charleston.
The couple will be having an outdoor Hawaiian wedding
which is being held at the home of the bride on Sept. 21, 2001
at 6:30 p.m. H awaiian attire is suggested.

ffiands

&amp;y

Linda K. Bauer and Farrell A. Houck

Bauer-Houck engagement
RODNEY - Linda K. Bauer and Farrell A. Houck are
anno uncing their engagemen t and upcoming marriage.
The open church wedding ceremony will be held 6:30 p.m.,
Sept. 29, 200 1 at Rodney United Methodist C hurch, with a
reception to follow in the fell ow ship hall.
.
The coup le has requested no gift s.

"Making A Difference"

Birchfield wedding
.•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
:_ Sonia Ebert Birchfield,
~daughter of Charles and
. Gwendolyn
Ebert,
was
:reunited in marriage to Carl
: William Birchfield, son of
·.: Carl Roger and Ruth Birch: field on Saturday, Jul y 28,
· 2001 at H eights United
: Methodist C hurch. Majors
;Roy and Jane Edelman of
:west Columbia performed
:: the. ceremony.
~ Lee Baird · read scripture
~ from Genesis and offered a
: prayer. A poem was written
:and recited by Donna Dack\tS
• entitled "A New Beginning."
: Pianist was Diane Roach of
: GaUipolis Ferry, and vocalists
+were Randy Parsons and Lisa
: Searls.
: The wedding parry includ: ed JoAnn Thomas, matron of
: honor; Kelly Blaine, brides: maid; Morgan Birchfield,
: flower giri;Joe Birchfield, best
; man ; Evan Birchfield , ring
~ bearer ;
Cody Birchfield,
: groom sman ; . and · ushers ,
· Nathan Blaine and T imothy
: Plantz.
: A recepti on followed th e
: ceremony in the Heights
' United Fellowship Hall. Serv: ing the guests were Janis
: Plantz, Sheil a McCallister and
: carol Blaine.
: The bride . presented a short
·•dedication to the mem ory of
Lisa Humphrey Ebert, who
passed away June 4, 2001, and·
· who designed all fl oral fash: ions. There was a table dedi! cated to Ebert, which indud~ ed her picture, a story about
' her written by the bride and
the bridal bouquets.
Sonia is employed at the
office ofDr. Gary L. Clarke in
' Gallipolis, and
Ca rl
is

Wyngate of Gallipolis
National Assisted Living Week
September 9th- September 15th

Sunday, September 9th

1:00 p.m.

Assisted Living Week Kickoff
&amp; Balloon Launch

'n1esday, September 11th

10:00 a.m.

Community Bingo
Tournament

'

Tons of Prizes &amp; Door Prizes

•

Thursday, September 13th 11:00 a.m.

Informational Open House
Wyngate staff will be available until
7:00p.m. to give tours of our
·
community and answer any
questions you may have regatfing
' assisted living anrl care option!.

Saturday, September 15th 12:00 p.m.

380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

For more information, call Wyngate at (740) 441-9633
or stop by at 300 Briarwood Drive, G(lllipolis

.-

· E-MAIL ,US:

===

(Located
approxim~tely
one quarter mile West of Holzer Medical
.
.
. Center)
r

End of Summer Celebration
and Open H«!IJSe with 101.5
The River
We will be grilli11g out and ser:vlng
lunch untll3:00 p.m. 101.5 The
Ri~er will be broadcasting live.
Don't miss a day offun and
enlertainment. Tons of Door Prizes!

from .The Staff

Holzer Senior Care Center

Gettles wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Carl William Birchfield

Please join us for any of our festivites
scheduled throughout the week!

·

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Sharon Sydenstricker and
': Phil ·P orter were united in r.latrimony at the Spirit ofVictory
•. Church on Aug. 18; 2001. Pastor Dr. CharlesVan ce perfor med
Mr. and Mrs. James Gettles
· the ceremony.
... The bride is the daughter of William and Helen Syden~ stricker of Mason Counry. The groom is th e son of Calvin ao1d
::.vir'nie Porter of Lincoln Counry.
.
&lt; Dee Hatfield was guest book attendant. Pianist was Cindy
GALLIPOLIS Jam es Schmidt, Ina Belle Sibley, Lisa
· Vance. Decorations were royal blue. baby blue and white.
Ge rtles ancl Kendra Phillips Kemp
and
Mary
Bea
The bride was· escorted by her father. Her mother served as . we re uniced in m:1rriage rlt M cc;alla.
matron of honor. Bridesmaids were her twin sister Shirley R.ive rby in Gallipolis on June
The flowers were provided
~ Sydenstricker, the groom's sister, Phyllis Porter, and friends 9, 2001, in an afternoon o ut- by Village Florist.
g Tanya Tucker and Glendoria Hatfield. Flower girls were Katlyn door ceremony.
Carmela Oliveras and Amy
~ Carrico and Carmen Ross.
.
The groom is the son of Mifler photographed the
Jami~ W ireman, friend of the groom, was best man . Grooms- C lare and Beverly Gettles of wedding, and Mrs. Betty
•· men included friends Roger Ward, Stephen Vance, Jo e Stowers Gallip_olis, and the grandson Wilmoth was the videograph~and Mark Ross. U shers were Wayne and Dwayne Johnson.
of Lorena Webb of Centenary. er.
:; A reception followed th e ceremony in the toyer of Spirit of
The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a graduate of
, Victory Church, featurmg an etght- layer weddmg cake catered Kent Phillips, and th e grand- the
University of Rio
;. by D ebbie Vance.
daughter of Stacy and Eliza- Grande, with a major in Engi The couple w!ll reside in the Huntington area.
beth Phillips of Athens.
lish. The groom is a -graduate
•
The
double-ring
ceremony
of
DeVry Institute of Tech~-----------------;
was performed by th e Rev. nology, with a bachelor of sci'
Raafat Zaki of the First Pres- ence in electronics engineerbyterian C hurch , and includ- ing technology and
ts ·
•
ed
readings
from
Kahlil
einployed by AdLTechnology
•'
G ib ran, Cor inthi ans and in Columbus .
Romans.

""""' ll'IO

'

Wishing All ~randparents The Very Best
On Grandparents Day, September 9

\..

ARTC:~t~.Y.f.!t

mg.

9iolzflr c.5flnlor CtJrrJ .CrJnfrJr

Porter wedding

,.

:------_;____

1001he
'--~~··
your body.

In an effort to provide our
readership
with current
news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after· 90 ,days from the
date of the event.
.
Weddings submitted after
the 90-day deadline will
appear dunng the week in
· The Daily Sentinel, Point
Pleasant Register and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
·
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society
section must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted within 60 days of .the
occurrence,
With the family reunion
season upon us, many will
be submitting articles of family activities for publication.
To ensure prompt publica'tion, the Sunday Times-Sentinel requests that articles be
neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing.
Reunion items should not
· exceed 300 words and must
be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence.
All material submitted for
publication is subject to edit-

... '----_;_---:M::-r.-a-nd-:-:-M:-rs-.-:P::h-::II:-:P:-o- r7te_r_ __

t:

cw:eddlntJ

·

•

...

news@mydailytribune.com
.. news@mydailyreglster.c:om
: news~mydallysentlnel.com

employed at the Toyota Plant
in Buffalo. T hey and the ir two
children, Evan (7) and Cody
(12) will continu e to 'reside in
Henderson and attend Mill stone Church in Apple Grove.

T,he .bride's atteridants
included Sarah Miner, maid of
honor;
Stacey
Bournis,
matron of honor, Heather
Baker, Angie M artin and C orrine Lucas. Stevie Wolfe was
junior bri destnat.d Groomsmen . were Adan1
Broyles of Tucson , Ari z., Jim
Martin of Colu mbus, David
Evans of Gallip olis, David
. Phillips, cOLisin of the bride,
and · Matthew Lavel of
Philadelphia , Pa~ ·
Ushers were Scott and Lauren Shelton of Co lum bus.
Registering the guests was
Kathryn Gettl es- Atwa, sister
of the groom ..·
Music was provided by a
brass qu artet, led by David
Porter of Charleston. A reception i'mmediately following
the ceremony was held at the
French Art Colo ny. Assisting
at th e reception were Joan

••

•

..

RESI DENTS CAll

m -maFORAN

•
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•

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· 0LialityF-urnfture Plus
.A2123 State Route 7• T
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Prenatal Clinic
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CJIR!TOOHto

14kt

Plains, OH 45783 • (740) 667-7388 •1-800-200-4005

�. PageCl

· Sunday, ~pt. 9, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

&amp;unbnp 'l!:tnJt!l :&amp;rntintl • Page C3

sundayi September 9, 1001

FLASHBACKS

BIRTHDAYS

BY Tf!E ASSOCIATED PRESS

Actor Peler Scolari is 47. Actress
Ward is 44. Singer Ben
Rache'
Celebrity birthdays for
Folds ot Ben Folds Five is 35. Guithe week of Sept. 9-15:
tarist Larry Lalonde of Primus is
33. Singer Liam Gallagher of
Sept. 9: Actor Ciff Robertson is. Oasis is 29. Actor Paul Walker
76. Actor Topol {"Fiddler on the ("The Fast and the Furious") is 28.
Roof") is 66. Actor Michael Keaton
Sept. 13: SingE~r Peter Cetera is
is 50. Actor Tom Wopat is 50. 57. Actress JacqueUne Bisset is
Musician-producer Dave Stewart 57. Actress Nell Carter is 53.
{Eurythmics) is 49. Actress Angela Singer Randy Jones of the Village
Cartwright ("The Danny Thomas People is 49. Record producerShow," "lost In Space") is 49. musician Don Was Is 49. Actress
Actor Hugh Grant is 41 . _Actor- Jean Smart is 42. Drummer Steve
comedian Adam Sandfer os 35. Perkins of Porno for Pyros and
Actor Goran Visnjic {"ER") is 29. Jane's Addiction is '34. Singer ·
Actress MiclieUe Williams {"Daw- Fiona Apple is 24. Actor Ben Savson's Creek") is 21 . .
.
age {"Boy Meets World") is 21 .
Sept. 10: Actress Fay Wra,y os
Sept. 14: Singer-actress Joey
94. Singer Jose Feliciano is 56. Heatherton is 57. Actor Sam Neill
Guitarist Joe Perry of Aerosmith is is 54. Singer Jon 'Bowzer" Bau51 . Actress Amy Irving is 48. Direc- man of Sha Na Na is 54. Singer
tor Chris Columbus is 43. Actor Barry Cowsill ofThe Cowsllls is 47 . .
Colin Firth is 41 . Rapper Big Actress Mary Crosby Is 42. Singer
Daddy Kane is 33. Director Guy Morten Harket of A-ha· Is 42 .
Ritchie is 33. Actor'Ryan Phillippe Actress. Faith · Ford ("Murphy
ls27.
Brown") is 37. Actor Dan Cortese
Sept. 11 : Actor Earl Holliman is is 33. Bassist .Craig Montoya of
73. Movie director Brian De Palma Everclear is 31 . Rapper Nas is 28.
is 61. Drummer Mickey Hart of the
Sept. 15: Actor Jackie Cooper is
Grateful Dead is 58. Actress Kristy 79. Comedian Norm Crosby is 74.
McNichol is 39: Aciress VIrginia Actor-sportsCaster Merlin Olsen is
Madsen is 38. Musician Moby is 61. Actor Tommy Lee Jones is 55.
36. Singer Harry Connick Jr. is 34. Movie director Oliver Stone is 55.
Actress Laura Wright {"G uiding OJ Kay Gee of Naughty By Nature
Lighr) is 31. Singer Brad Fischetti is 32. Actor Josh Charles {"Sports
of LFO is 26.
Night") Is 30. Singer lvette Sosa of
Sept. 12: Actor ian Holm {"Char- Ede.n;s
Crush is 25.
iots of Fire") is 70. Country singer
George Jones is 70. Actress linda
Gray is 61. Singer Barry Whole os
57. Actor Joe Pantollano is 50.
Drummer Nell Peart of Rush is 49.

er and was fined $600. The
Entertainment highlights photographer was taking
during Sept. 9-15:
Hutchence's picture outside a
ln 1956, Elvis Presley made hotel where Hutchen cc had
his fim of three appearances on spent the night with the
"The Ed Sullivan Show." H e estranged wife of singer llob
sang "Love Me Tender," Geldof.
"Hound Dog," " Don't De
In 1996, rapper . Tupac
Cruel" and "Ready Teddy."
Shakur died in Las Vegas of
In 1959, "Bonanza " made its gunshot wounds he suffered six
· TV debut on NBC
d1y' earlier.
In I 966, the comedy show
Al so in 1996, Wal-Mart
"The Monkees" made i'ts bann ed Sheryl Crow's selfdebut on NBC. The show fea- titled album because of the
tured a rock group that was song "Love Is A Good T hing,"
supposed to be the American which m entions children
version ofThe Deatles.
killin g each other "with a gun
In 1974, "Little House .on they bought at the Wal- Ma rt
the Prairie" made its TV debut disco unt 11tores.''
on NBC.
Al'o in 1\!%, Oa' i' abruptly
In 1978, the TV sitcom ~;a nceled. its U.S. tour two" Mork .&amp; Mindy," starring Pam thirds of th e way into it.
. Dawber and J\obin Williams,
premiered ori ABC.
In 1979, ABBA began its first
North American tour. .
In 1987, CBS news anchor
Dan Rather walked off the set
of the "CBS Evening News"
because a tennis tournament
ran long. T he nerwork went to
blacl( for six minutes when the
tourname.n t ended and Rather
was nowhere to be found.
In 1993,"The X-Files"made
68 Years In Business
its debut on Fox.
1
In 1995 , INXS singer
Tawney ewe ers
Michael Htttchence pleaded
422 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH
h
gui)ry to hitting a photograp - • • • • • • • • • • •

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kendra Michelle King and Kurt Stephen Palmer

Johnson 25th

King-Palmer engagement
\

GALLIPOLIS- Lenuille and Connie Johnson of Gallipolis
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary on Aug. 29, 200 I. ·
Lenuille is the son of the late Clayton and Berry Johnson of
Gallipolis.
:
Connie is the daughter of Alma and the late Frank Mayse of
Gallipolis. .
.
Th~y were united in maniage Aug. 29,1976.They have three
children: Tonya (Eugene) Caldwell of Middleport, and daughter, Katdynn; M elissa (Brian) Jacobs-Johnson of Middleport,
and daughter Alexia; and Pam Johnson Gamic Cain), who
resides with her parents.
The occasion was marked with a fami ly gathering and recep.tion given by their children .

G IV EN, W.Va.- Michael R . and Lurinda J. King of Given
are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Kendra Michelle King, to Kurt Stephen Palmer
of. Ravenswood. Kurt .......
is the son of Steve Palmer and Vickie
Ftelds.
. The bride-to-be is currently attending Mountaineer Beauty
College and will obtain her degree in cosmetolosr in December. Sh e plans to b~ employed a~ His and Her Hair Care of
Ripley after graduation.
The prospective bridegroom is currently employeq with
Relco of Charleston.
The couple will be having an outdoor Hawaiian wedding
which is being held at the home of the bride on Sept. 21, 2001
at 6:30 p.m. H awaiian attire is suggested.

ffiands

&amp;y

Linda K. Bauer and Farrell A. Houck

Bauer-Houck engagement
RODNEY - Linda K. Bauer and Farrell A. Houck are
anno uncing their engagemen t and upcoming marriage.
The open church wedding ceremony will be held 6:30 p.m.,
Sept. 29, 200 1 at Rodney United Methodist C hurch, with a
reception to follow in the fell ow ship hall.
.
The coup le has requested no gift s.

"Making A Difference"

Birchfield wedding
.•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
:_ Sonia Ebert Birchfield,
~daughter of Charles and
. Gwendolyn
Ebert,
was
:reunited in marriage to Carl
: William Birchfield, son of
·.: Carl Roger and Ruth Birch: field on Saturday, Jul y 28,
· 2001 at H eights United
: Methodist C hurch. Majors
;Roy and Jane Edelman of
:west Columbia performed
:: the. ceremony.
~ Lee Baird · read scripture
~ from Genesis and offered a
: prayer. A poem was written
:and recited by Donna Dack\tS
• entitled "A New Beginning."
: Pianist was Diane Roach of
: GaUipolis Ferry, and vocalists
+were Randy Parsons and Lisa
: Searls.
: The wedding parry includ: ed JoAnn Thomas, matron of
: honor; Kelly Blaine, brides: maid; Morgan Birchfield,
: flower giri;Joe Birchfield, best
; man ; Evan Birchfield , ring
~ bearer ;
Cody Birchfield,
: groom sman ; . and · ushers ,
· Nathan Blaine and T imothy
: Plantz.
: A recepti on followed th e
: ceremony in the Heights
' United Fellowship Hall. Serv: ing the guests were Janis
: Plantz, Sheil a McCallister and
: carol Blaine.
: The bride . presented a short
·•dedication to the mem ory of
Lisa Humphrey Ebert, who
passed away June 4, 2001, and·
· who designed all fl oral fash: ions. There was a table dedi! cated to Ebert, which indud~ ed her picture, a story about
' her written by the bride and
the bridal bouquets.
Sonia is employed at the
office ofDr. Gary L. Clarke in
' Gallipolis, and
Ca rl
is

Wyngate of Gallipolis
National Assisted Living Week
September 9th- September 15th

Sunday, September 9th

1:00 p.m.

Assisted Living Week Kickoff
&amp; Balloon Launch

'n1esday, September 11th

10:00 a.m.

Community Bingo
Tournament

'

Tons of Prizes &amp; Door Prizes

•

Thursday, September 13th 11:00 a.m.

Informational Open House
Wyngate staff will be available until
7:00p.m. to give tours of our
·
community and answer any
questions you may have regatfing
' assisted living anrl care option!.

Saturday, September 15th 12:00 p.m.

380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

For more information, call Wyngate at (740) 441-9633
or stop by at 300 Briarwood Drive, G(lllipolis

.-

· E-MAIL ,US:

===

(Located
approxim~tely
one quarter mile West of Holzer Medical
.
.
. Center)
r

End of Summer Celebration
and Open H«!IJSe with 101.5
The River
We will be grilli11g out and ser:vlng
lunch untll3:00 p.m. 101.5 The
Ri~er will be broadcasting live.
Don't miss a day offun and
enlertainment. Tons of Door Prizes!

from .The Staff

Holzer Senior Care Center

Gettles wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Carl William Birchfield

Please join us for any of our festivites
scheduled throughout the week!

·

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Sharon Sydenstricker and
': Phil ·P orter were united in r.latrimony at the Spirit ofVictory
•. Church on Aug. 18; 2001. Pastor Dr. CharlesVan ce perfor med
Mr. and Mrs. James Gettles
· the ceremony.
... The bride is the daughter of William and Helen Syden~ stricker of Mason Counry. The groom is th e son of Calvin ao1d
::.vir'nie Porter of Lincoln Counry.
.
&lt; Dee Hatfield was guest book attendant. Pianist was Cindy
GALLIPOLIS Jam es Schmidt, Ina Belle Sibley, Lisa
· Vance. Decorations were royal blue. baby blue and white.
Ge rtles ancl Kendra Phillips Kemp
and
Mary
Bea
The bride was· escorted by her father. Her mother served as . we re uniced in m:1rriage rlt M cc;alla.
matron of honor. Bridesmaids were her twin sister Shirley R.ive rby in Gallipolis on June
The flowers were provided
~ Sydenstricker, the groom's sister, Phyllis Porter, and friends 9, 2001, in an afternoon o ut- by Village Florist.
g Tanya Tucker and Glendoria Hatfield. Flower girls were Katlyn door ceremony.
Carmela Oliveras and Amy
~ Carrico and Carmen Ross.
.
The groom is the son of Mifler photographed the
Jami~ W ireman, friend of the groom, was best man . Grooms- C lare and Beverly Gettles of wedding, and Mrs. Betty
•· men included friends Roger Ward, Stephen Vance, Jo e Stowers Gallip_olis, and the grandson Wilmoth was the videograph~and Mark Ross. U shers were Wayne and Dwayne Johnson.
of Lorena Webb of Centenary. er.
:; A reception followed th e ceremony in the toyer of Spirit of
The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a graduate of
, Victory Church, featurmg an etght- layer weddmg cake catered Kent Phillips, and th e grand- the
University of Rio
;. by D ebbie Vance.
daughter of Stacy and Eliza- Grande, with a major in Engi The couple w!ll reside in the Huntington area.
beth Phillips of Athens.
lish. The groom is a -graduate
•
The
double-ring
ceremony
of
DeVry Institute of Tech~-----------------;
was performed by th e Rev. nology, with a bachelor of sci'
Raafat Zaki of the First Pres- ence in electronics engineerbyterian C hurch , and includ- ing technology and
ts ·
•
ed
readings
from
Kahlil
einployed by AdLTechnology
•'
G ib ran, Cor inthi ans and in Columbus .
Romans.

""""' ll'IO

'

Wishing All ~randparents The Very Best
On Grandparents Day, September 9

\..

ARTC:~t~.Y.f.!t

mg.

9iolzflr c.5flnlor CtJrrJ .CrJnfrJr

Porter wedding

,.

:------_;____

1001he
'--~~··
your body.

In an effort to provide our
readership
with current
news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after· 90 ,days from the
date of the event.
.
Weddings submitted after
the 90-day deadline will
appear dunng the week in
· The Daily Sentinel, Point
Pleasant Register and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
·
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society
section must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted within 60 days of .the
occurrence,
With the family reunion
season upon us, many will
be submitting articles of family activities for publication.
To ensure prompt publica'tion, the Sunday Times-Sentinel requests that articles be
neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing.
Reunion items should not
· exceed 300 words and must
be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence.
All material submitted for
publication is subject to edit-

... '----_;_---:M::-r.-a-nd-:-:-M:-rs-.-:P::h-::II:-:P:-o- r7te_r_ __

t:

cw:eddlntJ

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news@mydailytribune.com
.. news@mydailyreglster.c:om
: news~mydallysentlnel.com

employed at the Toyota Plant
in Buffalo. T hey and the ir two
children, Evan (7) and Cody
(12) will continu e to 'reside in
Henderson and attend Mill stone Church in Apple Grove.

T,he .bride's atteridants
included Sarah Miner, maid of
honor;
Stacey
Bournis,
matron of honor, Heather
Baker, Angie M artin and C orrine Lucas. Stevie Wolfe was
junior bri destnat.d Groomsmen . were Adan1
Broyles of Tucson , Ari z., Jim
Martin of Colu mbus, David
Evans of Gallip olis, David
. Phillips, cOLisin of the bride,
and · Matthew Lavel of
Philadelphia , Pa~ ·
Ushers were Scott and Lauren Shelton of Co lum bus.
Registering the guests was
Kathryn Gettl es- Atwa, sister
of the groom ..·
Music was provided by a
brass qu artet, led by David
Porter of Charleston. A reception i'mmediately following
the ceremony was held at the
French Art Colo ny. Assisting
at th e reception were Joan

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RESI DENTS CAll

m -maFORAN

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Our next clinic date is
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TUE 6:00 pm •WED 9:30 1m

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Comfort Inn • 605 East Main
.MON 6:30pm • SAT 9:30am

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· 0LialityF-urnfture Plus
.A2123 State Route 7• T
•

,,

"'"' , , , .' ,,,, . ,, , , .,, .,,,,,.,,, ~;,.:
,-. 1 Co
De
:· Udllia "~nty Iie&lt;Jtb )ldrtment :
•, ;. ·
Prenatal Clinic
,
. "'-- 'f l
• '
"ovtDtNG "'""'';.
•
CJIR!TOOHto

14kt

Plains, OH 45783 • (740) 667-7388 •1-800-200-4005

�Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

&amp;unbav ~imt!i -iirutiurl •

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

Pige'CS • ,' r -

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

l

•'

••.,'

· Meet 5 generations ofpretty baby Winners

'

Mr. and Mrs. Tory David Swartz

Swartz wedding
RUTLAND - Kendra Pauline Cleland and Tory David
S\vartz exrh.mgcd weddi ng vows in an Aug. 5, 2001 ceremony at
Rutland Freewill llaptist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mark and Connie Davis of Rutland, and the late Edwin Cleland .Tory is th e son ofJerry and Nan
S\Yartz and. Steve and Cathy Radsvick, all of Middleport.
The. cerc·mony was pertormed by the Rev. Mark Morrow of
Middleport First llaptist Church.
For her wedding, the bride wore an evening length sleeveless
white s.nin ~own with the bodice accented with sequins and simulated pe.tth. The pearl design extended fium the neckline to the
floor enluncing the chapel length train . She wore pearl jewelry
to complement her ensemble.
Her ha ir, .in which she wore white and yellow baby's breath,
urple
moneaster, a1id a rhinestone tiara, was· in a French twist
P
with cascading curls. She carried a bouquet of lavendar roses
arran&lt;&gt;ed
in an English
oval cascade.
•
~
·
The groom was attired in a black tuxedo with a black tie and a
black vest with lavender accent. He wore a lavender rose boutonniere.
A reception was held in the church's fellowship hall following
the wedding.
.
Swartz is employed by A-OK Builders of Cheshire. His wife is
currently a student at Hocking College. Following a short haneymoon, tl1c coupe
1 now res1'd e .m M ason, W''
. va.

When little Hannah Lee
Ridenour of Long Bottom
took the top award in the pretty baby contest at this year's
Meigs County Fair in the 0 to
3 months category, she became
the thifd in the family of Dan
and Donna Jean Smith to win
a pretty baby title.
Donna Jean Smith (was a
Smith and married a Smith),
.was the winner in 1937, and
'her granddaught~r. Jenny Varney Ridenour, mother of Han-.
nah, won in 1976.
• • •
Remember Scott A. Pullins,
son of Susie Mash and the late
Ray Pullins? He graduated
from Meigs High School {or
was it Pomeroy?) then earned
h is bachelor's degree in politi·
cal science from Ohio State
and is currently pursuing a
juris doctorate from Capital
University Law School.
Actively involved in .politics
. for many years, Scott recently
announced that he will run for
the 19th
Ohio
mittee, wh' h se es as a board
of directors fo the Ohio
Republican Party. That district
encompasses all or parts of
Ashland, Delaware, Huron,
Knox, Morrow and Richland
counties. ·

cion.
Anyone needing directions
can call Vic at 7 40-522-9823.
Cards can be sent to Jake in
care ofVic Gaul at 124 Clarin
Drive, Heath, 43055.

Charlene
Hoeflich

•••

COMMUNilY
that. He is also president and
CEO of Right Communications LLC, a public policy con~
suiting company.
Scott and his wife, Kathy
reside in Apple Valley.
·• • •
After spending a lifetime in
Meigs County, Jake and Mildred Gaul )lave left. They sold
th eir f:amil· y farm in the eastern
part of Meigs County and last
week moved to Heath to be
near• their son, Victor, and his ·
wife, Darlene.
Both Jake and Mildred have
health problems which have
complicated their lives and
they felt it was time to get near .
family. They are residing at
Hopewell Commons, 716
Windsor Lane, Heath, Ohio,
43056.
Ja ke w·ill be BO on Sept. 20
and a surprise celebration has
been planned by the family to
take place on Sept. 22 from 1

And speaking of birthdays,
Dorothy Riebel will observe
her 90th on Sept. 11. A card
shower is being planned and
for those who would like to
join in wishing Mrs. Riebel a
happy birthday, the address · to
send cards is Apartn\ent B, 714
Colvin St.. Belpre, Ohio
45714.

•••

Now that gas prices are hov-

....~
••

.i

eriog around $1.70 a gallon,
and in some places even higher, wouldn't it be wonderful to
have a car that would get 60 or
70 mpg. or maybe even one
that gets I 00 mpg - like the
one built by Dick Becker in
1982. It is now in the Crawford Auto Aviation Museum in
Cleveland.
Becker built the car from
plans he purchased from the
old Mechanix Illustrated magazme.
Apparently the technology
to build gas sippers rather than
gas ~zzlers was available 20
years ago. Wonder what happened to it.

'

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(

t~ :SEPTEMBER

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Let us c:opy your old family
photos. Specials 2·5x7's for
$14.95, reg. $19.95. · SAVE
$5.001 We also do passport
photos, ldentlflc:atlon photos
and Kodak processing on
photo-finishing.
Watc:h
batteries Installed while
walt!

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Cierra Hlexis
Roberts .

Eth~n

Chase·
Stapleton

Hlexis Brooke
Russell

I love you Gl'ontJF'lQ &amp;

'j

M

. 11-e. I ove 1 ou

I love you Gl'o"'"'Y &amp;

GI'Qncl,o CAol"y

Gf'all&lt;jl'lQ

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51-qple.-ron

Gl'an&lt;lpa Hubel'

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
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Currently, Scott serves as to 4 p.m. at the clubhouse of
executive director of the Ohio Hope Commons. In an e-mail
Taxpayers Association, which is . from the Gauls' daughier, Pat,
a nonprofit, nonpartisan associ- who lives in Georgia, she
arion that works to limit Ohio
taxes, government spending
d
I
an regu ations. And we like

9, 2001 "

***

extends an invitation to family
members and friends in Meigs
County to join in the celebra-

·:

Garrett CurnutteEuans·
I I ave 'I au

Hayley Leanne
· Wood

MCJF"'C/W &amp;

I love 1 ou, Gl'qndi'IQ &amp;

Po pOW C.01"f1(.11"-te.

Gl'andp&lt;J

11-00Q

Kim, Tim, Karen, Tom,
Buck 6 Teresa
•

lldenna Holley
Halley Rochelle Burris
6 Bretton Stutes

•

lie • tau MCII'IOW &amp;
Po paw .Bul"l"i2.

I love yOO very PJUcJ,
MqPIQW &amp;Popcrw
q.,q,., plin!
Love: 4cjennq

Halley Rochelle Burris
6 Brettonmlchael
Stutes
\I.e • '/OU MCII'IOW &amp; 1'-ic.lr

•
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Caltlyn laDale

TI'Qnl, 'I ou r ol" being
2.pec.iQI! lie love &amp;
oppl"ec.iQ-re 1ou.
~ppyGI"onclpqren-t2.
!&gt;oy! .
Gl"ond,.o P..o_u2h
11\QF'lQ DOI'i2.

~0/'le 1"0 01..11" •
worl~ z.we.e-rt-.eor-r,
~ ve

been ..,qi1"in9

f'or yoo.
Love 1 oo, Gt'on~PlQ

Gl'onQr!o-r~ ~

t.,nn Henz.on

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Josh EdWard
AUiherson
LOVe yOO 1'1QI'II'IQW2.
on~ pQppctwz..

Me.&amp; Pop Po

Sreve (&lt;:.QII)
lt-eVel"!

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:f/&gt;clnlr '/au for c.al"ing
2.0 I'IUC}o abou-t uz. f'or
being o pal"-t of oul"
live4 Qncii'IQy 'I au ·
QiwQ'/2. hn C&gt;.1- /lC&gt;.1- Vel''I
f'IUd&gt; 1M?. love 'I OAJ!
~PP'I Gl'qnqpol"en-r 2.
!&gt;Qy! .MiPii DonfiCJ &amp; Popo
Ge or.ge, Niflc:J &amp; Po pcJ
Gl"ond"lQ !&gt;ole. Grandpa
J'..OAJ2h. MCIF'1C1 Dot'i2. &amp;
Gt'qnq,.., O-rr.et' Theii'IC1

To oil "~y Gl"ondi'IQ 2. &amp;

~loveyoo!

Gt'qflc1 pO 2.
Hove o st-e.o-r cloy.
I Iove you oil
LOVe, Jot'dcin Poul Jl..iley

hc:lli~9

TeGZQ

monica, Josh, Will,
madison 6 mitchell

&amp;A&amp;Qt'

I
I

Tristan Polsley
I Jove yoo
Gt"on~PlQ &amp;
Gt'qn~pct H-olley,

wic.hline, Sof't'qnho,

'

on~

PoiGie.y

. . ._________, --------..J •:

r-------------~------~

Whitley, megan,
Trauls 6 Colton
Sigman

Brandon&amp;
Chelsea &amp;Caluvnn
Christopher
love yOAJ Grqnqpq
Moodlspaugh · lie
and Gl'qnqi'IQ Young.
Gl'llldsans Df Bob &amp; IUIII
MOOdiSPBUDh

qnd Gl'onddod oflc1 ·
Gl"ancii'IQ Holter

~

Colli William
Capehan

Gonny &amp; Pclpt:J C..Opei&gt;OI"f'
I love. yOAJ bort&gt; z.o vel'y
MliC.h.

.·tH"r.;

IIIIIJn IIICIIIIM

Po~ &amp; ~

Pinel',

~ &amp; Gf'onny Moi-re,
. e~nd~.&amp; GronQI'IQ
HQwk I Iove
Love.

Ravmond Lawson
11\QI'IQW qnq

Pclpqw;

~PP'I Gt'ondpc~l"e.nn
!&gt;oy
.

mariah Jade Hill

' Erin Renav Glaza

I love~
Nanny&amp; paw
GIOu.bUI"'(-1

Hoflc:J PeQc,t. Clnd

Port:: £rme.

lie love au
Gl'qnq"lQ &amp; Gl'clndpql
Si9"!Qn.
'I au ore_-r~&gt;e be.2.-r.

Samantha finn Burris
I love you
Gt'oncll'lo &amp; Gl"ondpa
,Bl.ll"l'i2.

ove. '/~

,

IIston Kane Hnsel

Garrett Joseph 6 Blake
matthew Ranegar

Son of timber mcCielland

lie I ave out' b oyz. Mil'li
one! Po
f.4oii,_MQF'1Q
one!

lie love you
Nanny &amp;Poflctvl. 'frQ-r2.on
•'
''

"
'

·'
,l

•

''

Casevllne
I

lalherlnelloel
&amp;ebq &amp; PopP'I

Kodv,
&amp;
Conner wane

~

I ave yau Gl"qnc1"1Q &amp;
Popaw Lof-ri?.onc1
GrontJF'lQ &amp; Gl"on&lt;1,o

McKensla Danlelle
Boso
To ""'i Hoimie &amp; Po,o
Miller anc1

Gl"anc1"1Q .&amp; 02. o
!LOVe

P..idell 001";
8eebq &amp; PopP'I

He'M!.II Gl"ofldi'IQ
Lucille &amp; Gl"qnny
ke¥ U!

James, Mag,
Marla &amp; Cannan
'
Thc:m1r2. Grof'll'ly ofl&lt;1 Gro"'py
lie love you! .

6 Dylan
'Saunders
lie love you JliCiw-f'ICIW
ond Poppy .Sq&lt;.mqeJ"2.

••

limy Ours
0'-11' pl'ec.i ou2. 4n.ge.l.

LOVe you
Po paw qnq MCif'ICIW ~"'""'

I I ove. MCif'ICIW onc1

PopOW

HleKis Brooke Russell nicholas Hllen Sheets •·t

'

.

Ho Ol'li Clfld llocllpt. .i)Jt'2.-t

marshall logan Gibbs
~love you Gt'onclpt:J

&amp;

Gl'qnd"lQ 1'-Qnkin &amp; Mei'te.

I Iove. you GI"Qnqi'IQ &amp;
Gl"ondpq P-uz.WI .

lie love yOAJ Nid&gt;OIQ2.
'GI"Qnd po &amp; Gl"anq"lQ ·
5f,ee.-t2.

�Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

&amp;unbav ~imt!i -iirutiurl •

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

Pige'CS • ,' r -

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

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

l

•'

••.,'

· Meet 5 generations ofpretty baby Winners

'

Mr. and Mrs. Tory David Swartz

Swartz wedding
RUTLAND - Kendra Pauline Cleland and Tory David
S\vartz exrh.mgcd weddi ng vows in an Aug. 5, 2001 ceremony at
Rutland Freewill llaptist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mark and Connie Davis of Rutland, and the late Edwin Cleland .Tory is th e son ofJerry and Nan
S\Yartz and. Steve and Cathy Radsvick, all of Middleport.
The. cerc·mony was pertormed by the Rev. Mark Morrow of
Middleport First llaptist Church.
For her wedding, the bride wore an evening length sleeveless
white s.nin ~own with the bodice accented with sequins and simulated pe.tth. The pearl design extended fium the neckline to the
floor enluncing the chapel length train . She wore pearl jewelry
to complement her ensemble.
Her ha ir, .in which she wore white and yellow baby's breath,
urple
moneaster, a1id a rhinestone tiara, was· in a French twist
P
with cascading curls. She carried a bouquet of lavendar roses
arran&lt;&gt;ed
in an English
oval cascade.
•
~
·
The groom was attired in a black tuxedo with a black tie and a
black vest with lavender accent. He wore a lavender rose boutonniere.
A reception was held in the church's fellowship hall following
the wedding.
.
Swartz is employed by A-OK Builders of Cheshire. His wife is
currently a student at Hocking College. Following a short haneymoon, tl1c coupe
1 now res1'd e .m M ason, W''
. va.

When little Hannah Lee
Ridenour of Long Bottom
took the top award in the pretty baby contest at this year's
Meigs County Fair in the 0 to
3 months category, she became
the thifd in the family of Dan
and Donna Jean Smith to win
a pretty baby title.
Donna Jean Smith (was a
Smith and married a Smith),
.was the winner in 1937, and
'her granddaught~r. Jenny Varney Ridenour, mother of Han-.
nah, won in 1976.
• • •
Remember Scott A. Pullins,
son of Susie Mash and the late
Ray Pullins? He graduated
from Meigs High School {or
was it Pomeroy?) then earned
h is bachelor's degree in politi·
cal science from Ohio State
and is currently pursuing a
juris doctorate from Capital
University Law School.
Actively involved in .politics
. for many years, Scott recently
announced that he will run for
the 19th
Ohio
mittee, wh' h se es as a board
of directors fo the Ohio
Republican Party. That district
encompasses all or parts of
Ashland, Delaware, Huron,
Knox, Morrow and Richland
counties. ·

cion.
Anyone needing directions
can call Vic at 7 40-522-9823.
Cards can be sent to Jake in
care ofVic Gaul at 124 Clarin
Drive, Heath, 43055.

Charlene
Hoeflich

•••

COMMUNilY
that. He is also president and
CEO of Right Communications LLC, a public policy con~
suiting company.
Scott and his wife, Kathy
reside in Apple Valley.
·• • •
After spending a lifetime in
Meigs County, Jake and Mildred Gaul )lave left. They sold
th eir f:amil· y farm in the eastern
part of Meigs County and last
week moved to Heath to be
near• their son, Victor, and his ·
wife, Darlene.
Both Jake and Mildred have
health problems which have
complicated their lives and
they felt it was time to get near .
family. They are residing at
Hopewell Commons, 716
Windsor Lane, Heath, Ohio,
43056.
Ja ke w·ill be BO on Sept. 20
and a surprise celebration has
been planned by the family to
take place on Sept. 22 from 1

And speaking of birthdays,
Dorothy Riebel will observe
her 90th on Sept. 11. A card
shower is being planned and
for those who would like to
join in wishing Mrs. Riebel a
happy birthday, the address · to
send cards is Apartn\ent B, 714
Colvin St.. Belpre, Ohio
45714.

•••

Now that gas prices are hov-

....~
••

.i

eriog around $1.70 a gallon,
and in some places even higher, wouldn't it be wonderful to
have a car that would get 60 or
70 mpg. or maybe even one
that gets I 00 mpg - like the
one built by Dick Becker in
1982. It is now in the Crawford Auto Aviation Museum in
Cleveland.
Becker built the car from
plans he purchased from the
old Mechanix Illustrated magazme.
Apparently the technology
to build gas sippers rather than
gas ~zzlers was available 20
years ago. Wonder what happened to it.

'

'

(

t~ :SEPTEMBER

,,
I

•

'

,
.
r'•

'•

Let us c:opy your old family
photos. Specials 2·5x7's for
$14.95, reg. $19.95. · SAVE
$5.001 We also do passport
photos, ldentlflc:atlon photos
and Kodak processing on
photo-finishing.
Watc:h
batteries Installed while
walt!

•'

I'"

tl··'

'1.

!

•

Cierra Hlexis
Roberts .

Eth~n

Chase·
Stapleton

Hlexis Brooke
Russell

I love you Gl'ontJF'lQ &amp;

'j

M

. 11-e. I ove 1 ou

I love you Gl'o"'"'Y &amp;

GI'Qncl,o CAol"y

Gf'all&lt;jl'lQ

&amp; Gr'andpo

51-qple.-ron

Gl'an&lt;lpa Hubel'

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Beds!

Currently, Scott serves as to 4 p.m. at the clubhouse of
executive director of the Ohio Hope Commons. In an e-mail
Taxpayers Association, which is . from the Gauls' daughier, Pat,
a nonprofit, nonpartisan associ- who lives in Georgia, she
arion that works to limit Ohio
taxes, government spending
d
I
an regu ations. And we like

9, 2001 "

***

extends an invitation to family
members and friends in Meigs
County to join in the celebra-

·:

Garrett CurnutteEuans·
I I ave 'I au

Hayley Leanne
· Wood

MCJF"'C/W &amp;

I love 1 ou, Gl'qndi'IQ &amp;

Po pOW C.01"f1(.11"-te.

Gl'andp&lt;J

11-00Q

Kim, Tim, Karen, Tom,
Buck 6 Teresa
•

lldenna Holley
Halley Rochelle Burris
6 Bretton Stutes

•

lie • tau MCII'IOW &amp;
Po paw .Bul"l"i2.

I love yOO very PJUcJ,
MqPIQW &amp;Popcrw
q.,q,., plin!
Love: 4cjennq

Halley Rochelle Burris
6 Brettonmlchael
Stutes
\I.e • '/OU MCII'IOW &amp; 1'-ic.lr

•
I

i

'
f'

Caltlyn laDale

TI'Qnl, 'I ou r ol" being
2.pec.iQI! lie love &amp;
oppl"ec.iQ-re 1ou.
~ppyGI"onclpqren-t2.
!&gt;oy! .
Gl"ond,.o P..o_u2h
11\QF'lQ DOI'i2.

~0/'le 1"0 01..11" •
worl~ z.we.e-rt-.eor-r,
~ ve

been ..,qi1"in9

f'or yoo.
Love 1 oo, Gt'on~PlQ

Gl'onQr!o-r~ ~

t.,nn Henz.on

..

D
1¥'/00PQ~

Josh EdWard
AUiherson
LOVe yOO 1'1QI'II'IQW2.
on~ pQppctwz..

Me.&amp; Pop Po

Sreve (&lt;:.QII)
lt-eVel"!

0

:f/&gt;clnlr '/au for c.al"ing
2.0 I'IUC}o abou-t uz. f'or
being o pal"-t of oul"
live4 Qncii'IQy 'I au ·
QiwQ'/2. hn C&gt;.1- /lC&gt;.1- Vel''I
f'IUd&gt; 1M?. love 'I OAJ!
~PP'I Gl'qnqpol"en-r 2.
!&gt;Qy! .MiPii DonfiCJ &amp; Popo
Ge or.ge, Niflc:J &amp; Po pcJ
Gl"ond"lQ !&gt;ole. Grandpa
J'..OAJ2h. MCIF'1C1 Dot'i2. &amp;
Gt'qnq,.., O-rr.et' Theii'IC1

To oil "~y Gl"ondi'IQ 2. &amp;

~loveyoo!

Gt'qflc1 pO 2.
Hove o st-e.o-r cloy.
I Iove you oil
LOVe, Jot'dcin Poul Jl..iley

hc:lli~9

TeGZQ

monica, Josh, Will,
madison 6 mitchell

&amp;A&amp;Qt'

I
I

Tristan Polsley
I Jove yoo
Gt"on~PlQ &amp;
Gt'qn~pct H-olley,

wic.hline, Sof't'qnho,

'

on~

PoiGie.y

. . ._________, --------..J •:

r-------------~------~

Whitley, megan,
Trauls 6 Colton
Sigman

Brandon&amp;
Chelsea &amp;Caluvnn
Christopher
love yOAJ Grqnqpq
Moodlspaugh · lie
and Gl'qnqi'IQ Young.
Gl'llldsans Df Bob &amp; IUIII
MOOdiSPBUDh

qnd Gl'onddod oflc1 ·
Gl"ancii'IQ Holter

~

Colli William
Capehan

Gonny &amp; Pclpt:J C..Opei&gt;OI"f'
I love. yOAJ bort&gt; z.o vel'y
MliC.h.

.·tH"r.;

IIIIIJn IIICIIIIM

Po~ &amp; ~

Pinel',

~ &amp; Gf'onny Moi-re,
. e~nd~.&amp; GronQI'IQ
HQwk I Iove
Love.

Ravmond Lawson
11\QI'IQW qnq

Pclpqw;

~PP'I Gt'ondpc~l"e.nn
!&gt;oy
.

mariah Jade Hill

' Erin Renav Glaza

I love~
Nanny&amp; paw
GIOu.bUI"'(-1

Hoflc:J PeQc,t. Clnd

Port:: £rme.

lie love au
Gl'qnq"lQ &amp; Gl'clndpql
Si9"!Qn.
'I au ore_-r~&gt;e be.2.-r.

Samantha finn Burris
I love you
Gt'oncll'lo &amp; Gl"ondpa
,Bl.ll"l'i2.

ove. '/~

,

IIston Kane Hnsel

Garrett Joseph 6 Blake
matthew Ranegar

Son of timber mcCielland

lie I ave out' b oyz. Mil'li
one! Po
f.4oii,_MQF'1Q
one!

lie love you
Nanny &amp;Poflctvl. 'frQ-r2.on
•'
''

"
'

·'
,l

•

''

Casevllne
I

lalherlnelloel
&amp;ebq &amp; PopP'I

Kodv,
&amp;
Conner wane

~

I ave yau Gl"qnc1"1Q &amp;
Popaw Lof-ri?.onc1
GrontJF'lQ &amp; Gl"on&lt;1,o

McKensla Danlelle
Boso
To ""'i Hoimie &amp; Po,o
Miller anc1

Gl"anc1"1Q .&amp; 02. o
!LOVe

P..idell 001";
8eebq &amp; PopP'I

He'M!.II Gl"ofldi'IQ
Lucille &amp; Gl"qnny
ke¥ U!

James, Mag,
Marla &amp; Cannan
'
Thc:m1r2. Grof'll'ly ofl&lt;1 Gro"'py
lie love you! .

6 Dylan
'Saunders
lie love you JliCiw-f'ICIW
ond Poppy .Sq&lt;.mqeJ"2.

••

limy Ours
0'-11' pl'ec.i ou2. 4n.ge.l.

LOVe you
Po paw qnq MCif'ICIW ~"'""'

I I ove. MCif'ICIW onc1

PopOW

HleKis Brooke Russell nicholas Hllen Sheets •·t

'

.

Ho Ol'li Clfld llocllpt. .i)Jt'2.-t

marshall logan Gibbs
~love you Gt'onclpt:J

&amp;

Gl'qnd"lQ 1'-Qnkin &amp; Mei'te.

I Iove. you GI"Qnqi'IQ &amp;
Gl"ondpq P-uz.WI .

lie love yOAJ Nid&gt;OIQ2.
'GI"Qnd po &amp; Gl"anq"lQ ·
5f,ee.-t2.

�'

PageC&amp;

imroa!l '&lt;lrimts .. ientintl
Sunday, September 9
ADDISON - Preaching service.
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m.
VINTON - Homecoming at
Vinton Full Gospel Church, 10
a.m., with Kemper Family
singing and Ernie Napier
preaching. Everyone welcome.
GALLIPOLIS- Harry Drummond reunion at American
Legion Post 27, McCormick
Road. Lunch at noon.
LECTA - Homecoming at Walnut R1dge Church, with Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m.. worship
service at 10:30 a.m., lunch at
noon. Guest speaker is Bud
Hatfield. Special singing.
PATRIOT- Homecoming at
Bethesda United Methodist
Church. Potluck at 1 p.m.

SUNDAY, September 9
POINT PLEASANT - Dellv.ered of Reedsville, Ohio, will
be at the Church of God of
Prophecy, 22nd Street. 7 p.m.
ground.
CHESHIRE - Baird-Halfhlll
reunion at Gavin Shelterhouse.
Dinner at 1 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Preparation for
Childbirth class from 2·6 p.m.,
in the HMC Education and Conference Center. Information, call
446-5030.
Monday, September 10
CHESHIRE -Kyger Creek
Middle School will have an athletics booster meeting at 5:30
p.m. and PTO meeting at 6:30
p.m.
Tuesday, September 11
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County
District Library Board of
Trustees will meet at 6 p.m. at
Bossard Memorial Library.

BIDWELL - Homecoming at
Prospect Baptist Church, starting with Sunday school at 10:30
a.m:, dinner at noon in fellow·
ship room, with preaching by
Rev. Ronnie Lamley in the afternoon. Special singing by Cherry
Ridge Gospel .band.

GALLIPOLIS- TRIAD meeting, 10 a.m., Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.

GALLIPOLIS - Homecom1ng at
Bell Chapel, 11 a.m., with
Wayne Balcomb preaching and
mercy singing. Dinner on the

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
District Library Board of
Trustees, 6 p.m., Bossard
Memorial tibrary.

SUNDAY
ALFRED - Orange Christian
church 163rd annual homecoming Sunday. Guest speaker
David Cougar with special
singing by Higher Calling. Dinner at 12:30; service at 1:30·
p.m. Morning services, Sunday
school at 9:30 and preaching at
10:30 a.m. Church located on
Coonty Road 53, Coolville.
RACINE - Hill reunion Sunday,
1 p.m. Star Mill Park in Racine.
MONDAY
RUTLAND- Rutland Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m., fire
station.
·
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Oance Club will
begin dance lessons Monday at
the Royal Oak Resort recreation
center. Classes will be held
· from 7:30 to 9 p.m. and the first
two sessions will be free . Couples are invited to participate.
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Page C7

2001
...

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy
High School Choir Boosters, 6
p.m., choir room.
Revivals
Gospel meeting at Church of
Christ, Bethel Congregation,
Sept. 2· 7, at 7:30 p.m. with
Bobby Holmes. Sunday morning
service at 10 a.m., 5:45 p.m.
and6 p.m.
Holy Ghost tent revi~al at Man·
power Park, Jack$on, Sept. 7-8, ·
10, 11 ,13, and 14, 7 p.m. nightly. Evangelisl Danny Logue and
Pastor Dan Neal will be speaking. Everybody welcome.
Revival at Centenary United
Christian Church, beginning
Sept. 4, with Rev. Sinnett Summers of Ripley, W.Va. Special
singing nightly, all welcome.
Comml!nlly Calendar Is published as a free service to
nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
sales or fund-raisers.

Due to the highway construction, entrance to the park is by •
taking Wipple Road to Pine
Grove Road to the entrance.
TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District,
regular meeting, Tuesday, 7
p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs CountyOhio Bicentennial Committee,
Monday, 4:30 p.m. Monday at
the Meigs Museur)'l. Committee
members urged to attend to further plans for bicentennial projects.
·
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, regular meeting,

Mason

POINT PLEASANT - Gospel
music at West Virginia State
Farm Museum, 1-4 p.m., wllh
Sharon Eblin of Gallipolis,
Delivered of Reedsville, Eternity of Point Pleasant, and Gloryland Believers of Southside.
Kenneth Bledsoe will be
emcee.

Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, luncheon, Tuesday. Overbrook
Center, Middleport, noon. Guest
speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of
Edward Jones Investments, on
fluctuations of the stock market.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees, special meeting,
Wednesday, 7 p.m. township
building on Joppa Road. Discussion on renewal of.the cable
television franchise with Adelphia Cable Co., and residents
with complaints or problems.

5:30 p.m. at Trinity United
Methodist Church. For informa,
lion call 675-3692 .

POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at·
Point Pleasant Gun Club 6
'

LEON - Leon Elementary
PTO, 7 p.m. Business Includes
election of officers.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.

TUESDAY, September 11
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.

•

~m .

.

POINT PLEASANT - Weight ,,
Watchers, Christ Episcopal .
Church w~h weigh in at 4:45 '·
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
·
'

GALLIPOLIS FERRY - The
Beavers will sing at Mount
Carmel Church, 6 p.m.

FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

MASON - I 4th Annual Ester
and Herb King reunion, Mason
Park, noon. Bring covered dish
(meat furnished) and gift for
auction.

POINT PLEASANT - Clothing
give away every Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th and
Main. Clothing contributions
appreciated.

LEON - 29th annual birthday
dinner in memory of John L.
Sayre, Baden Community Center, noon. Bring covered dish. ·
Auction in afternoon.

MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited.
HENDERSON - Line dancin9,
Henderson Community Building, with instructor Dawn Halstead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanc~d 7 p.m.

APPLE GROVE - Sounds of
Praise will sing at Millstone
Church, 7 p.m.

lEON - Mason County Board
of Education, 6:30 p.m., Leon
Elementary.

POINT PLEASANT - Matt
Hen,Y will be at Gospel Tabernacle Church, 6 p.m.

NEW HAVEN - New Haven ..
Jr. QUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m..''
REVIVALS
LEON - Revival at Leon
Church of Christ in Christian
Union beginning Sept. 16 with
Pete Cobb and Sampy Hart. ..

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- "Let ,
God Be God" services at Faim .·
Gospel Church with Evangelist '
Wayne Nelson, his wife Hattie ·.
and "Danny Boy" Sept. 9-13. :·
Service times are 10 a.m., 11
a .m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday ,.
and 7 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Special services include Round
Up Day, Friend Night, Grandparents Night, Youth Night,
Neighbor's Night, and Fellow- .
ship Night. Special music and ;
children's program. Nursery ·
available. For transportation :
675-1492 or 675-4038.

MASON - Wahama Alumni
Band will practice at 2 p.m. in
the bandroom to prepare for
Homecoming on September.
28. For more information call
Martha Varian at 882-3932 or
Rex Howard at 882-8240.

WEDNESDAY, September 12
GALLIPOLIS- Revival at
POINT PLEASANT Church of God of Prophecy,
Wednesday night Bible clubs
White Road, Sept. 16· 22. Serfor preschool up through 12th
vice times are 6 p.m. Sunday ·
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel and 7 p.m. throughout the
Lighthouse Church, Neal
week. Special speaker will be
Road. For information call 675- the Rev. Joe Gwinn and there .
7229 or 675-6620.
. will be special singing nightly. ..

·ASHTON - Homecoming oil
Moore's Chapel Church, Rocky
Fork Road, 11 a.m. Guest
speaker Dr. William Wilson,
Distric) Superintendent.

POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

MONDAY, September 10
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
loss support group, Southside

THURsDAY, September 13
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at

'·

E-MAIL US:.
news@mydailytribune.com·
news@mydailyregister.com

news@mydailysentinel.com

TOP FIVE

Presents

AUTUMN ADVENTURE. IN WIWA.MSBURC
AND MONTIClll.O

:_#:, OCfOBER
18-1?l'
2001
.
~. -

.

,

r:r

Tour Includes;

· 3 nights accommodation (all suites hotel)
·All full American Breakfast s, Lunch at Michie Tavern, three dinners
- Montice llo tour, Michie Tavern, ,admission to Colonia) Williamsburg with
local g uide and free time
-Williamsburg Music Theatre Show
-Tour Carters' Grove Plantation
- Eve nin g program in Co lo ni a l Williamsburg
- Shopping at Willi amsburg Pottery
- Deluxe. Motorcoach tran sportation
·A ll taxes and tips, luggage handling
· Esco rted by Mary Fowler, P.C .. Director

'

includes dessert. It's very easy
to fill a tray with side dishes
that add lots of calories. While
you're at it, make choices that
make your plate colorful.
Vegetables' color often indicates what nutrients they
contain (for example, orange
vegetables almost always indic
cate beta carotene). The darker the color, the more nutriertt&lt; - ·so fresh spinach is a
better choice for a salad than
iceberg lettuce.
• Don't snack between
meals. Or if you do, make. it
nutritious, and count it as a
meal. So, you might choose a

Becky
Collins
FAMILY
one. Here are some strategies

to avoid that pudgy middle.
Ohio State University
nutritionists share these tips:
• When eating in the cafeteria, limit yourself to one plate
of food per meal - and that

traditional breakfast-lun chand-dinner combination, or
decide that lunch-dinnermidnight snack is a bener
choice for your schedule. Sip
·on water or di et drinks in
between meals to preve nt
extra calories from creeping
into your diet.
• Be choosy about the food
you keep in your dorm room .
If you have a small refrigerator, it's easy to keep juice and
milk, as well as fruits and vegetables. Dry soups are good
choices, especially if they're
broth- based rather th an
cream-based. Limit th e hi gh-

sugar sodas and
snacks.

high-fat

GALLIPOLIS - It was on
J~y 28. 1880, that railroad construction crews from Gallipolis
and Logan joined track at
Hartley's Mill in Vinton County. That same day, the first
loaded train in Gallia history
steamed into Gallipolis.
· Freight service essentially
was begun on that day over
what in 1880 . was .called the
Ohio and West Virginia Railroad (later known as the
Hocking Valley) . Technically,
the first train to bring here
something other than railroad
supplies came on Aug. 9, 1880.
Among other things, 13 tons of
Lake Erie ice were unloaded.
The fact that it took until
1880 for Gallipolis to get rail .
service put the town behind
other southern Ohio cities.
The railroad came to Ironton,
Jackson, Oak Hill and Marietta
irl the 1850s.
It was on April 23, 1880,
when the first locomotive
acrually came to Gallipolis. But
it arrived here by steamboat.
. An incline railroad was con,)tructed in March of 1880
. '{f9mthe D,.four Wharf ~t the
·'end ofSpn. · Street up to the
.

.

James
Sands
HISTORY

·

top of the bank. That locomotive canie here with rtine flatcars, a steam shovel, a water
tank and a hand car. These
were all used in the laying of
the track.
By d1e end of May three
more locomotives had arrived
by boat. All four of these
engines (No. 71 , No. 73, No.
75 and No. 76) stayed in the
county for many yean. These
engines were pulled up the
bank by what were called "crab .
motor machines."
In the spring work. crews
were laying about three quarters of a mile of track a day. In
the summer they laid 1.5 miles
a day. Much of the crew's time
was spent on building the 18
tresdes located just in Gallia
County.

The longest trestles were the
Sum.mit
tresde
Glenn
(between what is now Bidwell
and Vinton) and the twin trestles at McCarley's Mill. At
some places, these trestles were
60 feet above the ground. At
one time they were uP.arly 400
feet in length . Trestles added
some element of excitement to
rail travel. We are not aware of
any real serious accidents there.
There was one story about a
train le-aving Vinton headed for
Gallipolis. The train had just
left the Vinton station when
word was received that part of
the Glenn Summit tresde had
coUapsed. The telegraph operator, a woman, fired up a locomotive sittin!i at the station and
steamed off to warn the tram .
She was .able to get the
"endangered train" stopped.
Fortunately, the southbound
train had to stop a few miles
out ofVihton to get a cow off
the track. The telegraph operator and the engineer on that
southbound train struck up a
friendship that later ended in
matrimony.
Most ,g_( the wooden trestle;;;
that wei'e''built in 1Silo had to'

you. If yo ur we igh t cree p&lt; up,
m rreasc you r e.xe rcise and

• Campus life often n1ean s a dt•creJ&lt;e calor ies to keep th ~
lot of walking, between class- frt shnm1 15 from piling on.
es and to and from th e dorm.
(Buk)' C&lt;&gt; lli11s is Ga llia
That's great, but don 't allow C&lt;,ll llf)l~- E.\t!'usion agntt .fi'r
yourself to believe any ex tra fa mily aud rousJ/mer sde11Crs,
exercise you get allows yo u to Oftio Stale Um'vcrsi1y.)
eat anything. People often ·.
overestimate the exercise they

get and underestimate th e
calories they consume. That's
a weight-gaining proposition
for anyone.
• Weigh yourself once a
week or so.You can do th is at
the student health center if
you didn 't bring scate·s with

First passenger,fteight .rail service came in 1880

~·

DON 'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

Chll(1ren Need 80% Of Their
Vaccinations In The First lWo
Years Of Lila

Call Your Health Care
be completely ·rebuilt in 1897 Seminel. He can be comactcd by
Or The Gallia
Provider
and 1898. By 1906, the oak wrilit~,g lo 346 Meadow Lme,
County Health Dept. At
beams had already become so Circleville, Ohio 43113.)
(740) 441-2950
weathered that it was decided
For More Information
to fill in trestles I 14 (in the picture) and 11 8 with earth . In
essence, earthen bridges .were
Gentlemen cl Ladie:s
built. That work was complet(ALL YOUTH)
ed by 1908. The smaller trestles
continued 'some years past that
Start Your
date.
·
Engines!
The giant earth 'shovel used .
in 1880 could fill a railroad car
in three minutes.

GIANT CARNIVAL
Middleport Church of Christ
FLC Parking Lot
September 9. 2001 . .
4 - 6pm
. llGCO

'

aames Sands is a special corrrSpotldenl for the Stmday Times-

for Children with Medical
Handicaps (BCMH) is available 10 help
families. 1£ fOU have achild that has
special health care netds, fOU
may be eli~ble for i!lsistance.
Call the Gallia Countf Health
' Department, 441·2039,for
information.Call today and ease
" ' uom•u

w- ytJ4II' fe~vorite roCII dothcsl
.
~~

Bri119 v- friCIIdsl
Cost of the cvat: $0

"I pNSI on tOWGI"d the pi to win thoe
· prize fOf' Which God has called me

heawnward Ill Christ .J•sus." Phil. 3:14

~

''

®

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
A GENESIS HOSPITAL

Alzheimer's Support Group " .

AerobiC.

Tuesday, Sept. 18, 7 p.m .
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236, Ext. 1383

Mondays and Wednesdays, 5:30 p.f11.
Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
Multi-purpose Room

Wlnp Grief Support Group.

$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222 .

Monday, Sept. 3, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

Thinking about getting a
home equity loan?
Think faster.

• Easy-to-clean upswept cooktop.
Electronic clock and timer.
Auto oven·shut-off turns
the oven off after 12 hours.
Frameless glass oveh
door with widow.

Thursdays, 7 p.m.

LARGE CAPACITY 3-CYCLE
Duty Dryer

Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$5 per session
(304) 675-7222

CPR Training (new or expired cards)

.

Pleasant Yalley Wellnen Center
Now Open at 8 a.m.
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

• Auto Dry Control
• 3 heat selections.
• Up-lront lint filters

·

Tuesday, Sept. 1i, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hartley Room

SUPER CAPACITY 6-CYCLE
Heavy Duty Washer
• 3 water level
selections
temperatures
• Auto Balance
Suspension
System
o Self-cleaning
lilt$

(304) 6 7 5-4340, E)(\. 2004

Aphasia Association &amp; Stroke
.Support Group
&gt; No closing costs, fees or points. &gt; Interest may be tax

Tuesday, Sep~ 18, 1 p.m .
Rehabilitation Center Conference Room
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

'

deductible. &gt;Simple application process. &gt; 7 days qnly

,,
www. firs tar. com

7M-~~
&amp;lt~at

304-6,14-1021
Peoples Choice Is a division of City National Bank, member FDIC
•

...

FUM14SM
'14.1 cu. II.
capacity
o 3 cabinet ·
shelves
• 5 door shelves

':::::::::;;;;;;~ • 3 wash/rinse

Diabetes Outpatient Classes

Tuesday, Sept. 11, 8 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Aerobics Room
$20/session
(304) 675-4340 ext. 2003

. GE STANDARD
UPRIGHT FREEZER

Ball Room Dancing

Monday, Sept. 24, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(304) 675-7997

•

30" ELECTRIC RANG
With Self-Cleaning Oven

I

Cameo Ladles Breast Cancer
Support Group

'

.Price Per Person (Due by Sept. 18)
$410- Quad
$485- Triple
$525- Double
$635- Single

GALLIPOLIS - When I
was in college, it was called
the "freshman 10." Those 10
pounds that the average freshman gains during the first year
away from home. Today it's
the "freshman . 15." I guess
inflation can strike anywhere,
even in the hips.
Unfortunately, it's easy for
young women and men to
gain weight their first year
away from home. The sudden
change in eating habits often
allows an increased intake of
calories without an offsetting
increase in exercise. That in
itself will put weight on any-

LEON - Revival at Pleasant
Region Wesleyan Methodist
Church , W.Va. 2, Sept. 13· 16,
7 p.m. special singing by The
Quales: Don, Valerie and FamIly. Preaching by new pastor
Rev. Orlyn "Butch" Cochran Jr.

ALBUMS
1. "Now," Maxwell.
FILMS
Columbia/CRG.
1. "Jeepers Creepers," MGM.
(feat. Ja Rule). Epic.
2.
2. "Rush Hour 2," New Line .
2. "Fallin','' Alicia Keys. J.
3. "American Pie 2," Un iversal.
3. "Someone To Call My Lover,"
--4 ~The-Others,":-Miramax. ___,Janet-Virgin. _____:__ _ __3,~fllo.w.-1.,:_va.riotJS.i~rtil&gt;ls.---5. "Rat Race ,'' Paramount.
4. "Hit 'Em Up Style !Oops!),"
EMI/UnlversaVSony/Zomba/Vir(From Exhibitor Relations Co.)
Blu Cantrell. RedZone.
gin.
5. "Let Me Blow Ya Mind," Eve
4. "Songs In A Minor," Alicia
(feat. Gwen Stefani). Ruff
Keys. J. (Platinum- certified
HOT FIVE
Ryders.
sales of 1 million units)
1. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez
(From Billboard magazine)
5. "Celebrity," 'N Sync. Jive.

of
City National
Bank

9,2001

Don't let the freshman 15' gain on you this year

Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a
short meeting.

HARTFORD - Elwood Lieving
reunion, Hartford Community
Center, noon. Covered dish
dinner at 1 p.m.

LETART - Forgiven 4 Southern Gospel Quartet of Gallipolis will sing at Old Town Board
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

Meigs

Sunday,

·'

•

Wr. havr. a limitr.~ quantity of room air conditior.rs at pricr.s
will
.
lr.avr. you brr.qthless...whilr. quantitir.s last! .
.
*ASV08FA8000BTU llOvolt .........................;........................................ $249.95
*ASVIOAB IO,OOOBTU IIO~olt...: .................................,...................~ ..... $279.95
*ASV18DB.
BTU 220 voll ........................~·.......................................$419.95

�'

PageC&amp;

imroa!l '&lt;lrimts .. ientintl
Sunday, September 9
ADDISON - Preaching service.
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m.
VINTON - Homecoming at
Vinton Full Gospel Church, 10
a.m., with Kemper Family
singing and Ernie Napier
preaching. Everyone welcome.
GALLIPOLIS- Harry Drummond reunion at American
Legion Post 27, McCormick
Road. Lunch at noon.
LECTA - Homecoming at Walnut R1dge Church, with Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m.. worship
service at 10:30 a.m., lunch at
noon. Guest speaker is Bud
Hatfield. Special singing.
PATRIOT- Homecoming at
Bethesda United Methodist
Church. Potluck at 1 p.m.

SUNDAY, September 9
POINT PLEASANT - Dellv.ered of Reedsville, Ohio, will
be at the Church of God of
Prophecy, 22nd Street. 7 p.m.
ground.
CHESHIRE - Baird-Halfhlll
reunion at Gavin Shelterhouse.
Dinner at 1 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Preparation for
Childbirth class from 2·6 p.m.,
in the HMC Education and Conference Center. Information, call
446-5030.
Monday, September 10
CHESHIRE -Kyger Creek
Middle School will have an athletics booster meeting at 5:30
p.m. and PTO meeting at 6:30
p.m.
Tuesday, September 11
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County
District Library Board of
Trustees will meet at 6 p.m. at
Bossard Memorial Library.

BIDWELL - Homecoming at
Prospect Baptist Church, starting with Sunday school at 10:30
a.m:, dinner at noon in fellow·
ship room, with preaching by
Rev. Ronnie Lamley in the afternoon. Special singing by Cherry
Ridge Gospel .band.

GALLIPOLIS- TRIAD meeting, 10 a.m., Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.

GALLIPOLIS - Homecom1ng at
Bell Chapel, 11 a.m., with
Wayne Balcomb preaching and
mercy singing. Dinner on the

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
District Library Board of
Trustees, 6 p.m., Bossard
Memorial tibrary.

SUNDAY
ALFRED - Orange Christian
church 163rd annual homecoming Sunday. Guest speaker
David Cougar with special
singing by Higher Calling. Dinner at 12:30; service at 1:30·
p.m. Morning services, Sunday
school at 9:30 and preaching at
10:30 a.m. Church located on
Coonty Road 53, Coolville.
RACINE - Hill reunion Sunday,
1 p.m. Star Mill Park in Racine.
MONDAY
RUTLAND- Rutland Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m., fire
station.
·
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Oance Club will
begin dance lessons Monday at
the Royal Oak Resort recreation
center. Classes will be held
· from 7:30 to 9 p.m. and the first
two sessions will be free . Couples are invited to participate.
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Page C7

2001
...

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy
High School Choir Boosters, 6
p.m., choir room.
Revivals
Gospel meeting at Church of
Christ, Bethel Congregation,
Sept. 2· 7, at 7:30 p.m. with
Bobby Holmes. Sunday morning
service at 10 a.m., 5:45 p.m.
and6 p.m.
Holy Ghost tent revi~al at Man·
power Park, Jack$on, Sept. 7-8, ·
10, 11 ,13, and 14, 7 p.m. nightly. Evangelisl Danny Logue and
Pastor Dan Neal will be speaking. Everybody welcome.
Revival at Centenary United
Christian Church, beginning
Sept. 4, with Rev. Sinnett Summers of Ripley, W.Va. Special
singing nightly, all welcome.
Comml!nlly Calendar Is published as a free service to
nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
sales or fund-raisers.

Due to the highway construction, entrance to the park is by •
taking Wipple Road to Pine
Grove Road to the entrance.
TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District,
regular meeting, Tuesday, 7
p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs CountyOhio Bicentennial Committee,
Monday, 4:30 p.m. Monday at
the Meigs Museur)'l. Committee
members urged to attend to further plans for bicentennial projects.
·
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, regular meeting,

Mason

POINT PLEASANT - Gospel
music at West Virginia State
Farm Museum, 1-4 p.m., wllh
Sharon Eblin of Gallipolis,
Delivered of Reedsville, Eternity of Point Pleasant, and Gloryland Believers of Southside.
Kenneth Bledsoe will be
emcee.

Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, luncheon, Tuesday. Overbrook
Center, Middleport, noon. Guest
speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of
Edward Jones Investments, on
fluctuations of the stock market.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees, special meeting,
Wednesday, 7 p.m. township
building on Joppa Road. Discussion on renewal of.the cable
television franchise with Adelphia Cable Co., and residents
with complaints or problems.

5:30 p.m. at Trinity United
Methodist Church. For informa,
lion call 675-3692 .

POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at·
Point Pleasant Gun Club 6
'

LEON - Leon Elementary
PTO, 7 p.m. Business Includes
election of officers.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.

TUESDAY, September 11
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.

•

~m .

.

POINT PLEASANT - Weight ,,
Watchers, Christ Episcopal .
Church w~h weigh in at 4:45 '·
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
·
'

GALLIPOLIS FERRY - The
Beavers will sing at Mount
Carmel Church, 6 p.m.

FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

MASON - I 4th Annual Ester
and Herb King reunion, Mason
Park, noon. Bring covered dish
(meat furnished) and gift for
auction.

POINT PLEASANT - Clothing
give away every Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th and
Main. Clothing contributions
appreciated.

LEON - 29th annual birthday
dinner in memory of John L.
Sayre, Baden Community Center, noon. Bring covered dish. ·
Auction in afternoon.

MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited.
HENDERSON - Line dancin9,
Henderson Community Building, with instructor Dawn Halstead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanc~d 7 p.m.

APPLE GROVE - Sounds of
Praise will sing at Millstone
Church, 7 p.m.

lEON - Mason County Board
of Education, 6:30 p.m., Leon
Elementary.

POINT PLEASANT - Matt
Hen,Y will be at Gospel Tabernacle Church, 6 p.m.

NEW HAVEN - New Haven ..
Jr. QUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m..''
REVIVALS
LEON - Revival at Leon
Church of Christ in Christian
Union beginning Sept. 16 with
Pete Cobb and Sampy Hart. ..

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- "Let ,
God Be God" services at Faim .·
Gospel Church with Evangelist '
Wayne Nelson, his wife Hattie ·.
and "Danny Boy" Sept. 9-13. :·
Service times are 10 a.m., 11
a .m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday ,.
and 7 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Special services include Round
Up Day, Friend Night, Grandparents Night, Youth Night,
Neighbor's Night, and Fellow- .
ship Night. Special music and ;
children's program. Nursery ·
available. For transportation :
675-1492 or 675-4038.

MASON - Wahama Alumni
Band will practice at 2 p.m. in
the bandroom to prepare for
Homecoming on September.
28. For more information call
Martha Varian at 882-3932 or
Rex Howard at 882-8240.

WEDNESDAY, September 12
GALLIPOLIS- Revival at
POINT PLEASANT Church of God of Prophecy,
Wednesday night Bible clubs
White Road, Sept. 16· 22. Serfor preschool up through 12th
vice times are 6 p.m. Sunday ·
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel and 7 p.m. throughout the
Lighthouse Church, Neal
week. Special speaker will be
Road. For information call 675- the Rev. Joe Gwinn and there .
7229 or 675-6620.
. will be special singing nightly. ..

·ASHTON - Homecoming oil
Moore's Chapel Church, Rocky
Fork Road, 11 a.m. Guest
speaker Dr. William Wilson,
Distric) Superintendent.

POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

MONDAY, September 10
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
loss support group, Southside

THURsDAY, September 13
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at

'·

E-MAIL US:.
news@mydailytribune.com·
news@mydailyregister.com

news@mydailysentinel.com

TOP FIVE

Presents

AUTUMN ADVENTURE. IN WIWA.MSBURC
AND MONTIClll.O

:_#:, OCfOBER
18-1?l'
2001
.
~. -

.

,

r:r

Tour Includes;

· 3 nights accommodation (all suites hotel)
·All full American Breakfast s, Lunch at Michie Tavern, three dinners
- Montice llo tour, Michie Tavern, ,admission to Colonia) Williamsburg with
local g uide and free time
-Williamsburg Music Theatre Show
-Tour Carters' Grove Plantation
- Eve nin g program in Co lo ni a l Williamsburg
- Shopping at Willi amsburg Pottery
- Deluxe. Motorcoach tran sportation
·A ll taxes and tips, luggage handling
· Esco rted by Mary Fowler, P.C .. Director

'

includes dessert. It's very easy
to fill a tray with side dishes
that add lots of calories. While
you're at it, make choices that
make your plate colorful.
Vegetables' color often indicates what nutrients they
contain (for example, orange
vegetables almost always indic
cate beta carotene). The darker the color, the more nutriertt&lt; - ·so fresh spinach is a
better choice for a salad than
iceberg lettuce.
• Don't snack between
meals. Or if you do, make. it
nutritious, and count it as a
meal. So, you might choose a

Becky
Collins
FAMILY
one. Here are some strategies

to avoid that pudgy middle.
Ohio State University
nutritionists share these tips:
• When eating in the cafeteria, limit yourself to one plate
of food per meal - and that

traditional breakfast-lun chand-dinner combination, or
decide that lunch-dinnermidnight snack is a bener
choice for your schedule. Sip
·on water or di et drinks in
between meals to preve nt
extra calories from creeping
into your diet.
• Be choosy about the food
you keep in your dorm room .
If you have a small refrigerator, it's easy to keep juice and
milk, as well as fruits and vegetables. Dry soups are good
choices, especially if they're
broth- based rather th an
cream-based. Limit th e hi gh-

sugar sodas and
snacks.

high-fat

GALLIPOLIS - It was on
J~y 28. 1880, that railroad construction crews from Gallipolis
and Logan joined track at
Hartley's Mill in Vinton County. That same day, the first
loaded train in Gallia history
steamed into Gallipolis.
· Freight service essentially
was begun on that day over
what in 1880 . was .called the
Ohio and West Virginia Railroad (later known as the
Hocking Valley) . Technically,
the first train to bring here
something other than railroad
supplies came on Aug. 9, 1880.
Among other things, 13 tons of
Lake Erie ice were unloaded.
The fact that it took until
1880 for Gallipolis to get rail .
service put the town behind
other southern Ohio cities.
The railroad came to Ironton,
Jackson, Oak Hill and Marietta
irl the 1850s.
It was on April 23, 1880,
when the first locomotive
acrually came to Gallipolis. But
it arrived here by steamboat.
. An incline railroad was con,)tructed in March of 1880
. '{f9mthe D,.four Wharf ~t the
·'end ofSpn. · Street up to the
.

.

James
Sands
HISTORY

·

top of the bank. That locomotive canie here with rtine flatcars, a steam shovel, a water
tank and a hand car. These
were all used in the laying of
the track.
By d1e end of May three
more locomotives had arrived
by boat. All four of these
engines (No. 71 , No. 73, No.
75 and No. 76) stayed in the
county for many yean. These
engines were pulled up the
bank by what were called "crab .
motor machines."
In the spring work. crews
were laying about three quarters of a mile of track a day. In
the summer they laid 1.5 miles
a day. Much of the crew's time
was spent on building the 18
tresdes located just in Gallia
County.

The longest trestles were the
Sum.mit
tresde
Glenn
(between what is now Bidwell
and Vinton) and the twin trestles at McCarley's Mill. At
some places, these trestles were
60 feet above the ground. At
one time they were uP.arly 400
feet in length . Trestles added
some element of excitement to
rail travel. We are not aware of
any real serious accidents there.
There was one story about a
train le-aving Vinton headed for
Gallipolis. The train had just
left the Vinton station when
word was received that part of
the Glenn Summit tresde had
coUapsed. The telegraph operator, a woman, fired up a locomotive sittin!i at the station and
steamed off to warn the tram .
She was .able to get the
"endangered train" stopped.
Fortunately, the southbound
train had to stop a few miles
out ofVihton to get a cow off
the track. The telegraph operator and the engineer on that
southbound train struck up a
friendship that later ended in
matrimony.
Most ,g_( the wooden trestle;;;
that wei'e''built in 1Silo had to'

you. If yo ur we igh t cree p&lt; up,
m rreasc you r e.xe rcise and

• Campus life often n1ean s a dt•creJ&lt;e calor ies to keep th ~
lot of walking, between class- frt shnm1 15 from piling on.
es and to and from th e dorm.
(Buk)' C&lt;&gt; lli11s is Ga llia
That's great, but don 't allow C&lt;,ll llf)l~- E.\t!'usion agntt .fi'r
yourself to believe any ex tra fa mily aud rousJ/mer sde11Crs,
exercise you get allows yo u to Oftio Stale Um'vcrsi1y.)
eat anything. People often ·.
overestimate the exercise they

get and underestimate th e
calories they consume. That's
a weight-gaining proposition
for anyone.
• Weigh yourself once a
week or so.You can do th is at
the student health center if
you didn 't bring scate·s with

First passenger,fteight .rail service came in 1880

~·

DON 'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

Chll(1ren Need 80% Of Their
Vaccinations In The First lWo
Years Of Lila

Call Your Health Care
be completely ·rebuilt in 1897 Seminel. He can be comactcd by
Or The Gallia
Provider
and 1898. By 1906, the oak wrilit~,g lo 346 Meadow Lme,
County Health Dept. At
beams had already become so Circleville, Ohio 43113.)
(740) 441-2950
weathered that it was decided
For More Information
to fill in trestles I 14 (in the picture) and 11 8 with earth . In
essence, earthen bridges .were
Gentlemen cl Ladie:s
built. That work was complet(ALL YOUTH)
ed by 1908. The smaller trestles
continued 'some years past that
Start Your
date.
·
Engines!
The giant earth 'shovel used .
in 1880 could fill a railroad car
in three minutes.

GIANT CARNIVAL
Middleport Church of Christ
FLC Parking Lot
September 9. 2001 . .
4 - 6pm
. llGCO

'

aames Sands is a special corrrSpotldenl for the Stmday Times-

for Children with Medical
Handicaps (BCMH) is available 10 help
families. 1£ fOU have achild that has
special health care netds, fOU
may be eli~ble for i!lsistance.
Call the Gallia Countf Health
' Department, 441·2039,for
information.Call today and ease
" ' uom•u

w- ytJ4II' fe~vorite roCII dothcsl
.
~~

Bri119 v- friCIIdsl
Cost of the cvat: $0

"I pNSI on tOWGI"d the pi to win thoe
· prize fOf' Which God has called me

heawnward Ill Christ .J•sus." Phil. 3:14

~

''

®

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
A GENESIS HOSPITAL

Alzheimer's Support Group " .

AerobiC.

Tuesday, Sept. 18, 7 p.m .
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236, Ext. 1383

Mondays and Wednesdays, 5:30 p.f11.
Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
Multi-purpose Room

Wlnp Grief Support Group.

$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222 .

Monday, Sept. 3, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

Thinking about getting a
home equity loan?
Think faster.

• Easy-to-clean upswept cooktop.
Electronic clock and timer.
Auto oven·shut-off turns
the oven off after 12 hours.
Frameless glass oveh
door with widow.

Thursdays, 7 p.m.

LARGE CAPACITY 3-CYCLE
Duty Dryer

Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$5 per session
(304) 675-7222

CPR Training (new or expired cards)

.

Pleasant Yalley Wellnen Center
Now Open at 8 a.m.
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

• Auto Dry Control
• 3 heat selections.
• Up-lront lint filters

·

Tuesday, Sept. 1i, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hartley Room

SUPER CAPACITY 6-CYCLE
Heavy Duty Washer
• 3 water level
selections
temperatures
• Auto Balance
Suspension
System
o Self-cleaning
lilt$

(304) 6 7 5-4340, E)(\. 2004

Aphasia Association &amp; Stroke
.Support Group
&gt; No closing costs, fees or points. &gt; Interest may be tax

Tuesday, Sep~ 18, 1 p.m .
Rehabilitation Center Conference Room
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

'

deductible. &gt;Simple application process. &gt; 7 days qnly

,,
www. firs tar. com

7M-~~
&amp;lt~at

304-6,14-1021
Peoples Choice Is a division of City National Bank, member FDIC
•

...

FUM14SM
'14.1 cu. II.
capacity
o 3 cabinet ·
shelves
• 5 door shelves

':::::::::;;;;;;~ • 3 wash/rinse

Diabetes Outpatient Classes

Tuesday, Sept. 11, 8 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Aerobics Room
$20/session
(304) 675-4340 ext. 2003

. GE STANDARD
UPRIGHT FREEZER

Ball Room Dancing

Monday, Sept. 24, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(304) 675-7997

•

30" ELECTRIC RANG
With Self-Cleaning Oven

I

Cameo Ladles Breast Cancer
Support Group

'

.Price Per Person (Due by Sept. 18)
$410- Quad
$485- Triple
$525- Double
$635- Single

GALLIPOLIS - When I
was in college, it was called
the "freshman 10." Those 10
pounds that the average freshman gains during the first year
away from home. Today it's
the "freshman . 15." I guess
inflation can strike anywhere,
even in the hips.
Unfortunately, it's easy for
young women and men to
gain weight their first year
away from home. The sudden
change in eating habits often
allows an increased intake of
calories without an offsetting
increase in exercise. That in
itself will put weight on any-

LEON - Revival at Pleasant
Region Wesleyan Methodist
Church , W.Va. 2, Sept. 13· 16,
7 p.m. special singing by The
Quales: Don, Valerie and FamIly. Preaching by new pastor
Rev. Orlyn "Butch" Cochran Jr.

ALBUMS
1. "Now," Maxwell.
FILMS
Columbia/CRG.
1. "Jeepers Creepers," MGM.
(feat. Ja Rule). Epic.
2.
2. "Rush Hour 2," New Line .
2. "Fallin','' Alicia Keys. J.
3. "American Pie 2," Un iversal.
3. "Someone To Call My Lover,"
--4 ~The-Others,":-Miramax. ___,Janet-Virgin. _____:__ _ __3,~fllo.w.-1.,:_va.riotJS.i~rtil&gt;ls.---5. "Rat Race ,'' Paramount.
4. "Hit 'Em Up Style !Oops!),"
EMI/UnlversaVSony/Zomba/Vir(From Exhibitor Relations Co.)
Blu Cantrell. RedZone.
gin.
5. "Let Me Blow Ya Mind," Eve
4. "Songs In A Minor," Alicia
(feat. Gwen Stefani). Ruff
Keys. J. (Platinum- certified
HOT FIVE
Ryders.
sales of 1 million units)
1. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez
(From Billboard magazine)
5. "Celebrity," 'N Sync. Jive.

of
City National
Bank

9,2001

Don't let the freshman 15' gain on you this year

Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a
short meeting.

HARTFORD - Elwood Lieving
reunion, Hartford Community
Center, noon. Covered dish
dinner at 1 p.m.

LETART - Forgiven 4 Southern Gospel Quartet of Gallipolis will sing at Old Town Board
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

Meigs

Sunday,

·'

•

Wr. havr. a limitr.~ quantity of room air conditior.rs at pricr.s
will
.
lr.avr. you brr.qthless...whilr. quantitir.s last! .
.
*ASV08FA8000BTU llOvolt .........................;........................................ $249.95
*ASVIOAB IO,OOOBTU IIO~olt...: .................................,...................~ ..... $279.95
*ASV18DB.
BTU 220 voll ........................~·.......................................$419.95

�..
_Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Pick~up
fawn PageCI
for the Model T Ford Club
International's 45th :mnual
tour and conventiOn.
"We were one of four
pickup convertibles there
out of 312 cars and trucks
registered for the tou·r,"
commented Roy.
The Model T's, ranging in
models from 1907 to 1927,
were brought in from all
over the country to participate in the event. Each one
had to be registered and .pass
a safety inspection · before
they could take t_o the road
in the planned Mo'nday to
Friday road tours.
As Roy explain~d, the day
trips were from 58 to 105
. miles long and for the most
part country roads were
used . Occasionally
the
Model T's moved onto stat~
roads to get where they
needed to go on the next leg
of their tour.
Since creating road rage

•l
Ral
from Page (J

from motorim going as fast
as they dar~ -~ho really don't
care that a Model T's cruising speed is only 35, the
organization opted a long
rime ago to stay on country
roads where traffic is at a
slower pace and there's more
·
space accommodating fewer
vehicles.
Mter touring each day the
antique car and truck owners
returned to the motel head~
h
· .. ·
quarters •Or ot er acnvmes.
At week's end, the. cpnvention culminated with an
awards banquet where the
best was sel~c ted from the
rest in a judging session and
trophies were handed out.
The day after returning
from the convention, the
G ruesers attended the grand
opening of the restored 1823
Chester Courthouse .
They arrived in the Roy's
T27 Model T, were greeted
by guides in primitive costuming, and toured OhioUs
oldest standing counhouse
-an impressive reflection of
yesteryear.

wv

Sunday, Sept. 9, 20o1
days in Septembar. Daily In October.
All-day trips are scheduled lor Sept.
29 and Oct. 27 batween Romney
and Moorefield.

mander. There are several restaurants near Cheat Bridge and in

W.Va.

Durbin and Elkins.

hum Page Cl
St4-$24. Children, 3to tt, $to-St8.
The Salamander also offers a
train-horseback riding combination
trip lor $t75 per person.
-The Durbin Rocket follows the
Greenbrier River on a t .5-hour, tomil&lt;! trip.
Schedule: ThuKdays and Sundays , Ap1i: through October.
Cost: Adults, $8. Over 60, $7.
Children, 3 to tt , $5.
Contact: Web site: www.moun_ tainrail.com. Phone: (304) 456-4935
or (877) 686-7245.
Food: Drinks are sold on the Sara-

Lodging: Railside camping sites
are available along the routes ollhe
Rocket and Salamander. There are
several motels, cabins and bed and
breaklasls in hearby towns. For a
complete list, see the Pocahontes
County Web site www.pocahontascountywv.com.
THE POTOIIAC EAGLE

lields with larms dating from the
early 1700S and the narrow river val-

ph~:

ley known as "The Trough.'
Schedule: Saturdays lrom May
through August. Saturdays and Sun-

NEW RIVER TRAIN EXCURSIO'NS

'

Exploding. pop~lation
of seals off Ma1ne coast

H!00-22-EAGLE.

In cooperation

w~h

Amtrak, the

Inside:
'

Sunday, September 9, 1001
•

out

ry, we probably have more piled in December, the harnow than ever before," says bor seal count is expected to
James Gilbert, a professor of surpass 31,000, more than
wildlife ecology at the Uni- six times the count recorded
versity of Maine who is in 1976.
heading the 2001 survey.
When the results are com-

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) · surge coming in the last
- The seal population is decade.
exploding off the Maine
"At least to the back of
coast, with the greatest the turn of the (last) centu-

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shaws haw local srocks of interesr performed lasr w~ek.
Each days closing figures are prov[ded by Advesr of Gallipolis.

~mTec!I/SBC

bears engineer Tom Jones
swears are a regular feature
on Cheat Mountain Salamander r\lns .
The Salamander, a selfpropelled rail car, is one of
several rail excursions operating in the Potomac Highlands along the eastern
slopes . of West Virginia's course. Pulled by " Little
Appalachian Mountains.
LeRni," a "little engine that
Nic.holas, who builds could," passengers ride in an
model ·r ailroads with his open excursion car or
grandfather, "found this trip woode'1 caboose for the
for us," said his mother, 1.5-hour, 10-mile ride.
Kerin Buckner, of AnderFurther north, · in Romson, S.C.
ney, the Potomac . Eagle
Nicholas saw an ad for a promises Bald Eagle sightWest Virginia train excur- ings on more than 90 per- ·
sion at the end of a video on cent of its excursions.
the Great Smoky Mountain
The three-hour narrated
Railway. His mom searched trip winds through pastures
the Internet and they devel- filled :with native wildflowoped a plan to make a five- ers and farms dating froin
day, train-focused trip to the early 1700s and 'the nar- e
West Virginia.
row river· valley -known -as
The trip included rides on "The Trough."
- -tl:ieCheaCMoiiirtain- Sala·- --Tlie most - \\lelll-=knoWil
· mandet; Cass Scenic Rail- West Virginia rail excursion
road and New 'TYgart Flyer, is Cass Scenic Railroad.
stops at two state parks,
Shay steam locomotives
shopping and a jazz and pull covered and open-air ·
·wine tasting festival.
cars from the former lumber
"I told him next year we'll town of Cass to the summit
go on a cruise," she said. ·
of West Virginia's second. The Salamander consists highest mountain, Bald
of one self-propelled replica Knob, elevation 4,842 feet.
of a 1920 Edwards Motor
That trip offers a chance
Car. It makes eight trips to smell the steam ·and cinfrom three departure points, dersof the huge black locoall hugging the Shaver's
Fork of the Cheat River. motive while riding up a
wooded hillside with a
Trips are offered throughout
the year, the schedule varies creek falling away on . one
according to the season.
side. The grade is so steep The shortest is 28 miles _I I percent in some spots and takes 2.5 hours. The that several switchbacks are
longest is 88 miles and takes necessary to make the
8.5 hoqrs.
climb. A grade of 2 percent
To keep children interest- is considered steep on coned, Jones lets them ride up ventional railroads.
front and take turns helping
The half-day trip . takes
him operate the train.
passengers to the halfway
Because of the train's point on the Bald Knob
noise, conversation is diffi- trip, Whitaker Station, a
cult so riders are almost high mountain meadow
forced to relax and enjoy picnic ground offering a
the scenery. With a forest on great view of surrounding
one side and the river on hills.
the other, the scenery is
·Back down in Cass, visiworth seeing even if bear tors can stop in a country
and deer are scarce.
. store and museum or stay in
The train 'sgoal after leav- one of 13 restored former
ing the Cheat Bridge station company homes.
on a recent morning run
The Sl)ays attract rail buffs
was the High Falls of the from ·a round the country.
Cheat, where riders can get · Val and Dean Hess came
off and walk down a steep recently from Pittsburgh.
trail to see the falls from a "It's the steepest railroad
wooden platform or the I've ever seen," he said.
rocky riyerbank. The falls
are the midp.o int on the
Susie and Mike Ringer of
line, and people ·can change Portsmouth, Va., were disaptrains and ride into Elkins pointed their trip to Bald
- an all-day roundtrip from Knob was on a _ra_iny day·
Cheat Bridge - or return and the mountain was
to Cheat Bridge.
fogged in.
"I think it's absolutely,
"It would have been
wonderfully relaxing. I wish much better if we could
there had been a black have
seen
somethingi'
bear," said Nora Wirtschafter Ringer said. "We're from
of Wilmingtqn. "The most the beach, we wanted to
fun has been watching the come to the mountains."
kids sit on the driver's lap.'~
When Grant Jacobs, 13, of
The Salamander is operat- Huntington, got off the
ed by the Durpin-based . train with his scout troop,
Durbin &amp; Greenbrier Valley he was not sure where he
Railroad, which also oper- had been, or how long he
ates the 'TYgart River Flyer had been riding, but he
and the Durbin Rocket.
· thought the trip was ','pretty
The Flyer climbs out of cool."

TUE.

WED.

THU.

• .,

M

43

43'1.

43

FRI.

Ashland Inc. ·

T

43

42'4

A
R

o41

43'!.

+

ta'4

m.

34

33'1.

3

3

Bob Evans

c
.Champion

the Tygart Valley, through a
tunnel, along the Cheat
River into the Monongahela National Forest. The
Flyer offers eight trips ranging from a two-hour, 24- ·
mile ride to a 6.5-hour, 85mile trip.
The Rocket departs from
a restored 96-year-old depot
in the small mountain town
of· Durbin and follows the
Greenbrier River's winding

MON.
AEP

BankOne

POOLS AND SPAS

• •

L

7 ............. '' .

7

15' ................... .

City Holding

18' ................... 532i99

. ·--civ'A.c:::~:;~
'15X30

+

s

11

24

AMERICAN PIE 2 (R)
7:15.8:30
MATINEES BAr · SUN 1:151 S:IO

II GROUIID POOL COV&amp;S
16X32 ........ $53.99

18X36 ...... .. $6U9 ' 20XAO ........ $7499

Page D1

.,

trains.

Other excursions altered throughthe year Include trips to The
Greenbrier resort in White Sulphur
Springs, Lewisburg and Pence
Springs.
For schedules call the Collis P.
Huntington Railroad Historical Soci-ety at (606) 325-8800.

+

DuPont

THE OTHERS (P013)
7:10.8:20

. Flratar

+

24Y.

General Electric

+

R

Harley Davidson

+

L

24Y,

24Y,

4Ho

40%

for $40 $2.o per month

GALLIPOLIS Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic announce the
recent addition of four highly trained
hospitalists; Santosh Likk:i, M.D.; Ashok
Dayal, M.D.; Thandavababu Chelliah,
M.D.; and Gnananandh Jayaraman, M .D..
As of July I, the Holzer hospitalists,
who are board-certified or board-eligible
internists, cover the hospital's inpatient
services 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
every day of the year.
Hospitalists are specialist providers of
inpatient medicine who also serve as
physician care managers responsible for
both clinical effectiveness and efficiency.
The overall goal of the hospitalist is to
promote high quality care by optimizing
patient clinical outcomes, patient satisfaction, provider satisfaction, and positive
cost control.
The New England Journal Medicine
first coined the term "hospitalist" five
years ago.
In order to meet this goal, numerous
demands are placed upon the: hospitalist.
Care must_be managed across the continuum, and skills must be developed for a

Dayal

variety of settings, including emer- ideal end result of a more efficient
gency care, triage, intensive care, acute and less costly stay for the patient.
care medicine and sub-acute care.
The primary care/referring physician
Patient referrals for the hospitalists stays infwmed and involved by
are from community based primary directing and coordinating the care
care physicians who resume ambulato- of the patient with the hospit;ilist.
ry care for the patient after inpatient
"Hospitalists are available to
need, have been met. OnFe a referral respond to needs In a more timely
has been made and the patient admit- manner because they are not seeing
ted to HMC, the hospitalist will patients in an office," says Nancy
assume all inpatient care until dis- Smith, RN, patient representative at
charge. This allows for more continu- Holzer Medical Center.
ity and consistency during the hospital
For information on the hospitalist
stay, and more accessibility to the · program at Holzer Medical Center,
physician by the Hospital staff, with an contact Smith at (740) 446-5568.
0

$75,000 grant

Ltd •

includes. ~oo anytime and 2,000 night &amp; weekend minutes:per month
'·

.

,,

'

with a new two-year service agreement on plans $40 and up

''

FREE ·activation ($2o value)

Sears
Wal·Mart
•

Y

Worthington

+.

14

14~.

14~.

1¢ with

Tapping into your nest
e~ bifore age 59 112

•

'

a new

toll-free USA feature included
with home state plans

two-year service
~greement on
plans $40 and up

I'

•'

.
I
I
l

l

,.

• for first three -months on $30 plan
•• for,flrstthree months on S40 plan

Hrlfl'l

,Jt 111 &gt;1111 / 111 1 clt!I !\II ' IY

t•888•BUY•USCC

call a!1')"M1ere within the contineotal u.s.
toN-free !rom ;oor home state plan ca111r1g an!~!.
vis~ your local-u.s. cellular• store for detals.

~US. Cellular

· .. We connect with you~

lltckloy Beckley Cross~ng Shopping Ctr., 13041255-3990

Brldaellon East Po~nte Shopping Ctr., 154 Emily Dr., )3041621-2331
ClllllcGd.o U.S. Callular, 750 Western Ave. 1740)102-4812
C11ilticatho In-Touch Wireless &amp; More, 34 East Wete~ 17401179-6999
ElliM 220 Third St., (3041636-9311
" " - 11 MiddletO'MI Rd., Route 73, (3041363-7881
w,olio USCC Wei-Man Kiosk, 2145 Eastern AiOnue, 17401441-1066
Jlduto Clas~c 1'1111, 408 E. Huron, (7401288-0016
Morg-. Morgantown Commons, 651 BMal Road, (3041983-2355
. , . _ , . #4 Suburban Coun PIIIJ, Chestii\JI Ri~ Rd., )3041598-2450
Now S.. U.S. Celila~ Now Bostoo Sh"""M Comer 40t0 Rhodeo Ave
(7401456-8722
' ._,...,
'
.,
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Priocetoo Pine PIIIJ, 1261 Staftord Dr.,[304)487-3855
s-villt 1016 Wei Street, )304187H922
Wavorly USCC We~Man Kios~ 900 West Emm11 Avenue, 17401947-0069

Ayttpirll·-r· .

-

Blaefilld ThoSI\Jar Group, Marner Mall, (3041 ·324-2355
.
H.,...vtlle Cel Paga Communications, 106 Wast Mon Straet, 13041754-3170
Kilgwood Peak Commumcabons, 206 Morgantown St. 13041329-3299
Llwilburt Gary's Elactmnics, 118 S. Jeffarson St, (3041645-7170
M~ C~l Pega Co'"!"unications~ Maninsbu'IJ Mall, 800 Foxcroft Ave., 1304)263-8155
MaltinAira Cellular Auociltot MartinsiKJv Mall BOO foxorolt Ave 13041283-9085
llill1ln Mfnlntd Telephone, t0717 S.R. 139, (7401,820-2151 .
.,
M10nlolll Sherman Eloctrnnict 501 N. Moin 'St., )3041538·2311 ·
Mt. llapo The Ce~~Aar Group, Cmaroads Moll, )304)255-7137
Wovortw Pike Coooty Pawn, 120 W. Emmitt Ave., )740)947-7101
WII-Mortlacollaol:
Btcldey, Buci&lt;ho1111D11, Cia~ Fairmont, Graft011, Jackson,
l.ewifar sburg, MD'IJ&amp;ntown, Naw Boston, Oal&lt; HiN, Princeton, Sullll1lei$Vile
""" ......... wt .... - 50 tMIIIIoriiM lllllloootloa.
Olllilt · - · - ... ...a..r.

,,

0

"I

•·
•!'

GALLIPOLIS - · . Have you
ever wondered if there is a way
you can take money out of your
·retirement savings account
without paying a penalty prior
to reaching retirement age?
Maybe you've recendy left your
job . earlier than expected. ·
Maybe your son or daughter is
approaching college and you
need additional funds . Or,
maybe you just incurred some
unforeseen medical expen~.
Usually, the IRS imposes a 10
percent early withdrawal penalty on money taken out of your
IRA before age 59-1/2. If you
wish to withdraw money from
your retirement savings, however, without paying this penalty,
there are a few ·ways of doing so.
Under the Health A:ct of
1996, two exceptions to the 10
percent penalty' are made. First,
distributions earmarked specifically for medical expenses in
excess of seven and..one-half
percent · of adjusted _gross
income are exempt fiom the
penalty.
Or -the penalGy co~ld be

Mark
Smith •
GUEST (

VIEW
waived on distributions for
medical insurance expenses if
the individual received unemployment compensation for at ·
least 12 consecutive weeks, the
withdrawal is made in the same
year or the following
in
which the unemployment
compensation was received, and
the individual is not hired back.
In addition, the Taxpayer
ReliefAct of 1997 allo\vs penalty-free distributions for higher
,education expenses and up to $
10,000 for first home purchases.
Section 72(t) of the Internal
Revenue Code outlines specific
rules to follow in order to withdraw · money fuim your IRA

year

PleaH ... Smith, D8

IUVt 1 "sl"'u ntws Item?

'-'-

•

· Give ui 8 call at (740) 446-1341. ext. 13

----

·-

----..

--- -

~~

. ·I I
'

B.J. Smith, dl~ector of external affairs for Amerltech, presents a check for $46,000 to
. Gallipolis Main Street Director lorie Neal and Community Improvement Corp. Associate
Director Tracy Call. The check is the first installment of the $75,000 grant obtained for
Bossard Memorial Library's new Community Computer Center. (Contributed photo)

Spray finally available for lady beetles

INVESTI'NG,
.
Audlovox MVX"480

Matura
featured

in book

(first three months)

.•.

.-.

Holzer welcomes 4 _hospita

2,500 minutes
•

.

Class!fied ads, Pages D2-7

loliage tours rrom Hun~ngton and
Charil&lt;lstoo through the New River
Gorge to Hinton and baek.
Amtrak locomotives and a mixture
ot Amtrak and privately-owned
Amtrak-approved heritege coaches,
lounges, parlor ears, sleeper lounges
and open plaHonn cars make up the

Cost: Adults $22-$40. Over 60,

$20.$36. Children, 3 to 14, $10.$20.
Food: First class Includes riding in
the club ear or dining car with lullmeal service.- Coach passengers can
buy sandwiChes, snacks, and drinks
on board or bring lhelr own small
coolers.
Lodging: For a complete Hst see
the Po1omac Highlands Web site
hHp://potomachighlands.OifJ/
Contact:
hnp:/lwvweb.comlpotornaceagle/ or

Passengers are treated to
glimpses ot Bald Eagles during this
three· hour narrated trip . through

Collis P. HuntlagtOn Railroad Historical Society operates a series ol latt

'

GALLIPOLIS - After
nine fall / spring seasons of
lady beetle home invasions/ evacuations, seven
. newspaper articles, and
answering literally hundreds of phone calls on the
subject, one would think
that the lady beetle message
had reached and bored the
target audien~e by now.
Yet, sometime over the
next eight Weeks, our office
will expeiience the seasonal flood of emotionally
charged phone calls fiom
homeowners who are
being run off their property

Farm

Jennifer

•

Byrnes

GUEST VIEW

by lady beetles.
Indeed, this is no joking
matter, as many of these
callers report layers of lady
beetles in the house up to
an inch thick. Others report
clouds of lady beetles so

r~view promises

POMEROY- - It's
time · for the 2001 Farm
Science Review from
Sept. 18 to 20 ·at the
Malley . Caren Agricul~ural Center located near
London, Ohio.
This Ohio State V niversity event reviews the
latest and greatest in
farm machinery, equipment, seeds and· other
farm: input~. In addition,
educational
classes,
antique machinery displays,
environmental
information and gardening· tips will be available.
This year's review 'is
'dedi cated in memory of

thick in the yard that
homeowners hold their
breath so not to inhale
them as. they dash to the
car.
Sound extreme? To those
who have never been a victim of such an infestation
and may just have lady beedes lining the windowsills
and baseboards of th~ir
honies , maybe this does
sound extreme.
However, it is important
to realize that every resi· dence has a different degree
of lady beetle infestation,

Please see Bymes, D8

latest developments

manager, stated that
"Ed's dedication, commitment and personal
touch will long be
remembered."
For· first time Farm
Science ),'teview participants, the site is located
close to London, Ohio,
GUEST VIEW
between state routes 40
and 38, just south of 1Ed Johnson, founder of 70. Tickets are $4 in
advance from the ExtenAgriculture l)roadcast
sion Office or $6-at th~
Network (ABN) . Johngate. ChildreQ 5 and
son was an avid support- under will be admitted
er of agrio:ulture, FFA free. Hours are 8 a.m. to
and 4- H youth pro- 5 p.m. on . Tuesday and
grams, and Ohio State Wednesday, and 8 a.m. to
U ni versi ty.
Craig Fendrick, FSR
Plean .,e Kneen, DB ·

Hal

Kneen

RIO GRANDE - The
Nationwide
Register's
Who's Who In· Executives
&amp; Businesses has included
Pamela K. (Black) Matura,
MHS, CRC, LPC, LSW,
executive director of Area
Agency on Aging District
7, Inc. for appearance in
the 2002 edition.
The
. intent of
the ·
Nationwide
Registerts
Who's
Who In
lii!C:,;,.,JL..J_ Executives &amp;
Businesses is to notifY all
who read this announcement that this individual
has reached a level of rec- ·
ognizable success in their
respecti"e field.
The Nationwide Register's Who's Who in El&lt;ccutives and Businesses commended Matura · for her
professional and C!VlC
• accomplishments. Matura
serves on the Board of
Directors, Gallia Co unty
United Way, charter member; Board ofTrustees, Gallia County Bossard Memorial Library; the Ohio
Appalachian Task Force;
state board member of
Advocacy and Protective
Services, Inc.; vice president of the Ohio Association of Area Agencies on
Aging (04A); chairwoman
of 04A's State Training
Committee, member of
the Ohio Depimment of
Aging/Ohio Department
of hMental
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities Double
Jeopardy Task Force; member of the National Association of Area Agencies on
Aging; and chairwoman of
its National Rural Special
In terest Group.
Matura holds a B.S. in
social work from the University of Rio Grande, an
M.H.S. from the Universi- '
ty of Florida in health sciences, and a "Special Certification in Gerontology!'
She is nationally licensed
as a certified rehabilitation
&gt;ounselor and is an Ohio
licensed professional counselor and an Ohio licensed
Social Worker. She is a former superintendent of the
Gallipolis Developmental
Center.
The Area Agency on'

Please see M1tura, D8

�..
_Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Pick~up
fawn PageCI
for the Model T Ford Club
International's 45th :mnual
tour and conventiOn.
"We were one of four
pickup convertibles there
out of 312 cars and trucks
registered for the tou·r,"
commented Roy.
The Model T's, ranging in
models from 1907 to 1927,
were brought in from all
over the country to participate in the event. Each one
had to be registered and .pass
a safety inspection · before
they could take t_o the road
in the planned Mo'nday to
Friday road tours.
As Roy explain~d, the day
trips were from 58 to 105
. miles long and for the most
part country roads were
used . Occasionally
the
Model T's moved onto stat~
roads to get where they
needed to go on the next leg
of their tour.
Since creating road rage

•l
Ral
from Page (J

from motorim going as fast
as they dar~ -~ho really don't
care that a Model T's cruising speed is only 35, the
organization opted a long
rime ago to stay on country
roads where traffic is at a
slower pace and there's more
·
space accommodating fewer
vehicles.
Mter touring each day the
antique car and truck owners
returned to the motel head~
h
· .. ·
quarters •Or ot er acnvmes.
At week's end, the. cpnvention culminated with an
awards banquet where the
best was sel~c ted from the
rest in a judging session and
trophies were handed out.
The day after returning
from the convention, the
G ruesers attended the grand
opening of the restored 1823
Chester Courthouse .
They arrived in the Roy's
T27 Model T, were greeted
by guides in primitive costuming, and toured OhioUs
oldest standing counhouse
-an impressive reflection of
yesteryear.

wv

Sunday, Sept. 9, 20o1
days in Septembar. Daily In October.
All-day trips are scheduled lor Sept.
29 and Oct. 27 batween Romney
and Moorefield.

mander. There are several restaurants near Cheat Bridge and in

W.Va.

Durbin and Elkins.

hum Page Cl
St4-$24. Children, 3to tt, $to-St8.
The Salamander also offers a
train-horseback riding combination
trip lor $t75 per person.
-The Durbin Rocket follows the
Greenbrier River on a t .5-hour, tomil&lt;! trip.
Schedule: ThuKdays and Sundays , Ap1i: through October.
Cost: Adults, $8. Over 60, $7.
Children, 3 to tt , $5.
Contact: Web site: www.moun_ tainrail.com. Phone: (304) 456-4935
or (877) 686-7245.
Food: Drinks are sold on the Sara-

Lodging: Railside camping sites
are available along the routes ollhe
Rocket and Salamander. There are
several motels, cabins and bed and
breaklasls in hearby towns. For a
complete list, see the Pocahontes
County Web site www.pocahontascountywv.com.
THE POTOIIAC EAGLE

lields with larms dating from the
early 1700S and the narrow river val-

ph~:

ley known as "The Trough.'
Schedule: Saturdays lrom May
through August. Saturdays and Sun-

NEW RIVER TRAIN EXCURSIO'NS

'

Exploding. pop~lation
of seals off Ma1ne coast

H!00-22-EAGLE.

In cooperation

w~h

Amtrak, the

Inside:
'

Sunday, September 9, 1001
•

out

ry, we probably have more piled in December, the harnow than ever before," says bor seal count is expected to
James Gilbert, a professor of surpass 31,000, more than
wildlife ecology at the Uni- six times the count recorded
versity of Maine who is in 1976.
heading the 2001 survey.
When the results are com-

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) · surge coming in the last
- The seal population is decade.
exploding off the Maine
"At least to the back of
coast, with the greatest the turn of the (last) centu-

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shaws haw local srocks of interesr performed lasr w~ek.
Each days closing figures are prov[ded by Advesr of Gallipolis.

~mTec!I/SBC

bears engineer Tom Jones
swears are a regular feature
on Cheat Mountain Salamander r\lns .
The Salamander, a selfpropelled rail car, is one of
several rail excursions operating in the Potomac Highlands along the eastern
slopes . of West Virginia's course. Pulled by " Little
Appalachian Mountains.
LeRni," a "little engine that
Nic.holas, who builds could," passengers ride in an
model ·r ailroads with his open excursion car or
grandfather, "found this trip woode'1 caboose for the
for us," said his mother, 1.5-hour, 10-mile ride.
Kerin Buckner, of AnderFurther north, · in Romson, S.C.
ney, the Potomac . Eagle
Nicholas saw an ad for a promises Bald Eagle sightWest Virginia train excur- ings on more than 90 per- ·
sion at the end of a video on cent of its excursions.
the Great Smoky Mountain
The three-hour narrated
Railway. His mom searched trip winds through pastures
the Internet and they devel- filled :with native wildflowoped a plan to make a five- ers and farms dating froin
day, train-focused trip to the early 1700s and 'the nar- e
West Virginia.
row river· valley -known -as
The trip included rides on "The Trough."
- -tl:ieCheaCMoiiirtain- Sala·- --Tlie most - \\lelll-=knoWil
· mandet; Cass Scenic Rail- West Virginia rail excursion
road and New 'TYgart Flyer, is Cass Scenic Railroad.
stops at two state parks,
Shay steam locomotives
shopping and a jazz and pull covered and open-air ·
·wine tasting festival.
cars from the former lumber
"I told him next year we'll town of Cass to the summit
go on a cruise," she said. ·
of West Virginia's second. The Salamander consists highest mountain, Bald
of one self-propelled replica Knob, elevation 4,842 feet.
of a 1920 Edwards Motor
That trip offers a chance
Car. It makes eight trips to smell the steam ·and cinfrom three departure points, dersof the huge black locoall hugging the Shaver's
Fork of the Cheat River. motive while riding up a
wooded hillside with a
Trips are offered throughout
the year, the schedule varies creek falling away on . one
according to the season.
side. The grade is so steep The shortest is 28 miles _I I percent in some spots and takes 2.5 hours. The that several switchbacks are
longest is 88 miles and takes necessary to make the
8.5 hoqrs.
climb. A grade of 2 percent
To keep children interest- is considered steep on coned, Jones lets them ride up ventional railroads.
front and take turns helping
The half-day trip . takes
him operate the train.
passengers to the halfway
Because of the train's point on the Bald Knob
noise, conversation is diffi- trip, Whitaker Station, a
cult so riders are almost high mountain meadow
forced to relax and enjoy picnic ground offering a
the scenery. With a forest on great view of surrounding
one side and the river on hills.
the other, the scenery is
·Back down in Cass, visiworth seeing even if bear tors can stop in a country
and deer are scarce.
. store and museum or stay in
The train 'sgoal after leav- one of 13 restored former
ing the Cheat Bridge station company homes.
on a recent morning run
The Sl)ays attract rail buffs
was the High Falls of the from ·a round the country.
Cheat, where riders can get · Val and Dean Hess came
off and walk down a steep recently from Pittsburgh.
trail to see the falls from a "It's the steepest railroad
wooden platform or the I've ever seen," he said.
rocky riyerbank. The falls
are the midp.o int on the
Susie and Mike Ringer of
line, and people ·can change Portsmouth, Va., were disaptrains and ride into Elkins pointed their trip to Bald
- an all-day roundtrip from Knob was on a _ra_iny day·
Cheat Bridge - or return and the mountain was
to Cheat Bridge.
fogged in.
"I think it's absolutely,
"It would have been
wonderfully relaxing. I wish much better if we could
there had been a black have
seen
somethingi'
bear," said Nora Wirtschafter Ringer said. "We're from
of Wilmingtqn. "The most the beach, we wanted to
fun has been watching the come to the mountains."
kids sit on the driver's lap.'~
When Grant Jacobs, 13, of
The Salamander is operat- Huntington, got off the
ed by the Durpin-based . train with his scout troop,
Durbin &amp; Greenbrier Valley he was not sure where he
Railroad, which also oper- had been, or how long he
ates the 'TYgart River Flyer had been riding, but he
and the Durbin Rocket.
· thought the trip was ','pretty
The Flyer climbs out of cool."

TUE.

WED.

THU.

• .,

M

43

43'1.

43

FRI.

Ashland Inc. ·

T

43

42'4

A
R

o41

43'!.

+

ta'4

m.

34

33'1.

3

3

Bob Evans

c
.Champion

the Tygart Valley, through a
tunnel, along the Cheat
River into the Monongahela National Forest. The
Flyer offers eight trips ranging from a two-hour, 24- ·
mile ride to a 6.5-hour, 85mile trip.
The Rocket departs from
a restored 96-year-old depot
in the small mountain town
of· Durbin and follows the
Greenbrier River's winding

MON.
AEP

BankOne

POOLS AND SPAS

• •

L

7 ............. '' .

7

15' ................... .

City Holding

18' ................... 532i99

. ·--civ'A.c:::~:;~
'15X30

+

s

11

24

AMERICAN PIE 2 (R)
7:15.8:30
MATINEES BAr · SUN 1:151 S:IO

II GROUIID POOL COV&amp;S
16X32 ........ $53.99

18X36 ...... .. $6U9 ' 20XAO ........ $7499

Page D1

.,

trains.

Other excursions altered throughthe year Include trips to The
Greenbrier resort in White Sulphur
Springs, Lewisburg and Pence
Springs.
For schedules call the Collis P.
Huntington Railroad Historical Soci-ety at (606) 325-8800.

+

DuPont

THE OTHERS (P013)
7:10.8:20

. Flratar

+

24Y.

General Electric

+

R

Harley Davidson

+

L

24Y,

24Y,

4Ho

40%

for $40 $2.o per month

GALLIPOLIS Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic announce the
recent addition of four highly trained
hospitalists; Santosh Likk:i, M.D.; Ashok
Dayal, M.D.; Thandavababu Chelliah,
M.D.; and Gnananandh Jayaraman, M .D..
As of July I, the Holzer hospitalists,
who are board-certified or board-eligible
internists, cover the hospital's inpatient
services 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
every day of the year.
Hospitalists are specialist providers of
inpatient medicine who also serve as
physician care managers responsible for
both clinical effectiveness and efficiency.
The overall goal of the hospitalist is to
promote high quality care by optimizing
patient clinical outcomes, patient satisfaction, provider satisfaction, and positive
cost control.
The New England Journal Medicine
first coined the term "hospitalist" five
years ago.
In order to meet this goal, numerous
demands are placed upon the: hospitalist.
Care must_be managed across the continuum, and skills must be developed for a

Dayal

variety of settings, including emer- ideal end result of a more efficient
gency care, triage, intensive care, acute and less costly stay for the patient.
care medicine and sub-acute care.
The primary care/referring physician
Patient referrals for the hospitalists stays infwmed and involved by
are from community based primary directing and coordinating the care
care physicians who resume ambulato- of the patient with the hospit;ilist.
ry care for the patient after inpatient
"Hospitalists are available to
need, have been met. OnFe a referral respond to needs In a more timely
has been made and the patient admit- manner because they are not seeing
ted to HMC, the hospitalist will patients in an office," says Nancy
assume all inpatient care until dis- Smith, RN, patient representative at
charge. This allows for more continu- Holzer Medical Center.
ity and consistency during the hospital
For information on the hospitalist
stay, and more accessibility to the · program at Holzer Medical Center,
physician by the Hospital staff, with an contact Smith at (740) 446-5568.
0

$75,000 grant

Ltd •

includes. ~oo anytime and 2,000 night &amp; weekend minutes:per month
'·

.

,,

'

with a new two-year service agreement on plans $40 and up

''

FREE ·activation ($2o value)

Sears
Wal·Mart
•

Y

Worthington

+.

14

14~.

14~.

1¢ with

Tapping into your nest
e~ bifore age 59 112

•

'

a new

toll-free USA feature included
with home state plans

two-year service
~greement on
plans $40 and up

I'

•'

.
I
I
l

l

,.

• for first three -months on $30 plan
•• for,flrstthree months on S40 plan

Hrlfl'l

,Jt 111 &gt;1111 / 111 1 clt!I !\II ' IY

t•888•BUY•USCC

call a!1')"M1ere within the contineotal u.s.
toN-free !rom ;oor home state plan ca111r1g an!~!.
vis~ your local-u.s. cellular• store for detals.

~US. Cellular

· .. We connect with you~

lltckloy Beckley Cross~ng Shopping Ctr., 13041255-3990

Brldaellon East Po~nte Shopping Ctr., 154 Emily Dr., )3041621-2331
ClllllcGd.o U.S. Callular, 750 Western Ave. 1740)102-4812
C11ilticatho In-Touch Wireless &amp; More, 34 East Wete~ 17401179-6999
ElliM 220 Third St., (3041636-9311
" " - 11 MiddletO'MI Rd., Route 73, (3041363-7881
w,olio USCC Wei-Man Kiosk, 2145 Eastern AiOnue, 17401441-1066
Jlduto Clas~c 1'1111, 408 E. Huron, (7401288-0016
Morg-. Morgantown Commons, 651 BMal Road, (3041983-2355
. , . _ , . #4 Suburban Coun PIIIJ, Chestii\JI Ri~ Rd., )3041598-2450
Now S.. U.S. Celila~ Now Bostoo Sh"""M Comer 40t0 Rhodeo Ave
(7401456-8722
' ._,...,
'
.,
~ H~ Center, 2736 Scioto Trail, )7401355-0058
Priocetoo Pine PIIIJ, 1261 Staftord Dr.,[304)487-3855
s-villt 1016 Wei Street, )304187H922
Wavorly USCC We~Man Kios~ 900 West Emm11 Avenue, 17401947-0069

Ayttpirll·-r· .

-

Blaefilld ThoSI\Jar Group, Marner Mall, (3041 ·324-2355
.
H.,...vtlle Cel Paga Communications, 106 Wast Mon Straet, 13041754-3170
Kilgwood Peak Commumcabons, 206 Morgantown St. 13041329-3299
Llwilburt Gary's Elactmnics, 118 S. Jeffarson St, (3041645-7170
M~ C~l Pega Co'"!"unications~ Maninsbu'IJ Mall, 800 Foxcroft Ave., 1304)263-8155
MaltinAira Cellular Auociltot MartinsiKJv Mall BOO foxorolt Ave 13041283-9085
llill1ln Mfnlntd Telephone, t0717 S.R. 139, (7401,820-2151 .
.,
M10nlolll Sherman Eloctrnnict 501 N. Moin 'St., )3041538·2311 ·
Mt. llapo The Ce~~Aar Group, Cmaroads Moll, )304)255-7137
Wovortw Pike Coooty Pawn, 120 W. Emmitt Ave., )740)947-7101
WII-Mortlacollaol:
Btcldey, Buci&lt;ho1111D11, Cia~ Fairmont, Graft011, Jackson,
l.ewifar sburg, MD'IJ&amp;ntown, Naw Boston, Oal&lt; HiN, Princeton, Sullll1lei$Vile
""" ......... wt .... - 50 tMIIIIoriiM lllllloootloa.
Olllilt · - · - ... ...a..r.

,,

0

"I

•·
•!'

GALLIPOLIS - · . Have you
ever wondered if there is a way
you can take money out of your
·retirement savings account
without paying a penalty prior
to reaching retirement age?
Maybe you've recendy left your
job . earlier than expected. ·
Maybe your son or daughter is
approaching college and you
need additional funds . Or,
maybe you just incurred some
unforeseen medical expen~.
Usually, the IRS imposes a 10
percent early withdrawal penalty on money taken out of your
IRA before age 59-1/2. If you
wish to withdraw money from
your retirement savings, however, without paying this penalty,
there are a few ·ways of doing so.
Under the Health A:ct of
1996, two exceptions to the 10
percent penalty' are made. First,
distributions earmarked specifically for medical expenses in
excess of seven and..one-half
percent · of adjusted _gross
income are exempt fiom the
penalty.
Or -the penalGy co~ld be

Mark
Smith •
GUEST (

VIEW
waived on distributions for
medical insurance expenses if
the individual received unemployment compensation for at ·
least 12 consecutive weeks, the
withdrawal is made in the same
year or the following
in
which the unemployment
compensation was received, and
the individual is not hired back.
In addition, the Taxpayer
ReliefAct of 1997 allo\vs penalty-free distributions for higher
,education expenses and up to $
10,000 for first home purchases.
Section 72(t) of the Internal
Revenue Code outlines specific
rules to follow in order to withdraw · money fuim your IRA

year

PleaH ... Smith, D8

IUVt 1 "sl"'u ntws Item?

'-'-

•

· Give ui 8 call at (740) 446-1341. ext. 13

----

·-

----..

--- -

~~

. ·I I
'

B.J. Smith, dl~ector of external affairs for Amerltech, presents a check for $46,000 to
. Gallipolis Main Street Director lorie Neal and Community Improvement Corp. Associate
Director Tracy Call. The check is the first installment of the $75,000 grant obtained for
Bossard Memorial Library's new Community Computer Center. (Contributed photo)

Spray finally available for lady beetles

INVESTI'NG,
.
Audlovox MVX"480

Matura
featured

in book

(first three months)

.•.

.-.

Holzer welcomes 4 _hospita

2,500 minutes
•

.

Class!fied ads, Pages D2-7

loliage tours rrom Hun~ngton and
Charil&lt;lstoo through the New River
Gorge to Hinton and baek.
Amtrak locomotives and a mixture
ot Amtrak and privately-owned
Amtrak-approved heritege coaches,
lounges, parlor ears, sleeper lounges
and open plaHonn cars make up the

Cost: Adults $22-$40. Over 60,

$20.$36. Children, 3 to 14, $10.$20.
Food: First class Includes riding in
the club ear or dining car with lullmeal service.- Coach passengers can
buy sandwiChes, snacks, and drinks
on board or bring lhelr own small
coolers.
Lodging: For a complete Hst see
the Po1omac Highlands Web site
hHp://potomachighlands.OifJ/
Contact:
hnp:/lwvweb.comlpotornaceagle/ or

Passengers are treated to
glimpses ot Bald Eagles during this
three· hour narrated trip . through

Collis P. HuntlagtOn Railroad Historical Society operates a series ol latt

'

GALLIPOLIS - After
nine fall / spring seasons of
lady beetle home invasions/ evacuations, seven
. newspaper articles, and
answering literally hundreds of phone calls on the
subject, one would think
that the lady beetle message
had reached and bored the
target audien~e by now.
Yet, sometime over the
next eight Weeks, our office
will expeiience the seasonal flood of emotionally
charged phone calls fiom
homeowners who are
being run off their property

Farm

Jennifer

•

Byrnes

GUEST VIEW

by lady beetles.
Indeed, this is no joking
matter, as many of these
callers report layers of lady
beetles in the house up to
an inch thick. Others report
clouds of lady beetles so

r~view promises

POMEROY- - It's
time · for the 2001 Farm
Science Review from
Sept. 18 to 20 ·at the
Malley . Caren Agricul~ural Center located near
London, Ohio.
This Ohio State V niversity event reviews the
latest and greatest in
farm machinery, equipment, seeds and· other
farm: input~. In addition,
educational
classes,
antique machinery displays,
environmental
information and gardening· tips will be available.
This year's review 'is
'dedi cated in memory of

thick in the yard that
homeowners hold their
breath so not to inhale
them as. they dash to the
car.
Sound extreme? To those
who have never been a victim of such an infestation
and may just have lady beedes lining the windowsills
and baseboards of th~ir
honies , maybe this does
sound extreme.
However, it is important
to realize that every resi· dence has a different degree
of lady beetle infestation,

Please see Bymes, D8

latest developments

manager, stated that
"Ed's dedication, commitment and personal
touch will long be
remembered."
For· first time Farm
Science ),'teview participants, the site is located
close to London, Ohio,
GUEST VIEW
between state routes 40
and 38, just south of 1Ed Johnson, founder of 70. Tickets are $4 in
advance from the ExtenAgriculture l)roadcast
sion Office or $6-at th~
Network (ABN) . Johngate. ChildreQ 5 and
son was an avid support- under will be admitted
er of agrio:ulture, FFA free. Hours are 8 a.m. to
and 4- H youth pro- 5 p.m. on . Tuesday and
grams, and Ohio State Wednesday, and 8 a.m. to
U ni versi ty.
Craig Fendrick, FSR
Plean .,e Kneen, DB ·

Hal

Kneen

RIO GRANDE - The
Nationwide
Register's
Who's Who In· Executives
&amp; Businesses has included
Pamela K. (Black) Matura,
MHS, CRC, LPC, LSW,
executive director of Area
Agency on Aging District
7, Inc. for appearance in
the 2002 edition.
The
. intent of
the ·
Nationwide
Registerts
Who's
Who In
lii!C:,;,.,JL..J_ Executives &amp;
Businesses is to notifY all
who read this announcement that this individual
has reached a level of rec- ·
ognizable success in their
respecti"e field.
The Nationwide Register's Who's Who in El&lt;ccutives and Businesses commended Matura · for her
professional and C!VlC
• accomplishments. Matura
serves on the Board of
Directors, Gallia Co unty
United Way, charter member; Board ofTrustees, Gallia County Bossard Memorial Library; the Ohio
Appalachian Task Force;
state board member of
Advocacy and Protective
Services, Inc.; vice president of the Ohio Association of Area Agencies on
Aging (04A); chairwoman
of 04A's State Training
Committee, member of
the Ohio Depimment of
Aging/Ohio Department
of hMental
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities Double
Jeopardy Task Force; member of the National Association of Area Agencies on
Aging; and chairwoman of
its National Rural Special
In terest Group.
Matura holds a B.S. in
social work from the University of Rio Grande, an
M.H.S. from the Universi- '
ty of Florida in health sciences, and a "Special Certification in Gerontology!'
She is nationally licensed
as a certified rehabilitation
&gt;ounselor and is an Ohio
licensed professional counselor and an Ohio licensed
Social Worker. She is a former superintendent of the
Gallipolis Developmental
Center.
The Area Agency on'

Please see M1tura, D8

�•

Page

02 • Sllunbnr ~unri ·ii&gt;rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

W'i

Sunday, Sept.

Sunday, Sept.

9, 2001

9, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gall i polis, Ohio Point Pleasant,
150

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1

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Work From Home, Free In·

lo. 1 ·~7-78 13

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must have experience With
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Send resume to PO Box
380 Mason Wv 252ti0

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DATE REQUI REMENTS
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.
.
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time and pa1H•me poSitions
for the nght candidate You
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well, OH, or call (740)446·
5001 and ask for Eula or

Martie

"""

SalespetSOn needed· lumtlure store, immedtate open-lng. lull·tlme position Apply
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Third Avenue, GallipoliS,
OH 9 30-5 oo No Phone
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~( 1· \11 " '

1'50

~

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each
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fully

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dryer, R e lt~ge rator &amp; stove.
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computer
desk, exerc1se BQUtpmenl,
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To J.lo

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~~~~~~~~
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EARN YOUR COLLEGE Top to Bollom Cleanmg ·· ·woRK

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to
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nd
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ATTENTION! WORK FROM
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'
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Qccaslonol Receive lroe
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1_877 -629 _4900 ell1 594

s

-o

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SERVI(.'t:ll

•

FROM HOME!
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lo
S7500+fmo Fu!ITime ~ak1
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4
7
1
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an affordable priCe Refngerators, stoves freezers al·
so
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(740)992·t391

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Tractors Tillers Repaired
Free ptck-up Delivery Avail·
able 21 Years Expenence
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j~

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'
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Open Tnterv1ews:
Monday, September 10, 2001
5:00pm-8:00pm

FORNIA900t0. -

{304}675·5332
3 Bedroom, I batt! , 1 bath
on Ma1n Street river vtew
on Main St , Pomeroy (740)
::99::2:_:-6::9.:;98:_--,-----·
bedroom, Racine family
3area
(
)
537 500 740 949
3228
- - - - --:-:--5 Bac1room hOuse, 12 acres,
mostly tlal (740)992..()449

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ext cca
841 9757
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out what everyone 1s talktng
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Autumn
Burnett
Derham
.

s8/HR
Light
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11-IS-75 - 9-9-00

Hearts
We lhought of you with love today,
But that Is nothing new.
We thought about you yesterday
And days before that too.
We think of you In sllenc.e
We often speak your name.
Now all we have Is memories,
And your picture In a frame
Your memory Is our keepsake,
With which we'll never part
God has you In his keeping,
We have you In our heart

3 Family yard sale across
from Shamrock Bar 1n Hen·
derson
WV
Fn/Sat
7t1Y8th

We love you S~heart
Your Family

----;::-;;-=-----In Memory

r ~~

1

B0 bb y L. Cl ary

r

On This Grandparents Day
He came Into our lives at our Orst brtalh
He was there ror enry step
He was there when we lost our Orst tooth
And always then: on Chrbtmas mornings.

.
sports

He was lhcrt ror every
event
And even alllhe banquets
He was always your biggest ran
Th11t cheered In the stands.

lie was our GRANDPA

Nothing In this world cduld make WI forget the past
Or the yean we spent with him.

Wntten by Mande Cox
Sadly mtssed by h1s grandchildren BJ.
JesSica R1cky. Mande, Casey. Zeph . Wes,
Lex1e and the rest of hts fam1ly

f

In Memory

...;'t

r--;:;;;;~ily ~;-···~:\

=,Marguerite Pope~ =,

Wishes to thank family, friends, co-workers, MUd
: employees durmg the loss of our mother~ Your :
kind words of comfort, prayers, nowers, food,
cards, 11nd numerous other things were greatly
appreciated and very comrorting.
•
• Thanks also to Gallla County EMS, Holzer •
Medical Cenler ER Slaff, 4-West Slaff, Transpor(
·Staff, Pastor Elmer Geiser, and
:
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.
:

We ;ere truly grateful to receive the support

I
I
I

which you all generouSly contributed. Thank )OU
and God bless euc~ and enry one of you,
:

1...7k'::.~~ ~:'~..1
'

It is only
days away!

CLASSIFIEDSI

Bull guess Wt' have to look at it as earths
loss and tleanns aaln.
And wh11t a GREAT MAN HEAVEN GOT"

•

Wanted to buy used mobile A PT/FT Work From Home Certified Medical AssiStant
homes Call (740)446·0175 ~t&amp;,~~~~:m:a~~;f V~~ needed for local Physicians - - - - - - - - cat•ons &amp; Bon~ses. No Ex· Ottlce Send resume to ;=:H:e:l:p:W=a:n:ted==:;
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r
havtorallv challenged chll·
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oy, Ohio 45769
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at
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nmHnanpnpnvnAiiiidiiAAii cation,
www prestera
lor
appll·
apply 1n person,
(740)363-5260
or send appl resume to.
McClure's Reatauran1 now
PRESTERA CENTER
hiring all 3 tocatlona. lull or
Ken Harb1son,
part-lime, plok up applicaEmployment Special
tion at location &amp; bring bacl&lt;
3375 Route !)() E
t~ between
9:30am
&amp;
Huntington, WV 25705
10 OOam. Monday thru Sat·
EOEIAA
urday
AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS
Medical Billing Aoalatan1
TRAINEES
neaddd tmmodlatelyl FTIPT
Leam a1rcraft systems an&lt;
Will Train E&gt;&lt;Cellont Income.
maintenance Open to H S
PC required. 1-888-449·
grads, ages 17·34 Excel
9773 E111. 222
lent salary and benefits
Paid travel required Call t
NOW HilliNG.
800·533·1657
f&gt;art- time Ward Clerk
Houro Spm- B!&gt;m. 7 Dayo a
· week. Duties to Include an·
$7.00/hour
awerlng phooe, filing, light
clerical. Medical Recorda
ResponSibilities If you are _
Interested, contact Teresa
UPTIUHIU.
Wllaon a1 (740)'411-5001, or
apply In person at Holzer
Senior Care , Center, 380
1·866·475·7223
l.ove ya,
Colonial Drive, Bidwell, OH
45614
Guess Who c
ext. 1916

Buy, Sell or Trade

He wa~ our one true love

I'
I
I

Custom Compu1ers

Need
Cash for
Christmas?

His smile brighttned the d11y
It brou~t~hl you up rrom gloom
He made you reel I 00% beuer
With thai snule that showed so much love

LOOK!
BUVIRI5
5T..WTIN6

•

Happy 30th

WALK IN HOURS
Friday 9·5
Saturday 9-noon
All other times by
appointment ~nly.

or~

We have a
solution:
Work
WEEKENDS
ONLY!!
That is 16
hours a weeki
Earn up to

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Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

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recruiting volunteers for the

1.t

American Heart
Association

985-3345
$3.00

on

any hair cut from

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A+.

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, Contact Us At:

These positions involve no
fundralslngl

HbU, FSTATJ:: 10 lw !;OJI,J wilh OW'rler·s cnn~;tn t Ml 6:.50 P.m Mini
Fanm w/ 1 I Men'S, pond, pri1'111e ~ uln~:, ' ttl.'tli"'Mlm 2 hath homt
w/heat pun1p In Rtflil ( tlnd lhon r-ento&lt;ltled vt ry n lc~,lwa/"1 2 c•r
~:,ural(e, healed wo rkshup. fmll t ret:S. Mrry lunht"!&gt;, a nd l(f!lpt' 1'1 nts.
UIRF.C'I InNS. Rl J! Wf'!it p•~l Alh11ny, 1om 1111 Rt. 14J, just 4
miles llt'yund &lt;.:o lumhhl l w)l. Hre Uepl , hn lldlnj! on rlghl w11trh fur
SIJI~

ANIIO! Jt'S ANil&lt; Oil tC'J'I!!I f:S «lilPtr lined srnllktr'8 ltl llntJ
"'"It mirror, L11ne waltrrllll cedar clltit, Z·lltrostne Ttlmi•J.

ornMit

itS Prus.~l • OOwl &amp; pllchtr, JohMOn llrns. Phllttr, ~~evtn~l mllk11lu.u
pitcH, tenral Fenlon plorcn, 5-&lt;kcupled J11p11n nJlurhles, hl11cli
Ryurlne, lm!Jilrlal GIIUS nullnc hen , blue 1humbprlnl 5lemntrd
abu~es . Mc&lt;:oy pitcher &amp; unusu111 nowtr pot. I!IN Colun1lmJ hlr
!IOU~tnlr glau, Pumemy Mlll'tnlr pltd1u, ID.~r 51tlll!l (SOnlf
German), wl~ eg h11skrt, sevtratl dolli lndudlnalln old bride dnll
Kkl Sl~ltr &amp; Kewple doll:~, kid plv11nlud oil canM, hlly hook. p1nh
plow,:t.lron wa~tn whHIJ,
llot JStiiOLQ t IIKNISIUNGS,i nice l11rgt newer rull·lop dHk
HC,t, umcorder (nffds battery), ~N~fa &amp; ch11lr, end &amp; rorree lahtu,
llltllJ' boUk•helf, J.\' Cit l11pe dra~ert, slnJ&amp;II! l"'ln bMd tonlpltlr,
Kenmore t6 cu h. uprii&amp;ht free~er, Aman11 22 side·by·slde
refrlatr•lor, Montaomtr:f Ward 42" 111.5 r1n1t, mthl klk~n
atbind cut 11lumlnum muMn, p~uu~ cooker, mi.Kellantolll
dhh!s, pots &amp; paw, set or Cllln11, loti or e~~nnlna J•n, oak medicine
cabinet senral mtllltl ttoralf.' tablntla 1nd shelvln&amp; unila, l•wn
Chain, ,t,lplnr l'nltku 11lldrr eurtlse lllaChlne, •nd olhtr lttnu,

IOO.f..t: larp Patton fa n on whHis, tar ramps, rollen on itltnds ror
use wfphmtltr, mllre !IIIW, t:asy Home- Mrpalr Hook.'!. lool uhlndt &amp;
bo:.ts. C~h•mp~ &amp;: rurnllure d.IUIII"· worlo. bench tablr., lot~ or hanc(
look! ( u ~n end &amp; tomhlnlldtlfl wrencheli In set•), pipe Wl'l'n(h~s,
null &amp; boll.'l, drill ~;huptner, BuiT11Iu If~ hp, 8 ' 11rlltder, t:111R~nwn
5lde w_rindtr. Cran sman nttl.a.l In" drill , Shop Smllh J)(notr lor(b,
Ram Tool mt~chlnl~l ~ 1 M" dt1' 1 ~, ~~~ndlr•ll bfll pup rlntrr &amp; rh'tl!l,
drill st t, dtep well1101:krts, l HI&gt; nt~or jacks, lln~man belt &amp; ~ p lkl'.,,
rencr tlrelchcr load binder, t)tloM seeder: lawn &amp; ~eartkn llllll l~ ,
fqlht el«lrk ltft'tl ealcr, CruO~num 41: ' h1wn Nwrt'/M"r, tin·•·
n"Mpt-'f, mel11ls•w hurR'! Krllp W'ood (lneludlltllll siKk or Wlllnut),
~~ond 0//wr mlseellllnr&lt;tus lltms

n&amp;M:i;. Ct~Jh or cha:k w/!JO!illhf I D ChKkl 01'tr $1000 mu!il
have blink IIUihorlulloa or runds nallahle. Not responsible ror lost
or aukltnls. Food will be avalia.blt.
QWNio:A1 Nn,nl• &amp;: Hill Pollt'y

or visit our website:

In lhle new.p~~per 11

IUbfeet 10 tM Feclerll
F•lr HoUalng Act ot 1tel
whlch mttk• tt llleQIIIo
*CiveriiM "....y
preterenc., limitation or
diiCflmlnatlon biMd on
r~c:., ~or....uurOn, ...

fnillll lllitu• Dr n.UONII
origin, or 1ny Intention to
tnllke sny such
preference, limitation or
dlscrlmln•tlon."
Thla newap~tpW will not

knowlngtyoccopt
Rvtnteemema tor ,...
"tate which Ia In
violation or the law Our
r.lldera are hereby
Informed that au
IIWetttnga odvent... In
thtanetofsPIIperare
available on an equal
opportunity baaea.

lo....;.;~...;;..;.:..;;.~-ol

Dan Smith · Aurtlonc.:r, Ohio #1344
C11.~h • Chec-k • Posllhi!! m
ln~ldt

Khool'

Sept. 20 Auction at l,ortland Grllde School
Sepl27 Auction at Syracuse Grade School
Oct. 4 Auction at Southern ]r. High School
Watch for nt'W 1/stlna \lllh tu h une!

•••• THIS IS A GOOD QUALITY SALE WITH
MANY UNUSUAL ITEMSIIII
OAK DRESSER , OAK NIGHT STAND,
DI;IESSER,
VICTORIAN
TABLE
WITH
PORCELAIN WHEELS, SMOKERS STAND
STANDS,
OLD
W/ACCESS.,
CHAIRS,
KITCHEN CUPeOARD, OLD CAST IRON
BABY eED, OTHER FURNITURE NOT
LISTED YET, TRAMP ART MIRROR,
VICTORIAN
HAT
RACK,
LOTS
OF
GLASSWARE COMING IN, OLD DISHES,
APPLE
PEELERS,
SILVER
PLATE
FLATWARE (40's), OLD KITCHEN ITEMS,
OLD FRAMES, OLD eOOKS, TOBACCO
TINS, NELSON MCCOY PLANTER, OTHER
POTTERY, BALL TOP CANNING JARS
(QUARTS, HALF-PINTS), NO. 11 SKILLET,
SMALL BROWN &amp; WHITE CROCK, SALT
GLAZE GRAY CROCK WIHANDLE, #8
CROCK W/2 HANDLES (SALT GLAZE,
POTTER MARKS), eRASS SPITTOON, NICE
OLD BOTTLES, PERFUMERS, OTHER MISC.
SMALLS ....
NICE COUNTRY &amp; PRIMATIVE PCS. TO
INCLUDE PRIM. ~-~EG GUNSMITH WORK
STAND, 2 EARLY ARROWBACK PLANK
CHAIRS, VERY NICE AMMO BOXES WITH
GOOD ADV., WOOO HAY FORK WITH METAL
TIPS, OAK BUCK SAW, 2 HANDLE DRAW
KNIFE, SPOKE SHAVE, BLOCK PLANE,
WET STONE IN WOOD eOX, MORTISE AXE,
WOOD HAMMER MAUL, FROE, HAND
AUGERS (1855 8t 1883), RABeET SAW,
CIRCLE SCRIBE, BROAD AX, DOUGLAS AX,
OTHER NICE OLD TOOLS ....

SR 124
MAPLE GROVE
SUBDIVISION • OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE • Approxlmalely 2 acre
lois. Groat camptng lois Call loday
lor more delatlo. ASKING $20,000.

PRICE REDUCED • CHESTER- 30 acres
ground, CR 36, just . outs~''l
Chesler. Eas1ern School DISirlcl. Eleclrlc, septtc, water well on
Sheller
I around an
ASKING
1991, 14x70
Buill-In hutch,
with ramp, new heal pump and
Musl Be Movedl
·

bedrooms 1 balh,
Includes a 1Ox 1~
lmmedtale
$15,000.

.. A 1 story frame home wh1ch Jnctudes · Ltvtng room, eat-In
2 bedrooms, 1 bath, part basement , and a newer stde deck All of
sits on a 25 aero lal.
ASKING $15,500

WNW.american~muntlydasslfied.com

""'"•" GROVE· Approximately 29 935 acres of greal hunllng
Home silo au I of flood plain SepUc, eleclrlc and your own waler
a D&amp;s well on this property Could have free gas lo your home
roya111es. What a v1aw of the Ohto Rtver Ask about an
1
fronllot also. Agonl Owned .

• Up to $7/h'r
•

All rNI H--lolng

CH'I•.N II t I l 1SI• • .Suud.t.\ , St'IJh•m tn r '' · ~ . ~ : 110 I'·m

.t-800-821-8139

If you are looking f9r a job
where you can make a
difference, we offer:

-

30033 S.R. 143, Albany, 011
Ml·igs County ·Alexander Sc:hool~ ·

-lt!censed

AnnDuncament

:::===:::;=;;:===::;====;; R•ck
Com·
pany, Pearson
full limeAuctton
auclloneer,
1
~. ')M-............ ... ~.1
complete auction serv1ce
"l!v ,~ VIr
Licensed M66,0h1o &amp; West
V1rg1nta, 304·773--5785 Or
304·773·5447

welcomes

10 Yl. EXPIIIJIICE

-

Or, call 1-877-463-624 7 to
schedu le an interview.
REAL ESTATE &amp; l'ERSONAL
PROPERTY AUCTIO N

roasaage •
&lt; '
therapist

~

242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

Announcement

WEST
SHADE
BARBER
SHOP

r---~----.

0" ner • Southern Local School District

Will be hfld

Find

FIRST TIME HOME
BUYERSI
$0 Down
No Crod1t Noededl
HUD , VA FHA
1-800·501-1777 ext 9626
Now BriCk Ranch Home on
acres,
mmutes from
24
Holzer
3 5Bedrooms, 3
BathS, n......n Kltcherv' Fami·
~.ly Room. Den, Mud Room,
Basement, In· ground Pool,
Storage Bui lding, Smllhl
caotnets (740)446·0t•9

·- - - - - - - - - - ' - - Real Estate General

wmdow fan. and lots more

Saturday, September 15, 2001
8:00am-J2:00pm #-

SO DOWN HOME$1 GOV'T
&amp;

payments for cash• lmmedt·
ate Quotes! (Ntek) BQ0.7768752 or 419·394· 1317
ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD
BILLS OVERWHELM ING
YOU?? FREE DEBT CON·
SOLIOATION can consoudate
bills mto one
monthly payment Reduce
.nterest, Avoid late charges
&amp; Stop harassment L•·

MONEY
Up lo $500 Instantly by
m l..oAN
phonal
_ _ _ _ __. H877)·EARYPAY
Lid
Will offer at auction the items rrom
•
750005
PROBLEMS
PAYING lsi ADVANCE FREEl
Letart Elementary School.
BILLS OR LOANS. Loans - - - - - - - - , - - ··Playaround E.Qutpmc:m"
Available Call Toll Free 1· STOP FORECLOSUREII
Sw mg sets, teeter toller, volleyball stands, monkeyj 8n.745-1049 GOOd Bad or Behind on Mortgage? Don't
bars, back stop for haseball , play gy ms, goal
No Credll or Bankruptcy File Bankruptcy·Sava Your
and nag pole
Welcome Fast Reliable Home! Guaranteed Service
"KJicben Items"
800·915·9704 x500
S S ,counter, S S 3 comportment smk. metal cabmet
TURNED DOWN ON
wnh butcher block top. Vulcan I0 burner stove, 28
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
Umco chest deep freeze, 16 cu ft upright freezer.
No Fee Unlese We Wm!
S S cab met, large m1xcr, and large coffee makers.
1·888·582·3345
$ FREE CASH NOW$ lrom -:-:-:.,.:;:=:.:::.:..::.:=:.:-.
::MW:.::
Me t.d dou ble cabmets. metal file cubmets, wood
weatthy tamiUes unloading VISA!MASTERCARDIII
sh ch~s. small c hild ~ coat mck, mcb1l desks,
millions of dollars to help NEW unsecured cred•t
m•mmize their taxes. Write cards!! $7500 apprcwal
com puler t.1bles, foldmg tables,
, elecmc 1ypewntcr, bullctm bourd, water coo·tcr, 1 lmmedtatety· WINDFALLS, GUARANTEEDII Bad crod3010 WILSHIRE BLVD It, bankruptcy 01&lt;11 1-716tablt:s, comer tables. metal book
188,
LOS ANGELES, CALl· 326·1993
computer, fi\'e TVs, upngh t plano,
metal stora ge ca bmcts

riO
.!~~..E
~-------_.1

~
3 Bedroom on Route 2

~..._

cop•er

IU\II,J\11

n:'lll"-'"":~---.,

~:~a~~~:~.,ir~u~~~~~

I

i

03

BANK FOAECLOSUAES 1
lOW OR NO MONEY
DOWN! OK CREDIT! FOR
LISTINGS1 CALL 1-800
338-()()20 ext 9811
-:-:-----,-----,.
3 bedroom house lor sale in
Mtddleport, call Tom Ander·
$$$NEED CASH??? It son after 5pm, (740)992·
you'·e
sold ,...,
~-ny on •··•
3348
w
IGIP\.1 : . . : . . - : - , - - - - : - - : -

mi~;;;.-B~~;.;;.;,-, DAY??

LGcalted on

Page

• Weekly bonuses

• Full-time

&amp;

part-time available

• Full benefits
I

• Paid training
• Paid holidays

&amp; paid

•n•u·umu

vacation

CDL umficalion 5wl: 1oune

• Friendly, professional environment

1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901

Valley Truck Driver Troining .

..

Mon &amp; Fri 7:00·3:30 Weekend
lat &amp;Sun 800-4 30 I2weeb
•finanli't and lllllliilglllllilrlile 11M! on el~i\ilt~
'Job pkxement on OOil Atraining'
Contact Kad Lamb 1-800.648-3695 orl7401373-3966

a

Farm hand grinder, mixer, IN

2400

1980 Jeep, McCudry
Wagon, 8' wide lime spreader

round baler,
Grain

Dan, Smlth ·Auctioneer
Cash • Positive

10 •

Refreshments

Realty, Inc. Office............. 992·2259
Henry
Sherrl

E.
L.

Cleland ........................... 992·2259
Hart ....................; .............7 42·2357

Anna M. Chapman .... ., ................... 992·2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·6191

•

'I

.i

I,

'

�•

Page

02 • Sllunbnr ~unri ·ii&gt;rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

W'i

Sunday, Sept.

Sunday, Sept.

9, 2001

9, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gall i polis, Ohio Point Pleasant,
150

~rtbune

- Sentinel - 3aegtster
CLASSIFIED

POSTAL JOBS Up to
$18 35/hour Htrtng , lor
2001 Patd tra•mng Full
benefits No expenence reqwred Toll lree 7 30am11pmCST 1·888·726·9083
x1705

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

f&gt;rofessional Jank Truck
OrtVeJs Grow Wllh
a Leader Enterpnse Trans·
Transport

W~ Q~~l:S~~8ooco;:~~~~

us

'we~~UWnlleolcrmo~~u~n 1Ss~"edady

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 "(304) 675.-1333
Call Today•••
(740) 992·2157
(304) 675-;..;52:.:34:...:...._ _ _...,-_ _ __
(740) 446·3008
To Place

Or Fax To

Or Fax To

Word Ads

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

D1splay Ads

Dally In - Colu m n 1 00 p m
Monday · Friday for In sertiOn
In Ne~et Day 5 Paper
Sunday In Col umn 1 00 p m
Fru;lay For Sun days Pape r

AU Display 12 Noo n ~
Bu smess Day s Pr 1or To
Publ lccJt'on
' s unday D•splay 1 DO p m

Or Fax To

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To
Over

15

15

Words,

Words

3

20¢

Days

Ill!!
~

Per Word

Ads Must Be Prepaid

Thursday ror Sun days

Private Party Ads Unde r $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
1

• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Antmals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Lim it 3 Per Person
Mail To: Ohio Valley Publishmg , 825 Third
Avenue, Galtrpohs, OH 45631

Job
Security,
$1 ,000/$5,000 +
Month
Work From Home, Free In·

lo. 1 ·~7-78 13

Now accepting apptlcatlOns
for lu!lllme office personnel,
must have experience With
compulers &amp; a denial or
medical background &amp; be
able to work flekable hrs
Send resume to PO Box
380 Mason Wv 252ti0

010 aeeks OTR driver With
3 yaara experience East to
West Coast for auto trans·
port (740)256-1021

CANO l·
SUCCESSFUL
DATE REQUI REMENTS
'21 Years Old 'COL With
Hazmet and Tank Endorsements 'DOT Ouaill•ed 'Two
Years Experience 'Clean
DnYirlQ Record *Stable Em·
ptoyment Background
OWNER/LEASE OPERA·
TOAS NEEDED Quanerly
Mileage Pa~ Guarantee
INTERESTED DRIVERS
SHOULD CALL 1·600·824·
2857 EOEIM F a 5pm
.
.
RN· LPN
We have available both lull·
time and pa1H•me poSitions
for the nght candidate You
must be a liCensed AN or
LPN and be a stncere, car·
tng individual, dedicated to
enhancmg the Hves of our
sen•ors If you meet these
quahficallons, please appl~
al Holzer Senior Care Center, 380 Colon1al Dnve, B•d·
well, OH, or call (740)446·
5001 and ask for Eula or

Martie

"""

SalespetSOn needed· lumtlure store, immedtate open-lng. lull·tlme position Apply
Lltestyle Furniture, 856
Third Avenue, GallipoliS,
OH 9 30-5 oo No Phone
Calls

~( 1· \11 " '

1'50

~

DEGREE QUICKLY bach·
elors Masters Doctorate
by correspondence based
upon pnor educatton and
short study course For
FREE tnlorrnat1on bookie!
phone
CAMBRIDGE
STATE UNIVERSITY I·
800·964 8' \16

1999 Cargo trader, 6x10.
Insulated , $2000 Har·
vard P•ng Pong table, hke
new $200 , t6 RPM records.
each
52 00
(7401742 .2572

fully

30. gas range w•tl't sealed
burners. white wllh blac:k
fron t, very good C'ond1tton,
$200 {740)992-7288
Couch &amp; chairs, Washer t.
dryer, R e lt~ge rator &amp; stove.
bedroom suit
computer
desk, exerc1se BQUtpmenl,
butld1ng supplies (740)992·

~.,._.,.INsnloiiiiliiiiocniiiioiiOiiN;..,.I1
SaiOOI....

BLACKSTONE
PARA·
LEGAL STUDIES Compre·
hens•ve. artord;ib!t~. Home
Study lega l tmlnlng SIOCe
1
890 Free catalog 1-800· C1ij:
936
~-":':':'""---.,
826·9228, PO BOX 701449 It
80
Dallas, TX 75370 or
WANim
http://www blackstone!aw co .
To Do

·-------r
1'

:m:-:-=:=:-:-:-:-:--~c- ·

BLACKSTONE .
PARA·
LEGAL STUDIES Home
Study, Approved, Afforda
b!e, com prehens•ve , legal
tra ining since 1890 FREE
Cata'log
800 826·9228,
wtlle
PO Box 701449,
Dallas, Tx 75370 NA or
h //

180

Bt.~il''ll:l&gt;"'

to

i.w------,.1

WA'Orm

To J.lo

QPI'olctlJNfrY

~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~
EARN YOUR COLLEGE Top to Bollom Cleanmg ·· ·woRK

WORK FROM HOME !
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED' COMPANY EXPLOD·
lNG EARNS 1000$8000/MQ PTIFT
,71)
t·888·446·1510
WWW
T-... ~
f\.1l'LI:lJANI-..OUS 1
1
·•·•EZM oney.I.Al&lt;:lycom

portaiiOn
Company
The
Oua!11y Lmk.
Immediate
openmgs lor profess.onals 1«1
BUSt'\'t~
t.,.--·T'RA-iiiiNiiitlii
M:
ili';,.,.J
bonus ·outstanding Pay .
and
Benefits
'Safety G•lllpolla Career College
Awards Prbgram "Up-To· (Careers Close To Homt~)
Date Equtpmenl "Compa· Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
ny-Match1ng 401{k) Pro·
1800·214·0452.
gram 'Husband &amp; W1fe
Reg 190..05· 12748

Ca.IILI (IHinty, OH

In One week With

URGENTLY
NEEDED
plasma donors earn S.t5 to
S60 tor 2 or 3 hours weekly
Call Sera-Tee 740·592·
66
_ _5_1~-::.,---,----

&amp;1H¥NS
LwrRL'nKJ\

WV
10

!}l.ISINFS'&gt;
Ol'roKniNtn'

AITENTIONI WORK FROM
HOME ! S5001S 1500 mo PT
$25001$5000 mo FT Great
for Moms• Free Info 866
628 RICH
-------DATA ENTRY ON YOUR
PC Legal J~nt Noli·
ces $200().$4000 Montnty
!NOTICE!
Potential, PTIFT WWWBVta·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-IChom-"...:;
•.:;com:.;;._____
lNG CO recommends that do bu
Earn $90,000 VEAALV reyou
wrthtopeopfe
you know S!neSS
and NOT
send pamng. NOT rep(actng
'
Long cracks in Windshields
money through tho mall until Free video 1-800-826·8523
lnvesttgated lhe US/Canada , www.glassme

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE
pa~ cash for rema1n1n.g pay·
ment s on Property Sold•
Mortgages• AnnUities! Set·
tlementsl
Immediate
Quotes!!! " N obod~ beats
our pnces: Naltonal Contract Buyers (800)49().()731
ext 101 wwwna!Kma!con:
lractbuyer:s cpm

SSOO
to
PanTime

Will do house c!eanu-.g, rt\a·
sonable
rates
call
('?40)742·2311 or 740..992·
3704
do
nd
Will
tree tumm1ng a removal Call lor lroo eslt·
mate (304)675·7210 or
{740)992..J689
w111 hatM away' clean out ·
clean up, move almost any
lh1ng Other odd iobS Call
(740)446·7604
Will power wash houses,
trailers
anything
Call
(740)441·4238 or (740)446·
0151 ask for Ron If no
answer !eave message
-W-,II-p&lt;_O_vtde-,n--:-hot-m-.,-ca-r-e
for elderly male Flexiblt~
hours (304)675. 2617
--:-:--'---'--,----,--:
Work•ng too much or JUSt
can't keep up wtth your
house clean•ng? Call lor an
lnterv1ew (740}446·9271 or
(740)441 ·1659

~~~rlhaye
ng

A HI Proht Vending Route!
Eams Big$$ Must sell!
1 888 .571 .0225 Eld 2005

A WORK AT HOME OP·
POATUNITYI Earn up to
$500·$5000/mo
~TIFT
Free Info Toll Free (866)
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----:-----A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE
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requtred Excellent Prof1t
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UQ

:ch::;"=;;"';:';::com=:::::::::--=:-::-::::-

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m Then call Adf!Bnne at
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MEDICAL BILLING
Unlimited Income potenl181
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MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS!
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wo r11 tng t rom ho me arou nd
your schedule PT/FT. 1·
800·813·5694
Stan ......r•vol a.-ncy ·
.. 11
••
Earn Big SS$1 Buotno10
Suppon Your own Travel
Websil~ and Travel Dis·
countsiP'erXa.
Nominal
Startup Cost! Free Info Call
1·888oo699-o901

ARE YOU CONNECTED?
INTERNET USERS
~i:;:10~--::-......- - . , , WANTED
BUSlNEX'l
$25·$751HA- PTIFT
Country Time Daycare has
OPPORltlNITY
www.BeBossFreecom
2 openmgs, any shllt
(740)843 5576
ATTENTION! WORK FROM
~lp wwwbt~ckslonelawco :__z....:.."....:..-"..-~-,. f&gt;rovon $l ,OOO True Weanh HOME! $5001$ 1500 mo PT
::'----,--..----- Georges Portable Sawmill, System 1·888-688-7906
2500155000 rY}O FT Great
EARN YOUR COLLEGE don't haul your logs to the
for Moms! Free Info 87f·
DEGREE QUICKLY. bach- m1111ust ca!l304oo67S·1957
Proven $1 ,000,000 True 8 6 4 . R
c H
1
elors Masters, Doctorate,
Wealth System 1·888-688· www Smanwo~4U.com
by correspondence based Koun try Ktds Chrlst1an 7906
upon pnor educatiOn and Ch1ldcare L1mited openings
Start Vour Buslneu To·
short study course For available Aelorences pro- · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - day Prime Shopping Cen·
vrded, lor more mlormat•on.
ter Space Available At Af·
FREE ioformalton bookl't please call (740)992-7532 _ _ _ _.,:P~U:::b:::.:II::::C..:S:::a:::l:::e~a:::n:.:d:...:A;;:;U:C::::t::I::::O:.:n'--- 1onlabte Rate Spring Valley
phone
CAMBRIDGE
Ploza ean 740 •446 101
STATE UNIV~SITY 1- LlghU ' Medium
'
800·964-8316
{740)388·8769
Theme Parties In A Box
-----:-:-::-:-~~~;.:..;;7~;____
Delivered to your doorl All
110 Help Wanted
Qccaslonol Receive lroe
catalog Expanding Work
from home Call Becky
1_877 -629 _4900 ell1 594

s

-o

I'Rotll.."ikll'i.U.
SERVI(.'t:ll

•

FROM HOME!
S1500fmo
$2000
lo
S7500+fmo Fu!ITime ~ak1
Vacations Call 1·800·4797
4
7
1
wwwmoneycash4mecom

Servtee, professiOI'lal. reSt·
dontia!. Office c!eanmg at
an affordable priCe Refngerators, stoves freezers al·
so
(740)992·2979 or
(740)992·t391

All Make Mowers. Lawn
Tractors Tillers Repaired
Free ptck-up Delivery Avail·
able 21 Years Expenence
Gall M•ke (740)446--7604

j~

&amp;unba!' !l:unr« srnlmrl •

FREE SEARCH•
WWN SINGLES com

We are looking forward
'
to meeting you!
Open Tnterv1ews:
Monday, September 10, 2001
5:00pm-8:00pm

FORNIA900t0. -

{304}675·5332
3 Bedroom, I batt! , 1 bath
on Ma1n Street river vtew
on Main St , Pomeroy (740)
::99::2:_:-6::9.:;98:_--,-----·
bedroom, Racine family
3area
(
)
537 500 740 949
3228
- - - - --:-:--5 Bac1room hOuse, 12 acres,
mostly tlal (740)992..()449

www goldcoastcc com

w1thoul tho farm 3 bed·
rooms, 2 112 t&gt;otna. newly
remodeled Southwe1tem
Schoot· District (740)379·
9887

~our

~=~x~·Proflt Country F!irm House Charm
CONSOLIDATE YOUR

WAY OUT OF DEBT!
Reduce monthly payments
f&gt;ay one biiVmonth Stop
foredosurel First/Second
mollgagos &amp; rol 1nanclng
EASY to
~t started Financial FrIf"'

.....--

dom
Chrtstlan. Counseltng,
(800)
ext cca
841 9757
wwwdebtc:cs
org (Non-ProfIt)

-=-:-:-,-.,.-----CREDIT f&gt;AOBLEM? CALL
THE CREDIT EXPERTS
l.ICENSEOIBONOED CORRECT!REMOVE
BAD
CREDIT. BANKAUf&gt;TCY,
LAWSUITS · JUDGMENTS
AAA RATING.
1·888·567-7345
G C •• F
$
S
et a... as111 100• 500
Easy OuaiWteatlons Apply
By ~honol Nover Leave
Homel Fundi Dopolllod·
Checking Account Next
Day. Loans By County
Bank MemberFDIC/EOL 1·
800-882·0644

~:=:=,c-'=:-=:--:-::-NEED AN EARLY ~AY·

out what everyone 1s talktng
about and tnterv1ew on the spot to
start a new career With InfoCi sion.

Autumn
Burnett
Derham
.

s8/HR
Light
Indoor
Work
1-888974JOBS

11-IS-75 - 9-9-00

Hearts
We lhought of you with love today,
But that Is nothing new.
We thought about you yesterday
And days before that too.
We think of you In sllenc.e
We often speak your name.
Now all we have Is memories,
And your picture In a frame
Your memory Is our keepsake,
With which we'll never part
God has you In his keeping,
We have you In our heart

3 Family yard sale across
from Shamrock Bar 1n Hen·
derson
WV
Fn/Sat
7t1Y8th

We love you S~heart
Your Family

----;::-;;-=-----In Memory

r ~~

1

B0 bb y L. Cl ary

r

On This Grandparents Day
He came Into our lives at our Orst brtalh
He was there ror enry step
He was there when we lost our Orst tooth
And always then: on Chrbtmas mornings.

.
sports

He was lhcrt ror every
event
And even alllhe banquets
He was always your biggest ran
Th11t cheered In the stands.

lie was our GRANDPA

Nothing In this world cduld make WI forget the past
Or the yean we spent with him.

Wntten by Mande Cox
Sadly mtssed by h1s grandchildren BJ.
JesSica R1cky. Mande, Casey. Zeph . Wes,
Lex1e and the rest of hts fam1ly

f

In Memory

...;'t

r--;:;;;;~ily ~;-···~:\

=,Marguerite Pope~ =,

Wishes to thank family, friends, co-workers, MUd
: employees durmg the loss of our mother~ Your :
kind words of comfort, prayers, nowers, food,
cards, 11nd numerous other things were greatly
appreciated and very comrorting.
•
• Thanks also to Gallla County EMS, Holzer •
Medical Cenler ER Slaff, 4-West Slaff, Transpor(
·Staff, Pastor Elmer Geiser, and
:
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.
:

We ;ere truly grateful to receive the support

I
I
I

which you all generouSly contributed. Thank )OU
and God bless euc~ and enry one of you,
:

1...7k'::.~~ ~:'~..1
'

It is only
days away!

CLASSIFIEDSI

Bull guess Wt' have to look at it as earths
loss and tleanns aaln.
And wh11t a GREAT MAN HEAVEN GOT"

•

Wanted to buy used mobile A PT/FT Work From Home Certified Medical AssiStant
homes Call (740)446·0175 ~t&amp;,~~~~:m:a~~;f V~~ needed for local Physicians - - - - - - - - cat•ons &amp; Bon~ses. No Ex· Ottlce Send resume to ;=:H:e:l:p:W=a:n:ted==:;
Absolute Top Dollar U S perience/Step By Step JR08 200 Ma1n Street, Point
UNE/CABLE
Sliver, Gold Co1ns, Proof· Tralnmg 888·754·5430
Pleasant, WV 25550
INITAUEII
sets
Dtamonds, Golct www Goals2Success com
No exp required We proChild Cere worker•
Rtngs,
U S Currency vide good salary, training,
Act Nowl
!&gt;art-time child care workers
M T S C01n Shop, 151 Sec·
excellent
benefits, retoca·
needed tor e.tter school proand Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- lntemallonal Bus•ness
tion and advancement op.~75h
f&gt;fT
gram
IQr
emot1onally
or
be$2
446·2842
portunltiOO. HS grads, 16-32
&amp;kpand!ng
&gt;.Jt•
r
havtorallv challenged chll·
FIT 888·580.3713
'
catt1-B00·1;33·1657
www megabucke4you net
dren In Mason County
-:-:-=-:':-:-:--::-::-::-77== Some duties include part1ti·
Managing Cosmetologist,
AMBITION
REQUIRED patmg 1n recreational actlvl·
full &amp; part-time, comn'lla&amp;lon
120 pay,
Earn 1ncome from home t1es, butld•ng social skills,
owner pays taxes,
$500·$7000 mo !&gt;TIFT: and momtonng behavior
work own houra Reply to
in the
Mall -orcter/o ·commerce Must have HS diploma/
Hair Salon, Box 68, PomerComplete training inlorma· ?ED vallct dr~ver:S license
oy, Ohio 45769
lion
920-924 8400 and be wdhng to transport
WNW AchleveDreams com
children Experience with
Mason, experience needed,
commercial job, Canal Win·
- - - - - - - - - children preferred Visit our
website
at
chester, competitive pay,
Happy Ad
signing bonus, call Kim at
nmHnanpnpnvnAiiiidiiAAii cation,
www prestera
lor
appll·
apply 1n person,
(740)363-5260
or send appl resume to.
McClure's Reatauran1 now
PRESTERA CENTER
hiring all 3 tocatlona. lull or
Ken Harb1son,
part-lime, plok up applicaEmployment Special
tion at location &amp; bring bacl&lt;
3375 Route !)() E
t~ between
9:30am
&amp;
Huntington, WV 25705
10 OOam. Monday thru Sat·
EOEIAA
urday
AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS
Medical Billing Aoalatan1
TRAINEES
neaddd tmmodlatelyl FTIPT
Leam a1rcraft systems an&lt;
Will Train E&gt;&lt;Cellont Income.
maintenance Open to H S
PC required. 1-888-449·
grads, ages 17·34 Excel
9773 E111. 222
lent salary and benefits
Paid travel required Call t
NOW HilliNG.
800·533·1657
f&gt;art- time Ward Clerk
Houro Spm- B!&gt;m. 7 Dayo a
· week. Duties to Include an·
$7.00/hour
awerlng phooe, filing, light
clerical. Medical Recorda
ResponSibilities If you are _
Interested, contact Teresa
UPTIUHIU.
Wllaon a1 (740)'411-5001, or
apply In person at Holzer
Senior Care , Center, 380
1·866·475·7223
l.ove ya,
Colonial Drive, Bidwell, OH
45614
Guess Who c
ext. 1916

Buy, Sell or Trade

He wa~ our one true love

I'
I
I

Custom Compu1ers

Need
Cash for
Christmas?

His smile brighttned the d11y
It brou~t~hl you up rrom gloom
He made you reel I 00% beuer
With thai snule that showed so much love

LOOK!
BUVIRI5
5T..WTIN6

•

Happy 30th

WALK IN HOURS
Friday 9·5
Saturday 9-noon
All other times by
appointment ~nly.

or~

We have a
solution:
Work
WEEKENDS
ONLY!!
That is 16
hours a weeki
Earn up to

Call Today!

Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

Help us make a difference by
recruiting volunteers for the

1.t

American Heart
Association

985-3345
$3.00

on

any hair cut from

'We'll fix it or elsel•

Chris Parker with
hr. or 112 hr.
mausge

741J.887-(J600

A+.

Cardiovascular disease and
stroke kill more Americans each
year than the next seven

Thursday, September 13 -5:30p.m.

Specializes In Deep
Tissue, Swedish,
Shiatsu,
Craniosacral, Yoga
$45 full hour
1
$3 0 half hour

Bit• II( B.Jtea

%~

K.rls Kanleckl

AnnDuncement

leading causes (Jf death
COMBINED.

One Stop Shopping
For All Your Advertising Needs

The AmeriCan Community
Classified Advertising Network
, Contact Us At:

These positions involve no
fundralslngl

HbU, FSTATJ:: 10 lw !;OJI,J wilh OW'rler·s cnn~;tn t Ml 6:.50 P.m Mini
Fanm w/ 1 I Men'S, pond, pri1'111e ~ uln~:, ' ttl.'tli"'Mlm 2 hath homt
w/heat pun1p In Rtflil ( tlnd lhon r-ento&lt;ltled vt ry n lc~,lwa/"1 2 c•r
~:,ural(e, healed wo rkshup. fmll t ret:S. Mrry lunht"!&gt;, a nd l(f!lpt' 1'1 nts.
UIRF.C'I InNS. Rl J! Wf'!it p•~l Alh11ny, 1om 1111 Rt. 14J, just 4
miles llt'yund &lt;.:o lumhhl l w)l. Hre Uepl , hn lldlnj! on rlghl w11trh fur
SIJI~

ANIIO! Jt'S ANil&lt; Oil tC'J'I!!I f:S «lilPtr lined srnllktr'8 ltl llntJ
"'"It mirror, L11ne waltrrllll cedar clltit, Z·lltrostne Ttlmi•J.

ornMit

itS Prus.~l • OOwl &amp; pllchtr, JohMOn llrns. Phllttr, ~~evtn~l mllk11lu.u
pitcH, tenral Fenlon plorcn, 5-&lt;kcupled J11p11n nJlurhles, hl11cli
Ryurlne, lm!Jilrlal GIIUS nullnc hen , blue 1humbprlnl 5lemntrd
abu~es . Mc&lt;:oy pitcher &amp; unusu111 nowtr pot. I!IN Colun1lmJ hlr
!IOU~tnlr glau, Pumemy Mlll'tnlr pltd1u, ID.~r 51tlll!l (SOnlf
German), wl~ eg h11skrt, sevtratl dolli lndudlnalln old bride dnll
Kkl Sl~ltr &amp; Kewple doll:~, kid plv11nlud oil canM, hlly hook. p1nh
plow,:t.lron wa~tn whHIJ,
llot JStiiOLQ t IIKNISIUNGS,i nice l11rgt newer rull·lop dHk
HC,t, umcorder (nffds battery), ~N~fa &amp; ch11lr, end &amp; rorree lahtu,
llltllJ' boUk•helf, J.\' Cit l11pe dra~ert, slnJ&amp;II! l"'ln bMd tonlpltlr,
Kenmore t6 cu h. uprii&amp;ht free~er, Aman11 22 side·by·slde
refrlatr•lor, Montaomtr:f Ward 42" 111.5 r1n1t, mthl klk~n
atbind cut 11lumlnum muMn, p~uu~ cooker, mi.Kellantolll
dhh!s, pots &amp; paw, set or Cllln11, loti or e~~nnlna J•n, oak medicine
cabinet senral mtllltl ttoralf.' tablntla 1nd shelvln&amp; unila, l•wn
Chain, ,t,lplnr l'nltku 11lldrr eurtlse lllaChlne, •nd olhtr lttnu,

IOO.f..t: larp Patton fa n on whHis, tar ramps, rollen on itltnds ror
use wfphmtltr, mllre !IIIW, t:asy Home- Mrpalr Hook.'!. lool uhlndt &amp;
bo:.ts. C~h•mp~ &amp;: rurnllure d.IUIII"· worlo. bench tablr., lot~ or hanc(
look! ( u ~n end &amp; tomhlnlldtlfl wrencheli In set•), pipe Wl'l'n(h~s,
null &amp; boll.'l, drill ~;huptner, BuiT11Iu If~ hp, 8 ' 11rlltder, t:111R~nwn
5lde w_rindtr. Cran sman nttl.a.l In" drill , Shop Smllh J)(notr lor(b,
Ram Tool mt~chlnl~l ~ 1 M" dt1' 1 ~, ~~~ndlr•ll bfll pup rlntrr &amp; rh'tl!l,
drill st t, dtep well1101:krts, l HI&gt; nt~or jacks, lln~man belt &amp; ~ p lkl'.,,
rencr tlrelchcr load binder, t)tloM seeder: lawn &amp; ~eartkn llllll l~ ,
fqlht el«lrk ltft'tl ealcr, CruO~num 41: ' h1wn Nwrt'/M"r, tin·•·
n"Mpt-'f, mel11ls•w hurR'! Krllp W'ood (lneludlltllll siKk or Wlllnut),
~~ond 0//wr mlseellllnr&lt;tus lltms

n&amp;M:i;. Ct~Jh or cha:k w/!JO!illhf I D ChKkl 01'tr $1000 mu!il
have blink IIUihorlulloa or runds nallahle. Not responsible ror lost
or aukltnls. Food will be avalia.blt.
QWNio:A1 Nn,nl• &amp;: Hill Pollt'y

or visit our website:

In lhle new.p~~per 11

IUbfeet 10 tM Feclerll
F•lr HoUalng Act ot 1tel
whlch mttk• tt llleQIIIo
*CiveriiM "....y
preterenc., limitation or
diiCflmlnatlon biMd on
r~c:., ~or....uurOn, ...

fnillll lllitu• Dr n.UONII
origin, or 1ny Intention to
tnllke sny such
preference, limitation or
dlscrlmln•tlon."
Thla newap~tpW will not

knowlngtyoccopt
Rvtnteemema tor ,...
"tate which Ia In
violation or the law Our
r.lldera are hereby
Informed that au
IIWetttnga odvent... In
thtanetofsPIIperare
available on an equal
opportunity baaea.

lo....;.;~...;;..;.:..;;.~-ol

Dan Smith · Aurtlonc.:r, Ohio #1344
C11.~h • Chec-k • Posllhi!! m
ln~ldt

Khool'

Sept. 20 Auction at l,ortland Grllde School
Sepl27 Auction at Syracuse Grade School
Oct. 4 Auction at Southern ]r. High School
Watch for nt'W 1/stlna \lllh tu h une!

•••• THIS IS A GOOD QUALITY SALE WITH
MANY UNUSUAL ITEMSIIII
OAK DRESSER , OAK NIGHT STAND,
DI;IESSER,
VICTORIAN
TABLE
WITH
PORCELAIN WHEELS, SMOKERS STAND
STANDS,
OLD
W/ACCESS.,
CHAIRS,
KITCHEN CUPeOARD, OLD CAST IRON
BABY eED, OTHER FURNITURE NOT
LISTED YET, TRAMP ART MIRROR,
VICTORIAN
HAT
RACK,
LOTS
OF
GLASSWARE COMING IN, OLD DISHES,
APPLE
PEELERS,
SILVER
PLATE
FLATWARE (40's), OLD KITCHEN ITEMS,
OLD FRAMES, OLD eOOKS, TOBACCO
TINS, NELSON MCCOY PLANTER, OTHER
POTTERY, BALL TOP CANNING JARS
(QUARTS, HALF-PINTS), NO. 11 SKILLET,
SMALL BROWN &amp; WHITE CROCK, SALT
GLAZE GRAY CROCK WIHANDLE, #8
CROCK W/2 HANDLES (SALT GLAZE,
POTTER MARKS), eRASS SPITTOON, NICE
OLD BOTTLES, PERFUMERS, OTHER MISC.
SMALLS ....
NICE COUNTRY &amp; PRIMATIVE PCS. TO
INCLUDE PRIM. ~-~EG GUNSMITH WORK
STAND, 2 EARLY ARROWBACK PLANK
CHAIRS, VERY NICE AMMO BOXES WITH
GOOD ADV., WOOO HAY FORK WITH METAL
TIPS, OAK BUCK SAW, 2 HANDLE DRAW
KNIFE, SPOKE SHAVE, BLOCK PLANE,
WET STONE IN WOOD eOX, MORTISE AXE,
WOOD HAMMER MAUL, FROE, HAND
AUGERS (1855 8t 1883), RABeET SAW,
CIRCLE SCRIBE, BROAD AX, DOUGLAS AX,
OTHER NICE OLD TOOLS ....

SR 124
MAPLE GROVE
SUBDIVISION • OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE • Approxlmalely 2 acre
lois. Groat camptng lois Call loday
lor more delatlo. ASKING $20,000.

PRICE REDUCED • CHESTER- 30 acres
ground, CR 36, just . outs~''l
Chesler. Eas1ern School DISirlcl. Eleclrlc, septtc, water well on
Sheller
I around an
ASKING
1991, 14x70
Buill-In hutch,
with ramp, new heal pump and
Musl Be Movedl
·

bedrooms 1 balh,
Includes a 1Ox 1~
lmmedtale
$15,000.

.. A 1 story frame home wh1ch Jnctudes · Ltvtng room, eat-In
2 bedrooms, 1 bath, part basement , and a newer stde deck All of
sits on a 25 aero lal.
ASKING $15,500

WNW.american~muntlydasslfied.com

""'"•" GROVE· Approximately 29 935 acres of greal hunllng
Home silo au I of flood plain SepUc, eleclrlc and your own waler
a D&amp;s well on this property Could have free gas lo your home
roya111es. What a v1aw of the Ohto Rtver Ask about an
1
fronllot also. Agonl Owned .

• Up to $7/h'r
•

All rNI H--lolng

CH'I•.N II t I l 1SI• • .Suud.t.\ , St'IJh•m tn r '' · ~ . ~ : 110 I'·m

.t-800-821-8139

If you are looking f9r a job
where you can make a
difference, we offer:

-

30033 S.R. 143, Albany, 011
Ml·igs County ·Alexander Sc:hool~ ·

-lt!censed

AnnDuncament

:::===:::;=;;:===::;====;; R•ck
Com·
pany, Pearson
full limeAuctton
auclloneer,
1
~. ')M-............ ... ~.1
complete auction serv1ce
"l!v ,~ VIr
Licensed M66,0h1o &amp; West
V1rg1nta, 304·773--5785 Or
304·773·5447

welcomes

10 Yl. EXPIIIJIICE

-

Or, call 1-877-463-624 7 to
schedu le an interview.
REAL ESTATE &amp; l'ERSONAL
PROPERTY AUCTIO N

roasaage •
&lt; '
therapist

~

242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

Announcement

WEST
SHADE
BARBER
SHOP

r---~----.

0" ner • Southern Local School District

Will be hfld

Find

FIRST TIME HOME
BUYERSI
$0 Down
No Crod1t Noededl
HUD , VA FHA
1-800·501-1777 ext 9626
Now BriCk Ranch Home on
acres,
mmutes from
24
Holzer
3 5Bedrooms, 3
BathS, n......n Kltcherv' Fami·
~.ly Room. Den, Mud Room,
Basement, In· ground Pool,
Storage Bui lding, Smllhl
caotnets (740)446·0t•9

·- - - - - - - - - - ' - - Real Estate General

wmdow fan. and lots more

Saturday, September 15, 2001
8:00am-J2:00pm #-

SO DOWN HOME$1 GOV'T
&amp;

payments for cash• lmmedt·
ate Quotes! (Ntek) BQ0.7768752 or 419·394· 1317
ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD
BILLS OVERWHELM ING
YOU?? FREE DEBT CON·
SOLIOATION can consoudate
bills mto one
monthly payment Reduce
.nterest, Avoid late charges
&amp; Stop harassment L•·

MONEY
Up lo $500 Instantly by
m l..oAN
phonal
_ _ _ _ __. H877)·EARYPAY
Lid
Will offer at auction the items rrom
•
750005
PROBLEMS
PAYING lsi ADVANCE FREEl
Letart Elementary School.
BILLS OR LOANS. Loans - - - - - - - - , - - ··Playaround E.Qutpmc:m"
Available Call Toll Free 1· STOP FORECLOSUREII
Sw mg sets, teeter toller, volleyball stands, monkeyj 8n.745-1049 GOOd Bad or Behind on Mortgage? Don't
bars, back stop for haseball , play gy ms, goal
No Credll or Bankruptcy File Bankruptcy·Sava Your
and nag pole
Welcome Fast Reliable Home! Guaranteed Service
"KJicben Items"
800·915·9704 x500
S S ,counter, S S 3 comportment smk. metal cabmet
TURNED DOWN ON
wnh butcher block top. Vulcan I0 burner stove, 28
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
Umco chest deep freeze, 16 cu ft upright freezer.
No Fee Unlese We Wm!
S S cab met, large m1xcr, and large coffee makers.
1·888·582·3345
$ FREE CASH NOW$ lrom -:-:-:.,.:;:=:.:::.:..::.:=:.:-.
::MW:.::
Me t.d dou ble cabmets. metal file cubmets, wood
weatthy tamiUes unloading VISA!MASTERCARDIII
sh ch~s. small c hild ~ coat mck, mcb1l desks,
millions of dollars to help NEW unsecured cred•t
m•mmize their taxes. Write cards!! $7500 apprcwal
com puler t.1bles, foldmg tables,
, elecmc 1ypewntcr, bullctm bourd, water coo·tcr, 1 lmmedtatety· WINDFALLS, GUARANTEEDII Bad crod3010 WILSHIRE BLVD It, bankruptcy 01&lt;11 1-716tablt:s, comer tables. metal book
188,
LOS ANGELES, CALl· 326·1993
computer, fi\'e TVs, upngh t plano,
metal stora ge ca bmcts

riO
.!~~..E
~-------_.1

~
3 Bedroom on Route 2

~..._

cop•er

IU\II,J\11

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03

BANK FOAECLOSUAES 1
lOW OR NO MONEY
DOWN! OK CREDIT! FOR
LISTINGS1 CALL 1-800
338-()()20 ext 9811
-:-:-----,-----,.
3 bedroom house lor sale in
Mtddleport, call Tom Ander·
$$$NEED CASH??? It son after 5pm, (740)992·
you'·e
sold ,...,
~-ny on •··•
3348
w
IGIP\.1 : . . : . . - : - , - - - - : - - : -

mi~;;;.-B~~;.;;.;,-, DAY??

LGcalted on

Page

• Weekly bonuses

• Full-time

&amp;

part-time available

• Full benefits
I

• Paid training
• Paid holidays

&amp; paid

•n•u·umu

vacation

CDL umficalion 5wl: 1oune

• Friendly, professional environment

1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901

Valley Truck Driver Troining .

..

Mon &amp; Fri 7:00·3:30 Weekend
lat &amp;Sun 800-4 30 I2weeb
•finanli't and lllllliilglllllilrlile 11M! on el~i\ilt~
'Job pkxement on OOil Atraining'
Contact Kad Lamb 1-800.648-3695 orl7401373-3966

a

Farm hand grinder, mixer, IN

2400

1980 Jeep, McCudry
Wagon, 8' wide lime spreader

round baler,
Grain

Dan, Smlth ·Auctioneer
Cash • Positive

10 •

Refreshments

Realty, Inc. Office............. 992·2259
Henry
Sherrl

E.
L.

Cleland ........................... 992·2259
Hart ....................; .............7 42·2357

Anna M. Chapman .... ., ................... 992·2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·6191

•

'I

.i

I,

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�••
Page 04 • iounbav m:untlf · iotntmtl

Pomeroy • Mladleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

:r:\d::~~~ua~H~~~s~ ~~~~~~:~~r:;r:::A;~;;;&amp;;c:E:::;I~rnior=::fOR~~~RENT==~==n

I

FDf sale by ownef NICe bi
level home on 1 acre near
Ches1er
Three bedroom
two bathS one-car garage
tam1ty room w1tl'l f11eplace
sun room New central heat
1ng &amp; ale system One m•
nute oft Rou1e 7 but st1ll pn
vala {740)965 3981
FORECLOSED
GOV T
HOMESI SO DR LOW
DOWN I TAX AEPD S &amp;
BANKAUPTCIESI
OK
CAEDITI FDA LISTING'
CALL 1...SOO 501 1777 ext
961 3
Newly constructed s1ngle
t
1600
I tho e
10
HOlzer HoSpital 20 mlnUieS
from Pleasant Valley Hosp1
tal on SA 160 on a "'''"'"

~!:~ted

BRUNER LAND
(740)U1·1•!12

3 Bedroom HooM "' Syra·
cuse Oh10 $4501 Month
HUO Approved (304)675
Gallle Co Kerr Ad 8 5332 weekends only
acres $21 0001 R10 Grande - - - - - - - e)(CIUSive 6 acres $19 5001 4 Bedroom House on Rt 2
Cheshire 5 acres $10000 No' Pets Deposit &amp; referon
or 24 acres with large bam ces (304)895-38 15
S30 0001 Clay Twp 11
$17 500' Vmton 14 acres Cottage suitable fOf s.ngle
or couple $250 00 Lincoln
$13500'
Ave call Homestead 304
Melg1 Co Tuppers Platns 675 5540 ask lor Nancy
Carr Ad 12 acres $21 000 Cozy 1 2 bedroom Cottage
or 6 acres S12 500• SR681
250 uncoln Ave Call
5 acres on Shade R.ver Homestead
Really
$12 000 OR 7 acres w1th (304)675 5540 ask lor Nan
pole bam $23 000
cy

s

J

t

t8

I the

I

r

s.n
f:,Z.;.;;;:.;,;o.;.;..___,

r

AllunMENrs
FOR

--

o.........

~,!~: f~rn~a'i!; ~~
~~=. ~~s ~~;:

2 218
--------1 Bedroom Apartment , A•
frlgerator Range AJC In
eluded, 5289 Plus Deposit &amp;
Aetecence HUD Approved
(740)441-1519

and other IISilngs l Owner ,, Dalh On At 33 m Hartford Secon d Ave
$300
nanc1ng w1th shght property next to comm bu11dmg month (740}446-o855

!,~;k bcaat~~net~' 9 0~tch~~

Commercial Lots w/ small
home for sale 4 lots 262
long over an acre 1n llleart of
Pt Pleasant located at 1410
LewiS St
pnce neg
$62 000 call 304 727 3318
between 5 oo to 11 oo pm

w/gas log !.replace cenlral
a1r laundry
front
porch
&amp; 2 1/2 room
car garage
lmmedlale posset&gt;siOn Ap·
Pratsed at 5125 500 ask•ng

$125 500 Call (740)446 Looktng To Buy A New
4514 lrom 6 5pm M F "'HOfne7 Dont Have Land ?
(740)446 3248 aher 5pm
We Dolll Hurry Dnly 10 Lots
NICe older home 2 BA !IV left 304 736 7295
1ng room dlnmg room MUST SELL Clear cut c•ty
k•tchen pantry u1111ty roOm water natural spnng creek
lull s•ze ai!IC gas furnace w•th 5 or 1 acres o1 flat
central a1r Aac1ne S35 000 land 30 m11es West from
{740)949 2070
Po1nt Pleasant (304)697
Ranch Style Home for sale "5.::92::7_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
4 bdrm 3 baths 2 car ga R.vor Lots for sale m Hart
rage close to h1gh school lord wv PubliC Wale• &amp;
19 Oakwood DA Gall sewer
Ava•table
Avg
Oh C. II between 6 00
60• 160 Call {'n')B82 2607
....
""""
11 00 pm •n good cond w or (304)882 2686
cent ral a1r &amp; heat $78 000
reduced 304 727 3318

o

Monn ~ HoM•:'i
L___l:;;t,;:JR·S·Aj;lj;F- ·

r.

:p:c1 1o~t"--Pr-og-ra-m--R-e-n-le_r_s.

j

Y

~3:..b:..ec.d:. :ro .: .m:...::_
.: m:..o_b'_'e_h_o_m_e_
petsln

3 bedroom WJth expanclo &amp;
centra l air water &amp; trash
pa1d 74D-992 2167 for 8"'"
,..
cpo::•::.:n•::.:m::e::.:nl::.__ _ _ _ _
3 bedroom all electnc mo
b•le home '"' rent on Little
Bullskin Road no pets
$350 dopos 1t $350 rent per
month
plus
ulii1Ues
(740)256·6192

All electnc $300/mo + de·
1
1 {740)367
pos
t no P9 s
061 1

:.:...:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _

Water

One bedroom apar1ment,
2nd A\lenue
Gallipolis,
$300 per month single,
$325 couple Utilities Jnclud·
ed C II {740w• ••
a 1972 ---~ 77 or
(740)256
One room eff1c1ency apart·
ment, 2nd Avenue Galhpo·
lis $200 per month couple,
$
175 per month single Uhl·
ltles
Included
Call
(740)446 8677 or {740)256

'-==.c.:=-- - -

Tara Townhouse Apart·
ments Very Spacious 2
Bedrooms 2 Floors, CA 1
1f2 Bath Fully Carpeted
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Po·
t10 Start $365/Mo No Pets
L
p
ease Ius ecurity Deposit
ReqUired, Cays 740-446·
3481 Evenings 74Q-367
0502 740·446·0101

s

Real Estate General

New 14 Wde 3 6edroom
Only $19 850 Free Delivery
&amp; Sel Up t-888 928 2426
New 16x80 3 bedroom 2
bath only $500 down call
N1k~ (740)385 4367

New 2002 Fleetwood only
$775 down and $150 85 per
month
call
Cheryl
(740)385 4367
New 2002 Fleetwood smgle
Wide Only $149 month only
at Fl eetwood Homes of
Proctorv lie Toll Free 1
888 565.0167
New bank rej)O 14x70 3
bedroom 2 balh Pay $499
&amp; mo\le·ln Oakwood Gallipolis {740) 446 3093
New Double W1de $195
Per Montht 3 BedrooM 2
Bath Free Del1very &amp; Set
up 1 886 928 3426

F 11
........,. ........
ion
u eqw....,..... .__uty sa
for rent in Galhpolla

{740~7130

~om~,~~ IOf rent ~

992 3 194

{~?40)""""• •

pet~non

Office/ Retatl apace lor rani

In Gallipolis Newly remodeled, plenty
ol park1ng
&amp;1740144 7130

riO

Hot.6DIOLD
ro.-..~
L---oi""""'liililil--_.1
Appliances ReconditiOned
Washers, Dryers Ranges,
Relngrators Up To 90 Days

r

Pretty as a p1cture Very well
planned stone and lrame ranch
home otters 3 bedrooms walk ln
closet 2 !ull baths charming living
room w/hreptace New oak cabinets
l1ne the kitchen Range refngeralor
diShwasher and compactor aU stay
Ut1ilty room Is extra large 2 t1er d eck
In the rear wtth 36 1nground pool
Many frwt trees flowers and
shrubs Spnnkler system m the rear
2 car auached garage and a carport
2 Mory barn bulldmg Blacktop and
ce ment dniJeways A home you 11 be
proud to own VL Sm1th 446 6806

84022 Watch the River trom your
backyard? Enjoy lhe v ew from
your boat dock or back deck thiS 1+
ac mil with a 2 BA 1 balh mobtle
bulldmg 1n M•ners
home/vacation camP.er 1s JUSt the
600 sq tt ale cov
th1ng for stress May be room for a
ered parkmg ce ling !an
garden
Located at 7103 St At 1
$275fmo 614 875 1661
South Reduced!
State Roul e !60 5 1/2 14031· $$ wtll be all yours &lt;I you
can run an acllve bustness Buy
m les Nor1h o! Holzer Hosp
bu1ldmg rucks equipment stock
tal 36)(90 lot of parking
and customers all for a bargam
(740)38 8 8463
Great location 1n R1o Grande
mak1ng proposulon for the
'--..;,;;.:;;~~_.J l •m•bllfous. VLS 446·6606

~

1'1!)~

Joe A.

Moora
Broker

740-441-1111

FAX: 74()-446-0006

~~:::=~~O~H~45631

SOCIAL SECURITY DISA
BILITY Clatm Den1ed? We
Spec1ahze In appeals and
Hearings FRE E CONSUl
TATION
Benefit Team
Services Inc Toll1ree 1
888 836-4052

For Sate Reoondhloned
washers, dryers and refrlgerators Thompsons Appll'
ance "'
~07 Jackson Ave_n_uo..;..;(_304_.:.)6_7_5_7_388
_ _ __
NEED A GRANDFATHER?
Grandtather Clocks Starting
at $339 WhOlesale 10 the
Pub.c, Tallclocka, Inc 1~
en-634-8412

------~---

Main Street Furniture
(304)875-1422
515 "-In St~t P•'nt
l'ffliiPieaa'a";t' ""

neighborhood

._
•
~.

~

... '-

-,

I

I;

•

13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
home w/4 BAs 2 baths kit LR, DR
porches part1al basement Pnced
nghl· see lhls outstand1ng offer!
Vacant, ready to welcome you VLS

ranch

3 bedroom house, 1,700 sq. ft., 2 ful
batha, large dining room,
living room, utility room, 2
garage, on 1 acre lot. In Porter ,.,.,._,
New roof, naw carpet all m•ruu•u"
Nice neighborhood. ·Prl,cel

:ttDII,_UIIU.IIU.

Call

after 5:00

p.m

--

Engineered Metal Building
Systems Low A sa Com·
mercia! and Industrial an
~stom s1ze Include Av
tlon Warehouse and Agn
cullurat Call lor DISCounts
AB Contractmg Inc (304)
674 0100

TIME COULD PAY OFFI Ylaw this
lovely all brick home wllhreo
bedrooms 2 baths lormal dining
rm , living rm , family nn with
llleplaco , Pallo above ground pool,
2 cat anached garage and
basement VERY LIVABLE HOME
THE MONEY $125,000 00

HISTORIC
PICTURE
OF
GALLIPOLIS • HOfne leatures 3
aR and 1 bath with custom
ca biQetS In kllch&amp;n very large lot
that has potential for several
op11ons tet us shOw
thrs home
With
location

spaces

enriched

wtth

a

14034 12292 St RT. ltiOo Qulat
l1v1ng but not too far out • This 1995
manufactured home on foundation
Is just what you are looking for
Home rests on 8 acres m/1 with
barn outbuilding and all fenced
Great for horse or cows Owner
wants to move and w1U let his 2000
ndtng mower stay so you can ride
the ranch Priced at S90 000 this
could be just what you need!

LOTS FOR SALE SA 588- Beautiful hill tap lol wtth 5

.

lid. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME Oak
kitchen cerarn.: tile In kllchan &amp;
baths NEW CARPET thtough ool
natural decor
5 ACRES M'L
$t05 000 Tnsh or Dave

mil $40 000 Lot 12 offeta 5 acres

Purebred Coll ie for sale·
both parents on property
S100 (740)985 4256

·lNSffiUMFNIS

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

CA~S!

i

r

r

G

'1995
- -Grand
' - - Am
- -GT
--$3695
1993 Grand Am 4 door
$1795
1993 cavalier
S2195 1!196
10 $2695
1990 Gran Prix $2195
COOK MOTORS 1740)446
0103

s

·- - - - -

19% Chev~ Beretta very
good condition New Tires
lots of other new parts
$6,000 {304)773 9187

1987"-'-

~~~~~~~~·

4x4 4
5 sp new !•res &amp; bal
tery
alummum wheels
nos
n~ee $2000 (740)247 4292
1991 Chevy Suburban lOw
1987FordF2SO 59 diesel m•leage loaded great cnn
4 speed recent overhaul dition (740)446 3108
have rece1pts runs excel
lent
well
matnta ned 1994 Astra Converslon Van
$4500 (7 40)992 7584
114 000 miles e~~:cellent
cond•llon $6000 (740)446
1989 Ford XLT 4x4 78 000 4619
miles e~~;cellent cond1t10n
S3495 1988 Jeep Chero-

59G= Sha~e~
t304)675-2642 or (304)675
1500

kee
door, 1996
$2595
1994 4&lt;4
S 10four
!3695
S
1 $2695 1992 S1lverado
$3695 COOK MOTORS
(740)446-()1 03

o

VANS&amp;

'

....~Ram Floor shift 1990 lsuzu uuck

d~=~ci~:a~ge~s;~~~ ~8~

o

ilr:::,or-"...;;;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

5 loot Gra nd Plano A 1 · - - - - - - - ·
cond1t10n
$6800
Call
Buck a bate sale square
(740)446 4525 aher 4pm
bales $1 00 other hay up to
Bach Trumpet w th case $2 00 round bales $15 00
EKcellent Condit on S350 each 304-675 4869
Neg
(304)675 2382 or
(304)675 2926 after 5pm
Hay &amp; Brtght Wtre Tie
Straw, Year Round Oehvery
Gememhardt Flute wllh &amp; Vol ume 0 1scount Avella·
hard case $200 {304)882 ble
Heritage
Farm
3775
(304)675 5724

cyl

4-WDs

1995 Chevy Van 15 ""s
senger 1 ton 138k m•les.
good shape ask•ng $8 000
{740)379 2995

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo 4x4 4 dr pw pi •
new t~res wel l maintained,
high mtles asking St3 400
neg (740)7427200

1

;==~R~e~a~I~E~s~t~a~t~e~G~e~n~e~r~a~l~~=

rI
1

1993 Chevy 2500 pk:l&lt; yp,
cru1se atr excellent 1
condit1on 72 000 miles, one 1
owner $6500 (304)882 [
2662

1111

1999 Doogo Dakota Spo"
Auto Air Loaded 28 000
m1les Rebuilt T1tle like j
New May Take Older
T ade $6 750 (740)256·
9161

I OPEN HOUSE
I

Sunday, September 9, 2001
From 2:00- 4:00 o'clock

2 Geo Trackers 1 black &amp; 1
White $3200 {304)697·
5927 or (304)638 0079

Dtrecttons

72 Chevy 1/2 ton 6 cyl1n
der 3 speed North Carolina
truck hall damaged hood 7
roof orange &amp; while Call
for Ust $5 000 fnvested
$2 500 hrm or trades Dave
Owens (740)256 0611

r~

VANS

94

Wmterplace

Gallipolis , Ohio
State Route

588

approxtmalely

••

3 mtles,

tum l eft on Wmte rplace ,

&amp;

I st h o u se on n gh t

4--WDs.

"'--------·

1986 Ford Bronco Edd1e
Bauer Two lone Med1 um
miles
usesiSSIOnno $500
01t Mocha/Light Mocha 4x4
Good transm
302 V8 EFI Automatic
{740)446 9776 or {140)446
98 500 m1les /IJC Cru1se
4553 asl&lt; '"' Mary
lllt Power WlndowsJLocks
1986 GMC Ptekup Trade lor 4~ Suspens1on L1ft Alpine
Stereo System $6 000
small car (304}882-3739
(740)446 6833
1987 Dodge Ram 150 4x4
looks Good, Runs Good 1987 Chevy JJ4 Ton 4x4
(740)256-6997
$4400 (740)441 1892

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths

over 3000 square
teet of living space Formal living room
and dining Lots of beautiful woodwork.

level

MlODLEPORT Park St

lot wtth shaded deck area 1n the back of

JU SI reduced' fh 1s
stor) home 1s located

the home adds to the overall appeal Let

Broadway Hom e

this charmer be on your list of must sees

R~ally n1cc h0mc ufh:rs 3
LlR I 112 B 11h~ I R DR
llr•hiy Rm 2 I.:LH g 1ra~e
Ap p ltan~.:cs N1cc pnvatl'
back yard \e1y well
m 1mtumcd M1d 90s

till

o ffer~

2

or J BR Buth I K DR
K11 Ut dlty Hm ~.:dlur
Reall y mce fc 1ced n )llTd
lo1 IS 75x 124 lmmcd ate
possession' Now In the
m1d 40s

PumrrtJ\1 • Umo n An
Mus1 see 10 ~rpr ccm lc'
I nC!l!ed on I 'i a~:rcs m/1
~hjuse remnddcU New
C I pet &amp; Jl OOIIIIB 1\e\1.
Ci\ New uctator ~ystcm
Reaii,t good huy al
149 500

CHESTER AREA Grem
place to nusc )Our fnmll)"'
Rc11ll y n 1~.:e splll c::n try

1U ()ea At

home w/4 HH. 2 B uh ~ Kit

!?'9 t?ed ~

FR DR Deck 2 car garuge
Large lot Pnce has been
red u~.:e d and v.e v.tll liSten
lu redonablt: uffc 1 ~l
Mid 80s

, 1~ee,

1-800-585-7101 or 446--7101

Mllll)f EPORT
Older
h(lrne thlll ilns hcen so
compkh:~ly rcn odekd thm
you \.\On t helu.:&gt;lt 11 ~ ~t he

POMEROY ,\ RE:A J 11~1
oft SR 7 &amp; 33 Rc 1lly jpeal
home onl) a C11uplc of
years old Bcaut1ful \lew
1 h1s home olfc1s su muny
extm s yo u have tu sec to
a ppre~.:m te l Pnce has JU SI
been re duced uga 111 11
Call for appomlnwnl

~

Russell 0 Wood, Broker 446-4618
441 · 0262
DanaAtha
24S-0022
Kenneth Amsbary
446-0722 l1m Slone
742-3171

1

~am~

&amp;~-~~~
li.J.'l Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0i
ut 740-446-0008 740-441-llll
•

205 North Second Ave.
Midd
OH

e;:'ru1smoo®zoomnet. net

W1""''· evans-l•to4&gt;r&lt;e. &lt;omnl,•1

Forml:!rly Bhrd6um Re«lly "Sen•wg Soutltem Ohw for Over A Quarter Century"

RIVERVIEW DRIVE • Need lots ol room 1n your
home? Th1s one has 111 3 bedrooms upstairs
(one be1ng 24 It ) and a 24 It hv •ng room The
basement also has a flmshed room There 1s a
large enclosed porch and a newer outbu1ld1ng
Really mce home Come and look

.Joe
Sarah

L.

A.

M o o r - B r o k e r 441-1818

Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1618

Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara Casey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990

;7,;:;;::;~;;:;;;~C;a:::ndace

446-7412

house L1X: 11!Cd on S

2ntl 1h1r, h{1me olfcrs 4
BR 2 ll •I•~ LR FR Kit
l 1ttll
I en New carpel
Ort 11
wuodv. urkl

Musl Sec'

Needs some 1 LC

bu~

could be

llllC

Beech

I

c:o:du~ne

RACINE 2 Bu.!imo; ~' oppom 1111es M~clun ~
Another versatil e bldg \1. /llpprox I ~00 sq ft

arcn
~h i'l p pl u~

MIDDLEPORl Sc\cl,d remul ptuJX!t1• C~ I\ a lable 1
home dupleK bu sllt "' !•11 1ding Agc nl u\\1\t'tl \V•II111g !
deol'
POMEROY I ot• IIIOH rt.Kllll lllo• f 1 I 1~1 appears 11 1
homel2 BR I Balh K•t I R Otllt:t I ull t ~111 M5 IXJO
MIDDLEPORT Rcull y g~t:al hone ~ 13R 2 1!2
K11 wJsome upplumccs grc. 1 ""mkmansh1p greut puol
xarage pn vate courlyard alt fcmnl fur pr Ht ~.:y
mamleno.nce

fillY OTHER USTINGSI STOP IN &amp; TAUI TO USI
Real Estate General

12015
R....

3814

a-goo

111,500 Nice

Creole

Bl Level atyla
home thai haa la~ijt family rOOfn &amp;
dining area that opens to large
rear deck and private back lawn
Eat-In kitchen 3 bedrooms large
family room. garage concrete
drtve and

CHEAP CHEAPI $21 000 001
ln'llestmenVstarter Ranch
slyle
home slluated at 738 Main
Street 2 bedrooms
equipped
k1tcnen living room bath! 12121

APPLE
GROVE
DORCAS
ROAD·
Approx•malely 3 4 acres ot land, partially a
grassy f1eld and the re st 1n woods Has a 1981
t 2x60 mobile home with 3 bedrooms and 2

'
MAIN STREET· A 1 '/o
story home
alum1num Siding, and has 2 beqrooms
room
kitchen, balh and laundry
downstairs a nd 2 small bedrooms upt;talrs.l
Has a nice v1ew ollhe Ohio River
NOW REDUCED TO

Beautiful brick horne In
8 ~u l et ln·town netghborhood
Low maintenance, conveniently
I
hard wood floors
kitchen and bath
windows and full
basement $89 900

Salon and office rental space plus
2 upstairs apartments corner lot
Call and let
Nice Income

0 ~:1 :~~~~4

2 to 3 bedroom home s ttl1ng
ap~~r~;;
Has a beautiful fam1ly room 1lh
screened 1n back porc h and plenty
the k1ds lo play

NEW USTINGI LO'VEI.Y
lor this 2 story home that J
years young resting on approx 2
acres Living room khchen 8
bedrooms, basement Low exterior
maintenance, detached 24 )( 30
garage large front porch and morel
12142

ALLEY • ApproXImately 1 acre
v1ny l s1d1ng blawn ~1n lnsu1a11on, and a
root
3 bedrooms and 1 balh A
1 by the houseful' L1ve 1n II or renlll out.
$25,000.00
see and g1ve us an offer
• N 3RD S'l:· A ranch style
that IS o nly t years old Home has 3
bedrooms 2 baths, a nd a storage building Also
has vmy l s1d1ng Anderson windows &amp; some
newer carpet!,..
$41,000 00

Iorge lol,
apactoua rooma, 5 bedrooms,
baths over 3 000 square feet of
liv1ng space and a 2 car gafage
Many Improve ments have
already been done lnctudmg
newer wmdows roof wtrlng
central a1r and master bath wltn
whirlpool tub With 8 little TLC
th1s home could be magnificent!
BDNUS I A 2 BA 1 BA garage
apartment rental that cou ld help
with
Pnce reduced

panel doors luxuriOus
sutte screened In porch custom
cherry k1tchen cabinets and a lull
basement partially f1 nlshed The
owner has priced the home with 2
Acres mil at $219,000 but may be
Willing to sell as much as 25 30
Acres surrounding the homo

lf101 Many poaalbllltlea ewalt
you with thla three bedroom
country farm home Located on
the banks ol Raccoon Creek next
famous Bob Evans Farm In
the toRiotheGrande
Owner willing to sell
backdrop
country living can this 121 acre farm for $195 000 or
be tounc:l In lhiB 4 bedroom 2 1n many combinations such as the
112 bath ranch located Jn
home and one acre w•th oversized
Green township th 1s remodeled garage for $49 900 or maybe you
one level home offers large open want the home and three acres
spaces ennched with a central w1th
barn and hobby house
kitchen and ramlty/su n room A
a small 45 acre
large level lot with shaded deck
today to
area m the back ol the home
adds to the overall appeal Let
lhls charmer be on your list of
must sees $134 850

10~_9()().

a

Ranch
wtth
bedrooms living room, dlnlr'lg and
kitChen Plus 14 K 70 mobile home
In excellent condttlon, presently
used as a rental Lots of frull trees
and I
112123

TRHDITIOnHL 2STORY PLHn
non-TRHDITIOnHL UHLUE
BRICK
WITH LOTS OF STYLE
open to specious formal
room and dining area, step-sav.ng
kitchen family room w1th flrep!ac;e 1
oversized master bedroom With
patio area that leads to mground
pool master bath 3 additional
bedrooms and bath Approx 2
acres, concrete d rcu tar drive To
much to mention In this ad call for
an appointment 12050
NEW USTINGI CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
RAISED
RANCH
STYLE HOME! Uvmg room,
dining room kitchen den fam1!y
room 3 bedrooms 2 baths built·
In 2 car garage plus large rec
room In baseme?tl Central air
12141

'

MIDDLEPO~T. Older home with
charm and great location near
school grocery •etc lots of room
here for the family G ive Cheryl a
call for more details 12110
NEW USTINQI
S/1 124
$79 000 3 29 acres co mes along
with this ranch home llvmg room
d1rnng room kitchen 3 bedrooms
'-2 baths 2 Car detached garage
Lovely pond fruit trees &amp; berries
lets go s.eel lf2130

)

clou to town can be f()und In
thla 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath on
Brentwood
D ri ve
W1lh
overs1zed rooms th 1s spac•ous
home otters an equipped kitchen
partially fm1s hed basement and
a two-car
an for only

MAIN STREET· A two slory home With a large
Ioyer dtnlng room, l1v1ng roo m kitchen, and
balh downstairs and 3 bedrooms upstairs Has
a full basement wtth a newer furnace and hot
water healer A beauttlul v1ew of the OhiO R1ver
NOW REDUCED TO $15,000
I

Thts

home

l1as

h ad

cons 1derable

updates and Improveme nts mak1ng 11 a

•

NEW USTINGI DON'T WORRY
ABOUT THE STOCKMARKET
CRASHING! Invest your money tn
purchasing th11 multiple rental
klcOf"ne producing property In
town location 3 Houses plus
mobile home Wanting a positive
cash ftow-call today for more
datallsl 12138

great buy

4

BR s

25

ba th s

LA

DR

ROY JONES ROAD· A hve year old ranch w1lh
over 2000 square teet Has a big kitchen, liVIng
room and mam bedroom
2 more average
sozed bedrooms and 2 baths A really mce
back po rch an d a newer front deck All of this
s1tttng on 51/2 acres
I

..

I

river YliWI, I
wooded lot and nature
thla raised ranch on 3
With lUSt a short dnve
south of Gallipolis one will tlnd a
hidden treasure positioned high
o·venlool&lt;ing the Oh1o Valley W1th
hardwood I
remod eled oak
kitchen and ample hvjng space
enhanced by a fm1shed lowe r
le'llel th1s gem awaits you
$119 000 00

lf1
town end cloee to
school I, park front, grocery and
much morel Th1s 2 story home has
the posstblllty of ha11mg 3 rentals
w1th 11 L1ve 1n one and let the rent
from the others pay your mortgage
Th1s Is a deal of a lifetime Don 1 lei
th1s one ~ou byl $74 000

it ,....

It
Fully
eqUipped kitchen with new relng
&amp; dishwasher 1 Car detached
garage Front &amp; Side porches
Large covered patio on the s1de
Located close to Middleport c1t-y
on a C!rc la drwe

One of the best pool area's we've seen

4

BR's,

3

baths, LR,

DR

eat 1n kitchen

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
NEW LISTING! t 205 ROY JONES
ROAO $45 000 00 2 Story home
with llv1ng room 3 bedrooms
dining room partial basement
heat pump and morelt2148

STOP BY HDO WHLI\ THROUGH THESE
Uti\Y DICE HOIOES DffiDITELVHGOOD
IDUESTIDEDT Of YOUR TilDE HOD IDODtY.
Directions: Take Stale ROille 588 to left on
llltnco Rd. Oust past mltcheRJ. Tum left ntthe
step sign onto Centenarg. Ta1tt the second
street to lite left. look ror signs.

SOUTH SECOND AVE • A 1 '/, slory frame
home w1th 3 bedrooms, 1 bath a Iron! porc h
and an enclosed rear porch Does need some
work
$11,000.00
DOTIIE TURNER, Broker ....... 992-5&amp;92
li=RRV C:UlAAnl INI'::
Q.t.Q ..?1't1
CHARMELE S-PRADLIN.G .. :.::. 949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS ................. 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ....... ..... . 992-3058

NEW LISTING! 297 LINCOLN
STREET $15 000 00 Commercial
building, approx 1029 oq H , klt
approx 30 11. 5!l 12149

In town w1th a 1
yard
This 2BA 1 bath home has a lot
to oflerl

II

...

.I• ~

11 22 Need the convenience of
living In town couplod with lho
low maintenance of 1 brick
home? Come see t!'lls one story
bnck home w1th hardwood floors
3 BR I t 12 BA lull basemen t
and
Pnced to sell

"

~
•120 Dr••m• can coma true!
Se cluded and conveniently
located th is lovely 4 BA 3 SA
home rests on 7 5 go•geous
acres and has a stocked pond
24 x 32 mete.l building 2 car
attached garage wrap around
porch and a beaut if ully
landscaped yard W1th ceramic
t1le entryways Bruce hardwood
flooring and Jntrlcatety laiCI bnck
sidewalks th1s superb home has
every detail covered Call for an
appomtment for your dream
home todayl

Many more amemttes

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR~
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

NEW
USTINGI
RECENTLY
REMODELED
2 STORY vtnyf
! sided home with lots ol living
space 4 BACfrooms, 3 baths living
room dining, kitchen den, famny
room 20 x 30 garage and lots
more Let Cheryl lfll you In on this
onalt2147

mndow1 from
top 4 BA and 3
spactOUs
great room overlooking the In
ground pool and pool house
great lor entertaining An
oversized attached t wo car
and storage building all
on t 7.ACmA $159900

RACINE • AI the &lt;Jdge of lawn IS th1s I

tell you '"" '"'"'

NEW LOT USTINGI $20,000 00 5
Acres
situated
In

MIDDLEPORT· Jusl barely out of town 1s this 3
bedroom home w•lh 11/2 baths , a fro nt porch,
large rear porch or carport a nd a 3 room
workshop across lhe road
N1ce appearing
home lhal has had a lol of
II ollale

•

'

FORSAU:
99
1 7 Ford Exploret" XLT V
Trumpet
Trombone
1
Good Conct11Jon (740)44," SO DOWN
POLICE :
8574 alter 6 pm
IMPOUNDS &amp; AEPOS J (304)773 5381
HONDA S
CHEVY s
JEEP'S LOW AS $29/MO 1997 FOI'd Thunderbird V
24 MO'S
199% FOA 8 e.uto air allpow8f excel·
LISTINGS CALL 1 SQO. lent condtt1on
64 000
FARM
miles
$ 5500 (7401992
451 .{)050 ext C 9812
~'lENT
7564
1
1984 Chevy Capnce Clas
stc low miles (740)245 1997 Saturn 4 door auto
air power sun root excel
John Deere 450-C 6 way 921 2
blade wmch &amp; canapy
tent
condition
4 500
40
-::)-74-::2:-2_8_80_ _ _ _ 1987 Chrysler LeBaron 4 ,(7,.:4:c01::4:;46:,:4:;7~82~---(7,.,
25mpg
new small
urcs -1998 Ford Contour LX 4
YANMAA YM 1500 nactor, cyllndar
battery, etc
Excellent
dtesel 3 pomt hitch $2 l50 er car (740)388-8997
cyl1nder, 76 000 m1les dark
Also new 4 f1n1sh mower .::....::....;__.;:;.:..:..:...;;:-'-::-- green
4 door
NADA
sUIIm crate $850 Shlpptng 1988 Chevy 1/2 ton Silvera $7 000 askmg
$5 700
ava table located JUS! out do, V·8, auto a1r power (740)446 2624
s•de of Huntsville AI (256) windows locks runs great
776 943 5 www maynatde· good condition
$2400 1999 Otds Allero bnghl red
Qulpment com
(740)9927584
loaded 100 000 m11e war
ronty $12 000 (304 )675
1989 Pontiac Grand Pnk V 6406 after 5pm
LIVESfOC K
6 3 1 good condtl1on
~---------' $2000 (740)446 7105
95 Spor" $2750 107800
good
cond1t on,
mites
Athens Livestock Sale Fall 1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass (740)949·3228
Ieeder calf sale TueSday C1era 6 cyl 4 door auto
September 18, 7pm Cattle amlfm cassene Tilt CrUI~
TRUCKS
w111 be accepted st artmg PW Pl, $2500 1994 Aang L---~~'DR:,S~
A,:;LE:;,.-~
4pm Monday up unt1l 3pm er 4x4 4 cyl 5 speed Ofle
Tuesday An breeds of live· owner sharp truck, lots of
stock accepted Hauling extras $5800 (740)379 1970 Ford 1 112 ton F 700
available (740)592 2322 or 9885
2 speed rear end 361 en
' - ' - - ' - - - - - - - - g1ne 40 000 miles 16·
(740)698-3531
1993 Lincoln Town Car low dump bed $3000 OBO
Beaut1tul Registered Ouar- mileage loaded (740)446· (740)9929798
ler Horse Mare,$ 1800 3108
1
G
1975 Dodge wfwood llat
Reg stared eld1ng Ouarter 1994 Otds 88 Royale one :bed::c.ll::
:=12::4::5:::95=5::_7_ _ _
740
Horse $1700 buy both for owner Excellent Condition
~$2_900_.:.&lt;7:_4_0,_)7_42::...:.83:..27:..___ (304)882·3173 '
1986 Ford F 150 300
Feeder calves halter broke, ' - - ' - - - - - - - - stra1ght 6 wlwood bed run s
1995 Chrysler Concorde good good tires new water
s1re moody blue qreat hntr 64 500 miles one owner pump $500 1987 Chevy
coat r' 40)867 8535
garage kept Excellent con· Astto van wJsalvage t1tle
HAY &amp;
d1tlon
$7 500
OBO lots of new and al most new
RAIN
{740)441-1018
parts MOIOf has 105 000

Ir~

VAJ\S &amp;
4-WDs

central

A large

www .BIG-BEND REALTY .COM

INCOME

INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulev1fte
.Pk 3 badrm, 3 bath living quart818
11110 18' x 32 garage plus 30' x 20
building t/2 ac olland good sales
loc Priced 10 sell VLS

Doberman Pmshcer pup
pies, not feg1sterec:1 Mother!
Father on prem1ses S 150
each (740)446 9638 days
(740)256 6390 evemngi

IrL.-...:~.~:.:i~CK!::;A::;~t:;;._.JI r

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~

NEW USTINGI 1~8 SR 218
$65,000 00 1 story vinyl sided
ranch home Llv1ng room, dining
area kitchen, family room and 2
botho 2 Car o~ched garage
Central air City achoolsl J2145

l

AKC Boston Terner Pupp1es
lor sale (740)256 1825

J. ll:'lr""-":"::""----,
70
MUSICAL

4 bedroom 2 1/2 bath

kttchen and famtly/sun room

Real Estate General

NEW USTINGI WITHIN MINUTES
OF HOI.ZER HOSPITAL Located
at 6153 SR 160 you w•ll lind this
011er 1 7 acre lot and multiple use
dwelling ldaal lor resldanlla l or
commercial
use
Unlimited
potential Must call lor oomplete
llstlngl 112143

J4035 RIO GRANDE BEAUTY· 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths Ranch home
K1tchen w/eatlng area, formal dlnng
room garden tub Fireplace In LA
Cathedral ce1llngs oovered deck
above ground pool cellar w/
butldtng storage shed, 3 car
detached
garage,
blacktop
dnveway fenced lot 2 2 acres mil

A
FllR~IJ

Page 05

remodeled one level home offers large
open

MEIGS COUNTY
Grande 4 bedrooms 2 baths, 2
k11chens basement and garage 70
x 172 lot 290 College Sl Great
mcome and location Priced to sell
Virgtn a 446 6806
114019
COMMERCIAL
LOT
Jackson Pk Galltpohs OH Comer
101 Wllh great potentJel •

Block bnck sewer pipeS
w1ndows hotels etc Claude
w nters R1o Grande OH
Calt740 245 5121

r'o
I

s

~;{i.

AKC reg1stered English
Bulldogs ma es &amp; females
9 wks old (740)992 1435

8U!UliNG
SUI'PIIfo,';

AI.TI'O.&gt;

i#u nbav ll::tmrs ·lilrntmrl •

Located 1n Green township thts

$134,850.

388-8838.

AREAl Roomy almost new home
with approx 2 560 eq ff 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, lormal
dining room, kltollen and morel
Nice llzed rooms Large front
porch bam &amp; sllop and 3 29 acres
mA 12133

I town, new
root
BR 2 5 BA 2 car
garage
vinyl
sktmg
niCe
ne1ghbotllood Needs some TLC but
pnced nght at $79,900

r

Walerl1ne Spec~al 3f4 200
PSI $21 95 Per 100 1• 200 AKC Aeg1stered Boker Pup
p1es OOB 6 28 Fawn 1
PSI $37 00 Per 100 All male 2 females
T 1
Cl
a s
Brass Compress1on. F1thngs Docked De
In Stock
w
aws ro
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- moved wormed $300 Call
ES Jackson Oho 1 800 (304)675 4156 after 6 00
537 9528
pm M F all day weekends

setting

EDGEOF
will
lo11e the remodeled kitchen In th1s
3 bedi'oom home with an
enjoyable overs•zed front deck _
Nice sized liv1ng room lots of 748
updating maida and out New :1:12
;;;,,,d~i8d,
sldmg roof vinyl t1lt ·1n windows
n
carpeting &amp; v•nyl to name a few
Reasonably pnced $47 900 00
t2136
14030· IT'S
PLUS!
ACRES·
HOME·
BUILDINGS Old tuhlon charm
with mOdern convenience In this 4
BR 2 story home, 2 balha,
{whlrtpool tub) Lovely equipped
k1Uiamlly rm combo w/hardwoo&lt;l
floors cherry cabinets Enjoy
viewing the countty from every
wondow Formal d•nlng rm &amp; LM
wlbeamed colllnga Porch &amp; patio
72 ACRES of baautllul rollng land
Pasture, woods &amp; eome limber,
pond &amp; mineral rtghll
bam
&amp; buildings 56 mil
avallableloo
VLS oMEI-6&amp;08

sell 40X60x 12 was $ 17 500
now $10971 50xt00:.16
was S27 850 now $!9 990
80x135x16 was $79 850
now $49 990 10xt75Jt20
was S 129 650 now $84 990
1 800 406 5126

9 wk old male Cocker
Wanted to buy large dog Spamel regtstered shots &amp;
house reaso nably ~1ced ta11 docked askmg $200
17401256 6038
(140)742 2525

POMEROY Butldmg lot~ 111 a \i~ry
m s1u from I 5 ncre tn1 1J llf£ m/1

414009 ALL
Updates Include new carpet copper
plumbing &amp; bath, new root, privacy
lence Ftn!lhed 3rd floor, 4 bedrms,
t 112 baths lull basom t living rm
wff•replace tormal dining rm, 3
bedrooms. on
2nd
floor
1
wtf~replace garage &amp; landscaped
yard Call for appoint Virginia 446
6806

-c--------Steel budd•ngs New must

~~~~~~~~~

rio

WV

along with the back drop of country living
can be found 1n thts

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom
Su1tes 1399 Buy, Sell,
Trade
New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holiday Inn,
Kanauga We Sell Grave
Monuments And Vases

relaxed

All STEEL BUILDING
40x32 was $7,922 now
$3 980 1 soo 292 0111

S200 "----;;;,;-;ofi.-,.J

WATER WELLS DRILLED
(740)886·731 1

Sawm II $3 895 New Super
Lumbermate 2000 larger
capac1ttes more opt1ons
Man ufacturer o! sawm11ts
edgers and skldders NOR
WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwi!t Dnve Buffalo NY
14225 FREE Information 1
800 578 1363 EXT 200 U

tl:-;

Air compressor
Planer $180 (740)44&amp; 1489

MIDDI.EPORT N 1cC Silll1~ r M rdm:mcnl I
Price reduced to $29,.54'HI

1·1 112 acre lot flat w/sew
&amp;r 2 m1les out o1 Rutland on
Crem eans Ad no mob11e
homes
(740)742 2603
leave message

~40271NVESTMENT Located In Rio

$600

Tappan H1 EffiCiency 9Q&lt;'~o
Gas Fumaces 011 Furna
ces 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
A1r Condlttontng Systems
Free 8 Year Warranty Ben
netts Heatmg &amp; Cooling 1
800
872
5967
www otVb comfbennen

~~

11100 A

-

t3362 CARRVOUT BUSINESS
ond CONVENIENCE STORE FOR
SALE New alarm system Building
built to state code Cont nuous
operat1on s1oce 1986 Pr1ce tnclueles
1nventory Call JOhnnie 367·0323 or

"''"'o'Ta'"' • DELIGHTFUL HOME

rable saw $2SO Radial saw

S100 Jmnter $180 Shaper

RESIDENTIAL HOME
OWNERS

U004 9 ACRE
ol vacant
land Land $'75 000 00 Located on
SA 588 V1rgm1a 446-6806

,....om;

'

•

VIRGINIA SMITH, BRDKEII • .. ,_ 4418101
GAIL BELVILLE.....
...
..441-1209
TIIISH SNYDER.
..............441-MSI
JOHNNIE RUSSELL
.... 387-11323
DAVID SNYDER ... , ..... ,., ............ 441-MSI
OUR WEB PAGE IS www vlamlthrealeltata com

LOOK AT
Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full
basement w1th 2 car garage and
f1n1shed lam•ly room Home Sits on 2
Ac mil 1n Hannan Trace Schools
Jus!
mmutes
from downtown
Gall1polts Th1s home features a
beauhful landscaped lawn, wood
pellet stove and central a1r Located
JUS! oH Rock L1ck Ad on Mable or
1n n1ce neighborhood Have a
garden and ra•se some flowers but
make sure to look at thiS Call
at 387-&lt;&gt;323 today lor an
appo•ntment

MERCIIANIJt'&lt;&gt;

NEW AND USED FUR
NANCES FOR SA LEI We
Install Free Est mates 11
you doni Call us We both
Loose• (7 40)446 6308 1
800 29l 0098

PETCARERX COM Save
up to 50% on ALL pet med1
cations and supp11es tn
eluding Heartgard lntercep
tot, FronU100 more!l FRE!l:
$HIPPING Order onlme
www PetCareR X com 1
800 844·1427 {

~

I

)_J_..A_~.H.)(.·_.~ ...........B.l1·t·JMNG_.:..._.~
SIIJ't,

Misc
__...

'

New pa1ntball gun Brass
Eagle St~ngray 2 all acces
sones. ready to shoot 304 STEEL BUI~DINGS 5 Only
675 3508
3) 25x30 2)451190 Must
0xyg8!1 tank for torch from Move Now! Selling for Sal
Air Products 3 loot h1gh ance Owed 1-800 411 5869
~ 14
$1 00 {740)992 2369

'J~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~,pii~A.-

'

Grubbs Ptano Tuning &amp;
Repairs Problems? Need
Tuned? Gall The P1ano Or
740-446 4525

(

ERSI Even with less than
AotiQue Cherry dining Ml per1ect credit! 1 800 477 °
L~r&amp;ry table, (740)992· 90 16
Cocle
AC37
1938
wwwomcsolu110ncom
- - - - - - - - - - COOKWARE AMERIC'S
,...
Buy Of sell RIYenne Ant1 .HEAVIESr Surgcal Steel!
ques, 1124 East Main on ·NEW' 7 pl 11 walerless sets
SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
,
Russ Moore LIFETIME GUARANTEED!
992•2526
owner
NOfmally $2000 Secllllclng
IC~:":'......- ...._., $399 {FREE stockpot OR
MISCEJ.4.NF.Ol8
electric Sklllett) checks
u-~·~~
COD VIIMCIAMX, DIS·
J•a.r..l\~~
COVER Brochures.. 1-800
928•7253
SO DOWN HOMES NO
CREDIT OKI HUD VA
F1rewood for sale $150
'
load (740)441 9476
FHA Call tor LIStings
1-800 5011m Ext 9818
For sale- dark oak heavy
dining room set b1g china
12ft
Aluminum F1shmg cab1net with hght table 7
•-t Se IV Bottom p~
I.IUCl
m• •
•u-h long With SI)C h1gh back
fesslona.l Hair Dryer WJt
chairs excetlent cond1hon
~·~75 2365
chair &lt;~"' •
$700 {740)742 2050
-------------------

Real Estate General

8USINFl~o'&lt;;
ANil HUll f&gt;IN(,S

100 acres ONLY $49 000
or 273 acres ONLY
$136,00 Recreat•on proper
ty m KY and WV Great for
the Outdoor Lover' Also 5
acre to 6 acre lracts ava1la
ble 1n P1ke and Jrtckson Co
access1bl13 to 40 acre to 200
acre or Pulll c hunt1ng For
more nfo and FREE maps
contact
Anthony Land Co , Ltd
1·800 213 8365
www alcland com

417 Second Avenue, GalltpOilS Ohio 3 room office
suite formerty Kelty SeN·
Ices
-... Call Don Stanle~
(740)446-1781

~9

i

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Ftnal Days Nat1onw1de In
ventoty
ReducMnl
{304)736-3409

Um1ted Or No Credtt? Gov
emment Bank Finance Only
At Oakwood In BarbQurs
voile WV 304 736 3409

SPA_.CE
___,JI

Sewage • Trash, ,{$:.;7.;;5:..){7:;..;.40:.:).;.4.;;48;..7c;27.;.t.;___

$350/Mo 740 -448•0008

Beautiful 3 year old 16x80
mobile home with cathedral
C81lmgs on 5 17 acres w1th
100 block

Land·hOme packages all
areas Prequaltfy by phone
(740)446·3563

r___

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis , Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Now Takln.., Applications- Dark blue chair with Queen
35 West 2 Bec:troom Town Anne l"tn ($80) and belg8
hou se Apartmenta, Includes Bench raH rocker recliner

Ashland Fleetwoocl Sep tem
b.er spec al 2002 14x70
3bd/2ba $19 990 Free Del
&amp; Setup To ll Free 1 866
805·561 9

For sale by owner 3 bed
room Schutt mobtle home
Very n1ce hnanc1ng avalta
ble {740)446 3583

......

'"r

bedroom
Apart wtth
Guaranteed!
We SellFrench
New
en appliances
AC Kitch·
WID Maytag
Appliances
Hookup {304)67S·4302
City Maytag 740-446-7795

Beaut1ful RIVer Vew Ideal
o 2p
R 1
For 1 r
eople e eren
cos Deposit No Pets, Fos
te r Tta1ter Park 740 441
1972
0181

a

Deluxe home save $5 445
new 2000 model Skyl•na 3
bedroom ~ 2 bath total alec
tr1c v1nyl &amp; shmgte low
monthly payments dehv
ered &amp; setup Includes sk1rt·
1ng &amp; steps Coles Mob1le
Homes US 50 East Ath
ens Oh, 740.592 t 972

APART

MI!NTS AT BUDGET PRI·

CES AT JACKSON E$TATES, 52 Westwood Onve
from $297 to $383 Walk to
Taking apphcahons for a 2 .,....,..
-•·s Call 7_,..
.m_
.,......, &amp; ,....,y"'
bedrooms m a qu1et netgh 446 2568 Equal Hous1ng
bofhood
(740)446 6939 Opportunity
leave message
Chrlstys Family Uv1ng
33140 New Uma Ad Rul·
M~nl!~ land Ohio 740 7-t2 7403
1• Apartment home and trailer
-J'Vft AI'.J'i.
rentals Commercial atorefronts available fOJ lease
2 Bedroom Trailer on Addl vacancies now
son P1ke $220/ month
$1 00 depostt No Pets For Lease One bedroom,
(740)446 1637 or {740,.."
,_.... unfurnished second floor
3437
apartment, 81 comer of Sec
ond and Pone A/C, $300
2 bedroom 2 t;.ath beaut!lul per month water Included
"H 1
1 od ad tront
""
arge enc
r
Secunty and key deposit
&amp; back decks 12 m1ies lrom References required No
G 11 poll
1 1
a 1 s no pes
year pets (740}446-4425
loase negotiable $200 de- - - - - - - - - pos11 $425 per month Modem 1 bed
rt
(304) 736 7268 lor appoint
room apa ment
ment (740)~90
Noce Newly Redooorated 2

area nver v1ew references
reqwred deposrt requ1 fed Mason 3br Trailer $285
I 740 992 6777 aIt er plus depos11 (304)675·n83
no pes
5pm
c.::::..:::c:.:::::::-'.:::2:::..:::..:..:.::::
New 16x80 really n1ce CIA
$425/mo $300 depoSit, wa·
79 V1cto nan mob•le home
$4 750 (740)256 1690
3 Bedroom Pomeroy nver te r &amp; trash Included niCe
v1ew $350tmo references neighborhood
no pets
Abando ned
Doublewtde requorod. (740)992·4451 al (740)256 1664
free set up &amp; delivery Hur ter 4pm
ry 1 only (740)446 3093

Asnland Fleetwood 2002
Doublew1de $26 226 Toll
Free 86680 556t9 10 min
from Huntington

BEAUTIFUL

on
per

Needed 304 736-1'295

1•0-..:,:H;,;Oj,USFS
_ _ __.I Mtddleport
no
FOR RENT
(740)992·5858

16 W1de Only $195 00 Per
Month 8 99% F :(ed Interest
Rate With A1r And
Un 1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
dArnmnmg 1 888 928 3426 Homes From 5 199/Mo 4%
..... ,..
Down 30 Years at 8 5%
APR For LIS11ngs 800 319
l99 5 Clayton 141170 2BD 3323 Ext t709
2BA V1ny1 S1d1ng Shmgle - - - - -- - - Roof
Must be Moved
b d
NC
11
1 e room
re r gera
(304)675 1388
•
tor range References re
1996
Oakwood
Home QUired $350 month 260
t4x80 new porch 10xl6 State Streel {740)446 3667
Central a~r sys1em 3 bed 2 bedroom home close to
roo ms 2 baths Mus I have town oasement A111er v1ew
pav, of1 Call (740)256 1367 $4251 month 3 bedroom 10
or (740)339 2:J02
town 1 112 baths Good 1o
lsi "me Buvers Coli Oak cat•on $ 5001 mont h AeIer
"
'
"
dd
1
d
wood
Galltpolts todayl ences an
epos• reqUire
Gov I backed program buy (1401446 3644
local 17401446 3093 __ 3 bedroom home Mlnersv•lle
:::::::c:...:.:::_:.:..::::::_
28)(60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On
iy 5345 00 Per Month
99% Ft)(ecf Interest Rate
1 888 928 3426

sage

I

JV.l"'IJ

9, 2001

~ I~.E_..
r~ ~~?....::'::.
~~·~

r

Two Bedn&gt;om Sots, Electric - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tndope&lt;dout Horbailo Di&amp;HospftaJ Bed and Uti CNit, 1 cl'lefry din•ng su•ts hutch For sale o6d Frigkjaire elec tribUtor Call For Product Or
Assorted household Hema. tabte 6 c:halrs wlt::able pads tnc range good condition Opportun1ty (740)44t-1982
{740)256-l426
9 pl«e PVC Patto l'uml (740)949 2538
(740~3945
• "-r:;;;;;,~;;;..--...,
~-~ Sut S
JET
SfolmNc
lure ~ra •nger FREE CASHI SID 000 or
AERATION MOTORS
ed
seW1ng machine wtth bench more posSibfe tn 58 days or R
.,_,
&amp; R~"l" 1
Gracious living 1 and 2
GooD;
Moving mutt sell (30-4)882•
epa 1r
,...,.....
vvu n n
bedroom apartlnlml at Vil- - 280'
less Never Repay! New Stock Call Ron Evans 1
~age Uano&lt; and A - - - - - - - - - P&lt;ogramsl Froo lnl0fm8hon 800-537·9528
Apartments In Middleport XI ExpiOfer youth com- 12 year old Dale Earnhart 1 800-308-6147
---------From $278-$348 Call 7.40- pound hunting bow aN ac· Jacket been worn twtca :w::::w:.;;w:::"':::•::lonq2000~=:::::;:co:::::m:__~
MOIIILE HOME OWNERS
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng ceasortea ready to hunr kept '" pfastie tor past 1o Free Grants Never Repay
Opportunities
31)4-87 5-3508
years Paid $250 wtU take Housing Purchases, Re·
Huge Inventory Discount
Apartment Avelleble Now "T-riiOIIan&lt;J--.,.,-Loc--on-F_IX_JlO'_ reasonable otter or will pa~rs Medtcal Bus 1ness Prices On VInyl Sklrt1ng
call
Sltion type, 4 wfwood plat~ trade for 20 250 nrlle must Emergency Funds Arts Doors Windows, Anchors
Twin River Towers
form , $30 eacn 2 wialumt- be Remington or Auger Writers ECiucatlon Non Water Heaters Plumbing &amp;
(304)6 75-8879
num ~dorm, $40 each 1 (740)441-o750 ask lor Tlm Profit Groups Bulldlllg Re- Electncal Parts Furnaces &amp;
for appticatton HUD tiJbai. Ol'man ctlrnbl~ type little 25 folding chairs 51 00 pa1rs Debts Fun&lt;11ng IS Heat Pumps Bennens• MoSSO ~-30pm
Guaranteed
1 866·289·
Clized apr for elderly and
,..,IVI.e a er 5
' each , heavy duty gas het~,t· HELP
wwwgrants dot bilo Home Supply 74o-446
941e wwworvb com/ben
7
7
d1sab'ed EHO
(140)379
er 70 000 BTU best offer com com
naH
740 1446 2917
FOK RENT
~
COMPUTERS
wE Fl· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
NANCE DELL COMPUT
Real Estate General

Two bedroom t2x60, S320
month dePQIIt AJC no Furnished wftiiCieiiCY all utif.
pets references requlred !ties paid share beth $125
{740)992
month, 919 2nd Avenoe

2

::.m::ar::k:ouP::__ _ _ _ _ (304)675 2484 leave mes

r

Sunday, Sept.

9, 2001

Sunday, Sept.

~~ -1r~~iO~~IIoumlow~Gooos~~~~~ ~~ 1 ~~ 1 ~~ 1

~m~es 1~ a:11a~le ~a~ now ,rr~~: ~o~~~e ~:!a~r 2st~~ 1"Bedroom Upsta1rs Apt

1 112 acre lot 3 bedroom

WV

"

t126A
$3• ,ooo
This 2 Story home features 3
bedrooms 1 bath hardwood
floo rs 2 fi replaces and much
morel This Js all found on a 315
acre lot In t ow~

VIsit us online at
www.Evans-Moore.com

townl One of the
BEST cered for homn In
areal Huge tlvtng room
master bedroom o;4irlllooltino
Ohio RIYer This
11nd with many umque
tnclud mg beautuul
floors trim crown
pocket doors
I
landscaped lol that runs all
way to the nver You 11e seen
rest schedule yo1Jr 11ppo1n1m1~t
now to see the

now
BUILT home on 2
mill Very nice 3 BR 2
with solid 6 panel doors 1
hardwood flooring Smith custom
k1tchen and 2 car garage
Located In Porter area S102,900
Call today thiS one wont last

1

'

�••
Page 04 • iounbav m:untlf · iotntmtl

Pomeroy • Mladleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

:r:\d::~~~ua~H~~~s~ ~~~~~~:~~r:;r:::A;~;;;&amp;;c:E:::;I~rnior=::fOR~~~RENT==~==n

I

FDf sale by ownef NICe bi
level home on 1 acre near
Ches1er
Three bedroom
two bathS one-car garage
tam1ty room w1tl'l f11eplace
sun room New central heat
1ng &amp; ale system One m•
nute oft Rou1e 7 but st1ll pn
vala {740)965 3981
FORECLOSED
GOV T
HOMESI SO DR LOW
DOWN I TAX AEPD S &amp;
BANKAUPTCIESI
OK
CAEDITI FDA LISTING'
CALL 1...SOO 501 1777 ext
961 3
Newly constructed s1ngle
t
1600
I tho e
10
HOlzer HoSpital 20 mlnUieS
from Pleasant Valley Hosp1
tal on SA 160 on a "'''"'"

~!:~ted

BRUNER LAND
(740)U1·1•!12

3 Bedroom HooM "' Syra·
cuse Oh10 $4501 Month
HUO Approved (304)675
Gallle Co Kerr Ad 8 5332 weekends only
acres $21 0001 R10 Grande - - - - - - - e)(CIUSive 6 acres $19 5001 4 Bedroom House on Rt 2
Cheshire 5 acres $10000 No' Pets Deposit &amp; referon
or 24 acres with large bam ces (304)895-38 15
S30 0001 Clay Twp 11
$17 500' Vmton 14 acres Cottage suitable fOf s.ngle
or couple $250 00 Lincoln
$13500'
Ave call Homestead 304
Melg1 Co Tuppers Platns 675 5540 ask lor Nancy
Carr Ad 12 acres $21 000 Cozy 1 2 bedroom Cottage
or 6 acres S12 500• SR681
250 uncoln Ave Call
5 acres on Shade R.ver Homestead
Really
$12 000 OR 7 acres w1th (304)675 5540 ask lor Nan
pole bam $23 000
cy

s

J

t

t8

I the

I

r

s.n
f:,Z.;.;;;:.;,;o.;.;..___,

r

AllunMENrs
FOR

--

o.........

~,!~: f~rn~a'i!; ~~
~~=. ~~s ~~;:

2 218
--------1 Bedroom Apartment , A•
frlgerator Range AJC In
eluded, 5289 Plus Deposit &amp;
Aetecence HUD Approved
(740)441-1519

and other IISilngs l Owner ,, Dalh On At 33 m Hartford Secon d Ave
$300
nanc1ng w1th shght property next to comm bu11dmg month (740}446-o855

!,~;k bcaat~~net~' 9 0~tch~~

Commercial Lots w/ small
home for sale 4 lots 262
long over an acre 1n llleart of
Pt Pleasant located at 1410
LewiS St
pnce neg
$62 000 call 304 727 3318
between 5 oo to 11 oo pm

w/gas log !.replace cenlral
a1r laundry
front
porch
&amp; 2 1/2 room
car garage
lmmedlale posset&gt;siOn Ap·
Pratsed at 5125 500 ask•ng

$125 500 Call (740)446 Looktng To Buy A New
4514 lrom 6 5pm M F "'HOfne7 Dont Have Land ?
(740)446 3248 aher 5pm
We Dolll Hurry Dnly 10 Lots
NICe older home 2 BA !IV left 304 736 7295
1ng room dlnmg room MUST SELL Clear cut c•ty
k•tchen pantry u1111ty roOm water natural spnng creek
lull s•ze ai!IC gas furnace w•th 5 or 1 acres o1 flat
central a1r Aac1ne S35 000 land 30 m11es West from
{740)949 2070
Po1nt Pleasant (304)697
Ranch Style Home for sale "5.::92::7_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
4 bdrm 3 baths 2 car ga R.vor Lots for sale m Hart
rage close to h1gh school lord wv PubliC Wale• &amp;
19 Oakwood DA Gall sewer
Ava•table
Avg
Oh C. II between 6 00
60• 160 Call {'n')B82 2607
....
""""
11 00 pm •n good cond w or (304)882 2686
cent ral a1r &amp; heat $78 000
reduced 304 727 3318

o

Monn ~ HoM•:'i
L___l:;;t,;:JR·S·Aj;lj;F- ·

r.

:p:c1 1o~t"--Pr-og-ra-m--R-e-n-le_r_s.

j

Y

~3:..b:..ec.d:. :ro .: .m:...::_
.: m:..o_b'_'e_h_o_m_e_
petsln

3 bedroom WJth expanclo &amp;
centra l air water &amp; trash
pa1d 74D-992 2167 for 8"'"
,..
cpo::•::.:n•::.:m::e::.:nl::.__ _ _ _ _
3 bedroom all electnc mo
b•le home '"' rent on Little
Bullskin Road no pets
$350 dopos 1t $350 rent per
month
plus
ulii1Ues
(740)256·6192

All electnc $300/mo + de·
1
1 {740)367
pos
t no P9 s
061 1

:.:...:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _

Water

One bedroom apar1ment,
2nd A\lenue
Gallipolis,
$300 per month single,
$325 couple Utilities Jnclud·
ed C II {740w• ••
a 1972 ---~ 77 or
(740)256
One room eff1c1ency apart·
ment, 2nd Avenue Galhpo·
lis $200 per month couple,
$
175 per month single Uhl·
ltles
Included
Call
(740)446 8677 or {740)256

'-==.c.:=-- - -

Tara Townhouse Apart·
ments Very Spacious 2
Bedrooms 2 Floors, CA 1
1f2 Bath Fully Carpeted
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Po·
t10 Start $365/Mo No Pets
L
p
ease Ius ecurity Deposit
ReqUired, Cays 740-446·
3481 Evenings 74Q-367
0502 740·446·0101

s

Real Estate General

New 14 Wde 3 6edroom
Only $19 850 Free Delivery
&amp; Sel Up t-888 928 2426
New 16x80 3 bedroom 2
bath only $500 down call
N1k~ (740)385 4367

New 2002 Fleetwood only
$775 down and $150 85 per
month
call
Cheryl
(740)385 4367
New 2002 Fleetwood smgle
Wide Only $149 month only
at Fl eetwood Homes of
Proctorv lie Toll Free 1
888 565.0167
New bank rej)O 14x70 3
bedroom 2 balh Pay $499
&amp; mo\le·ln Oakwood Gallipolis {740) 446 3093
New Double W1de $195
Per Montht 3 BedrooM 2
Bath Free Del1very &amp; Set
up 1 886 928 3426

F 11
........,. ........
ion
u eqw....,..... .__uty sa
for rent in Galhpolla

{740~7130

~om~,~~ IOf rent ~

992 3 194

{~?40)""""• •

pet~non

Office/ Retatl apace lor rani

In Gallipolis Newly remodeled, plenty
ol park1ng
&amp;1740144 7130

riO

Hot.6DIOLD
ro.-..~
L---oi""""'liililil--_.1
Appliances ReconditiOned
Washers, Dryers Ranges,
Relngrators Up To 90 Days

r

Pretty as a p1cture Very well
planned stone and lrame ranch
home otters 3 bedrooms walk ln
closet 2 !ull baths charming living
room w/hreptace New oak cabinets
l1ne the kitchen Range refngeralor
diShwasher and compactor aU stay
Ut1ilty room Is extra large 2 t1er d eck
In the rear wtth 36 1nground pool
Many frwt trees flowers and
shrubs Spnnkler system m the rear
2 car auached garage and a carport
2 Mory barn bulldmg Blacktop and
ce ment dniJeways A home you 11 be
proud to own VL Sm1th 446 6806

84022 Watch the River trom your
backyard? Enjoy lhe v ew from
your boat dock or back deck thiS 1+
ac mil with a 2 BA 1 balh mobtle
bulldmg 1n M•ners
home/vacation camP.er 1s JUSt the
600 sq tt ale cov
th1ng for stress May be room for a
ered parkmg ce ling !an
garden
Located at 7103 St At 1
$275fmo 614 875 1661
South Reduced!
State Roul e !60 5 1/2 14031· $$ wtll be all yours &lt;I you
can run an acllve bustness Buy
m les Nor1h o! Holzer Hosp
bu1ldmg rucks equipment stock
tal 36)(90 lot of parking
and customers all for a bargam
(740)38 8 8463
Great location 1n R1o Grande
mak1ng proposulon for the
'--..;,;;.:;;~~_.J l •m•bllfous. VLS 446·6606

~

1'1!)~

Joe A.

Moora
Broker

740-441-1111

FAX: 74()-446-0006

~~:::=~~O~H~45631

SOCIAL SECURITY DISA
BILITY Clatm Den1ed? We
Spec1ahze In appeals and
Hearings FRE E CONSUl
TATION
Benefit Team
Services Inc Toll1ree 1
888 836-4052

For Sate Reoondhloned
washers, dryers and refrlgerators Thompsons Appll'
ance "'
~07 Jackson Ave_n_uo..;..;(_304_.:.)6_7_5_7_388
_ _ __
NEED A GRANDFATHER?
Grandtather Clocks Starting
at $339 WhOlesale 10 the
Pub.c, Tallclocka, Inc 1~
en-634-8412

------~---

Main Street Furniture
(304)875-1422
515 "-In St~t P•'nt
l'ffliiPieaa'a";t' ""

neighborhood

._
•
~.

~

... '-

-,

I

I;

•

13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
home w/4 BAs 2 baths kit LR, DR
porches part1al basement Pnced
nghl· see lhls outstand1ng offer!
Vacant, ready to welcome you VLS

ranch

3 bedroom house, 1,700 sq. ft., 2 ful
batha, large dining room,
living room, utility room, 2
garage, on 1 acre lot. In Porter ,.,.,._,
New roof, naw carpet all m•ruu•u"
Nice neighborhood. ·Prl,cel

:ttDII,_UIIU.IIU.

Call

after 5:00

p.m

--

Engineered Metal Building
Systems Low A sa Com·
mercia! and Industrial an
~stom s1ze Include Av
tlon Warehouse and Agn
cullurat Call lor DISCounts
AB Contractmg Inc (304)
674 0100

TIME COULD PAY OFFI Ylaw this
lovely all brick home wllhreo
bedrooms 2 baths lormal dining
rm , living rm , family nn with
llleplaco , Pallo above ground pool,
2 cat anached garage and
basement VERY LIVABLE HOME
THE MONEY $125,000 00

HISTORIC
PICTURE
OF
GALLIPOLIS • HOfne leatures 3
aR and 1 bath with custom
ca biQetS In kllch&amp;n very large lot
that has potential for several
op11ons tet us shOw
thrs home
With
location

spaces

enriched

wtth

a

14034 12292 St RT. ltiOo Qulat
l1v1ng but not too far out • This 1995
manufactured home on foundation
Is just what you are looking for
Home rests on 8 acres m/1 with
barn outbuilding and all fenced
Great for horse or cows Owner
wants to move and w1U let his 2000
ndtng mower stay so you can ride
the ranch Priced at S90 000 this
could be just what you need!

LOTS FOR SALE SA 588- Beautiful hill tap lol wtth 5

.

lid. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME Oak
kitchen cerarn.: tile In kllchan &amp;
baths NEW CARPET thtough ool
natural decor
5 ACRES M'L
$t05 000 Tnsh or Dave

mil $40 000 Lot 12 offeta 5 acres

Purebred Coll ie for sale·
both parents on property
S100 (740)985 4256

·lNSffiUMFNIS

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

CA~S!

i

r

r

G

'1995
- -Grand
' - - Am
- -GT
--$3695
1993 Grand Am 4 door
$1795
1993 cavalier
S2195 1!196
10 $2695
1990 Gran Prix $2195
COOK MOTORS 1740)446
0103

s

·- - - - -

19% Chev~ Beretta very
good condition New Tires
lots of other new parts
$6,000 {304)773 9187

1987"-'-

~~~~~~~~·

4x4 4
5 sp new !•res &amp; bal
tery
alummum wheels
nos
n~ee $2000 (740)247 4292
1991 Chevy Suburban lOw
1987FordF2SO 59 diesel m•leage loaded great cnn
4 speed recent overhaul dition (740)446 3108
have rece1pts runs excel
lent
well
matnta ned 1994 Astra Converslon Van
$4500 (7 40)992 7584
114 000 miles e~~:cellent
cond•llon $6000 (740)446
1989 Ford XLT 4x4 78 000 4619
miles e~~;cellent cond1t10n
S3495 1988 Jeep Chero-

59G= Sha~e~
t304)675-2642 or (304)675
1500

kee
door, 1996
$2595
1994 4&lt;4
S 10four
!3695
S
1 $2695 1992 S1lverado
$3695 COOK MOTORS
(740)446-()1 03

o

VANS&amp;

'

....~Ram Floor shift 1990 lsuzu uuck

d~=~ci~:a~ge~s;~~~ ~8~

o

ilr:::,or-"...;;;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

5 loot Gra nd Plano A 1 · - - - - - - - ·
cond1t10n
$6800
Call
Buck a bate sale square
(740)446 4525 aher 4pm
bales $1 00 other hay up to
Bach Trumpet w th case $2 00 round bales $15 00
EKcellent Condit on S350 each 304-675 4869
Neg
(304)675 2382 or
(304)675 2926 after 5pm
Hay &amp; Brtght Wtre Tie
Straw, Year Round Oehvery
Gememhardt Flute wllh &amp; Vol ume 0 1scount Avella·
hard case $200 {304)882 ble
Heritage
Farm
3775
(304)675 5724

cyl

4-WDs

1995 Chevy Van 15 ""s
senger 1 ton 138k m•les.
good shape ask•ng $8 000
{740)379 2995

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo 4x4 4 dr pw pi •
new t~res wel l maintained,
high mtles asking St3 400
neg (740)7427200

1

;==~R~e~a~I~E~s~t~a~t~e~G~e~n~e~r~a~l~~=

rI
1

1993 Chevy 2500 pk:l&lt; yp,
cru1se atr excellent 1
condit1on 72 000 miles, one 1
owner $6500 (304)882 [
2662

1111

1999 Doogo Dakota Spo"
Auto Air Loaded 28 000
m1les Rebuilt T1tle like j
New May Take Older
T ade $6 750 (740)256·
9161

I OPEN HOUSE
I

Sunday, September 9, 2001
From 2:00- 4:00 o'clock

2 Geo Trackers 1 black &amp; 1
White $3200 {304)697·
5927 or (304)638 0079

Dtrecttons

72 Chevy 1/2 ton 6 cyl1n
der 3 speed North Carolina
truck hall damaged hood 7
roof orange &amp; while Call
for Ust $5 000 fnvested
$2 500 hrm or trades Dave
Owens (740)256 0611

r~

VANS

94

Wmterplace

Gallipolis , Ohio
State Route

588

approxtmalely

••

3 mtles,

tum l eft on Wmte rplace ,

&amp;

I st h o u se on n gh t

4--WDs.

"'--------·

1986 Ford Bronco Edd1e
Bauer Two lone Med1 um
miles
usesiSSIOnno $500
01t Mocha/Light Mocha 4x4
Good transm
302 V8 EFI Automatic
{740)446 9776 or {140)446
98 500 m1les /IJC Cru1se
4553 asl&lt; '"' Mary
lllt Power WlndowsJLocks
1986 GMC Ptekup Trade lor 4~ Suspens1on L1ft Alpine
Stereo System $6 000
small car (304}882-3739
(740)446 6833
1987 Dodge Ram 150 4x4
looks Good, Runs Good 1987 Chevy JJ4 Ton 4x4
(740)256-6997
$4400 (740)441 1892

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths

over 3000 square
teet of living space Formal living room
and dining Lots of beautiful woodwork.

level

MlODLEPORT Park St

lot wtth shaded deck area 1n the back of

JU SI reduced' fh 1s
stor) home 1s located

the home adds to the overall appeal Let

Broadway Hom e

this charmer be on your list of must sees

R~ally n1cc h0mc ufh:rs 3
LlR I 112 B 11h~ I R DR
llr•hiy Rm 2 I.:LH g 1ra~e
Ap p ltan~.:cs N1cc pnvatl'
back yard \e1y well
m 1mtumcd M1d 90s

till

o ffer~

2

or J BR Buth I K DR
K11 Ut dlty Hm ~.:dlur
Reall y mce fc 1ced n )llTd
lo1 IS 75x 124 lmmcd ate
possession' Now In the
m1d 40s

PumrrtJ\1 • Umo n An
Mus1 see 10 ~rpr ccm lc'
I nC!l!ed on I 'i a~:rcs m/1
~hjuse remnddcU New
C I pet &amp; Jl OOIIIIB 1\e\1.
Ci\ New uctator ~ystcm
Reaii,t good huy al
149 500

CHESTER AREA Grem
place to nusc )Our fnmll)"'
Rc11ll y n 1~.:e splll c::n try

1U ()ea At

home w/4 HH. 2 B uh ~ Kit

!?'9 t?ed ~

FR DR Deck 2 car garuge
Large lot Pnce has been
red u~.:e d and v.e v.tll liSten
lu redonablt: uffc 1 ~l
Mid 80s

, 1~ee,

1-800-585-7101 or 446--7101

Mllll)f EPORT
Older
h(lrne thlll ilns hcen so
compkh:~ly rcn odekd thm
you \.\On t helu.:&gt;lt 11 ~ ~t he

POMEROY ,\ RE:A J 11~1
oft SR 7 &amp; 33 Rc 1lly jpeal
home onl) a C11uplc of
years old Bcaut1ful \lew
1 h1s home olfc1s su muny
extm s yo u have tu sec to
a ppre~.:m te l Pnce has JU SI
been re duced uga 111 11
Call for appomlnwnl

~

Russell 0 Wood, Broker 446-4618
441 · 0262
DanaAtha
24S-0022
Kenneth Amsbary
446-0722 l1m Slone
742-3171

1

~am~

&amp;~-~~~
li.J.'l Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0i
ut 740-446-0008 740-441-llll
•

205 North Second Ave.
Midd
OH

e;:'ru1smoo®zoomnet. net

W1""''· evans-l•to4&gt;r&lt;e. &lt;omnl,•1

Forml:!rly Bhrd6um Re«lly "Sen•wg Soutltem Ohw for Over A Quarter Century"

RIVERVIEW DRIVE • Need lots ol room 1n your
home? Th1s one has 111 3 bedrooms upstairs
(one be1ng 24 It ) and a 24 It hv •ng room The
basement also has a flmshed room There 1s a
large enclosed porch and a newer outbu1ld1ng
Really mce home Come and look

.Joe
Sarah

L.

A.

M o o r - B r o k e r 441-1818

Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1618

Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara Casey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990

;7,;:;;::;~;;:;;;~C;a:::ndace

446-7412

house L1X: 11!Cd on S

2ntl 1h1r, h{1me olfcrs 4
BR 2 ll •I•~ LR FR Kit
l 1ttll
I en New carpel
Ort 11
wuodv. urkl

Musl Sec'

Needs some 1 LC

bu~

could be

llllC

Beech

I

c:o:du~ne

RACINE 2 Bu.!imo; ~' oppom 1111es M~clun ~
Another versatil e bldg \1. /llpprox I ~00 sq ft

arcn
~h i'l p pl u~

MIDDLEPORl Sc\cl,d remul ptuJX!t1• C~ I\ a lable 1
home dupleK bu sllt "' !•11 1ding Agc nl u\\1\t'tl \V•II111g !
deol'
POMEROY I ot• IIIOH rt.Kllll lllo• f 1 I 1~1 appears 11 1
homel2 BR I Balh K•t I R Otllt:t I ull t ~111 M5 IXJO
MIDDLEPORT Rcull y g~t:al hone ~ 13R 2 1!2
K11 wJsome upplumccs grc. 1 ""mkmansh1p greut puol
xarage pn vate courlyard alt fcmnl fur pr Ht ~.:y
mamleno.nce

fillY OTHER USTINGSI STOP IN &amp; TAUI TO USI
Real Estate General

12015
R....

3814

a-goo

111,500 Nice

Creole

Bl Level atyla
home thai haa la~ijt family rOOfn &amp;
dining area that opens to large
rear deck and private back lawn
Eat-In kitchen 3 bedrooms large
family room. garage concrete
drtve and

CHEAP CHEAPI $21 000 001
ln'llestmenVstarter Ranch
slyle
home slluated at 738 Main
Street 2 bedrooms
equipped
k1tcnen living room bath! 12121

APPLE
GROVE
DORCAS
ROAD·
Approx•malely 3 4 acres ot land, partially a
grassy f1eld and the re st 1n woods Has a 1981
t 2x60 mobile home with 3 bedrooms and 2

'
MAIN STREET· A 1 '/o
story home
alum1num Siding, and has 2 beqrooms
room
kitchen, balh and laundry
downstairs a nd 2 small bedrooms upt;talrs.l
Has a nice v1ew ollhe Ohio River
NOW REDUCED TO

Beautiful brick horne In
8 ~u l et ln·town netghborhood
Low maintenance, conveniently
I
hard wood floors
kitchen and bath
windows and full
basement $89 900

Salon and office rental space plus
2 upstairs apartments corner lot
Call and let
Nice Income

0 ~:1 :~~~~4

2 to 3 bedroom home s ttl1ng
ap~~r~;;
Has a beautiful fam1ly room 1lh
screened 1n back porc h and plenty
the k1ds lo play

NEW USTINGI LO'VEI.Y
lor this 2 story home that J
years young resting on approx 2
acres Living room khchen 8
bedrooms, basement Low exterior
maintenance, detached 24 )( 30
garage large front porch and morel
12142

ALLEY • ApproXImately 1 acre
v1ny l s1d1ng blawn ~1n lnsu1a11on, and a
root
3 bedrooms and 1 balh A
1 by the houseful' L1ve 1n II or renlll out.
$25,000.00
see and g1ve us an offer
• N 3RD S'l:· A ranch style
that IS o nly t years old Home has 3
bedrooms 2 baths, a nd a storage building Also
has vmy l s1d1ng Anderson windows &amp; some
newer carpet!,..
$41,000 00

Iorge lol,
apactoua rooma, 5 bedrooms,
baths over 3 000 square feet of
liv1ng space and a 2 car gafage
Many Improve ments have
already been done lnctudmg
newer wmdows roof wtrlng
central a1r and master bath wltn
whirlpool tub With 8 little TLC
th1s home could be magnificent!
BDNUS I A 2 BA 1 BA garage
apartment rental that cou ld help
with
Pnce reduced

panel doors luxuriOus
sutte screened In porch custom
cherry k1tchen cabinets and a lull
basement partially f1 nlshed The
owner has priced the home with 2
Acres mil at $219,000 but may be
Willing to sell as much as 25 30
Acres surrounding the homo

lf101 Many poaalbllltlea ewalt
you with thla three bedroom
country farm home Located on
the banks ol Raccoon Creek next
famous Bob Evans Farm In
the toRiotheGrande
Owner willing to sell
backdrop
country living can this 121 acre farm for $195 000 or
be tounc:l In lhiB 4 bedroom 2 1n many combinations such as the
112 bath ranch located Jn
home and one acre w•th oversized
Green township th 1s remodeled garage for $49 900 or maybe you
one level home offers large open want the home and three acres
spaces ennched with a central w1th
barn and hobby house
kitchen and ramlty/su n room A
a small 45 acre
large level lot with shaded deck
today to
area m the back ol the home
adds to the overall appeal Let
lhls charmer be on your list of
must sees $134 850

10~_9()().

a

Ranch
wtth
bedrooms living room, dlnlr'lg and
kitChen Plus 14 K 70 mobile home
In excellent condttlon, presently
used as a rental Lots of frull trees
and I
112123

TRHDITIOnHL 2STORY PLHn
non-TRHDITIOnHL UHLUE
BRICK
WITH LOTS OF STYLE
open to specious formal
room and dining area, step-sav.ng
kitchen family room w1th flrep!ac;e 1
oversized master bedroom With
patio area that leads to mground
pool master bath 3 additional
bedrooms and bath Approx 2
acres, concrete d rcu tar drive To
much to mention In this ad call for
an appointment 12050
NEW USTINGI CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
RAISED
RANCH
STYLE HOME! Uvmg room,
dining room kitchen den fam1!y
room 3 bedrooms 2 baths built·
In 2 car garage plus large rec
room In baseme?tl Central air
12141

'

MIDDLEPO~T. Older home with
charm and great location near
school grocery •etc lots of room
here for the family G ive Cheryl a
call for more details 12110
NEW USTINQI
S/1 124
$79 000 3 29 acres co mes along
with this ranch home llvmg room
d1rnng room kitchen 3 bedrooms
'-2 baths 2 Car detached garage
Lovely pond fruit trees &amp; berries
lets go s.eel lf2130

)

clou to town can be f()und In
thla 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath on
Brentwood
D ri ve
W1lh
overs1zed rooms th 1s spac•ous
home otters an equipped kitchen
partially fm1s hed basement and
a two-car
an for only

MAIN STREET· A two slory home With a large
Ioyer dtnlng room, l1v1ng roo m kitchen, and
balh downstairs and 3 bedrooms upstairs Has
a full basement wtth a newer furnace and hot
water healer A beauttlul v1ew of the OhiO R1ver
NOW REDUCED TO $15,000
I

Thts

home

l1as

h ad

cons 1derable

updates and Improveme nts mak1ng 11 a

•

NEW USTINGI DON'T WORRY
ABOUT THE STOCKMARKET
CRASHING! Invest your money tn
purchasing th11 multiple rental
klcOf"ne producing property In
town location 3 Houses plus
mobile home Wanting a positive
cash ftow-call today for more
datallsl 12138

great buy

4

BR s

25

ba th s

LA

DR

ROY JONES ROAD· A hve year old ranch w1lh
over 2000 square teet Has a big kitchen, liVIng
room and mam bedroom
2 more average
sozed bedrooms and 2 baths A really mce
back po rch an d a newer front deck All of this
s1tttng on 51/2 acres
I

..

I

river YliWI, I
wooded lot and nature
thla raised ranch on 3
With lUSt a short dnve
south of Gallipolis one will tlnd a
hidden treasure positioned high
o·venlool&lt;ing the Oh1o Valley W1th
hardwood I
remod eled oak
kitchen and ample hvjng space
enhanced by a fm1shed lowe r
le'llel th1s gem awaits you
$119 000 00

lf1
town end cloee to
school I, park front, grocery and
much morel Th1s 2 story home has
the posstblllty of ha11mg 3 rentals
w1th 11 L1ve 1n one and let the rent
from the others pay your mortgage
Th1s Is a deal of a lifetime Don 1 lei
th1s one ~ou byl $74 000

it ,....

It
Fully
eqUipped kitchen with new relng
&amp; dishwasher 1 Car detached
garage Front &amp; Side porches
Large covered patio on the s1de
Located close to Middleport c1t-y
on a C!rc la drwe

One of the best pool area's we've seen

4

BR's,

3

baths, LR,

DR

eat 1n kitchen

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
NEW LISTING! t 205 ROY JONES
ROAO $45 000 00 2 Story home
with llv1ng room 3 bedrooms
dining room partial basement
heat pump and morelt2148

STOP BY HDO WHLI\ THROUGH THESE
Uti\Y DICE HOIOES DffiDITELVHGOOD
IDUESTIDEDT Of YOUR TilDE HOD IDODtY.
Directions: Take Stale ROille 588 to left on
llltnco Rd. Oust past mltcheRJ. Tum left ntthe
step sign onto Centenarg. Ta1tt the second
street to lite left. look ror signs.

SOUTH SECOND AVE • A 1 '/, slory frame
home w1th 3 bedrooms, 1 bath a Iron! porc h
and an enclosed rear porch Does need some
work
$11,000.00
DOTIIE TURNER, Broker ....... 992-5&amp;92
li=RRV C:UlAAnl INI'::
Q.t.Q ..?1't1
CHARMELE S-PRADLIN.G .. :.::. 949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS ................. 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ....... ..... . 992-3058

NEW LISTING! 297 LINCOLN
STREET $15 000 00 Commercial
building, approx 1029 oq H , klt
approx 30 11. 5!l 12149

In town w1th a 1
yard
This 2BA 1 bath home has a lot
to oflerl

II

...

.I• ~

11 22 Need the convenience of
living In town couplod with lho
low maintenance of 1 brick
home? Come see t!'lls one story
bnck home w1th hardwood floors
3 BR I t 12 BA lull basemen t
and
Pnced to sell

"

~
•120 Dr••m• can coma true!
Se cluded and conveniently
located th is lovely 4 BA 3 SA
home rests on 7 5 go•geous
acres and has a stocked pond
24 x 32 mete.l building 2 car
attached garage wrap around
porch and a beaut if ully
landscaped yard W1th ceramic
t1le entryways Bruce hardwood
flooring and Jntrlcatety laiCI bnck
sidewalks th1s superb home has
every detail covered Call for an
appomtment for your dream
home todayl

Many more amemttes

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR~
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

NEW
USTINGI
RECENTLY
REMODELED
2 STORY vtnyf
! sided home with lots ol living
space 4 BACfrooms, 3 baths living
room dining, kitchen den, famny
room 20 x 30 garage and lots
more Let Cheryl lfll you In on this
onalt2147

mndow1 from
top 4 BA and 3
spactOUs
great room overlooking the In
ground pool and pool house
great lor entertaining An
oversized attached t wo car
and storage building all
on t 7.ACmA $159900

RACINE • AI the &lt;Jdge of lawn IS th1s I

tell you '"" '"'"'

NEW LOT USTINGI $20,000 00 5
Acres
situated
In

MIDDLEPORT· Jusl barely out of town 1s this 3
bedroom home w•lh 11/2 baths , a fro nt porch,
large rear porch or carport a nd a 3 room
workshop across lhe road
N1ce appearing
home lhal has had a lol of
II ollale

•

'

FORSAU:
99
1 7 Ford Exploret" XLT V
Trumpet
Trombone
1
Good Conct11Jon (740)44," SO DOWN
POLICE :
8574 alter 6 pm
IMPOUNDS &amp; AEPOS J (304)773 5381
HONDA S
CHEVY s
JEEP'S LOW AS $29/MO 1997 FOI'd Thunderbird V
24 MO'S
199% FOA 8 e.uto air allpow8f excel·
LISTINGS CALL 1 SQO. lent condtt1on
64 000
FARM
miles
$ 5500 (7401992
451 .{)050 ext C 9812
~'lENT
7564
1
1984 Chevy Capnce Clas
stc low miles (740)245 1997 Saturn 4 door auto
air power sun root excel
John Deere 450-C 6 way 921 2
blade wmch &amp; canapy
tent
condition
4 500
40
-::)-74-::2:-2_8_80_ _ _ _ 1987 Chrysler LeBaron 4 ,(7,.:4:c01::4:;46:,:4:;7~82~---(7,.,
25mpg
new small
urcs -1998 Ford Contour LX 4
YANMAA YM 1500 nactor, cyllndar
battery, etc
Excellent
dtesel 3 pomt hitch $2 l50 er car (740)388-8997
cyl1nder, 76 000 m1les dark
Also new 4 f1n1sh mower .::....::....;__.;:;.:..:..:...;;:-'-::-- green
4 door
NADA
sUIIm crate $850 Shlpptng 1988 Chevy 1/2 ton Silvera $7 000 askmg
$5 700
ava table located JUS! out do, V·8, auto a1r power (740)446 2624
s•de of Huntsville AI (256) windows locks runs great
776 943 5 www maynatde· good condition
$2400 1999 Otds Allero bnghl red
Qulpment com
(740)9927584
loaded 100 000 m11e war
ronty $12 000 (304 )675
1989 Pontiac Grand Pnk V 6406 after 5pm
LIVESfOC K
6 3 1 good condtl1on
~---------' $2000 (740)446 7105
95 Spor" $2750 107800
good
cond1t on,
mites
Athens Livestock Sale Fall 1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass (740)949·3228
Ieeder calf sale TueSday C1era 6 cyl 4 door auto
September 18, 7pm Cattle amlfm cassene Tilt CrUI~
TRUCKS
w111 be accepted st artmg PW Pl, $2500 1994 Aang L---~~'DR:,S~
A,:;LE:;,.-~
4pm Monday up unt1l 3pm er 4x4 4 cyl 5 speed Ofle
Tuesday An breeds of live· owner sharp truck, lots of
stock accepted Hauling extras $5800 (740)379 1970 Ford 1 112 ton F 700
available (740)592 2322 or 9885
2 speed rear end 361 en
' - ' - - ' - - - - - - - - g1ne 40 000 miles 16·
(740)698-3531
1993 Lincoln Town Car low dump bed $3000 OBO
Beaut1tul Registered Ouar- mileage loaded (740)446· (740)9929798
ler Horse Mare,$ 1800 3108
1
G
1975 Dodge wfwood llat
Reg stared eld1ng Ouarter 1994 Otds 88 Royale one :bed::c.ll::
:=12::4::5:::95=5::_7_ _ _
740
Horse $1700 buy both for owner Excellent Condition
~$2_900_.:.&lt;7:_4_0,_)7_42::...:.83:..27:..___ (304)882·3173 '
1986 Ford F 150 300
Feeder calves halter broke, ' - - ' - - - - - - - - stra1ght 6 wlwood bed run s
1995 Chrysler Concorde good good tires new water
s1re moody blue qreat hntr 64 500 miles one owner pump $500 1987 Chevy
coat r' 40)867 8535
garage kept Excellent con· Astto van wJsalvage t1tle
HAY &amp;
d1tlon
$7 500
OBO lots of new and al most new
RAIN
{740)441-1018
parts MOIOf has 105 000

Ir~

VAJ\S &amp;
4-WDs

central

A large

www .BIG-BEND REALTY .COM

INCOME

INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulev1fte
.Pk 3 badrm, 3 bath living quart818
11110 18' x 32 garage plus 30' x 20
building t/2 ac olland good sales
loc Priced 10 sell VLS

Doberman Pmshcer pup
pies, not feg1sterec:1 Mother!
Father on prem1ses S 150
each (740)446 9638 days
(740)256 6390 evemngi

IrL.-...:~.~:.:i~CK!::;A::;~t:;;._.JI r

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~

NEW USTINGI 1~8 SR 218
$65,000 00 1 story vinyl sided
ranch home Llv1ng room, dining
area kitchen, family room and 2
botho 2 Car o~ched garage
Central air City achoolsl J2145

l

AKC Boston Terner Pupp1es
lor sale (740)256 1825

J. ll:'lr""-":"::""----,
70
MUSICAL

4 bedroom 2 1/2 bath

kttchen and famtly/sun room

Real Estate General

NEW USTINGI WITHIN MINUTES
OF HOI.ZER HOSPITAL Located
at 6153 SR 160 you w•ll lind this
011er 1 7 acre lot and multiple use
dwelling ldaal lor resldanlla l or
commercial
use
Unlimited
potential Must call lor oomplete
llstlngl 112143

J4035 RIO GRANDE BEAUTY· 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths Ranch home
K1tchen w/eatlng area, formal dlnng
room garden tub Fireplace In LA
Cathedral ce1llngs oovered deck
above ground pool cellar w/
butldtng storage shed, 3 car
detached
garage,
blacktop
dnveway fenced lot 2 2 acres mil

A
FllR~IJ

Page 05

remodeled one level home offers large
open

MEIGS COUNTY
Grande 4 bedrooms 2 baths, 2
k11chens basement and garage 70
x 172 lot 290 College Sl Great
mcome and location Priced to sell
Virgtn a 446 6806
114019
COMMERCIAL
LOT
Jackson Pk Galltpohs OH Comer
101 Wllh great potentJel •

Block bnck sewer pipeS
w1ndows hotels etc Claude
w nters R1o Grande OH
Calt740 245 5121

r'o
I

s

~;{i.

AKC reg1stered English
Bulldogs ma es &amp; females
9 wks old (740)992 1435

8U!UliNG
SUI'PIIfo,';

AI.TI'O.&gt;

i#u nbav ll::tmrs ·lilrntmrl •

Located 1n Green township thts

$134,850.

388-8838.

AREAl Roomy almost new home
with approx 2 560 eq ff 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, lormal
dining room, kltollen and morel
Nice llzed rooms Large front
porch bam &amp; sllop and 3 29 acres
mA 12133

I town, new
root
BR 2 5 BA 2 car
garage
vinyl
sktmg
niCe
ne1ghbotllood Needs some TLC but
pnced nght at $79,900

r

Walerl1ne Spec~al 3f4 200
PSI $21 95 Per 100 1• 200 AKC Aeg1stered Boker Pup
p1es OOB 6 28 Fawn 1
PSI $37 00 Per 100 All male 2 females
T 1
Cl
a s
Brass Compress1on. F1thngs Docked De
In Stock
w
aws ro
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- moved wormed $300 Call
ES Jackson Oho 1 800 (304)675 4156 after 6 00
537 9528
pm M F all day weekends

setting

EDGEOF
will
lo11e the remodeled kitchen In th1s
3 bedi'oom home with an
enjoyable overs•zed front deck _
Nice sized liv1ng room lots of 748
updating maida and out New :1:12
;;;,,,d~i8d,
sldmg roof vinyl t1lt ·1n windows
n
carpeting &amp; v•nyl to name a few
Reasonably pnced $47 900 00
t2136
14030· IT'S
PLUS!
ACRES·
HOME·
BUILDINGS Old tuhlon charm
with mOdern convenience In this 4
BR 2 story home, 2 balha,
{whlrtpool tub) Lovely equipped
k1Uiamlly rm combo w/hardwoo&lt;l
floors cherry cabinets Enjoy
viewing the countty from every
wondow Formal d•nlng rm &amp; LM
wlbeamed colllnga Porch &amp; patio
72 ACRES of baautllul rollng land
Pasture, woods &amp; eome limber,
pond &amp; mineral rtghll
bam
&amp; buildings 56 mil
avallableloo
VLS oMEI-6&amp;08

sell 40X60x 12 was $ 17 500
now $10971 50xt00:.16
was S27 850 now $!9 990
80x135x16 was $79 850
now $49 990 10xt75Jt20
was S 129 650 now $84 990
1 800 406 5126

9 wk old male Cocker
Wanted to buy large dog Spamel regtstered shots &amp;
house reaso nably ~1ced ta11 docked askmg $200
17401256 6038
(140)742 2525

POMEROY Butldmg lot~ 111 a \i~ry
m s1u from I 5 ncre tn1 1J llf£ m/1

414009 ALL
Updates Include new carpet copper
plumbing &amp; bath, new root, privacy
lence Ftn!lhed 3rd floor, 4 bedrms,
t 112 baths lull basom t living rm
wff•replace tormal dining rm, 3
bedrooms. on
2nd
floor
1
wtf~replace garage &amp; landscaped
yard Call for appoint Virginia 446
6806

-c--------Steel budd•ngs New must

~~~~~~~~~

rio

WV

along with the back drop of country living
can be found 1n thts

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom
Su1tes 1399 Buy, Sell,
Trade
New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holiday Inn,
Kanauga We Sell Grave
Monuments And Vases

relaxed

All STEEL BUILDING
40x32 was $7,922 now
$3 980 1 soo 292 0111

S200 "----;;;,;-;ofi.-,.J

WATER WELLS DRILLED
(740)886·731 1

Sawm II $3 895 New Super
Lumbermate 2000 larger
capac1ttes more opt1ons
Man ufacturer o! sawm11ts
edgers and skldders NOR
WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwi!t Dnve Buffalo NY
14225 FREE Information 1
800 578 1363 EXT 200 U

tl:-;

Air compressor
Planer $180 (740)44&amp; 1489

MIDDI.EPORT N 1cC Silll1~ r M rdm:mcnl I
Price reduced to $29,.54'HI

1·1 112 acre lot flat w/sew
&amp;r 2 m1les out o1 Rutland on
Crem eans Ad no mob11e
homes
(740)742 2603
leave message

~40271NVESTMENT Located In Rio

$600

Tappan H1 EffiCiency 9Q&lt;'~o
Gas Fumaces 011 Furna
ces 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
A1r Condlttontng Systems
Free 8 Year Warranty Ben
netts Heatmg &amp; Cooling 1
800
872
5967
www otVb comfbennen

~~

11100 A

-

t3362 CARRVOUT BUSINESS
ond CONVENIENCE STORE FOR
SALE New alarm system Building
built to state code Cont nuous
operat1on s1oce 1986 Pr1ce tnclueles
1nventory Call JOhnnie 367·0323 or

"''"'o'Ta'"' • DELIGHTFUL HOME

rable saw $2SO Radial saw

S100 Jmnter $180 Shaper

RESIDENTIAL HOME
OWNERS

U004 9 ACRE
ol vacant
land Land $'75 000 00 Located on
SA 588 V1rgm1a 446-6806

,....om;

'

•

VIRGINIA SMITH, BRDKEII • .. ,_ 4418101
GAIL BELVILLE.....
...
..441-1209
TIIISH SNYDER.
..............441-MSI
JOHNNIE RUSSELL
.... 387-11323
DAVID SNYDER ... , ..... ,., ............ 441-MSI
OUR WEB PAGE IS www vlamlthrealeltata com

LOOK AT
Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full
basement w1th 2 car garage and
f1n1shed lam•ly room Home Sits on 2
Ac mil 1n Hannan Trace Schools
Jus!
mmutes
from downtown
Gall1polts Th1s home features a
beauhful landscaped lawn, wood
pellet stove and central a1r Located
JUS! oH Rock L1ck Ad on Mable or
1n n1ce neighborhood Have a
garden and ra•se some flowers but
make sure to look at thiS Call
at 387-&lt;&gt;323 today lor an
appo•ntment

MERCIIANIJt'&lt;&gt;

NEW AND USED FUR
NANCES FOR SA LEI We
Install Free Est mates 11
you doni Call us We both
Loose• (7 40)446 6308 1
800 29l 0098

PETCARERX COM Save
up to 50% on ALL pet med1
cations and supp11es tn
eluding Heartgard lntercep
tot, FronU100 more!l FRE!l:
$HIPPING Order onlme
www PetCareR X com 1
800 844·1427 {

~

I

)_J_..A_~.H.)(.·_.~ ...........B.l1·t·JMNG_.:..._.~
SIIJ't,

Misc
__...

'

New pa1ntball gun Brass
Eagle St~ngray 2 all acces
sones. ready to shoot 304 STEEL BUI~DINGS 5 Only
675 3508
3) 25x30 2)451190 Must
0xyg8!1 tank for torch from Move Now! Selling for Sal
Air Products 3 loot h1gh ance Owed 1-800 411 5869
~ 14
$1 00 {740)992 2369

'J~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~,pii~A.-

'

Grubbs Ptano Tuning &amp;
Repairs Problems? Need
Tuned? Gall The P1ano Or
740-446 4525

(

ERSI Even with less than
AotiQue Cherry dining Ml per1ect credit! 1 800 477 °
L~r&amp;ry table, (740)992· 90 16
Cocle
AC37
1938
wwwomcsolu110ncom
- - - - - - - - - - COOKWARE AMERIC'S
,...
Buy Of sell RIYenne Ant1 .HEAVIESr Surgcal Steel!
ques, 1124 East Main on ·NEW' 7 pl 11 walerless sets
SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
,
Russ Moore LIFETIME GUARANTEED!
992•2526
owner
NOfmally $2000 Secllllclng
IC~:":'......- ...._., $399 {FREE stockpot OR
MISCEJ.4.NF.Ol8
electric Sklllett) checks
u-~·~~
COD VIIMCIAMX, DIS·
J•a.r..l\~~
COVER Brochures.. 1-800
928•7253
SO DOWN HOMES NO
CREDIT OKI HUD VA
F1rewood for sale $150
'
load (740)441 9476
FHA Call tor LIStings
1-800 5011m Ext 9818
For sale- dark oak heavy
dining room set b1g china
12ft
Aluminum F1shmg cab1net with hght table 7
•-t Se IV Bottom p~
I.IUCl
m• •
•u-h long With SI)C h1gh back
fesslona.l Hair Dryer WJt
chairs excetlent cond1hon
~·~75 2365
chair &lt;~"' •
$700 {740)742 2050
-------------------

Real Estate General

8USINFl~o'&lt;;
ANil HUll f&gt;IN(,S

100 acres ONLY $49 000
or 273 acres ONLY
$136,00 Recreat•on proper
ty m KY and WV Great for
the Outdoor Lover' Also 5
acre to 6 acre lracts ava1la
ble 1n P1ke and Jrtckson Co
access1bl13 to 40 acre to 200
acre or Pulll c hunt1ng For
more nfo and FREE maps
contact
Anthony Land Co , Ltd
1·800 213 8365
www alcland com

417 Second Avenue, GalltpOilS Ohio 3 room office
suite formerty Kelty SeN·
Ices
-... Call Don Stanle~
(740)446-1781

~9

i

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Ftnal Days Nat1onw1de In
ventoty
ReducMnl
{304)736-3409

Um1ted Or No Credtt? Gov
emment Bank Finance Only
At Oakwood In BarbQurs
voile WV 304 736 3409

SPA_.CE
___,JI

Sewage • Trash, ,{$:.;7.;;5:..){7:;..;.40:.:).;.4.;;48;..7c;27.;.t.;___

$350/Mo 740 -448•0008

Beautiful 3 year old 16x80
mobile home with cathedral
C81lmgs on 5 17 acres w1th
100 block

Land·hOme packages all
areas Prequaltfy by phone
(740)446·3563

r___

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis , Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Now Takln.., Applications- Dark blue chair with Queen
35 West 2 Bec:troom Town Anne l"tn ($80) and belg8
hou se Apartmenta, Includes Bench raH rocker recliner

Ashland Fleetwoocl Sep tem
b.er spec al 2002 14x70
3bd/2ba $19 990 Free Del
&amp; Setup To ll Free 1 866
805·561 9

For sale by owner 3 bed
room Schutt mobtle home
Very n1ce hnanc1ng avalta
ble {740)446 3583

......

'"r

bedroom
Apart wtth
Guaranteed!
We SellFrench
New
en appliances
AC Kitch·
WID Maytag
Appliances
Hookup {304)67S·4302
City Maytag 740-446-7795

Beaut1ful RIVer Vew Ideal
o 2p
R 1
For 1 r
eople e eren
cos Deposit No Pets, Fos
te r Tta1ter Park 740 441
1972
0181

a

Deluxe home save $5 445
new 2000 model Skyl•na 3
bedroom ~ 2 bath total alec
tr1c v1nyl &amp; shmgte low
monthly payments dehv
ered &amp; setup Includes sk1rt·
1ng &amp; steps Coles Mob1le
Homes US 50 East Ath
ens Oh, 740.592 t 972

APART

MI!NTS AT BUDGET PRI·

CES AT JACKSON E$TATES, 52 Westwood Onve
from $297 to $383 Walk to
Taking apphcahons for a 2 .,....,..
-•·s Call 7_,..
.m_
.,......, &amp; ,....,y"'
bedrooms m a qu1et netgh 446 2568 Equal Hous1ng
bofhood
(740)446 6939 Opportunity
leave message
Chrlstys Family Uv1ng
33140 New Uma Ad Rul·
M~nl!~ land Ohio 740 7-t2 7403
1• Apartment home and trailer
-J'Vft AI'.J'i.
rentals Commercial atorefronts available fOJ lease
2 Bedroom Trailer on Addl vacancies now
son P1ke $220/ month
$1 00 depostt No Pets For Lease One bedroom,
(740)446 1637 or {740,.."
,_.... unfurnished second floor
3437
apartment, 81 comer of Sec
ond and Pone A/C, $300
2 bedroom 2 t;.ath beaut!lul per month water Included
"H 1
1 od ad tront
""
arge enc
r
Secunty and key deposit
&amp; back decks 12 m1ies lrom References required No
G 11 poll
1 1
a 1 s no pes
year pets (740}446-4425
loase negotiable $200 de- - - - - - - - - pos11 $425 per month Modem 1 bed
rt
(304) 736 7268 lor appoint
room apa ment
ment (740)~90
Noce Newly Redooorated 2

area nver v1ew references
reqwred deposrt requ1 fed Mason 3br Trailer $285
I 740 992 6777 aIt er plus depos11 (304)675·n83
no pes
5pm
c.::::..:::c:.:::::::-'.:::2:::..:::..:..:.::::
New 16x80 really n1ce CIA
$425/mo $300 depoSit, wa·
79 V1cto nan mob•le home
$4 750 (740)256 1690
3 Bedroom Pomeroy nver te r &amp; trash Included niCe
v1ew $350tmo references neighborhood
no pets
Abando ned
Doublewtde requorod. (740)992·4451 al (740)256 1664
free set up &amp; delivery Hur ter 4pm
ry 1 only (740)446 3093

Asnland Fleetwood 2002
Doublew1de $26 226 Toll
Free 86680 556t9 10 min
from Huntington

BEAUTIFUL

on
per

Needed 304 736-1'295

1•0-..:,:H;,;Oj,USFS
_ _ __.I Mtddleport
no
FOR RENT
(740)992·5858

16 W1de Only $195 00 Per
Month 8 99% F :(ed Interest
Rate With A1r And
Un 1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
dArnmnmg 1 888 928 3426 Homes From 5 199/Mo 4%
..... ,..
Down 30 Years at 8 5%
APR For LIS11ngs 800 319
l99 5 Clayton 141170 2BD 3323 Ext t709
2BA V1ny1 S1d1ng Shmgle - - - - -- - - Roof
Must be Moved
b d
NC
11
1 e room
re r gera
(304)675 1388
•
tor range References re
1996
Oakwood
Home QUired $350 month 260
t4x80 new porch 10xl6 State Streel {740)446 3667
Central a~r sys1em 3 bed 2 bedroom home close to
roo ms 2 baths Mus I have town oasement A111er v1ew
pav, of1 Call (740)256 1367 $4251 month 3 bedroom 10
or (740)339 2:J02
town 1 112 baths Good 1o
lsi "me Buvers Coli Oak cat•on $ 5001 mont h AeIer
"
'
"
dd
1
d
wood
Galltpolts todayl ences an
epos• reqUire
Gov I backed program buy (1401446 3644
local 17401446 3093 __ 3 bedroom home Mlnersv•lle
:::::::c:...:.:::_:.:..::::::_
28)(60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On
iy 5345 00 Per Month
99% Ft)(ecf Interest Rate
1 888 928 3426

sage

I

JV.l"'IJ

9, 2001

~ I~.E_..
r~ ~~?....::'::.
~~·~

r

Two Bedn&gt;om Sots, Electric - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tndope&lt;dout Horbailo Di&amp;HospftaJ Bed and Uti CNit, 1 cl'lefry din•ng su•ts hutch For sale o6d Frigkjaire elec tribUtor Call For Product Or
Assorted household Hema. tabte 6 c:halrs wlt::able pads tnc range good condition Opportun1ty (740)44t-1982
{740)256-l426
9 pl«e PVC Patto l'uml (740)949 2538
(740~3945
• "-r:;;;;;,~;;;..--...,
~-~ Sut S
JET
SfolmNc
lure ~ra •nger FREE CASHI SID 000 or
AERATION MOTORS
ed
seW1ng machine wtth bench more posSibfe tn 58 days or R
.,_,
&amp; R~"l" 1
Gracious living 1 and 2
GooD;
Moving mutt sell (30-4)882•
epa 1r
,...,.....
vvu n n
bedroom apartlnlml at Vil- - 280'
less Never Repay! New Stock Call Ron Evans 1
~age Uano&lt; and A - - - - - - - - - P&lt;ogramsl Froo lnl0fm8hon 800-537·9528
Apartments In Middleport XI ExpiOfer youth com- 12 year old Dale Earnhart 1 800-308-6147
---------From $278-$348 Call 7.40- pound hunting bow aN ac· Jacket been worn twtca :w::::w:.;;w:::"':::•::lonq2000~=:::::;:co:::::m:__~
MOIIILE HOME OWNERS
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng ceasortea ready to hunr kept '" pfastie tor past 1o Free Grants Never Repay
Opportunities
31)4-87 5-3508
years Paid $250 wtU take Housing Purchases, Re·
Huge Inventory Discount
Apartment Avelleble Now "T-riiOIIan&lt;J--.,.,-Loc--on-F_IX_JlO'_ reasonable otter or will pa~rs Medtcal Bus 1ness Prices On VInyl Sklrt1ng
call
Sltion type, 4 wfwood plat~ trade for 20 250 nrlle must Emergency Funds Arts Doors Windows, Anchors
Twin River Towers
form , $30 eacn 2 wialumt- be Remington or Auger Writers ECiucatlon Non Water Heaters Plumbing &amp;
(304)6 75-8879
num ~dorm, $40 each 1 (740)441-o750 ask lor Tlm Profit Groups Bulldlllg Re- Electncal Parts Furnaces &amp;
for appticatton HUD tiJbai. Ol'man ctlrnbl~ type little 25 folding chairs 51 00 pa1rs Debts Fun&lt;11ng IS Heat Pumps Bennens• MoSSO ~-30pm
Guaranteed
1 866·289·
Clized apr for elderly and
,..,IVI.e a er 5
' each , heavy duty gas het~,t· HELP
wwwgrants dot bilo Home Supply 74o-446
941e wwworvb com/ben
7
7
d1sab'ed EHO
(140)379
er 70 000 BTU best offer com com
naH
740 1446 2917
FOK RENT
~
COMPUTERS
wE Fl· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
NANCE DELL COMPUT
Real Estate General

Two bedroom t2x60, S320
month dePQIIt AJC no Furnished wftiiCieiiCY all utif.
pets references requlred !ties paid share beth $125
{740)992
month, 919 2nd Avenoe

2

::.m::ar::k:ouP::__ _ _ _ _ (304)675 2484 leave mes

r

Sunday, Sept.

9, 2001

Sunday, Sept.

~~ -1r~~iO~~IIoumlow~Gooos~~~~~ ~~ 1 ~~ 1 ~~ 1

~m~es 1~ a:11a~le ~a~ now ,rr~~: ~o~~~e ~:!a~r 2st~~ 1"Bedroom Upsta1rs Apt

1 112 acre lot 3 bedroom

WV

"

t126A
$3• ,ooo
This 2 Story home features 3
bedrooms 1 bath hardwood
floo rs 2 fi replaces and much
morel This Js all found on a 315
acre lot In t ow~

VIsit us online at
www.Evans-Moore.com

townl One of the
BEST cered for homn In
areal Huge tlvtng room
master bedroom o;4irlllooltino
Ohio RIYer This
11nd with many umque
tnclud mg beautuul
floors trim crown
pocket doors
I
landscaped lol that runs all
way to the nver You 11e seen
rest schedule yo1Jr 11ppo1n1m1~t
now to see the

now
BUILT home on 2
mill Very nice 3 BR 2
with solid 6 panel doors 1
hardwood flooring Smith custom
k1tchen and 2 car garage
Located In Porter area S102,900
Call today thiS one wont last

1

'

�I,

\

Page 06 • M&gt;uub,W 1Ermr~ - erntinrl ·

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

-

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

Woman rewarded for retuming .S120,000
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -Wanda
Johnson. a siugle mother of five
stw ggling to pay her bills, is getting
a big helpin g hand after she
returned $120,000 in cash that fell
from an

armon.~d

car.

Johnson, 34, was driving to pawn
her television Wedne~day so she
could pay her electric bill when an
armored car turned a corner ahead
of her, spilling a large plastic bag in
the street.
Johnson, picked the money up
and went on to work at her job as a
housek'ee per at Memorial Hosp itaL

SunTrust and the security company sa id they want people to know
that good deeds reap rewards.
'Tb.ough their money is insured
against theft and loss, the policies
come with steep deductibles.
"We wanted to reward and reinforce somebody standing up and
doing the right thing," said SunTrust Savannah President Willian\
D. Haile, who gave Johnson her
che ck for $2,500. " If we can reinforce when people do the right
thing, that money will come baclc.
.
"
'
to us many, many 11mes.
••
•

going to work our'' And he did it,"
Johnson said.
SunTrust gave Johnson $5,000,
half in a check and•the rest deposit-.
ed to an account in her name -for
others to donate on Johnson's
behalf.
. The armored car company, EM
Security of Savannah, gave Johnson
a reward and donated to her
ing a news conference at SunTrust church .The company's chief execuDank. She said she had prayed about tive officer, Richard Estus, declined
her financial troubles, and view~d to name the amounts. '"We gave her
the I&lt;1st money as a test of her faith . at least what the bank gave her," he
" I said, 'How in the world is this said.

Johnso1t, picked the money up and U'et1t
011 to work at her job as a housekeeper at
Memorial Hospital. After work, she went
to lrer pastor's home a11d he encouraged
her to return the .cash.
After wo'rk, she \Vent to her pastor's
honw and he encouraged her to
return the cash.
'' It's really ~II abo ut God, putting
him tim," Johnson said Friday dur-

...

- -Real
-Estate
-- - - -·..General

WOOD
IWLI't
INC
32 LOCUST S'lmT, GAWffiUS, ~0 45631
Allen C.Wood, Broker· 44&amp;-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· 446-0971
Jeanelle Moore,. 256-1745 Patroa

r

t~ I «l
~...-----·d

i~

&amp;

1996 Chevrotet4x4.e)Cten ·

Ii

.

Man:JRcvn""
.

1993

Suzuki

Ka tana,

ad cab, loaded, excellent GSX600, black &amp; blue,
condition, 57 V-8. At.\IFM cams cleaned &amp; naw plugs,

CD,
$14.200
740 4
(
) 4S-4Sao

OBO. now tires. (740)245-5634
2ooo Kawasaki Prairie 400,
2000 tbs. Wam Winch lois
ol oxlras, $4,250, 1740)985·
2000 Chevy 4Jt4 Blazer 39t7
32.000 miles, loaded, Extended Warranty (304 )675- 2000 Sukl Katana GFX
600F, 5500 miles like new.
3052
$4500 (304)576-2668 ·

i

·

BoATS &amp;

·

MaroRS

J.UR SAl.£

I =i;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:;;;;::::::;
r·~
HOME

r

'"to

·--~~
&lt;M""''"~·~"" I.

Public Notice

IMPRo\'El\IENI1i 1 1 t

· &amp;I EMtoriorremodel•
n enor

r

1

.~;;;;A;e:ai~E;s;t:at;e~G:e;n~e~ra;I;;;;~. . . .~;;~R:ea=I~E=s~ta~t~e~e~n=er~a~;;;;..........

REAL ESTATE
St~eee 1943
.

I

'w/approvt!d credi t

Intersec tion of

us 33 &amp; 595
Just South of
Logan.
M·F 8;30·8:00
Sat. 9:00·6:00
Closed Sunday

HOMES
Not The Ponderoaa, eut
Cloaall This Is your
chance to live like Ben &amp; Uttle

Joe! 125 acres surrOUnd large
log home. Wonderful, private
views from all sides. Recently
remodeled · and added onto,
this home features 7 BRa,
including master area with
fireplace &amp; large sitting area, 4
full baths &amp; two hall baths.
Huge FR , 4 fireplaces and
much, much more. lnground
pool, hot tub and more .
Located 7 miles from town.
Priced to move al $295,000.
'2t5

AN
definitely
can easily be
nlo a great
opporlunlly wllh very little
Imagination. Prlvalely sallied
on nearly 7 acres, there Is
room for eJCpanslon . There are
many possibilities for lhe
property in addition to being a
wonderful church . Priced at
$169,900 1120

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled in
!all trees with natural secl u s i on ~ A lovely 2 year
old home on 4 acres more or less. Wrap around
decking and 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hmdwood nooring all oak tr im and solid oak
imerior dooroc; throughout. Large .family room w/
vent less fireplace . A free flowing noor plan of
space &amp; ·functiu n. Pli vatc bedrOO m suite &amp; bath.
Severn! wa lk-in closets, lcirge kit chen with lots

oak cabinets. 1 odditional bedrooms. Basement
an'd detal:hed 2 car garage. NO. 320
.
ONLY $16.!,000.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING SITE
I ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only 5 mi les

1

I

&lt;$ •

'lo

~

New
is a must seal This
beautiful home rests on 5 acres of land mil.
This home also has 5 bedroom s, 2
bathrooms and a two car garage with a
workshop 10 offer. If you art looking for a
with 'lyle and class look no further.
I lo view t1 94.

•

Move up to
atyllot 2 atory.
the
dramatic mart:Jie foyer with an

,. I

•

•

other New York"
:l'- the one populated by
~norities and the poor, the
O;he he says was left behind
11f!ring Republican Mayor·
lt.udolph Giuliani's two terms
&gt;- Ferrer has vaulted to the
~nt ranks just days before
fuesday's Democratic primary.
ft.elected, he Would become
~ew .York's first Hispanic
11~ayo r.

· { ''What's surprising is not that
t$'e endorsements gave him a
Q!lost, but how quickly that
SQ_rge came;· said Fred Siegel, a
Jil.llitical science professor at
t;tooper Union.
':}\ Quinnipiac University
pjill released Tuesday sh&lt;:Jwed
Fhrer - who was mired in
J:jj;t place arhong the four .
major Democratic contenders
~g. 14 - made up 22 points
iitthree weeks and is now in a
tit' with Green. Comptroller
~~n Hevesi and City Council
S!&gt;eaker Peter Vallone are ttailin,g in the Democratic race.
.·On Friday.-a new. Marist poll

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M . FRIDAY 446-2342
Washington Elementary
School presents!
"Meet &amp; Eat withe
Teachers"
Sept. 11
6:30 - 8 pm
Picnic food &amp; baby-sitting
provided

had similar results, showing
Ferrer supported by 30 percent
of the city's likely Democratic
voters and Green backed by 29
percent. Heyesi and Vallone
were well back.A runoff would
be held if the leading vote getter fails to get 40 percent of the
vote.
· Still, the polls show that half
oflikely voters may yet change
th eir minds. And Green,
instandy recognizable fo~. his
shock of white hair and his
stinging barbs, is known as a
tireless campaigner.
Green, 56, is a well- known
figure in New York from his
two earlier, unsuccessful runs
for the U.S. Senate' - and
frqm his eight years as the city's
public advocate, an elective
office in which he essentially .
served as·a government watchdog.
As har.;h as Ferrer has been
in his criticism of Giuliani,
Gre;n has been City Hall's
most dependable critic for
y~an. But mindful that many
voters hold Giuliani in high
regard, Green moderated his
public statements as he held a
double-digit lead in the polls.
For the Republicans, out, numbered 5-to-1 by Democrats in New York, the ·race
ahead looks difficult. Media
entrepreneur
Michael
Bloomberg and former Rep.
Herman Badillo 'Ire seeking
the GOP nomination on Tuesday.
Giuliani, barreCI by term limits &amp;om · seeking re-election,
was first elected in 1993 during
a period of high ~llime and
ethnic unrest that led many
Democrats to Oee the party.
With those circumstances
absent this year, the polls so far
show the eventual Democratic
nominee wo~ld easily defeat
either Republican.

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1~800-942 -9577
Gallia County Health
Department
Presents
Women;s Health Month
"Join us and be a W.J .N.N .E.R. "

Customer
AppreCiation Day at
Brown's Insurance,
990 State Route 160,
Friday, September
14, 9am till5pm , food,
fun, soft drinks, stop
in and say hello!

(Women Incorporating Necessary
Nutrition, Exercise &amp; Relaxation.)

A FREE interactive seminar for women
and adolescent girl s. September 10,
2001 6:30p.m . · 8:30p.m.
Gallia County Service Center

Conference Room
RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED
Contact lhe Gallia County Health
Department (740) 441 ·2950

Graham's Upholstery is
looking for .an Individual
interested in learning the
craft of upholstery.
Hours 9-4 Mon. - Fri.
Call for an appointment

FREE Block -Party
· Countryside
Baptist Chapel
Saturday, September 22,
4:00-6:00 p.m. ·

Dinner will be Sat.
Sept. 15th, 2001 at Bob
Evans Shelterhouse,
Rio Grande, at 6:30
p.m. 4-H Fair booth
awards will be
presented.

Live Remote with 40Y FM

Food, games for all ages,
door prizes, lots of fun
things for kids to do,
special music by Earthen
Vessels! Everyone
welcome! Bring the entire
family and your lawn
chairs! Countryside
Baptist Chapel
845 Skidmore Road, Bidwell

Ladies VFW Aux.
4464 meeting and
inspection
Sept. 13 at 7pm.
Please attend.

TO ALL AREA
FIREMEN: with love
and awpreciation, we
would ike to invite you ·
and your families to a
Cook-Out 9-t the
Centena1 United
Methodis Church
located on St. Rt. 141,
Sept. 16, at 6:00p.m.
(740) 446-2323
Will do house
cleaning, excellent
references, excellent
' rates, (7 40) 446-1379

446-1742

•

FOR SALE
Construction material and
tools, Tues. Wed, Thurs.
at 6847 SR 588, Rodney

Holcomb-Shaw
Reunion Sept. 16 at
Mcintyre Park KillDeer Shelter, 1 to 4

Piano's for Sale
Currier, piano and bench, also
a Yamaha, electric piano and
stand (excellent condition).

446-9227

For More Info ...

4

446-2342 or 992-2156

••

•

~~~~~~

with vaulted ceiling, you'll be
with this

kitchen Is
and the den is
with a
custom shelving system: Each
bedroom has Its own bath plus

much,

much

more.

,A

The

stone/brlcl&lt;ldrivet exterior Is
virtulally maintenance free.
,We could go on and on, but
that might spoil it for you. Give
us a call lor a prlvale look al
this rare opportunity. Priced to
sell at $269,900. 12t4

11

ALL SEAsoNs

Muat Seel This beautifully maintained

"~-- has plenty to offer. It has 3 BR's and 1
. This home also has a new metal
heat pump, ell new and Insulated

LT133 Lawn Tractor
•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on·the·go transmission

l~:::~~:~~a:~n:~d:~" new
septic
systGm. Into
It also
building
designed
an
H110.

Interested in selling fast. Call to
.

ol the lineal homea In the county!

• 11'h'· home has 4 bedrooms, 3 112 baths Live
We are very

DEERE FoR

view

l

eJCcited about this outstanding
home. It's roomy, comfortable,
stylish end adaptable.
Features a large, open eat·in
room. Very confortable FR kitchen doslgned for today's
wllh fireplace, large rae room, lifestyles, living room with
deluxe eat in kitchen along vaulted ceiling, fireplace and
wllh formal DR and formal LR, french doors leadi"!g to the
2 story foyer and a second brick polio. 3 BR's up and 2 In
slahway the! makes IKe a linle the basement. 3 full baths.
easler. This home Is . lormal Fantastic basement wllh lots of
enough for diner parties y't living space and lots of storage
casual enough lor everyday space. Highly afflcl&lt;fnt gao·
. Much,
living. Screened porch. 2 car thermal heat
attached
largo 2 car
detacho
Largo
yet
yard. Paved

LX255 Lawn Tractor
• 15-hp engine ·
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

with hard wood floors , a jet tub,
I E~~~erview.
plumb.lng and oak doors $270,000.
l189
Chock thlo oull Located right in townl
I fall In love with this 4 BR, 2 112
home. Call to viowt•187 $140,000
Are you looking for
location? Check out this

·~:~~~~~and
t t/2 baths .
It
all the conveniences
to view 1181

·

family? Well we have the ideal home
with 2 bedrooms and a bath. It sets on t
acre mn. Located In Mercerville. This home
Is priced to sell. Call -to view tl82 Prlct
Ritducad $30,000.00

JS60 Wolk·Behlnd Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die·cast aluminum deck '.
• Seven cutting heights

the many comfort• ond
lconvoinlo•nclo of living In town in this 1 t/2
home with 2 bedrooms and a. bath.

~''~c~om~f~o~~rl,~s

MAKE

THAT A~,~~j~p~~~~ "YOU ,
WHAT · '
MIGHT Bl
I WILL TAKE" WERE THIS OUT
OF TOWN SELLERS EXACT
WORDS. VERY CHARMING 3·
4 BEDROOM HOME WITH INSIDE
AND
OUT.
SUCH A GREAT IN TOWN Conveniently located at 2038
LOCAT ION THAT ' YOU'LL Jackson Pike, this property
WONDER WHAT YOU DID offers formal LA and DR, large
BEFORE . LARGE EAT IN • lamlly room, with beaulllul
KITCHEN , DINING ROOM , custom wet bar den/office 3
LIVING ROOM AND FOYER. 2 BR's &amp; 1.5 baths. 2 ~sr
1/2 BATHS . COUNTYARD detached garage with storage,
TYPE BACK YARD. ASKING beautiful pool area wldecking
$97,500 120t
and nicely lsnilscaped lot.
,
Prlcede at $1 29,900. You've
YOU'LL
BE
REALLY admired it from the road, now
SURPRISED! This land Is call
to
schedule an
term beautiful. Supol view In any appointment 116t3
that Is used a lot these days
direction. ONly minutes from ~~:---:-:-:-:---:-::-:---:­
but in this cas~ really does town in tho heart of Green OUTSTANDING BUILDING
aply. Very nice 3 BA home in a Twp. 27 acres as a whole or S_
ITES From 5.)9 t1 plus acre
quality Green townsh ip spill. Give us a call for more building sites In the heart of
neighborhood with amenities Info. 1225
Green Twp Great views. Some
that usually aren't available at
wooded, some a miJCture of
this priCe. Large family room
woods and pasture and some
with fireplace, 2 full baths,
hilltop. All outstanding. Cfbse
large living room, dining area·
to hospllal. Call for prices and
and more. 2 car garage. Nice
details . 11 t8 ·
lot with back yard· privacy.
$99,000 1234
detallsll1402

Before shopping for your New Address ... stop by ours:

from Gallipol lii. Need a new pla.ce lo slart your
NO. 301

Include a stroll through the
or going to the movies and
within walking distance. For
un•ore lnforma1tlon on this home, Give Allen a
. Aak for 1172

T1 osc Line Trlmmer/Brushcuner
•1.05-hp {19.8 eel M-Saries angina
•15·inch-cutting·swath
• Only 8.51bs
• 2-year consumer warra.ntv

commerclol building Is looking for 1
bualne11 to 1111 Its t760 sq/. ft. Located
tho edge of town . Call for more
Information. Ask lor 1150t2,
For S.ale: Six lots in Walter's Hill
Subdivision. All six lots for )ust $7,500.00
12018 .
Looking far land In a nl~e locatiOn? Just a
miles out of Gallipolis (Groen Twp.), we
2·acre tracts to 6-acre tracts M/L.
water also available. There are some
Call and aak for 112022.
for land? We have ttl Available In
more or less. Public water
Driveways &amp; culverts already
Give Allen a call. 112023.

_40) 446·3644

•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic 1ransmission
·• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn rad[uswith power steering

'

www. JohnDeere com ·

We

hove several 5 acre plus trocto
available lor building thet drum home. All
your utilities are available and each lot has
road frontage. Restricted . Near Holzer
Hospital. Ask for 112028.

N

More Landi We have tt5 acres olland more
less. Located In a nice area. Call to view

$54,000
New Llatlng: Are you looking for a couontrv
settlln;~? This 4 bedroom 3 bath horne
2 acres mil with double layered
lho lront has a 1 car attached
bam and more. Call today and aso&lt;Too

We are alwaya giad to help you Mil or
. buy property. Rental property It lito
1111allable. Gtve ua • call, we can halp.

0 T H I N G

R u

N

s

L

I K E

A

D

JoHN DEERE

E E R E'

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp;.LAWN, INC.

EASt END CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital .
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington~ WV 25703
304•529-3309

-·

you are looking for Investment property
several to offer. Call and ask for Allan.

I

• SST18 Lawn Tractor

Fortlie past 163 years, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, quality, and co~mi.t~ent
to the customer. Stop in to your local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our t1me t.ested_ reltabdtty.
Yliu'll find that our standards haven't changed much over the years. Ask about easy fmancrng optrons
at your participating dealer today.

own business? Call for more de1ails.

PV.I.!Oii'

Meat. drink, table service,
furnished, bring covered dish.

VOl'/

LOCATION+
STYLE+
QUALITY• THIS HOME
Outstanding home from all
viewpoints .• As you walk
through this home, you'll nol
only appreciate the size ollhe
rooms, the quality of malerials
used in construction, and all
the amenitiles thai are offered,
bul also lho livability of tho
hOme. With over 3600 square
feet floor plan, there's plenty of

David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446-0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555 [B '

September 10, 2001
Disabled American
Veterans
Chapter 53 - Members
and Guests
Annual Picnic.• Cheshire
Park at 6:00 p.m.

Support provided by ODH, Bureau off
Health Promotion and Risk Reduction.
Women's Heal1h Section &amp; Ohio AHEC

Annual Landowner
Appreciation

open winding staircase to the
open, yet private, livl'10 room

EASY MATH
Quolhy On Tho Rlverl
Everywhere you . •tum, the
quality of this house Is
evldent...and the design lay·
out takes full advantage of lhe
great view. Offers 3-4 BRs, 2
112 baths, large LR, formal
DR, along with the river. Other
features include custom oak
kitchen, oak trim, hardwood
floors &amp; ovtstanding porches.
Full basement, 2 112 car
garage, lenced yard and Boat
Oockl There's much, much ,
more, · but don't hesllato-won1
last long I $195,000 (1222

New Llatlngl This \!,Ceatures 3
bedrooms,~att-n&lt;ift\
iiiJl a 28 x 311
bulldingl!' · Alcllil'ls' ocated on State
Route 7ilil ll'!o view. 1198
Listing! A 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom
lmc1bii•le home resting on 45 acres of land. If
!You. io''e lhe outdoors this home is perfect for
also offers a metal garage, wash
1nouse, hunting cabin and farm equipment.
for Information. 11197
11.1uat Minutes From Town. This home has' It
bedroom , 2 baths with barn located on
acres on State Route 2t8. $B5,000. Call
lltllll

··· ~

All You Relllly Need To Do Ia
Move Into this lovely brick tri·
level. with a wonderful view of
the countryside. Large formal
LR wllh liroplaco, formal DR,
lower level FR, den, 3 BRs and
3 lull baths, 2+ snachad
garage (currently used
home business...-but could
easily converted back lo
garage use), 26 x 36 deleched
garage with 10' ceilings,
lnground pool wllh privacy
fence and nice patio area.
lovely landscaped 4.26 acre lot.
mil. Pnced at•195,000. 11600

740·385.4367

New Lllllngl Wowl Check out
bedroom, 1 1/2 bathroom Cape Cod
priced at only $t35,900.00 Oon't pass
upl Call to view 11M

.

11 •

.

NEW YORK (AP) - All
sununer long, the &amp;ont~runner
in New York City's Democratic mayoral race was a Harvardeducated, one-time Nader's ·
JU.ider known for his liberal
positions and his fondness for
news conferences.
Then, within two weeks, a
race that seemed to have one
leader, Public Advocate Mark'
Green, and a pack of foll~we"
shifted dramatically.
·
Fernando Ferrer, the 51year-old Bronx borough president who grew up in a fifth(lpor tenement walkup in the
South Bronx, began collecting
a· stnng of h1gh-profile
f!'ldorsements, including that
12f the Rev. AI Sharpton and a
E!'werful union of ·~ospital

&amp;uubal' 1!:nnr11- &amp;rnllnrl • Page 07

BULLETIN BOARD

to go from South Bronx
to New York's City Hall

~t · for"the

LEGAL NOTICE

G

~Hispanic candidate aims

~rkers.

Public Notice

lor a free-standing
t974 Winnebago (Brave).
Good Condition. 53 , 000 _ -,
algn In a General
Call (?40)38S-B4 73
lng, chain link fence, home
The
City
of Commercial District
WA:::::Jo~NG
;:"pa~:;,;~slo~rw"';,'', wo~ Galli poll I will hold a
Planning
t98t Winnebago. 27', load· Unconditional llfellme guar- (304)6 5public hearing on .
7 3733
Comm1111on • Will
ed, 440 Chrysler engine, antee. Local references fur·
Tuesdly, September meet
with
the
great shape, sleeps 5 10 8 nlshed. Eslabilshed tg75.
25, 2001 at 7:00 pm. Progrenlve Planning
7
2
5533
2
( 40199 ·
or (304)S8 · Call 24 HIS. 1740) · 4'16- l l : l l " - : : - - - - : - - , 1n the Municipal
Committee,
an
3318
0870,
.1·800-287-0576.
Eu:cnucAil
Courtroom ,
5t8 advisory committee
Rogers Waterproofing.
n ...........,__, ~·:no~ 1
t995 Winnebago Adventur"""'"""""" ·'
Second
Avenue, to the Planning
er, 34 foot, auto le_vels, - - - - - - - - · - - - - - Gallipolis, Ohio.
Commission, lor a
awnings, good condition, C&amp;C General Home Malnta- Residential or commercial
Case I I • Board of discussion seaslon.
44,000 miles $32,000. nence- Painting, vinyl aid· · wiring, new service or re· zoning AppJ~als {&lt;:
1740) 446- 7602
lng, carpentl'/. dool8, win- pairs. Maatml.lcenaed alec- John sang, Turnpike September 9, 200t
l996 Gul f Stream Stream- dows, baths, mobile home triclan. Ridenour Electrical, Ford, 195 Upper River
Lite' 25 . by travel trailer, repair and more. For tree WV000306, 304-675-1786. Road,
who
Ia
· 1e
call Chef, 740-992·
awn Ing, a1r,
s eps 6 . ·m per· estimate
re~uestlng a variance
feet
condition.
asking 6323.
$7,000::.::(7_;4.:;0).::99:.:2..;·34.;_t_;3_;
. ---------

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

f, With a campaign pledge to

740-446-11*

I

---t991 Suzuki LT250, 4WD,
just rebuilt , good condition, t993 Fish and Ski Boat
asking St ,700. (740)388· Challenger 112 18", Phone
1304)675-2034 or (304)6758822
t204

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

CAMPERS &amp;

M&lt;mlR HOI\mi

6
.

Sunday, Sapt. 9, 2001

'""

'

:~

'Stt d11l1r for det1ils.

•II

\

\

�I,

\

Page 06 • M&gt;uub,W 1Ermr~ - erntinrl ·

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

-

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

Woman rewarded for retuming .S120,000
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -Wanda
Johnson. a siugle mother of five
stw ggling to pay her bills, is getting
a big helpin g hand after she
returned $120,000 in cash that fell
from an

armon.~d

car.

Johnson, 34, was driving to pawn
her television Wedne~day so she
could pay her electric bill when an
armored car turned a corner ahead
of her, spilling a large plastic bag in
the street.
Johnson, picked the money up
and went on to work at her job as a
housek'ee per at Memorial Hosp itaL

SunTrust and the security company sa id they want people to know
that good deeds reap rewards.
'Tb.ough their money is insured
against theft and loss, the policies
come with steep deductibles.
"We wanted to reward and reinforce somebody standing up and
doing the right thing," said SunTrust Savannah President Willian\
D. Haile, who gave Johnson her
che ck for $2,500. " If we can reinforce when people do the right
thing, that money will come baclc.
.
"
'
to us many, many 11mes.
••
•

going to work our'' And he did it,"
Johnson said.
SunTrust gave Johnson $5,000,
half in a check and•the rest deposit-.
ed to an account in her name -for
others to donate on Johnson's
behalf.
. The armored car company, EM
Security of Savannah, gave Johnson
a reward and donated to her
ing a news conference at SunTrust church .The company's chief execuDank. She said she had prayed about tive officer, Richard Estus, declined
her financial troubles, and view~d to name the amounts. '"We gave her
the I&lt;1st money as a test of her faith . at least what the bank gave her," he
" I said, 'How in the world is this said.

Johnso1t, picked the money up and U'et1t
011 to work at her job as a housekeeper at
Memorial Hospital. After work, she went
to lrer pastor's home a11d he encouraged
her to return the .cash.
After wo'rk, she \Vent to her pastor's
honw and he encouraged her to
return the cash.
'' It's really ~II abo ut God, putting
him tim," Johnson said Friday dur-

...

- -Real
-Estate
-- - - -·..General

WOOD
IWLI't
INC
32 LOCUST S'lmT, GAWffiUS, ~0 45631
Allen C.Wood, Broker· 44&amp;-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· 446-0971
Jeanelle Moore,. 256-1745 Patroa

r

t~ I «l
~...-----·d

i~

&amp;

1996 Chevrotet4x4.e)Cten ·

Ii

.

Man:JRcvn""
.

1993

Suzuki

Ka tana,

ad cab, loaded, excellent GSX600, black &amp; blue,
condition, 57 V-8. At.\IFM cams cleaned &amp; naw plugs,

CD,
$14.200
740 4
(
) 4S-4Sao

OBO. now tires. (740)245-5634
2ooo Kawasaki Prairie 400,
2000 tbs. Wam Winch lois
ol oxlras, $4,250, 1740)985·
2000 Chevy 4Jt4 Blazer 39t7
32.000 miles, loaded, Extended Warranty (304 )675- 2000 Sukl Katana GFX
600F, 5500 miles like new.
3052
$4500 (304)576-2668 ·

i

·

BoATS &amp;

·

MaroRS

J.UR SAl.£

I =i;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:;;;;::::::;
r·~
HOME

r

'"to

·--~~
&lt;M""''"~·~"" I.

Public Notice

IMPRo\'El\IENI1i 1 1 t

· &amp;I EMtoriorremodel•
n enor

r

1

.~;;;;A;e:ai~E;s;t:at;e~G:e;n~e~ra;I;;;;~. . . .~;;~R:ea=I~E=s~ta~t~e~e~n=er~a~;;;;..........

REAL ESTATE
St~eee 1943
.

I

'w/approvt!d credi t

Intersec tion of

us 33 &amp; 595
Just South of
Logan.
M·F 8;30·8:00
Sat. 9:00·6:00
Closed Sunday

HOMES
Not The Ponderoaa, eut
Cloaall This Is your
chance to live like Ben &amp; Uttle

Joe! 125 acres surrOUnd large
log home. Wonderful, private
views from all sides. Recently
remodeled · and added onto,
this home features 7 BRa,
including master area with
fireplace &amp; large sitting area, 4
full baths &amp; two hall baths.
Huge FR , 4 fireplaces and
much, much more. lnground
pool, hot tub and more .
Located 7 miles from town.
Priced to move al $295,000.
'2t5

AN
definitely
can easily be
nlo a great
opporlunlly wllh very little
Imagination. Prlvalely sallied
on nearly 7 acres, there Is
room for eJCpanslon . There are
many possibilities for lhe
property in addition to being a
wonderful church . Priced at
$169,900 1120

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled in
!all trees with natural secl u s i on ~ A lovely 2 year
old home on 4 acres more or less. Wrap around
decking and 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hmdwood nooring all oak tr im and solid oak
imerior dooroc; throughout. Large .family room w/
vent less fireplace . A free flowing noor plan of
space &amp; ·functiu n. Pli vatc bedrOO m suite &amp; bath.
Severn! wa lk-in closets, lcirge kit chen with lots

oak cabinets. 1 odditional bedrooms. Basement
an'd detal:hed 2 car garage. NO. 320
.
ONLY $16.!,000.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING SITE
I ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only 5 mi les

1

I

&lt;$ •

'lo

~

New
is a must seal This
beautiful home rests on 5 acres of land mil.
This home also has 5 bedroom s, 2
bathrooms and a two car garage with a
workshop 10 offer. If you art looking for a
with 'lyle and class look no further.
I lo view t1 94.

•

Move up to
atyllot 2 atory.
the
dramatic mart:Jie foyer with an

,. I

•

•

other New York"
:l'- the one populated by
~norities and the poor, the
O;he he says was left behind
11f!ring Republican Mayor·
lt.udolph Giuliani's two terms
&gt;- Ferrer has vaulted to the
~nt ranks just days before
fuesday's Democratic primary.
ft.elected, he Would become
~ew .York's first Hispanic
11~ayo r.

· { ''What's surprising is not that
t$'e endorsements gave him a
Q!lost, but how quickly that
SQ_rge came;· said Fred Siegel, a
Jil.llitical science professor at
t;tooper Union.
':}\ Quinnipiac University
pjill released Tuesday sh&lt;:Jwed
Fhrer - who was mired in
J:jj;t place arhong the four .
major Democratic contenders
~g. 14 - made up 22 points
iitthree weeks and is now in a
tit' with Green. Comptroller
~~n Hevesi and City Council
S!&gt;eaker Peter Vallone are ttailin,g in the Democratic race.
.·On Friday.-a new. Marist poll

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M . FRIDAY 446-2342
Washington Elementary
School presents!
"Meet &amp; Eat withe
Teachers"
Sept. 11
6:30 - 8 pm
Picnic food &amp; baby-sitting
provided

had similar results, showing
Ferrer supported by 30 percent
of the city's likely Democratic
voters and Green backed by 29
percent. Heyesi and Vallone
were well back.A runoff would
be held if the leading vote getter fails to get 40 percent of the
vote.
· Still, the polls show that half
oflikely voters may yet change
th eir minds. And Green,
instandy recognizable fo~. his
shock of white hair and his
stinging barbs, is known as a
tireless campaigner.
Green, 56, is a well- known
figure in New York from his
two earlier, unsuccessful runs
for the U.S. Senate' - and
frqm his eight years as the city's
public advocate, an elective
office in which he essentially .
served as·a government watchdog.
As har.;h as Ferrer has been
in his criticism of Giuliani,
Gre;n has been City Hall's
most dependable critic for
y~an. But mindful that many
voters hold Giuliani in high
regard, Green moderated his
public statements as he held a
double-digit lead in the polls.
For the Republicans, out, numbered 5-to-1 by Democrats in New York, the ·race
ahead looks difficult. Media
entrepreneur
Michael
Bloomberg and former Rep.
Herman Badillo 'Ire seeking
the GOP nomination on Tuesday.
Giuliani, barreCI by term limits &amp;om · seeking re-election,
was first elected in 1993 during
a period of high ~llime and
ethnic unrest that led many
Democrats to Oee the party.
With those circumstances
absent this year, the polls so far
show the eventual Democratic
nominee wo~ld easily defeat
either Republican.

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1~800-942 -9577
Gallia County Health
Department
Presents
Women;s Health Month
"Join us and be a W.J .N.N .E.R. "

Customer
AppreCiation Day at
Brown's Insurance,
990 State Route 160,
Friday, September
14, 9am till5pm , food,
fun, soft drinks, stop
in and say hello!

(Women Incorporating Necessary
Nutrition, Exercise &amp; Relaxation.)

A FREE interactive seminar for women
and adolescent girl s. September 10,
2001 6:30p.m . · 8:30p.m.
Gallia County Service Center

Conference Room
RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED
Contact lhe Gallia County Health
Department (740) 441 ·2950

Graham's Upholstery is
looking for .an Individual
interested in learning the
craft of upholstery.
Hours 9-4 Mon. - Fri.
Call for an appointment

FREE Block -Party
· Countryside
Baptist Chapel
Saturday, September 22,
4:00-6:00 p.m. ·

Dinner will be Sat.
Sept. 15th, 2001 at Bob
Evans Shelterhouse,
Rio Grande, at 6:30
p.m. 4-H Fair booth
awards will be
presented.

Live Remote with 40Y FM

Food, games for all ages,
door prizes, lots of fun
things for kids to do,
special music by Earthen
Vessels! Everyone
welcome! Bring the entire
family and your lawn
chairs! Countryside
Baptist Chapel
845 Skidmore Road, Bidwell

Ladies VFW Aux.
4464 meeting and
inspection
Sept. 13 at 7pm.
Please attend.

TO ALL AREA
FIREMEN: with love
and awpreciation, we
would ike to invite you ·
and your families to a
Cook-Out 9-t the
Centena1 United
Methodis Church
located on St. Rt. 141,
Sept. 16, at 6:00p.m.
(740) 446-2323
Will do house
cleaning, excellent
references, excellent
' rates, (7 40) 446-1379

446-1742

•

FOR SALE
Construction material and
tools, Tues. Wed, Thurs.
at 6847 SR 588, Rodney

Holcomb-Shaw
Reunion Sept. 16 at
Mcintyre Park KillDeer Shelter, 1 to 4

Piano's for Sale
Currier, piano and bench, also
a Yamaha, electric piano and
stand (excellent condition).

446-9227

For More Info ...

4

446-2342 or 992-2156

••

•

~~~~~~

with vaulted ceiling, you'll be
with this

kitchen Is
and the den is
with a
custom shelving system: Each
bedroom has Its own bath plus

much,

much

more.

,A

The

stone/brlcl&lt;ldrivet exterior Is
virtulally maintenance free.
,We could go on and on, but
that might spoil it for you. Give
us a call lor a prlvale look al
this rare opportunity. Priced to
sell at $269,900. 12t4

11

ALL SEAsoNs

Muat Seel This beautifully maintained

"~-- has plenty to offer. It has 3 BR's and 1
. This home also has a new metal
heat pump, ell new and Insulated

LT133 Lawn Tractor
•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on·the·go transmission

l~:::~~:~~a:~n:~d:~" new
septic
systGm. Into
It also
building
designed
an
H110.

Interested in selling fast. Call to
.

ol the lineal homea In the county!

• 11'h'· home has 4 bedrooms, 3 112 baths Live
We are very

DEERE FoR

view

l

eJCcited about this outstanding
home. It's roomy, comfortable,
stylish end adaptable.
Features a large, open eat·in
room. Very confortable FR kitchen doslgned for today's
wllh fireplace, large rae room, lifestyles, living room with
deluxe eat in kitchen along vaulted ceiling, fireplace and
wllh formal DR and formal LR, french doors leadi"!g to the
2 story foyer and a second brick polio. 3 BR's up and 2 In
slahway the! makes IKe a linle the basement. 3 full baths.
easler. This home Is . lormal Fantastic basement wllh lots of
enough for diner parties y't living space and lots of storage
casual enough lor everyday space. Highly afflcl&lt;fnt gao·
. Much,
living. Screened porch. 2 car thermal heat
attached
largo 2 car
detacho
Largo
yet
yard. Paved

LX255 Lawn Tractor
• 15-hp engine ·
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

with hard wood floors , a jet tub,
I E~~~erview.
plumb.lng and oak doors $270,000.
l189
Chock thlo oull Located right in townl
I fall In love with this 4 BR, 2 112
home. Call to viowt•187 $140,000
Are you looking for
location? Check out this

·~:~~~~~and
t t/2 baths .
It
all the conveniences
to view 1181

·

family? Well we have the ideal home
with 2 bedrooms and a bath. It sets on t
acre mn. Located In Mercerville. This home
Is priced to sell. Call -to view tl82 Prlct
Ritducad $30,000.00

JS60 Wolk·Behlnd Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die·cast aluminum deck '.
• Seven cutting heights

the many comfort• ond
lconvoinlo•nclo of living In town in this 1 t/2
home with 2 bedrooms and a. bath.

~''~c~om~f~o~~rl,~s

MAKE

THAT A~,~~j~p~~~~ "YOU ,
WHAT · '
MIGHT Bl
I WILL TAKE" WERE THIS OUT
OF TOWN SELLERS EXACT
WORDS. VERY CHARMING 3·
4 BEDROOM HOME WITH INSIDE
AND
OUT.
SUCH A GREAT IN TOWN Conveniently located at 2038
LOCAT ION THAT ' YOU'LL Jackson Pike, this property
WONDER WHAT YOU DID offers formal LA and DR, large
BEFORE . LARGE EAT IN • lamlly room, with beaulllul
KITCHEN , DINING ROOM , custom wet bar den/office 3
LIVING ROOM AND FOYER. 2 BR's &amp; 1.5 baths. 2 ~sr
1/2 BATHS . COUNTYARD detached garage with storage,
TYPE BACK YARD. ASKING beautiful pool area wldecking
$97,500 120t
and nicely lsnilscaped lot.
,
Prlcede at $1 29,900. You've
YOU'LL
BE
REALLY admired it from the road, now
SURPRISED! This land Is call
to
schedule an
term beautiful. Supol view In any appointment 116t3
that Is used a lot these days
direction. ONly minutes from ~~:---:-:-:-:---:-::-:---:­
but in this cas~ really does town in tho heart of Green OUTSTANDING BUILDING
aply. Very nice 3 BA home in a Twp. 27 acres as a whole or S_
ITES From 5.)9 t1 plus acre
quality Green townsh ip spill. Give us a call for more building sites In the heart of
neighborhood with amenities Info. 1225
Green Twp Great views. Some
that usually aren't available at
wooded, some a miJCture of
this priCe. Large family room
woods and pasture and some
with fireplace, 2 full baths,
hilltop. All outstanding. Cfbse
large living room, dining area·
to hospllal. Call for prices and
and more. 2 car garage. Nice
details . 11 t8 ·
lot with back yard· privacy.
$99,000 1234
detallsll1402

Before shopping for your New Address ... stop by ours:

from Gallipol lii. Need a new pla.ce lo slart your
NO. 301

Include a stroll through the
or going to the movies and
within walking distance. For
un•ore lnforma1tlon on this home, Give Allen a
. Aak for 1172

T1 osc Line Trlmmer/Brushcuner
•1.05-hp {19.8 eel M-Saries angina
•15·inch-cutting·swath
• Only 8.51bs
• 2-year consumer warra.ntv

commerclol building Is looking for 1
bualne11 to 1111 Its t760 sq/. ft. Located
tho edge of town . Call for more
Information. Ask lor 1150t2,
For S.ale: Six lots in Walter's Hill
Subdivision. All six lots for )ust $7,500.00
12018 .
Looking far land In a nl~e locatiOn? Just a
miles out of Gallipolis (Groen Twp.), we
2·acre tracts to 6-acre tracts M/L.
water also available. There are some
Call and aak for 112022.
for land? We have ttl Available In
more or less. Public water
Driveways &amp; culverts already
Give Allen a call. 112023.

_40) 446·3644

•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic 1ransmission
·• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn rad[uswith power steering

'

www. JohnDeere com ·

We

hove several 5 acre plus trocto
available lor building thet drum home. All
your utilities are available and each lot has
road frontage. Restricted . Near Holzer
Hospital. Ask for 112028.

N

More Landi We have tt5 acres olland more
less. Located In a nice area. Call to view

$54,000
New Llatlng: Are you looking for a couontrv
settlln;~? This 4 bedroom 3 bath horne
2 acres mil with double layered
lho lront has a 1 car attached
bam and more. Call today and aso&lt;Too

We are alwaya giad to help you Mil or
. buy property. Rental property It lito
1111allable. Gtve ua • call, we can halp.

0 T H I N G

R u

N

s

L

I K E

A

D

JoHN DEERE

E E R E'

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp;.LAWN, INC.

EASt END CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital .
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington~ WV 25703
304•529-3309

-·

you are looking for Investment property
several to offer. Call and ask for Allan.

I

• SST18 Lawn Tractor

Fortlie past 163 years, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, quality, and co~mi.t~ent
to the customer. Stop in to your local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our t1me t.ested_ reltabdtty.
Yliu'll find that our standards haven't changed much over the years. Ask about easy fmancrng optrons
at your participating dealer today.

own business? Call for more de1ails.

PV.I.!Oii'

Meat. drink, table service,
furnished, bring covered dish.

VOl'/

LOCATION+
STYLE+
QUALITY• THIS HOME
Outstanding home from all
viewpoints .• As you walk
through this home, you'll nol
only appreciate the size ollhe
rooms, the quality of malerials
used in construction, and all
the amenitiles thai are offered,
bul also lho livability of tho
hOme. With over 3600 square
feet floor plan, there's plenty of

David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446-0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555 [B '

September 10, 2001
Disabled American
Veterans
Chapter 53 - Members
and Guests
Annual Picnic.• Cheshire
Park at 6:00 p.m.

Support provided by ODH, Bureau off
Health Promotion and Risk Reduction.
Women's Heal1h Section &amp; Ohio AHEC

Annual Landowner
Appreciation

open winding staircase to the
open, yet private, livl'10 room

EASY MATH
Quolhy On Tho Rlverl
Everywhere you . •tum, the
quality of this house Is
evldent...and the design lay·
out takes full advantage of lhe
great view. Offers 3-4 BRs, 2
112 baths, large LR, formal
DR, along with the river. Other
features include custom oak
kitchen, oak trim, hardwood
floors &amp; ovtstanding porches.
Full basement, 2 112 car
garage, lenced yard and Boat
Oockl There's much, much ,
more, · but don't hesllato-won1
last long I $195,000 (1222

New Llatlngl This \!,Ceatures 3
bedrooms,~att-n&lt;ift\
iiiJl a 28 x 311
bulldingl!' · Alcllil'ls' ocated on State
Route 7ilil ll'!o view. 1198
Listing! A 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom
lmc1bii•le home resting on 45 acres of land. If
!You. io''e lhe outdoors this home is perfect for
also offers a metal garage, wash
1nouse, hunting cabin and farm equipment.
for Information. 11197
11.1uat Minutes From Town. This home has' It
bedroom , 2 baths with barn located on
acres on State Route 2t8. $B5,000. Call
lltllll

··· ~

All You Relllly Need To Do Ia
Move Into this lovely brick tri·
level. with a wonderful view of
the countryside. Large formal
LR wllh liroplaco, formal DR,
lower level FR, den, 3 BRs and
3 lull baths, 2+ snachad
garage (currently used
home business...-but could
easily converted back lo
garage use), 26 x 36 deleched
garage with 10' ceilings,
lnground pool wllh privacy
fence and nice patio area.
lovely landscaped 4.26 acre lot.
mil. Pnced at•195,000. 11600

740·385.4367

New Lllllngl Wowl Check out
bedroom, 1 1/2 bathroom Cape Cod
priced at only $t35,900.00 Oon't pass
upl Call to view 11M

.

11 •

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NEW YORK (AP) - All
sununer long, the &amp;ont~runner
in New York City's Democratic mayoral race was a Harvardeducated, one-time Nader's ·
JU.ider known for his liberal
positions and his fondness for
news conferences.
Then, within two weeks, a
race that seemed to have one
leader, Public Advocate Mark'
Green, and a pack of foll~we"
shifted dramatically.
·
Fernando Ferrer, the 51year-old Bronx borough president who grew up in a fifth(lpor tenement walkup in the
South Bronx, began collecting
a· stnng of h1gh-profile
f!'ldorsements, including that
12f the Rev. AI Sharpton and a
E!'werful union of ·~ospital

&amp;uubal' 1!:nnr11- &amp;rnllnrl • Page 07

BULLETIN BOARD

to go from South Bronx
to New York's City Hall

~t · for"the

LEGAL NOTICE

G

~Hispanic candidate aims

~rkers.

Public Notice

lor a free-standing
t974 Winnebago (Brave).
Good Condition. 53 , 000 _ -,
algn In a General
Call (?40)38S-B4 73
lng, chain link fence, home
The
City
of Commercial District
WA:::::Jo~NG
;:"pa~:;,;~slo~rw"';,'', wo~ Galli poll I will hold a
Planning
t98t Winnebago. 27', load· Unconditional llfellme guar- (304)6 5public hearing on .
7 3733
Comm1111on • Will
ed, 440 Chrysler engine, antee. Local references fur·
Tuesdly, September meet
with
the
great shape, sleeps 5 10 8 nlshed. Eslabilshed tg75.
25, 2001 at 7:00 pm. Progrenlve Planning
7
2
5533
2
( 40199 ·
or (304)S8 · Call 24 HIS. 1740) · 4'16- l l : l l " - : : - - - - : - - , 1n the Municipal
Committee,
an
3318
0870,
.1·800-287-0576.
Eu:cnucAil
Courtroom ,
5t8 advisory committee
Rogers Waterproofing.
n ...........,__, ~·:no~ 1
t995 Winnebago Adventur"""'"""""" ·'
Second
Avenue, to the Planning
er, 34 foot, auto le_vels, - - - - - - - - · - - - - - Gallipolis, Ohio.
Commission, lor a
awnings, good condition, C&amp;C General Home Malnta- Residential or commercial
Case I I • Board of discussion seaslon.
44,000 miles $32,000. nence- Painting, vinyl aid· · wiring, new service or re· zoning AppJ~als {&lt;:
1740) 446- 7602
lng, carpentl'/. dool8, win- pairs. Maatml.lcenaed alec- John sang, Turnpike September 9, 200t
l996 Gul f Stream Stream- dows, baths, mobile home triclan. Ridenour Electrical, Ford, 195 Upper River
Lite' 25 . by travel trailer, repair and more. For tree WV000306, 304-675-1786. Road,
who
Ia
· 1e
call Chef, 740-992·
awn Ing, a1r,
s eps 6 . ·m per· estimate
re~uestlng a variance
feet
condition.
asking 6323.
$7,000::.::(7_;4.:;0).::99:.:2..;·34.;_t_;3_;
. ---------

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

f, With a campaign pledge to

740-446-11*

I

---t991 Suzuki LT250, 4WD,
just rebuilt , good condition, t993 Fish and Ski Boat
asking St ,700. (740)388· Challenger 112 18", Phone
1304)675-2034 or (304)6758822
t204

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

CAMPERS &amp;

M&lt;mlR HOI\mi

6
.

Sunday, Sapt. 9, 2001

'""

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'Stt d11l1r for det1ils.

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pteasanr,' wv

Page 08 • lilunba!' ~mtrll·li&gt;rntmrl

Kileen
from PageD1
4 p.m. on Thursday.

Paw Festival.
Chris Chmeil of lntegcatc~ Acres has spearheaded this event to educate the
local populace in the value
of raising and harvesting
paw paws for the consumer
marke't\Paw paws are our
nation's largest native fruit.
This late summer and early
fall fruit were used by
Native· American Indians
and early settlers.
Its nutrition value is in its
high concentration ofVitamin C, riboflavin and
niacin. Whether eaten. fresh
like a banana or prepared
into muffins or 1ce cream,
the · festival highlights a
great locally grown product, cou ntry music and
crafts me n making rope,
weaving and tin products.
The festival is being held
at Lake Snowden , located
along U.S. 32 from .1 0 a.m .
to 7 p.m. Check out the .
web
site
at
0h

Smith
from Page Dl

mininoum amount "'quired by
the IRS).
• Any non-deductible conmbutions that were made to
the IRA are withdrawn on a
pro-rated 'ba&lt;is, and that portion of your withdrawal wiU
not be subject to ordinary
income tax or a ten percent
penalty.
Three I R.S-approved methods are called life expectanty,
amortization and annuity. First,
with the li f~ expectancy
method, you may use either a
single or joint life expectancy. If
joint life is used, the co-payee
must be the pcimary beneficiary of yolir acc&lt;;&gt;unt. The life
expectancy method usually
results in the lowest amount
you can withdraw from your
. account, an amount that will
increase annually.
TI1e second method, amortization, usually translates to a
larger withdrawal. It uses the
same type of calculations as you
would use to figure a home
mortgage. Unlike the life
expectancy method, the amortization method projects equal
amounts to be withdrawn over
the required period.

penalty free :
• Withdrawals can be taken
Have you noticed the
monthly, quarterly or annually.
giant caterpillars appearing
But, once you begin malcing
and eating the leaves of
penalty-free withdrawals, you
catalpa, walnuts, oaks and '
must continue making them
hickory?
umil you either reach age 59:
Mr. Yonker of Rock
1/2 or for a period of five conSprings came to the Extensecutive years - whichever is
sion Office to show me a
longeE
large, five-inch blue green
• The amount withdrawn
catcrpilla·r with four sets of
must be calculated using one of
dangerous looking horns.
the three metho&lt;ls approved by
This almost mature caterth&lt;" IRS.
pillar was identified as a
• Once a method is chosen, it
hickory -horned
devil
cannot be changed throughout
caterpillar.
the distribution period . If it is
After a few more days of
changed, you will be charged
eating, this
cate rpillar
the ten percent penalty retroacwould seek a hole in the
tively to all distributions taken
~oil to pupate into its restbefore age 59-112 so,
ing stage ·o nly to reappear
choose your method carefully.
next spring as a Royal Wal• After completing the withnut, Moth. Several other
drawals for the required time
caterpillars will be noticeperiod, you have the option to
iopawpaw.or~.
discontinue the distribution ·
able if you check the plants
•••
around you. Tobacco hornschedule and withdraw the
worms, either the Carolina
Remember to stop by money at your leisure (or until
S
the Sixth Big Bend Town
Sphinx moth or Five pot- and Country Expo b-eing you reach age 70-1/2 when
ted Hawk moth, appear on
you must begin withdrawing a .
tobacco plants.
held the same weekend,
The Catalpaworm larvae Sept. IS and 16 at the
(Catalpa Sphinx Moth) has Meigs
Country
Fairhad its second generation grounds from I 0 a.m. to 7
of larvae emerge and is p.m . on• Saturday and I 0
quickly eating the large a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
catalpa tree leaves. Several
Discover all the reasons
COMETO
'
fishermen have stated they you remain or moved into
used it as bait when they this · regiop through the
were young.
activities, demonstrations,
All · of these caterpillars businesses, skills, music and
should be left alone, as organizations on display for
Brakes, Shocks, Struts
their numbers are limited your enjoyment.
and so · is their damage.
Horticultural entries are
Engine Diagnosis, Tune-ups, Oil Changes
Most trees have stored suf- still
being
accepted
We sell all major tire brands,
ficient energy to resprout through Saturday morning
185-70-14, 185-75-14, 195-70.14, 195-75-14
out next spring. The at 10 a:m. at the Senior
Extension Office has infor- Fair Building. For further
These sizes this week Special
mation on these ''Monster information call the exten- ,.
each Includes mounting and computer balance
Caterpillars." Ask for fact . sion office at 992-6696.
sheet 2015-95.
Admission is free.
IN~.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs
•••
1/4 mile down river frotn Pomeroy Bridge
County's
Extension agent for
Looking for places to
992-4484 or 992-3011
and
natural
visit and things to do? agriculture
Drive to Albany on Sept. resources, .Ohio State Univer1
·
15 to attend the Ohio Paw sity.)

•••

Car Problems?•••
No Problem

JO~ e(Ul-e Ooeto~~ lAIC.

''Good Honest People"

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

.,1 8
Matu
1

from Page Dl
Aging District 7, Inc. also was
recognized in this award.
During Marura's tenure, the
Area Agency has become one
of the largest rural area agencies in the United States. This
agency covers 5,120 miles in
southern Ohio. District 7
serves older adults in th e following counties: Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,

Byrnes
from Page Dl
some very mild, and others
practically unbelievable.
How much of this difference is due to personal perspective? Reaction and toler-

Scioto, and Vinton.
The agency's PASSP~R.T
.progratns, which includel
PASSPORT, Care Coocdination and the Residential State
Supplement Programs, serve
more than 3,000 homecare
clients. The Ombudsman piogram . division oversees 57
' nursing
homes
(4,204
beds), 13 Assisted Living
Homes (737 beds), and 69
Adult Care Facilities and VA
Homes (682 beds).
· · . This year's edition will be
registered at the Library of
Congress in Washington, D. C,.

Area Television Listings For The Week
. . . . . .ber 9, 2001 - September 15, 2001
'

ance play only a minor role.
This article is geared towards
those with the unbelievably
· bad infestations and to those
with extremely low toleranc~
to lady beetles.
:
aennifer L. Bymts is Gallih
County s Extension agent fo•
· agriculture· and natuml resoun:e!&lt;
Ohio State University.)

.

The Sunday Times:.Sentinel And The Point Pleasant

TV
Crossword

·TV Pipe Line
I Page3 I

5d- ~~'f4411Ut'­

I Page 5

~~ft,

Soap Talk

Today's
Homes

I Page 3 I
Saturday, September 15,2001
All Day- Free Admissioo
- Uue music
- Pig Roast
- Chain Saw Caruer
- magician
- food 6 .Drinks

-Dunking Booth
-Big Bend Cloggers
-IUddle Tractor Pun
- Arts 6 Crafts
- Karaoke Contest

Page6

CBS's
Wolfe Lake
May TurnOut
Loopy, Not Lupine

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I

*38.98

·WB's
Maybe It's Me
A Smart Surprise

CAR CARE DOCTORS,

SRSO&amp;US7

..Jl \\•u

...
'

f

· Coolville, Ohio

1

Biography of Natalie Wood makes for insightful reading

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I Page 4 I

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Advice On
Home
Repairs·

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By TARA BURGHART
tnarried Robert Wagner, the man she had predicted would be rebellious teens.
Associated Press Wrher
her husband after she passed him ·on the Fox lot when she
The book makes the case that Wood was one of the
."Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood" (Harmony, 454 was only 11.
last great studio stars, with the studio dictating whom she
pages, $25) by Suzanne Finstad.
· Even h~r death was dramatic. She had a lifelong fear of dated, what pictures she made and how she dressed. And
If a screenplay were written about Natalie Wood's life, dark water, . caused by her mother's superstitions and by it details how she struggled with this as well, veering
moviemakers would probably tum it down as too dramatic several movie stunts that went awry, and drowned at night in between wanting to be the star her mother groomed her to
to be plausible.
·
1981 at age 42 under tnysterious circutnstances that Finstad be and a serious actress who worked with directors
But her life makes for an .insightful, haunting, page- spends 43 pages trying to unravel.
including her idol, Elia Kazan.
turner of a book as wrilleiJ by Suzanne Finstad.
Finstad's heavily researched book (she interviewed
"Her role as James Dean's girlfriend in 'Rebel Withqut a
Born Natasha GurClin, the actress known as Natalie almost 400 friends, co-workers and family members, but not Cause' not only established Natalie as a mature actress,
Wood was pushed into acting .at age 4 by a Russian Wagner) focuses on Wood's dual identity - as the sweet she suddenly became her generation's idealized teen-age
ltntnlgrant stage mother so desperate to turn her child into a Natasha who longed firs! to be a normal high-schooler and girl," Finstad writes. "She felt pressure, in public, to become
Hollywood star thai she tortured a b~:~l)erfly to make her cty later a mother and wife, and as Natalie Wood, the mink· the airbrushed fantasy figure smiling from the pages of fan
on cue.
draped, sophisticated star who suffered frotn crippling magazines, to please everyone, to be perfect ... to look
Her mother succeeded and by the time Wood was 24, phobias and never left the house without a full face of beautiful at all times, to be a star."
·
she had starred ih classics iflcluding "Miracle on 34th makeup. .
·
Ultimately, the book is an examination of an extremely
Street," "Rebel Without a Cause," "Splendor in the Grass,"
Finstad tends to rely on the Natasha-Natalie metaphor a talented and intelligent, yet vulnerable, woman whose life
"West Side Story" and "Gypsy."
bit much, and the book can be slow in the beginning- when was mapped.out for her long before she was old enough to
The men in her life included Frank Sinatra, Raymond the spotlight is really on Wood's disturbed, controlling mother have a choice.
Burr, Elvis Presley and Warren Beatty, and twice she· - but it picks up as soon as Wood hits her surprisingly

Our Name Says It All!!

Here's how to fin4 the entire 'I Love _Lucy' collection ort tape
•

By DICK
and CHICK! KLEINER
Newspaper Enterprise Association
0: I love "I Love Lucy." with Lucille Ball. Where can I get
videos of all of the episodes?- J .M.G., Bloomington, Ill.
A: The entire "I Love Lucy" collection is available
'through Movies Unlimited, which can be reached at (BOO) 4MOVIES, or http://www.moviesunlimited.com. ,
0: Will Anthony Hopkins ever play Hannibal Lecter
again?- P.K., Winston-Salem, N.C.
"
A: Yes. Ther are going to make a movie based on
Thomas Harris' Red Dragon" (Dell, 1990), the book that
introduced Lecter. Edward Norton will co-star.
0: I saw a very handsotne actor name~\ Kevin Dobson

on a made-lor-TV tnovle called "A House Of Secrets and
Lies ." What's he doing now? Hll.s he ever been on a TV
series? - D.J ., Little Rock, Ark.
•
A: Dobson, a professional actor, is looking for work. His
previous claim to fame was as Sgt. Bobby Crocker on
"Kojak." His tnost recent role is in the 2001 release "She's No
Angel."
. 0 : I love the movie "Imitation of Life." Can you please tell
me the name of the star who played the daughter of the maid
who worked ·at Lana Turner's hotne? - V.E., Saginaw, Mich.
A: That was Susan Kohner.
•
0: Could director-producer' Mark Rydell (rece ntly of
"James Dean") possibly be the same Mark Rydell who played
Jeff Baker on "As the World Turns" about 40-some years

ago?- P.F., Bristol, Tenn.
A: They are one and the same. Rydell was an actor
before he became a director-producer. He played the role
of Jeff Baker from 1956 to 1962.
0 : I have not been able to find out where the movie
"Hud," starring Paul Newman, was filmed. I have that 1963
film taped , but I have no way of knowing whether the little
town in the film is in Texas.- T.N., Bloomington, Ill.
A: Yes, that movie was filmed in and around several
small Texas towns.
..
.
(Send your questions to : Ask Dick Kleiner, c/o
Newspaper Enterprise Association, 200 Madison Ave., New
YotR, N.Y. 10016. Due t6 the volume of mail , personal
replies cannot be provided.)

... dPS . . . . . . Oeriltl 3

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pteasanr,' wv

Page 08 • lilunba!' ~mtrll·li&gt;rntmrl

Kileen
from PageD1
4 p.m. on Thursday.

Paw Festival.
Chris Chmeil of lntegcatc~ Acres has spearheaded this event to educate the
local populace in the value
of raising and harvesting
paw paws for the consumer
marke't\Paw paws are our
nation's largest native fruit.
This late summer and early
fall fruit were used by
Native· American Indians
and early settlers.
Its nutrition value is in its
high concentration ofVitamin C, riboflavin and
niacin. Whether eaten. fresh
like a banana or prepared
into muffins or 1ce cream,
the · festival highlights a
great locally grown product, cou ntry music and
crafts me n making rope,
weaving and tin products.
The festival is being held
at Lake Snowden , located
along U.S. 32 from .1 0 a.m .
to 7 p.m. Check out the .
web
site
at
0h

Smith
from Page Dl

mininoum amount "'quired by
the IRS).
• Any non-deductible conmbutions that were made to
the IRA are withdrawn on a
pro-rated 'ba&lt;is, and that portion of your withdrawal wiU
not be subject to ordinary
income tax or a ten percent
penalty.
Three I R.S-approved methods are called life expectanty,
amortization and annuity. First,
with the li f~ expectancy
method, you may use either a
single or joint life expectancy. If
joint life is used, the co-payee
must be the pcimary beneficiary of yolir acc&lt;;&gt;unt. The life
expectancy method usually
results in the lowest amount
you can withdraw from your
. account, an amount that will
increase annually.
TI1e second method, amortization, usually translates to a
larger withdrawal. It uses the
same type of calculations as you
would use to figure a home
mortgage. Unlike the life
expectancy method, the amortization method projects equal
amounts to be withdrawn over
the required period.

penalty free :
• Withdrawals can be taken
Have you noticed the
monthly, quarterly or annually.
giant caterpillars appearing
But, once you begin malcing
and eating the leaves of
penalty-free withdrawals, you
catalpa, walnuts, oaks and '
must continue making them
hickory?
umil you either reach age 59:
Mr. Yonker of Rock
1/2 or for a period of five conSprings came to the Extensecutive years - whichever is
sion Office to show me a
longeE
large, five-inch blue green
• The amount withdrawn
catcrpilla·r with four sets of
must be calculated using one of
dangerous looking horns.
the three metho&lt;ls approved by
This almost mature caterth&lt;" IRS.
pillar was identified as a
• Once a method is chosen, it
hickory -horned
devil
cannot be changed throughout
caterpillar.
the distribution period . If it is
After a few more days of
changed, you will be charged
eating, this
cate rpillar
the ten percent penalty retroacwould seek a hole in the
tively to all distributions taken
~oil to pupate into its restbefore age 59-112 so,
ing stage ·o nly to reappear
choose your method carefully.
next spring as a Royal Wal• After completing the withnut, Moth. Several other
drawals for the required time
caterpillars will be noticeperiod, you have the option to
iopawpaw.or~.
discontinue the distribution ·
able if you check the plants
•••
around you. Tobacco hornschedule and withdraw the
worms, either the Carolina
Remember to stop by money at your leisure (or until
S
the Sixth Big Bend Town
Sphinx moth or Five pot- and Country Expo b-eing you reach age 70-1/2 when
ted Hawk moth, appear on
you must begin withdrawing a .
tobacco plants.
held the same weekend,
The Catalpaworm larvae Sept. IS and 16 at the
(Catalpa Sphinx Moth) has Meigs
Country
Fairhad its second generation grounds from I 0 a.m. to 7
of larvae emerge and is p.m . on• Saturday and I 0
quickly eating the large a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
catalpa tree leaves. Several
Discover all the reasons
COMETO
'
fishermen have stated they you remain or moved into
used it as bait when they this · regiop through the
were young.
activities, demonstrations,
All · of these caterpillars businesses, skills, music and
should be left alone, as organizations on display for
Brakes, Shocks, Struts
their numbers are limited your enjoyment.
and so · is their damage.
Horticultural entries are
Engine Diagnosis, Tune-ups, Oil Changes
Most trees have stored suf- still
being
accepted
We sell all major tire brands,
ficient energy to resprout through Saturday morning
185-70-14, 185-75-14, 195-70.14, 195-75-14
out next spring. The at 10 a:m. at the Senior
Extension Office has infor- Fair Building. For further
These sizes this week Special
mation on these ''Monster information call the exten- ,.
each Includes mounting and computer balance
Caterpillars." Ask for fact . sion office at 992-6696.
sheet 2015-95.
Admission is free.
IN~.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs
•••
1/4 mile down river frotn Pomeroy Bridge
County's
Extension agent for
Looking for places to
992-4484 or 992-3011
and
natural
visit and things to do? agriculture
Drive to Albany on Sept. resources, .Ohio State Univer1
·
15 to attend the Ohio Paw sity.)

•••

Car Problems?•••
No Problem

JO~ e(Ul-e Ooeto~~ lAIC.

''Good Honest People"

Sunday, Sept. 9, 2001

.,1 8
Matu
1

from Page Dl
Aging District 7, Inc. also was
recognized in this award.
During Marura's tenure, the
Area Agency has become one
of the largest rural area agencies in the United States. This
agency covers 5,120 miles in
southern Ohio. District 7
serves older adults in th e following counties: Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,

Byrnes
from Page Dl
some very mild, and others
practically unbelievable.
How much of this difference is due to personal perspective? Reaction and toler-

Scioto, and Vinton.
The agency's PASSP~R.T
.progratns, which includel
PASSPORT, Care Coocdination and the Residential State
Supplement Programs, serve
more than 3,000 homecare
clients. The Ombudsman piogram . division oversees 57
' nursing
homes
(4,204
beds), 13 Assisted Living
Homes (737 beds), and 69
Adult Care Facilities and VA
Homes (682 beds).
· · . This year's edition will be
registered at the Library of
Congress in Washington, D. C,.

Area Television Listings For The Week
. . . . . .ber 9, 2001 - September 15, 2001
'

ance play only a minor role.
This article is geared towards
those with the unbelievably
· bad infestations and to those
with extremely low toleranc~
to lady beetles.
:
aennifer L. Bymts is Gallih
County s Extension agent fo•
· agriculture· and natuml resoun:e!&lt;
Ohio State University.)

.

The Sunday Times:.Sentinel And The Point Pleasant

TV
Crossword

·TV Pipe Line
I Page3 I

5d- ~~'f4411Ut'­

I Page 5

~~ft,

Soap Talk

Today's
Homes

I Page 3 I
Saturday, September 15,2001
All Day- Free Admissioo
- Uue music
- Pig Roast
- Chain Saw Caruer
- magician
- food 6 .Drinks

-Dunking Booth
-Big Bend Cloggers
-IUddle Tractor Pun
- Arts 6 Crafts
- Karaoke Contest

Page6

CBS's
Wolfe Lake
May TurnOut
Loopy, Not Lupine

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I

*38.98

·WB's
Maybe It's Me
A Smart Surprise

CAR CARE DOCTORS,

SRSO&amp;US7

..Jl \\•u

...
'

f

· Coolville, Ohio

1

Biography of Natalie Wood makes for insightful reading

i

.

"

'

~

.I Page 6 I

I Page 4 I

: •. '

I

Advice On
Home
Repairs·

'

I .~

By TARA BURGHART
tnarried Robert Wagner, the man she had predicted would be rebellious teens.
Associated Press Wrher
her husband after she passed him ·on the Fox lot when she
The book makes the case that Wood was one of the
."Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood" (Harmony, 454 was only 11.
last great studio stars, with the studio dictating whom she
pages, $25) by Suzanne Finstad.
· Even h~r death was dramatic. She had a lifelong fear of dated, what pictures she made and how she dressed. And
If a screenplay were written about Natalie Wood's life, dark water, . caused by her mother's superstitions and by it details how she struggled with this as well, veering
moviemakers would probably tum it down as too dramatic several movie stunts that went awry, and drowned at night in between wanting to be the star her mother groomed her to
to be plausible.
·
1981 at age 42 under tnysterious circutnstances that Finstad be and a serious actress who worked with directors
But her life makes for an .insightful, haunting, page- spends 43 pages trying to unravel.
including her idol, Elia Kazan.
turner of a book as wrilleiJ by Suzanne Finstad.
Finstad's heavily researched book (she interviewed
"Her role as James Dean's girlfriend in 'Rebel Withqut a
Born Natasha GurClin, the actress known as Natalie almost 400 friends, co-workers and family members, but not Cause' not only established Natalie as a mature actress,
Wood was pushed into acting .at age 4 by a Russian Wagner) focuses on Wood's dual identity - as the sweet she suddenly became her generation's idealized teen-age
ltntnlgrant stage mother so desperate to turn her child into a Natasha who longed firs! to be a normal high-schooler and girl," Finstad writes. "She felt pressure, in public, to become
Hollywood star thai she tortured a b~:~l)erfly to make her cty later a mother and wife, and as Natalie Wood, the mink· the airbrushed fantasy figure smiling from the pages of fan
on cue.
draped, sophisticated star who suffered frotn crippling magazines, to please everyone, to be perfect ... to look
Her mother succeeded and by the time Wood was 24, phobias and never left the house without a full face of beautiful at all times, to be a star."
·
she had starred ih classics iflcluding "Miracle on 34th makeup. .
·
Ultimately, the book is an examination of an extremely
Street," "Rebel Without a Cause," "Splendor in the Grass,"
Finstad tends to rely on the Natasha-Natalie metaphor a talented and intelligent, yet vulnerable, woman whose life
"West Side Story" and "Gypsy."
bit much, and the book can be slow in the beginning- when was mapped.out for her long before she was old enough to
The men in her life included Frank Sinatra, Raymond the spotlight is really on Wood's disturbed, controlling mother have a choice.
Burr, Elvis Presley and Warren Beatty, and twice she· - but it picks up as soon as Wood hits her surprisingly

Our Name Says It All!!

Here's how to fin4 the entire 'I Love _Lucy' collection ort tape
•

By DICK
and CHICK! KLEINER
Newspaper Enterprise Association
0: I love "I Love Lucy." with Lucille Ball. Where can I get
videos of all of the episodes?- J .M.G., Bloomington, Ill.
A: The entire "I Love Lucy" collection is available
'through Movies Unlimited, which can be reached at (BOO) 4MOVIES, or http://www.moviesunlimited.com. ,
0: Will Anthony Hopkins ever play Hannibal Lecter
again?- P.K., Winston-Salem, N.C.
"
A: Yes. Ther are going to make a movie based on
Thomas Harris' Red Dragon" (Dell, 1990), the book that
introduced Lecter. Edward Norton will co-star.
0: I saw a very handsotne actor name~\ Kevin Dobson

on a made-lor-TV tnovle called "A House Of Secrets and
Lies ." What's he doing now? Hll.s he ever been on a TV
series? - D.J ., Little Rock, Ark.
•
A: Dobson, a professional actor, is looking for work. His
previous claim to fame was as Sgt. Bobby Crocker on
"Kojak." His tnost recent role is in the 2001 release "She's No
Angel."
. 0 : I love the movie "Imitation of Life." Can you please tell
me the name of the star who played the daughter of the maid
who worked ·at Lana Turner's hotne? - V.E., Saginaw, Mich.
A: That was Susan Kohner.
•
0: Could director-producer' Mark Rydell (rece ntly of
"James Dean") possibly be the same Mark Rydell who played
Jeff Baker on "As the World Turns" about 40-some years

ago?- P.F., Bristol, Tenn.
A: They are one and the same. Rydell was an actor
before he became a director-producer. He played the role
of Jeff Baker from 1956 to 1962.
0 : I have not been able to find out where the movie
"Hud," starring Paul Newman, was filmed. I have that 1963
film taped , but I have no way of knowing whether the little
town in the film is in Texas.- T.N., Bloomington, Ill.
A: Yes, that movie was filmed in and around several
small Texas towns.
..
.
(Send your questions to : Ask Dick Kleiner, c/o
Newspaper Enterprise Association, 200 Madison Ave., New
YotR, N.Y. 10016. Due t6 the volume of mail , personal
replies cannot be provided.)

... dPS . . . . . . Oeriltl 3

.., tOCa•taaa, ... tta.uu
·"'··~·~

~I · '~~~ ~···

i

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••

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~
'

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~

.I

'i

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�-

PAGE THREE

PAGE TWO

I MONDAY

!SUNDAY

SEPTEMBER 10 I
Brenneman was arresting on Blue
By Taylor Michaela
OTVOata Features Syndicate

Q: What did Amy Brenne-

"lan do before Judging Amy?
I don't retail hearing or her
before this show. -Clyde
Buntting, Burton. Mirh.

MoNDAY

Amy Brenneman
A: A graduate of Harvard, the
stage- trained Brenneman made
her TV series debut in the shortlived 1992 CBS drama Middle
Ages, but really captured viewers and critics with her performance t\S Officer Janice Licalsi
in NYPD Blue, a ro le that
brought her two Emmy nominations.

She also has starred in the
films Casper: Bye Bye, Lave;
Fear,· A.T.F;. and Your Friends
&amp; Neighbors, among others.
Q: Has the sho\" CleopiJiril
2525 been canceled, or will It
return

Ron Dixon and the New York Giants head west to
meet the Denver Broncos on their home turf In NFL
action Monday on ABC.

I SUNDAY

ITUESDAY

SEPTEMBER 91 Actors soldier on for HBO's
•

•

•

SEPTEMBER11

I

Billy Bob Thornton. Please
help me. -'"Soooo right" in

mm1senes Band of Brothers

Foot~U .

Carolina Panthers at Minnesota Vikings (live) (CC)

II, i

Brothers is the second ·highprofile World War II project
with Steven Spielberg and
Tom Hanks high on the
credits list, this lime as coexecutive producers. It's
based on the book by .
Stephen E. Ambrose, who
interviewed survivors of the
506th Regiment of the tOtst
Airborne division, a unit
ironically dubbed Easy
Company. He tells the story
of the regiment's World War
II experience from basic
training to seizing Hitler's
Eagle's
Ne s I
at
Berchtesgaden.
" I didn't think about
(working for Hanks and
Spielberg)," Moreno says.
· "Their ghosts were there,

lOUt a
tress,
n-age
come
of fan
1 look

- Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

lmely

;e tile

1gh to

Green Bay, Wis.
A: Alba, 20, is indeed engaged
ro her Angel co-star Michael
Weatherly. She ~ aS no romantic
"history with Thornton . Your
husband clearly has confused
Alba with Angelina Jolie, 26.
another exotic beauty who cur·
rently is Mrs. Thornton. For the
record. that maniage is Jolie's
second and Thomlon 's fifth.
Q: I recently saw Susan
Hayward if! With a Son, in
My Heart, and In one scene, I
thougbt I recognized a very
young Robert Wagner as a
sheltshocked Gl she was
singing to. Was that him?
They didn't show the .end
credits. -D. Wylie, Satitsota,

were so into the project, they
just felt like part of the feam."
On June 6, the 57th
anniversary of 0-Day, on the
beach at Normandy, France,
WWII veterans, government
officials and Band of Brothers
folks gathered to watch the
first few episodes. When
asked what the experience
was like, Moreno answers
with a question.
" Besides having to go to
the bathroom?" he says, far
less flippantly than it might
sound. "Pretty much that
was it; you step on this
beach and it was, ' I gotta
pee.' "
•
. And it wasn't because of
the incessant sound of
splashing water.

Grimes, Frank John Hughes'- them every day or~ everL___r!!y Gocii _You ":'''---""-"'·= =r.;!cOon_o ugfi, Adam · week. It was more about, peaceful beach,
James, Kirk Acevedo, Elon lhese guys do Incredible think, 'Fifty-seven years ago,
Bailey, Philip Barrantlnl and wonk, and how can we match the s"* happened hera.' "
R.oss McCall.
their standards?" he says,
About a month later, the
_ British actor Damian before rethinking his stand. wine flows freely at an HBO
Lewis, the star_ of the "But It really wasn't about party thrown on . the vast,
miniseries agrees with matching their standards; It chilly porch of a posh
Moreno wholeheartedly. was about matching these California mansion-turned.. Band of Brothers was, veterans' standards. ft wsari't museum.
physically
Incredibly about Steven, It wasn't about
"Our generation always
demanding because of the Tom; It was about, 'Can we thinks of America as, ' Oh, It's
literal soldiering we had to do justice to these veterans?' the power,' you know?" says
do, day In and day out. As. "
Ron Livingston, who appears
well as having the added
"Tom came down on the throughout Band of Brothers.
pressure of having to re- first day of boot camp," Lewis "It's
Incredible
how
create faithfully the people relates. "He made a speech comple!_
ely new that Is.
you're playing, knowing that telling us what we needed to Americas pre-eminence m ·
they're alive and they're achieve and how he believed the world scene was really
going to see it."
in the projec;t- how It was like because .of what these guys
Moreno describes the tO- -a historical document. So the d1d . Not JUSt these guys, but
part miniseries as "Saving pressure of working for the people at home, 20 years
Private Ryan times 10," and Spielberg and Hanks after the last great war, (who)
' the movie reference isn't dissipated really quickly marshaled up and did -II
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;_ _ _ _ _... without import. Band of because you just felt like they
Continued on Page 3

Jf the
n she .
I. And
•erlng
her to
•ctors

Fla.

Jeanette, TonLand Laura (from-ltft)-ar-.-three-of, the
tltglblt tlnglta '"king romance In Love Crul•: nr.
Mlldln Voylj!W, premiering 1\laday on Fox.

SOAP TALK

NBC online venture
sates viewer appetites
By Candace Havens
OTVOata Features Syndicate

CBS' Wolf Lake may turn out loopy, not lupine
By John Crook
CT\/Oata FeatureS Syndicate

Both viewers and critics carp
about the stunning lock of creativity tha( goes into most shows, yet

one .of this season's most strikingly original efforts premieres
Wednesday, Sept. 12, with two
big strikes against it.
That show is Wolf Lake, a supernatural ~a set in a seemingly idyllic Pacitic Northwest
hamlet that covertly harbors a
community of werewolves. (Acrually, it may be more accurate to
describe these entities as "shapeshifters," because many of the
convenlional liappings of werewolf lore have lx:en tossed out the
window here.)
Several weeks ago, CBS sent

aunospheric hour that seemed to
be setting up a story about rival
werewolf clans heading for some

sort of a major faceoff.
By midsummer, much of that
premise had lx:en scuttled in what
executive producer Alex Gansa
says is an effort to make the story

Jines clearer.

"It's a toral make--over, a.fthough
... I thought the pilot ... had a lot of
wonderful ingredients. but it was

actor
! role
1ovie
t963
• tiUie
veral
c/o
New
;onal

Programs

Lou Dlamood Phillips stars as a ·taw enforcement offi!)er
Investigating bizarre happenings In a small Pacific Northwest town In Wolf Lake, premiering Wednesday on CBS.

'I

•

I

'

the best of circumstances - and
overf:auling a show this extensively for a shockingly early fall
premiere date hardly qualifies as
an ideal situation, especially for
creative giUU Gansa, who cheerfully but blearily admits that his
insane workload is taking its toll.

Actors

Daytime fans want more.

They are a dedicated lot and
want as much infonnation about
Uteir favorite star&gt; and shows as
possible.
All the daytime soaps have indi,
vidual Websiles with cast infer~
marion, daily updates and interviews with the stars. There are
hundreds of chat moms '~:here
fans can discuss their favorite story lines and characters.

Now NBC is taking the online
component a srep· further. The
network has partnered with Ute
online company SoapCity to give
fans a backstage pass 10 Passions
and Days of Our lives.
The Website offers viewers information not revealed during the
regular broadcast A small icon
appears on the screen during the
shows to indicate when additional
infonnation is available online.
A recent example is a letter Jennifer Horton (Melissa Reeves)
wrote- aboul her mysterious relationship with Colin Murphy
(Robert Cutl\ill) on Days. The let, ter gave viewers insight into Jen ·s
unrequited feeling:; for Colin that
wasn't revealed during the show.
The SoapCity site provides
complete online Coverage of the
NBC Soap FanFest, which takes
place Nov. 3 _and 4 at Universal
Studios Orlando's Islands-of Adventure theme park in Ronda.
Thus, the cast took the
Farts around the world will
project very seriously have a chance 10 see interviews.
maybe a bit too seriously. For
skits and performances by their
instance, during t~e shoot,
favorite actors during the Fanyou didn'l refer to your rifle
as your " gun.'' That's not . Fest.
For mOre infonnation, fans can
done in the Army.
check
oul the Website at
" Even a Tommy gun was .
www.soapcity.com.
a ' Thompson weapon,' "
Dear Candace: I am a fan of
Lewis says, laughing. "It was
7he Young and Restless, and I've
ridiculous."
spent some time walching the
Although he missed
spinOff 111e Bold and the Beauti.. boot camp," Moreno ful. But I'm giving up on 8&amp;8.
frequently refers to his
Good grief, they never talk abo~t
castmates by their character anything e.cept Ridge and
names (which the actors
Brooke (Ronn. Moss. Katl\erine
were made to do).
Kelly Lang) .
•

Continued from page 2
. kind of in search of a recipe,"
again. And then decided tHey
Gansa says. "We're going to keep
didn't want to talk about it for
the horror aspect (and) ... the took
60 years.."
of tlle show. We're hoping to add
The collapse of WWII
a little levity."
vets'
reticence about that
No one's laughing about the
conflict
has been welllikelihood of this show's survival
documented in the past three
on CBS. whose core viewers tend
to be network TV 's oldest and · years, .and it has instilled a
respect bordering on awe in
mosr conservative.
The faiiure of earlier critically
many younger people - the
acclaimed supernatural dramas
om a handsomely shot pilot
cast of Band .of Brothers
- episode featuring Lou Diamond . such as American Gothic suggests · Included.
Otal Wolf Lake would be a tough
Phillips, Graham Greene, Tim
" They would never adn;Jil
sell to CBS viewers even under
Matheson and Bruce McGi ll in an
to being heroes; they- don't
like · to call themselves
heroes," Lewis says. " But I
guess the definition of a hero
is an ordinary man acting
extraSrdinarlly
in
extraordinary
circumstances."

I HoBjlrtal

\

this season?

one time she was married to

TuESDAY

•

By Stephen English
TVOata Features Syndicate
War is hell. So is making a
miniseries about it, according
to some of the players in
HBO's ballyhooed Band of
Brothers, premiering Sunday,
Sept. 9.
" It wasn't about acting. It
was more about being a
soldier- getting the job done.
It wasn't about, ' OK, here's
the camera, smile. Make
sure my hair looks good.' It
was about, ' Here's the group
of guys you're commanding.
You better make sure none of
them die,' " says Rene L.
Moreno, who was among the
last to join the huge Band of
Brothers cast, which also
includes Donnie Wahlberg,

later

- Leigh Osborne, CastlewoOd,
Va.
A : Cleo was canceled due' to
lackluster ratings. Star Gina
Torres, who won an ALMA
Award for her portrayal of Hel,
has joined the cast of Lifetime's
Any Day N01v.
Q: I understand Jessica
Alba or Dark Angel is engaged
to marry one of her co-stars.
My husband insists that al

!"

I.

.,

- I thought they were finally go-

lng to go in a new direction with
Ridge's sister and her new

boyfriend. Now that'~ not happening. I guess they just can't
think · of anything original to

A: Good catch' Yes, Song
(1952) was W!gner's fifth feature film role.
Q: I hope a lot of reoden
gave you aome richly deserved
grief for your Idiotic SU88t11·
lion that Margaret and 1\Jcker Carlson of CNN are married. Check your facts In the
future, you moron! -L.K. via
e-mail.
'
A: For the record, the erroneous information you read
here came directly from CNN,
even after TVPipeline called a
second time to re-confirm . .
"We apologize for the infor·
mation you received from CNN
concerning the relationship between Margaret Carlson and
Tucker Carlson,." . responds
CNN publicist Kelly Keane,
who looked into the matter. "As
you know, they are not married.
They are not even related."
As always, thanks to all readers who took the time to write
and point out this error to us.

write.-Tulning It Off in Wichita,

Kan.
De'ar Reader: You aren't the
only one who feels betrayed.
Fans are furious th.at Thome

(Winsor Harmon) dumped
Macy (Bobbie Eakes) so he
could marry Brooke, and it was
all for naught.

Send questions of general interest
to TV Pipeline, TVData Features
Syndicate, 333 Glen SL, Glens
Falls, NY 12801, or e-mail to
tvplpeUne@tvdata.com. Only
questions selected for this column
will be answered. Persooal replies
cannot be sent

Channel Listings
Channel

Sarvlce

I

Cblinnel

2 WSAZ Huntington-Charleston (NBC)
3 QVC

27 C-Span

4 WGN-Chicago

29 E!

S
6
7
8
9
10

Famil y Channel

30 TNN

WSYX Columbus (ABC)

31
32
33
34
35

Prevue
~CHS

Hun·tington -Charleston (ABC)

WPBY Huntinglon (PBS)
WBNS Columbus (CBS)

l1 WVAH Huntington {FOX)
12 WOWK Hunl i ngto~- Charl e~ton (CBS)
13 WTAP Parkmburg (NBC)

"14 fiBO

28 Th e Learning Channel

TNT

ESPN
Nickelodeon
Weatht:r Channel

MTV

36 lifetim e

37 1\&amp;E
38 'Headlin e·News

39 CNN

"IS Ci nemax
'
•17 Showtime
18 Sneak Prevue
19 ~mmunity Bu llclin Board
*20 S,tarz!
'2 1 Ple&lt;(s)
'22 1180 -l(S)
2., tom munit y Watch 2J

40 America's

•24 HBO Family (s)
25 WOUB (1\thens) PBS

48 TV Land

-

26

Service

Trinity Broadcast Network

"'Oenotes ·oremium channels

~lealth

Net.

41 . WTBS (Atlanla)
42 C-NBC
43 USA
44 Discovery
45 fox News Network

46 CMT
47 VH-1

49 Disney

t SO
51

MSNBC
FX

\J

�-

PAGE THREE

PAGE TWO

I MONDAY

!SUNDAY

SEPTEMBER 10 I
Brenneman was arresting on Blue
By Taylor Michaela
OTVOata Features Syndicate

Q: What did Amy Brenne-

"lan do before Judging Amy?
I don't retail hearing or her
before this show. -Clyde
Buntting, Burton. Mirh.

MoNDAY

Amy Brenneman
A: A graduate of Harvard, the
stage- trained Brenneman made
her TV series debut in the shortlived 1992 CBS drama Middle
Ages, but really captured viewers and critics with her performance t\S Officer Janice Licalsi
in NYPD Blue, a ro le that
brought her two Emmy nominations.

She also has starred in the
films Casper: Bye Bye, Lave;
Fear,· A.T.F;. and Your Friends
&amp; Neighbors, among others.
Q: Has the sho\" CleopiJiril
2525 been canceled, or will It
return

Ron Dixon and the New York Giants head west to
meet the Denver Broncos on their home turf In NFL
action Monday on ABC.

I SUNDAY

ITUESDAY

SEPTEMBER 91 Actors soldier on for HBO's
•

•

•

SEPTEMBER11

I

Billy Bob Thornton. Please
help me. -'"Soooo right" in

mm1senes Band of Brothers

Foot~U .

Carolina Panthers at Minnesota Vikings (live) (CC)

II, i

Brothers is the second ·highprofile World War II project
with Steven Spielberg and
Tom Hanks high on the
credits list, this lime as coexecutive producers. It's
based on the book by .
Stephen E. Ambrose, who
interviewed survivors of the
506th Regiment of the tOtst
Airborne division, a unit
ironically dubbed Easy
Company. He tells the story
of the regiment's World War
II experience from basic
training to seizing Hitler's
Eagle's
Ne s I
at
Berchtesgaden.
" I didn't think about
(working for Hanks and
Spielberg)," Moreno says.
· "Their ghosts were there,

lOUt a
tress,
n-age
come
of fan
1 look

- Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

lmely

;e tile

1gh to

Green Bay, Wis.
A: Alba, 20, is indeed engaged
ro her Angel co-star Michael
Weatherly. She ~ aS no romantic
"history with Thornton . Your
husband clearly has confused
Alba with Angelina Jolie, 26.
another exotic beauty who cur·
rently is Mrs. Thornton. For the
record. that maniage is Jolie's
second and Thomlon 's fifth.
Q: I recently saw Susan
Hayward if! With a Son, in
My Heart, and In one scene, I
thougbt I recognized a very
young Robert Wagner as a
sheltshocked Gl she was
singing to. Was that him?
They didn't show the .end
credits. -D. Wylie, Satitsota,

were so into the project, they
just felt like part of the feam."
On June 6, the 57th
anniversary of 0-Day, on the
beach at Normandy, France,
WWII veterans, government
officials and Band of Brothers
folks gathered to watch the
first few episodes. When
asked what the experience
was like, Moreno answers
with a question.
" Besides having to go to
the bathroom?" he says, far
less flippantly than it might
sound. "Pretty much that
was it; you step on this
beach and it was, ' I gotta
pee.' "
•
. And it wasn't because of
the incessant sound of
splashing water.

Grimes, Frank John Hughes'- them every day or~ everL___r!!y Gocii _You ":'''---""-"'·= =r.;!cOon_o ugfi, Adam · week. It was more about, peaceful beach,
James, Kirk Acevedo, Elon lhese guys do Incredible think, 'Fifty-seven years ago,
Bailey, Philip Barrantlnl and wonk, and how can we match the s"* happened hera.' "
R.oss McCall.
their standards?" he says,
About a month later, the
_ British actor Damian before rethinking his stand. wine flows freely at an HBO
Lewis, the star_ of the "But It really wasn't about party thrown on . the vast,
miniseries agrees with matching their standards; It chilly porch of a posh
Moreno wholeheartedly. was about matching these California mansion-turned.. Band of Brothers was, veterans' standards. ft wsari't museum.
physically
Incredibly about Steven, It wasn't about
"Our generation always
demanding because of the Tom; It was about, 'Can we thinks of America as, ' Oh, It's
literal soldiering we had to do justice to these veterans?' the power,' you know?" says
do, day In and day out. As. "
Ron Livingston, who appears
well as having the added
"Tom came down on the throughout Band of Brothers.
pressure of having to re- first day of boot camp," Lewis "It's
Incredible
how
create faithfully the people relates. "He made a speech comple!_
ely new that Is.
you're playing, knowing that telling us what we needed to Americas pre-eminence m ·
they're alive and they're achieve and how he believed the world scene was really
going to see it."
in the projec;t- how It was like because .of what these guys
Moreno describes the tO- -a historical document. So the d1d . Not JUSt these guys, but
part miniseries as "Saving pressure of working for the people at home, 20 years
Private Ryan times 10," and Spielberg and Hanks after the last great war, (who)
' the movie reference isn't dissipated really quickly marshaled up and did -II
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;_ _ _ _ _... without import. Band of because you just felt like they
Continued on Page 3

Jf the
n she .
I. And
•erlng
her to
•ctors

Fla.

Jeanette, TonLand Laura (from-ltft)-ar-.-three-of, the
tltglblt tlnglta '"king romance In Love Crul•: nr.
Mlldln Voylj!W, premiering 1\laday on Fox.

SOAP TALK

NBC online venture
sates viewer appetites
By Candace Havens
OTVOata Features Syndicate

CBS' Wolf Lake may turn out loopy, not lupine
By John Crook
CT\/Oata FeatureS Syndicate

Both viewers and critics carp
about the stunning lock of creativity tha( goes into most shows, yet

one .of this season's most strikingly original efforts premieres
Wednesday, Sept. 12, with two
big strikes against it.
That show is Wolf Lake, a supernatural ~a set in a seemingly idyllic Pacitic Northwest
hamlet that covertly harbors a
community of werewolves. (Acrually, it may be more accurate to
describe these entities as "shapeshifters," because many of the
convenlional liappings of werewolf lore have lx:en tossed out the
window here.)
Several weeks ago, CBS sent

aunospheric hour that seemed to
be setting up a story about rival
werewolf clans heading for some

sort of a major faceoff.
By midsummer, much of that
premise had lx:en scuttled in what
executive producer Alex Gansa
says is an effort to make the story

Jines clearer.

"It's a toral make--over, a.fthough
... I thought the pilot ... had a lot of
wonderful ingredients. but it was

actor
! role
1ovie
t963
• tiUie
veral
c/o
New
;onal

Programs

Lou Dlamood Phillips stars as a ·taw enforcement offi!)er
Investigating bizarre happenings In a small Pacific Northwest town In Wolf Lake, premiering Wednesday on CBS.

'I

•

I

'

the best of circumstances - and
overf:auling a show this extensively for a shockingly early fall
premiere date hardly qualifies as
an ideal situation, especially for
creative giUU Gansa, who cheerfully but blearily admits that his
insane workload is taking its toll.

Actors

Daytime fans want more.

They are a dedicated lot and
want as much infonnation about
Uteir favorite star&gt; and shows as
possible.
All the daytime soaps have indi,
vidual Websiles with cast infer~
marion, daily updates and interviews with the stars. There are
hundreds of chat moms '~:here
fans can discuss their favorite story lines and characters.

Now NBC is taking the online
component a srep· further. The
network has partnered with Ute
online company SoapCity to give
fans a backstage pass 10 Passions
and Days of Our lives.
The Website offers viewers information not revealed during the
regular broadcast A small icon
appears on the screen during the
shows to indicate when additional
infonnation is available online.
A recent example is a letter Jennifer Horton (Melissa Reeves)
wrote- aboul her mysterious relationship with Colin Murphy
(Robert Cutl\ill) on Days. The let, ter gave viewers insight into Jen ·s
unrequited feeling:; for Colin that
wasn't revealed during the show.
The SoapCity site provides
complete online Coverage of the
NBC Soap FanFest, which takes
place Nov. 3 _and 4 at Universal
Studios Orlando's Islands-of Adventure theme park in Ronda.
Thus, the cast took the
Farts around the world will
project very seriously have a chance 10 see interviews.
maybe a bit too seriously. For
skits and performances by their
instance, during t~e shoot,
favorite actors during the Fanyou didn'l refer to your rifle
as your " gun.'' That's not . Fest.
For mOre infonnation, fans can
done in the Army.
check
oul the Website at
" Even a Tommy gun was .
www.soapcity.com.
a ' Thompson weapon,' "
Dear Candace: I am a fan of
Lewis says, laughing. "It was
7he Young and Restless, and I've
ridiculous."
spent some time walching the
Although he missed
spinOff 111e Bold and the Beauti.. boot camp," Moreno ful. But I'm giving up on 8&amp;8.
frequently refers to his
Good grief, they never talk abo~t
castmates by their character anything e.cept Ridge and
names (which the actors
Brooke (Ronn. Moss. Katl\erine
were made to do).
Kelly Lang) .
•

Continued from page 2
. kind of in search of a recipe,"
again. And then decided tHey
Gansa says. "We're going to keep
didn't want to talk about it for
the horror aspect (and) ... the took
60 years.."
of tlle show. We're hoping to add
The collapse of WWII
a little levity."
vets'
reticence about that
No one's laughing about the
conflict
has been welllikelihood of this show's survival
documented in the past three
on CBS. whose core viewers tend
to be network TV 's oldest and · years, .and it has instilled a
respect bordering on awe in
mosr conservative.
The faiiure of earlier critically
many younger people - the
acclaimed supernatural dramas
om a handsomely shot pilot
cast of Band .of Brothers
- episode featuring Lou Diamond . such as American Gothic suggests · Included.
Otal Wolf Lake would be a tough
Phillips, Graham Greene, Tim
" They would never adn;Jil
sell to CBS viewers even under
Matheson and Bruce McGi ll in an
to being heroes; they- don't
like · to call themselves
heroes," Lewis says. " But I
guess the definition of a hero
is an ordinary man acting
extraSrdinarlly
in
extraordinary
circumstances."

I HoBjlrtal

\

this season?

one time she was married to

TuESDAY

•

By Stephen English
TVOata Features Syndicate
War is hell. So is making a
miniseries about it, according
to some of the players in
HBO's ballyhooed Band of
Brothers, premiering Sunday,
Sept. 9.
" It wasn't about acting. It
was more about being a
soldier- getting the job done.
It wasn't about, ' OK, here's
the camera, smile. Make
sure my hair looks good.' It
was about, ' Here's the group
of guys you're commanding.
You better make sure none of
them die,' " says Rene L.
Moreno, who was among the
last to join the huge Band of
Brothers cast, which also
includes Donnie Wahlberg,

later

- Leigh Osborne, CastlewoOd,
Va.
A : Cleo was canceled due' to
lackluster ratings. Star Gina
Torres, who won an ALMA
Award for her portrayal of Hel,
has joined the cast of Lifetime's
Any Day N01v.
Q: I understand Jessica
Alba or Dark Angel is engaged
to marry one of her co-stars.
My husband insists that al

!"

I.

.,

- I thought they were finally go-

lng to go in a new direction with
Ridge's sister and her new

boyfriend. Now that'~ not happening. I guess they just can't
think · of anything original to

A: Good catch' Yes, Song
(1952) was W!gner's fifth feature film role.
Q: I hope a lot of reoden
gave you aome richly deserved
grief for your Idiotic SU88t11·
lion that Margaret and 1\Jcker Carlson of CNN are married. Check your facts In the
future, you moron! -L.K. via
e-mail.
'
A: For the record, the erroneous information you read
here came directly from CNN,
even after TVPipeline called a
second time to re-confirm . .
"We apologize for the infor·
mation you received from CNN
concerning the relationship between Margaret Carlson and
Tucker Carlson,." . responds
CNN publicist Kelly Keane,
who looked into the matter. "As
you know, they are not married.
They are not even related."
As always, thanks to all readers who took the time to write
and point out this error to us.

write.-Tulning It Off in Wichita,

Kan.
De'ar Reader: You aren't the
only one who feels betrayed.
Fans are furious th.at Thome

(Winsor Harmon) dumped
Macy (Bobbie Eakes) so he
could marry Brooke, and it was
all for naught.

Send questions of general interest
to TV Pipeline, TVData Features
Syndicate, 333 Glen SL, Glens
Falls, NY 12801, or e-mail to
tvplpeUne@tvdata.com. Only
questions selected for this column
will be answered. Persooal replies
cannot be sent

Channel Listings
Channel

Sarvlce

I

Cblinnel

2 WSAZ Huntington-Charleston (NBC)
3 QVC

27 C-Span

4 WGN-Chicago

29 E!

S
6
7
8
9
10

Famil y Channel

30 TNN

WSYX Columbus (ABC)

31
32
33
34
35

Prevue
~CHS

Hun·tington -Charleston (ABC)

WPBY Huntinglon (PBS)
WBNS Columbus (CBS)

l1 WVAH Huntington {FOX)
12 WOWK Hunl i ngto~- Charl e~ton (CBS)
13 WTAP Parkmburg (NBC)

"14 fiBO

28 Th e Learning Channel

TNT

ESPN
Nickelodeon
Weatht:r Channel

MTV

36 lifetim e

37 1\&amp;E
38 'Headlin e·News

39 CNN

"IS Ci nemax
'
•17 Showtime
18 Sneak Prevue
19 ~mmunity Bu llclin Board
*20 S,tarz!
'2 1 Ple&lt;(s)
'22 1180 -l(S)
2., tom munit y Watch 2J

40 America's

•24 HBO Family (s)
25 WOUB (1\thens) PBS

48 TV Land

-

26

Service

Trinity Broadcast Network

"'Oenotes ·oremium channels

~lealth

Net.

41 . WTBS (Atlanla)
42 C-NBC
43 USA
44 Discovery
45 fox News Network

46 CMT
47 VH-1

49 Disney

t SO
51

MSNBC
FX

\J

�·.
PAGE FOUR
PAGE FIVE

I~W::E;:D::NE;:S::DA;:Y:::;::=;::::::;:::~:::;::::;::;;:;S~EP~T~E~MB~E~R~12~1 WB 's Maybe It's Me a smart surprise
By John Crook
orVoeta Features·Syndlcate

Maybe It's Me, the winning new
WB Neiworl&lt; sitcom premiering
Friday. Sept 14, opens a1 what

•

SEPTEMBER 15 I

!SATURDAY

should be a magical time for win·
some Molly Stage (Reagan Dale
Neis).
• At 15. Molly has shed her boby
fat and braces over summer
break, finally anracting the •Jlllll&gt;'

WEDNESDAY

H~(CC)

2ol

CABLE STATIONS
Family
Fresh
WGN Full

G'

Hoose

Prince

FAM

Growong

Growing

m

Pams

USA

Walker, TeKas
Ranger (CC)

@

NASH
®l
TNT
lj])
ESPN

. PaJns

Sudden~

Matters

Susan

Step by
Step

Step by
Step

JAG ICC)

Real TV Real TV Mad TV Mad TV
ICC)
iCC)
NYPD Blue(PA) iCC) Pretender (CC) ·
Sportscenter (CC)

MOVIE: Madhouso OtlM&lt;ioos l'ooseguesiS
push a coople 101M edge ol""dness.

**

I

Major League Baseb;jl. Teams to Be Anmunced (LiVe} (CC)

.

Nicktooos . Thornber- Rocket

lj])

TV

UFE

Golden

~·

Golden

IW

G1rls

Girls

A&amp;E

Night

@

Coun

Newsra·
dio iCC)

Power

Sponge·
bob Sq.

I

U Pk:k
TOOI1S

Intimate Portrait (CC) Unsol'ed ~sleries

Law &amp; Order iCC)

Evening

CNN
@

Mone~ine (CCI

TBS

RoseaMe Roseanne

Fr~sh

@

(CCI

Prin:e

News
ICC}

Rugrats
(CC)

Crossfire
(CCI
Fresh
Pnnce

I

MOVIE: The Truth About Cots and Dogs
State of State ol 700 CI\Jb (CC}
Grace
Grace
(1996, Comedy)*" Uma lllutman.
MM1in
MOVIE: Death Warrant
A karate-kicki'lg Marlil
Nash Bridges (CCI
ollcer goes under OO\I&amp;r to fin&lt;! e ~tief. (CC) (CCI
iCC)
Small
Mad TV MOVIE: A Killet in lhe Fani~ (1963) A p&lt;ison Mad TV
escapee leads his sons on a murder spree.
Shots
'
MOVIE: Ghosts of Mississipp; (t996. Drama) u A prosecutar
Law &amp; Order (CC)
reopens 1M case against Medgar Evers' ~ler . Aloe Baldwin. (CC)

®
NICK

In 11'&lt;1 Heal ollt&lt;l
Nighi(CC)

News ICC)

American Justice
(CC)
Wd!
Blitzer

I

Burdi

Brady
Burch

MOVIE: Talk to Me*" A talk show executive Golden
Glris
stops at nothing lo keep top ratings. (CC}

Golden
Girts .

BradY. . JBrady ,
Bunch
Bunch

Bk&gt;lraphy (CCI

The Point Larry King L~ (CC}
(CCI

Ripley's Believe II or
NoH

Major League Basebal. Teams )o Be
Amounced ( l~e} (CC)
Brady
Bun~

Brady

!Brady
8lJnch

City Con1itlential (CCI Law &amp; Order (CC}
CNN
Ton~!

Spo&lt;ts

!Green·
fi~d·Lrve

Moneyline

Tong,!

Ripleys E:elie\19 nor
MOVIE: Spawn (I 997} H A dead """
returns from heltlo take revenge on his kiler. Not!
-

Mike (Denla Leary) Is required to attend anger management classes after a run-In with a cabdriver In The
Job Wednesday on ABC.

ciative glances of boys at her
schOol. As far as her family is
concerned. however. Molly - like
every Oilier teen-age- girl before
her - feels like Marilyn Munster
in a household of frealcs.
Her dad. Jerry (Fred Willard.
Best in Show), is a sweet-natured ·
man whose passion is coaching
girls soccer. And allhough lhe
family is comfortably middleclass, mom Mary (Julia Sweeney,
Saturday Night Live) pinches
every penny till it screams .- like
her children. who don't get Novocain at the dentist's office.
Among her siblings, Molly
can't decide which brother is
more ,embarrassing: Grant
(Pattick Levis, Inside rhe Osmond.r) wants to be a Christian
'10Ck singer, while bad boy Rick
· (Andrew Walker, The ScOT~) hus·
ties whnt look suspiciously like
fake Rulexes. '!Win kid sisters
Cindy and Mindy (Daniella and
Deanna Can!errnen) are identically obnoxious.
· Representing the senior generations are Jerry's dad (veteran
character actor Dabbs Greer),
who has beel1 cranky since the
late 1950s, and Mary's mother
(Ellen Albertini Dow, 7111! Wedding Singer), who compulsively
hides bits of raw food around the

CABLE

ho!ase.

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

I FRIDAY

SEPTEMBER 14 I

If the characters in Maybe It~
Me feel both original and yet
unerly believable, credit series
creator Suunne Martin, the twotime Emmy·winning writerproducer of Frasier who says
she baaed the series loosely on
her own experiences growing up
In a close·knit but kooky family.
"A lot of the series is based on
just being embarrassed by yom
family,'' Martin says. "My mom
is very much like the character in
the show, just incredibly cheap.
We did not have Novocain for
cavities - that's.absolutely true just to save money. ·
'1 have two older brothets, just
like on the show. My oldest broth·
er was a classical pianis~ not a
Christian rocker ... and my other
brother isn't a hoodlwn, but he
'Will (Eric McCormack, left)
_ hie beat _
was always in his room, where
friend's boyfriend while Jack (Sean Hayes) preparea l--'--you-jusnssumed-(he) was up tn- - - -l
no aood." .
to meet his father In Will &amp; Grace Thursday on NBC.
Aithough lhe show has a loving,
generous spirit to it - Molly may
be monified by her family mem·
bers, but she clearly loves them.
too - Maybe It's Me attracted
Weekly Puzzler Answer .
some unwelcome attention a few
weeks ago when ils original title Maybe I'm Adopted - drew the ire
of ·pro-adoption groups, who
found that title offensive.
·. Martin-says she had no problem
ehanging the title but thinks the
original was misunderstood in
' some quarters.
"It was a fantasy of mine that at
some point my real parents would
show up and take me back to the
castle that I thought I belonged in
and !ell me about my royal heritage," she adds ' with a laugh. "I
just didn't want to share genes
with the rest of my family. That
was all it meant to me. It was
more a hopeful thought that I ·
might be adopted - nothing
against adoption at all.''
The title change probably was a
wise course of action, because in
every other respect this delightful
little show deserves ·to be ern,·braced by a wide spectrwn of
viewers. It's not quite as profound
as
The mmder Yean - yet - but .
Wee~ly Puzzler On Page 6
Maybe It~ Me is one of the ·season's brightest new shows - no
. . '
ifs, ands, buts or maybes about it.

IN

FRIDAY

Screen queen
audl·
auperb comic timing, li re· ence1 with her
membered In Blognlphy Thursdey on AAE Network.

_conteatantL..Io... r.ac«L l¥hi1. -'======-- --====;;;:;-:::::;-=;._=...=J- they' re moat afraid of In
order to win big money In
Fear Factor Saturday on
NBC.

TV CROSSWORD

-TRIVIA
. Best known as singer Meat.
Loaf (Trappetf), Marvin Lee
Aday began his career in a traveling.stage production of Hai'

The identity of the featured celebrity is found within the
answers In the puzzle. Jn order to take the TV Challenge,.
unscramble thf;!letters noted with .asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
5. Like the Love Boat
t. Dick or Roy
6. Seta's monogram
5. _ Harriet ; '98 sitcom
7 . John or Deborah
8. Bumbler's utterance
9. Get _ of; eliminate
9. Series about teens
10. Day _(1993·95)
. 13. Groove
11 . 1959·63 Western series
14. Drescher role
12. Aspin or Paul
15. Actress Cassidy
·1 4. Letters with hi or sci
16. Brainchild
19. Michael
17. Reading and So. Pac.
20. _: A Dog ; '62 Carroll
18. _ May; Donna Douglas
O'Connor film
role
23. Bladed pole
21 . Ms. Thompson
24. The _ Factor
22. The Perry
Show ('48- 28. Squeezer's product
'63)
.,....
.
29 .. A _ in the Life ('87·'88)
25. _ Blue (1985-86)
30. Curtis, lor one
26. _ Power ; '56-'58
· · 31. Actress on The Golden
Waller Cronkite series
Palace ('92-'93)
27. _ Spirit (1989·90)
32. Slip up
28. _ Given Sunday ; '99 AI 33. · Kirstie Alley's slate of
Pacino movie
. birth: abbr.
30. Word in the title of
36. Frankie Muniz's role, lor
Mulgrew's series
short
34. Ruby or Sandra
37. Building wing
35. Yours, Mine and _ ; '88
39. _ This Is Hollywood ;
Fonda-Ball film
'55 sitcom
36. Alice's boss
40. Setlif\9 lor Dharma &amp;
38. '78 best actor in a drama
Greg : abbr. •
series Eminy winner (2)

Focus

•

Margot Kidder and Chad Lowe star •• a mother end
son caught up In the Investigation ola murder In Law
&amp; Order: Special VIctims Unlf Friday on NBC.

..
\

\

.

,.

Double nominee Cbrlstlna :
Agullel'l is featured in the :
awiU'ds show that could make
couch potatoes dancing fools.
71ae 2nd Annual Lmin Grammy
Awarri.r airs Tuesday, Sept. II,
on CBS.
Well·known singers from ..
many senrcs ate performing.
Among the famous nominees is
Aguilera, who, like opera superstar Placido Domingo, has garnered two nominations this year.
Juanes, a Colombian rocker,
has the most nominations with
seven.

40. _ to Glory ('84·'85)

4 t . -David Schramm's role
on Wings
42, Bole on The Dick Van
Dyke Show ('61 ·'66)

•

DOWN
1.

.Chuck Norris' rqle..

2. 38 Acro~s· role
3. _ Pupil ; :'98 lan .

Reagan Dale Nels (center) stars as teen-age Molly, whou quirky family II sometlmea too much for her to take, In the promising
new wEi Network series l!laybe lt'e Me, which premieres Friday. Fred Willard and Julia Sweeney star as Molly's parents, Jerry
and Mary•

. McKellen movie
.•·

4. lnitialk for tho host of
. The Twflight Zone

•

\

'. '

.'

-.

.~

..

�·.
PAGE FOUR
PAGE FIVE

I~W::E;:D::NE;:S::DA;:Y:::;::=;::::::;:::~:::;::::;::;;:;S~EP~T~E~MB~E~R~12~1 WB 's Maybe It's Me a smart surprise
By John Crook
orVoeta Features·Syndlcate

Maybe It's Me, the winning new
WB Neiworl&lt; sitcom premiering
Friday. Sept 14, opens a1 what

•

SEPTEMBER 15 I

!SATURDAY

should be a magical time for win·
some Molly Stage (Reagan Dale
Neis).
• At 15. Molly has shed her boby
fat and braces over summer
break, finally anracting the •Jlllll&gt;'

WEDNESDAY

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Mike (Denla Leary) Is required to attend anger management classes after a run-In with a cabdriver In The
Job Wednesday on ABC.

ciative glances of boys at her
schOol. As far as her family is
concerned. however. Molly - like
every Oilier teen-age- girl before
her - feels like Marilyn Munster
in a household of frealcs.
Her dad. Jerry (Fred Willard.
Best in Show), is a sweet-natured ·
man whose passion is coaching
girls soccer. And allhough lhe
family is comfortably middleclass, mom Mary (Julia Sweeney,
Saturday Night Live) pinches
every penny till it screams .- like
her children. who don't get Novocain at the dentist's office.
Among her siblings, Molly
can't decide which brother is
more ,embarrassing: Grant
(Pattick Levis, Inside rhe Osmond.r) wants to be a Christian
'10Ck singer, while bad boy Rick
· (Andrew Walker, The ScOT~) hus·
ties whnt look suspiciously like
fake Rulexes. '!Win kid sisters
Cindy and Mindy (Daniella and
Deanna Can!errnen) are identically obnoxious.
· Representing the senior generations are Jerry's dad (veteran
character actor Dabbs Greer),
who has beel1 cranky since the
late 1950s, and Mary's mother
(Ellen Albertini Dow, 7111! Wedding Singer), who compulsively
hides bits of raw food around the

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I FRIDAY

SEPTEMBER 14 I

If the characters in Maybe It~
Me feel both original and yet
unerly believable, credit series
creator Suunne Martin, the twotime Emmy·winning writerproducer of Frasier who says
she baaed the series loosely on
her own experiences growing up
In a close·knit but kooky family.
"A lot of the series is based on
just being embarrassed by yom
family,'' Martin says. "My mom
is very much like the character in
the show, just incredibly cheap.
We did not have Novocain for
cavities - that's.absolutely true just to save money. ·
'1 have two older brothets, just
like on the show. My oldest broth·
er was a classical pianis~ not a
Christian rocker ... and my other
brother isn't a hoodlwn, but he
'Will (Eric McCormack, left)
_ hie beat _
was always in his room, where
friend's boyfriend while Jack (Sean Hayes) preparea l--'--you-jusnssumed-(he) was up tn- - - -l
no aood." .
to meet his father In Will &amp; Grace Thursday on NBC.
Aithough lhe show has a loving,
generous spirit to it - Molly may
be monified by her family mem·
bers, but she clearly loves them.
too - Maybe It's Me attracted
Weekly Puzzler Answer .
some unwelcome attention a few
weeks ago when ils original title Maybe I'm Adopted - drew the ire
of ·pro-adoption groups, who
found that title offensive.
·. Martin-says she had no problem
ehanging the title but thinks the
original was misunderstood in
' some quarters.
"It was a fantasy of mine that at
some point my real parents would
show up and take me back to the
castle that I thought I belonged in
and !ell me about my royal heritage," she adds ' with a laugh. "I
just didn't want to share genes
with the rest of my family. That
was all it meant to me. It was
more a hopeful thought that I ·
might be adopted - nothing
against adoption at all.''
The title change probably was a
wise course of action, because in
every other respect this delightful
little show deserves ·to be ern,·braced by a wide spectrwn of
viewers. It's not quite as profound
as
The mmder Yean - yet - but .
Wee~ly Puzzler On Page 6
Maybe It~ Me is one of the ·season's brightest new shows - no
. . '
ifs, ands, buts or maybes about it.

IN

FRIDAY

Screen queen
audl·
auperb comic timing, li re· ence1 with her
membered In Blognlphy Thursdey on AAE Network.

_conteatantL..Io... r.ac«L l¥hi1. -'======-- --====;;;:;-:::::;-=;._=...=J- they' re moat afraid of In
order to win big money In
Fear Factor Saturday on
NBC.

TV CROSSWORD

-TRIVIA
. Best known as singer Meat.
Loaf (Trappetf), Marvin Lee
Aday began his career in a traveling.stage production of Hai'

The identity of the featured celebrity is found within the
answers In the puzzle. Jn order to take the TV Challenge,.
unscramble thf;!letters noted with .asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
5. Like the Love Boat
t. Dick or Roy
6. Seta's monogram
5. _ Harriet ; '98 sitcom
7 . John or Deborah
8. Bumbler's utterance
9. Get _ of; eliminate
9. Series about teens
10. Day _(1993·95)
. 13. Groove
11 . 1959·63 Western series
14. Drescher role
12. Aspin or Paul
15. Actress Cassidy
·1 4. Letters with hi or sci
16. Brainchild
19. Michael
17. Reading and So. Pac.
20. _: A Dog ; '62 Carroll
18. _ May; Donna Douglas
O'Connor film
role
23. Bladed pole
21 . Ms. Thompson
24. The _ Factor
22. The Perry
Show ('48- 28. Squeezer's product
'63)
.,....
.
29 .. A _ in the Life ('87·'88)
25. _ Blue (1985-86)
30. Curtis, lor one
26. _ Power ; '56-'58
· · 31. Actress on The Golden
Waller Cronkite series
Palace ('92-'93)
27. _ Spirit (1989·90)
32. Slip up
28. _ Given Sunday ; '99 AI 33. · Kirstie Alley's slate of
Pacino movie
. birth: abbr.
30. Word in the title of
36. Frankie Muniz's role, lor
Mulgrew's series
short
34. Ruby or Sandra
37. Building wing
35. Yours, Mine and _ ; '88
39. _ This Is Hollywood ;
Fonda-Ball film
'55 sitcom
36. Alice's boss
40. Setlif\9 lor Dharma &amp;
38. '78 best actor in a drama
Greg : abbr. •
series Eminy winner (2)

Focus

•

Margot Kidder and Chad Lowe star •• a mother end
son caught up In the Investigation ola murder In Law
&amp; Order: Special VIctims Unlf Friday on NBC.

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Double nominee Cbrlstlna :
Agullel'l is featured in the :
awiU'ds show that could make
couch potatoes dancing fools.
71ae 2nd Annual Lmin Grammy
Awarri.r airs Tuesday, Sept. II,
on CBS.
Well·known singers from ..
many senrcs ate performing.
Among the famous nominees is
Aguilera, who, like opera superstar Placido Domingo, has garnered two nominations this year.
Juanes, a Colombian rocker,
has the most nominations with
seven.

40. _ to Glory ('84·'85)

4 t . -David Schramm's role
on Wings
42, Bole on The Dick Van
Dyke Show ('61 ·'66)

•

DOWN
1.

.Chuck Norris' rqle..

2. 38 Acro~s· role
3. _ Pupil ; :'98 lan .

Reagan Dale Nels (center) stars as teen-age Molly, whou quirky family II sometlmea too much for her to take, In the promising
new wEi Network series l!laybe lt'e Me, which premieres Friday. Fred Willard and Julia Sweeney star as Molly's parents, Jerry
and Mary•

. McKellen movie
.•·

4. lnitialk for tho host of
. The Twflight Zone

•

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