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                  <text>Page B6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday. September 21. 2001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AROUND THE DIAMOND

.Dodgers fight for needed
NLWest race win overAZ

Notionolloovue

Colorado (JeMinga 3-t) at Montreat
(Armas Jr. 9-t2). 7:05p.m.
St LouiS (Kilo !'·tO) at Pi11Sburgl1

Eut

Atlanta
PhilaOelphia
NewYOI1t
Florida
Montreal

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It sure took ? long time for an NL West contender to get a
wm .
After Barry Bonds' 64th homer wasn 't enough for San Fran·
cisco, the division's other contenders -Arizona and L-;,s Ange·
Ies .- took 13 ini1ings to decide the opener of their four-game
senes.
Shawn Green hit his 47th homer with two outs in the 13th
as Los Angeles defeated fi rst-place Arizona 3-2 Thursday night
to snap a five · game losing streak. The Diamondbacks and
Giants have each lost three straight.
"The goal is to win these big games so we have a chance to
play for bigger games later," Green said. "It's going to be a battle this whole series."
The Dodgers' first victory si nce baseball' resumed Monday
moved them within three games of the Diamondbacks in the
NL West. Los Angeles remains four behind St. Louis in the wild
card race.
With 15 games left, Bonds is six homers shy of the record
Mark McGwire set three years ago. Bonds' 64th came in San
Francisco's 147th game, eight gati\eS feWer than it took MeGwire to hit the same number, but his mind is still on last week's
terrorist attacks.
·
Dodgers 3, D-backs 2
Green went 4-for·6, including an RBI triple in the first
inning and his game·winning homer in the 13th off Greg
Swindell (2·5) at Dodger Stadium.
Luke Prokopec (8·6) earned his first victory since Aug. 25
and also his first win this season as a reliever.
·
J Luis Gonzalez tied the game with 'his 53rd homer, a two-run
shot in the eighth inning offJesse Orosco.
.
"This is a tough loss ·for us, but we can't dwell on it because
tomorrow's game is just as big as this one,!' Gonzalez said: "But
it was hard to swallow because we tied it late in the game and
went into extra innings."
Astros 5, Giants 4
Houston led 4-2 in the fifth when Bonds homered on a 1-0
count offWade Miller. The ball cleared the fence beyond the
reach of center fielder Richard Hidalgo.
Braves 5, Phillies 1
Javy Lopez drove in three runs and Kevin Millwood (6-6)
pitched six shutout innings as visiting Atlanta beat Philadelphia
·to open a 1 1/2-game lead in the NL East.
.
Cardinals 9, Pirates 1
Woody Williams (13-9) pitched three-hit ball for seven
. innings, and Mark McGwire, who came into the game only
because of an injury, homered in his 39th major league park as
visiting St. Louis won its seventh straight.
Expos 8, Rockies 3
Orlando Cabrera hit a tiebreaking three·run double with
two outs in the eighth inning against Jay Powell (4-3) to lead
host Montreal past Colorado.

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Chicago
Milwaukee
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Chicago Cubs I, Cincinnati 5
Hqustan 5, San Francisco 4, 10 innings
Montreal 8, COlorado 3
Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 1
St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1
Los Angeles 3, Arizona 2, 13 Innings

(Airoyo H). 7:05p.m.
Florida (Burnoll 9-tt ) at Phladelptio
IDaaJ t2-ll), 7:05 p.m.
Alfanta(Mirquia 3-8) at N.V. Mots (Chon
HI), 7:t0 p.m.
Chicago Cubo (Cruz 2·1) at Houslort (Vi~
tone 6-6), 8:05 p.m.
Clnclnnltl (llllvla 1,1) It -111(Shoots 10.9), 1:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Schmidt 11 -7) at san
Diego (lawrence 4-3), 10:05 p.m.
Arizon;l(Batista 9-8) at Los Angeles (Mut·
holland Hl), tO: tO p.m.
SOiurdOy'a Ari&lt;ona (Johnson t9-6) at Los Angeles
(Brown to-4), 4:t0 p.m.
Colorado (Efarton U) at Montreal (Yosltll
3-5), 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (Smith 5·2) at Pittsburgh
(Ritchie tt-12), 7:05p.m.
Clnclnna~ tAco- 4-1) It Mllnukw
(~ 4-3), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Ciom8flt 11-1 0) at Philadelphia
(Pe""" t 5-6), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux t7-9) at 1\t.Y. Ma1s (Tra·
chsel 9-t2), 7:t0 p.m.
·
Chicago Cubs (Tapanl ll-t2) at Houston
(Roynolds 11-10), 8:05p.m.
•
San Francisco (Estes 8-8) at San Diogo
(Jones S.t8), t0:05 p.m.

Friday's Games

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The Boss joins

TEMPO

Highlights of
Friday's action
begin on 81

Disney World
hits middle age
in Orlando, C7

all-star attack

DolrOO (M&lt;lmly t_.) at Bos!an(Fossum

13
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'
Thuf'l4ay'o
Gomaa
Minnesota 3. Detroit 0
Anahelm 6, Seattte 3
Battimora 12, Toronto 6
Bcston 2, Tampa Bay t
Konuo City •· CloVOiond 2
Oakland 7, Texas 2
Chicago Whl1e Sox 7, N.Y. YankEies 5

t·t). 7:05p.m.
Tarrc&gt;o Bay (Rel&lt;ar 1-13) at Toroolo (lyon
5-2), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yank- (IU&amp;Ina tS.t1) at Baltlmore (Blue&lt; 0.2), 7:05 p.m.
Artoltelm (Valdoo 11-1 0) at Tuas (Bel &lt;I4). 8:05 p.m.
olond ~ ts..t) 1 1 .. ( - 3-3~ 1:05 p.m.
Kansas City (K.WIIaon 6:5) at Chicago
White Sox (D.Wristtt 4·2), 8:05p.m.
Seattto (Abbott tS.3) at OO!dand (Udle
to-&amp;), t0:05 p.m.

a ..

•

tmes

0

..

., '
'

Bush, Putin hold
extensive talks

•

Having his timing thrown off turned
out to be a temporary problem for Barry
Zito.
After rushing through his bullpen
preparation, Zito won his sixth straight
start and led the Oakland Athletics over
the Texas Rangers 7-2 Thursday night.
" I didn't feel as good as I usually do.
My pregame routine was thrown off a
little bit," Zito said. "That threw me off,
so I think a lot of it was mental."
Zito (14-8), at first unable to find his
pregame throwing partner, allowed two
runs and six hits in six innings. He has
allowed just four earned runs in his last
42 innings and is 9-1 in his past 10 starts.
"He's just been solid for us, almost a
.lock," Oakland manager Art Howe said.
Eric Chavez drove in four runs as
Oakland won for the 16th time in 18
games and improved to 54-18. Their
magic number for clinching the AL wild
card is five.
Oakland went ahead to stay when
Miguel Tejada hit a two-run single in the
top of the fifth off Darren Oliver (1 110) for a 3-2 lead.

a

•
they won their previous six games.
Sean Lowe (8-4) pitched 1 1-3
innings, and Keith Fo1.dke got five outs
for his 39th save.
Red Sox 2, Devil Rays 1
Calvin Pickering, in his first start for
Boston, homered and started the go,
ahead rally at Fenway Park with a single:
Pickering, claimed 'o ff waivers from
Cincinnati on Sept. 6, hit his first homer
for Boston in the second, then singled to
start the eighth against Doug Creek (2.:
4). Chris Stynes doubled in the goahead run as . Boston won for just the
third time in 17 games.
'
Rolando Arrojo (5-3) escaped a basesloaded, one·out threat in the seventh.
Orioles 12, Biue jays 6
Pinch-hitter Tony Batista helped end
Baltimore's 1O.game losing streak with a'
three-run homer against his former
team.
'
Visiting Baltimore; which stopped its
longest losing streak since a 10-game
skid from June 23-July 3, 1999, rallied
from a 5-1 deficit with six runs in the
seventh and five runs in the eighth. It
was the Orioles' first win since Aug. 31. :

•'' global "battle with terror" as the

United States prepared for thil.itary action.
B.u sh said the. U.S. economy has suffered shock waves from the Sept. 1 1 terrorist attacks but remains fundamentalBY CHRISTOPHER NEWTON
Iy strong.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
"We're still the greatest nation on the
WASHINGTON - President Bush . face of the Earth, and no terrorist will
and Russian President Vladimir Putin ever be able' to decide our fate;• Bush
talked extensively Samrday about the said in his weekly radio address.

Oakland's Zito wins sixth straight start; Angels post win•
Angels 6, Mariners 3
Bengie Molina singled off John Halama (10-7) to break a 3-all in the eighth
at Seattle, stopping the Mariners' sevengame winning streak.
Seattle (106-41 ), which clinched the
division title Wednesday, kept five regulars out of the starting lineup.
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (5-4) pitched
two scoreless. innings; and Troy Percival
got three outs for his 39th save.
Twins 3, Tigers 0
Joe Mays (16-13) pitched six-hitter
at the Metrodome to improve to 5-0
with a 1.13 ERA against Detroit this
season.
Jacque Jones hit his second homer in
as many games for Minnesota.
Jose Lim:i (4-8) took the Joss despite
limiting the Twins to three runs - one
earned - . and live hits in 7 2-3 innings.
White Sox 7, Yankees 5
Josh Paul hit a two-run double off
Andy Pettitte (15-1 0) after an intentional walk loaded ihe bases at Comiskey
Park.
The Yankees' magic number for
clinching the AL East remained at five;

me

Slturdoy'o-

Tampa Bay (Biertlf&lt;ldt t_.) at TO&lt;Mo
(Loaiza tQ.tt), t p.m.
N.Y. Vank99$ ( H i - 3-3) at Balli'
more (Wasclin HI), t :25 p.m.
~ (Woodord 3-3) ot Mlnn
tRodke 13-9), 1:30 p.m•
Seanlo (Pineiro S.t) at Oaldand (Hijus S,
0), 4:05 p.m.
Detroit (Comojo 3-3) at Booton (Lowe &lt;1t 0), 5:05 p.m.
Kansas City (MacDougal 0.0) at Chicago
White Sox (Garland 6:6). 7:05p.m.
Anahoim (Wise 1·3) at Texas (Myette~
4), 8:05 p.m.
•

AMERICAN LEAGUE "
BY THE ASSOCIATED PREiSS

•

President Gaorge Bush

He met with advisers at Camp David
this weekend as tl1e Pentagon ordered
ships and planes to the Middle East and
thousands of reservists stepped back
into uniform. B·52s departed Saturday
from Barksdale Air Force Base in
Louisiana.
The president will soon sign an executive order naming terrorist organiza-

Pieue -

BY KEVIN KEu,y

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFf

Brand New: 2002 Chevy

~2]50* · i2f55i* ·q"Oi5i-: .ia~ii-: •23,95
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Cassetta
• Sporty Equipped!

• Vortec V~ · Power
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• AWFM Stereo, Till Steering

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Air CondHionlng, CD System
• Tlh Steering, Cruise Control

• Power Windows, Locka, Mirrors
• Keyless Entry, Onstar
•16" Aluminum Wheels

• Fully Power Equipped!
• Onatar, Keyless Entry
• Alum. Whaale, Tm Steering

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Trailblazer ~S 4 Door 4x4

125,
• 4200-6 Cylinder Engine
•16" Alum. Whetla, Trailer H~ch
• CO.Syltem,. Tltt Steering

.

of a flag for each life lost in the attack on America. It has helped
students deal with the tragedy. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

ACINE
"Although this
tragedy
has
happened, we
must sta.nd tall
and fight for that which we
still have," wrote Shyla Jarrel,
Amber Holsinger, Tiffany
McDaniel and Caitlin Nease,
in their group essay about the

Salutln1local servicemen
Do you have a loved one deployed in the
war on terrorism? Ohio Valley Publishinf! Co. wants
to salute these heroes by publishing a lrst featuring
their names, a brief bio, and a photograph. Drop off
these materials at the offices of the GalliP,olis Daily
Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or The Darly Sentinel.
Sept. It attack on America.
· Southern Elementary students were encouraged to
express their feelings as a way
of dealing with the attack.
"The children here needed
to talk about the tragedy as a
way of coming to understand

".---------------------------------~
Hlp: 801
L-:sos
Details,

2001 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

2001 Chevy
Impala Sedan .

2001 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan ·

~3,950* ~5,550* ~5,850*

• Piiiiir Windows, Locke, Mlrrora
• AutomaUc, Air Conditioning
• Tlh Steering, Cn~lse Control
· • Taxes,

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;
CD System, Aluminum Wheels
Cruise Control, Till Steering

118,750*

• V-6, Automatic

• Power Seat, CD Syatem
• Power Windows &amp; Locke
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

• Air Conditioning, CD System
• Power Seat, Windows. Locka

Tags, Tnle Fees eJt1ra . fjebale irduded in sale price of new velicle lisled Where applicable. "On approved cre&lt;lt On selecled models. Nol rasponsi&gt;le for lypograpijcaf erroot.

Pli&lt;:es Good September 21st Through Seplember~3rd.
CHIVROLIT

Buick
•

. West Ylrginl!l's f1 Cheyy, Pontia~.
'

•

;~~)

•
Bul~k. _ Oid~,: And Custom
••

·

.,-,,

&gt;.. -·

• ft.:IL}--

~8 9

• Automlllc, AlrCotl~ltl&lt;onln!lvo
• Power Windows, Locks, l~lm1n1
• CD Syattm, Tilt &amp;Cruise

2001 Chevy Blaier
LT 4 Door4x4

~8,95

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;Locke
• CD Syatem, Alum. Wheels
• Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

C!assjfieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

02-7
insert
Cl
A4
A6
BJ-8

p!

Stocks

A3 ·

ON THE
RUNMeigs'
Tyson
Lee
fights
for
yardage
Friday
'

just what has happened," said
Principal Michaela Kucsma.
But, as sh,e and several other
teachers pointed out, the children also need~d ·an expression of a non-verbal nature like writing their thoughts
down on paper, doing art-

_-,:!

Sanders said inquiries. have
come to her office about
GALLIPOLIS Doha- . where to donate to Red
tions of time, money and Cross efforts.
blood to the relief effort
Sanders provided the
arising from the Sept. 11 ter- information due to concern
rorist attack on the U.S. can over reports of bogus relief
be made to the American collections.
Red c;ross' offiCial site, offi"I don't want anyone" to
cials with the organization's get ripped off," she said. "It's
Gallia County chapter said.
.a sad situation to begin with
Gallia Coordinate~ Nancy and people don't need their
Sanders said pledges can be · money intended for a good
. e , J?h?ned il;l J,zy ~calling 1 -800~
PII•P9'e going...i.nto . $Q!llC-o.. .
·"": F!ELP ~NOW or 1·800- body else's po~ket.
257-7575.1nternet users can
"There are a lot of good
- make a...secure online credit agencies involved in this___
card contribution by visiting effort, but with some, you
www.redcross.org.
don't know where the
Donations can also be money is· going," she added.
made to the Gallia County . Anyone interested in
American Red Cross at P.O. donating blood should call
Box 342, Gallipolis, Ohio 1-800-GIVE-LIFE
for
45631 , or to the American schedules of upcoming local
Red C ross , P.O. Box 37243,
Washington, D.C. 20013.
Pleese - Help, AI

work, creating displays, participating in patriotic activities,
doing positive things to
heighten their sense of pride
in America.
All of these things, said Lori
Hill, an eighth grade teacher,
helps relieve the apprehension
-"after all many of my stu·
dents have siblings who are in
the military. They know how
serious this is, they saw it all
on television ."
She said her students were
watching the classroom television when the plane hit the

Please see Kids, A&amp;

Frank predicts revenue
will continue plunge· .
BY BRIAN J. REED

end, and the closing is
expected to result in the loss
POMEROY- Signs of a of undetermined, but thouweakening economy in light sands of doUars in taX revof the Sept. 11 terrorist · enue.
attacks could be especially
M eigs County Treasurer
alarming to Meigs County Howard Frank said the
officials
dealing
with county stands to lose at least
already- dwindling revenue $150,000 in personal propfrom sales tax and the loss of erty tax revenue this year
tax revenue from Southern alone, if mining equipment
is removed from the Salem
Ohio Coal Co.
The mines are expected to Township property before
cease operations at year's
Pleese see 'nixes, A&amp;.
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

·Gillilan seeks post-conviction relief
Alleges murder plea
was coerced

sentence be vacated ..
Michael A. "Tony" Gillilan filed a peti·
tion to vacate, or Set aside, his sentence of
15 years to life in Common Pleas Court
on Friday.
He was sentenced on charges of murder and child endangering as the result of
a "no contest" plea in February.
Gillilan was originally charged with
two counts of murder with death penal.
.'

BY BRIAN ), REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY -A Long Bottom man
serving prison time for last year's murder
· of a 3- year-old boy has asked that his

ty specifications in addition to the child
endangering charge, accused in the shaking death of his former girlfriend's son.
In his motion, Gillilan says his attorney,
William N. Eachus of Gallipolis, "pres·
sured me into taking a plea bargain and
coerced the plea without advising me of
all possible defenses."

Please see Gillilan, A6

'

Galli• all Business .Expo
look for the Holzer Medical Center Community Health
·

a ..

It's all goo'CI

WIUNTHIII '

2001 Chevy Venture ·
Extended Van

• Wall Street suffers somber,
staggering week. A8

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF ,

School children
react to attacks
Brand New 2002 Chevy

• Stars turn out for unprecedent·
ed telethon for attack victims, A7

rel1ef donation
infonnation

TOBE
Brand New 2002 Chevy

• Feds charged man for trying
to fly with ilfegal papers, A7

R~ Cross posts

THE M~OAIAL · WAU. - Victoria Freeman, a fourth-grader at
Southern Elementary, looks over the memorial wall which consists

Brand New 2002 Pontiac

Bush, A&amp;

AMERICA AT WAR

an~ Wellness
at the Expo
. Department
.

·-

Slltunlay, S.ptenlll•er· 29 • I 0 aln • 5 pm
Sunday, Septemller 30 • 1. pm • 5 pm
Gallla County Fairground•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

FREE Blood Pressure screeni(lgs, Body Fat Analysis. screenings. and
health information will be provided. For more information, coli

www .holzer.org

.

446·5679

�..

~
___________
RacNan~~----~~~-~~e~~·
~-·Holzer Medical Equipmentr Holzer Infusion Services open·
jun:bKJl ·~rm.m"' jentintJ

'

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Coru6lid.tted Health Systems :mnounces the
recent opening of Holzer Medical
Equipment and Holzer Infusion Services.
Holzer Medical Equipment Inc.,
located at 288 1 Ohio ·160 in Gallipolis, at the intersection of Ohio 160
and Jackson Pike, provides home-use
medical equipment, related supplies,
and services to patients with the quality ·they deserve. Home medical
equipment availa~e includes patient
room equipment, mobility aids, bath- .

ainic slated

SIIIIAy, Septenlber 2S, 2001

room aids, aids for new mothers, and
incontinent and diabetic supplies. ·
Also offered is a fuU line of respiratory products supported by respiratory therapists, including home oxygen,
ventilators, apnea monitors, nebulizers and medication. Delivery and
pick-up of equipment and service
calli are included as a pan of the service.
Holzer Medical Equipment Inc. is
backed by highly qualified home
specialists,The service area consists of
southeastern Ohio and Mason

care

County Farm Bureau.
For details, caU 1-800-7779226.

POMEROY
Meig5
County Health Department
will have an immunization
clinic Tuesd.ty, 9 to 11 a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. at its office on
Memorial Drive. Shot records
are to be presented and children are to be accompanied
by a parent or legal guardian.

Spedal meeting
GALLIPOLIS - A special
meeting and work session will
be · conducted by Gallia
County Agricultural Society
on Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at
the fairgrounds and the new
property to review and discuss
site plans and othe&lt; items.

Board to meet
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Equcation will
meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
high school.

Meeting set
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee's regular
bimonthly full committee
meeting is Monday at noon at
the 911 Center. The public is
welcome to attend.

Dedicate
markers

POMEROY
Meigs
County Historical Society,
Ohio Historical Society and
Meigs County commissioners
wiU hold a dedication of the
GALLIPOLIS - ChickaMorgan's Raid route marker . mauga Watershed Conservanat Bashan, located by the cy District's regular monthly
Bashan Fire Department, meeting is Tuesday at 7:30
Monday at 11:30 a.m. and the p.m. in C. H. McKenzie AgriMorgan's Raid route and cultural Center meeting
Meigs County Courthouse room.
marker on the courthouse
The public is welcome to
lawn on Monday at 1 p.m.
attenc;!. For more information,
1 A reception wiU be held at call 446-617 3.
the Meigs County Museum
foUowing the dedications. J.D.
Britton, director of the Ohio
·Historical Society, local •histoCHESHIRE - · River Val.ry office, will be the speaker. ley High School homecoming hog roast is Sept. 28 at 6
- p.m. in the- school yard. Cost
-AgDay~
· is $5 per person.
GALLIPOLIS More
Dinner includes pork, soup
than 400 fourth-graders from beans, cornbread, coleslaw,
Gallipolis City and Gallia beverage and dessert.
County Local schools are
expected to participate in
Gallia County Farm Bureau's
first Agriculture Awareness
GALLIPOLIS - Women's
Day on Thursday.
Connection meets Tuesday
The event will feature the from 6:30-8 p.m. at Altho( &amp;
COS! on Wheels display. .
Associates, 1456-Jackson Pike.
The "Agriculture AdvenThe topic is "Finances tures" traveling science pro- Getting Started or Starting
gratll will provide educational Over."The meeting is open to
exploration of the agricultur- · all women who are single,
a! community.
widowed, divorced or otherThe day also features sta- wise alone.
tions present.ed by local edu,cators, Gallia Soil and Water,
Extension Service, library,
post office and other Farm
RIO GRANDE- GalliaBureau volunteers. The sta- Vinton Educational Service
tions wiU brief ·students on Center Governing Board has
farm math, agronomy, ·wool changed its monthly meeting
dyeing and spinning, safety on date.
the farm and other hands-on
The meeting will be held
learning.
on the second Wednesday of
"The agriculture industry each month. The next board
in Gallia County .is a vital part meeting is Oct, 10 at 7 p.m. in
of the community, and this the Human Resources Buildday is designed to provide ing at Buckeye Hills Career
more knowledge to our resi- Center, Room 155.
,dents," said Jill Smith, organizational director for Gallia

Distrid session

Hog roast.

Meet Tuesday

Date change

Gallipolis, Eastem win
Details in Sports,.B1

Correction Polley
Our maln CU:1ftm !n all stories is to bt
accunte. Ir ,.uu know·or an error in a
story, call 'lhl! newaruom at (1..0) 446·
~lor P0111&lt;roy: (7&gt;10) 991.2155. Wo will
check your Information and make a
col'l'!dJon If warranted.

. Ntwl Dlplrtmenll
OIIU]polle

Tho m•l• aoaabor lo 446·2342.
Dtpo_u.,.....,an: ·
Mll!IIIJll Editor·I!Jt.118
Clly Edllor..--..·-··---·-E•L 121
Lifatyle ...- ........................ - ....ExL l:ZO
SpOrts .............. ;. ........--............ Ext.lll
News ............ _ ..., ,.......,_,_,_EJt.l19

To Send ~Mall
K•ltribuno@ourtkantt.etHII

Now• Dlpeilmont
Pomeroy
Tho main number Is Ul-1155.

Membtr: Thr Auociated PKu, 1nd the Ohio

Newspaper Auociation.
POSTMASTEA: Send .Jdreu corm:tions 'to The
Sunday-11rnu Sentinel, 82' Third Ave.,
Oallipolii,Ohio 4~3 I.
.
SIJNDAYONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier 011 Mocer Routt
ON: Week. ...........-...~..-·····················.'...•.~.... SI.l!i
One Ye.r ~-········'""-··· .............................. W .OO :
•SINGLI! COP\' PRICI!

~-~-bY··;·~-~ - ~~ii'tcd'i~-~~--!~
home ellrler ICI'\'kc is •~lillble .
.
Thl! Sundly 1lme1·Senllnel wlll no1 be relpO!IIible
fct ldvance paymenrs rnacle 10 eaniert.
Publilher JWCtve• the: ri&amp;lv: to ldj1.11tntcs durin&amp;
the IUbtcription period. Sublcription rate thiiiJCI
m117 be lmplcmcnled by chanaint the duration br
the wblc:ription.

lltpartmfllt ..............,

Gonor1l M•pr...............-.... Ext.IIOI
Nowo-...-... -......- .............- ...-Ext.ll02
................_........-...-, ....... -....or Exlllll6

•

'

NAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
bailie GIIIJI Count}'

13 WoelcJ ..... ~ ............................................... $27.30
.SSJ.S2
S2 Wet.kl ........................................-.. ......... ..$ 10.5.56
Rata OutMdt Gtlll• C.U.ty
13WeeU .......................................................$29.2'
26·WeeU.......................................................S.56.68
ll W..b ....................................... ............ ll09.72

26 Weeu ........................... ,......

GALLIPOLIS - Anyone
who has attended Gallia
Academy High School and is
currently on active military
duty, contact Kim Frazier
with your name and branch
of service at 446-4745.

HMC notes

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 20 none.
Birth Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew Muller, daughter,
Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

Driver ticketed
GALLIPOLIS - An Arizona man was cited on three
. charges by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol following a two-vehicle
accident Friday on Ohio 160
near Gallipolis.
Troopers said Roy L. Hill,
58, Helena, was northbound
at 8:06 p.m. when the pickup
truck he drove went left· and
collided with a · southbound
pickup driven by Freddy L.
Helms, 41, 201 Circle Drive,
Ga!lipolis.
·
··
··. Helms was stopped to make
a left turn onto County ROad
3 Q3ulaville Pik7.) at the time
of the crash, accordiqg.to the
repoh.
Both vehicles were sli~:Jltlly
damaged. Iiill__was
driving under the influence,
driving under suspension and
left of center.

four calls for assistance Friday,
bringing the total number of
runs for the month to 219
and 2, 729 on the year.
Runs included transportS to
Holzer Medical Center from
an accident at Third Avenue
and Court Street (two units
sent), HuU Road and Gallia
Metropolitan Estates.
Refusal of treatment was
noted on runs to the Third
and Court accident, and to
Si)ver Bridge Plaza.

M ............ . .....

.

·~o:---~-------Ohlo weather
: Bund8y, Sept. 23

-

~
•I Columbuo lwm- I

•,

•

DissolutiOn

W. VA.

sought

POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
POMEROY - An action
Meigs County Common
for
dissolution of marriage
Pleas Court by Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Co., Pomeroy, . has been filed in Meigs
against Modern Sanitation County Common Pleas
Service Corp., Long Bottom, Court to Daniel E. Gheen,
and others, aUeging default on Long ·Bottom, and Jill M.
a promissory note in the Gheen, CottageviUe, W.Va.
amount of $182,208.43.

o~a
bny Pl Cloudy. Cloudy

',

THE.HOSKINS FAMILY .
· Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

•.•

Sternwhee[ ~ver ~est

- . ~[[~&amp;~the ~ver
Fire TniCk hl'llde
Dee &amp; Dall8li •

S=:~~~~:
· September
29th
Live Remote· WYVK Radio

~t

Parade
Swinging Seniors •
Clogging·
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
Myron Duffield "King of the
Calliope" (Calliope playing IS
to 20
on the hour)
by the
Lottery

,_

SponSOOld.by the Ohio Lottery

Friday, Septem :

s~nsoredby

1:00 p.m.

JACKSON- Holzer Med' · "ical
Center-Jackson
has
' achieved accreditation from
the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations as a result of its
demonstrated
compliance
i with the Joint Commissions
nationally recognized health
care st&lt;~ndards.
l Founded in 1951, the Joint
: Commission is dedicated to
: :. contin~ously improving the
i • safety and quality of the
nations health care through
' voluntary accreditation. The
; .Joint Commissions on-site
survey of Holzer Medical
·Center-Jackson occurred in
June.
· "Above all, the national
' ~tandafds are intended to stimulate continuous, systematic

I

September .27th, 28th, and 29th
6:30p.m.
7:00. 10:00 p.m.

8v MIWSSIA RUSSELL

5:30-6:4Sp.m.

Contributing to activities at T.J.'s are
Wome n, Infants and Children (WIC)
Program, FACT S, GaUia County Family
and Children First Council, Fashion
Bug, Bas ket Delights, Shake Shoppe,
Bob Evans, Dairy Queen, KFC, Captain
D 's, That Special Touch, McDonald's,
Ponderosa, Summer Image, Image
Gallery, Golden C orral and Movie Station.

"The sherffl"'s office
ca11't be there 24 I1011rs
a day."

~~ter-J~ckson,

O.lllpolle, OH

~~~~~

rr=:;;;::
....::;--1

;.. awarded~acctedltatlen-ffem-~JaAel

more lnformatil)n, call Denver .RID at

OpeniD&amp; Cemnony by
Pomeroy AmeriCan Legitm ,

101

------------------------,~---------

.i Holzer Medid,l

Place: Gqod NeW'S Bapt)st Qipr;eh,~ 4!)45,~llR~

6:00p.m.

Snow

.

TJ.'s will also promote numerous
activities during the week, incl uding a
parent's breakfast, parent care packages,
daily drawings and ·prize giveaways, and
more.

,

Would like to welcome you to a night of
great music with nationally known group .

Thursday, September 27th

-

ronment for all children of th e facility,"
Church said.

receiVmg a bulb can call
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cloudiness in the afternoon.
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
Hampton at the sheriff's office,
The National Weather Ser- Highs around 80. Light and
CADMUS -"We have· to
446-1221.
vice says dry weather will variable wind becoming do some community policing,
Crime Watch officers were
. continue across the region on southwest 5 to 10 mph.
that means getting involved;'
JeHProvenl
also elected at the meeting,
·. ' Sunday 3l a high pressure sysSunday
night... Mostly Gallia County sheriff's Deputy
including president, John
; tern moves out.
. . cloudy with a chance of JeffProvens recently told mem- · sheriff's office can't be there 24
Ingels; vice president, Betty
. Moisture will increase as a showers and thunderstorms. bers of the Walnut ·Township hours a day," Provens said. "If
Miller; secretary, Allison Hively;
·· cold front moves into · the Lows in the mid 50s.
Crime Watch.
you can save one person from
and treasurer, Greg Spears.
·. Great Lakes remon
Sunday
Monday... Mostly cloudy
.,.
Provens read various police getting their home broken into,
· night.
·
·
with a chance of showers.
'
~~~~~hl~~
.
•, A. southerly flow of air in Highs near 70.
f
townships and allowed residents
Deputy Karla Hampton was
• d
. a vance o the approaching . Monday
night.. .Mostly
to ask questions and voice con- also on hand to demonstrate
: cold front will bring warmer cloudy with a chance of
Want To Save
: temperatures for Sunday with showers. Lows in the lower cerns.
the Emergency Beacon proMoney On
. high
80
·
50
"It's your program. We're just gram. The program allows
'
snear.
s.
h
hldi
"h
th
Diamonds And
.Extended forecast:
ere to e p · rect it,
e senior citizens in e area to
. Showers will continue into
Wedding Bands?
Thesday... Mostly
cloudy added.
replace their porch lights with
; Monday and Tuesday as a low
: pressure system moves across with a chance of showers.
Provens said he was pleased emergency beacons which
SEE USI
• the Great Lakes.
Highs in the mid 60s.
with the . number of residents strobe ill the event of an emer• Sunrise Sunday wiU be at
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. who attended the meeting. "It's gec:tcy.
; 7:20a.m.
Lows in the upper 40s and going to take everybody in this 1 Hampton has handed out
Weather forecaat:
highs in the upper ·60s.
. JX?Om to help prevent crime more than 50 of the bulbs free
Sunday... Patchy fog early,
Thursday... Partly cloudy. here:• he said.
of charge and has plenty more
: otherwise sunshine, giving Lows in the upper 40s and ' "Our gnals are to reduce to go:around, she said.
Tawney Jewelers
·: way to some increasing highs in· the lower 70s. ·
crime in the community. The
Anyone iS interested in
422 Second Avenue

Good News Baptist Church·.

·

-

Chance for showers increases

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been isued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Justin Robert EdW2rds, 21,
Coolville, and Chanda Clair,
21, Reedsville; Jason Thomas
Hart, 25, and Amber K..
Atkins, 21, both of Rutland;
Jerod Daniel Gilmore, 21,
Pomeroy, and Brook Lynn
Bryan, 16, Cheshire; and
Shawn Edward Rayburn, 31,
and Leslie Leigh Parker, 22,
both of Pomeroy.

ATTENTION
KMART
SHOPPERS

T.......

dinner with their children - is Monday.
Parents across the nation are encouraged
to take a break from their busy schedules, sit down and eat dinner with their
children.
Organizers said the goal of Family Day
is not only the promotion of "family
dinners;' but to instill in children the
importance of famil y unity.
Tammy C hurch, ow ner and adlninistrator ofTJ.'s C hild Care, and her staff
will again parti cipate in this year's celebration .
"T.J's will tise Parents Week to say
' thank you' to all parents whose hard
work, help and support aUow myself and
my saff the ability to provide a productive, loving and quality child care envi-

Walnut promotes community
policing with Crime Watch

.rn . ~ ~• .. ~•
-

2:5,2001

TJ:s joins Ohio Parents Week events
GALLIPOLIS - TJ:s Child Care of
GaUipolis will join in the celebration of
Ohio Parents Week that starts Sunday.
Ohio has established Parents Week in
an effort to recognize, honor and celebrate those who raise children. The celebration also promotes many resources
available to help with the task.
In a letter, Ohio First Lady Hope Taft
said "parents need to be lifted up and
encouraged for their hard work in providing food, clothing, shelter, health care
and emotional support for their children
and for reinforcing education, setting
positive values and modeling healthy .
·
lifestyles."
National Family Day - a day where
parents should make all efforts to eat

l...._lwm· l ·

Issued licenses

Citation Issued
POINT ROCK- Jessica
R. Whitlatch, 16, 38924 Ohio
689, Albany, was cited for failure to control by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol foUowing a onecar accident Thursday on 689.
Troopers said Whitlatch was
southbound, one-tenth of a
mile south of Columbia
Township Road 11 (Sisson) at
3:50 p.m. when the car she
drove went off the right edge
of the road.
She lost control of the car,
which crossed the roadway
and went off the left side of
the road. The car then struck
an embankment, where ·it
rolled onto its top.
The driver was not injured
and the car was moderately
damaged.

•

"With the addition of these services, Holzer Consolidated Health
Syuems now has a fuU range ofhome
health services that includes Holzer
Home Care, Holzer Extra Care
•
Holzer Hospice, Holzer Infusion Services, and Holzer Medical Equipment," said Rebecca Nelson, systems
director, Holzer Medical Center
Home Health Services.
For information, call Holzer Medical Equipment, Inc. at . (740) '4464095; and Holzer Infusion Services,
toO-free at 1-877-623-6427.

File foreclosure

j

and
organization-wide
improvement in an organizations performance and the
outcomes of care;• says Russell
P. Massaro, M.D., executive
vice president, Accreditation
Operations, Joint Commission.
"The community should be
proud that Holier Medical
Center-Jackson is focusing on
the most challenging. goal to
continuously raise quality to
higher levels."
Diana Fisher, Chief Operating Officer, spoke of her pride
in a staff who strive to meet or
exceed the national standards
set by tlie Joint Commission.
"In addition, they appreciate
the educational aspect of the
survey and the opportunity to
interact with the team of sur-

veyors."
She notes accreditation is
attainable only through coop•
'
eration and communication
among ho!.pitai staff. "Everyone plays a vital role in meeting standards. Accreditation is
proof of an organization-wide
commitment to provide quality care on an ongoing basis."

Cemetery adds
service- Money, Dl

IT'S NOT
TOO
LATE!
STILL
TIME TO
ENROLL
FOR FALL
ClASSES!

CALL
TODAYU
446-4367
OR

1-800-214-0452

EXPO 2001
Thanks For Your ·
t:::::~ . Support Of Expo 2001

MEIGS COUNTY
.KARATE CLUB
Fall Quarter
beginning classes
starting Thursday,
Setpember 'Zl, at
6:00 p.m. at Carelton
School, Syracuse.
For more
.Information, call

(740) 992-6839

To everyone who helped In any way with this year'l
event... we couldn't do It tllthout you.
Thanks so much, see you next yurt
· Expo Committee • Dallas Weber, President.

EMS runs ·
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County EMS responded to

'
···-:
..

'·,·

troivnl1q of the

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - US Airways plans to
lay off or transfer aU of its 44
employees at Yeager Airport,a
nempaper reports.
The workers will be replaced
by lower-paid US Airways
Express workers.
The
airline
recently'
announced it was dropping
three daily . fuU-size jet flights ·
between Charleston and Pittsburgh.
. "Many of these people have
been here 20 years or more,"
said Brian Belcher, Yeager's
marketing director. "They're
professionals. You hate to see
them go."
David Nichols, the airline's
operations chief at Yeager, sai.i
union employees with seniority may be able. to transfer to
positions at other airports,'but
the rest face layoffi.
t·

.

by the
University of Rio Grande'.·

Queen ·

4:00p.m.,
4:00p.m.

·
cuts Yeager jobs

(USPS lll-UOI
CMmualt7 Newtplper Hokliap, Inc.
Publiahed every Sund1y, 82' fhird Ave.,
Callipolll, Ohio, by \he Ohio Valley Publilhina
Compeny. Second elliS po~~.~ac paid MOallipoli1.
Ohio.
EniCrcd· 11 ltc:ond clau mailina 11.11ter at
Pomeroy, Ohio Pmt olflce.

lhllyands. ...,

Seeking names

expanding list of therapies including
IV antibiotic therapy, chemotherapy,
AIDS therapy, and growth hormone
therapy.
Services featured include clinical
pharmacists and skilled IV nurses on
call24 hours a day, seven days a week;
the latest infusion equipment and
supplies; prompt, reliable deliveries of
supplies and equipment; coordination
of care with physicians and case managers; and patient training, assessment
and monitoring. On-call patient sup-.
port is available 24 hours a day.

US Airway5

&amp;unbap-tltime• &amp;entinel
Reader Services

County, W.Va., with emergency services available 24 hours a day, seven
days a week.
Holzer Infusion Services specializes in caring, individualized services
for patients who require infusion
therapy. Services are available wherever the patient is, whether at home,
in an extended care facility, ·or at a
medical clinic.
Formed to provide convenient,
high-quality infusion services for residents, Holzer Infusion Services is the
provider of choice for an ever-

PageA3

5:00 ·6:00p.m.
5:30 p.ll).
6:30. 8:30p.m.- ..

· 9:00 • 132:00 mid
9:30p.m.

Chili Cookoff Jutlsing , . · 1

"Ducky Derby" • Pomcioy
Merchants AssociatlQtl
Big Bend Cloggers. Spotisocid
by the Ohio Lottery
:
Captain's Dinner· Eagles Clu~
"ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower . Sponsored by d..!
Ohio Lottery
'1
Blitzkreig Unplugged • •· ·
Sponsored by the Ohio 'Loiter)&lt;
FIREWORKS • Ripenhoff '
Distributing.

••
I

''

'•

I .
~

I

I
••

I
I

!

.

.

All Entertainment is
'

Sponsored by the
O~io Lottery!

•

.

I
I '

Fireworks are
sponsored by
Ripenhoff Distri
and

I •
~

AT RIO GRAND·E
Scoff Spencer, Millersburg, OH

SR325

hurch '

September 23-27, 2001

)

Sunday • lOAM Bible Class • 11AM Worship
6PM Evening Worship • Monday - Thursday 7PM
EveryC?ne Is Welcome! • Come Hear The Gospel

•

.....
'"';.

..

..

!

.,

.'

�..

~
___________
RacNan~~----~~~-~~e~~·
~-·Holzer Medical Equipmentr Holzer Infusion Services open·
jun:bKJl ·~rm.m"' jentintJ

'

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Coru6lid.tted Health Systems :mnounces the
recent opening of Holzer Medical
Equipment and Holzer Infusion Services.
Holzer Medical Equipment Inc.,
located at 288 1 Ohio ·160 in Gallipolis, at the intersection of Ohio 160
and Jackson Pike, provides home-use
medical equipment, related supplies,
and services to patients with the quality ·they deserve. Home medical
equipment availa~e includes patient
room equipment, mobility aids, bath- .

ainic slated

SIIIIAy, Septenlber 2S, 2001

room aids, aids for new mothers, and
incontinent and diabetic supplies. ·
Also offered is a fuU line of respiratory products supported by respiratory therapists, including home oxygen,
ventilators, apnea monitors, nebulizers and medication. Delivery and
pick-up of equipment and service
calli are included as a pan of the service.
Holzer Medical Equipment Inc. is
backed by highly qualified home
specialists,The service area consists of
southeastern Ohio and Mason

care

County Farm Bureau.
For details, caU 1-800-7779226.

POMEROY
Meig5
County Health Department
will have an immunization
clinic Tuesd.ty, 9 to 11 a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. at its office on
Memorial Drive. Shot records
are to be presented and children are to be accompanied
by a parent or legal guardian.

Spedal meeting
GALLIPOLIS - A special
meeting and work session will
be · conducted by Gallia
County Agricultural Society
on Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at
the fairgrounds and the new
property to review and discuss
site plans and othe&lt; items.

Board to meet
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Equcation will
meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
high school.

Meeting set
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee's regular
bimonthly full committee
meeting is Monday at noon at
the 911 Center. The public is
welcome to attend.

Dedicate
markers

POMEROY
Meigs
County Historical Society,
Ohio Historical Society and
Meigs County commissioners
wiU hold a dedication of the
GALLIPOLIS - ChickaMorgan's Raid route marker . mauga Watershed Conservanat Bashan, located by the cy District's regular monthly
Bashan Fire Department, meeting is Tuesday at 7:30
Monday at 11:30 a.m. and the p.m. in C. H. McKenzie AgriMorgan's Raid route and cultural Center meeting
Meigs County Courthouse room.
marker on the courthouse
The public is welcome to
lawn on Monday at 1 p.m.
attenc;!. For more information,
1 A reception wiU be held at call 446-617 3.
the Meigs County Museum
foUowing the dedications. J.D.
Britton, director of the Ohio
·Historical Society, local •histoCHESHIRE - · River Val.ry office, will be the speaker. ley High School homecoming hog roast is Sept. 28 at 6
- p.m. in the- school yard. Cost
-AgDay~
· is $5 per person.
GALLIPOLIS More
Dinner includes pork, soup
than 400 fourth-graders from beans, cornbread, coleslaw,
Gallipolis City and Gallia beverage and dessert.
County Local schools are
expected to participate in
Gallia County Farm Bureau's
first Agriculture Awareness
GALLIPOLIS - Women's
Day on Thursday.
Connection meets Tuesday
The event will feature the from 6:30-8 p.m. at Altho( &amp;
COS! on Wheels display. .
Associates, 1456-Jackson Pike.
The "Agriculture AdvenThe topic is "Finances tures" traveling science pro- Getting Started or Starting
gratll will provide educational Over."The meeting is open to
exploration of the agricultur- · all women who are single,
a! community.
widowed, divorced or otherThe day also features sta- wise alone.
tions present.ed by local edu,cators, Gallia Soil and Water,
Extension Service, library,
post office and other Farm
RIO GRANDE- GalliaBureau volunteers. The sta- Vinton Educational Service
tions wiU brief ·students on Center Governing Board has
farm math, agronomy, ·wool changed its monthly meeting
dyeing and spinning, safety on date.
the farm and other hands-on
The meeting will be held
learning.
on the second Wednesday of
"The agriculture industry each month. The next board
in Gallia County .is a vital part meeting is Oct, 10 at 7 p.m. in
of the community, and this the Human Resources Buildday is designed to provide ing at Buckeye Hills Career
more knowledge to our resi- Center, Room 155.
,dents," said Jill Smith, organizational director for Gallia

Distrid session

Hog roast.

Meet Tuesday

Date change

Gallipolis, Eastem win
Details in Sports,.B1

Correction Polley
Our maln CU:1ftm !n all stories is to bt
accunte. Ir ,.uu know·or an error in a
story, call 'lhl! newaruom at (1..0) 446·
~lor P0111&lt;roy: (7&gt;10) 991.2155. Wo will
check your Information and make a
col'l'!dJon If warranted.

. Ntwl Dlplrtmenll
OIIU]polle

Tho m•l• aoaabor lo 446·2342.
Dtpo_u.,.....,an: ·
Mll!IIIJll Editor·I!Jt.118
Clly Edllor..--..·-··---·-E•L 121
Lifatyle ...- ........................ - ....ExL l:ZO
SpOrts .............. ;. ........--............ Ext.lll
News ............ _ ..., ,.......,_,_,_EJt.l19

To Send ~Mall
K•ltribuno@ourtkantt.etHII

Now• Dlpeilmont
Pomeroy
Tho main number Is Ul-1155.

Membtr: Thr Auociated PKu, 1nd the Ohio

Newspaper Auociation.
POSTMASTEA: Send .Jdreu corm:tions 'to The
Sunday-11rnu Sentinel, 82' Third Ave.,
Oallipolii,Ohio 4~3 I.
.
SIJNDAYONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier 011 Mocer Routt
ON: Week. ...........-...~..-·····················.'...•.~.... SI.l!i
One Ye.r ~-········'""-··· .............................. W .OO :
•SINGLI! COP\' PRICI!

~-~-bY··;·~-~ - ~~ii'tcd'i~-~~--!~
home ellrler ICI'\'kc is •~lillble .
.
Thl! Sundly 1lme1·Senllnel wlll no1 be relpO!IIible
fct ldvance paymenrs rnacle 10 eaniert.
Publilher JWCtve• the: ri&amp;lv: to ldj1.11tntcs durin&amp;
the IUbtcription period. Sublcription rate thiiiJCI
m117 be lmplcmcnled by chanaint the duration br
the wblc:ription.

lltpartmfllt ..............,

Gonor1l M•pr...............-.... Ext.IIOI
Nowo-...-... -......- .............- ...-Ext.ll02
................_........-...-, ....... -....or Exlllll6

•

'

NAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
bailie GIIIJI Count}'

13 WoelcJ ..... ~ ............................................... $27.30
.SSJ.S2
S2 Wet.kl ........................................-.. ......... ..$ 10.5.56
Rata OutMdt Gtlll• C.U.ty
13WeeU .......................................................$29.2'
26·WeeU.......................................................S.56.68
ll W..b ....................................... ............ ll09.72

26 Weeu ........................... ,......

GALLIPOLIS - Anyone
who has attended Gallia
Academy High School and is
currently on active military
duty, contact Kim Frazier
with your name and branch
of service at 446-4745.

HMC notes

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 20 none.
Birth Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew Muller, daughter,
Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

Driver ticketed
GALLIPOLIS - An Arizona man was cited on three
. charges by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol following a two-vehicle
accident Friday on Ohio 160
near Gallipolis.
Troopers said Roy L. Hill,
58, Helena, was northbound
at 8:06 p.m. when the pickup
truck he drove went left· and
collided with a · southbound
pickup driven by Freddy L.
Helms, 41, 201 Circle Drive,
Ga!lipolis.
·
··
··. Helms was stopped to make
a left turn onto County ROad
3 Q3ulaville Pik7.) at the time
of the crash, accordiqg.to the
repoh.
Both vehicles were sli~:Jltlly
damaged. Iiill__was
driving under the influence,
driving under suspension and
left of center.

four calls for assistance Friday,
bringing the total number of
runs for the month to 219
and 2, 729 on the year.
Runs included transportS to
Holzer Medical Center from
an accident at Third Avenue
and Court Street (two units
sent), HuU Road and Gallia
Metropolitan Estates.
Refusal of treatment was
noted on runs to the Third
and Court accident, and to
Si)ver Bridge Plaza.

M ............ . .....

.

·~o:---~-------Ohlo weather
: Bund8y, Sept. 23

-

~
•I Columbuo lwm- I

•,

•

DissolutiOn

W. VA.

sought

POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
POMEROY - An action
Meigs County Common
for
dissolution of marriage
Pleas Court by Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Co., Pomeroy, . has been filed in Meigs
against Modern Sanitation County Common Pleas
Service Corp., Long Bottom, Court to Daniel E. Gheen,
and others, aUeging default on Long ·Bottom, and Jill M.
a promissory note in the Gheen, CottageviUe, W.Va.
amount of $182,208.43.

o~a
bny Pl Cloudy. Cloudy

',

THE.HOSKINS FAMILY .
· Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

•.•

Sternwhee[ ~ver ~est

- . ~[[~&amp;~the ~ver
Fire TniCk hl'llde
Dee &amp; Dall8li •

S=:~~~~:
· September
29th
Live Remote· WYVK Radio

~t

Parade
Swinging Seniors •
Clogging·
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
Myron Duffield "King of the
Calliope" (Calliope playing IS
to 20
on the hour)
by the
Lottery

,_

SponSOOld.by the Ohio Lottery

Friday, Septem :

s~nsoredby

1:00 p.m.

JACKSON- Holzer Med' · "ical
Center-Jackson
has
' achieved accreditation from
the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations as a result of its
demonstrated
compliance
i with the Joint Commissions
nationally recognized health
care st&lt;~ndards.
l Founded in 1951, the Joint
: Commission is dedicated to
: :. contin~ously improving the
i • safety and quality of the
nations health care through
' voluntary accreditation. The
; .Joint Commissions on-site
survey of Holzer Medical
·Center-Jackson occurred in
June.
· "Above all, the national
' ~tandafds are intended to stimulate continuous, systematic

I

September .27th, 28th, and 29th
6:30p.m.
7:00. 10:00 p.m.

8v MIWSSIA RUSSELL

5:30-6:4Sp.m.

Contributing to activities at T.J.'s are
Wome n, Infants and Children (WIC)
Program, FACT S, GaUia County Family
and Children First Council, Fashion
Bug, Bas ket Delights, Shake Shoppe,
Bob Evans, Dairy Queen, KFC, Captain
D 's, That Special Touch, McDonald's,
Ponderosa, Summer Image, Image
Gallery, Golden C orral and Movie Station.

"The sherffl"'s office
ca11't be there 24 I1011rs
a day."

~~ter-J~ckson,

O.lllpolle, OH

~~~~~

rr=:;;;::
....::;--1

;.. awarded~acctedltatlen-ffem-~JaAel

more lnformatil)n, call Denver .RID at

OpeniD&amp; Cemnony by
Pomeroy AmeriCan Legitm ,

101

------------------------,~---------

.i Holzer Medid,l

Place: Gqod NeW'S Bapt)st Qipr;eh,~ 4!)45,~llR~

6:00p.m.

Snow

.

TJ.'s will also promote numerous
activities during the week, incl uding a
parent's breakfast, parent care packages,
daily drawings and ·prize giveaways, and
more.

,

Would like to welcome you to a night of
great music with nationally known group .

Thursday, September 27th

-

ronment for all children of th e facility,"
Church said.

receiVmg a bulb can call
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cloudiness in the afternoon.
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
Hampton at the sheriff's office,
The National Weather Ser- Highs around 80. Light and
CADMUS -"We have· to
446-1221.
vice says dry weather will variable wind becoming do some community policing,
Crime Watch officers were
. continue across the region on southwest 5 to 10 mph.
that means getting involved;'
JeHProvenl
also elected at the meeting,
·. ' Sunday 3l a high pressure sysSunday
night... Mostly Gallia County sheriff's Deputy
including president, John
; tern moves out.
. . cloudy with a chance of JeffProvens recently told mem- · sheriff's office can't be there 24
Ingels; vice president, Betty
. Moisture will increase as a showers and thunderstorms. bers of the Walnut ·Township hours a day," Provens said. "If
Miller; secretary, Allison Hively;
·· cold front moves into · the Lows in the mid 50s.
Crime Watch.
you can save one person from
and treasurer, Greg Spears.
·. Great Lakes remon
Sunday
Monday... Mostly cloudy
.,.
Provens read various police getting their home broken into,
· night.
·
·
with a chance of showers.
'
~~~~~hl~~
.
•, A. southerly flow of air in Highs near 70.
f
townships and allowed residents
Deputy Karla Hampton was
• d
. a vance o the approaching . Monday
night.. .Mostly
to ask questions and voice con- also on hand to demonstrate
: cold front will bring warmer cloudy with a chance of
Want To Save
: temperatures for Sunday with showers. Lows in the lower cerns.
the Emergency Beacon proMoney On
. high
80
·
50
"It's your program. We're just gram. The program allows
'
snear.
s.
h
hldi
"h
th
Diamonds And
.Extended forecast:
ere to e p · rect it,
e senior citizens in e area to
. Showers will continue into
Wedding Bands?
Thesday... Mostly
cloudy added.
replace their porch lights with
; Monday and Tuesday as a low
: pressure system moves across with a chance of showers.
Provens said he was pleased emergency beacons which
SEE USI
• the Great Lakes.
Highs in the mid 60s.
with the . number of residents strobe ill the event of an emer• Sunrise Sunday wiU be at
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. who attended the meeting. "It's gec:tcy.
; 7:20a.m.
Lows in the upper 40s and going to take everybody in this 1 Hampton has handed out
Weather forecaat:
highs in the upper ·60s.
. JX?Om to help prevent crime more than 50 of the bulbs free
Sunday... Patchy fog early,
Thursday... Partly cloudy. here:• he said.
of charge and has plenty more
: otherwise sunshine, giving Lows in the upper 40s and ' "Our gnals are to reduce to go:around, she said.
Tawney Jewelers
·: way to some increasing highs in· the lower 70s. ·
crime in the community. The
Anyone iS interested in
422 Second Avenue

Good News Baptist Church·.

·

-

Chance for showers increases

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been isued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Justin Robert EdW2rds, 21,
Coolville, and Chanda Clair,
21, Reedsville; Jason Thomas
Hart, 25, and Amber K..
Atkins, 21, both of Rutland;
Jerod Daniel Gilmore, 21,
Pomeroy, and Brook Lynn
Bryan, 16, Cheshire; and
Shawn Edward Rayburn, 31,
and Leslie Leigh Parker, 22,
both of Pomeroy.

ATTENTION
KMART
SHOPPERS

T.......

dinner with their children - is Monday.
Parents across the nation are encouraged
to take a break from their busy schedules, sit down and eat dinner with their
children.
Organizers said the goal of Family Day
is not only the promotion of "family
dinners;' but to instill in children the
importance of famil y unity.
Tammy C hurch, ow ner and adlninistrator ofTJ.'s C hild Care, and her staff
will again parti cipate in this year's celebration .
"T.J's will tise Parents Week to say
' thank you' to all parents whose hard
work, help and support aUow myself and
my saff the ability to provide a productive, loving and quality child care envi-

Walnut promotes community
policing with Crime Watch

.rn . ~ ~• .. ~•
-

2:5,2001

TJ:s joins Ohio Parents Week events
GALLIPOLIS - TJ:s Child Care of
GaUipolis will join in the celebration of
Ohio Parents Week that starts Sunday.
Ohio has established Parents Week in
an effort to recognize, honor and celebrate those who raise children. The celebration also promotes many resources
available to help with the task.
In a letter, Ohio First Lady Hope Taft
said "parents need to be lifted up and
encouraged for their hard work in providing food, clothing, shelter, health care
and emotional support for their children
and for reinforcing education, setting
positive values and modeling healthy .
·
lifestyles."
National Family Day - a day where
parents should make all efforts to eat

l...._lwm· l ·

Issued licenses

Citation Issued
POINT ROCK- Jessica
R. Whitlatch, 16, 38924 Ohio
689, Albany, was cited for failure to control by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol foUowing a onecar accident Thursday on 689.
Troopers said Whitlatch was
southbound, one-tenth of a
mile south of Columbia
Township Road 11 (Sisson) at
3:50 p.m. when the car she
drove went off the right edge
of the road.
She lost control of the car,
which crossed the roadway
and went off the left side of
the road. The car then struck
an embankment, where ·it
rolled onto its top.
The driver was not injured
and the car was moderately
damaged.

•

"With the addition of these services, Holzer Consolidated Health
Syuems now has a fuU range ofhome
health services that includes Holzer
Home Care, Holzer Extra Care
•
Holzer Hospice, Holzer Infusion Services, and Holzer Medical Equipment," said Rebecca Nelson, systems
director, Holzer Medical Center
Home Health Services.
For information, call Holzer Medical Equipment, Inc. at . (740) '4464095; and Holzer Infusion Services,
toO-free at 1-877-623-6427.

File foreclosure

j

and
organization-wide
improvement in an organizations performance and the
outcomes of care;• says Russell
P. Massaro, M.D., executive
vice president, Accreditation
Operations, Joint Commission.
"The community should be
proud that Holier Medical
Center-Jackson is focusing on
the most challenging. goal to
continuously raise quality to
higher levels."
Diana Fisher, Chief Operating Officer, spoke of her pride
in a staff who strive to meet or
exceed the national standards
set by tlie Joint Commission.
"In addition, they appreciate
the educational aspect of the
survey and the opportunity to
interact with the team of sur-

veyors."
She notes accreditation is
attainable only through coop•
'
eration and communication
among ho!.pitai staff. "Everyone plays a vital role in meeting standards. Accreditation is
proof of an organization-wide
commitment to provide quality care on an ongoing basis."

Cemetery adds
service- Money, Dl

IT'S NOT
TOO
LATE!
STILL
TIME TO
ENROLL
FOR FALL
ClASSES!

CALL
TODAYU
446-4367
OR

1-800-214-0452

EXPO 2001
Thanks For Your ·
t:::::~ . Support Of Expo 2001

MEIGS COUNTY
.KARATE CLUB
Fall Quarter
beginning classes
starting Thursday,
Setpember 'Zl, at
6:00 p.m. at Carelton
School, Syracuse.
For more
.Information, call

(740) 992-6839

To everyone who helped In any way with this year'l
event... we couldn't do It tllthout you.
Thanks so much, see you next yurt
· Expo Committee • Dallas Weber, President.

EMS runs ·
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County EMS responded to

'
···-:
..

'·,·

troivnl1q of the

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - US Airways plans to
lay off or transfer aU of its 44
employees at Yeager Airport,a
nempaper reports.
The workers will be replaced
by lower-paid US Airways
Express workers.
The
airline
recently'
announced it was dropping
three daily . fuU-size jet flights ·
between Charleston and Pittsburgh.
. "Many of these people have
been here 20 years or more,"
said Brian Belcher, Yeager's
marketing director. "They're
professionals. You hate to see
them go."
David Nichols, the airline's
operations chief at Yeager, sai.i
union employees with seniority may be able. to transfer to
positions at other airports,'but
the rest face layoffi.
t·

.

by the
University of Rio Grande'.·

Queen ·

4:00p.m.,
4:00p.m.

·
cuts Yeager jobs

(USPS lll-UOI
CMmualt7 Newtplper Hokliap, Inc.
Publiahed every Sund1y, 82' fhird Ave.,
Callipolll, Ohio, by \he Ohio Valley Publilhina
Compeny. Second elliS po~~.~ac paid MOallipoli1.
Ohio.
EniCrcd· 11 ltc:ond clau mailina 11.11ter at
Pomeroy, Ohio Pmt olflce.

lhllyands. ...,

Seeking names

expanding list of therapies including
IV antibiotic therapy, chemotherapy,
AIDS therapy, and growth hormone
therapy.
Services featured include clinical
pharmacists and skilled IV nurses on
call24 hours a day, seven days a week;
the latest infusion equipment and
supplies; prompt, reliable deliveries of
supplies and equipment; coordination
of care with physicians and case managers; and patient training, assessment
and monitoring. On-call patient sup-.
port is available 24 hours a day.

US Airway5

&amp;unbap-tltime• &amp;entinel
Reader Services

County, W.Va., with emergency services available 24 hours a day, seven
days a week.
Holzer Infusion Services specializes in caring, individualized services
for patients who require infusion
therapy. Services are available wherever the patient is, whether at home,
in an extended care facility, ·or at a
medical clinic.
Formed to provide convenient,
high-quality infusion services for residents, Holzer Infusion Services is the
provider of choice for an ever-

PageA3

5:00 ·6:00p.m.
5:30 p.ll).
6:30. 8:30p.m.- ..

· 9:00 • 132:00 mid
9:30p.m.

Chili Cookoff Jutlsing , . · 1

"Ducky Derby" • Pomcioy
Merchants AssociatlQtl
Big Bend Cloggers. Spotisocid
by the Ohio Lottery
:
Captain's Dinner· Eagles Clu~
"ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower . Sponsored by d..!
Ohio Lottery
'1
Blitzkreig Unplugged • •· ·
Sponsored by the Ohio 'Loiter)&lt;
FIREWORKS • Ripenhoff '
Distributing.

••
I

''

'•

I .
~

I

I
••

I
I

!

.

.

All Entertainment is
'

Sponsored by the
O~io Lottery!

•

.

I
I '

Fireworks are
sponsored by
Ripenhoff Distri
and

I •
~

AT RIO GRAND·E
Scoff Spencer, Millersburg, OH

SR325

hurch '

September 23-27, 2001

)

Sunday • lOAM Bible Class • 11AM Worship
6PM Evening Worship • Monday - Thursday 7PM
EveryC?ne Is Welcome! • Come Hear The Gospel

•

.....
'"';.

..

..

!

.,

.'

�I

Opinion

PageA4

Page AS

Sunday. September 2:1, 1001

13.1001
•

Galllpolll, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio

Point P11111nt, W.V1.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis

Charles W. Govey
·
Publisher

Managing Editor
DIMe K.y HIU

Larry Boyer

Advertising Dl...crtor

Controller

«&lt;iiitw.,........,., n.,. ...._., hleu dla.......
Jill .... .tJII«&lt;m
. , JMbj«f ,. t4ililat.U..,., l#pfll.all . . . . .
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Utun, *"~

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,., ....- - - - · - ..... .............. o/ ... 0111# IWl4y

PvblislliAr

OUR VIEW

Nodou

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

Today

IS

BY TH£ ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday, Sept. 23, the 266rh day of2001. There are 99

days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 23, 1n9, during the R~lutionary War, the Ameri. can warship Bon Homme Richard defeated the HMS Serapis
after the American commander, John Paul Jones, iJ said to have
declared: "I have not ~ begun to fight!"
On this date:
In 63 B.C., Cae.ar Augustus was born in Rome.
In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass.• held its first
commencement.
In 1780, British spy John Andre wa1 captured along with papen
revealing Benedia Arnold's plot to surrender West Point to the
British.
.
In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to Sr. Louis
from the Pacific Northwm.
In 1846, the planet Neptune wa1 diJc&lt;M"red by German
astronomer Johann Goafried Galle.
In 1939, Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, died in
London.
In 1957, nine black students who had entered Little Rock
~emral High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside~ ·
In I%2. New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed Avery
Fi5her Hall) formally opened as the lint unit of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Am.
In 1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron was rerumed
ro power.
In 1999, the Man Climate Observ!:r apparently burned up as it
\Vas about to go into orbit around the Red Planet.
Ten years ago: UN weapons ~cton in Baghdad discovered
documenn derailing Iraq's secret nuclear weapons program, triggering a standoff with Iraqi authorities. President Bush addressed
the United Nations, urging the world body to r=:ind in resolution equating Zionism with racism.
Five years ago: Space shutde Atlantis lefi Ruma's orbiting Mir
station with astronaut Shannon Lucid, who ended her six-month
,;sit "ith render goodbyes 10 her Russian colleagues. Ross Perot
med' the bipartisan commission that voted to uqMrim out of the
pr.,•dential debates, arguing that excluding him would deepen
public cynicism and cause his campaign "incalculable damage."
One rear ago: At the Sydney Olympics, Marion Jones won the
women's 100-meter final in 10.7 seconds; Maurice Greene took
the men's 100 in 9.87 seconds.

ty to check him and hi5 bags.
He described it as "just shy of
a fuU body cavity search."

CLEVELAND (AP)
Minutes before a jury was to
begin hearing evidence in a
capital murder case, a man
admitted to fat:illy stabbing his
live-in girlfriend.
Christopher Worman agreed
Friday to plead guilty to aggravated murder. Prosecutors in
return removed the death.
penalty and dropped other
charges. Worman was sentenced
by a three-judge panel to life in
prison with no possibility of
parole.
Worman, 41, was accused of
stabbing Mary Davis 99 times,
using five different kitchen
knives, at their home -on June
16,2000.
Assistant Prosecutor Rebecca
Maleckar s:tid the blade of one
knife was broken and another
was bent during the attack on
Davis, 39.

Boy admits
to raping·kidS

Judge orders
traficant motion

cLEVELAND (AP&gt; - A
federal court judge on Friday
ordered indicted U.S. Rep.
ELYRIA (AP) -A 12-year- James A. Traficant Jr. to specify
old boy has admitted to raping which documents submitted as
and molesting fhree other chil- evidence against him might be
dren while he was in foster care. suppressed due to congressional
The charges involve the boy's privilege.
3-year-old half-sister, who was
US. District Judge Leslie
staying in an Oberlin foster Brooks Wells said in the order
home with him; and girls ages 5 that Traficant's blanket objecand 7.
tion is insufficient regarding
' The boy pleaded guilty to documents that federal prosethree count! of rape and one cutors sk'bmitted July 23 and
count each of attempted gross 24. The government submitted
sexual imposition and gross hundreds of documents, well
sexual imposition .
over I 00,000 pages.
Lorain County Domestic . Traficant, 0 -0hio, is facing a
Court Magistrate Chari ita Feb. 4 ttial on bribery and ·rackAnderson-White asked the boy eteering charges. He is not a
Friday if he )lad any questions . lawyer but has insisted on repabout the charges.
resenting himself.
Wells s:tid that if Traficant is
·not able to review each document and make specific arguments on which should be
privileged, that the court "will
ATHENS (AP) - A man seriously consider the. appointwho led police to a body he ment of standby counsel" to·
WARREN (AP)- One of claimed to have found while
he can comply with the
America's favorite weathermen hunting was charged Friday ensure
order.
found .t hat airport security with two counts of aggravated
_}llight not be as complete as it murder.
Eric J. Knott, 18, of Hollister,
should be after hijackings and
terrorism attacks.
was arrested Friday afier a trafraiS~
Speaking Wednesday night fie stop and charged in the
HUNTINGTON (AP)
while standing in front of a deaths of David Malcolm, 32,
large U.S. flag, AI Roker · of and Ruth Malcolm, 35, both of Marshall University pr~sident
Dan Angel will receive a 4 perNBC's "Today" show spoke Glouster.
Athens County SheriffVern cent r:tise under a qmtract
about his trip to this northeast
Casde
said Knott reported find- extension endorsed in MorganOhio community for a lecture
ing David Malcolm on town Friday by the West Virsponsored by the YwCA.
He arrived at New York's Wednesday while hunting for · ginia Higher Education Policy
.'LaGuardia Airport a few hours yellow root and led deputies to Commission.
The compensation package,
·before his flight was to take off. the body m the Trimble
Wildlife
Area.
approVed
by Marshall's lnstituEven though the airport wasn't
The body of Ruth Malcolm tiona! Board of Governors two
crowded, Roker said it took
was
found at · the couple's weeks ago, increases Angel's
quite a while for :tirport securiGlouster home.
salary from · $205,000 to

Rokerfinds
security glitch

President's message put
nation's resolve back on track
If there were any doubts about this nation's purpose in striking back at the terror that invaded our shore. on Sept. 11, they ·
were pur to rest by President Bush's address to. Congress and
the nation Thursday night.
With firmness and confidence, the president put' nations harboring and abetting terrorism on notice that if Osarna bin
Laden and his forces are not handed over, this nation will act
- and act decisively.
With the plain talk that marks his style of discussion. Bush
said nations must decide if they're with us or against us.
The nations that oppose us and choose to continue supporting terrorism will be treated the !anle way as those outbws we
seek ro bring to justice.
That's not a cask entered into lighdy.
Destruction and loss of life pushed this nation to an irrevocable
decision
to .take out the threat that imperils our domes.
.
uc secunty.
But in an even-handed approach, the pmident assured law.abiding Muslim followen they haVe nothing to fear. Our quarrel is not with them, but with those who have twisted their
religion to serve their political ends, namely, the elimination of
western influence in the Middle East and the extinction of
Israel.
It would have been one matter to allow these nations to setde. their problems by themsel~ .
Bur it's another when "naked aggression" - the term the
president's father used when Iraq invaded Kuwait in the prelude to the GulfWar - iJ visited ori our eoumry.-there's- noway to leave it unanswered.
Our answer came in the form of the president's message.
It strengthened our resolve. His inaoduction of the widow of
one of the passengen who stopped one of the hijacked planes
from striking another building, and disp!.y of a fallen New
York police officer's shield were graphic and effective
reminders of what we need to do.
Many pundits considered the address the most important
speech a president has ever made - more so than FDR 's
request fo r a declaration of war foUowing the Pearl Harbor
attack.
George Walker Bush's calni, self-assured delivery .of his mes~
sage this past week has gone a long way to help this nation
remain vigilant in the wk ahead.

Mah pleads in
stabbing death

Police have
slaying suspect

$213,000. The contract expires
Sept. 30, 2006.
"The governing board felt it
needed to make a. statement by
giving Dr. Angel the five-year
contract so that he is comfortable and knows he has the fuU
support of the board, along
with a contract of sufficient
length that will enable him to
do what he believes is best for
the institution;' said Gary
White, board chairman.

Neighbors
renew request

The Rev. Craig Cook, pastor
of Neola C hurch ·of God,
reminded Patterson that state
corrections
officials
had
promised a fence three years
ago.

county officials.
Charles Wilfong, who registered with the stare as the non-.
profit corporation Upshur
County Fire Board Inc., this
week sued the Upshur County
Commission, Sheriff Sherman
Baxa and a different Upshur
County Bre Board Inc. that is
collecting the fee.
The lawsuit says the feeBUCKHANNON (AP)
charging board is not a legal
A week afier Upshur County's institution because the corpofirst fire- fee bills were mailed, a rate board holds the same
citizen-led organization is suing name.

NEOLA (AP) - Neighbors
of Anthony Correctional Center are renewing their call for a
fence to be installed around the
minimum-security facility for
youthful offenders.
Warden Scott Patterson this
week assured residents of the
rural area north of White Sulphur Springs that the state is
committed to building a fence
as soon as money is available.
Two youths escaped from the
facility last month. They were
captured a week later in Marion County.

Thoughts on attacks
Dear Ediior:
As we .go throughout our day, everyone is undoubtedly dealing with the
impact of yesterday's tragic events · and
their effect on the future.
Yesterday, .as 1 received calls from family and friends, who were checking on
my safery and seeking information on
friends who worked both at the Pentagon and the World Trade Center,! often
heard the- phrase ."loss of innocence."
While watching the news late last night,
someone . made' the statement that the
world has been "forever ~hanged."
For myself, the incident brought back
vivid, unpleasant memories of1983 on a
sleepy, beautiful Sunday morning aboard
the USS New Jeney (BB62) in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea.
What was once the Marine Barracks
in Beirut, \vas now a large pile of smoldering rubble, and the beginning of a
grim and depressing work ofrecovering
the bodies of friends and colleagues
killed and wounded in a blast delivered
by suicide drivers with a truck of explosives. Just one ·day before 1 had stood at
quarters speaking with my chief, who
had accepted a mission ashore IO repair a
spotting radar. Now that morning he
would be counted among those who
had given their life in service for their
country at the hands of terroriJn.
This morning I received a similar call
about a friend who was serving hiJ
Naval Reserve rime at the Pentagon.
Make no mistake about it, all of those
who arc counted among the casualties
from yesterday's attacks, served this
country proudly and were taken from us
by the same rype of action.
After the attack in Beirut, we saw
young Marines sitting next to the bodies
of their friends out in the rubble, the
tean in their eyes and despair on their
faces. But there \vas an old gunnery
sergeam mmtering them together and
telling them, "Come on Marines, don't
give them the satisfaction:·
With that, they wiped their eyes, and
with the help of the Gunny, carried their
friends out of the rubble. We here in the
United States of America have you, Mr.
President , calling us to action with the
same courage ·and leadership. "Come on
America, don't ler rhe terrorists have any
satisfaction."
We shaU dig through the piles of smoldering r\]bble, carry Out our friends and
family members, and track down those
responsible and punish them severely for
violating our great nation . In 1986, President Ronald Reagan gave a warning to
the hijackers of the Achille Lauro, "You
can run, bur you can't hide:'.' That warning is very true for those responsible for
yesterday's act.
As parr of the Multi-National Peacekeeping Fo rce assigned to Beirut, our
force~ wou ld be o n alert continupusly
and a!WJ\'~ vigiLmt for &gt;ets of terrorism.
Last night. J.l I lay m bed seeking sleep, I
could ieel n aU again. Only this time not
in a far-o ff di1tant land, but in my l)ome.
No longer could I know that as I depart

an operation on my way home would I
be able to "let my guard down" and relax
in the refuge of my own backyard
Now I mwr learn to deal \vith what
many of those in other countties have
dealt with for so many years, and no
longer from afar on TV news, but firsthand. But, we have something that those
other countries don't have, a nation that
is always willing to join rogethn- for the
common good, a Godly people who are
free and willing to fight and protect
those freedoms, a president who can
muster us in times like these and cultivale our true strength and spirit of a free
nation.
.
The primary goal of a terrorist is to

flagpole rhe third Wednesday in September started a national movement. Now
millions of students meet at their school
flagpole at 7 a.m. on this same day
throughout the world. .
As in all great moments of prayer, "See
You at the Pole'' did not begin in the
heam of people. .It began in the heart of
God. God wed the obedience of a small
group of teenagers - to ignite what ha5
become an international movement. A Concerned Women for America's
newsletter states:"According to Supreme
Court precedent students have the rig~
10 pray. The prayers are student led, stu;
dent organized and student initiated;
before school hours , and it is outside of

inject fear and chaos into the SOCJ,.,~·e~r:y~~o~f-~an;;y~sc;h~o:~o~l ~h::~~~~fi~·a:l~t&lt;:~do~·el;s:~nf~o:;t~c~o~stl~t~h~e--{-in intended- vietiiJJS;--Since--a to
lacks the logistical capability and opera- to meet and pray, so they aren't 'estab~
:
. tiona! expertise lo carry out any kind of lishing religioi1' with tax money."
a sustained military operation, they rely
Not just at Point Pleasant Middle
School
and Point Pleasant High School·,
on attacking the symbols of their vic tim's way of life, hoping to inflict emo- but throughout America and in 20
tiona! and psychological damage oopro- co untries, students prayed on Wednesday. Some stood alone at their schools
portionate to the actual damage.
Their ultimate goal being to breal&lt; the while or hers joined hundreds in prayin&amp;,
will of their victims. America's will W'.l.l &lt;inging songs, and reading scriptures. ·
tried yesterday, but far from ever being
"Let no man despise they youth; but
broken. What those c·O\vanb did was be thou an example of the believers, in
quite the opposite. These terroristS unit- word, in charity, in spirit, ir~ faith, in
ed us into seeking out those responsible purity." I Timothy 4:12: In other words,
. and declaring war on all acts of terrorism Don't let anyone look down on you
because you are young, but set an exam~
here and abroad.
Back in 1983. as I flew ou t of pie for the believers in speech, in life, in
Lebanon, I sat in a jump seat of an Air love, in faith and in purity.
Force plane with caskets lined up in th e
From the example set 10 years ago in
center of the aircraft. I can still remem- Texas, we have see n a great impact in the
ber the thoughts that ran through my "See You at the Pole" prayers.
· mind and of how great it will be to
R emember it is always the third
rerum home where I won't have to fear Wednesday in SeptcmbeP. That's easy. We
or worry about an attack such as this hop e more students will participate next
ever again.Yesterday those thoughts were year. There's no telling how the Lord
proven wrong. I will never be the same, will bless.
even here at home. I will forever hold
Denise Bonecutter
yesterday's o_c~urrence in my mind and
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
· be always VIgilant and watchful m my
home, here in America, where we must
now take what has happened and
strengthen our defenses so that 1t wdl
Dear Editor:
·never happen again and one day our
Presi dent Bush overruled a law that
children will no longer lose. sleep, but Congress has placed upon the American
will have ~~ same feeling of " I am at people, the law that dm·s not allow us to
home, now I can relax .in ~y refuge. The pray in schools or in or in public assemUrn ted Scares of Amen ca.
blics:We have joined together to pray in
G~ Mitchell the places that we have been forbidden
Washmgton, D.C. to do so.

a

LOCALLY
~a~~eaGooda

H••d·Crafted lte"••
,AU l.oc•I'J7 Made
Op

pay

Editor's note: Greg .\1i1Chtll was born and
raised in Gallipolis and aftn retiring from the
Navy as a master cl•iif peuy o.fficer, ht works
as a senior analyst under lDntrad for govtmment agmries i11 Washington, D. C.

file suit

It~~~~~~~~~~l

Ange1get5 4%

OUR READERS' VIEWS

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www.toc-ns

It begins in the heart
Dear Editor:

Did .you h.ear what happened Wednesday :it Point 'Pl~t Middle School?
Right before school started, a group of
students met on the tiont lawn ar the
.school flagpole. Here 's how it all started:
A small group of teenagers in Texas
Canle together for a "Disciple Now"
retreat in 1990. They came seeking God.
Lirde did they know how powerfully
God was about to move.
That day, God penetrated their hearts
like never before. The students were broken before God and burdened for their
friends.
CompeUed to pray, they drove ro three
different school!. Not knowing exactly
whar ro do, they went to school flagpoles
and prayed for their friends, schools,
leaden and country. Those students had
no idea how God would use their obe- sent.
dience.
The vision of praying at their ·schoot

Pamela Riley
Bidwell

s••·c·

Speedo .·P izza would like to extend our deepest sympathies to the
families of the vietims in last week's vieious terrorist attaeks.
Our thoughts and prayers are with them during this diffieult time.
'

No better time

If prayer can be doll!e at 11 time of
tragedy, then why not cwry day? Arc we
turnin g to God lln ly ill tilll ~i of trouble,
or are we willinH to put Clod hack into
our natio!1? With the po11i bilicy that our
nation will be at wnr soon, wa n~od .od
on our si&lt;k We· ncc•d m Jnln i"K~fh~r to
pr.ty for our pt• ~&gt;ple 1h ~t will lw f~Piug
into war, for thdt• iflf~ r~tllrtt, 1111rl !}ontinuc to pray fm tlw \wop! ~ thll• h~ve
been personally uffe~t~l l•y th~ lltt~rk on
Amrrica.
Now is the tinw ro1• thQ Atm·rican
'people· to join togctlwr .l\nct •·nnt~c~ their
cqngressman an~ tell them that prayer
needs to be back in America, in the
schools and in rhe public assctnblks.
Our congressman is lCd Strickhuul, his
phone number is 740-376-086R, and it
will take an act of Congress to put pr.tyer
back in our schools· and public assemblies.
There is no better time than the pre-

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�I

Opinion

PageA4

Page AS

Sunday. September 2:1, 1001

13.1001
•

Galllpolll, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio

Point P11111nt, W.V1.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis

Charles W. Govey
·
Publisher

Managing Editor
DIMe K.y HIU

Larry Boyer

Advertising Dl...crtor

Controller

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PvblislliAr

OUR VIEW

Nodou

TODAY IN HISTORY
•

Today

IS

BY TH£ ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday, Sept. 23, the 266rh day of2001. There are 99

days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 23, 1n9, during the R~lutionary War, the Ameri. can warship Bon Homme Richard defeated the HMS Serapis
after the American commander, John Paul Jones, iJ said to have
declared: "I have not ~ begun to fight!"
On this date:
In 63 B.C., Cae.ar Augustus was born in Rome.
In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass.• held its first
commencement.
In 1780, British spy John Andre wa1 captured along with papen
revealing Benedia Arnold's plot to surrender West Point to the
British.
.
In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to Sr. Louis
from the Pacific Northwm.
In 1846, the planet Neptune wa1 diJc&lt;M"red by German
astronomer Johann Goafried Galle.
In 1939, Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, died in
London.
In 1957, nine black students who had entered Little Rock
~emral High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside~ ·
In I%2. New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed Avery
Fi5her Hall) formally opened as the lint unit of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Am.
In 1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron was rerumed
ro power.
In 1999, the Man Climate Observ!:r apparently burned up as it
\Vas about to go into orbit around the Red Planet.
Ten years ago: UN weapons ~cton in Baghdad discovered
documenn derailing Iraq's secret nuclear weapons program, triggering a standoff with Iraqi authorities. President Bush addressed
the United Nations, urging the world body to r=:ind in resolution equating Zionism with racism.
Five years ago: Space shutde Atlantis lefi Ruma's orbiting Mir
station with astronaut Shannon Lucid, who ended her six-month
,;sit "ith render goodbyes 10 her Russian colleagues. Ross Perot
med' the bipartisan commission that voted to uqMrim out of the
pr.,•dential debates, arguing that excluding him would deepen
public cynicism and cause his campaign "incalculable damage."
One rear ago: At the Sydney Olympics, Marion Jones won the
women's 100-meter final in 10.7 seconds; Maurice Greene took
the men's 100 in 9.87 seconds.

ty to check him and hi5 bags.
He described it as "just shy of
a fuU body cavity search."

CLEVELAND (AP)
Minutes before a jury was to
begin hearing evidence in a
capital murder case, a man
admitted to fat:illy stabbing his
live-in girlfriend.
Christopher Worman agreed
Friday to plead guilty to aggravated murder. Prosecutors in
return removed the death.
penalty and dropped other
charges. Worman was sentenced
by a three-judge panel to life in
prison with no possibility of
parole.
Worman, 41, was accused of
stabbing Mary Davis 99 times,
using five different kitchen
knives, at their home -on June
16,2000.
Assistant Prosecutor Rebecca
Maleckar s:tid the blade of one
knife was broken and another
was bent during the attack on
Davis, 39.

Boy admits
to raping·kidS

Judge orders
traficant motion

cLEVELAND (AP&gt; - A
federal court judge on Friday
ordered indicted U.S. Rep.
ELYRIA (AP) -A 12-year- James A. Traficant Jr. to specify
old boy has admitted to raping which documents submitted as
and molesting fhree other chil- evidence against him might be
dren while he was in foster care. suppressed due to congressional
The charges involve the boy's privilege.
3-year-old half-sister, who was
US. District Judge Leslie
staying in an Oberlin foster Brooks Wells said in the order
home with him; and girls ages 5 that Traficant's blanket objecand 7.
tion is insufficient regarding
' The boy pleaded guilty to documents that federal prosethree count! of rape and one cutors sk'bmitted July 23 and
count each of attempted gross 24. The government submitted
sexual imposition and gross hundreds of documents, well
sexual imposition .
over I 00,000 pages.
Lorain County Domestic . Traficant, 0 -0hio, is facing a
Court Magistrate Chari ita Feb. 4 ttial on bribery and ·rackAnderson-White asked the boy eteering charges. He is not a
Friday if he )lad any questions . lawyer but has insisted on repabout the charges.
resenting himself.
Wells s:tid that if Traficant is
·not able to review each document and make specific arguments on which should be
privileged, that the court "will
ATHENS (AP) - A man seriously consider the. appointwho led police to a body he ment of standby counsel" to·
WARREN (AP)- One of claimed to have found while
he can comply with the
America's favorite weathermen hunting was charged Friday ensure
order.
found .t hat airport security with two counts of aggravated
_}llight not be as complete as it murder.
Eric J. Knott, 18, of Hollister,
should be after hijackings and
terrorism attacks.
was arrested Friday afier a trafraiS~
Speaking Wednesday night fie stop and charged in the
HUNTINGTON (AP)
while standing in front of a deaths of David Malcolm, 32,
large U.S. flag, AI Roker · of and Ruth Malcolm, 35, both of Marshall University pr~sident
Dan Angel will receive a 4 perNBC's "Today" show spoke Glouster.
Athens County SheriffVern cent r:tise under a qmtract
about his trip to this northeast
Casde
said Knott reported find- extension endorsed in MorganOhio community for a lecture
ing David Malcolm on town Friday by the West Virsponsored by the YwCA.
He arrived at New York's Wednesday while hunting for · ginia Higher Education Policy
.'LaGuardia Airport a few hours yellow root and led deputies to Commission.
The compensation package,
·before his flight was to take off. the body m the Trimble
Wildlife
Area.
approVed
by Marshall's lnstituEven though the airport wasn't
The body of Ruth Malcolm tiona! Board of Governors two
crowded, Roker said it took
was
found at · the couple's weeks ago, increases Angel's
quite a while for :tirport securiGlouster home.
salary from · $205,000 to

Rokerfinds
security glitch

President's message put
nation's resolve back on track
If there were any doubts about this nation's purpose in striking back at the terror that invaded our shore. on Sept. 11, they ·
were pur to rest by President Bush's address to. Congress and
the nation Thursday night.
With firmness and confidence, the president put' nations harboring and abetting terrorism on notice that if Osarna bin
Laden and his forces are not handed over, this nation will act
- and act decisively.
With the plain talk that marks his style of discussion. Bush
said nations must decide if they're with us or against us.
The nations that oppose us and choose to continue supporting terrorism will be treated the !anle way as those outbws we
seek ro bring to justice.
That's not a cask entered into lighdy.
Destruction and loss of life pushed this nation to an irrevocable
decision
to .take out the threat that imperils our domes.
.
uc secunty.
But in an even-handed approach, the pmident assured law.abiding Muslim followen they haVe nothing to fear. Our quarrel is not with them, but with those who have twisted their
religion to serve their political ends, namely, the elimination of
western influence in the Middle East and the extinction of
Israel.
It would have been one matter to allow these nations to setde. their problems by themsel~ .
Bur it's another when "naked aggression" - the term the
president's father used when Iraq invaded Kuwait in the prelude to the GulfWar - iJ visited ori our eoumry.-there's- noway to leave it unanswered.
Our answer came in the form of the president's message.
It strengthened our resolve. His inaoduction of the widow of
one of the passengen who stopped one of the hijacked planes
from striking another building, and disp!.y of a fallen New
York police officer's shield were graphic and effective
reminders of what we need to do.
Many pundits considered the address the most important
speech a president has ever made - more so than FDR 's
request fo r a declaration of war foUowing the Pearl Harbor
attack.
George Walker Bush's calni, self-assured delivery .of his mes~
sage this past week has gone a long way to help this nation
remain vigilant in the wk ahead.

Mah pleads in
stabbing death

Police have
slaying suspect

$213,000. The contract expires
Sept. 30, 2006.
"The governing board felt it
needed to make a. statement by
giving Dr. Angel the five-year
contract so that he is comfortable and knows he has the fuU
support of the board, along
with a contract of sufficient
length that will enable him to
do what he believes is best for
the institution;' said Gary
White, board chairman.

Neighbors
renew request

The Rev. Craig Cook, pastor
of Neola C hurch ·of God,
reminded Patterson that state
corrections
officials
had
promised a fence three years
ago.

county officials.
Charles Wilfong, who registered with the stare as the non-.
profit corporation Upshur
County Fire Board Inc., this
week sued the Upshur County
Commission, Sheriff Sherman
Baxa and a different Upshur
County Bre Board Inc. that is
collecting the fee.
The lawsuit says the feeBUCKHANNON (AP)
charging board is not a legal
A week afier Upshur County's institution because the corpofirst fire- fee bills were mailed, a rate board holds the same
citizen-led organization is suing name.

NEOLA (AP) - Neighbors
of Anthony Correctional Center are renewing their call for a
fence to be installed around the
minimum-security facility for
youthful offenders.
Warden Scott Patterson this
week assured residents of the
rural area north of White Sulphur Springs that the state is
committed to building a fence
as soon as money is available.
Two youths escaped from the
facility last month. They were
captured a week later in Marion County.

Thoughts on attacks
Dear Ediior:
As we .go throughout our day, everyone is undoubtedly dealing with the
impact of yesterday's tragic events · and
their effect on the future.
Yesterday, .as 1 received calls from family and friends, who were checking on
my safery and seeking information on
friends who worked both at the Pentagon and the World Trade Center,! often
heard the- phrase ."loss of innocence."
While watching the news late last night,
someone . made' the statement that the
world has been "forever ~hanged."
For myself, the incident brought back
vivid, unpleasant memories of1983 on a
sleepy, beautiful Sunday morning aboard
the USS New Jeney (BB62) in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea.
What was once the Marine Barracks
in Beirut, \vas now a large pile of smoldering rubble, and the beginning of a
grim and depressing work ofrecovering
the bodies of friends and colleagues
killed and wounded in a blast delivered
by suicide drivers with a truck of explosives. Just one ·day before 1 had stood at
quarters speaking with my chief, who
had accepted a mission ashore IO repair a
spotting radar. Now that morning he
would be counted among those who
had given their life in service for their
country at the hands of terroriJn.
This morning I received a similar call
about a friend who was serving hiJ
Naval Reserve rime at the Pentagon.
Make no mistake about it, all of those
who arc counted among the casualties
from yesterday's attacks, served this
country proudly and were taken from us
by the same rype of action.
After the attack in Beirut, we saw
young Marines sitting next to the bodies
of their friends out in the rubble, the
tean in their eyes and despair on their
faces. But there \vas an old gunnery
sergeam mmtering them together and
telling them, "Come on Marines, don't
give them the satisfaction:·
With that, they wiped their eyes, and
with the help of the Gunny, carried their
friends out of the rubble. We here in the
United States of America have you, Mr.
President , calling us to action with the
same courage ·and leadership. "Come on
America, don't ler rhe terrorists have any
satisfaction."
We shaU dig through the piles of smoldering r\]bble, carry Out our friends and
family members, and track down those
responsible and punish them severely for
violating our great nation . In 1986, President Ronald Reagan gave a warning to
the hijackers of the Achille Lauro, "You
can run, bur you can't hide:'.' That warning is very true for those responsible for
yesterday's act.
As parr of the Multi-National Peacekeeping Fo rce assigned to Beirut, our
force~ wou ld be o n alert continupusly
and a!WJ\'~ vigiLmt for &gt;ets of terrorism.
Last night. J.l I lay m bed seeking sleep, I
could ieel n aU again. Only this time not
in a far-o ff di1tant land, but in my l)ome.
No longer could I know that as I depart

an operation on my way home would I
be able to "let my guard down" and relax
in the refuge of my own backyard
Now I mwr learn to deal \vith what
many of those in other countties have
dealt with for so many years, and no
longer from afar on TV news, but firsthand. But, we have something that those
other countries don't have, a nation that
is always willing to join rogethn- for the
common good, a Godly people who are
free and willing to fight and protect
those freedoms, a president who can
muster us in times like these and cultivale our true strength and spirit of a free
nation.
.
The primary goal of a terrorist is to

flagpole rhe third Wednesday in September started a national movement. Now
millions of students meet at their school
flagpole at 7 a.m. on this same day
throughout the world. .
As in all great moments of prayer, "See
You at the Pole'' did not begin in the
heam of people. .It began in the heart of
God. God wed the obedience of a small
group of teenagers - to ignite what ha5
become an international movement. A Concerned Women for America's
newsletter states:"According to Supreme
Court precedent students have the rig~
10 pray. The prayers are student led, stu;
dent organized and student initiated;
before school hours , and it is outside of

inject fear and chaos into the SOCJ,.,~·e~r:y~~o~f-~an;;y~sc;h~o:~o~l ~h::~~~~fi~·a:l~t&lt;:~do~·el;s:~nf~o:;t~c~o~stl~t~h~e--{-in intended- vietiiJJS;--Since--a to
lacks the logistical capability and opera- to meet and pray, so they aren't 'estab~
:
. tiona! expertise lo carry out any kind of lishing religioi1' with tax money."
a sustained military operation, they rely
Not just at Point Pleasant Middle
School
and Point Pleasant High School·,
on attacking the symbols of their vic tim's way of life, hoping to inflict emo- but throughout America and in 20
tiona! and psychological damage oopro- co untries, students prayed on Wednesday. Some stood alone at their schools
portionate to the actual damage.
Their ultimate goal being to breal&lt; the while or hers joined hundreds in prayin&amp;,
will of their victims. America's will W'.l.l &lt;inging songs, and reading scriptures. ·
tried yesterday, but far from ever being
"Let no man despise they youth; but
broken. What those c·O\vanb did was be thou an example of the believers, in
quite the opposite. These terroristS unit- word, in charity, in spirit, ir~ faith, in
ed us into seeking out those responsible purity." I Timothy 4:12: In other words,
. and declaring war on all acts of terrorism Don't let anyone look down on you
because you are young, but set an exam~
here and abroad.
Back in 1983. as I flew ou t of pie for the believers in speech, in life, in
Lebanon, I sat in a jump seat of an Air love, in faith and in purity.
Force plane with caskets lined up in th e
From the example set 10 years ago in
center of the aircraft. I can still remem- Texas, we have see n a great impact in the
ber the thoughts that ran through my "See You at the Pole" prayers.
· mind and of how great it will be to
R emember it is always the third
rerum home where I won't have to fear Wednesday in SeptcmbeP. That's easy. We
or worry about an attack such as this hop e more students will participate next
ever again.Yesterday those thoughts were year. There's no telling how the Lord
proven wrong. I will never be the same, will bless.
even here at home. I will forever hold
Denise Bonecutter
yesterday's o_c~urrence in my mind and
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
· be always VIgilant and watchful m my
home, here in America, where we must
now take what has happened and
strengthen our defenses so that 1t wdl
Dear Editor:
·never happen again and one day our
Presi dent Bush overruled a law that
children will no longer lose. sleep, but Congress has placed upon the American
will have ~~ same feeling of " I am at people, the law that dm·s not allow us to
home, now I can relax .in ~y refuge. The pray in schools or in or in public assemUrn ted Scares of Amen ca.
blics:We have joined together to pray in
G~ Mitchell the places that we have been forbidden
Washmgton, D.C. to do so.

a

LOCALLY
~a~~eaGooda

H••d·Crafted lte"••
,AU l.oc•I'J7 Made
Op

pay

Editor's note: Greg .\1i1Chtll was born and
raised in Gallipolis and aftn retiring from the
Navy as a master cl•iif peuy o.fficer, ht works
as a senior analyst under lDntrad for govtmment agmries i11 Washington, D. C.

file suit

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OUR READERS' VIEWS

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www.toc-ns

It begins in the heart
Dear Editor:

Did .you h.ear what happened Wednesday :it Point 'Pl~t Middle School?
Right before school started, a group of
students met on the tiont lawn ar the
.school flagpole. Here 's how it all started:
A small group of teenagers in Texas
Canle together for a "Disciple Now"
retreat in 1990. They came seeking God.
Lirde did they know how powerfully
God was about to move.
That day, God penetrated their hearts
like never before. The students were broken before God and burdened for their
friends.
CompeUed to pray, they drove ro three
different school!. Not knowing exactly
whar ro do, they went to school flagpoles
and prayed for their friends, schools,
leaden and country. Those students had
no idea how God would use their obe- sent.
dience.
The vision of praying at their ·schoot

Pamela Riley
Bidwell

s••·c·

Speedo .·P izza would like to extend our deepest sympathies to the
families of the vietims in last week's vieious terrorist attaeks.
Our thoughts and prayers are with them during this diffieult time.
'

No better time

If prayer can be doll!e at 11 time of
tragedy, then why not cwry day? Arc we
turnin g to God lln ly ill tilll ~i of trouble,
or are we willinH to put Clod hack into
our natio!1? With the po11i bilicy that our
nation will be at wnr soon, wa n~od .od
on our si&lt;k We· ncc•d m Jnln i"K~fh~r to
pr.ty for our pt• ~&gt;ple 1h ~t will lw f~Piug
into war, for thdt• iflf~ r~tllrtt, 1111rl !}ontinuc to pray fm tlw \wop! ~ thll• h~ve
been personally uffe~t~l l•y th~ lltt~rk on
Amrrica.
Now is the tinw ro1• thQ Atm·rican
'people· to join togctlwr .l\nct •·nnt~c~ their
cqngressman an~ tell them that prayer
needs to be back in America, in the
schools and in rhe public assctnblks.
Our congressman is lCd Strickhuul, his
phone number is 740-376-086R, and it
will take an act of Congress to put pr.tyer
back in our schools· and public assemblies.
There is no better time than the pre-

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plelllnt, WV

Page AS • 611nllap 11:imet-6tnlintl

Deaths

to let transport plane use its
airspace and airports. More
than'SO U.S. and Brltishjea are
based on lncirlik air base in
southern Thrkey.
i ban."
The presid~t chaired a.
En route to the region from
the United States were a third national security meeting Sataircraft carrier, B-52 bombers, urday via teleconference. With
warships capable of launching him at Camp David were
ground-attack
Tomahawk national security adviser Concruise missiles and jet fighters. doleezza Rice, chief of stalf
The air war would be directed Andrew Card and CIA Direcby Lt. Gen. Charles Wald, who tor George Tenet.
On Sunday, Bush planned to .
flew last week to Prince Sultan
join Marines at the presidential
Air Base in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia's foreign minis- retreat to help return U.S. flags
ter was in Washington last to full staff for the first time
week for consultations, and since the attacks.
The country is still reeling
U.S. officials said the kingdom
was cooperating with U.S. from the attacks that destroyed .
the World Trade Center and
requests.
The United States has "a damaged the Pentagon at a
command and control center probable cost of more than
with Saudi Arabia. It's up and 6,000 lives.
On Friday night, entertainrunning and it's operational;' a
ers
from Tom Hanks to Bruce
senior U.S. official said SaturSpringsteen united for an
day.
The nation ofTurkey sent a extraordinary televised benefit
letter to Washington agreeing t:o raise money for victims.
said, we will not discuss any
operational issues," he said.
"We will not respond to each
and every statement of the Tal-

spoke of the wounded economy, which many economists
believe is guaranteed to slip
into
recession.
flamPIIpAl
"Our economy has had a
tions and specific terrorists shock. Many workers lost their
PROCTORVILLE -Janis R. Adkins, 69, Wellston, former- around the world and freezing jobs this week, especially in the
ly of Proctorville. died Friday, Sept. 21, 2001 in Holzer Med- their U.S. assets, said a senior airline and hospitality indwadministration official, speak- tries, in restaurants and in
ical Center-Jackson.
Surviving are her husband, Rondall Adkins; a son, James ing on condition of anonymi- tourism, as companies struggle
Timothy Adkins of Akron; a daughter, Ronda Adkins of Port- ty. The official would not say to remain atloat," he said. "I
land, Ore.; and a brother, the Rev. Mark McAllister of S-eneca whether the order would list applaud those companies who
terrorist groups beyond al- are making extra efforts to
Rock, W.Va.
Qaida,
the network controlled avoid laying off workers even
Services will be II a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home,
during difficult times. Many
Proctorville. Burial will be in Highland Memorial Gardens, by Osama bin Laden.
Putin and Bush conferred by Americans have, also seen the
South Point. Friends may call at' the funeral home on Monday,
phone,
their third such conver- value of their stocks decline.
one hour prior to services.
. sation since Sept. 11. The Yet, for all these challenges, the
White House depicted the call American economy is fundaas one in a series to di$cuss a mentally strong."
The United States and the
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth W. Amsbary, 61, Gallipolis, died . ~nited fron~ against tertor.ism.
leadership
of
Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Ohio State University Hospitals, · The pres1d~n.t appremtes Taliban
Columbus.
Pres1dent Putm s engagement Afghanistan appeared locked
Arrang~ments will be announced by McCoy-Moore Funer- and SUpPO~ in the. fight against on a path toward conOict.
a! Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.
terronsm, White House Afghanistan's ambassador to
·
spokeswoman Jeanie Mama Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef,
said.
said Saturday an unmanned spy
Putin huddled with his plane was shot down over
in
. Pass
VINTON - Giles P. Borden, 64, Vinton, died Friday, Sept. national security advisers, and Tashgurgan
made
an
appearance
on
RussAfghanistan's northern Saman21. 2001 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Huntington,
ian
television.
gan
province by Taliban solW.Va.
"We have always been initia- diers armed with RussianBorn Feb. l9, 1937 in Gallia County, son of the late Hal Sr.
of the effort to unite the made anti-aircraft weapons.
tors
and J14arie Long Borden, he was a self-employed auto body
forces of the international
"We are still trying to ascermechanic and a U.S. Army veteran.
community
in
the
battle
with
tain
what country this plane
Survivit1g are his wife, Carol Smith Borden; a son,James Borden of Gallipolis; a daughter, Rachel Borden of Columbus; terror. If we want to win there belongs to:' Zaeef said.
A Pentagon spokesman, Lt.
three grandchildren; two brothers, Hal (Connie) Borden of is no other way;' Putin said.
"We
must
unite
forces
of
all
Col.
Mike Milord, would not
Bidwell, and Clifford Payne of Columbus; and a sister, Elsie
civilized
society."
comment on the report. "As
-'Borden of Columbus.
In
his
radio
address,
Bush
the secretary Qf defense has
He was also preceded in death by three brothers and a sister.
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at Pine Hill
Cemetery, Evergreen, with the Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating.
accepted it because I feared a
Friends may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt
worse outcome because of a
Chapel, Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
tape recording.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by Gallia County
"I asked to plead no contest
veterans organizations.
faumPapAl
and they said 'no.' "
Gillilan refers to a recording
"(He) kept me in a room
alone without letting me talk made secrefly by the victim's
CENTERPOINT- George L. Click, 81, Centerpoint, for- to my family," Gillilan's mother, Amber Well, on the
merly of Ravenna, died Friday, Sept. 21, 2001 in Holzer Med- motion states. "I did not want day the child was rushed to
ical Center, following a lengthy illness.
to take a plea bargain and did the hospital with symptoms of
Born July 29, 1920 in Floyd County, Ky., son o~ the late not understand my defenses."
Shaken Baby Sy.ndrome.
James H. and Mary Hale Click, he was retired ·from Chrysler
The tape, which records the
"I told them I did not want
Corp. in Twinsburg. He was wounded during his service in the to take a plea bargain ... I moments .leading to the child's
U.S. Army durirtg World War II.
wanted to go to trial, but they injury, was considered the
He resided in Centerpoint with his niece, Leona Dotson.
kept me in a room along with state's most crucial evidence,
, Surviving are a sister, Celia (Edward) Stratton oflvel, Ky.; and co-counsel telling me the and was played in court durseveral nieces, nephews, great-nieces, great-nephews, great- judge (Fred W. Crow III) was ing pre-trial hearings.
great-nieces and great-great-nephews.
A hearing on Gillilan's
getting. upset;' the motion
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Samuel J. Click; says.
motion has not been set, and
.
and two sisters, Worlie Hurd and Eliza Damron.
"My attorney said ifl took he remains in the Ross CorServices will be 1 p.m. Thesday in Kuhner-Lewis Funeral the plea I was not pleading rectional Institution in ChilliHome, Oak Hill, with the Rev. Danny Boggs officiating. Bur- guilty, that it only meant that I cothe.
ial will be in Centerpoint Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2~4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday.

Bush

Jamls R. Adkins

Kenneth W. Amsbary

Giles P. Borden

percent sales tax on all raxabie
purchases in the county.
The closing of the Parnida
store
in Pomeroy and Jerry ·
from PapAl
Bibbee Ford in Middleport
have been ·partly to blame for
Dec. 31.
That equipment must be on that revenue loss, said Frank.
Gallia-Meigs Community .
mine property at year's end to
Action Agency has estimated
be raxed.
SOCCO has announced .that the closing of the mines
that it will· cease mining coal will result in the loss of
in October, but has not indi- approximately $100,000 in
cated when, or if, mining wages, ·sales revenue and taX
equipment, is to be removed revenue for all of the counties
affected.
from the Meigs property.
Frank expects to meet with
The county has also lost
$35,000 in sales taX revenue Meigs County commissioners
to date, and those losses are to discuss the county's bleak
expected to continue indefi- financial outlook for the
nitely, because of a number of remainder of 2001 later this
retail closings and a general week.
The · commissioners were
downturn in the retail.economy.
noi available on Friday to dis.
Meigs County collects a 1 cuss Frank's predictions.

Taxes

Gillilan

George L alck

·catharine Marie Newberry
from

LETART, W.Va.- Catharine Marie Newberry, 73, Letart,
Page AI
died Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 7, 1928 iii Cabell County, W.Va., daughter of the second tower of · the World
late Dennis and Vada Mae Edwards Roush, she was a home- Trade Center. ·
maker, and .a member of Old Town Board Baptist Church. at
Because of their continued
Letart.
interest and "concern about
Surviving are her husband, Elmer Newberry; three sons, what's happening today;' she
Steve (Karen) Newberry ofVinton, Michael (Carol) Newber- . said the television is turned on
ry of Letart, and Tim (Lee) Newberry of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a cQuple times each day
six grandchildren and a great-grandchild; two brothers, Jack because it "comfOrts them to
(Joy) Roush of Letart, and Dertnis (Irene) Roush Jr. of Point know what's going on as they
Pleasant; and a sister, Helen ·Lambert of Savannah, Ga.
move through their day.''
Private graveside services will .be conducted Thesday at Old
Pride and patriotism, couTown Board Baptist Church Cemetery.
pled with concern and comA memorial service will be conducted at 6 p.m. Tuesday at passion, are reflected all about
bid Town Board Baptist Church, with Pastor Greg Collins Southern Elementary School.
officiating. Arrangements are by Deal Funeral Home, Point
It's apparent even before
Pleasant.
entering the buildirtg. A sheet
signed by all the students and
centered with the wordS "God
uling bloodmobiles
and Bless America" hangs on the
recruiting potential donors to fiont of the buildirtg. Visitors
meet future blood needs are greeted at the entrance
where~er they occur:·. he
with a tall wooden Uncle. Sam
faomPapAl.
added.
at the bottom of the flagpole
In the Greater Alleghenies where the flag flies at half-mast.
blood sites, Sanders said.
Due to the response to relief Region, at least 1,050 units of
In the foyer is a memorabilia
efforts, Greater Alleghenies "blood must be collected each display of wars past brought in
Region of American Red weekday to meet the needs of by community people. IncludCross Blood Services has sick and injured patients at ed are war medals, books,
launched a donor rapid more than ll 0 hospitals in a plaques, a bronze eagle, a fireresponse team to assist the fiv~-state area.
men's helmet, a variety ofban. All regional bloodmobiles ners in red, white and blue, one
region's 100-county area in
_meeting future patient blood now carry applications for proclaiming America as : the
potential donors to join the "Land of the Free.''
needs.
"Since Sept. 11, we have donor rapid response team.
A "Memorial Wall" where a
"If donors are unable to wait paper flag represents every life
been .overwhelmed by the
outpouring of public support in line or wish to donate at lost has been created in the
to help those injured in terror- another time, they can com- cafeteria. The students learned
ist attacks on our country:' said plete this form and we will· the enormity of the tragedy by
Executive Director Thomas S. contact them over the next coloring more than 6,000 flags
Angle. "Many people have two months to inform them of
waited in lines, some for sever- upcoming bloodmobiles in
their area:' Angle said.
al hours,'to donate blood.
"Information provided will
"As the emergency bloOd
need$ for victims have been be held in the. sttictesf confi· met, we must focus on sched- dence."

Help

.

~ :':-un_bq~1r_im_es_-_i_er-.r.lir:-•e_l----::~Am2!!!~e~n!..!·~•!!(4!!1!.....!8!.t~·-w!!!~a~r_· _____1s~un~d·7:.,'·!!JS•p~~·~~~~~:!:2~~·~! ! !.
~ Feels say they charged man for using i
papers
flying aboard a German airliner on th
1 · t 'd
e comp am sa• .
Sept. II when it was grounded in
Al-Hadi, who is in custody in
"'o
t
uJ
1
h
k
" ron o as a res t o t e attac s.
Canada, appeared to be an employee
Al-Hadi was traveling with a tick- of Lufthansa, the complaint said. He
et under a different name and was
h
d
·h
was c arge Wit possessing and
carrying three passports from attempting to use a fa!
se passport.
Yemen, the complaint said. In his
Each of the Yemenese passports he
luggage found on the flight, investi- carried had a different number, difu
gators found two Lufthansa crew .ferent name and different date of
·-&lt; I 11inois, prosecutors said Nageeb uniforms, at least one identification ·
· ·d AI H eli
l·' Abdul Jabar Mohamed Al-Hadi was
Issue, It sai . - a presented one
-------------c-ard_a_n_d_:p_a.:_pe_r_w_._.th_A_ra_b..:.ic--wr..:.I:.:.ti_::n:g,--_::of:._t:::h_::em::::_,i:::ss:::u.::.ed:_::in Yemen on Sept. 2,

·"' WASHINGTON (AP) - As the
,:, terror investigation proceeded with
fi d
"• arrests
overseas,
F .da
.d the eral prosecutors
~·· on r• . Y sa~
ey had charged a
"·' ~n With trymg to fly into Chicago
. with an illegal passport and a•·rl.·ne
uniforms on the day of the hiiacking
k
"
~~ a~: :· criminal complaint ciled ··n

f:. Stars turn out in unprecedented
,televised pitch for attack victims
.• NEW YORK (AP)- Hoi·, ; lywood's finest paid tribute to
real-life heroes during an
extraordinary benefit for vic- rims of the terrorist attacks
; that was hard to miss on the
television dial.
,:,, The telethon was televised
: •Friday night on more than 30
' " n~tworks, including the six
• ·biggest broadcasters - ABC,
CBS, NBC, Fox, UPN and
~· the WB.
;,. . From Tom Hanks to Julia
,.. Roberts, actors made underi ..stated appeals for donations,
&lt;••telling stories of innocent
'('People killed and heroic acts.
'':'They alternated short speeches with singers such· as Willie
-~~ Nelson and Wyclef Jean, who
f~performed on sets decorated
}.~.by hundreds of burning can; :.dJes.
·
,;, "We are not healers," Hanks
said. "We are not protectors of
' ithis great nation.
_,; "We are merely artists,
~ntertainers, here to raise spirits and, we hope, a great deal
of moneY,"
Nelson wrapped up the
two-hour. benefit by leading
an all-star version ·of" America the B'eautiful" with Stevie
Wonder·· on .harmonfca. .He

THE BOSS -; Bruce Spring.
. steen opens the llw broadcast
Friday of ·America: A Tribute to
Heroes" with 'My City In Ruins"
in New York. (AP Photo/Wireim-

age.com, Kevin Mazur)

·

followed Canddian singer
Celine Dion 's vetsion of
"God Bless America."
Paul Simon, wearing an
"FDNY" cap, sang a spooky
version of ·his venerable hit,
Over Troubled
"Bridge
Water." Mariah Carey s~ng
"Hero" in one of her first
public appearances since her
breakdown . .
"America:· A Tribute to
Heroes" was reminiscent of
the Live Aid concerts for
famine relief in 1985, but that
wasn't available across such a
wi&lt;le spectrum of networks.
Organizers said ii may be

next week before they have
an estimate of how much
money was raised.
'
Within the first 15 minutes
of Friday night's telethon,
Bruce Springsteen, Wonder
and the rock band U2 performed on .stages in New
York, Los Angeles and London.
· "This is a prayer for our
fallen brothers and sisters,"
Springsteen said opening the
telecast, before singing one of
his newer songs, "My City of
Ruins ."
Wonder condemned ·hatred
in 1he name of religion before
singing "Love's in Need of
Love Today." Neil Young performed the late John
Lennon's hit, "Imagine." Tom
Petty and the Heartbre~kers
played their defiant, "I Won't
Back Down." Jean, dressed in
stars and stripes, sang Bob
Marley's "Redemption Song.'·'
·,With such stars as Tom
Cruise, Roberts and Jim Carrey and a two-hour limit, it
-was hard to fit in everybody.
Meg Ryan, Jack Nicholson,
Sylvester Stallone and other
celebrities were relegated to
' ~pe phone bank, answering
contributors' calls."

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A plaque reads "God Bless
America. In loving memory of
those lost from the terrorism
on our country. 9-11-0 1."
Essays and artwork, displays
created from newspaper clipping$, and banners proclaiming
pride in America plaster . the
hallways and classrooms of the
school.
The children wear red, white
and blue ribbons, and Friday
morni'ng staged a balloon
launch. The community is
involved in the school's efforts
of remembering and moving
on through help with activities
from several residents including
Linda Diddle, Jim Caldwell,
.
and Jody Cummins.
Special
actiVltles
have
allowed students to express
their feelings, making it possible in some small way to adjust
to the uncertainty brought
about by the attack on Ameri• ca.

to Canadian authorities. A receipt !ish and Arabic numbers .
showed that he had purchased a visa
The complaint, filed Sept. 14, had
from the United State Embassy in previously been sealed.
Yemen on that day.
The charges came as European
Using a search warrant, the FBI authorities made several arrests and
also recovered a student identifica- issued warrants and the Justi ce
tion card from the Yemenese Lal)- Department disclosed that many of
guage Institute in Yemen, and a pair the Middle Eastern immigrants
of pants that had a small piece of detained since \he attacks had
material sewn into the side of a entered the country illegally or
pocket that had a sequence of Eng- overstayed visas.

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�0

Sunda~Sept.23,2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plelllnt, WV

Page AS • 611nllap 11:imet-6tnlintl

Deaths

to let transport plane use its
airspace and airports. More
than'SO U.S. and Brltishjea are
based on lncirlik air base in
southern Thrkey.
i ban."
The presid~t chaired a.
En route to the region from
the United States were a third national security meeting Sataircraft carrier, B-52 bombers, urday via teleconference. With
warships capable of launching him at Camp David were
ground-attack
Tomahawk national security adviser Concruise missiles and jet fighters. doleezza Rice, chief of stalf
The air war would be directed Andrew Card and CIA Direcby Lt. Gen. Charles Wald, who tor George Tenet.
On Sunday, Bush planned to .
flew last week to Prince Sultan
join Marines at the presidential
Air Base in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia's foreign minis- retreat to help return U.S. flags
ter was in Washington last to full staff for the first time
week for consultations, and since the attacks.
The country is still reeling
U.S. officials said the kingdom
was cooperating with U.S. from the attacks that destroyed .
the World Trade Center and
requests.
The United States has "a damaged the Pentagon at a
command and control center probable cost of more than
with Saudi Arabia. It's up and 6,000 lives.
On Friday night, entertainrunning and it's operational;' a
ers
from Tom Hanks to Bruce
senior U.S. official said SaturSpringsteen united for an
day.
The nation ofTurkey sent a extraordinary televised benefit
letter to Washington agreeing t:o raise money for victims.
said, we will not discuss any
operational issues," he said.
"We will not respond to each
and every statement of the Tal-

spoke of the wounded economy, which many economists
believe is guaranteed to slip
into
recession.
flamPIIpAl
"Our economy has had a
tions and specific terrorists shock. Many workers lost their
PROCTORVILLE -Janis R. Adkins, 69, Wellston, former- around the world and freezing jobs this week, especially in the
ly of Proctorville. died Friday, Sept. 21, 2001 in Holzer Med- their U.S. assets, said a senior airline and hospitality indwadministration official, speak- tries, in restaurants and in
ical Center-Jackson.
Surviving are her husband, Rondall Adkins; a son, James ing on condition of anonymi- tourism, as companies struggle
Timothy Adkins of Akron; a daughter, Ronda Adkins of Port- ty. The official would not say to remain atloat," he said. "I
land, Ore.; and a brother, the Rev. Mark McAllister of S-eneca whether the order would list applaud those companies who
terrorist groups beyond al- are making extra efforts to
Rock, W.Va.
Qaida,
the network controlled avoid laying off workers even
Services will be II a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home,
during difficult times. Many
Proctorville. Burial will be in Highland Memorial Gardens, by Osama bin Laden.
Putin and Bush conferred by Americans have, also seen the
South Point. Friends may call at' the funeral home on Monday,
phone,
their third such conver- value of their stocks decline.
one hour prior to services.
. sation since Sept. 11. The Yet, for all these challenges, the
White House depicted the call American economy is fundaas one in a series to di$cuss a mentally strong."
The United States and the
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth W. Amsbary, 61, Gallipolis, died . ~nited fron~ against tertor.ism.
leadership
of
Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Ohio State University Hospitals, · The pres1d~n.t appremtes Taliban
Columbus.
Pres1dent Putm s engagement Afghanistan appeared locked
Arrang~ments will be announced by McCoy-Moore Funer- and SUpPO~ in the. fight against on a path toward conOict.
a! Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.
terronsm, White House Afghanistan's ambassador to
·
spokeswoman Jeanie Mama Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef,
said.
said Saturday an unmanned spy
Putin huddled with his plane was shot down over
in
. Pass
VINTON - Giles P. Borden, 64, Vinton, died Friday, Sept. national security advisers, and Tashgurgan
made
an
appearance
on
RussAfghanistan's northern Saman21. 2001 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Huntington,
ian
television.
gan
province by Taliban solW.Va.
"We have always been initia- diers armed with RussianBorn Feb. l9, 1937 in Gallia County, son of the late Hal Sr.
of the effort to unite the made anti-aircraft weapons.
tors
and J14arie Long Borden, he was a self-employed auto body
forces of the international
"We are still trying to ascermechanic and a U.S. Army veteran.
community
in
the
battle
with
tain
what country this plane
Survivit1g are his wife, Carol Smith Borden; a son,James Borden of Gallipolis; a daughter, Rachel Borden of Columbus; terror. If we want to win there belongs to:' Zaeef said.
A Pentagon spokesman, Lt.
three grandchildren; two brothers, Hal (Connie) Borden of is no other way;' Putin said.
"We
must
unite
forces
of
all
Col.
Mike Milord, would not
Bidwell, and Clifford Payne of Columbus; and a sister, Elsie
civilized
society."
comment on the report. "As
-'Borden of Columbus.
In
his
radio
address,
Bush
the secretary Qf defense has
He was also preceded in death by three brothers and a sister.
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at Pine Hill
Cemetery, Evergreen, with the Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating.
accepted it because I feared a
Friends may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt
worse outcome because of a
Chapel, Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
tape recording.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by Gallia County
"I asked to plead no contest
veterans organizations.
faumPapAl
and they said 'no.' "
Gillilan refers to a recording
"(He) kept me in a room
alone without letting me talk made secrefly by the victim's
CENTERPOINT- George L. Click, 81, Centerpoint, for- to my family," Gillilan's mother, Amber Well, on the
merly of Ravenna, died Friday, Sept. 21, 2001 in Holzer Med- motion states. "I did not want day the child was rushed to
ical Center, following a lengthy illness.
to take a plea bargain and did the hospital with symptoms of
Born July 29, 1920 in Floyd County, Ky., son o~ the late not understand my defenses."
Shaken Baby Sy.ndrome.
James H. and Mary Hale Click, he was retired ·from Chrysler
The tape, which records the
"I told them I did not want
Corp. in Twinsburg. He was wounded during his service in the to take a plea bargain ... I moments .leading to the child's
U.S. Army durirtg World War II.
wanted to go to trial, but they injury, was considered the
He resided in Centerpoint with his niece, Leona Dotson.
kept me in a room along with state's most crucial evidence,
, Surviving are a sister, Celia (Edward) Stratton oflvel, Ky.; and co-counsel telling me the and was played in court durseveral nieces, nephews, great-nieces, great-nephews, great- judge (Fred W. Crow III) was ing pre-trial hearings.
great-nieces and great-great-nephews.
A hearing on Gillilan's
getting. upset;' the motion
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Samuel J. Click; says.
motion has not been set, and
.
and two sisters, Worlie Hurd and Eliza Damron.
"My attorney said ifl took he remains in the Ross CorServices will be 1 p.m. Thesday in Kuhner-Lewis Funeral the plea I was not pleading rectional Institution in ChilliHome, Oak Hill, with the Rev. Danny Boggs officiating. Bur- guilty, that it only meant that I cothe.
ial will be in Centerpoint Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2~4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday.

Bush

Jamls R. Adkins

Kenneth W. Amsbary

Giles P. Borden

percent sales tax on all raxabie
purchases in the county.
The closing of the Parnida
store
in Pomeroy and Jerry ·
from PapAl
Bibbee Ford in Middleport
have been ·partly to blame for
Dec. 31.
That equipment must be on that revenue loss, said Frank.
Gallia-Meigs Community .
mine property at year's end to
Action Agency has estimated
be raxed.
SOCCO has announced .that the closing of the mines
that it will· cease mining coal will result in the loss of
in October, but has not indi- approximately $100,000 in
cated when, or if, mining wages, ·sales revenue and taX
equipment, is to be removed revenue for all of the counties
affected.
from the Meigs property.
Frank expects to meet with
The county has also lost
$35,000 in sales taX revenue Meigs County commissioners
to date, and those losses are to discuss the county's bleak
expected to continue indefi- financial outlook for the
nitely, because of a number of remainder of 2001 later this
retail closings and a general week.
The · commissioners were
downturn in the retail.economy.
noi available on Friday to dis.
Meigs County collects a 1 cuss Frank's predictions.

Taxes

Gillilan

George L alck

·catharine Marie Newberry
from

LETART, W.Va.- Catharine Marie Newberry, 73, Letart,
Page AI
died Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 7, 1928 iii Cabell County, W.Va., daughter of the second tower of · the World
late Dennis and Vada Mae Edwards Roush, she was a home- Trade Center. ·
maker, and .a member of Old Town Board Baptist Church. at
Because of their continued
Letart.
interest and "concern about
Surviving are her husband, Elmer Newberry; three sons, what's happening today;' she
Steve (Karen) Newberry ofVinton, Michael (Carol) Newber- . said the television is turned on
ry of Letart, and Tim (Lee) Newberry of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a cQuple times each day
six grandchildren and a great-grandchild; two brothers, Jack because it "comfOrts them to
(Joy) Roush of Letart, and Dertnis (Irene) Roush Jr. of Point know what's going on as they
Pleasant; and a sister, Helen ·Lambert of Savannah, Ga.
move through their day.''
Private graveside services will .be conducted Thesday at Old
Pride and patriotism, couTown Board Baptist Church Cemetery.
pled with concern and comA memorial service will be conducted at 6 p.m. Tuesday at passion, are reflected all about
bid Town Board Baptist Church, with Pastor Greg Collins Southern Elementary School.
officiating. Arrangements are by Deal Funeral Home, Point
It's apparent even before
Pleasant.
entering the buildirtg. A sheet
signed by all the students and
centered with the wordS "God
uling bloodmobiles
and Bless America" hangs on the
recruiting potential donors to fiont of the buildirtg. Visitors
meet future blood needs are greeted at the entrance
where~er they occur:·. he
with a tall wooden Uncle. Sam
faomPapAl.
added.
at the bottom of the flagpole
In the Greater Alleghenies where the flag flies at half-mast.
blood sites, Sanders said.
Due to the response to relief Region, at least 1,050 units of
In the foyer is a memorabilia
efforts, Greater Alleghenies "blood must be collected each display of wars past brought in
Region of American Red weekday to meet the needs of by community people. IncludCross Blood Services has sick and injured patients at ed are war medals, books,
launched a donor rapid more than ll 0 hospitals in a plaques, a bronze eagle, a fireresponse team to assist the fiv~-state area.
men's helmet, a variety ofban. All regional bloodmobiles ners in red, white and blue, one
region's 100-county area in
_meeting future patient blood now carry applications for proclaiming America as : the
potential donors to join the "Land of the Free.''
needs.
"Since Sept. 11, we have donor rapid response team.
A "Memorial Wall" where a
"If donors are unable to wait paper flag represents every life
been .overwhelmed by the
outpouring of public support in line or wish to donate at lost has been created in the
to help those injured in terror- another time, they can com- cafeteria. The students learned
ist attacks on our country:' said plete this form and we will· the enormity of the tragedy by
Executive Director Thomas S. contact them over the next coloring more than 6,000 flags
Angle. "Many people have two months to inform them of
waited in lines, some for sever- upcoming bloodmobiles in
their area:' Angle said.
al hours,'to donate blood.
"Information provided will
"As the emergency bloOd
need$ for victims have been be held in the. sttictesf confi· met, we must focus on sched- dence."

Help

.

~ :':-un_bq~1r_im_es_-_i_er-.r.lir:-•e_l----::~Am2!!!~e~n!..!·~•!!(4!!1!.....!8!.t~·-w!!!~a~r_· _____1s~un~d·7:.,'·!!JS•p~~·~~~~~:!:2~~·~! ! !.
~ Feels say they charged man for using i
papers
flying aboard a German airliner on th
1 · t 'd
e comp am sa• .
Sept. II when it was grounded in
Al-Hadi, who is in custody in
"'o
t
uJ
1
h
k
" ron o as a res t o t e attac s.
Canada, appeared to be an employee
Al-Hadi was traveling with a tick- of Lufthansa, the complaint said. He
et under a different name and was
h
d
·h
was c arge Wit possessing and
carrying three passports from attempting to use a fa!
se passport.
Yemen, the complaint said. In his
Each of the Yemenese passports he
luggage found on the flight, investi- carried had a different number, difu
gators found two Lufthansa crew .ferent name and different date of
·-&lt; I 11inois, prosecutors said Nageeb uniforms, at least one identification ·
· ·d AI H eli
l·' Abdul Jabar Mohamed Al-Hadi was
Issue, It sai . - a presented one
-------------c-ard_a_n_d_:p_a.:_pe_r_w_._.th_A_ra_b..:.ic--wr..:.I:.:.ti_::n:g,--_::of:._t:::h_::em::::_,i:::ss:::u.::.ed:_::in Yemen on Sept. 2,

·"' WASHINGTON (AP) - As the
,:, terror investigation proceeded with
fi d
"• arrests
overseas,
F .da
.d the eral prosecutors
~·· on r• . Y sa~
ey had charged a
"·' ~n With trymg to fly into Chicago
. with an illegal passport and a•·rl.·ne
uniforms on the day of the hiiacking
k
"
~~ a~: :· criminal complaint ciled ··n

f:. Stars turn out in unprecedented
,televised pitch for attack victims
.• NEW YORK (AP)- Hoi·, ; lywood's finest paid tribute to
real-life heroes during an
extraordinary benefit for vic- rims of the terrorist attacks
; that was hard to miss on the
television dial.
,:,, The telethon was televised
: •Friday night on more than 30
' " n~tworks, including the six
• ·biggest broadcasters - ABC,
CBS, NBC, Fox, UPN and
~· the WB.
;,. . From Tom Hanks to Julia
,.. Roberts, actors made underi ..stated appeals for donations,
&lt;••telling stories of innocent
'('People killed and heroic acts.
'':'They alternated short speeches with singers such· as Willie
-~~ Nelson and Wyclef Jean, who
f~performed on sets decorated
}.~.by hundreds of burning can; :.dJes.
·
,;, "We are not healers," Hanks
said. "We are not protectors of
' ithis great nation.
_,; "We are merely artists,
~ntertainers, here to raise spirits and, we hope, a great deal
of moneY,"
Nelson wrapped up the
two-hour. benefit by leading
an all-star version ·of" America the B'eautiful" with Stevie
Wonder·· on .harmonfca. .He

THE BOSS -; Bruce Spring.
. steen opens the llw broadcast
Friday of ·America: A Tribute to
Heroes" with 'My City In Ruins"
in New York. (AP Photo/Wireim-

age.com, Kevin Mazur)

·

followed Canddian singer
Celine Dion 's vetsion of
"God Bless America."
Paul Simon, wearing an
"FDNY" cap, sang a spooky
version of ·his venerable hit,
Over Troubled
"Bridge
Water." Mariah Carey s~ng
"Hero" in one of her first
public appearances since her
breakdown . .
"America:· A Tribute to
Heroes" was reminiscent of
the Live Aid concerts for
famine relief in 1985, but that
wasn't available across such a
wi&lt;le spectrum of networks.
Organizers said ii may be

next week before they have
an estimate of how much
money was raised.
'
Within the first 15 minutes
of Friday night's telethon,
Bruce Springsteen, Wonder
and the rock band U2 performed on .stages in New
York, Los Angeles and London.
· "This is a prayer for our
fallen brothers and sisters,"
Springsteen said opening the
telecast, before singing one of
his newer songs, "My City of
Ruins ."
Wonder condemned ·hatred
in 1he name of religion before
singing "Love's in Need of
Love Today." Neil Young performed the late John
Lennon's hit, "Imagine." Tom
Petty and the Heartbre~kers
played their defiant, "I Won't
Back Down." Jean, dressed in
stars and stripes, sang Bob
Marley's "Redemption Song.'·'
·,With such stars as Tom
Cruise, Roberts and Jim Carrey and a two-hour limit, it
-was hard to fit in everybody.
Meg Ryan, Jack Nicholson,
Sylvester Stallone and other
celebrities were relegated to
' ~pe phone bank, answering
contributors' calls."

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A plaque reads "God Bless
America. In loving memory of
those lost from the terrorism
on our country. 9-11-0 1."
Essays and artwork, displays
created from newspaper clipping$, and banners proclaiming
pride in America plaster . the
hallways and classrooms of the
school.
The children wear red, white
and blue ribbons, and Friday
morni'ng staged a balloon
launch. The community is
involved in the school's efforts
of remembering and moving
on through help with activities
from several residents including
Linda Diddle, Jim Caldwell,
.
and Jody Cummins.
Special
actiVltles
have
allowed students to express
their feelings, making it possible in some small way to adjust
to the uncertainty brought
about by the attack on Ameri• ca.

to Canadian authorities. A receipt !ish and Arabic numbers .
showed that he had purchased a visa
The complaint, filed Sept. 14, had
from the United State Embassy in previously been sealed.
Yemen on that day.
The charges came as European
Using a search warrant, the FBI authorities made several arrests and
also recovered a student identifica- issued warrants and the Justi ce
tion card from the Yemenese Lal)- Department disclosed that many of
guage Institute in Yemen, and a pair the Middle Eastern immigrants
of pants that had a small piece of detained since \he attacks had
material sewn into the side of a entered the country illegally or
pocket that had a sequence of Eng- overstayed visas.

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2495 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631 Huntington, WV 25703

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(7401 446·9445
1-800·562·2646

..

�Sunday, September 23, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

Selling pressure reflects absenc~
of.any buyer\s during somber.week
NEW YORK (AP) -The
week Wall Street dreaded is
finally over and it lived up to
some of investors' worst fears.
Battered by political and
economic un certainty, the
stock marker's best-known
indicator fell I ,369 points this
week, its biggest on e-week
point decline in history.
The Dow Jones industrials'
loss by far eclipsed the previous
record of 821.21, set in March,
and amounted to 14.26 percent - the fifth-largest percentage decline and the biggest
since 1940.
By the time trading ended
Friday, S1.2 trillion had been
sliced !Tom the value of U.S.
stocks.
"It's such an old cliche about
the lack ofbuyers, but it's probably trbe," said Kevin Connel~
]an, director of equity trading
at Northern Trust. "What's
keeping people back is the
uncertainty about what's to
come. It makes people nervous."

The market resumed trading
Monday after a four-day shutdown because of the Sept. II
attacks on th e East Coast. The
markets were volatile from the
opening bell, with th e Dow
plunging nearly 700 points.
The bad news continued
Friday amid worries · about
how the United States would
retaliate for the attacks and
how much the economy will
suffer in the months ahead.
Technical factors that can make
prices fluctuate in the best ~Jf
times also affected the activity.
"This is an extraordinarily
emotion-filled stock market
environment," sa id Hu gh
·Johnson, chief investment officer at First Albany. " lf1vestors
are scrambling to defend their
nest eggs."
The Dow fell 140.41 to
8,235.81 Friday.

The Nasdaq compomc·
index fell4 7.74, or 3.3 percent,
to 1,423.19.
For the week, the Nasdaq
lost 272.19, or 16 percent.

Inside:
Point difeats River valley, Page 8 2
Meigs falls to Fairland, Page 83
Eastern rolls over Hannan, Page 84
Outdoors, Page 8 7

Sunday, September 13, 2001

The broader Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index ended the
week down 126.74 or 11.6
percent, after closing down
18.74 at 965.80 Friday.

SUNDAY'S

ro

'Century

A mssAG£ OUR COJ..fJ.fUNI1Y PROJ.f ...
United Way of Gallla County

Prep Footb•ll .

$SAVE!

:rum

SEOAL .
~

Logan
2·0
Gallia Academy 2·0
Marietta
H
Athens
H
Jackson
H
Point Pleasant
H
Warren
·
0·2
River Valley
0·2
Friday's Results

Kent .st.,

All·

s.o

4·1
4·1
3·2
3·2
2-3

34-14

1· 4

0·5

31-28 with 5:25 left in the contest.
lo
The "play aapped a. tline;play, 90- . t-~ Wa
ATHENS - As NCAA Division yard drive that was set . up on a
I-A teams across the country got Seneca Wallace ·

MORGANTOWN, WVa. (AP) Brad Lewis threw two touchdo\Vn passes
and ran for another . score while Avon
Cobournc rushed (or 181 yards and a TD
to lead WestVirginia to a 34-14 victory
over Kent State on Saturday
Lewis completed 27 of 34 passes - ·
both career highs - for 286 yards in
emerging from an early season slump.
T he Mountaineers (2-1) surpassed their
point totals from the two previous games
combined. Their 503 total yards was more
than they had in any contest last season.
Cobourne, coming off a 173-yard performance two weeks ago against Ohio,
had 35 carries for the second-straight
game. He scored on a 1-yard run.
It was the second-best career effort fur
Cobourne, a junior. He gained 210 yards
against Pittsburgh in 1999.
Kent State (1-2) was limited to 293
yards - 37 in the first half- in falling to
4-32 under coach Dean Pees.
Lewis, who threw five TD passes in a
Music City Bowl victory last December,
hall none in his first two games this season.
His struggles continued in the first half
against Kent State. The Mountaineers
failed to reach the end zone on their first
two times inside the 20.
On West Virginia's first drive of the second half, Lewis threw for 6 7 of his team's
69 .yards, including a 40-yard n;&gt; pass to
Antonio Brown for a 20-0 lead.
Lewis later found Phil Braxton on an

wide off week, Ohio was still in
search of that first elusive win of the
season .
Unfortunately, that win wouldn't
come on this Saturday afternoon as
Iowa State (2-0) almost blew open a
tight gam e at halftime, but held off
th e Bobcats (0-3) for a 31-28 victory after leading by 17 late in the
third quarter.
·
Ohio quarterback Dontrell Jackson pitched the ball back to halfback
Chad Brinker, who met up with Joe
Mohler for a 53-yard touchdown
pass which cur the Cyclones' lead to

· C riticized for being too slow for new
coach Rich Rodriguez' no-huddle, spread
offense, Lewis also scored on an 8-yard
run late in the third quarter for a 34-7
lead.
Brown caught eight passes for 116 yards
in his first extended playing time after suffering a sprained ankle in the preseason.
Kent Stare· freshman quarterback Joshua
Cribbs scored on an 84-yard run late in
the third quarter, the lo ngest TD run by a
West Virginia opponent in the 21-year
history of Mountaineer Field.
Cribbs threw an 18-yard touchdown
pass to David Alston in the fourth quarter.

Point Pleasant 33, Rivet
Valley 6
Gallia Academy 21, Marietta 15 OT
Jackson 54, Athens 33
Logan 42, Warren Local 0

TVC
Ohlo Division

Ium

.M

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

1o the Oigldon del9lied by the dcmr.

AmeriCIII Rid Crou
P.O.8ol37243
Wasll9111, oc 20013

IBm

The New York Firt 911 Relief Fund

HOlde
Silhouette Vt~n

September 11 Fund

lewis,
·U rip

HIGHLIGHTS

..Sptcl•l Edition" P.::bv7,000 Low Mil••· FIICtOfV Demo

Lie rrilioos of people 11voughout the Y«lfid, our hea1S go out to
the victim; of the artie alladls oo the Wort! T!ale Cen!er,the Pentagon, and the people in the br civililrl aiaaft. We COIIllilfllid the
heroic e1100s 01 the pubic saEtt personnel illd the IIBlY others
v.tlo; at great personal risk, helped resooe illd treat the victim; of
these 1ragedes- illd the many v.tlo oonti1ue these ei!OOs.
Gallia County 11M been responding in many ways tllhis natiooal
tragedy: through church ser.tes. carolelighl ...Vis, special fundraising &amp;'!Mties, aoo contribuOOns to the Arnert.an Red Cross and
other authorized orglllizalions.
Wlile ~ diligently oontinue in ar efb1s to ol*lin fundilg ilr
the local human seM:e ageodes 1hat provide help tr our conmJnity, we also v.ilolehearted~ ~MH~rage, suppJII. and pi;ll tl partijpate in the ellorts to help those afliciBd by these IBirible atl!ds on
our country
We ae providi1g the tllklwing inklrrnaliln tr those ¥tOO 'MlUid
ike to donate to an authorized aid 01ga11izaion. Conllilutiln checks
should be !!8le ~to one of the three IXJlE'l"lizaak and mailed
either to-United Wrt ol Gl!ll1 County, P.O. llol 771, Gl!llpolls, OH
45631 - or to the address of the organizaliJn (shovm below). Please
oo mm1 cash.) AI chadls Sid 1o l * Wrf d Gala Coldy w1 be lmadad

lrumational AIIOdaliOI1 d Fire Fijm
1750 New Yen AWIIUI, N.W.
W86hi9U1, 0C 2IXD).5395

Page B1

98 RegaiGS
''"" Tnidl. 70k, '
1 LOoll ~-

Eastern
Waterford
trimble
Southern
Miller
Federal Hocking

All
2·3
2·3 .
2-3
1-2
1-4

0·5

M
0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0-0

All
5·0
3-1

3·2
2-3
1-4

0-5
Friday's Results
Wahama 26, Southern 0
Eastern 50, Hannan 0 .
Millec 29, South Gallia 0
Fairland 29, Meigs 0
Wellston 50, Rock Hill 0
Wilmington 38, Vinton
County 19
Trimble 14, NelsonvilleYork 6
•
Alexander · 39: ~·Federal ·
Hocking 21
- t ~--Gileslape,ake 22, Belpre 21
Saturday's Game
Waterford at World Harvest Christian, late

lJriled WIJfS an! Colni1 d Fwidm's.

2Pllk AWIIUI
New Yen, NY 10016

NcM: ()!e 1lRhd pstat d al douliious sat 1o eilher Lnled Wr, d Gala
Ccxdy or 1o the iiM 111m IIIII !J) ID the i1111911iad Olgllization.
For additiOilal ibmliiou,ca17~2+12or llliletolkilad Wlf dGalaecuty,

P.O. 8ol m, Galifris, OH 45631.

SMOKER
FRIENDlY

. Non-league

:rum

STOP BY YOUR NEAREST SMOKER FRIENDLY LOCATION, AND SIGN
UP FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN IN OUR $15,000 CASH GIVEAWA'I(.
($1 ,000 given away at each store)
··

·~chief~~~

WEAKEST LINK,
Chief smart.
he shop

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
, Hannan
South Gallia

2·3
0·5
0·5

Reds strike
out Brewers

~.um.ers

tobaccon~.

3·2

Friday's Results
Wahama 26, Southern 0
Eastern 50, Hannan 0
Miller 29. South Galli a 0
Oak Hill 28, Symmes ValleyO
Hurricane 24, Ripley 19
Ravenswood 35, Chapmanville 12

Smoker Fr•eniiiJ
are smart, es~1eciq
Cigar and
That's why
more are coming to
Smoker Friendly for

All
5·0
3·2

:' MiLWAUKEE (AP) - Ken
~riffey Jr. hit a three-run
homer after a scary collision in
ihe .sixth inning to lead the
Cincinnati Reds to a 5"2 win
over the Milwaukee Brewers
on Friday.night.
: Milwaukee struck out . 10
6mes in the game, breaking the .
Olajor league record for most
~ikeouts in a season with
t ,272. The Detroit Tigers set
the previous record of 1,268 in
1996.
: Todd Walkerled off the sixth
fly drawing a walk from relievMac Suzuki (3-7). Wilton
Guerrero then bunted toward
third baseman Lou Collier
who fielded the ball and threw
Wildly to first.
• As second · baseman Mark
Loretta lunged for the errant
throw, he collided with Guerrero and landed awkwardly on
his head . Both players lay
motionless just a few feet apart.
· Guerrero has a mild concussion and is ·day to day. Loretta
left for precautionary reasons.
Lance Davis (7-3) allowed
two runs. and seven hits in six
innings to get the win. Danny
Graves pitched tqe ninth for
his 27th save.
: The Brewers have dropped
six straight and are 22 games
under .500 for the first time
this season.

ON THE Gf:rAWAY- Ohio's Chad Brinker tries to get around Iowa State's Atif Austin during th·e fist quarter at
Ohio's Peden Stadium in Athens Saturday. Iowa State won, .31-28. (AP)

Ohio rally falls short
Bv BUTCH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAEI'

....,

State

back~to

home opener for the
Bobcats at the newly renovated
Peden Stadium. A capacity crowd of
24,000 was in attendan ce, a new
Peden record.
It was also the lone game in a
three-week sp'an for Ohio. The
Bobcats were otiginally scheduled
to travel' to North Carolina State on
Sept. 13, but that game was p ostponed after . last week's terrorist
attacks.That game has been rescheduled for Nov. 24.
Earlier in the fourth , following a
blocked field goal, the Bobcats had

28
moved the ball before quarterback
DontreU Jackso n met up with Joe
Mohler .for a 31 - yard touchdown
pass that made it a 10 -poi nt game,
The play that gave th e Cyclones
the decisive lead on Saturday was a
66-yard to uchdown run by 'Iowa
State tailback Ennis Haywood that
gaw th e Cyclones a 31 - 14 lead with

PIHH IH Ohio, 85

Blue Devils win thriller on the road
9

BY R. SHAWN LEwiS
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

MARIETTA, O hio - Gallipolis'
David Brodeur hurl ed a 13-yard scoring strike to sop homo re Andre
Geiger, and the Blue Devils defense
stopp ed Ma riet ta o n fourth -a ndinches to w in a 21-15 overt ime
thriller Friday.
The late action capped a back- andforth night that saw two evenly
matched teams slugging it out in conferen ce play.
Mari etta drew first blood when
Brandon Burke caught an 8-yard
touchdown toss from Braden Amigo.

The tally ended Gallipo lis' season-lon g
first-q uarter scoreless
streak.
The Tigers (4-1, 11) kept Gallipolis'
high- flying offense
in check most of th e
night. The Blue Dev&gt;\.....:'---..%!L--l ils were held to 19
. · Geiger
yards in 13 carries in
the first half by the
swarmi ng M arietta defense.
"We j ust got w hooped up front in
the first half," Gallia Academy Coach
llre 11t Saunders said ."That's a tremen-

dous football team.
"They exemplify what a good high ·
school football team is all about. I'm
proud of my kids, but I'm proud of
Mari etta , too."
The Blue Devils were shut o ut in
the. first half, but th eir big-play attack
struck early in the third quarter.
Brodeur hooked up with tight-end
Nathan Kiskis on a 54-yard post pattern to knot the game at 7 at th e 8:47
mark.
One minute and 33 seconds later,
defensive back Justin North stepped
in front of an Amigo pass and sprinted 31 yards for the go -ahead score.

Nick R eed reached paydirt on the
two-point conversio n, and Gallipolis
(4- 1, 2-0) was up 15-7.
The Blue Devils stopped the Tigers
on their follow-up possession, and
then Marietta returned the favor, settin g up a Gallipolis punt.
Punter Shannon Shipley booted a
high hanger that bounced near the
Marietta 20 and rolled into the Tigers'
return man, who was leveled by a host
of Blue Devil defenders.
: Gallipolis' Aaron Burnette pounced
on the loose ball, and the Blue Devils

PleiH IH Devils, 85

Lady Rebel volleyball player

er

41

Ohio

knows about wins that count
Bv

DAN PoLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

COMEBACK - South Ga,111a senior Alicia Halley, who is In remission from cancer, prepares to pass to a teammate. (Dan Pocyn)

If

,

M ERCERVlLE South Gallia sen ior
volleyball player Alicia Halley knows about
w inning and losing.
While the Lady Rebels have struggled
through the early part of this season, her
return to the team is a victory that can't be
diminished by any degree of on-court success.
Near the end of her sophomore year, Halley was diagnosed with Ewing's Sarcoma, a
cancer which appears in immature nerve tissue, usually the bone marrow of individuals
between the ages of 10 and 20.
'During her freshman and sophomore years,
Halley noticed a pain in her left hip that
•
1'

I

wouldn't-go away.
" It just kept hurting," said Halley. "!
thought tliat l kept hitting it."
"Finally I just had to go to the hospital
because it had gotten to the point where it
was waking me up at night," she added.
What she thought she was hitting and
injuring was a.tumor which doctors told her
was the size of a brick.
" I never thought it would be .something
like that," she said.
Halley, who has two brothers, Dustin Halley and Derek Taylor, who are athletes at
South Gallia and a father, Terry, who is an
avid sports fan, ca ught her doctor ofT-guard

.......... VIctory, 85
iiC

•

'•

••

�Sunday, September 23, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

Selling pressure reflects absenc~
of.any buyer\s during somber.week
NEW YORK (AP) -The
week Wall Street dreaded is
finally over and it lived up to
some of investors' worst fears.
Battered by political and
economic un certainty, the
stock marker's best-known
indicator fell I ,369 points this
week, its biggest on e-week
point decline in history.
The Dow Jones industrials'
loss by far eclipsed the previous
record of 821.21, set in March,
and amounted to 14.26 percent - the fifth-largest percentage decline and the biggest
since 1940.
By the time trading ended
Friday, S1.2 trillion had been
sliced !Tom the value of U.S.
stocks.
"It's such an old cliche about
the lack ofbuyers, but it's probably trbe," said Kevin Connel~
]an, director of equity trading
at Northern Trust. "What's
keeping people back is the
uncertainty about what's to
come. It makes people nervous."

The market resumed trading
Monday after a four-day shutdown because of the Sept. II
attacks on th e East Coast. The
markets were volatile from the
opening bell, with th e Dow
plunging nearly 700 points.
The bad news continued
Friday amid worries · about
how the United States would
retaliate for the attacks and
how much the economy will
suffer in the months ahead.
Technical factors that can make
prices fluctuate in the best ~Jf
times also affected the activity.
"This is an extraordinarily
emotion-filled stock market
environment," sa id Hu gh
·Johnson, chief investment officer at First Albany. " lf1vestors
are scrambling to defend their
nest eggs."
The Dow fell 140.41 to
8,235.81 Friday.

The Nasdaq compomc·
index fell4 7.74, or 3.3 percent,
to 1,423.19.
For the week, the Nasdaq
lost 272.19, or 16 percent.

Inside:
Point difeats River valley, Page 8 2
Meigs falls to Fairland, Page 83
Eastern rolls over Hannan, Page 84
Outdoors, Page 8 7

Sunday, September 13, 2001

The broader Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index ended the
week down 126.74 or 11.6
percent, after closing down
18.74 at 965.80 Friday.

SUNDAY'S

ro

'Century

A mssAG£ OUR COJ..fJ.fUNI1Y PROJ.f ...
United Way of Gallla County

Prep Footb•ll .

$SAVE!

:rum

SEOAL .
~

Logan
2·0
Gallia Academy 2·0
Marietta
H
Athens
H
Jackson
H
Point Pleasant
H
Warren
·
0·2
River Valley
0·2
Friday's Results

Kent .st.,

All·

s.o

4·1
4·1
3·2
3·2
2-3

34-14

1· 4

0·5

31-28 with 5:25 left in the contest.
lo
The "play aapped a. tline;play, 90- . t-~ Wa
ATHENS - As NCAA Division yard drive that was set . up on a
I-A teams across the country got Seneca Wallace ·

MORGANTOWN, WVa. (AP) Brad Lewis threw two touchdo\Vn passes
and ran for another . score while Avon
Cobournc rushed (or 181 yards and a TD
to lead WestVirginia to a 34-14 victory
over Kent State on Saturday
Lewis completed 27 of 34 passes - ·
both career highs - for 286 yards in
emerging from an early season slump.
T he Mountaineers (2-1) surpassed their
point totals from the two previous games
combined. Their 503 total yards was more
than they had in any contest last season.
Cobourne, coming off a 173-yard performance two weeks ago against Ohio,
had 35 carries for the second-straight
game. He scored on a 1-yard run.
It was the second-best career effort fur
Cobourne, a junior. He gained 210 yards
against Pittsburgh in 1999.
Kent State (1-2) was limited to 293
yards - 37 in the first half- in falling to
4-32 under coach Dean Pees.
Lewis, who threw five TD passes in a
Music City Bowl victory last December,
hall none in his first two games this season.
His struggles continued in the first half
against Kent State. The Mountaineers
failed to reach the end zone on their first
two times inside the 20.
On West Virginia's first drive of the second half, Lewis threw for 6 7 of his team's
69 .yards, including a 40-yard n;&gt; pass to
Antonio Brown for a 20-0 lead.
Lewis later found Phil Braxton on an

wide off week, Ohio was still in
search of that first elusive win of the
season .
Unfortunately, that win wouldn't
come on this Saturday afternoon as
Iowa State (2-0) almost blew open a
tight gam e at halftime, but held off
th e Bobcats (0-3) for a 31-28 victory after leading by 17 late in the
third quarter.
·
Ohio quarterback Dontrell Jackson pitched the ball back to halfback
Chad Brinker, who met up with Joe
Mohler for a 53-yard touchdown
pass which cur the Cyclones' lead to

· C riticized for being too slow for new
coach Rich Rodriguez' no-huddle, spread
offense, Lewis also scored on an 8-yard
run late in the third quarter for a 34-7
lead.
Brown caught eight passes for 116 yards
in his first extended playing time after suffering a sprained ankle in the preseason.
Kent Stare· freshman quarterback Joshua
Cribbs scored on an 84-yard run late in
the third quarter, the lo ngest TD run by a
West Virginia opponent in the 21-year
history of Mountaineer Field.
Cribbs threw an 18-yard touchdown
pass to David Alston in the fourth quarter.

Point Pleasant 33, Rivet
Valley 6
Gallia Academy 21, Marietta 15 OT
Jackson 54, Athens 33
Logan 42, Warren Local 0

TVC
Ohlo Division

Ium

.M

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

1o the Oigldon del9lied by the dcmr.

AmeriCIII Rid Crou
P.O.8ol37243
Wasll9111, oc 20013

IBm

The New York Firt 911 Relief Fund

HOlde
Silhouette Vt~n

September 11 Fund

lewis,
·U rip

HIGHLIGHTS

..Sptcl•l Edition" P.::bv7,000 Low Mil••· FIICtOfV Demo

Lie rrilioos of people 11voughout the Y«lfid, our hea1S go out to
the victim; of the artie alladls oo the Wort! T!ale Cen!er,the Pentagon, and the people in the br civililrl aiaaft. We COIIllilfllid the
heroic e1100s 01 the pubic saEtt personnel illd the IIBlY others
v.tlo; at great personal risk, helped resooe illd treat the victim; of
these 1ragedes- illd the many v.tlo oonti1ue these ei!OOs.
Gallia County 11M been responding in many ways tllhis natiooal
tragedy: through church ser.tes. carolelighl ...Vis, special fundraising &amp;'!Mties, aoo contribuOOns to the Arnert.an Red Cross and
other authorized orglllizalions.
Wlile ~ diligently oontinue in ar efb1s to ol*lin fundilg ilr
the local human seM:e ageodes 1hat provide help tr our conmJnity, we also v.ilolehearted~ ~MH~rage, suppJII. and pi;ll tl partijpate in the ellorts to help those afliciBd by these IBirible atl!ds on
our country
We ae providi1g the tllklwing inklrrnaliln tr those ¥tOO 'MlUid
ike to donate to an authorized aid 01ga11izaion. Conllilutiln checks
should be !!8le ~to one of the three IXJlE'l"lizaak and mailed
either to-United Wrt ol Gl!ll1 County, P.O. llol 771, Gl!llpolls, OH
45631 - or to the address of the organizaliJn (shovm below). Please
oo mm1 cash.) AI chadls Sid 1o l * Wrf d Gala Coldy w1 be lmadad

lrumational AIIOdaliOI1 d Fire Fijm
1750 New Yen AWIIUI, N.W.
W86hi9U1, 0C 2IXD).5395

Page B1

98 RegaiGS
''"" Tnidl. 70k, '
1 LOoll ~-

Eastern
Waterford
trimble
Southern
Miller
Federal Hocking

All
2·3
2·3 .
2-3
1-2
1-4

0·5

M
0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0-0

All
5·0
3-1

3·2
2-3
1-4

0-5
Friday's Results
Wahama 26, Southern 0
Eastern 50, Hannan 0 .
Millec 29, South Gallia 0
Fairland 29, Meigs 0
Wellston 50, Rock Hill 0
Wilmington 38, Vinton
County 19
Trimble 14, NelsonvilleYork 6
•
Alexander · 39: ~·Federal ·
Hocking 21
- t ~--Gileslape,ake 22, Belpre 21
Saturday's Game
Waterford at World Harvest Christian, late

lJriled WIJfS an! Colni1 d Fwidm's.

2Pllk AWIIUI
New Yen, NY 10016

NcM: ()!e 1lRhd pstat d al douliious sat 1o eilher Lnled Wr, d Gala
Ccxdy or 1o the iiM 111m IIIII !J) ID the i1111911iad Olgllization.
For additiOilal ibmliiou,ca17~2+12or llliletolkilad Wlf dGalaecuty,

P.O. 8ol m, Galifris, OH 45631.

SMOKER
FRIENDlY

. Non-league

:rum

STOP BY YOUR NEAREST SMOKER FRIENDLY LOCATION, AND SIGN
UP FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN IN OUR $15,000 CASH GIVEAWA'I(.
($1 ,000 given away at each store)
··

·~chief~~~

WEAKEST LINK,
Chief smart.
he shop

Ravenswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
, Hannan
South Gallia

2·3
0·5
0·5

Reds strike
out Brewers

~.um.ers

tobaccon~.

3·2

Friday's Results
Wahama 26, Southern 0
Eastern 50, Hannan 0
Miller 29. South Galli a 0
Oak Hill 28, Symmes ValleyO
Hurricane 24, Ripley 19
Ravenswood 35, Chapmanville 12

Smoker Fr•eniiiJ
are smart, es~1eciq
Cigar and
That's why
more are coming to
Smoker Friendly for

All
5·0
3·2

:' MiLWAUKEE (AP) - Ken
~riffey Jr. hit a three-run
homer after a scary collision in
ihe .sixth inning to lead the
Cincinnati Reds to a 5"2 win
over the Milwaukee Brewers
on Friday.night.
: Milwaukee struck out . 10
6mes in the game, breaking the .
Olajor league record for most
~ikeouts in a season with
t ,272. The Detroit Tigers set
the previous record of 1,268 in
1996.
: Todd Walkerled off the sixth
fly drawing a walk from relievMac Suzuki (3-7). Wilton
Guerrero then bunted toward
third baseman Lou Collier
who fielded the ball and threw
Wildly to first.
• As second · baseman Mark
Loretta lunged for the errant
throw, he collided with Guerrero and landed awkwardly on
his head . Both players lay
motionless just a few feet apart.
· Guerrero has a mild concussion and is ·day to day. Loretta
left for precautionary reasons.
Lance Davis (7-3) allowed
two runs. and seven hits in six
innings to get the win. Danny
Graves pitched tqe ninth for
his 27th save.
: The Brewers have dropped
six straight and are 22 games
under .500 for the first time
this season.

ON THE Gf:rAWAY- Ohio's Chad Brinker tries to get around Iowa State's Atif Austin during th·e fist quarter at
Ohio's Peden Stadium in Athens Saturday. Iowa State won, .31-28. (AP)

Ohio rally falls short
Bv BUTCH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAEI'

....,

State

back~to

home opener for the
Bobcats at the newly renovated
Peden Stadium. A capacity crowd of
24,000 was in attendan ce, a new
Peden record.
It was also the lone game in a
three-week sp'an for Ohio. The
Bobcats were otiginally scheduled
to travel' to North Carolina State on
Sept. 13, but that game was p ostponed after . last week's terrorist
attacks.That game has been rescheduled for Nov. 24.
Earlier in the fourth , following a
blocked field goal, the Bobcats had

28
moved the ball before quarterback
DontreU Jackso n met up with Joe
Mohler .for a 31 - yard touchdown
pass that made it a 10 -poi nt game,
The play that gave th e Cyclones
the decisive lead on Saturday was a
66-yard to uchdown run by 'Iowa
State tailback Ennis Haywood that
gaw th e Cyclones a 31 - 14 lead with

PIHH IH Ohio, 85

Blue Devils win thriller on the road
9

BY R. SHAWN LEwiS
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

MARIETTA, O hio - Gallipolis'
David Brodeur hurl ed a 13-yard scoring strike to sop homo re Andre
Geiger, and the Blue Devils defense
stopp ed Ma riet ta o n fourth -a ndinches to w in a 21-15 overt ime
thriller Friday.
The late action capped a back- andforth night that saw two evenly
matched teams slugging it out in conferen ce play.
Mari etta drew first blood when
Brandon Burke caught an 8-yard
touchdown toss from Braden Amigo.

The tally ended Gallipo lis' season-lon g
first-q uarter scoreless
streak.
The Tigers (4-1, 11) kept Gallipolis'
high- flying offense
in check most of th e
night. The Blue Dev&gt;\.....:'---..%!L--l ils were held to 19
. · Geiger
yards in 13 carries in
the first half by the
swarmi ng M arietta defense.
"We j ust got w hooped up front in
the first half," Gallia Academy Coach
llre 11t Saunders said ."That's a tremen-

dous football team.
"They exemplify what a good high ·
school football team is all about. I'm
proud of my kids, but I'm proud of
Mari etta , too."
The Blue Devils were shut o ut in
the. first half, but th eir big-play attack
struck early in the third quarter.
Brodeur hooked up with tight-end
Nathan Kiskis on a 54-yard post pattern to knot the game at 7 at th e 8:47
mark.
One minute and 33 seconds later,
defensive back Justin North stepped
in front of an Amigo pass and sprinted 31 yards for the go -ahead score.

Nick R eed reached paydirt on the
two-point conversio n, and Gallipolis
(4- 1, 2-0) was up 15-7.
The Blue Devils stopped the Tigers
on their follow-up possession, and
then Marietta returned the favor, settin g up a Gallipolis punt.
Punter Shannon Shipley booted a
high hanger that bounced near the
Marietta 20 and rolled into the Tigers'
return man, who was leveled by a host
of Blue Devil defenders.
: Gallipolis' Aaron Burnette pounced
on the loose ball, and the Blue Devils

PleiH IH Devils, 85

Lady Rebel volleyball player

er

41

Ohio

knows about wins that count
Bv

DAN PoLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

COMEBACK - South Ga,111a senior Alicia Halley, who is In remission from cancer, prepares to pass to a teammate. (Dan Pocyn)

If

,

M ERCERVlLE South Gallia sen ior
volleyball player Alicia Halley knows about
w inning and losing.
While the Lady Rebels have struggled
through the early part of this season, her
return to the team is a victory that can't be
diminished by any degree of on-court success.
Near the end of her sophomore year, Halley was diagnosed with Ewing's Sarcoma, a
cancer which appears in immature nerve tissue, usually the bone marrow of individuals
between the ages of 10 and 20.
'During her freshman and sophomore years,
Halley noticed a pain in her left hip that
•
1'

I

wouldn't-go away.
" It just kept hurting," said Halley. "!
thought tliat l kept hitting it."
"Finally I just had to go to the hospital
because it had gotten to the point where it
was waking me up at night," she added.
What she thought she was hitting and
injuring was a.tumor which doctors told her
was the size of a brick.
" I never thought it would be .something
like that," she said.
Halley, who has two brothers, Dustin Halley and Derek Taylor, who are athletes at
South Gallia and a father, Terry, who is an
avid sports fan, ca ught her doctor ofT-guard

.......... VIctory, 85
iiC

•

'•

••

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Qalllpolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, wv

Sunday,Sept. 23,2001
Page 82 • &amp;unbap QI:imr!l-&amp;rnlinrl

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

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

-Lambert, Falcons
run over Tornadoes

'

Point Pleasant wins league game over Raiders Miller
tops
BY IAN BECKER

CHESHIRE - In a match
up fea turing two SEOAL
teams desperate for their first
conference win, Point Pleasant
defeated River Valley 33-6,
extending the Radier's losing
streak to 36 games.
" I feel badly about extending
their losing streak, but I didn't
want it to end with us either,"
Point head coach Steve Safford.
''I'd like to see them get a win,
but like us they've got a tough
road the rest of the year in the
league."
Junior runnning back Jesse
Nott paced the Big Blacks (23, 1- 1 SEOAL) with 125 vards
on 16 carries, scoring a f;urth
quarter touchdown to seal the
victory. ·
After River Valley (0-5, 0-2)
turned the ball over on downs
with just 10 minutes left in the
game, Point Pleasant pounded
the ball downfield on the
shoulders of Kevin and J D.
Thompson, who combined for
;&gt;8 yards on six itttempts. On
second-and-four, Nott got his
first touch of the drive and
bolted 35-yards to put the Big
' Blacks up 27-6 with 6:46
remaining.
.
In the end, the Big Black's
dominant rushing game was
the difference. Point ammassed

·

GETTING READY - The River Valley football team waits to
take the field prior to the Raiders' 33-6 loss to Point Pleasant
Friday at Cheshire. (ian Becker) ,

311 yards on 46 attempts.
"That was key," Safford said.
"We knew . had to establish .~
ground game.We didn't do that
a week ago (in a 25-6 loss to
Marietta) and I think that
helped to open up the passing a
little bit."

With a dominant running
game, the Big Blacks opened
up the offense, attempting
down-field passes in situations
where they would normally
run the ball.Junior quarterback
Kevin Thompson connected
on · six of 14 pass attempts for

94 yards, one touchdown and
one interception, connecting
with junior tight end Seth
Matheny fo r two completions
for over 20 yards apiece.
The Big Blacks opened the
game With a punishing 11 -play,
72-yard drive that kept the
Radier defense on the field for
over six minutes. Sophomore
fullba ck J immy Jordan capped
the drive. w ith a one-yard
tou c~d~wn drive, but it was
N ott s SIX carnes for 38 yards ,
that moved Point down the
field .
"Their running game was
pretty nice inside between the
tackles," River Valley head
coach Larry Carter said. "We
missed a few tackles. which
caused us some problems. If
you've got a guy in the right
position you've got to make
the play. If you don't then
something big is ~ing to happen."
After digging themsleves a
20-point deficit, the Radiers
put together a nine-play, 68yard scoring drive, capped by a
Blake
Marcum
one-yard
touchdown run. Marcum
paced River Valley on its ·lone
scoring drive, carrying the ball
six times for 51 yards, while
junior Adam Darst added an
18.-yard run that brought the
ball to the Point 21-yard line.

Marcum led the Radiers with
107 yards on 21 attempts.
Getting the ball to lead-off
the second half, the Radiers
squandered ~ chance to cut
into the Point lead and were
forced to punt. Another chance
quickly arose, however, after
sophomore 'defensive back
Riley · Rice intercepted a
Thompson pass inteded for
Nic Dalton near midfield. The
Point defense stiffened, though.
forcing the Raiders to turn the
ball-over on downs at the Point
30-yard marker.
With over 11 miriutes in the
fourth, River Valley got one
more chance to cut the Big
Black lead to just one score, but were able to muster just one
first down before punting the
ball away.
For Point, getting a win at
River Valley may go a long way
to build the confidence of a
young team.
"We finished the first half of
the season at 2-3:' Safford s;lid.
"We know we're a young football team, but we know we're
capable of winning some
games. We just have to go o.ne
week at a time ... Who knows
what might happen next
week."
The Big Blacks host undefeared Logan next Friday, while
River Valley hosts Athens.

Swisher scores six touchdowns in Jackson win over Athens
Swisher's fumble-return
Swisher scored on runs of
20, 46, 19,63, and nine yards, score in the second period
OVP SPORTS STAFF
breaking
numerous tackles kicked off a sequence which
JACKSON,
Ohio
lasted under two minutes but
"That's gonna be our game
along the way.
"There are gonna be peo- saw four TO's scored. After
plan every week."
· That quote came from
ple who are gonna stop him Jackson's Kevin Wiseman
or slow him down," said Lay- stripped Athens quarterback
Jackson head coach Randy
ton, "but our kids just did a Grant Gregory. Swisher
Layton after Friday's 54-33
SEOAL football · win over
nice J~.\&gt; of, executing the
Athens.
· ··
offense-tortlgl\t and .o pening '
up holes for Swisher."
He was referring tO the
offense
f---~~~m~Saw~i~shfe~rSil~l~~~~l~d to simply. out- muscle The
1
·
its
the skill attack of the Bull- totaled
plus yard game of the seasun, dogs (3-2, 1- 1 SEOAL). ·
ground Friday.
amassing 251 yards on 22
hauls to help the Jronmen
(3-2 overall, 1-1 SEOAL)
back onto the winning track
after last week's loss at Gallia
Academy.
In the course of Friday's
performance, Swisher scored
five rushing·touchdow
.. ns and
another oll'':1 fumble· return
as the Ironmen were deter-

BY DAN PoLCYN

Week Five
Dragons scorch Marauders, 29-0
'

High School Football
OVP SPORTS ST4FF

&amp;unbap l!:imtt -&amp;tntintl • Page 83

picked the ball up at the 26yard line and rumbled · for
the score at the 2:28 mark
for a 26-12 Jackson lead.
Just over a minute later,
Gregory hit senior end Brad
Hartley o!l the deep slant for
a 15-yard score.

BY ChRY CLARK

Rebels
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

HEMLOC K, Ohio Miller amassed 382 rushing yards on 52 attempts
Friday at home en route
to 29-0 victory over
South Gallia.
Justin Vernon rushed
24 times for 124 ·yards,
including two fourthquarter touchdowns that
sealed the Falcons' first
win of the season.
John Dishpan added
109 yards on 11 attempts,
while
Larry Wilson
gained 34 on five rushes.
Jake Workman led the
Rebels with 73 yards on
13 attempts, while South
Gallia (0- 5) was held to
114 total offensive yards.
After Wilson scored the
game's first score with
15-yard run with 8:13
left in the first quarter,
the Rebels held scoreless
the rest of the half. In the
opening minutes of the
second half,John Dishon
put the Falcons ahead
16-0 with a 61-yard run.
Later in the fourth
quarter, Vernon scored his
two touchdowns, solidifying the Rebels' fifth
loss.
South Gallia quarterback Jtistin Waugh , connected on just two of 17
pass attempts for a five

yards.

.thick of the hunt for the better
part of the night, but the TorMASON Gabe Lam- nadoes committed several
bert's 143--yard rushing night cosily penalties, especially in
helped Wahama overcome five
turnovers as the White Falcons the second half, that severely
pitched a 26-0 shutout Win hampered the visitors chances.
The Meigs County squad was
.
over Vlsiting Southern Friday. whistled for seven penalties
The White Falcons lost the
pigskin four times on fumbles with six of those being major
- ddi
violations that proved vital to
m a ·tion to tossing an inter- the 6nal outcome.
"Penalties killed us theres no
ception but coach Rusty
Richards Tornadoe eleven
failed to capitalize on the question about it," Southern
Ben4 Area teams . generosity. assistant coach Tom Smiff said.
Southern also experienced "We were down by a . 6-0
trouble hanging on to the score and took the second half
football in losing two fumbles kickoff and began marching
to the White Falcons in addi- down the field. Each play
tion to having one pass picked would fire us up even more
off.
then came a personal foul
· The win snapped a two- penalty and that took us out
game losing skid for Wal1ama of the game the assistant coach
added."
as coach Ed Cromley's gridWahama scored on its first
ders improved to 2-3 on the
season while Southern fell for two possessions following the
the second straight week to halftime intermission as Hank'dip to 2-3 also following the mson scored on a 13-yard
Joss.
jaunt at the 6:02 mark with
"We picked it up in the sec- · Lambert going in from six
ond half" WHS coach Crom- yards away with :39 left in the
Brandon
ley stated. "The first half was third period.
ugly, to put it mildly. We made ~agnon completed the sc~r­
far too many mistakes in the mg wtth a. 40-ya:J burst ~tth
first two quarters and you cant 4:20 remammg m the game.
put points on the board when Bradford Clark connected
you keep turning the ball With Adam Rickard for the
over."
lone successful PAT of the
Lambert led an effective night following Hankinsons
WHS ground attack cllat saw scoring run.
the White Falcons run for 354
Except for the opening
yards on the night. The junior series of the second half, the
fullback scored one touch- White Falcons stalled the
down on a six-yard run while Souihern ground game which
Ryan Mitchell and Brandon forced the Tornadoes to take to
Hankinson also reached the the air. Senior quarterback
end zone on runs of eight and Brandon Pierce enjoyed some
13 yards. Brandon Gagnon early success With pass comclosed
out 'the Falcon scoring pletions to speedy Brice Hill
'iI
' With a 40-yard scamper in the and Aaron Ohlinger but the
final period to put the contest Wahama defense stiffened to
out of reach. Mitchell finished keep its cross-river rivals out of
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.

South Gallia will play
at Parkersburg Catholic
next Saturday.

BY

DAVE

HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

PROCTORVILLE
Fairland
scored t wo touchdowns in a span of
2:40 seconds in the third period.
breaking open a 7- 0 halftime lead en
route to a 29-0 win over Meigs in
non -.conference football action Friday
even mg.
Fairland ran for 431 yards on the
night with two players going over the
century mark . Sophomore speedster
Tristin Clark rush ed for 171 yards on
15 carries and Darin Thomas· added
126 in 12 tries. C hris Hardy just
missed joining the ac t with 99 yards
in 13 carries .
Meigs received a big break in the
first when th e Dragons fumbled and
Meigs re covered at the Dragon 29.
M eigs drove to the Fairland 14, but a
Kyle Hannan fourth down . pass fell
incomplete.
The Dragons took ove r o n downs
and put together a nine - play, 86 yard
drive with Clark scoring from 41
yards out. Darin Thomas added the
kick for a 7-0 Fairland lead with
10:12 left in the half.
·
Fairland drove deep into Meigs territory late in the first half. but Buzzy
F~ckler picked off a Drew Clark pass
in the end zon e with 16 seconds left
to ehd the threat.
Meigs received the second hal(
kickoff and drove into Dragon territory, but once again came up empty
on fourth and four from the 35 yard
line.
Fairland went on a 13-play, 65-yard

MEIGS FALLS - Meigs· Tyson Lee
carries the ball against Fairland Friday. The marauders fell to the Dragons , 29-0. (Dave Harris)
·

drive th at was capped off when
Thomas their 210 pound fullback
scored from . a yard out. Thomas
caught a bad snap on the fly on his
kick attempt for the extra points and
ran it in for a 15-0 lead at the 3:05
mark of the third period.
Meigs once again drove into Fairland territory, but •Clark picked off a

Hannan pass at the 12- yard line and
returned it to the 28. On th e fir st play,
Thomas went up the gut, fou n d day
light and took it the di stan ce 72 yards
fo r the score. Once agai n Thomas
added the extra points fo r a 22-0 lead.
C hris. Hardy capped off the Fairland
scoring with a 2 1-yard ru n . w ith
10:35 left in th e game to cap off a
four- play, 60-yard drive. Tho mas once
again added the ex tra points.
M eigs drove to the Dragon five
after Hardy's score, hut once again had
to tu rn the ball over on downs. T he
big play in t he dr ive wa s a 25-yard
pass fro m H ann an to Fack ler to the
D ragon 14 yard li ne.
Clark led all ru sh ers with his 17 1
yards, T ho mas added 126 and Hardy
99 . Clark was fo ur of eight in the air
with an interception for 37 yards.
H ardy caught two passes fo r 20 ya rds.
Jeremy R o ush led M eigs with 48
yards in 12 carries, Tyson Lee added
41 in 12 crac ks. H annan was 11 of 25
in the air with an interce ption fo r 106
yards. Fackl er pulled in five passes for
47 yard s. Freshman Rya n Frazier
added two carches fo r 36 yards.
"I thought we gave go od effort,"
Marauder coac h Mike C han cey said
after the game. "We are going to stick
together, and improve, th ese are good
kids and they will get better." ·
Fairland with the win is 2-3 overall,
they will play Chesapeake next week.
Meigs drops to 1-4 for the season, the
Marauders will TVC play next week
at Wellston.

.•

~! ~S3 y.uds, whilet;:H~ .:··!· ~·~~-ow~o.:--ll~~·J}sl:l:f

Ma~nntOUt

• son added 62 for the Wahama 39
;
:
;. :
;: :
;: :

"They took our passing
game away and for the second
straight week · our offensive
line stepped up and got the job
done," said Cromley. "Lambert and Mitchell ran the ball
;: ; effectively which gave our
·: • offense a much needed boost."
:' : WHS led by a narrow 6-0
:: : margin at the halfway point
wi~ Mitchell scoring on a six,; yard run with 3:33 remaining
in the second quarter. The
;j : White Falcons had several
:• ; more chances to score during
,~: the early going but couldn't
•: • hold on to the football which
; : hindered the Bend Area team's
; offensive thrust_' ·
·
•
Southern found itself in the

F:
!: :
t.

-·-·

18 to 26 HP
Gas or.Diesel Engines
·52" to 72" Deck

Defensively Adam Rickard
and R. T. Roush were the stars
of the game for WHS while
'!yler Little, Matt Ash and Joe
Cornell excelled for Southern.
Brandon Pierce recovered a
pair of Falcon fumbles while '
Cornell and Chris Coppick
added one each. Lambert and
R.T. Roush had enemy fum- ·
ble recoveries for Wahama
while Ohlinger intercepted a
White Falcon aerial and Hankinson picked · off a Southern
pass attempt.
Wahama will host Duval
next Friday in a homecoming
matchup while Southern travels to Federal Hocking.

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Qalllpolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, wv

Sunday,Sept. 23,2001
Page 82 • &amp;unbap QI:imr!l-&amp;rnlinrl

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

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

-Lambert, Falcons
run over Tornadoes

'

Point Pleasant wins league game over Raiders Miller
tops
BY IAN BECKER

CHESHIRE - In a match
up fea turing two SEOAL
teams desperate for their first
conference win, Point Pleasant
defeated River Valley 33-6,
extending the Radier's losing
streak to 36 games.
" I feel badly about extending
their losing streak, but I didn't
want it to end with us either,"
Point head coach Steve Safford.
''I'd like to see them get a win,
but like us they've got a tough
road the rest of the year in the
league."
Junior runnning back Jesse
Nott paced the Big Blacks (23, 1- 1 SEOAL) with 125 vards
on 16 carries, scoring a f;urth
quarter touchdown to seal the
victory. ·
After River Valley (0-5, 0-2)
turned the ball over on downs
with just 10 minutes left in the
game, Point Pleasant pounded
the ball downfield on the
shoulders of Kevin and J D.
Thompson, who combined for
;&gt;8 yards on six itttempts. On
second-and-four, Nott got his
first touch of the drive and
bolted 35-yards to put the Big
' Blacks up 27-6 with 6:46
remaining.
.
In the end, the Big Black's
dominant rushing game was
the difference. Point ammassed

·

GETTING READY - The River Valley football team waits to
take the field prior to the Raiders' 33-6 loss to Point Pleasant
Friday at Cheshire. (ian Becker) ,

311 yards on 46 attempts.
"That was key," Safford said.
"We knew . had to establish .~
ground game.We didn't do that
a week ago (in a 25-6 loss to
Marietta) and I think that
helped to open up the passing a
little bit."

With a dominant running
game, the Big Blacks opened
up the offense, attempting
down-field passes in situations
where they would normally
run the ball.Junior quarterback
Kevin Thompson connected
on · six of 14 pass attempts for

94 yards, one touchdown and
one interception, connecting
with junior tight end Seth
Matheny fo r two completions
for over 20 yards apiece.
The Big Blacks opened the
game With a punishing 11 -play,
72-yard drive that kept the
Radier defense on the field for
over six minutes. Sophomore
fullba ck J immy Jordan capped
the drive. w ith a one-yard
tou c~d~wn drive, but it was
N ott s SIX carnes for 38 yards ,
that moved Point down the
field .
"Their running game was
pretty nice inside between the
tackles," River Valley head
coach Larry Carter said. "We
missed a few tackles. which
caused us some problems. If
you've got a guy in the right
position you've got to make
the play. If you don't then
something big is ~ing to happen."
After digging themsleves a
20-point deficit, the Radiers
put together a nine-play, 68yard scoring drive, capped by a
Blake
Marcum
one-yard
touchdown run. Marcum
paced River Valley on its ·lone
scoring drive, carrying the ball
six times for 51 yards, while
junior Adam Darst added an
18.-yard run that brought the
ball to the Point 21-yard line.

Marcum led the Radiers with
107 yards on 21 attempts.
Getting the ball to lead-off
the second half, the Radiers
squandered ~ chance to cut
into the Point lead and were
forced to punt. Another chance
quickly arose, however, after
sophomore 'defensive back
Riley · Rice intercepted a
Thompson pass inteded for
Nic Dalton near midfield. The
Point defense stiffened, though.
forcing the Raiders to turn the
ball-over on downs at the Point
30-yard marker.
With over 11 miriutes in the
fourth, River Valley got one
more chance to cut the Big
Black lead to just one score, but were able to muster just one
first down before punting the
ball away.
For Point, getting a win at
River Valley may go a long way
to build the confidence of a
young team.
"We finished the first half of
the season at 2-3:' Safford s;lid.
"We know we're a young football team, but we know we're
capable of winning some
games. We just have to go o.ne
week at a time ... Who knows
what might happen next
week."
The Big Blacks host undefeared Logan next Friday, while
River Valley hosts Athens.

Swisher scores six touchdowns in Jackson win over Athens
Swisher's fumble-return
Swisher scored on runs of
20, 46, 19,63, and nine yards, score in the second period
OVP SPORTS STAFF
breaking
numerous tackles kicked off a sequence which
JACKSON,
Ohio
lasted under two minutes but
"That's gonna be our game
along the way.
"There are gonna be peo- saw four TO's scored. After
plan every week."
· That quote came from
ple who are gonna stop him Jackson's Kevin Wiseman
or slow him down," said Lay- stripped Athens quarterback
Jackson head coach Randy
ton, "but our kids just did a Grant Gregory. Swisher
Layton after Friday's 54-33
SEOAL football · win over
nice J~.\&gt; of, executing the
Athens.
· ··
offense-tortlgl\t and .o pening '
up holes for Swisher."
He was referring tO the
offense
f---~~~m~Saw~i~shfe~rSil~l~~~~l~d to simply. out- muscle The
1
·
its
the skill attack of the Bull- totaled
plus yard game of the seasun, dogs (3-2, 1- 1 SEOAL). ·
ground Friday.
amassing 251 yards on 22
hauls to help the Jronmen
(3-2 overall, 1-1 SEOAL)
back onto the winning track
after last week's loss at Gallia
Academy.
In the course of Friday's
performance, Swisher scored
five rushing·touchdow
.. ns and
another oll'':1 fumble· return
as the Ironmen were deter-

BY DAN PoLCYN

Week Five
Dragons scorch Marauders, 29-0
'

High School Football
OVP SPORTS ST4FF

&amp;unbap l!:imtt -&amp;tntintl • Page 83

picked the ball up at the 26yard line and rumbled · for
the score at the 2:28 mark
for a 26-12 Jackson lead.
Just over a minute later,
Gregory hit senior end Brad
Hartley o!l the deep slant for
a 15-yard score.

BY ChRY CLARK

Rebels
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

HEMLOC K, Ohio Miller amassed 382 rushing yards on 52 attempts
Friday at home en route
to 29-0 victory over
South Gallia.
Justin Vernon rushed
24 times for 124 ·yards,
including two fourthquarter touchdowns that
sealed the Falcons' first
win of the season.
John Dishpan added
109 yards on 11 attempts,
while
Larry Wilson
gained 34 on five rushes.
Jake Workman led the
Rebels with 73 yards on
13 attempts, while South
Gallia (0- 5) was held to
114 total offensive yards.
After Wilson scored the
game's first score with
15-yard run with 8:13
left in the first quarter,
the Rebels held scoreless
the rest of the half. In the
opening minutes of the
second half,John Dishon
put the Falcons ahead
16-0 with a 61-yard run.
Later in the fourth
quarter, Vernon scored his
two touchdowns, solidifying the Rebels' fifth
loss.
South Gallia quarterback Jtistin Waugh , connected on just two of 17
pass attempts for a five

yards.

.thick of the hunt for the better
part of the night, but the TorMASON Gabe Lam- nadoes committed several
bert's 143--yard rushing night cosily penalties, especially in
helped Wahama overcome five
turnovers as the White Falcons the second half, that severely
pitched a 26-0 shutout Win hampered the visitors chances.
The Meigs County squad was
.
over Vlsiting Southern Friday. whistled for seven penalties
The White Falcons lost the
pigskin four times on fumbles with six of those being major
- ddi
violations that proved vital to
m a ·tion to tossing an inter- the 6nal outcome.
"Penalties killed us theres no
ception but coach Rusty
Richards Tornadoe eleven
failed to capitalize on the question about it," Southern
Ben4 Area teams . generosity. assistant coach Tom Smiff said.
Southern also experienced "We were down by a . 6-0
trouble hanging on to the score and took the second half
football in losing two fumbles kickoff and began marching
to the White Falcons in addi- down the field. Each play
tion to having one pass picked would fire us up even more
off.
then came a personal foul
· The win snapped a two- penalty and that took us out
game losing skid for Wal1ama of the game the assistant coach
added."
as coach Ed Cromley's gridWahama scored on its first
ders improved to 2-3 on the
season while Southern fell for two possessions following the
the second straight week to halftime intermission as Hank'dip to 2-3 also following the mson scored on a 13-yard
Joss.
jaunt at the 6:02 mark with
"We picked it up in the sec- · Lambert going in from six
ond half" WHS coach Crom- yards away with :39 left in the
Brandon
ley stated. "The first half was third period.
ugly, to put it mildly. We made ~agnon completed the sc~r­
far too many mistakes in the mg wtth a. 40-ya:J burst ~tth
first two quarters and you cant 4:20 remammg m the game.
put points on the board when Bradford Clark connected
you keep turning the ball With Adam Rickard for the
over."
lone successful PAT of the
Lambert led an effective night following Hankinsons
WHS ground attack cllat saw scoring run.
the White Falcons run for 354
Except for the opening
yards on the night. The junior series of the second half, the
fullback scored one touch- White Falcons stalled the
down on a six-yard run while Souihern ground game which
Ryan Mitchell and Brandon forced the Tornadoes to take to
Hankinson also reached the the air. Senior quarterback
end zone on runs of eight and Brandon Pierce enjoyed some
13 yards. Brandon Gagnon early success With pass comclosed
out 'the Falcon scoring pletions to speedy Brice Hill
'iI
' With a 40-yard scamper in the and Aaron Ohlinger but the
final period to put the contest Wahama defense stiffened to
out of reach. Mitchell finished keep its cross-river rivals out of
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.

South Gallia will play
at Parkersburg Catholic
next Saturday.

BY

DAVE

HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

PROCTORVILLE
Fairland
scored t wo touchdowns in a span of
2:40 seconds in the third period.
breaking open a 7- 0 halftime lead en
route to a 29-0 win over Meigs in
non -.conference football action Friday
even mg.
Fairland ran for 431 yards on the
night with two players going over the
century mark . Sophomore speedster
Tristin Clark rush ed for 171 yards on
15 carries and Darin Thomas· added
126 in 12 tries. C hris Hardy just
missed joining the ac t with 99 yards
in 13 carries .
Meigs received a big break in the
first when th e Dragons fumbled and
Meigs re covered at the Dragon 29.
M eigs drove to the Fairland 14, but a
Kyle Hannan fourth down . pass fell
incomplete.
The Dragons took ove r o n downs
and put together a nine - play, 86 yard
drive with Clark scoring from 41
yards out. Darin Thomas added the
kick for a 7-0 Fairland lead with
10:12 left in the half.
·
Fairland drove deep into Meigs territory late in the first half. but Buzzy
F~ckler picked off a Drew Clark pass
in the end zon e with 16 seconds left
to ehd the threat.
Meigs received the second hal(
kickoff and drove into Dragon territory, but once again came up empty
on fourth and four from the 35 yard
line.
Fairland went on a 13-play, 65-yard

MEIGS FALLS - Meigs· Tyson Lee
carries the ball against Fairland Friday. The marauders fell to the Dragons , 29-0. (Dave Harris)
·

drive th at was capped off when
Thomas their 210 pound fullback
scored from . a yard out. Thomas
caught a bad snap on the fly on his
kick attempt for the extra points and
ran it in for a 15-0 lead at the 3:05
mark of the third period.
Meigs once again drove into Fairland territory, but •Clark picked off a

Hannan pass at the 12- yard line and
returned it to the 28. On th e fir st play,
Thomas went up the gut, fou n d day
light and took it the di stan ce 72 yards
fo r the score. Once agai n Thomas
added the extra points fo r a 22-0 lead.
C hris. Hardy capped off the Fairland
scoring with a 2 1-yard ru n . w ith
10:35 left in th e game to cap off a
four- play, 60-yard drive. Tho mas once
again added the ex tra points.
M eigs drove to the Dragon five
after Hardy's score, hut once again had
to tu rn the ball over on downs. T he
big play in t he dr ive wa s a 25-yard
pass fro m H ann an to Fack ler to the
D ragon 14 yard li ne.
Clark led all ru sh ers with his 17 1
yards, T ho mas added 126 and Hardy
99 . Clark was fo ur of eight in the air
with an interception for 37 yards.
H ardy caught two passes fo r 20 ya rds.
Jeremy R o ush led M eigs with 48
yards in 12 carries, Tyson Lee added
41 in 12 crac ks. H annan was 11 of 25
in the air with an interce ption fo r 106
yards. Fackl er pulled in five passes for
47 yard s. Freshman Rya n Frazier
added two carches fo r 36 yards.
"I thought we gave go od effort,"
Marauder coac h Mike C han cey said
after the game. "We are going to stick
together, and improve, th ese are good
kids and they will get better." ·
Fairland with the win is 2-3 overall,
they will play Chesapeake next week.
Meigs drops to 1-4 for the season, the
Marauders will TVC play next week
at Wellston.

.•

~! ~S3 y.uds, whilet;:H~ .:··!· ~·~~-ow~o.:--ll~~·J}sl:l:f

Ma~nntOUt

• son added 62 for the Wahama 39
;
:
;. :
;: :
;: :

"They took our passing
game away and for the second
straight week · our offensive
line stepped up and got the job
done," said Cromley. "Lambert and Mitchell ran the ball
;: ; effectively which gave our
·: • offense a much needed boost."
:' : WHS led by a narrow 6-0
:: : margin at the halfway point
wi~ Mitchell scoring on a six,; yard run with 3:33 remaining
in the second quarter. The
;j : White Falcons had several
:• ; more chances to score during
,~: the early going but couldn't
•: • hold on to the football which
; : hindered the Bend Area team's
; offensive thrust_' ·
·
•
Southern found itself in the

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Defensively Adam Rickard
and R. T. Roush were the stars
of the game for WHS while
'!yler Little, Matt Ash and Joe
Cornell excelled for Southern.
Brandon Pierce recovered a
pair of Falcon fumbles while '
Cornell and Chris Coppick
added one each. Lambert and
R.T. Roush had enemy fum- ·
ble recoveries for Wahama
while Ohlinger intercepted a
White Falcon aerial and Hankinson picked · off a Southern
pass attempt.
Wahama will host Duval
next Friday in a homecoming
matchup while Southern travels to Federal Hocking.

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�Ohio, W.Va. Scoreboard
Ohio High School F - 1
Frlday'o Raauna
Akr. Cenlral-Hower 46, Akr. Nont\ 38
Akr. Garfield 18, Akr. Fire~tone 8
"lbany Ale&lt;ande&lt; 39, Stewart F al Hocking 21
Alliance Marlington 33. Carrolllon 0
Amanda -Ciearcreek 46, Alf'l~ll•
Teays Valley 0
Amherst 33, North Olmoted 27, 5 OT
"nna 34, New Paris NlliotUII T,.H 7
Ansonia 41 , Tri-County N. 20
"pplo Creek Waynedale 11,

Ironton

~5 .

Ashland (Ky.) Paul Blazer

7

Jaekaon 50, Athans 33
Jeff"""" 38, Cln. Academy 0
Johnttown -rlclga 50, Frederick·
town 25
Kant Root- 8, Twlnaburg Chamberlin 0
Kenton 35, wapakoneta 21
Ke~ering Fairborn 7, Day. Springtooto 8
Kettering F1lrmont 28, Spring. N. 28
KJngo Milt KJnaa 33, Goahan 21
Jeromesville Hillsdale 0
Lakewood t4,
Hra. 8
Archbold 43, Swanton 1~
Lancur.r 211. Findlay I
tancasr,r Fairfield Union 27, ClrAshland Crestview 42, Collna..W•t·
cllviHe 1~
·
ern Reserve 6
Llncaoter Floh., C8thollc 7, Balli•
Aurora 17, Orwell Grand Valley 7
Avon t9, Oberlin Flrelanda 18, OT
more Uberty Union 8
Avon Lake 42, Fairview Park
Labanon 41, D1y. Stebbins 7
Fairview 3
·
Lees Creak E. Clinton 55, Bathe~
Bainbridge Paint Valley 48, PiketOn 0 1'1180
Barnesville 40 , Bridgeport 8
Leipsic 28, Arcadia 27
Lewlllown Indian Like 34, Spring.
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 33, N.
Baltimore 13
Batavia 6, Hillsboro 0
Bay Village Bay 32, ROCky River 27
Bedford 42, Parma Normandy 7
Bellaire 26, Cambridge 21.
·
Bellaire St. John'a 38, BeaUavtlle :M
Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 37,
Spring. Shawnee 33
Bellevue 19, Tiffin Columbian 13
Bellville Clear Fork 42, Colo. W. 1
Berea 41, North Royalton 0
Blulfton 18, Lima Parry 0
Brunswick 30, Middleburg Hta. Mid·
park 0
Bryan 34, Montpelier 6
Bucyrus Wynford 32, New Washington Buckeye Cent. 14
Butler 33, Day. Northmont 20
·campbell Memorial 35, Black Rl14
Can . Cent Cath. 15, Akr. Hollin 14
Can . GlenO.,k 41, Painesville Riverside 6
Can . McKinley &lt; ' · Grove City 15
Can. S. 42, Mi.-. 1a 32
.
Can . Timkf'n ?C. Youngs. Rayen 20
Canal FultCJi! r~ .v 10, Louiavtlla 0
Canal Winch~,· :or 29, Colo. Hamilton
Twp. 21
Cardington-Uri• .•,In 35, Gallon North·
mor 6
Carlisle 32, &amp;PI.i'OOk 14

0

castalia Maro•"·"" 18, Milan Edison
.
CenterburQ 36, Loudonville 2~
Centerville 19, Greenville 7
Chagrin Falls 56, Kirtland 0
Chagrin Falls Kenston 26, Ravenne

0

ere.

NW1~

Lt&lt;lngton 38, Orrville 7
Llbany cantor 28, Wauaaon 12
Uma·Bath 28, Colina 18
Llibon 30, Hanov«ton United 1~
Lllbon Boavar Local41, Cadiz Harrison Cent 0
Logan 42, VIncent W.,., 0
Logan Elm 18, Bloom-Carroll 3
Lorain Admlrll King 44, Maple Hta.
22
Lorain Claarvltw ~ 1, Oberlin 14
Madison Plains 28, W. Jenan10n 28
MagnOIII (W. Va,) 20. Hannibal River

8

Manafleld ~8. Vermilion 8
Mansfield Mldlaon 30, Ashland 12
· Montua Creotwood 35, Peninsula
Woodridge 0
Marla Stain Marton LOCal 24, Mintier
0
Marion Pteoaant 72, Marton Elgin o
Mart~n River Valley 28, Morral
Rldgedolo 14
Martina Ferry 13, Sl. Ctalravllle 8
Marysville ~ 1, Pataskala ·Watkins
Memortal8
M110n 21, Cln. Winton Woods 20
Mftllllon Jackson 47, Alliance 0
Maaalllon Tuslaw 1~. Akr. Coventry 0
Musllion W11hlngton 54, Austintown-Fitch 15
Maumee 21, Bowling Graen 13
Mayfield 27, Barberton o
McComb 52, Von Buren \2
McDonald 17, Mineral Ridge 0
Mechanicsburg 54 , N. Lewisburg
Trtad 12
Medina 14, Brecksville 0
Medina Highland 35, Lodl Cloverleaf
10
Middletown 27, Fairfield 23
Middletown Mldlaon 25, MiltonUnion 18
Milford Cantor Fairbanks 26, Grandview 12
Millbury Like 28, Genoa 20
Mogadore ~2. Windham 20
Monroeville ~a. Aahland Mapleton 14
Morenci (Mich.) 35, Tol. onawa Hills

Chardon 21, Washington Dunbar 20
Chesapeake 22, Belpre 21
Chesterland W. Geauga ~7. Burton
Berkshire 0
Cin . Anderson 46, Cln. NW 0
Cin. Colerain 42, Cin. Oak Hilla 21
Cin . Glen Esta 34, Cln. Turpin 0
Cin. Hills Christian 45, Hamilton New
MiamiO
Cin . Hughes 12, Cin. Withrow 8
Cin . Indian Hill30, N. Bond l'lytor 8
Cin . LaSalle14, Cln. Moeller 13
1~
Cin. Loveland 19, Hamilton Rou 3
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale ~. CrestCln. Madeira 47, Cln. Dear Park 22
line 0
Cln . .Mt. Healthy 28, Cln. Wuttm
N. Cen. Hocver 21, Maaalllon Pe&lt;ry 7
Hills 6
N. Lima S. Range 88, Bertin Center
Cln. N. Collage Hill 59, Cln .. Lind- Waarem Roaervt 6
mark Christian 12
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 20, Lueaa
' Cin. Norwood 31, Morrow Little 4
Miami 21
. New Albany 36, Sugar Grove Barno
Cin . Princeton 35, Uberty Twp. Lalto- Union 1~
ta E. o
New Bremen 24, Rockford Parkway
Cln. Reading 48, Finnaytown 28
13
Cin. Summn Country Day M, LoCk·
New Cartlala TactJmaeh ~9. St. Paris
land 14
Qraham 14
Cln. Walnut Hills 21, Cln. Alkan 20
New Concord John Qlenn 55,
Cin , Wyoming 42, Cln. Mari.,..,t 13 Mceonnelovllle Morgan 7
•
Cle. E. 46, Cle. RhOdes 8
New Labanon Dixie 80, Day. Oak·
Cia. Glenville 19, Cia. JF~ ~
21
Cia. His. Lutheran E.. 50, Lor1ln
Lexington 41, Zanesville
Cia. s. 18,
.
e
Cltl. VASJ 33, Willoughby S. 211
Clermont NE 22, Cln. Hanmony 0
Coldwater 56, St. Henry 0
Cols. Academy 35, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 0
Cols. Ceniennlal 29, Cola. Unden 8
Cols. DeSales 27, Whltohaii•YNrtlng
6
Cols . Eastmocr 22, Cola. Whmtane

New
MlthaWI 0
New Richmond 30, Clarksville Clln-

lan·M-Ie 211
Nowark Licking VaHey 27, Newark

Cath. 21, OT
Oak Qlen (W. lie.) 23, Belmont Union

Local&amp;
Olm- F1111 ~1. Weatlaka o
0
. Onttrio 38, Mlllenlburg W. Holmes 0
Cols. Franklin Hta. 40, Oaiawtrt 15
Oxford Tailwind&amp; 30, W. Carrollton
Cola. Independence 32, Cola. E. 0
12
Cols. Mlftlln 21, Cola. Brookhaven 14
Palneavlllo Harvey 21, Ashtabula
Cols. Nonhland 19, Cola. Boechcroft Edgewood 15
1
P1ndora-OIIboa 55, Artlngton 28
Colo. Ready 26, Waohlngton O.H.
P1rma Hta. Holy Name 19, Madison
Miami Trace 14
0
Colo. St. Chonos 30, Cola. Bexley 14 . Pembarvllle Eastwood 34, Bloom·
Cola. Watterson 44, Sharon (Pa.) 17 dale almwocd 7
Columbiana 42, Leetonia.7
Parry 28, Ml~dloltald Cardinal 1~
Columbiana Crestview 28; E. PalalParry~rg 48, Sylvania Southview 7
tlne 24
PIOkerington 21, Zanelvllle o
Columbus Grove 41,.Span08MIIa 7
Piqua 28, Troy 0
.
Conneaut 46, Andover Pymatunlng
PoJnt Plaaaant (W.IIa.) 33, Cheshl,.
Valley 6.
RlverVallay6
Copkiy 13, Greensburg Green 10
Poland Seminary 24, Niles McKinley
Cory-Rawson 14, Findley Liberty· 0
Benton 6
Port Clinton 20, Sandueky St. Mary'a
Covington 25, Arcanum 3
15
Crooksville 34, Orasdan Tri-Valloy 8
Portsmouth~~. Huntington (W. Va.) o
Cuyahoga Hts. 34, Columbia station
Portsmouth W. 42, Wavarty 36
Columbia 21
Preble ShlwnH 28, Waynesville 1~
Day. Carroll 34, Mlamlaburg 0
Proctorville Fairland 29, Pomaroy
Day. Edgewood 42, Mid. FanwiOk 7
Mtlga 0
.
Day. Moadowdala 12, Day. Belmont
Raceland (Ky.) 33, Coal Qroira Daw· ·
6
oon·Bryant 7
Defiance 42, Elida 0
Ravenna SE ~. Rootatown 13
·Delta 48, Oregon Stritch 14
Raadlng 48, Flnneytown 28
Cola Hardin Northe&lt;n 72, 1/anlua 8
RHCIIvllle Eutern 50, Hannan
Dover 26, Coshoclon 1
(W.\Ia.) 0
Dublin Conman 49, Newark 13
Raynoldlburg ·31, Upper Artlngton 0
Dublin Scioto 28, Hilliard Darby 0
Rklllfleld A - • 40, Tallmadge 7
E. Can. 20, Cuyahoga Falla CVCA 14
·Richmond Oalo SE 34, Frankfort
E. Cle. Shaw 19, Parma 7
Adana 8
E. Clinton 55, Bethel-Tate 0 .
Rlchwocd N. Union 28, Oalawara
E. Liverpool 45, Rayland Buckaya Buckeye Volley 14
Local 7
Roaoford ~2. Holland Spring. 41,
Eaton 47, Day. Northridge \4
30T
Elmore Woodmora 29, Kanan Llkoo
S. Chartuton SE 13, Cedarville 12
ta 16
·
Sallnlvllle Southam 48, Sabring 1~
Elyria 14, Lorain Southview 13
S1nduolcv Ptrklna 14, Clyde 7
EuClid 31, Parma Viney Forge 8
Sclotovllle
Community
20,
1 Fairfield 27, Middletown 23
Portsmouth Notre Dame 8
Fairport Harbor Harding 28, Ole.
Sherwood Fllrvlew 25, Hiclcavllle 8
Cent. Cath. 6
Sidney 37, Trotwood-Madison 12
Fostoria 34, Sandutky 21
Sidney Lahman 48, Day. Dunbar 0
Franklin 25, Lemen-MonrO. 7
Sparta 1-Hghland 36, MI. Qllold 34
Fremont Rosa 17, Oregon Clay 14, . sprtng. Oath. Cant. 28. Spring. NE 7
OT
8pHng. 8. 18, Huber Htl. Wayne 18
Ft. Recovery 14, Uma Cent. Oath. 8
Gahanna 47, Groveport 13
Gallon 33, Shelby 7
Gallipolis Gallia 21, Manetta 18, OT
Germantown Valley VIew ··t4,
Brookville 0
Girard 29, Brookfield 7
GlousterTrlmble14, Nelaonvlllo-York

St. Marys Memorial 42. Lima
Shawnee 6
Streetsboro 21. Mogadore Field 14,
OT
Strongsville 42 , North Ridgeville 6
Summit Station Licking Hts. 4 1,
Mllle&lt;spOrt 26
Sunbury Big Walnut 20 , Lewis Center
Olentangy 17, OT
Sycamore Mohawk t 2, Carey 7
Thomas Worthington 53 . Chilticothe
21
Thornville Sheridan 41 , Philo 0
Tipp City Bethel 34, Union City Mlssiasinawa Valley 7
.
fipp City Tippecanoe 41, Enon
Graenon 7
Tol. Coni. Cath. 34, Tol. Bowsher 28
Tol. ChriStian 39, Ecorse (Mich.) 8
Tol. Rogers 32, Tol. Woodward 6
Tol. St. John's17 , Tol. Start 7
Tol. Waite 23, Tol. Libbey o
Tontogany Otsego 29, Gibsonburg
1~

.

Toronto 37, Southington Chalker 20
Uhrichsville ·Claymont 34, Byesville
Meadowbrook 7
Unfontown Lake 21 , Wooster 14
Upper Sandusky 4 t , Bucyrus 6
Urbana 49, Casstown Miami E. 16
Utica 26, Johnstown-Monroe 22
Van Wert 28, Oltawa-Giandorl 7
Versailles 34, Delphos St. John's 28
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 28,
Bradford 8
·
W. Chester Lakota w. 20, MiHord 6
W. Letayatte RidgewoOd 38, Magnolia Sandy Valley 6 ·
W. Liberty-Salem 28, Jamestown
Greenavlew 6
Wadsworth ~7. Akr. Norton 7
Wahama (W.Va.) 26, Racine South·
amo
Warren Harding 30, Tal. Whitmer 0
'. Jarren Howland 14, Canfield 13, OT
Warren JFK 34, Medina Buckeye 23
Warrensville Hts. 44, Garlield Hts. 21
Warsaw River View 28, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 14
Washington C.H. 38, London 0
Welling1on 35 , laGrange Keystone 6
Wellston 50, Ironton Rock Hill 0
Westerville N. 26, Westerville.S. 20
Wheelersburg 21, Minford 7
Wheeling (W. Va .) Central 21,
Wellsville 7
Wheeling (W. Va.) Pa[k 31, Rich·
mond Edison 28
Whitahouse Anthony Wayne 36, Sylvania Northview 6
Willard 41 , Norwalk 14
Williamsburg 33, Blanchester 30
Wllli~msport Westlalf 55, Chillicothe
Unloto 34
Wilmington 38, McArthur Vinton
County 19
Wintersville Indian Creek 26, Weirton
(W. Va.) Weir 20
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 54, Beverly Fl. Frye 3
Wooster Trlway 28, Navarre Fairtess
12
Worthington Kilbourne 35, Galloway
Westland 3
Xenia 35, Bea~ercre~k 7
Youngs. Boardman 52, Steubenville

0
Youngs. Ursuline 33, Cle. Benedictine 7
Zanesville Rosecrans 34, Old WashIngton Buckeye Trail 22
W.lla. high achooiiCCHIIO
Fridey'o Raaulta
Berkeley Springs 27, Northern Garren,
Md.6
Bridgeport21 East Falnnont 0
Buckhannon
Philip Barbour 14
Cameron
Wetzel 7
Oonahue 13
Montcalm,8

55, Petersburo
Washington 56, South
6
BalleysviUe 22
16, Southam Garrett, Md. 13
Guyan Yaney 8, Tolsia 6
Hamlin 6, Burch 0
Hampshire 28, Fainnont Senior 26
Herbert HooVer 21 , Clay County 13
Hurricane 24, Ripley 19
Independence 34, Oceana 6
Indian Creek, Ohio 26, Weir 20
James Monroe 34, Summers County 0
Lowis County 39, South Harrisoo 0
Magnolia 20, River, Ohio 8
Martinsburg 59, Hedgosville7
Matewan 44, Pendleton County 14
Meadow Bndge 48, Gauley Bndga 15
Midland Trall46, Mount Hope 21
Morgan-n 38, Brooke 14
Mount VIew 27, Shady Spring 16
Mueaelman 35, Robert C. Byrd 6
North Marlon 35, John Marshall 32
Oak Glen 23, Union Local, Ohio 8
Oak Hil 38, Bluefield 9
Paden City 45, Hundred 8
Parkernburg 32, Perl&lt;eraburg South ·o
PikeV10w 28, Big Creek 8
Poea 35, Buffalo 15
Point Pleasant 33, River Valley, Ohio 6
Portsmouth, Ohio 46, Huntington 0
Praston 42, Ubeny Harrison 0
Princeton 47, Nicholas County 7
Ravenswood 35, Chapmanville 12
ReedsvHie Eastem, Ohio 50, Hannan, 0
Richwood 30, Pocahontas County 15
Riverside 34, Capltal24
Roane Co"nty 1B, Bra&lt;ton County 1
Soon 14, Duval6
Spnng Valley 7, Cabell Midland e
St. Albans 31, Logan 19
•
Stone Bridge, Va. at Jelferson, ppd
Tyler Consolidated 41, St Marys 0
Unlveralty 41, Nllro o
Van 42, Sharman 20
Wahama 26, Southern, Ohio o
Wayne 40, SiSSOrlville 0
Webster County 20; Uncotn 6
Wheeling Contral21, Wellsville, Ohio 7
Wheeling Pari&lt; 31, Edison, Oltlo 28
WIHiamstown 22, Calhoun County o
Winfield 52, Man 0
Wlrt County 26, Ritchie County 0
Wyoming East 14, laager 12

Eagles remain unbeaten
in victory over Hannan

Toledo 52, Cent. Michigan 26
Wi"erberg 14, Wabash 3
Ohio Northern 2t, Bakfwin·Wallace 20
Grand Valley St. 63, A•hland 19
Trinity lntematlona128. Walsh 14
Buffalo 37, Conneeiicul 20
Hiram 22. Mount St J008j)h 8
West Uberty 42, Westminster, Pa. 22

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eQJI-e OoetD!I'I lilt.

from Page Bl
2:17 left in th e third quarter.
Ohio only n-ailed 17-1 4 at
halfti111e.
Haywood finished the game
with a pair of touchdowns
Jackson fumbled the ball on
the following drive, setting up
the Cyclones on the Ohio 34yard line.
Iowa State scored earlier in
the half on fourth and goal
from the 1-yard line early in the
third quarter as Wallace ran in
his ·second rushing touchdown
of the afternoon to give Iowa
State a 24- 14 advanrage.
The game had opened up
promisingly for Ohio, as it didn't take long for the Bobcats get
things started.
On the opening kickoff,

No. 20 Michigan 38, W. Michtgan 2 1
Wisconsin 18, Penn Sl. 6
Wooster 51 . Kenyon 10
Nonh Carot•na 4 t , No. 6 Florida St. 9
No. 2 Florida 44, Kent.ucky 10
No. 9 VIrginia Tech 50, Rutgers 0
Pu&lt;Ouo 33, " kroo 14

YOUTH SPORTS
GALLERY

Ohio drove the ball from their
own 20 quickly into Iowa State
territory, where three minutes
and 56 seconds into the game,
Ray Huston ·ran the ball up the
· middle from the Cyclone oneyard line for the score.
The Cyclones struck back
with a fury.
A 32-yard reven;e run by ,
Lane Danielson and a 25-yard
catch by Craig Cainpbell set up
a pitch by Wallace to Danielson
for a 15-yard rushing score.
A 75-yard run by Chad
Brinker put the ball on the
Iowa State seven. Two plays
later,Jackson scored from a yard
out on a keeper as the Bobcats
regained the lead as the Bobcats
led 14-7 at the end of the first
quarter.
The Bobcats will play host to
Toledo on Oct. 6 with a 5 p.m.
kickoff.

'31••

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PREP VOLLEYBALL

Blue Angels fall to Athens;
Rebels split in tri-match

,Victory

MERCERVILLE Th e Lady Rebels of South Gallia
earned a split in a volleyball tri- match at ho me Saturday.
The Lady R ebels lost to Nelsonville in straight sets 15-7
and 15- 11 . They were led by Tracy Cheney with five service
points and Ashley Cardwell and Sarah Wright with three.
Cardwell and Cheney each notched a pair of aces.
Holly H aner had four blocks and two kills.
In their second match, the lad~ R ebels de feated Federal
Hocking 2- 1. After winning the J'ener 15-5 , South Gallia
allowed Hockin g a 15- 1 w m before seahn g the nr ght With a
15- 1 win in the fin ale.
'
Cardwell led with 12 po ints followed by Wright with I 0
and Andrea Jones wi th five. Cardwell had six aces. Haner and
Jones each added a pair of blocks while eac h added th ree
kills.

TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS - The Syracuse Araves , age 7
and 8 Minor League Boys, placed first place in the Big Bend
Youth League Tournament held in New Haven. The team also
won the league championship. Pictured in the front row from
left to right are: Jeremiah Warden, Ethan Martin, Dyllan Roush ,
Austin Hill and Andrew Roseberry. Second row: Dylan Bass,
Eric Buzzard, Eric Cundiff, Adam Warden. and Colby Roseberry.
Coaches for the team were Rick Buzzard, Jeff Martin, Tom
Roseberry, Doug Warden, Dave Bass and Larry Cundiff. (Submitted photo)

to. You just have to think to yourself,
'What do I need to live for?'"
While in treatment, Halley was
unable to attend scheduled classes, so
from Page Bl
she was tutored at home and mainwith her first question when she was tained a 3.5 GPA despite the complicatold she had cancer.
tions, some ofwnich became very seri"My first question was 'Does this ous . She attended as many events at the
mean no sports?'" she said. Her doctor school as she could, coming to events
at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis broke wearing a breathing mask to avo'i d ·
down and started crying when she infection due to· her weakened immune
asked the question.
system.
It took · time for the idea to sink in.
At one point during her treatments,
Halley says she didn't actually realize Halley's doctors we afraid that she
until the drive home after .her mother would might not survive the treatments
had insisted on driving from the doc- due to massive hemorrhaging
tor's office.
"They said, 'If she doesn 't stop bleed"Did he just tell me I have cancer?" ing, something serious is going to hapHalley asked.
pen,"' said Halley. However, Halley did
. Halley was sent immediately to Chi!- not learn of that concern until she was
dren's Hospital in Columbus to begin starting up the hill 'to recovery.
_
chemotherapy and radiation therapy.
In fact, she was surprised, "I said, 'Was
Her experience with the treatments it that bad?'"
was much like any other with _the poiHalley has returned to volleyball for
sons designed to kill cancer, including her senior season at South Gallia and
really hasn't missed a beat.
pain, nausea and the loss of her hair.
Halley admits that at the most painful
"I expected her to be slow returning
junctures of the treatment, returning to and everything," said South Gallia valsports would become the farthest thing leyball. coach Dafney Qavis, "bur the
from her mind. "The pain hurts so bad first mght of pracnce was the only
_ that it's like___Ldon'LwanLto.live...any~nigh Lshe..didn~Ldo...e.verJthing. Aftermore," she said.
that, she did everything all-out."
From those moments, she found herHalley did make up the two laps she
self thinking, "The minute you think wasn't able to complete at that first
about it is the minute you don't need practice, part of her resolve to not be
mask penalty moved the ball
to the B, but Gallipolis
negated the bonus with a
delay
penalty.
from PageBI
On
second- and-goal
looked poised to put the Brodeur found Geiger in the
right corner of the end zone.
game away.
Marietta's defense held Gallipolis opted to kick the
strong, forcing Gallipolis to extra point, but there was
try a 32-yard field goal. some confusion on the play.
Bobby Jones' boot had ·plen- Kicker Clayton Saunders was
ty. of leg but was wide left. late getting on the field and
The miss gave the Tigers the · his rushed kick failed to clear
the uprights.
ball on their 20.
Then came Marietta's.
From
there, Marietta
launched a 13-play sco'r ing turn.
Kelly rumbled for four and
drive featuring its vaunted
Amigo
did likewise. Burke
wing-T attack that kept Gallipolis off-balance all night. gained ab~ut two yards on
Tyler Kelly capped the drive third-and-2, leaving the
with 9-yard receptiop from Tigers with fourth-andinches on the 11.
Amigo.
Amigo and Burke missed
The senior quarterback
.
snuck in for the two-potnt connections on the handoff
conversion with 4:51 in the on fourth down, and Galfourth to deadlock .the game. lipolis stopped Amigo on the
Neither team managed a broken play.
"They're fielding a bunch
serious drive for the remainder of regulation, although of athletic kids," Saunders
.Gallipolis made things inter- said. "I think they're one of
the top four teams in the
esting.
..
· After Marietta stalled on I eague.
its 47 with about two minutes left, the Tigers punted to
Auto- Owners Insurance
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Johnson, who bobbled the
ball on his· 15 .
7J(e '1/. 'PwlitM 1'-ro;V
Geiger recovered the misINSURANCE PLUS
cue, giving the Blue Devils
one last shot. Gallipolis
AGENCIES, INC.
. quickly moved to its 40, but
a clipping penalty pushed
114 Court Pomeroy
the Blue Devils back to the
25 with eight seconds left.
Marietta set up to defend a

Devils

a

.

Hail
Marygave
pass.
buttheGallia
Academy
Jones
ball.
The senior standout scam- L..-.J'.._
pered 35 yards down the
Marietta sideline before
being horse-collared to end
regulation.
In overtime, Gallipolis got
the ball first and ·started possession on the Marietta 20.
Reed carried for two yards
and Jones followed with
three more. A Marietta face-

B~~~G~f~!~m!~~!e

UNDATED
Angels fell to
Athens in three matches Thursday in SEOAL volleyball.
Athens won the first game 15-0 before Gallia won th e second game 15- 12. Athens took the rubber match, 15-9,
Jessica Bodimer was the Angels' reading scorer with 12
points. Jenny Mooney and Sarah Stepp each had three points.
At the net, Meredith Addington was 9-of- 12 hitting, followed
by Bodimer at 7-of- 10, and Stepp at 10-of-1 6.
The JV squad improved to 7-0 in league play with a 2- 1
win win. After losing th e opener 15- 4, they won the following matches 15- 11 and 15- 11.The Young Angels were led by
Tessa Haggerty with nine points and 13-of-16 hitting from
Steph Addington .
The frosh team lost in three sets. lexi ReesJed with 15 service points.
The Angels will play host to River Valley on Tuesday.

the recipient of any special treatment.
"The most important thing I thought
of was, 'I'm gonna come in here, and
I'm gonna do my best, and I'm not
gonna slack." Halley said. ''I'll do every
single thing they do because I don't
want them to think that I'm getting
some kind of special treatment, because
there's no I in team."
Davis sees Halley as a motivator and
leader for the Lady Rebels.
"She . sets a good example for the
team. If she can do it, anybody can do
it. She's a lot of motivation for them,"
said Davis.
In her first night back in competicion, Halley scored five servic~ points
for the lady Rebels and showed no
hesitation in diving for sinking balls.
She takes her return to action in
stride, almost as a given for her and her
family and friends.
"They knew I would come back," she
said. "It didn't surprise them. I was just
out there playing ball."
Halley, who would like to eventually
become a veterinarian, has tried to
downplay the illness which threatened
h~~ life . .
You JUst
can, .buit-it's.lifi:~c.ha~lgirlg,--de,finitely,:.-1-·--,.-,.--..--she said .."We take
for gra~ted. You JUSt gotta step back and reahze
that sometimes it takes something like
cancer."

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR LOCAL TEAMS.

Jones finished with 72
yards on 11 carries. Ty Simmons enjoyed a productive
night with 39 yards on nine
totes.
"We knowJY can ·do some
things real well," Saunders
said . "He showed some signs
of being able to step up in
there.
"We've got to do something to get the· load off of
Bobby."
Backup quarterback Travis
McKinniss also saw significant action as Saunders continued to seek quality play~
ing time for his key reserves.
Marietta hosts Jackson
next Friday for homecoming, while Gallipolis welcomes Warren to Memorial
Field in another homecoming match up.

HANK YOU
'

R&amp;C
Packing
For Purchasing
My 2001
Market Hog

~7~~
· Silver Streaks

"':~F-r~;;i?i:-;:':)~~~;'il;~~;:;;;;:l
r-

Brakes, Shocks, Struts
Engine Diagnosis, Tun•ups, 011 Changes
We sell aH major tire brands,
185-7G-14, 185-75·14, 195-7G-14, 195-75-14

&amp;unba!' UJ:nnet~ -&amp;tntrnrl• Page 85

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

.992-6677

"Good Honest; People"

v

Ohio

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - As
expected, Eastern improved
to 5-0 Friday night.
The Eagles outrushed Hannan 335-60 to beat ~he Wildcats, 50-0.
"It's pretty much what we .
expected," said Eastern head
coach Scott Christian. "I'm
sure our kids are thinking of
other things. There's a lot of
distractions right now. We're
trying to keep that limited.
They stayed focused enough
get us . to 5-0 and hopefully
we'll continue to do that."
But, it was a ugly win as the
Eagles fumbled the ball away
three times and committed
three interceptions .
· It was also a little costly as a
couple of E3stern players,
including end Brent Buckley,
left the game early. Their status was unknown as of press
time.
"We had three or four kids
go out, but hopefully their be
back next week," said Christ~ ·
man. The Eagles travel to
PREGAME - Eastern head coach Scott Christman watche
Trimble next week ~n a
his offense go· through pregame drills Friday prior to th
showdown of two top TVC Eagles' game against Hannan. (Butch Cooper)
Ohio Division teams.
"We're improving every the first half."
tou chdown this season.
"Eastern's got a g&amp;od,
week," said Christman. "It
"We've got explosive kids,·
seems like we're taking care strong, quick ball club. We said Christman . "It seems lik
of a few little problems each had a hard time controlling they break loose every wed
week that we have. Hopeful- their speed, especially their One out of every three or fou
ly, by next week, we'll have all line. I thought their line times they'll break one loose.
those problems corrected."
dominated.
"But, we've got to learn to
Christman sat out starting
Kirk Murray led the Wild·
that we can't rely on tha'. ·
quarterback Garrett Karr, cats (0-5) with 19 carries for
because the teams ahead ar
who was a little banged up 58 yards.
last week at Parkersburg
"I feel like at times, our line going to try to take those bi
Catholic. Christman, though, . did a good job," said Price. "I plays away. That's what they'r
says he's alright.
feel like (quarterback Stacey preaching, I'm sure. We've gc .
"Garrett's fine," said Christ- Cooper) did a good job (with to stay focused and get sam ·
man. "We just wanted to rest the) audible that caught them long drives going and bur:
him a little bit this week."
off guard. Kirk 's a good run- some clock."
Hannan travels to Burc:
.Stepping . in was freshman ner. He ran hard and B.J.
Ken Amsbary, who did all Nicely and John Woods up next Saturday.
"Overall, I thought our kid
right in his fint-ever varsity front blocking for (Murray) at
played
hard," said Price. "The ..
start.
times did a good job, too."
Amsbary, who carried the
Lyons opened the second played hard all four quarter! ,
ball six times for 47 yards, half with an 84-yard kickoff We had four or five turnover :
opened the scoring with a return for a score. It was his defensively, we were please•
kickoff return~fora with thaC'
kicked the
. extra poirit and finished a
perfect 6-for-6 kicking PAT's
for the Eagles on the night.
Arnsbary struggled passing
the ball, throwing the ball
four· times with three interceptions, two were picked off
by Hannan's Shannon Gay in
the first quarter.
"Amsbary stepped in and
For Purchasing
did a pretty good job," said
Christman. "We put him in
For Purchasing
My 2001
some bad situations a couple
My 2001
Market Hog
of times and didn't come out
Market Steer
too welL But, he got his conIJ.... ~J- , . , /
,J
fidence back and I thought he
Silver Streaks
did a fine job for his first start ~ I~
ever."
Silver Streaks
·second quarter touchdown
runs by R.J. Gibbs, from 59~
yards out, Brad Parker, from
5'2 yards out, and Chris
Lyons, from 18 yards out, put
the Eagles up 29-0 at halftime.
Gibbs finished with five
carries for 90 yards and two
touchdowns, while freshman
Bryan Minear had seven carries for 108 yards, including a
third quarter TD run, to lead
all rushers.
"I was pleased with some of
the things we did," said Hannan head coach Kent Price.
"Defensively, we came up
with some turnovers there in

K
Wiseman
Realty
and JK.
Landscaping

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

Saturday's college scores

......,,,._

6
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 13, New
Philadelphia 12
Grafton Mldvlaw 39, Lorain Brooll·
side 16
Greenwich S. Cent. 12, New London
6
Hamilton 30, Sycamore 7
Hamler Patrick Henry 55, MIIIIIIOrl
. Evergreen 28
Harrison 28, Amalia 0
Heath 12, Granville 7
Hebron Lakewood 33, Colt. Hartley
8
Hemlock Miller 29, Crown City 8.
Gallla 0
Hilliard Davidson 1~. Marton Harding
10
Hubbard 28, Youngs. Llbatly a·
Hudson 16, Macedonia Nordonla 1
Hudaon Western Ranrva q, Ash·
land Crestview 6
Huron 24, Oak Harbor 7
Independence 21, Brooklyn 1~

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt; WV

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'

�Ohio, W.Va. Scoreboard
Ohio High School F - 1
Frlday'o Raauna
Akr. Cenlral-Hower 46, Akr. Nont\ 38
Akr. Garfield 18, Akr. Fire~tone 8
"lbany Ale&lt;ande&lt; 39, Stewart F al Hocking 21
Alliance Marlington 33. Carrolllon 0
Amanda -Ciearcreek 46, Alf'l~ll•
Teays Valley 0
Amherst 33, North Olmoted 27, 5 OT
"nna 34, New Paris NlliotUII T,.H 7
Ansonia 41 , Tri-County N. 20
"pplo Creek Waynedale 11,

Ironton

~5 .

Ashland (Ky.) Paul Blazer

7

Jaekaon 50, Athans 33
Jeff"""" 38, Cln. Academy 0
Johnttown -rlclga 50, Frederick·
town 25
Kant Root- 8, Twlnaburg Chamberlin 0
Kenton 35, wapakoneta 21
Ke~ering Fairborn 7, Day. Springtooto 8
Kettering F1lrmont 28, Spring. N. 28
KJngo Milt KJnaa 33, Goahan 21
Jeromesville Hillsdale 0
Lakewood t4,
Hra. 8
Archbold 43, Swanton 1~
Lancur.r 211. Findlay I
tancasr,r Fairfield Union 27, ClrAshland Crestview 42, Collna..W•t·
cllviHe 1~
·
ern Reserve 6
Llncaoter Floh., C8thollc 7, Balli•
Aurora 17, Orwell Grand Valley 7
Avon t9, Oberlin Flrelanda 18, OT
more Uberty Union 8
Avon Lake 42, Fairview Park
Labanon 41, D1y. Stebbins 7
Fairview 3
·
Lees Creak E. Clinton 55, Bathe~
Bainbridge Paint Valley 48, PiketOn 0 1'1180
Barnesville 40 , Bridgeport 8
Leipsic 28, Arcadia 27
Lewlllown Indian Like 34, Spring.
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 33, N.
Baltimore 13
Batavia 6, Hillsboro 0
Bay Village Bay 32, ROCky River 27
Bedford 42, Parma Normandy 7
Bellaire 26, Cambridge 21.
·
Bellaire St. John'a 38, BeaUavtlle :M
Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 37,
Spring. Shawnee 33
Bellevue 19, Tiffin Columbian 13
Bellville Clear Fork 42, Colo. W. 1
Berea 41, North Royalton 0
Blulfton 18, Lima Parry 0
Brunswick 30, Middleburg Hta. Mid·
park 0
Bryan 34, Montpelier 6
Bucyrus Wynford 32, New Washington Buckeye Cent. 14
Butler 33, Day. Northmont 20
·campbell Memorial 35, Black Rl14
Can . Cent Cath. 15, Akr. Hollin 14
Can . GlenO.,k 41, Painesville Riverside 6
Can . McKinley &lt; ' · Grove City 15
Can. S. 42, Mi.-. 1a 32
.
Can . Timkf'n ?C. Youngs. Rayen 20
Canal FultCJi! r~ .v 10, Louiavtlla 0
Canal Winch~,· :or 29, Colo. Hamilton
Twp. 21
Cardington-Uri• .•,In 35, Gallon North·
mor 6
Carlisle 32, &amp;PI.i'OOk 14

0

castalia Maro•"·"" 18, Milan Edison
.
CenterburQ 36, Loudonville 2~
Centerville 19, Greenville 7
Chagrin Falls 56, Kirtland 0
Chagrin Falls Kenston 26, Ravenne

0

ere.

NW1~

Lt&lt;lngton 38, Orrville 7
Llbany cantor 28, Wauaaon 12
Uma·Bath 28, Colina 18
Llibon 30, Hanov«ton United 1~
Lllbon Boavar Local41, Cadiz Harrison Cent 0
Logan 42, VIncent W.,., 0
Logan Elm 18, Bloom-Carroll 3
Lorain Admlrll King 44, Maple Hta.
22
Lorain Claarvltw ~ 1, Oberlin 14
Madison Plains 28, W. Jenan10n 28
MagnOIII (W. Va,) 20. Hannibal River

8

Manafleld ~8. Vermilion 8
Mansfield Mldlaon 30, Ashland 12
· Montua Creotwood 35, Peninsula
Woodridge 0
Marla Stain Marton LOCal 24, Mintier
0
Marion Pteoaant 72, Marton Elgin o
Mart~n River Valley 28, Morral
Rldgedolo 14
Martina Ferry 13, Sl. Ctalravllle 8
Marysville ~ 1, Pataskala ·Watkins
Memortal8
M110n 21, Cln. Winton Woods 20
Mftllllon Jackson 47, Alliance 0
Maaalllon Tuslaw 1~. Akr. Coventry 0
Musllion W11hlngton 54, Austintown-Fitch 15
Maumee 21, Bowling Graen 13
Mayfield 27, Barberton o
McComb 52, Von Buren \2
McDonald 17, Mineral Ridge 0
Mechanicsburg 54 , N. Lewisburg
Trtad 12
Medina 14, Brecksville 0
Medina Highland 35, Lodl Cloverleaf
10
Middletown 27, Fairfield 23
Middletown Mldlaon 25, MiltonUnion 18
Milford Cantor Fairbanks 26, Grandview 12
Millbury Like 28, Genoa 20
Mogadore ~2. Windham 20
Monroeville ~a. Aahland Mapleton 14
Morenci (Mich.) 35, Tol. onawa Hills

Chardon 21, Washington Dunbar 20
Chesapeake 22, Belpre 21
Chesterland W. Geauga ~7. Burton
Berkshire 0
Cin . Anderson 46, Cln. NW 0
Cin. Colerain 42, Cin. Oak Hilla 21
Cin . Glen Esta 34, Cln. Turpin 0
Cin. Hills Christian 45, Hamilton New
MiamiO
Cin . Hughes 12, Cin. Withrow 8
Cin . Indian Hill30, N. Bond l'lytor 8
Cin . LaSalle14, Cln. Moeller 13
1~
Cin. Loveland 19, Hamilton Rou 3
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale ~. CrestCln. Madeira 47, Cln. Dear Park 22
line 0
Cln . .Mt. Healthy 28, Cln. Wuttm
N. Cen. Hocver 21, Maaalllon Pe&lt;ry 7
Hills 6
N. Lima S. Range 88, Bertin Center
Cln. N. Collage Hill 59, Cln .. Lind- Waarem Roaervt 6
mark Christian 12
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 20, Lueaa
' Cin. Norwood 31, Morrow Little 4
Miami 21
. New Albany 36, Sugar Grove Barno
Cin . Princeton 35, Uberty Twp. Lalto- Union 1~
ta E. o
New Bremen 24, Rockford Parkway
Cln. Reading 48, Finnaytown 28
13
Cin. Summn Country Day M, LoCk·
New Cartlala TactJmaeh ~9. St. Paris
land 14
Qraham 14
Cln. Walnut Hills 21, Cln. Alkan 20
New Concord John Qlenn 55,
Cin , Wyoming 42, Cln. Mari.,..,t 13 Mceonnelovllle Morgan 7
•
Cle. E. 46, Cle. RhOdes 8
New Labanon Dixie 80, Day. Oak·
Cia. Glenville 19, Cia. JF~ ~
21
Cia. His. Lutheran E.. 50, Lor1ln
Lexington 41, Zanesville
Cia. s. 18,
.
e
Cltl. VASJ 33, Willoughby S. 211
Clermont NE 22, Cln. Hanmony 0
Coldwater 56, St. Henry 0
Cols. Academy 35, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 0
Cols. Ceniennlal 29, Cola. Unden 8
Cols. DeSales 27, Whltohaii•YNrtlng
6
Cols . Eastmocr 22, Cola. Whmtane

New
MlthaWI 0
New Richmond 30, Clarksville Clln-

lan·M-Ie 211
Nowark Licking VaHey 27, Newark

Cath. 21, OT
Oak Qlen (W. lie.) 23, Belmont Union

Local&amp;
Olm- F1111 ~1. Weatlaka o
0
. Onttrio 38, Mlllenlburg W. Holmes 0
Cols. Franklin Hta. 40, Oaiawtrt 15
Oxford Tailwind&amp; 30, W. Carrollton
Cola. Independence 32, Cola. E. 0
12
Cols. Mlftlln 21, Cola. Brookhaven 14
Palneavlllo Harvey 21, Ashtabula
Cols. Nonhland 19, Cola. Boechcroft Edgewood 15
1
P1ndora-OIIboa 55, Artlngton 28
Colo. Ready 26, Waohlngton O.H.
P1rma Hta. Holy Name 19, Madison
Miami Trace 14
0
Colo. St. Chonos 30, Cola. Bexley 14 . Pembarvllle Eastwood 34, Bloom·
Cola. Watterson 44, Sharon (Pa.) 17 dale almwocd 7
Columbiana 42, Leetonia.7
Parry 28, Ml~dloltald Cardinal 1~
Columbiana Crestview 28; E. PalalParry~rg 48, Sylvania Southview 7
tlne 24
PIOkerington 21, Zanelvllle o
Columbus Grove 41,.Span08MIIa 7
Piqua 28, Troy 0
.
Conneaut 46, Andover Pymatunlng
PoJnt Plaaaant (W.IIa.) 33, Cheshl,.
Valley 6.
RlverVallay6
Copkiy 13, Greensburg Green 10
Poland Seminary 24, Niles McKinley
Cory-Rawson 14, Findley Liberty· 0
Benton 6
Port Clinton 20, Sandueky St. Mary'a
Covington 25, Arcanum 3
15
Crooksville 34, Orasdan Tri-Valloy 8
Portsmouth~~. Huntington (W. Va.) o
Cuyahoga Hts. 34, Columbia station
Portsmouth W. 42, Wavarty 36
Columbia 21
Preble ShlwnH 28, Waynesville 1~
Day. Carroll 34, Mlamlaburg 0
Proctorville Fairland 29, Pomaroy
Day. Edgewood 42, Mid. FanwiOk 7
Mtlga 0
.
Day. Moadowdala 12, Day. Belmont
Raceland (Ky.) 33, Coal Qroira Daw· ·
6
oon·Bryant 7
Defiance 42, Elida 0
Ravenna SE ~. Rootatown 13
·Delta 48, Oregon Stritch 14
Raadlng 48, Flnneytown 28
Cola Hardin Northe&lt;n 72, 1/anlua 8
RHCIIvllle Eutern 50, Hannan
Dover 26, Coshoclon 1
(W.\Ia.) 0
Dublin Conman 49, Newark 13
Raynoldlburg ·31, Upper Artlngton 0
Dublin Scioto 28, Hilliard Darby 0
Rklllfleld A - • 40, Tallmadge 7
E. Can. 20, Cuyahoga Falla CVCA 14
·Richmond Oalo SE 34, Frankfort
E. Cle. Shaw 19, Parma 7
Adana 8
E. Clinton 55, Bethel-Tate 0 .
Rlchwocd N. Union 28, Oalawara
E. Liverpool 45, Rayland Buckaya Buckeye Volley 14
Local 7
Roaoford ~2. Holland Spring. 41,
Eaton 47, Day. Northridge \4
30T
Elmore Woodmora 29, Kanan Llkoo
S. Chartuton SE 13, Cedarville 12
ta 16
·
Sallnlvllle Southam 48, Sabring 1~
Elyria 14, Lorain Southview 13
S1nduolcv Ptrklna 14, Clyde 7
EuClid 31, Parma Viney Forge 8
Sclotovllle
Community
20,
1 Fairfield 27, Middletown 23
Portsmouth Notre Dame 8
Fairport Harbor Harding 28, Ole.
Sherwood Fllrvlew 25, Hiclcavllle 8
Cent. Cath. 6
Sidney 37, Trotwood-Madison 12
Fostoria 34, Sandutky 21
Sidney Lahman 48, Day. Dunbar 0
Franklin 25, Lemen-MonrO. 7
Sparta 1-Hghland 36, MI. Qllold 34
Fremont Rosa 17, Oregon Clay 14, . sprtng. Oath. Cant. 28. Spring. NE 7
OT
8pHng. 8. 18, Huber Htl. Wayne 18
Ft. Recovery 14, Uma Cent. Oath. 8
Gahanna 47, Groveport 13
Gallon 33, Shelby 7
Gallipolis Gallia 21, Manetta 18, OT
Germantown Valley VIew ··t4,
Brookville 0
Girard 29, Brookfield 7
GlousterTrlmble14, Nelaonvlllo-York

St. Marys Memorial 42. Lima
Shawnee 6
Streetsboro 21. Mogadore Field 14,
OT
Strongsville 42 , North Ridgeville 6
Summit Station Licking Hts. 4 1,
Mllle&lt;spOrt 26
Sunbury Big Walnut 20 , Lewis Center
Olentangy 17, OT
Sycamore Mohawk t 2, Carey 7
Thomas Worthington 53 . Chilticothe
21
Thornville Sheridan 41 , Philo 0
Tipp City Bethel 34, Union City Mlssiasinawa Valley 7
.
fipp City Tippecanoe 41, Enon
Graenon 7
Tol. Coni. Cath. 34, Tol. Bowsher 28
Tol. ChriStian 39, Ecorse (Mich.) 8
Tol. Rogers 32, Tol. Woodward 6
Tol. St. John's17 , Tol. Start 7
Tol. Waite 23, Tol. Libbey o
Tontogany Otsego 29, Gibsonburg
1~

.

Toronto 37, Southington Chalker 20
Uhrichsville ·Claymont 34, Byesville
Meadowbrook 7
Unfontown Lake 21 , Wooster 14
Upper Sandusky 4 t , Bucyrus 6
Urbana 49, Casstown Miami E. 16
Utica 26, Johnstown-Monroe 22
Van Wert 28, Oltawa-Giandorl 7
Versailles 34, Delphos St. John's 28
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 28,
Bradford 8
·
W. Chester Lakota w. 20, MiHord 6
W. Letayatte RidgewoOd 38, Magnolia Sandy Valley 6 ·
W. Liberty-Salem 28, Jamestown
Greenavlew 6
Wadsworth ~7. Akr. Norton 7
Wahama (W.Va.) 26, Racine South·
amo
Warren Harding 30, Tal. Whitmer 0
'. Jarren Howland 14, Canfield 13, OT
Warren JFK 34, Medina Buckeye 23
Warrensville Hts. 44, Garlield Hts. 21
Warsaw River View 28, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 14
Washington C.H. 38, London 0
Welling1on 35 , laGrange Keystone 6
Wellston 50, Ironton Rock Hill 0
Westerville N. 26, Westerville.S. 20
Wheelersburg 21, Minford 7
Wheeling (W. Va .) Central 21,
Wellsville 7
Wheeling (W. Va.) Pa[k 31, Rich·
mond Edison 28
Whitahouse Anthony Wayne 36, Sylvania Northview 6
Willard 41 , Norwalk 14
Williamsburg 33, Blanchester 30
Wllli~msport Westlalf 55, Chillicothe
Unloto 34
Wilmington 38, McArthur Vinton
County 19
Wintersville Indian Creek 26, Weirton
(W. Va.) Weir 20
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 54, Beverly Fl. Frye 3
Wooster Trlway 28, Navarre Fairtess
12
Worthington Kilbourne 35, Galloway
Westland 3
Xenia 35, Bea~ercre~k 7
Youngs. Boardman 52, Steubenville

0
Youngs. Ursuline 33, Cle. Benedictine 7
Zanesville Rosecrans 34, Old WashIngton Buckeye Trail 22
W.lla. high achooiiCCHIIO
Fridey'o Raaulta
Berkeley Springs 27, Northern Garren,
Md.6
Bridgeport21 East Falnnont 0
Buckhannon
Philip Barbour 14
Cameron
Wetzel 7
Oonahue 13
Montcalm,8

55, Petersburo
Washington 56, South
6
BalleysviUe 22
16, Southam Garrett, Md. 13
Guyan Yaney 8, Tolsia 6
Hamlin 6, Burch 0
Hampshire 28, Fainnont Senior 26
Herbert HooVer 21 , Clay County 13
Hurricane 24, Ripley 19
Independence 34, Oceana 6
Indian Creek, Ohio 26, Weir 20
James Monroe 34, Summers County 0
Lowis County 39, South Harrisoo 0
Magnolia 20, River, Ohio 8
Martinsburg 59, Hedgosville7
Matewan 44, Pendleton County 14
Meadow Bndge 48, Gauley Bndga 15
Midland Trall46, Mount Hope 21
Morgan-n 38, Brooke 14
Mount VIew 27, Shady Spring 16
Mueaelman 35, Robert C. Byrd 6
North Marlon 35, John Marshall 32
Oak Glen 23, Union Local, Ohio 8
Oak Hil 38, Bluefield 9
Paden City 45, Hundred 8
Parkernburg 32, Perl&lt;eraburg South ·o
PikeV10w 28, Big Creek 8
Poea 35, Buffalo 15
Point Pleasant 33, River Valley, Ohio 6
Portsmouth, Ohio 46, Huntington 0
Praston 42, Ubeny Harrison 0
Princeton 47, Nicholas County 7
Ravenswood 35, Chapmanville 12
ReedsvHie Eastem, Ohio 50, Hannan, 0
Richwood 30, Pocahontas County 15
Riverside 34, Capltal24
Roane Co"nty 1B, Bra&lt;ton County 1
Soon 14, Duval6
Spnng Valley 7, Cabell Midland e
St. Albans 31, Logan 19
•
Stone Bridge, Va. at Jelferson, ppd
Tyler Consolidated 41, St Marys 0
Unlveralty 41, Nllro o
Van 42, Sharman 20
Wahama 26, Southern, Ohio o
Wayne 40, SiSSOrlville 0
Webster County 20; Uncotn 6
Wheeling Contral21, Wellsville, Ohio 7
Wheeling Pari&lt; 31, Edison, Oltlo 28
WIHiamstown 22, Calhoun County o
Winfield 52, Man 0
Wlrt County 26, Ritchie County 0
Wyoming East 14, laager 12

Eagles remain unbeaten
in victory over Hannan

Toledo 52, Cent. Michigan 26
Wi"erberg 14, Wabash 3
Ohio Northern 2t, Bakfwin·Wallace 20
Grand Valley St. 63, A•hland 19
Trinity lntematlona128. Walsh 14
Buffalo 37, Conneeiicul 20
Hiram 22. Mount St J008j)h 8
West Uberty 42, Westminster, Pa. 22

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from Page Bl
2:17 left in th e third quarter.
Ohio only n-ailed 17-1 4 at
halfti111e.
Haywood finished the game
with a pair of touchdowns
Jackson fumbled the ball on
the following drive, setting up
the Cyclones on the Ohio 34yard line.
Iowa State scored earlier in
the half on fourth and goal
from the 1-yard line early in the
third quarter as Wallace ran in
his ·second rushing touchdown
of the afternoon to give Iowa
State a 24- 14 advanrage.
The game had opened up
promisingly for Ohio, as it didn't take long for the Bobcats get
things started.
On the opening kickoff,

No. 20 Michigan 38, W. Michtgan 2 1
Wisconsin 18, Penn Sl. 6
Wooster 51 . Kenyon 10
Nonh Carot•na 4 t , No. 6 Florida St. 9
No. 2 Florida 44, Kent.ucky 10
No. 9 VIrginia Tech 50, Rutgers 0
Pu&lt;Ouo 33, " kroo 14

YOUTH SPORTS
GALLERY

Ohio drove the ball from their
own 20 quickly into Iowa State
territory, where three minutes
and 56 seconds into the game,
Ray Huston ·ran the ball up the
· middle from the Cyclone oneyard line for the score.
The Cyclones struck back
with a fury.
A 32-yard reven;e run by ,
Lane Danielson and a 25-yard
catch by Craig Cainpbell set up
a pitch by Wallace to Danielson
for a 15-yard rushing score.
A 75-yard run by Chad
Brinker put the ball on the
Iowa State seven. Two plays
later,Jackson scored from a yard
out on a keeper as the Bobcats
regained the lead as the Bobcats
led 14-7 at the end of the first
quarter.
The Bobcats will play host to
Toledo on Oct. 6 with a 5 p.m.
kickoff.

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I

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Blue Angels fall to Athens;
Rebels split in tri-match

,Victory

MERCERVILLE Th e Lady Rebels of South Gallia
earned a split in a volleyball tri- match at ho me Saturday.
The Lady R ebels lost to Nelsonville in straight sets 15-7
and 15- 11 . They were led by Tracy Cheney with five service
points and Ashley Cardwell and Sarah Wright with three.
Cardwell and Cheney each notched a pair of aces.
Holly H aner had four blocks and two kills.
In their second match, the lad~ R ebels de feated Federal
Hocking 2- 1. After winning the J'ener 15-5 , South Gallia
allowed Hockin g a 15- 1 w m before seahn g the nr ght With a
15- 1 win in the fin ale.
'
Cardwell led with 12 po ints followed by Wright with I 0
and Andrea Jones wi th five. Cardwell had six aces. Haner and
Jones each added a pair of blocks while eac h added th ree
kills.

TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS - The Syracuse Araves , age 7
and 8 Minor League Boys, placed first place in the Big Bend
Youth League Tournament held in New Haven. The team also
won the league championship. Pictured in the front row from
left to right are: Jeremiah Warden, Ethan Martin, Dyllan Roush ,
Austin Hill and Andrew Roseberry. Second row: Dylan Bass,
Eric Buzzard, Eric Cundiff, Adam Warden. and Colby Roseberry.
Coaches for the team were Rick Buzzard, Jeff Martin, Tom
Roseberry, Doug Warden, Dave Bass and Larry Cundiff. (Submitted photo)

to. You just have to think to yourself,
'What do I need to live for?'"
While in treatment, Halley was
unable to attend scheduled classes, so
from Page Bl
she was tutored at home and mainwith her first question when she was tained a 3.5 GPA despite the complicatold she had cancer.
tions, some ofwnich became very seri"My first question was 'Does this ous . She attended as many events at the
mean no sports?'" she said. Her doctor school as she could, coming to events
at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis broke wearing a breathing mask to avo'i d ·
down and started crying when she infection due to· her weakened immune
asked the question.
system.
It took · time for the idea to sink in.
At one point during her treatments,
Halley says she didn't actually realize Halley's doctors we afraid that she
until the drive home after .her mother would might not survive the treatments
had insisted on driving from the doc- due to massive hemorrhaging
tor's office.
"They said, 'If she doesn 't stop bleed"Did he just tell me I have cancer?" ing, something serious is going to hapHalley asked.
pen,"' said Halley. However, Halley did
. Halley was sent immediately to Chi!- not learn of that concern until she was
dren's Hospital in Columbus to begin starting up the hill 'to recovery.
_
chemotherapy and radiation therapy.
In fact, she was surprised, "I said, 'Was
Her experience with the treatments it that bad?'"
was much like any other with _the poiHalley has returned to volleyball for
sons designed to kill cancer, including her senior season at South Gallia and
really hasn't missed a beat.
pain, nausea and the loss of her hair.
Halley admits that at the most painful
"I expected her to be slow returning
junctures of the treatment, returning to and everything," said South Gallia valsports would become the farthest thing leyball. coach Dafney Qavis, "bur the
from her mind. "The pain hurts so bad first mght of pracnce was the only
_ that it's like___Ldon'LwanLto.live...any~nigh Lshe..didn~Ldo...e.verJthing. Aftermore," she said.
that, she did everything all-out."
From those moments, she found herHalley did make up the two laps she
self thinking, "The minute you think wasn't able to complete at that first
about it is the minute you don't need practice, part of her resolve to not be
mask penalty moved the ball
to the B, but Gallipolis
negated the bonus with a
delay
penalty.
from PageBI
On
second- and-goal
looked poised to put the Brodeur found Geiger in the
right corner of the end zone.
game away.
Marietta's defense held Gallipolis opted to kick the
strong, forcing Gallipolis to extra point, but there was
try a 32-yard field goal. some confusion on the play.
Bobby Jones' boot had ·plen- Kicker Clayton Saunders was
ty. of leg but was wide left. late getting on the field and
The miss gave the Tigers the · his rushed kick failed to clear
the uprights.
ball on their 20.
Then came Marietta's.
From
there, Marietta
launched a 13-play sco'r ing turn.
Kelly rumbled for four and
drive featuring its vaunted
Amigo
did likewise. Burke
wing-T attack that kept Gallipolis off-balance all night. gained ab~ut two yards on
Tyler Kelly capped the drive third-and-2, leaving the
with 9-yard receptiop from Tigers with fourth-andinches on the 11.
Amigo.
Amigo and Burke missed
The senior quarterback
.
snuck in for the two-potnt connections on the handoff
conversion with 4:51 in the on fourth down, and Galfourth to deadlock .the game. lipolis stopped Amigo on the
Neither team managed a broken play.
"They're fielding a bunch
serious drive for the remainder of regulation, although of athletic kids," Saunders
.Gallipolis made things inter- said. "I think they're one of
the top four teams in the
esting.
..
· After Marietta stalled on I eague.
its 47 with about two minutes left, the Tigers punted to
Auto- Owners Insurance
return specialist Donnie
Life Home Car Business
Johnson, who bobbled the
ball on his· 15 .
7J(e '1/. 'PwlitM 1'-ro;V
Geiger recovered the misINSURANCE PLUS
cue, giving the Blue Devils
one last shot. Gallipolis
AGENCIES, INC.
. quickly moved to its 40, but
a clipping penalty pushed
114 Court Pomeroy
the Blue Devils back to the
25 with eight seconds left.
Marietta set up to defend a

Devils

a

.

Hail
Marygave
pass.
buttheGallia
Academy
Jones
ball.
The senior standout scam- L..-.J'.._
pered 35 yards down the
Marietta sideline before
being horse-collared to end
regulation.
In overtime, Gallipolis got
the ball first and ·started possession on the Marietta 20.
Reed carried for two yards
and Jones followed with
three more. A Marietta face-

B~~~G~f~!~m!~~!e

UNDATED
Angels fell to
Athens in three matches Thursday in SEOAL volleyball.
Athens won the first game 15-0 before Gallia won th e second game 15- 12. Athens took the rubber match, 15-9,
Jessica Bodimer was the Angels' reading scorer with 12
points. Jenny Mooney and Sarah Stepp each had three points.
At the net, Meredith Addington was 9-of- 12 hitting, followed
by Bodimer at 7-of- 10, and Stepp at 10-of-1 6.
The JV squad improved to 7-0 in league play with a 2- 1
win win. After losing th e opener 15- 4, they won the following matches 15- 11 and 15- 11.The Young Angels were led by
Tessa Haggerty with nine points and 13-of-16 hitting from
Steph Addington .
The frosh team lost in three sets. lexi ReesJed with 15 service points.
The Angels will play host to River Valley on Tuesday.

the recipient of any special treatment.
"The most important thing I thought
of was, 'I'm gonna come in here, and
I'm gonna do my best, and I'm not
gonna slack." Halley said. ''I'll do every
single thing they do because I don't
want them to think that I'm getting
some kind of special treatment, because
there's no I in team."
Davis sees Halley as a motivator and
leader for the Lady Rebels.
"She . sets a good example for the
team. If she can do it, anybody can do
it. She's a lot of motivation for them,"
said Davis.
In her first night back in competicion, Halley scored five servic~ points
for the lady Rebels and showed no
hesitation in diving for sinking balls.
She takes her return to action in
stride, almost as a given for her and her
family and friends.
"They knew I would come back," she
said. "It didn't surprise them. I was just
out there playing ball."
Halley, who would like to eventually
become a veterinarian, has tried to
downplay the illness which threatened
h~~ life . .
You JUst
can, .buit-it's.lifi:~c.ha~lgirlg,--de,finitely,:.-1-·--,.-,.--..--she said .."We take
for gra~ted. You JUSt gotta step back and reahze
that sometimes it takes something like
cancer."

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR LOCAL TEAMS.

Jones finished with 72
yards on 11 carries. Ty Simmons enjoyed a productive
night with 39 yards on nine
totes.
"We knowJY can ·do some
things real well," Saunders
said . "He showed some signs
of being able to step up in
there.
"We've got to do something to get the· load off of
Bobby."
Backup quarterback Travis
McKinniss also saw significant action as Saunders continued to seek quality play~
ing time for his key reserves.
Marietta hosts Jackson
next Friday for homecoming, while Gallipolis welcomes Warren to Memorial
Field in another homecoming match up.

HANK YOU
'

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For Purchasing
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.992-6677

"Good Honest; People"

v

Ohio

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - As
expected, Eastern improved
to 5-0 Friday night.
The Eagles outrushed Hannan 335-60 to beat ~he Wildcats, 50-0.
"It's pretty much what we .
expected," said Eastern head
coach Scott Christian. "I'm
sure our kids are thinking of
other things. There's a lot of
distractions right now. We're
trying to keep that limited.
They stayed focused enough
get us . to 5-0 and hopefully
we'll continue to do that."
But, it was a ugly win as the
Eagles fumbled the ball away
three times and committed
three interceptions .
· It was also a little costly as a
couple of E3stern players,
including end Brent Buckley,
left the game early. Their status was unknown as of press
time.
"We had three or four kids
go out, but hopefully their be
back next week," said Christ~ ·
man. The Eagles travel to
PREGAME - Eastern head coach Scott Christman watche
Trimble next week ~n a
his offense go· through pregame drills Friday prior to th
showdown of two top TVC Eagles' game against Hannan. (Butch Cooper)
Ohio Division teams.
"We're improving every the first half."
tou chdown this season.
"Eastern's got a g&amp;od,
week," said Christman. "It
"We've got explosive kids,·
seems like we're taking care strong, quick ball club. We said Christman . "It seems lik
of a few little problems each had a hard time controlling they break loose every wed
week that we have. Hopeful- their speed, especially their One out of every three or fou
ly, by next week, we'll have all line. I thought their line times they'll break one loose.
those problems corrected."
dominated.
"But, we've got to learn to
Christman sat out starting
Kirk Murray led the Wild·
that we can't rely on tha'. ·
quarterback Garrett Karr, cats (0-5) with 19 carries for
because the teams ahead ar
who was a little banged up 58 yards.
last week at Parkersburg
"I feel like at times, our line going to try to take those bi
Catholic. Christman, though, . did a good job," said Price. "I plays away. That's what they'r
says he's alright.
feel like (quarterback Stacey preaching, I'm sure. We've gc .
"Garrett's fine," said Christ- Cooper) did a good job (with to stay focused and get sam ·
man. "We just wanted to rest the) audible that caught them long drives going and bur:
him a little bit this week."
off guard. Kirk 's a good run- some clock."
Hannan travels to Burc:
.Stepping . in was freshman ner. He ran hard and B.J.
Ken Amsbary, who did all Nicely and John Woods up next Saturday.
"Overall, I thought our kid
right in his fint-ever varsity front blocking for (Murray) at
played
hard," said Price. "The ..
start.
times did a good job, too."
Amsbary, who carried the
Lyons opened the second played hard all four quarter! ,
ball six times for 47 yards, half with an 84-yard kickoff We had four or five turnover :
opened the scoring with a return for a score. It was his defensively, we were please•
kickoff return~fora with thaC'
kicked the
. extra poirit and finished a
perfect 6-for-6 kicking PAT's
for the Eagles on the night.
Arnsbary struggled passing
the ball, throwing the ball
four· times with three interceptions, two were picked off
by Hannan's Shannon Gay in
the first quarter.
"Amsbary stepped in and
For Purchasing
did a pretty good job," said
Christman. "We put him in
For Purchasing
My 2001
some bad situations a couple
My 2001
Market Hog
of times and didn't come out
Market Steer
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Silver Streaks
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ever."
Silver Streaks
·second quarter touchdown
runs by R.J. Gibbs, from 59~
yards out, Brad Parker, from
5'2 yards out, and Chris
Lyons, from 18 yards out, put
the Eagles up 29-0 at halftime.
Gibbs finished with five
carries for 90 yards and two
touchdowns, while freshman
Bryan Minear had seven carries for 108 yards, including a
third quarter TD run, to lead
all rushers.
"I was pleased with some of
the things we did," said Hannan head coach Kent Price.
"Defensively, we came up
with some turnovers there in

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Wiseman
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and JK.
Landscaping

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

Saturday's college scores

......,,,._

6
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 13, New
Philadelphia 12
Grafton Mldvlaw 39, Lorain Brooll·
side 16
Greenwich S. Cent. 12, New London
6
Hamilton 30, Sycamore 7
Hamler Patrick Henry 55, MIIIIIIOrl
. Evergreen 28
Harrison 28, Amalia 0
Heath 12, Granville 7
Hebron Lakewood 33, Colt. Hartley
8
Hemlock Miller 29, Crown City 8.
Gallla 0
Hilliard Davidson 1~. Marton Harding
10
Hubbard 28, Youngs. Llbatly a·
Hudson 16, Macedonia Nordonla 1
Hudaon Western Ranrva q, Ash·
land Crestview 6
Huron 24, Oak Harbor 7
Independence 21, Brooklyn 1~

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt; WV

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Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

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

oors

NASCAR

Winston Cup drivers dabble in Busch
Tho 2001 NASCAA -

Cl4l

(\otYin;, . . . .
) rod
- Aug.pairi
-do
1111'
25- Stw!io 500, Briot:ll, Tenn.

(T~

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S.C. (-.:1 Blnln)
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Solll Zl- MBNACol ~Jr. «Xl,
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Solll 30 One 400,
- O i y. Kan.
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Od. 7- UAWG.l ClJolfy 500. C&lt;nc:onf. N.C.
Od. 14 - Old llon*liOn 500, Mar·

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NIH. 4-l'q) Seaol Mi&gt;""""' «Xl,
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Nw. 11 - Pernzoi 400, ..bt ! !' 1
Fla.
NIH. 18- NAPA 500, ...,..,..,. Ga.
NIH. Zl - Now HairC&gt;&amp;'1re :IX!,
1..ouOln
CriY6r S&amp;drvs
1. Jei!Gontln....... .... .. :!,788
2. Aiclty FkJdd. . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,548.
3. Oola.Jamlll •...• ' .... . .. 3,375.
4. TOIII' · ..••.•..•.• 3,356.
5. ~ """'· ....•..... 3,:J)2.
Ullt:.::,·. . . .... 3,287.
7. Oola
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8. KsW11-taN1&lt;* ... . .•.•.. . 3,230.
9. Auoly Waloce . . . . . . . . . 3,225
1o.Jell anon . . .. . . . .. . . . 2.979.
11 . .lotrY1II Beuoau . . . . . . . . 2.fH1.
12. Marllf.4ai11n . . . . . • . . . . . 2,948
13. 8il EllcliL .......... . . • 2,917.
14. Poi1&lt; . .....•....• 2,859.
15. Jrrmt Sponaor ..... . .. 2.838.
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11. v.wt~ anon ........... 2.112.
16. Ellall Sadler ........... 2,629.
19. Babl:i¥ i lao I ilb I . . .. . . . . . 2,fiOB.
20.Kan.~ . ......•. . 2,!117.
21. .-ny Maylleid ........ 2,559.
22. J o n y - ...... . .. . 2,558.
Zl. AicltyCnMin ........... 2,410.
24. Dave lllanoy. . . . . . . . . . . 2,392.
25. Till!)' i.JIIicnB . . . . . . . . . . 2.358.
26. KLot Buoch . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,325.
21. -~ . :

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29. Jam- ....... ... 2,214.
30. 9101Badrw ... ... .... . 2,120.
31 . ~AM&lt;Icld

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32. lbdd Bcmo' .. ' ... .... 2.083.

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40.Il.oci&lt;lnot- . . . . . . . . 1,339.

BY KEmt PARSONS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Winston Cup driver Mark
Martin alw.l~ crea!M the Busch
Series as his own private playground, .winning multiple races
each year while running a parttime schedule in NASCAR's
top developmental series.
He gave that up last year,
deciding he wanted more time
for himself and his family, since
his Busch schedule consisted of
running most of the "companion" races- evenlli held in conjunction with the Winston Cup
Series.
Martin also wanted ro concentrate more on his Winston
Cup team as the schedule balloo·n ed to 36 point-paying
·evenlli in 2001.
He left the Busch Series with
45 career vicrories, easily the
best of all time.
.So far, this seascn has been a
trade-off for Martin. He's had
more time with his wife, Arlene,
and son, Matt, who's starting a
racing career of his own. Weekends at the races are not as hectic since he's only running Win.
ston Cup.
" It's been a real pleasure this
year;' Martin said. "We've had
more time for a lot of things we
didn't do in the past."
On the track, though, Martin
is facing his first winless season
since he joined Roush Racing
in 1988. He has just three top
fives, and he's 12th in poinlli
with I 0 races to go, putting his

example of what running both
series can do for you," said Todd
BOdine, who won the Busch
race at that track earlier this year,
a day before finishing fifth in the
Wmsron Cup event
"That weekend, we were able
to tune both cars fiom what we
learned fiom the other. We'd
practice the Busch car, and then
make changes on the Cup car
car."
based on that. Then we'd do the
· Since the Busch Series started same ·for the Busch car after
in 1982, its had ill&gt; share ofWin- Winston Cup practice," he said.
ston Cup drivers pulling double
"It was like having eight pravduty. The late Dale Earnhardt, tices."
Harry Gant and Darrell Waltrip
Spencer, Bodine's Winston
were among the drivers who ran Cup teammate, was not scheda good portion of the races in uled to run any Busch races this
the early years, and Jimmy year. He replaced PJ. Jones midSpencer, Joe Nemechek and Jeff way through the year and has
Burton,' Martin's Roush team- won three of the 13 races he's
inate, continue to do so.
run. Not so coincidentally, his
The reasons these Winston Winston C up result&gt;; in that
Cup drivers run a partial Busch period also
improved, and
schedule are varied, but most he's jumped to 15th in the
agree they gain valuable experi- standings.
"It's helped a lot," Spencer
ence from running the extra
said. "You can learn a lot of little
races.
"The reason we run the things about what makes the car
Busch program is because it give go faster, and also characteristics
us as drivers another opportuni- about the track and the tires.
ty to try things on race cars, and Being able to win races and run
it gives us an opportunity to up front also helps the driver's
drive and get more tt.ick experi- confidence, which carries over
ence:' said Burton, who has one to the Wmston Cup side."
Burton's Busch schedule ihis
Busch victory this year.
Rule changes this year have season has been more limited
made the two series more equal, than in the pasi, hampered mostfurther enhancing the appeal to ly by the lack of sponsorship.
running at least the companion And he, like Martin, has seen the
performance of his Winston
races.
"I look at Las Vegas as a perfect Cup team suffer in 2001, But
12-year streak oftop-10 finishes
in jeopardy.
Has not running the Busch
races hurt his Winston Cup performance?
"Our Cup .car .didn't run that
goOct_last year, when we were
still winning Busch races:· Martin said. "There's no relationship
between us not winning Cup
races and not running the Busch

Burton also doesn't see a relationship between the two.
"Our Busch set ups have
never worked or transferred over
ro our Winston Cup cars:' B}Jrron said. "I believe not running
the Busch car enough earlier in
the season has hurt my Busch
program but I'm not sure it has
hurt my Cup program."
The careers of Earnhardt and
Waltrip both seemed to suffer
when they quit running the
Busch Series. Earnhardt's last
year running at least a partial
schedule was 1994, the same
year he won his last Wiuston
Cup championship.
Waltrip's final Winston Cup
victory game in 1992, which
also is the last year he maintained
his Busch tea.m.

haw

"Anybody who sa~ running
the Busch races doesn't help is
full of baloney:' Bodine said.
"With the way the cars are this
year, being mo~ equal than
ever, there's a lot you can learn
running the companion races:•
· Kevin Harvie~ has rak~n
advantage of ~nrung both ser1es
this year. Harv~ck, thrust mto the
spotlight after Earnhardt's death
in the Daytona
le:~ds the
Busch Senes standings and also
has won two Wmston Cup
races.
He plans to stay in the Busch
Series part time in 2002.
" Running both series has
helped me so much this year
that we're going tQ keep it going
for at Ieast one more year,"u.• .....vick said.

S?O•

--

...·--···--··--~··--····--··-··--·.. .....

N '2' DEEP

/

"-·

'

BOSTIC ROAD, RODNEY, OHIO
Sunday, September 30, 2001
. GATES OPEN AT 10:00 A.M.
RACING STARTS AT 12:00 P.M.

Bv JENNA

will be a ce ntral issue for the
AP SPORTS WRITER
rest of the season.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. can
" It's )lnfortunate, but it's
understand the importance of
something we have 'to do,"
having a cooler at a race
Copeland said.
Lowe's Motor Speedway
track. On his way to watch a
· late model race with some
spokesman Jerry Gappens said
friends a few years back, he
tlie track ou tside Charlotte,
learned that alcohol wasn't
· N .C. , has no plan to ban
allowed.
,-==&gt;~bottles . Why~y~juS.L..co..o.le.rs.iotits..race. Oct. 7. But
improvised, keep that policy?"
he said that policy is subject
and lined the bottom of his
Part of the reason for the to change depending on
cooler with beer. He dumped ban could stem from the developments in the terrorsome ice on top of it, layered track's close proximity to ism crisis.
"We've already had fans
it with soda and smuggled it Dover Air Force Base.
through the gate.
The base, located about five · calling to ask about it, and at
"I know all too well why miles away, is serving as a this time we plan to continyou need a cooler at a race," morgue for victims of the ue as normal and allow coolhe said. "But I can understand Pentagon attack. Personnel ers into the track, although
why they shouldn't be there are on high alert in case we will continue our policy·
allowed in tracks right now." America retaliates for the ter- of checking everything that
The cooler has long been rorist attacks. ..
comes through the gate,"
one of the staples of a day at
But there's also the chance Gappens said.
· the track for most fans.
that the Dover race's action
Cathy and Tommy Watson,
But much has changed in could be a sign of permanent race fans from Moultrie, Ga.,
America since the terrorist changes at tracks.
would understand if Lowe's
attacks of la!t week, and
~ith an average of 150,000 didn't let them bring a cooi.JNASCAR fans will be with- fans at a track, the task of er into the track.
out their traveling ice boxes . thoroughly searching all those
The Watsons make it a trafor the first time when the coolers as they go through clition of packing a full lunch '
series resumes racing thi s the gates could be difficult.
with beverages to stow
weekend at Dover Downs
That's a topic track man- under their seat during the
International Speedway.
agers across the country dis~ race. Not only does it save
On heightened security in cussed in a conference call them money, but it prevents
the wake the attacks, Dover this week with NASCAR them from having to leave
officials have banned all cool~ officials. ,
their seats during the race
ers, backpacks and large bags
NASCAR spokesman Rob and miss on-track action
from the tra ck. Out of fair- Copeland said installing metal while waiting in a line at a
ness to the fans, the track is detectors at tracks was an concession stand.
lowering the price of conces- option discussed and that it
But they'd be willing to
s1ons.
was made clear that security sacrifice out of safery.
"While we regret that we
have to step up ou.r security ·
measures to this extent, it is,
at this time, completely necessa ry/' said Denis McGlynn,
Dover Downs' president and
CEO. "We don't know how
long the changes will have to
be_in place.
"But given the events ... we
think it iS of ·the highest
importance that this race
rakes place in a completely
safe manner."
. The ban has irritated race
fans across the country, many
of whom have vented their
frustration on NASCAR
message boards.
Joe Kellinger, a North Carolina race fan driving to
Dover this weekend, said he
can understand the anger. The
average race ticket to Sunday's MBNA Cal Ripken Jr.
400 costs $80, so saving a
buck or two by packing a
St. Rt. 248 • .Chester, Ohio
lunch has kept th e spor t
affordable for most fans.
"Lower concessions, what
does that mean?'' Kelly wonFRYER

dered. "Does that mean my
hamburger will cost $6
instead of $8? Will my
watered-down soda only cost
me $5?
'
"I don't get the ban. Tracks
normally search your things
anyway to make sure you
aren't bringing in any glass

HAmERS HOT ODES

Wood Pellets
··Only $150CJ.~Ton

Buy Early &amp; Save While
The Supply Lasts

Baum Lumber
(740) 985-3301

·.

"It will be strange not
having my little cooler at my .
feet, but it will be worth it if
it protects everyone," Cathy
Watson said. "Right now·
you don't know who you

•••

and the duck populations have
responded
accordingly.
Duck
hunters have enjoyed excellent
hunting.
.
The good news for duck hunters
is that the areas with poor conditions seem to be offset by other
areas that saw good rainfall and
good nesting success. The poor
conditions were mostly in the western regions, including Montana,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Ducks Unlimited described it as
the best of times and the worst of
times. In some survey areas, the
nesting success was the worst in
more than 10 years.
But farther east, in North Dakota,
South Dakota and southeastern
Manitoba, an unusually wet spring
resulted in excellent nesting condi:tions for ducks. Hopefully this will
more than offset the areas with poor
production. But the U.S. Fish and

Wildlife Service reports that the
total numbers are off about 14 percent this year compared to last year.
Ducks Unlimited reports that in
the eastern survey area, unusually
warm spring weather enabled
. breeding waterfowl to begin nesting
early in Quebec, southern Ontario,
and New York, where wetland habitat conditions ranged from fair to
good. Cooler and wetter weather in
Maine and the Maritime Provinces
delayed waterfowl breeding efforts,
but created good to excellent wetland conditions . Total breeding
duck numbers were similar. to last
year. However, all population numbers, including mallards, blac k
ducks, wigeon, green-winged teal,
and scaup were either stable or
increased. This is where a lot of our
ducks will come from .
The USFWS is reporting that
even though waterfowl numbers

will be down in some areas, hunters
can look forward to another excellent season for ducks and geese this
fall. Hunters will also enjoy lengthy
hunting seasons and generous ba g
limits for most species.
Warerfowl hunting regulations are
formulated under the Adaptiw
Harvest Management system, in
which regula!ions are chosen from a
standardized set of harvest packages
ranging from liberal to restrictive.
The ·proposal uses data incorporating mallard breeding population
estimates and data from the M ay
Waterfowl Breeding Population
Survey. The USFWS says that with a
mid-continent mallard population
of 10.5 million birds and an eastern
mallard population of roughly 1
millio'! birds, the AHM model prescribed liberal hunting packages for
all flyways.
The USFWS is predicting anoth-

er excellent season, similar to last
season. The USFWS reports that in
the 2000-01 season, hunters bagged
15.3 million du cks , a 4 percent
dec rease from the previous season .
This included a mallard harvest of
5. 7 million birds, up 3 percent from
the year before.
The five most commonly taken
species .were mallards, gadwalls,
green-winged teal , wood ducks and
blue- winged teal.
.
Overall, water fowlers spent an
average of eight days afield , and
bagged nine ducks .and two geese
ea~ h . During th e early part of the
season, most of the ducks will be
local birds that have nested in the
area. But as the cold weather moves
in, the · northern birds will pass
through as they make their way
down the Atlantic Flyway. It appears
that the 2001-02 season will be
another good one.

L

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- largemoulh bass are being for largemouth tishing. No Park (Preble County) : The weekly fishing report caught and anglers fishing boals are allowed.
Medium-sized crappies are
, provided by lhe Division of at night are picking up wall·
AEP Rscraalion Area baing caughl around the
! Wildlife of the Ohio Depart- eye at the south end of the lakes (Noble County) - boat ramps by using small
; ,nent of Natural Resources.
;
CENTRAL OHIO

! fishing reelly plcka up lhls

;: flme of year. Troll Rai-l·

CLASSES A·D MUST BE DOT API'IIOIIED llRES
Q.ASS A
STOCK·I4' TillES $20.00
Q.ASS I
35'-16' TIRES $20.00

'Traps and shallow minnow·
~ lmllatlng crank balta along

31'- TIRES $10.00
42'-44' TIRES $10,00

' the drodge breakllnes and

: riprap on the braakwalls and

CLASS A, 8, C, D PAYS 1ST I 2ND

'NO SPEED PIT VEHICLES ALOUD' NO BLOWERS, NOS, NO .
ALCOHOL EN6INES ALOUDIIII NO PADDLE TIRES.
IN EACH CLASS THERE WILL BE A $10.00 FEE
FOR EACH ADDITIONAL RUN
MUST HAVE HELMUT 4 SEATBEL
MUST BE 18 YRS. OR OLDER

SPECTATOR FEE $!5.00 "10 &amp; UNDER FREE"
·"CONCESSIONS .ON 6ROUNDS"
"NO ALCOHOLIC BEVERA~S"
"BRIN6 LAWN CHAIR"
QUESTIONS CALL (740) 24!5-9!5!5!5
WATCH FOR SI6NSII
THE TRACK OWNER RESERVES THE RI&amp;HT TO
STOP ANY VEHICLE FROM PARTICIPATIN&amp;I

From Jackson-Rio Granda Exit taka 588 to
Cora Mill Road to Bostic Ad.
From Pt. Plaasant - Taka U.S. 3!1 to St. At. 8!10
can trust, you don't know
...• . .
Exit to !188 to ,Col'!l Mill to Bottle Rood who the
sitting riext to
From 6alllpoli1 - Tok• !188 to Cora Mill to Bottle Road
you is and you don't know if
From Malgs- Taka Rt. 7 toRt. 3!1 Exit St. At. 8!10
his cooler-could-be a bomt•.~"~ l --t.o..91Lto_Cora.MIU to. Bo1tic Road
-~-t -~

guy

E-Mail your outdoors news to
sports@mydailytribune.com

.OHIO fiSHING REPORT

.,

• Indian Lake - Saugeye

CllS.IIBlUSii
4·WHEELERS $10.00. PAYS 1ST PLACE

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

Way of life ending for NASCAR fans

MORGANTOWN, WVa.
If
,.you are a waterfowl hunter, you
,. probably already understand that
,. weather conditions in areas far from
' here directly affect the duck hunt,. ing in our region.
• . The biggest ~uck nesting areas are
, in the prairie country of the west, ,ern United States, and Canadian
.,, provinces including Alberta and
" Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.
~ Some call this the pothole region
' because the prairies are dotted with
~ tiny potholes that afford ducks
nearly ideal nesting habitat if the
.:. area gets normal or above-normal
, rainfall.
:-- Many can well remember the
••, unusually dry conditions of the
1980s and the corresponding low
duck numbers that were a result of
~ the. drought conditions. For the past
~ 1() years, the nesting conditions
; have been very good on average,

Friday, September n. 1001

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

MUD BOG

ClASS C
CLASS b

-~

Page 87

, dams. Largemouth bass will

! soon start using shallower
;. cover al"'d feed heavily on

• the young gizzard shad.

:

Madison Lake -

large·

' moulh baso fishing Is
~ already picking up In lhls
• Madison County lake as lho
~ walar cools down. Fish the
;. rlprap on lhe dam and
&lt; around the lslanct and other

t areas with submerged wood

to find active fish. Channol
t• catfish
are available In
decent numbers and can be

l

reservoir near the mouth of
the river.

Topwater lures have been
the choice ball tor large-

minnows in · 4 to 5 feet of
water. j;.lsh . the minnows

Tappan lake - Pallen! mouth bass, and anglers
anglers have been laking are calchlng sunfish using
panflsh on wax worms and tly rod tackle In weedy
minnows , flahed without areas. Soma sunfish are up
using a bobber. F)sh lng over lo 8 Inches In lenglh. There
atruclure near the shoreline Ia a 10 horae power limit.
or al the underpaaa has
lake Rupert and . Lalla
been the moalsuccesaful. Hope (VInton Cou.nty) .Atwood Lake - Anglers Bluogllls and channel catare laking nlghl
are reporting some success fish
for large saugaye by using crawlers on Lake Rupert ~
On lake Hope, 1argem04th
leaches.
base In the 1 to 2-pound
SOUTHEAST OHIO
Clouse Lake, St. Joseph's range are being caught on
Lake, Flagdale lake and nlghl crawlers and eplnner
Twin Churchss lake (Rush belts.
Creek Conservancy Olalrtct, Musklngum River- Allhe
Perry Counly) - Anglers Philo Lock and Dam,
have bean catching large· anglers are taking chailh~l
mouth bass al night ualng caWish and flalhead catftsh
lopwater balls like rubber of 12 to 20 Inches, uSing
frogs and mice. One angler shiners. One group was
caughl a 5 .5-pound largo· said lo have ·caughl 45
mouth at St. Joseph's and channel caWish and 12 flal·
anglers were calchlng fish head catfish. AI Oey~la,
In lht 3 lo 4·pound range 11 white bass of tO to 12 Inch·
Twin Churchea lake. All the es are coming on Jigs,' with

below a small bobber and
out e to 10 feet from I he
bank. Early -morning Ia lhe
best time for crappie fishing.
' Mad River (Clark County)
- Troul are biting on nlghl
crawlers,

email

spinner

balta or flies along the Mad
River from the Tremont City

Road bridge and going
north Into Champaign Coun·
ty.
.
Ohio River Ttlbutorlu

• FREE Fertili2er

Spreading
• FREE Buggy Rental

From Manchester to New

L NOW FOR DETAILS

Richmond - Crappies ate
being caught near weed

bods and struclure. Fish In
4 to B feet of water wllh min·
nows fished below floats or
slip bobbers. Jigs Upped

Chester landmar

with minnows are also suc-

cesslut. Fish are blllng
lhroughout the day.

• caught on cui bait, chicken
~ livers, and prepared balta.
OHIO RIVER
1Only elsctrlc motors are
Scioto
County · Anglers In
all""ed.
,
.
,
0
the Portsmouth area are
•
NORTHEAST OHIO
: Lakt -'MIIi'on - c'rapple above lakes have large soma small yellow pe,rch having good success with
channel caUish by using
• and bluegill fishing hn amounls of floating vegeta· also being caught.
IIOUTHW!ST
OHIO
chicken livers and stink
lion.
Early
morning
and
J been steady here lhrough·
Hueston Woods State balta.
) out the summer. Some evening are lhe best times

f

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saturday a am · 9 pm 1....1.1,1
_. Sunday 1 pm • 8 pm

Mon~ay-

�•

Page ~6 • 6unbap 11:imtf·6tntinrl

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

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

oors

NASCAR

Winston Cup drivers dabble in Busch
Tho 2001 NASCAA -

Cl4l

(\otYin;, . . . .
) rod
- Aug.pairi
-do
1111'
25- Stw!io 500, Briot:ll, Tenn.

(T~

" " - - 500,

~

S.C. (-.:1 Blnln)
Solll8-a-oiot,.,.. CMo.Ql,
Ri:h1oid. Va. (Ricky Auclll
Solll Zl- MBNACol ~Jr. «Xl,
O..., Del
Solll 30 One 400,
- O i y. Kan.
.
Od. 7- UAWG.l ClJolfy 500. C&lt;nc:onf. N.C.
Od. 14 - Old llon*liOn 500, Mar·

P•-li&lt;&gt;'

-.va.
21 -

Od.

EA Spcos 500, Taladogo.

Ala.

Od. 28 - -

500, - . . . . .

NIH. 4-l'q) Seaol Mi&gt;""""' «Xl,
Aocbl(tem. N.C.
Nw. 11 - Pernzoi 400, ..bt ! !' 1
Fla.
NIH. 18- NAPA 500, ...,..,..,. Ga.
NIH. Zl - Now HairC&gt;&amp;'1re :IX!,
1..ouOln
CriY6r S&amp;drvs
1. Jei!Gontln....... .... .. :!,788
2. Aiclty FkJdd. . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,548.
3. Oola.Jamlll •...• ' .... . .. 3,375.
4. TOIII' · ..••.•..•.• 3,356.
5. ~ """'· ....•..... 3,:J)2.
Ullt:.::,·. . . .... 3,287.
7. Oola
Jr.... ' ... 3,244.
8. KsW11-taN1&lt;* ... . .•.•.. . 3,230.
9. Auoly Waloce . . . . . . . . . 3,225
1o.Jell anon . . .. . . . .. . . . 2.979.
11 . .lotrY1II Beuoau . . . . . . . . 2.fH1.
12. Marllf.4ai11n . . . . . • . . . . . 2,948
13. 8il EllcliL .......... . . • 2,917.
14. Poi1&lt; . .....•....• 2,859.
15. Jrrmt Sponaor ..... . .. 2.838.
16.Moll- ... . .. . ... 2,629.
11. v.wt~ anon ........... 2.112.
16. Ellall Sadler ........... 2,629.
19. Babl:i¥ i lao I ilb I . . .. . . . . . 2,fiOB.
20.Kan.~ . ......•. . 2,!117.
21. .-ny Maylleid ........ 2,559.
22. J o n y - ...... . .. . 2,558.
Zl. AicltyCnMin ........... 2,410.
24. Dave lllanoy. . . . . . . . . . . 2,392.
25. Till!)' i.JIIicnB . . . . . . . . . . 2.358.
26. KLot Buoch . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,325.
21. -~ . :

...... 2.299.

26- -~·········

2,290.

29. Jam- ....... ... 2,214.
30. 9101Badrw ... ... .... . 2,120.
31 . ~AM&lt;Icld

. .. ...... 2,113.

32. lbdd Bcmo' .. ' ... .... 2.083.

33.Jao-. ........
34. """' ...... . .. .
35. Slacy car...., .. ... ...
36. Ran -..day ........ .
37. Jaoan ~- ..... . ....
36. 1111&lt;8- . . . . . . .. ..
39. K8W1 ~ ..... . . . ..

1,111!9.

uz
I.~.

t ,827.

l,llltl.
1,656.
1,437.
40.Il.oci&lt;lnot- . . . . . . . . 1,339.

BY KEmt PARSONS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Winston Cup driver Mark
Martin alw.l~ crea!M the Busch
Series as his own private playground, .winning multiple races
each year while running a parttime schedule in NASCAR's
top developmental series.
He gave that up last year,
deciding he wanted more time
for himself and his family, since
his Busch schedule consisted of
running most of the "companion" races- evenlli held in conjunction with the Winston Cup
Series.
Martin also wanted ro concentrate more on his Winston
Cup team as the schedule balloo·n ed to 36 point-paying
·evenlli in 2001.
He left the Busch Series with
45 career vicrories, easily the
best of all time.
.So far, this seascn has been a
trade-off for Martin. He's had
more time with his wife, Arlene,
and son, Matt, who's starting a
racing career of his own. Weekends at the races are not as hectic since he's only running Win.
ston Cup.
" It's been a real pleasure this
year;' Martin said. "We've had
more time for a lot of things we
didn't do in the past."
On the track, though, Martin
is facing his first winless season
since he joined Roush Racing
in 1988. He has just three top
fives, and he's 12th in poinlli
with I 0 races to go, putting his

example of what running both
series can do for you," said Todd
BOdine, who won the Busch
race at that track earlier this year,
a day before finishing fifth in the
Wmsron Cup event
"That weekend, we were able
to tune both cars fiom what we
learned fiom the other. We'd
practice the Busch car, and then
make changes on the Cup car
car."
based on that. Then we'd do the
· Since the Busch Series started same ·for the Busch car after
in 1982, its had ill&gt; share ofWin- Winston Cup practice," he said.
ston Cup drivers pulling double
"It was like having eight pravduty. The late Dale Earnhardt, tices."
Harry Gant and Darrell Waltrip
Spencer, Bodine's Winston
were among the drivers who ran Cup teammate, was not scheda good portion of the races in uled to run any Busch races this
the early years, and Jimmy year. He replaced PJ. Jones midSpencer, Joe Nemechek and Jeff way through the year and has
Burton,' Martin's Roush team- won three of the 13 races he's
inate, continue to do so.
run. Not so coincidentally, his
The reasons these Winston Winston C up result&gt;; in that
Cup drivers run a partial Busch period also
improved, and
schedule are varied, but most he's jumped to 15th in the
agree they gain valuable experi- standings.
"It's helped a lot," Spencer
ence from running the extra
said. "You can learn a lot of little
races.
"The reason we run the things about what makes the car
Busch program is because it give go faster, and also characteristics
us as drivers another opportuni- about the track and the tires.
ty to try things on race cars, and Being able to win races and run
it gives us an opportunity to up front also helps the driver's
drive and get more tt.ick experi- confidence, which carries over
ence:' said Burton, who has one to the Wmston Cup side."
Burton's Busch schedule ihis
Busch victory this year.
Rule changes this year have season has been more limited
made the two series more equal, than in the pasi, hampered mostfurther enhancing the appeal to ly by the lack of sponsorship.
running at least the companion And he, like Martin, has seen the
performance of his Winston
races.
"I look at Las Vegas as a perfect Cup team suffer in 2001, But
12-year streak oftop-10 finishes
in jeopardy.
Has not running the Busch
races hurt his Winston Cup performance?
"Our Cup .car .didn't run that
goOct_last year, when we were
still winning Busch races:· Martin said. "There's no relationship
between us not winning Cup
races and not running the Busch

Burton also doesn't see a relationship between the two.
"Our Busch set ups have
never worked or transferred over
ro our Winston Cup cars:' B}Jrron said. "I believe not running
the Busch car enough earlier in
the season has hurt my Busch
program but I'm not sure it has
hurt my Cup program."
The careers of Earnhardt and
Waltrip both seemed to suffer
when they quit running the
Busch Series. Earnhardt's last
year running at least a partial
schedule was 1994, the same
year he won his last Wiuston
Cup championship.
Waltrip's final Winston Cup
victory game in 1992, which
also is the last year he maintained
his Busch tea.m.

haw

"Anybody who sa~ running
the Busch races doesn't help is
full of baloney:' Bodine said.
"With the way the cars are this
year, being mo~ equal than
ever, there's a lot you can learn
running the companion races:•
· Kevin Harvie~ has rak~n
advantage of ~nrung both ser1es
this year. Harv~ck, thrust mto the
spotlight after Earnhardt's death
in the Daytona
le:~ds the
Busch Senes standings and also
has won two Wmston Cup
races.
He plans to stay in the Busch
Series part time in 2002.
" Running both series has
helped me so much this year
that we're going tQ keep it going
for at Ieast one more year,"u.• .....vick said.

S?O•

--

...·--···--··--~··--····--··-··--·.. .....

N '2' DEEP

/

"-·

'

BOSTIC ROAD, RODNEY, OHIO
Sunday, September 30, 2001
. GATES OPEN AT 10:00 A.M.
RACING STARTS AT 12:00 P.M.

Bv JENNA

will be a ce ntral issue for the
AP SPORTS WRITER
rest of the season.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. can
" It's )lnfortunate, but it's
understand the importance of
something we have 'to do,"
having a cooler at a race
Copeland said.
Lowe's Motor Speedway
track. On his way to watch a
· late model race with some
spokesman Jerry Gappens said
friends a few years back, he
tlie track ou tside Charlotte,
learned that alcohol wasn't
· N .C. , has no plan to ban
allowed.
,-==&gt;~bottles . Why~y~juS.L..co..o.le.rs.iotits..race. Oct. 7. But
improvised, keep that policy?"
he said that policy is subject
and lined the bottom of his
Part of the reason for the to change depending on
cooler with beer. He dumped ban could stem from the developments in the terrorsome ice on top of it, layered track's close proximity to ism crisis.
"We've already had fans
it with soda and smuggled it Dover Air Force Base.
through the gate.
The base, located about five · calling to ask about it, and at
"I know all too well why miles away, is serving as a this time we plan to continyou need a cooler at a race," morgue for victims of the ue as normal and allow coolhe said. "But I can understand Pentagon attack. Personnel ers into the track, although
why they shouldn't be there are on high alert in case we will continue our policy·
allowed in tracks right now." America retaliates for the ter- of checking everything that
The cooler has long been rorist attacks. ..
comes through the gate,"
one of the staples of a day at
But there's also the chance Gappens said.
· the track for most fans.
that the Dover race's action
Cathy and Tommy Watson,
But much has changed in could be a sign of permanent race fans from Moultrie, Ga.,
America since the terrorist changes at tracks.
would understand if Lowe's
attacks of la!t week, and
~ith an average of 150,000 didn't let them bring a cooi.JNASCAR fans will be with- fans at a track, the task of er into the track.
out their traveling ice boxes . thoroughly searching all those
The Watsons make it a trafor the first time when the coolers as they go through clition of packing a full lunch '
series resumes racing thi s the gates could be difficult.
with beverages to stow
weekend at Dover Downs
That's a topic track man- under their seat during the
International Speedway.
agers across the country dis~ race. Not only does it save
On heightened security in cussed in a conference call them money, but it prevents
the wake the attacks, Dover this week with NASCAR them from having to leave
officials have banned all cool~ officials. ,
their seats during the race
ers, backpacks and large bags
NASCAR spokesman Rob and miss on-track action
from the tra ck. Out of fair- Copeland said installing metal while waiting in a line at a
ness to the fans, the track is detectors at tracks was an concession stand.
lowering the price of conces- option discussed and that it
But they'd be willing to
s1ons.
was made clear that security sacrifice out of safery.
"While we regret that we
have to step up ou.r security ·
measures to this extent, it is,
at this time, completely necessa ry/' said Denis McGlynn,
Dover Downs' president and
CEO. "We don't know how
long the changes will have to
be_in place.
"But given the events ... we
think it iS of ·the highest
importance that this race
rakes place in a completely
safe manner."
. The ban has irritated race
fans across the country, many
of whom have vented their
frustration on NASCAR
message boards.
Joe Kellinger, a North Carolina race fan driving to
Dover this weekend, said he
can understand the anger. The
average race ticket to Sunday's MBNA Cal Ripken Jr.
400 costs $80, so saving a
buck or two by packing a
St. Rt. 248 • .Chester, Ohio
lunch has kept th e spor t
affordable for most fans.
"Lower concessions, what
does that mean?'' Kelly wonFRYER

dered. "Does that mean my
hamburger will cost $6
instead of $8? Will my
watered-down soda only cost
me $5?
'
"I don't get the ban. Tracks
normally search your things
anyway to make sure you
aren't bringing in any glass

HAmERS HOT ODES

Wood Pellets
··Only $150CJ.~Ton

Buy Early &amp; Save While
The Supply Lasts

Baum Lumber
(740) 985-3301

·.

"It will be strange not
having my little cooler at my .
feet, but it will be worth it if
it protects everyone," Cathy
Watson said. "Right now·
you don't know who you

•••

and the duck populations have
responded
accordingly.
Duck
hunters have enjoyed excellent
hunting.
.
The good news for duck hunters
is that the areas with poor conditions seem to be offset by other
areas that saw good rainfall and
good nesting success. The poor
conditions were mostly in the western regions, including Montana,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Ducks Unlimited described it as
the best of times and the worst of
times. In some survey areas, the
nesting success was the worst in
more than 10 years.
But farther east, in North Dakota,
South Dakota and southeastern
Manitoba, an unusually wet spring
resulted in excellent nesting condi:tions for ducks. Hopefully this will
more than offset the areas with poor
production. But the U.S. Fish and

Wildlife Service reports that the
total numbers are off about 14 percent this year compared to last year.
Ducks Unlimited reports that in
the eastern survey area, unusually
warm spring weather enabled
. breeding waterfowl to begin nesting
early in Quebec, southern Ontario,
and New York, where wetland habitat conditions ranged from fair to
good. Cooler and wetter weather in
Maine and the Maritime Provinces
delayed waterfowl breeding efforts,
but created good to excellent wetland conditions . Total breeding
duck numbers were similar. to last
year. However, all population numbers, including mallards, blac k
ducks, wigeon, green-winged teal,
and scaup were either stable or
increased. This is where a lot of our
ducks will come from .
The USFWS is reporting that
even though waterfowl numbers

will be down in some areas, hunters
can look forward to another excellent season for ducks and geese this
fall. Hunters will also enjoy lengthy
hunting seasons and generous ba g
limits for most species.
Warerfowl hunting regulations are
formulated under the Adaptiw
Harvest Management system, in
which regula!ions are chosen from a
standardized set of harvest packages
ranging from liberal to restrictive.
The ·proposal uses data incorporating mallard breeding population
estimates and data from the M ay
Waterfowl Breeding Population
Survey. The USFWS says that with a
mid-continent mallard population
of 10.5 million birds and an eastern
mallard population of roughly 1
millio'! birds, the AHM model prescribed liberal hunting packages for
all flyways.
The USFWS is predicting anoth-

er excellent season, similar to last
season. The USFWS reports that in
the 2000-01 season, hunters bagged
15.3 million du cks , a 4 percent
dec rease from the previous season .
This included a mallard harvest of
5. 7 million birds, up 3 percent from
the year before.
The five most commonly taken
species .were mallards, gadwalls,
green-winged teal , wood ducks and
blue- winged teal.
.
Overall, water fowlers spent an
average of eight days afield , and
bagged nine ducks .and two geese
ea~ h . During th e early part of the
season, most of the ducks will be
local birds that have nested in the
area. But as the cold weather moves
in, the · northern birds will pass
through as they make their way
down the Atlantic Flyway. It appears
that the 2001-02 season will be
another good one.

L

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- largemoulh bass are being for largemouth tishing. No Park (Preble County) : The weekly fishing report caught and anglers fishing boals are allowed.
Medium-sized crappies are
, provided by lhe Division of at night are picking up wall·
AEP Rscraalion Area baing caughl around the
! Wildlife of the Ohio Depart- eye at the south end of the lakes (Noble County) - boat ramps by using small
; ,nent of Natural Resources.
;
CENTRAL OHIO

! fishing reelly plcka up lhls

;: flme of year. Troll Rai-l·

CLASSES A·D MUST BE DOT API'IIOIIED llRES
Q.ASS A
STOCK·I4' TillES $20.00
Q.ASS I
35'-16' TIRES $20.00

'Traps and shallow minnow·
~ lmllatlng crank balta along

31'- TIRES $10.00
42'-44' TIRES $10,00

' the drodge breakllnes and

: riprap on the braakwalls and

CLASS A, 8, C, D PAYS 1ST I 2ND

'NO SPEED PIT VEHICLES ALOUD' NO BLOWERS, NOS, NO .
ALCOHOL EN6INES ALOUDIIII NO PADDLE TIRES.
IN EACH CLASS THERE WILL BE A $10.00 FEE
FOR EACH ADDITIONAL RUN
MUST HAVE HELMUT 4 SEATBEL
MUST BE 18 YRS. OR OLDER

SPECTATOR FEE $!5.00 "10 &amp; UNDER FREE"
·"CONCESSIONS .ON 6ROUNDS"
"NO ALCOHOLIC BEVERA~S"
"BRIN6 LAWN CHAIR"
QUESTIONS CALL (740) 24!5-9!5!5!5
WATCH FOR SI6NSII
THE TRACK OWNER RESERVES THE RI&amp;HT TO
STOP ANY VEHICLE FROM PARTICIPATIN&amp;I

From Jackson-Rio Granda Exit taka 588 to
Cora Mill Road to Bostic Ad.
From Pt. Plaasant - Taka U.S. 3!1 to St. At. 8!10
can trust, you don't know
...• . .
Exit to !188 to ,Col'!l Mill to Bottle Rood who the
sitting riext to
From 6alllpoli1 - Tok• !188 to Cora Mill to Bottle Road
you is and you don't know if
From Malgs- Taka Rt. 7 toRt. 3!1 Exit St. At. 8!10
his cooler-could-be a bomt•.~"~ l --t.o..91Lto_Cora.MIU to. Bo1tic Road
-~-t -~

guy

E-Mail your outdoors news to
sports@mydailytribune.com

.OHIO fiSHING REPORT

.,

• Indian Lake - Saugeye

CllS.IIBlUSii
4·WHEELERS $10.00. PAYS 1ST PLACE

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

Way of life ending for NASCAR fans

MORGANTOWN, WVa.
If
,.you are a waterfowl hunter, you
,. probably already understand that
,. weather conditions in areas far from
' here directly affect the duck hunt,. ing in our region.
• . The biggest ~uck nesting areas are
, in the prairie country of the west, ,ern United States, and Canadian
.,, provinces including Alberta and
" Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.
~ Some call this the pothole region
' because the prairies are dotted with
~ tiny potholes that afford ducks
nearly ideal nesting habitat if the
.:. area gets normal or above-normal
, rainfall.
:-- Many can well remember the
••, unusually dry conditions of the
1980s and the corresponding low
duck numbers that were a result of
~ the. drought conditions. For the past
~ 1() years, the nesting conditions
; have been very good on average,

Friday, September n. 1001

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

MUD BOG

ClASS C
CLASS b

-~

Page 87

, dams. Largemouth bass will

! soon start using shallower
;. cover al"'d feed heavily on

• the young gizzard shad.

:

Madison Lake -

large·

' moulh baso fishing Is
~ already picking up In lhls
• Madison County lake as lho
~ walar cools down. Fish the
;. rlprap on lhe dam and
&lt; around the lslanct and other

t areas with submerged wood

to find active fish. Channol
t• catfish
are available In
decent numbers and can be

l

reservoir near the mouth of
the river.

Topwater lures have been
the choice ball tor large-

minnows in · 4 to 5 feet of
water. j;.lsh . the minnows

Tappan lake - Pallen! mouth bass, and anglers
anglers have been laking are calchlng sunfish using
panflsh on wax worms and tly rod tackle In weedy
minnows , flahed without areas. Soma sunfish are up
using a bobber. F)sh lng over lo 8 Inches In lenglh. There
atruclure near the shoreline Ia a 10 horae power limit.
or al the underpaaa has
lake Rupert and . Lalla
been the moalsuccesaful. Hope (VInton Cou.nty) .Atwood Lake - Anglers Bluogllls and channel catare laking nlghl
are reporting some success fish
for large saugaye by using crawlers on Lake Rupert ~
On lake Hope, 1argem04th
leaches.
base In the 1 to 2-pound
SOUTHEAST OHIO
Clouse Lake, St. Joseph's range are being caught on
Lake, Flagdale lake and nlghl crawlers and eplnner
Twin Churchss lake (Rush belts.
Creek Conservancy Olalrtct, Musklngum River- Allhe
Perry Counly) - Anglers Philo Lock and Dam,
have bean catching large· anglers are taking chailh~l
mouth bass al night ualng caWish and flalhead catftsh
lopwater balls like rubber of 12 to 20 Inches, uSing
frogs and mice. One angler shiners. One group was
caughl a 5 .5-pound largo· said lo have ·caughl 45
mouth at St. Joseph's and channel caWish and 12 flal·
anglers were calchlng fish head catfish. AI Oey~la,
In lht 3 lo 4·pound range 11 white bass of tO to 12 Inch·
Twin Churchea lake. All the es are coming on Jigs,' with

below a small bobber and
out e to 10 feet from I he
bank. Early -morning Ia lhe
best time for crappie fishing.
' Mad River (Clark County)
- Troul are biting on nlghl
crawlers,

email

spinner

balta or flies along the Mad
River from the Tremont City

Road bridge and going
north Into Champaign Coun·
ty.
.
Ohio River Ttlbutorlu

• FREE Fertili2er

Spreading
• FREE Buggy Rental

From Manchester to New

L NOW FOR DETAILS

Richmond - Crappies ate
being caught near weed

bods and struclure. Fish In
4 to B feet of water wllh min·
nows fished below floats or
slip bobbers. Jigs Upped

Chester landmar

with minnows are also suc-

cesslut. Fish are blllng
lhroughout the day.

• caught on cui bait, chicken
~ livers, and prepared balta.
OHIO RIVER
1Only elsctrlc motors are
Scioto
County · Anglers In
all""ed.
,
.
,
0
the Portsmouth area are
•
NORTHEAST OHIO
: Lakt -'MIIi'on - c'rapple above lakes have large soma small yellow pe,rch having good success with
channel caUish by using
• and bluegill fishing hn amounls of floating vegeta· also being caught.
IIOUTHW!ST
OHIO
chicken livers and stink
lion.
Early
morning
and
J been steady here lhrough·
Hueston Woods State balta.
) out the summer. Some evening are lhe best times

f

State Routel• Chester, Ohio
ll40J 985·3100

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Ferguson
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�••
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•

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Inside:
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p, ge Cl

••

Sunday,September2J,2001

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Dear
Abby .
•

I

ADVICE

:Relationship
appears to
have come
up short

and

•••

DEAR ABBY: I am a
38-year-old divorced professional and mother of two.
I have been dating "Fred"
for seven years.
This year, for the first .
time, we did not spend our
vacation together. As a matter of fact, he didn't even
bother to call and tell me
the plans had changed. I was
left standing with packed
bags and nowhere to go for
12 days of vacation. I don't
normally travel by myself,
so I was at a loss as to what
to do. I was also embar- ·
rassed to have been stood
TESTING - Christ Acaden\y students
up.
Kristina Sawtell and Emalea Neal set up a
I called Fred's home sevman-made electrical testing meter to detereral times and left· messages .
mine where artifacts can be found underneath the ground. (Michele Carter photos)
on his answering machine.
'
(We liire 500 P'liles apart, so
. I couldn't just drop by and
. BY MICHELE CARTER
see what was up.) Abby, he
REGISTER NEWS EDITOR
hasn't returned any of my
OINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Bricks,
. calls. At this point, I haven't
soot, glass, ciles and pottery are just a
a clue as to whether he's
few
of the things Pam Casto's seventhdead or alive.
and eighth-gr~de science class at
. Fred has never stood me
up for a vacation, but he has
Christ Academy are finding.
been a. no-show for a cou- 'I'he.e- items-are being detecte.d as the class takes a
pl~· of dates over the years.
hands-on
to archaeology. ·
~-11'---- ___N_ow__ I'm~ trying to~pick
myself up and go on. I love
the past two summers and
with the Indian ,
him no matter what; howMounds near Chillocothe, Ohio, .saw archaeology as a
ever, I'm wondering if I
way..for the students to really "dig in" to learning·.
have been dumped. Have I?
Digging on the si te of an 1800s home behind Casto's ,
~R.OKENHEARTED
residence, the students have found some colonial perilN PENNSYLVANIA
od 1800s artifacts. She and her husband Barry reside in
; DEAR
BROKENPle•se see Dlntnc. Cl
HEARTED: It . would
·$eem so. Fred appears 'to be
a man of few words, but
from where I'm sitting, his
· actions have told you "So
long, farewell, aufWieder!eben, goodbye" loud and
clear.
Consider yourself lucky.
Better to know now that. he
got the seven-year itch than
to waste any more time on
!lim or discover it after you
were married . .
: DEAR ABBY: I am
worried about my 10-yearpld daughter. She seems to
. bave a · problem making
friends. She's very active in
Jporcs and doesn't seem to
bave a 'problem getting
~long with the oiher kids
y;hen she's with them in a
group: However, when it
fOmes to a one-on-one
DIGGING - Christ Academy students Cody Birchfield
friendship - like someone
and Erin Darst dig around an old pipe found durl'ng
!Pending the night or an
their archaeology project.
CHECKING FIND- AShley Russel ~a,nd teacher Pam Casto look at an Item found as Rus9uting at the movies ~ she
sell was digging In her archaeologyt it.
bas a 9ifficult time getting
~nyone to ·agree to go. I am
y;orried that she has no real
WORRIED
friends . ~OM IN TENNESSEE
:. DEAR
WORRIED
. tdOM: It's time' to expand
your ., daughter's horizons.
!ielp ,her to get involved
DAVIS, W.Va. (AP) -The picture
Some say the refuge is big ~nough. access ... people are going to quit
"{{they eliminate biking,
y;ith other special-interest
win.dow
in
Jeff
Shryer's
office
lives
up
Already, ii has cost Tucker County coming," says Roger Lilly, who owns
~ctivities - . dance, skating, ·
they
limit
the
access
to
to its name: In the foreground, a deer '
the 24 Hours of Canaan, a bike race a mountain bike shop in Davis.
$Couting, etc .. It will give
,
people
during
deer
season,
grazes in tall gra~s. Birds soar overthat was staged here for nine years.
"People don't just go out walking .
her an opporfunity to make
. head. A mountain range lies in .the
When
a
12-mile
section
of
the
course
they effectively eliminate
through Canaan Valley. There's no betfriends outsi4e her usual
distance. ·
wa.•
sold
to
the
federal
government,
·;~ccess ... people are going
ter way to see the valley than bicycle."
Circle: If she still has diffithe race moved to Pocahontas CounWhere
others
see
a
pretty
landShryer concedes some residents .
culty making friends, have a
· to quit coming. "
ty and became the 24 Hours of have concerns.
scape, Shryer sees the Canaan Valley
talk with her teacher and
Sn~wshoe. ·
National Wildlife Refuge, home to
"'
"But the community is gradually
ask if there is some behavior
' Roger Lilly
' In June, the .race that enthusia.'ts call
290 species of animals, reptiles,
that's creating a problem. If
accepting the refuge," he says. "We
the greatest mountain biking event
amphibians and fish, including the There's never been ~ full inventory."
that doesn't help, some sesoffer recreational opportunities that
threatened C heat Mountain salamanSmce the nation's SOOth refuge east of the Mississippi drew more than
$ions with a child psycholoder and the endangered West Virginia opened in August 1994, it has grown 500 racers and nearly I 4,000 tourists complement other offerings in Tucker
gist could shed some light
County."
·
northern flying squirreL
from. 86 acres to nearly 3,300. And to Snowshoe Mountain resort.
\)n what's causing the probHunting, fishing, birdwatching,
Last year, abot)t 6,000 people visited
"This valley is unusual," says Shryer, with another $7.8 million in federal
lem.
nature photography and environmenwho manages the refuge for the U.S. funding that Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D- the refuge.
"If they eliminate biking, if they . tal education are allowed. Biking,
, Dear Abby is written by
Fish and Wildlife Service. " It has at W.Va., secured in June, the purchas.e of
least 40 plant communities, with 580 more than 12,000 acres is on the limit the access to people during deer horseback 'riding and other historical
pauli~~ Phillips and daughter
season, if they effectively eliminate uses are not.
species. And that's what we know of. horizon.
jeanne Phillips. .

.Students)receive hands-on
approach to archaeology

Canaan Valley refuge continues expanding
.· if
if

•I

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'

,,

' .•

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.,'

�••
. . . ~ • aanoap tltmrtl-:li!Prnllntl

•

.f

Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2

p, ge Cl

••

Sunday,September2J,2001

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2001 ZX2, AIR, STEREO, CHROME ........................................................ $10,97700 1998 FORD EXPLORER, XLT, 4x4, AUTO, FULL POWER .................... $15,9noo
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Dear
Abby .
•

I

ADVICE

:Relationship
appears to
have come
up short

and

•••

DEAR ABBY: I am a
38-year-old divorced professional and mother of two.
I have been dating "Fred"
for seven years.
This year, for the first .
time, we did not spend our
vacation together. As a matter of fact, he didn't even
bother to call and tell me
the plans had changed. I was
left standing with packed
bags and nowhere to go for
12 days of vacation. I don't
normally travel by myself,
so I was at a loss as to what
to do. I was also embar- ·
rassed to have been stood
TESTING - Christ Acaden\y students
up.
Kristina Sawtell and Emalea Neal set up a
I called Fred's home sevman-made electrical testing meter to detereral times and left· messages .
mine where artifacts can be found underneath the ground. (Michele Carter photos)
on his answering machine.
'
(We liire 500 P'liles apart, so
. I couldn't just drop by and
. BY MICHELE CARTER
see what was up.) Abby, he
REGISTER NEWS EDITOR
hasn't returned any of my
OINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Bricks,
. calls. At this point, I haven't
soot, glass, ciles and pottery are just a
a clue as to whether he's
few
of the things Pam Casto's seventhdead or alive.
and eighth-gr~de science class at
. Fred has never stood me
up for a vacation, but he has
Christ Academy are finding.
been a. no-show for a cou- 'I'he.e- items-are being detecte.d as the class takes a
pl~· of dates over the years.
hands-on
to archaeology. ·
~-11'---- ___N_ow__ I'm~ trying to~pick
myself up and go on. I love
the past two summers and
with the Indian ,
him no matter what; howMounds near Chillocothe, Ohio, .saw archaeology as a
ever, I'm wondering if I
way..for the students to really "dig in" to learning·.
have been dumped. Have I?
Digging on the si te of an 1800s home behind Casto's ,
~R.OKENHEARTED
residence, the students have found some colonial perilN PENNSYLVANIA
od 1800s artifacts. She and her husband Barry reside in
; DEAR
BROKENPle•se see Dlntnc. Cl
HEARTED: It . would
·$eem so. Fred appears 'to be
a man of few words, but
from where I'm sitting, his
· actions have told you "So
long, farewell, aufWieder!eben, goodbye" loud and
clear.
Consider yourself lucky.
Better to know now that. he
got the seven-year itch than
to waste any more time on
!lim or discover it after you
were married . .
: DEAR ABBY: I am
worried about my 10-yearpld daughter. She seems to
. bave a · problem making
friends. She's very active in
Jporcs and doesn't seem to
bave a 'problem getting
~long with the oiher kids
y;hen she's with them in a
group: However, when it
fOmes to a one-on-one
DIGGING - Christ Academy students Cody Birchfield
friendship - like someone
and Erin Darst dig around an old pipe found durl'ng
!Pending the night or an
their archaeology project.
CHECKING FIND- AShley Russel ~a,nd teacher Pam Casto look at an Item found as Rus9uting at the movies ~ she
sell was digging In her archaeologyt it.
bas a 9ifficult time getting
~nyone to ·agree to go. I am
y;orried that she has no real
WORRIED
friends . ~OM IN TENNESSEE
:. DEAR
WORRIED
. tdOM: It's time' to expand
your ., daughter's horizons.
!ielp ,her to get involved
DAVIS, W.Va. (AP) -The picture
Some say the refuge is big ~nough. access ... people are going to quit
"{{they eliminate biking,
y;ith other special-interest
win.dow
in
Jeff
Shryer's
office
lives
up
Already, ii has cost Tucker County coming," says Roger Lilly, who owns
~ctivities - . dance, skating, ·
they
limit
the
access
to
to its name: In the foreground, a deer '
the 24 Hours of Canaan, a bike race a mountain bike shop in Davis.
$Couting, etc .. It will give
,
people
during
deer
season,
grazes in tall gra~s. Birds soar overthat was staged here for nine years.
"People don't just go out walking .
her an opporfunity to make
. head. A mountain range lies in .the
When
a
12-mile
section
of
the
course
they effectively eliminate
through Canaan Valley. There's no betfriends outsi4e her usual
distance. ·
wa.•
sold
to
the
federal
government,
·;~ccess ... people are going
ter way to see the valley than bicycle."
Circle: If she still has diffithe race moved to Pocahontas CounWhere
others
see
a
pretty
landShryer concedes some residents .
culty making friends, have a
· to quit coming. "
ty and became the 24 Hours of have concerns.
scape, Shryer sees the Canaan Valley
talk with her teacher and
Sn~wshoe. ·
National Wildlife Refuge, home to
"'
"But the community is gradually
ask if there is some behavior
' Roger Lilly
' In June, the .race that enthusia.'ts call
290 species of animals, reptiles,
that's creating a problem. If
accepting the refuge," he says. "We
the greatest mountain biking event
amphibians and fish, including the There's never been ~ full inventory."
that doesn't help, some sesoffer recreational opportunities that
threatened C heat Mountain salamanSmce the nation's SOOth refuge east of the Mississippi drew more than
$ions with a child psycholoder and the endangered West Virginia opened in August 1994, it has grown 500 racers and nearly I 4,000 tourists complement other offerings in Tucker
gist could shed some light
County."
·
northern flying squirreL
from. 86 acres to nearly 3,300. And to Snowshoe Mountain resort.
\)n what's causing the probHunting, fishing, birdwatching,
Last year, abot)t 6,000 people visited
"This valley is unusual," says Shryer, with another $7.8 million in federal
lem.
nature photography and environmenwho manages the refuge for the U.S. funding that Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D- the refuge.
"If they eliminate biking, if they . tal education are allowed. Biking,
, Dear Abby is written by
Fish and Wildlife Service. " It has at W.Va., secured in June, the purchas.e of
least 40 plant communities, with 580 more than 12,000 acres is on the limit the access to people during deer horseback 'riding and other historical
pauli~~ Phillips and daughter
season, if they effectively eliminate uses are not.
species. And that's what we know of. horizon.
jeanne Phillips. .

.Students)receive hands-on
approach to archaeology

Canaan Valley refuge continues expanding
.· if
if

•I

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�Page Cl

Sunday, September 23, 2001

Jhnh-v ~imn-JJmtbtel • Page C3

Gallipolis, Ohio

13.1001

Uzlle wedding

Mr. and Mra. Gary Lee Cooper

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Edward Vaughl!n Jr.

Cooper wedding

Vaughan wedding

Stanley anniversary

RACINE - Jessica Renee Smith, daughter of Barry and
MIDDLEPORT - Brooke Ashley Williams, daughter of
Melinda Smith, was united in marriage to Gary Lee Cooper, Richard Williams and Barbara Williams, was \Jnited in marriage
son of Gary and Marilyn Cooper on Saturday, Sept. 1, at Unit- to Donald Edward Vaughan Jr.. son of Donald and PaJllela
ed Methodist Church in Racine.
Vaughan, on June 23 at Middleport Church of Christ.
For the wedding performed by the Rev. Mark Matson, the
Albert Hartson performed the ceremony, and there was a
church was decorated in a pale blue and yellow color scheme. special prayer for the couple by the bride's grandfather, the
.J Escorted to the altar by her father, the bride was attired in a Rev. Amos Tillis.
Music for the ceremony was provided by Strings and Combib front gown accented with pearls and sequins.The train featured a pleat inside\vith more pearl and sequin trim. Her veil pany, a violin and cello duo, from Vienna. A solo was presented
fell from a tiara .arid she wore fingerless gloves also accented by Amy Perrin during the lighting of the unity candle.
with pearls and sequins.
·
. The wedding party included Brittany Williams, sister of the
Maid of honor was Sarah Hill and bridesmaids were Jody bride, as maid of honor; bridesmaids, Beth Williams, also a sisHupp and Chelsea Smith. They wore long, pale blue gowns ter of the bride; Ashlee Vaughan and Cassandra Vaughan, both
accessori.Zed with shoulder starves and carried bouquets of sisters of the groom;Tiffany Halfhill, Marissa Whaley, and Elizdaisies.
abeth Well, cousin of the groom.
.
Sophie Guinther was the flower girl and dropped daisy petals
Julie Tillis, cousin of the bride, was a junior bridesmaid, and
· o f th e groom.
down the aisle. She wore a pale blue floral print. Sandy Smith the fl ower girl was KarIi Woo Iington, a cousm
Donald Vaughan, father of . the groom, was best man.
. and Christie Smith registered the guests, and music for the
'.r
,.·
wedding was provided by pianist Kelly Eichinger and soloist Groomsmen were Michael WilfongJr.,Jeremy Hartson, James
'
Sharon Fulton.
White, Jason Moore, Joe VanDorn and Richard Well, cousin of
·~,. ··.
The groom wore a black tuxedo with a white vest and tie, the groom.
and had a single daisy .boutonniere. His uncle, Jerry Cooper,
Cody Williams, brother of the bride, was the junior groomswas
best
man,
and
groomsmen
were
Jeremy
Smith
and
Justin
man,
and ringbearer was Benjamin Tillis, cousin of the bride.
"
.,
Smith, Ringbearers were Gage Smith and Tanner Roush. The· Ushers were Jacob Well, the groom's cousin, and Zachariah
groom's attendants wore black tuxedoes with black vests and Meadows. ·
ties and had daisy boutonnieres .
A reception following the ceremony was held in Middleport
A reception was held following the wedding. The bride's Church of Christ's Family Life Center.
table featured a nine-tiered cake.
The newlyweds honeynrooned in the Pocono Mountains of
The bride is employed at Jackson General Hospital as a res- Pennsylvania and currently reside in Middleport.
piratory therapist. Her husband is employed through the Boilermakers Local 66 7.
The couple reside in Portland.

. ..

CADMUS - George and Gloria Stanley of Cidmus will
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 8.
They were married Oct. 8, 1951. They are the parents of two
daughters and five sons. They have six grandsons ~nd two
granddaughters.
Their children are requesting that anyone who wants to
honor the anniverSary couple with cards, send them to Randy
Stanley, 2161 Flagsprings Road, Patriot, Ohio 45658. Cards
must be in by Oct. 3. For anyone wanting to send a gift, there
will be golden money .tree for the couple. ·

I. '

. ' ... REQ'N.ION' s·
~

i

L.;.._ _...,._ ___.;;
........___.". .:.,...;::.._ _"------~-....:...

With the family reunion season upon us, many readers are
submitting articles of family activities for publication.
To ensure prompt
Co.
b publication,
I
d Ohio
d d Valley
bl Publishing
df
reguests articles e neat y tvl'e an ou e-space or easy
editing. Reunion items should not exceed 300 words and
must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
In addition, photographs smaller than 8-by-10 are weicome, and we request all photographs contain the identificalion of the subjects either on the back of the photograph or
neatly typed on a separate sheet of paper. .
No reunion matenal will be accepted after 30 days have
passed since the actual observance. Please include a contact
name and phone number on all submitted material.
··
No exceptions will be made.
All mt~terial submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Articles will be published as soon as possible.

'Shock' an 'eggs~cellent'
medical thriller

current news,
Times-Sentinel
not accept weddings after
90 days from the date of the
event
Weddings submitted after
the 90-cfay deadline · will
appear during the week In 111e
BY WAKA TIUNODA
Dallv Sentinel, Point Pleasant
FOR AP WEEK\.Y FEIITURES
Re~ster and the Gallipolis
"Shock" (Putnam, 370
Da1 Tribune.
1
pages, $24 .95) by Robin
AI dub meetings and other ·
Cook.
news articles in the society
section must be submitted
60 days of occurrence.
within
"Wanted: Eggs from Ivy- the terror it exudes is just as
All birthdays must be sub·
~t!,~~O." coeds. Will pay intense as - or even more mitted within 60 days of the
An advertisement to this than - some action-packed ocrurrence.
thrillers. As Cook allows the
All material submitted is
effect catches the attention of
subject
to editing.
-'two Harvard graduate stu- reader to get to know these
two women, their fears and
dents, the protagonists of anxieties become the reader's
. Robin Cook's new medical
.... 1:1&amp;1111111111thriller, "Shock."
as well.
Well Child Clinic
They wonder if the ad is a
The Wingate clinic is a forDoH your child need
·d h d
mer tuberculosis sanitariumtal . . · fill d · h
1 w.ll child checkup?
prank , but d ect e t e a ver.
h w·
I
il'
. men mstttutton
e wit
Call 4411-1538 or 441·29114 end
tcts~r•. t e
tbngate. n6ert d1ty · old-time medical paraphernam1ke 1n 1ppolntm1nt
mlc, must e senous an IS li Th
.
.
.
lor our next clinic. .
a. ere 1S evert a crematon100 k'mg fior eggs fro m. th ~ b est um
on the premises. All this
batch of young women •Or 1ts
.
h
1 d 1· ·
g1ves t e nove a . e ICJous
. ••
lth
1
wea y c 1en~.
•
G h'
h
.
ot 1c touc .
E . d b
h ·
nnce
Y t e generous
"Shock" ·is one of Cook's
pay, Joanna and Deborah,
Ph.D. candidates and room- most memorable medical .
4H Jecbon Pike, Suite 0
mates, go to the clinic ·and thrillers.
donate.
With the money they earn, .
they spend a year and a half in
Italy, writing their theses. ·
!When they return to the
States, Joanna is seized by a
compulsion to find out what .
has happened to her eggs and ·
if any children resulted from
them.
When the clinic refuses to
'FarnOlJS Howard Miller Pulaski-Howard Miller
release the information, JoanGRANDFATHER ClOCKS
CURIO CABINETS
na.and Deborah get jobs there
under false identities, hoping
to break into the clinic's highSofas &amp;. Olalrs
. ly secure computer system.
REDUCED
Little do they know . that it is
Sof..s ·Chairs - Recliners
30%-60%
the beginning of their jour~
ney into fear. ·
The women are opposite in .
personality: Johanna is conserCocktail, Sofa &amp;. End
ALL BEDROOM
. vative and straight-laced,
FURNITURE
TABLES
while Deborah is a free spirit
with plenty of chutzpah. They
make an amusing team as they
argue, quarrel, and banter
their way to the horrible
truth hidden behind the clinic's heavy veil of secrecy.
No bullets fly and no
·cadavers roll in this novel, but

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As we age we·often
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Nursing homes offer intensive care for very ill people, but
more often people just need help from time to time with
medications, meals or bathing.
·
Resi.d ents here can live independently in homelike surroundings and still receive nursing support and other
services when they're needed. Medication supervision
and administration, home cooked meals, transportation,
outings, housekeeping, activities -the list of amenities
and services isn't endless, but it's very· long.
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And one of the best things about WYNGATE OF GALLIPOLIS is
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"Shock" is one
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•••

GALLIPOLIS - Lisa Kay Tarvin and Jeffrey R alph Valle
were married July 7, 2001 in an ourdoor garden wedding at the
French Art Colony.
.
The bride is the da ughter of Gilbert and Sandra Mill iron of
Gallipolis, and th e granddaughter of the late Lewis and Essie
Lee, and Dorothy and the late Gilbert Milli ron, of Gall ipo lis.
The groom is the son of Joseph and the late Bette Valle of
Plymouth, Mich., and the grandson of the late Ralph and
Manila Funkhouser, and the late Florian and Hope Valle of
•
Youngstown. 1
Dr. Robert Ingram of Grace United Methodist Church performed the ceremony, with music provided by a string ensemble of Cathy Grant, and Scott and .Barbara Michael.
Lori Milliron, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, wearing
an A-line, lilac Ni cole Miller gown. Best man was Joseph Valle,
brother of the groom, wearing a classic black tuxedo.
Ushers were Mike Milliron, uncle of the bride, and Robert
Valle, brother of the groom. Laura Valle, niece of the groom,
registered guests and Maggie Valle, niece of the groom, handed
out the uniquely designed fan programs.
The bride wore a floor-length white, satin and tulle princess
cut Alfred Angelo gown with a bateau neckline and a chapel '
train.
Her father escorted her down the petal-strewn aisle to Pach•
Mr. and Mra. Jamal Michal Oura
Mr. and Mra. Jeffrey Ralph VaU.a
•
abel's Canon in D. The bride carried a bouquet of bluebird
•
roses and stephanotis. The groom wore a classic black tuxedo tary education from Bowling Green, State University, and a
with a matching boutonniere of bluebird roses and stephanotis . . master's degree in educational technology from NationalLouis University in Evanston, 111. She is a technology specialist
Floral arrangements were by Melvin Biars of Floral Fashions.
A dinner and dance reception immediately followed the cer- lllr Aon in Chicago, Ill.
GALLIPOLIS - Jacqueline Renee Merry and James
emony
at the French Art Colony. Wellington's of Poca, WVa.,
The ~room received a bachelor of science degree from the
Michael Ours. were united in marriage on June 16, 2001, at
catered the formal dinner, and the four-tiered white wedding University of Michigan. He is a command pilot in the U.S. Air
·3:30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church, Gallipolis.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Merry of cake, adorned with lilac ribbon and fresh bluebird roses, was Force, and a pilot for American Airlines.
.
After a honeymoon cwising the Mediterranean Sea, the cooBidwell, ·and the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. William made by Susan Brandeberry.
The bride received a bachelor of scie~ce degree in elemen- pie will return to their home in Winnetka, Ill.
DeVault of Gallipolis, and Betty Merry and the late James R.
Merry of Bidwell.
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ours of Gal~ipolis and the grandson of Mrs. Mary Ours, the late Marvin
(Biggin) Ours, and the late Mr. and ·Mrs. Steven and Theresa
Geremesz of Gallipolis.
The bride, who was escorted by her father, was wearing a ·
white satin formal gown accented with pearls and sequins on
BY 'THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
garine over medium-high
the bodice. A cathedral-length train was fashioned with lace
The sprightly combination · heat. Cook and stir leeks, car: and roses. The veil featured a tiara.
oflemon and dill is a great sea- rots and pea pods in hot marShe carried a hand-held bouquet, with ashmir gold roses and soning for sweet pink shrimp. garine for 2 to 3 minutes or
Both For
' white daisies. Also in the bouquet were tree ferns and galas With these three ingredients until vege~ables are crisp-tenleaves, with a streaming yellow chiffon ribbon.
and rice it could take you all of der.
Dissolve bouillon granules in
Julie and Jodi Merry, sisters of the bride, served as maids of '25 minutes to produce a main
(, cup .water. Stir shrimp, rice,
:.honor. Kelly Hager, Erika Adkins, Stacie Lambert and Crystal dish for four diners.
Queen, all. of Gallipolis, and Amy Schilling served as bridesOne of the shortcuts avail- lemon peel and dissolved granable, explains the editor of Bet- ules into skillet. Cook about 5
.mal'ds .
The attendants wore yellow satin gowns accented with pearls ter Homes and Gardens' "One minutes or until heated
·and lace on the bodice and carried a bouquet of yellow roses Dish Dinners" (Meredith, rhrough, ·stirring occasionally.
and white daisies, hand-wrapped and tied with a gold chiffon · 2000, $24.95), which features Stir in diU. To serve, divide rice
'·ribbon.
the recipe, is the fully cooked, mixture among four bowls. If
Buy II
. '· Elizabeth Pyer, cousin of the bride, and Emily Belville, cousin peeled shrimp found in more desired, garnish with fresh dill
QUEEn Size
sprigs.
of the groom, served as flower girls. They wore white gowns and more supermarkets.
filr ft fuU
Makes 4 servings.
Dilled Shrimp WHh Rice
and hair pieces with white daisies and yellow and white ribbon
Size Price!
Nutrition informatior per
'streaming down the ·back.
(Prnparation and cooking time 25
minutes)
serving: 268 cal., 4 g total fat (I
Best man was Brian Ours, brot her o f t he groom.
1 lablespoon IJ18lllllrlne or butter
g saturated fat), 166 mg chol.,
• The groomsmen were Travis Ratliff, Brian Unroe,Joel Jagers,
\cup thinly alfced leeks
478 mg sodium, ,35 g carbo., 5
J'iffi~s Merry and Ben . Baird, all of Gallipoli,s, ·and Jeremy
1~ cupa ahtadded Clllnlts
.,.,
1
ll f
d
1 cup lnish pea pods, cut in ha~
g
fiber, 22 g pro.
we vi e o South Carolina. They all wore tuxe oes, as did the
1 teaspoon lnslant ~hlcken bo\JIIIon
_Jgroom ani! .h~d yellow: ros~ byd~~outonnieres. ,Levi Queen,
_
granules ---,-~:-:~ousin of the bride, served as ring bearer and wore also an all
12 ounces fully cooked paeled
· shrimp
:black tuxedo.
•
·
. 2 cupa hot cooked rice
.: Music for the ceremony was provided by Chris Bullion and
1teupoon finely shredded lemon
1inging by Jennifer Dyer, aunt of the bride. Maria and Megan
1 tablespoon ~ lnish dill or~
.Schilling. cousins of the bride, served in guest reception.
teaspoon dried e1111
: The ceremony was conducted by Monsignor William Myers.
In a large skillet, melt ma1
:A dinner-dance, held at the University of Rio Grande, imme:ctiately followed the wedding. The guests were served with a
:CUll sit down dinner.
...-----------,
: The couple honeymooned in Puerto Valletta, Mexico.
'£NGAGEMENT RINGS
: They nov.: reside in Bidwell.
.
: The new Mrs. James Ours was a 1995 graduate of Gallia
1Academy High School and a 1999 graduate of the University
;of Rio Grande. She is curre.mly employed by Ohio Valley
•Bank.
. ·
: The groom is also a 1995 graduate of Gallia Academy High
:School and a 1999 graduate of the University of Rio Grande.
:He is currently employed by Rockwell Automation.
·

Funds are now being collected to establish a

Scholarship in Honor of Dr. Paul W. Ambrose,

•
Marshall URiversity graduate killed in terrorist crash at The Pentagon.
Those wishing to contribute may send checks to:

\

Linda Holmes
Marshall University School of Medicine
1600 Medical Center Drive
Huntington, WY_ 25701
Checks should be made payable to Marshall University Foundation.

,.

Our Phone# Has Changed!!!
. If you are calling for cable service or billing questions, ,

Call toll free 877-998-3407 ·
For new service, upgrade or downgrade current service,

Call 800-800-CABLE
Please DO NOT call (304) 675-3398 in the Point Pleasant
. area or 800-766-0553 in the Jackson County area.
These phone numbers will sooii be disconnected.

Call us at 441-9633 or mail us this coupon.
Please send me more
information about your

community.

last name

first name
street addre~s

. Wj'yllft

state

city

zip

OF GALUPOLIS

phone ntJmber

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

MPON

�Page Cl

Sunday, September 23, 2001

Jhnh-v ~imn-JJmtbtel • Page C3

Gallipolis, Ohio

13.1001

Uzlle wedding

Mr. and Mra. Gary Lee Cooper

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Edward Vaughl!n Jr.

Cooper wedding

Vaughan wedding

Stanley anniversary

RACINE - Jessica Renee Smith, daughter of Barry and
MIDDLEPORT - Brooke Ashley Williams, daughter of
Melinda Smith, was united in marriage to Gary Lee Cooper, Richard Williams and Barbara Williams, was \Jnited in marriage
son of Gary and Marilyn Cooper on Saturday, Sept. 1, at Unit- to Donald Edward Vaughan Jr.. son of Donald and PaJllela
ed Methodist Church in Racine.
Vaughan, on June 23 at Middleport Church of Christ.
For the wedding performed by the Rev. Mark Matson, the
Albert Hartson performed the ceremony, and there was a
church was decorated in a pale blue and yellow color scheme. special prayer for the couple by the bride's grandfather, the
.J Escorted to the altar by her father, the bride was attired in a Rev. Amos Tillis.
Music for the ceremony was provided by Strings and Combib front gown accented with pearls and sequins.The train featured a pleat inside\vith more pearl and sequin trim. Her veil pany, a violin and cello duo, from Vienna. A solo was presented
fell from a tiara .arid she wore fingerless gloves also accented by Amy Perrin during the lighting of the unity candle.
with pearls and sequins.
·
. The wedding party included Brittany Williams, sister of the
Maid of honor was Sarah Hill and bridesmaids were Jody bride, as maid of honor; bridesmaids, Beth Williams, also a sisHupp and Chelsea Smith. They wore long, pale blue gowns ter of the bride; Ashlee Vaughan and Cassandra Vaughan, both
accessori.Zed with shoulder starves and carried bouquets of sisters of the groom;Tiffany Halfhill, Marissa Whaley, and Elizdaisies.
abeth Well, cousin of the groom.
.
Sophie Guinther was the flower girl and dropped daisy petals
Julie Tillis, cousin of the bride, was a junior bridesmaid, and
· o f th e groom.
down the aisle. She wore a pale blue floral print. Sandy Smith the fl ower girl was KarIi Woo Iington, a cousm
Donald Vaughan, father of . the groom, was best man.
. and Christie Smith registered the guests, and music for the
'.r
,.·
wedding was provided by pianist Kelly Eichinger and soloist Groomsmen were Michael WilfongJr.,Jeremy Hartson, James
'
Sharon Fulton.
White, Jason Moore, Joe VanDorn and Richard Well, cousin of
·~,. ··.
The groom wore a black tuxedo with a white vest and tie, the groom.
and had a single daisy .boutonniere. His uncle, Jerry Cooper,
Cody Williams, brother of the bride, was the junior groomswas
best
man,
and
groomsmen
were
Jeremy
Smith
and
Justin
man,
and ringbearer was Benjamin Tillis, cousin of the bride.
"
.,
Smith, Ringbearers were Gage Smith and Tanner Roush. The· Ushers were Jacob Well, the groom's cousin, and Zachariah
groom's attendants wore black tuxedoes with black vests and Meadows. ·
ties and had daisy boutonnieres .
A reception following the ceremony was held in Middleport
A reception was held following the wedding. The bride's Church of Christ's Family Life Center.
table featured a nine-tiered cake.
The newlyweds honeynrooned in the Pocono Mountains of
The bride is employed at Jackson General Hospital as a res- Pennsylvania and currently reside in Middleport.
piratory therapist. Her husband is employed through the Boilermakers Local 66 7.
The couple reside in Portland.

. ..

CADMUS - George and Gloria Stanley of Cidmus will
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 8.
They were married Oct. 8, 1951. They are the parents of two
daughters and five sons. They have six grandsons ~nd two
granddaughters.
Their children are requesting that anyone who wants to
honor the anniverSary couple with cards, send them to Randy
Stanley, 2161 Flagsprings Road, Patriot, Ohio 45658. Cards
must be in by Oct. 3. For anyone wanting to send a gift, there
will be golden money .tree for the couple. ·

I. '

. ' ... REQ'N.ION' s·
~

i

L.;.._ _...,._ ___.;;
........___.". .:.,...;::.._ _"------~-....:...

With the family reunion season upon us, many readers are
submitting articles of family activities for publication.
To ensure prompt
Co.
b publication,
I
d Ohio
d d Valley
bl Publishing
df
reguests articles e neat y tvl'e an ou e-space or easy
editing. Reunion items should not exceed 300 words and
must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
In addition, photographs smaller than 8-by-10 are weicome, and we request all photographs contain the identificalion of the subjects either on the back of the photograph or
neatly typed on a separate sheet of paper. .
No reunion matenal will be accepted after 30 days have
passed since the actual observance. Please include a contact
name and phone number on all submitted material.
··
No exceptions will be made.
All mt~terial submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Articles will be published as soon as possible.

'Shock' an 'eggs~cellent'
medical thriller

current news,
Times-Sentinel
not accept weddings after
90 days from the date of the
event
Weddings submitted after
the 90-cfay deadline · will
appear during the week In 111e
BY WAKA TIUNODA
Dallv Sentinel, Point Pleasant
FOR AP WEEK\.Y FEIITURES
Re~ster and the Gallipolis
"Shock" (Putnam, 370
Da1 Tribune.
1
pages, $24 .95) by Robin
AI dub meetings and other ·
Cook.
news articles in the society
section must be submitted
60 days of occurrence.
within
"Wanted: Eggs from Ivy- the terror it exudes is just as
All birthdays must be sub·
~t!,~~O." coeds. Will pay intense as - or even more mitted within 60 days of the
An advertisement to this than - some action-packed ocrurrence.
thrillers. As Cook allows the
All material submitted is
effect catches the attention of
subject
to editing.
-'two Harvard graduate stu- reader to get to know these
two women, their fears and
dents, the protagonists of anxieties become the reader's
. Robin Cook's new medical
.... 1:1&amp;1111111111thriller, "Shock."
as well.
Well Child Clinic
They wonder if the ad is a
The Wingate clinic is a forDoH your child need
·d h d
mer tuberculosis sanitariumtal . . · fill d · h
1 w.ll child checkup?
prank , but d ect e t e a ver.
h w·
I
il'
. men mstttutton
e wit
Call 4411-1538 or 441·29114 end
tcts~r•. t e
tbngate. n6ert d1ty · old-time medical paraphernam1ke 1n 1ppolntm1nt
mlc, must e senous an IS li Th
.
.
.
lor our next clinic. .
a. ere 1S evert a crematon100 k'mg fior eggs fro m. th ~ b est um
on the premises. All this
batch of young women •Or 1ts
.
h
1 d 1· ·
g1ves t e nove a . e ICJous
. ••
lth
1
wea y c 1en~.
•
G h'
h
.
ot 1c touc .
E . d b
h ·
nnce
Y t e generous
"Shock" ·is one of Cook's
pay, Joanna and Deborah,
Ph.D. candidates and room- most memorable medical .
4H Jecbon Pike, Suite 0
mates, go to the clinic ·and thrillers.
donate.
With the money they earn, .
they spend a year and a half in
Italy, writing their theses. ·
!When they return to the
States, Joanna is seized by a
compulsion to find out what .
has happened to her eggs and ·
if any children resulted from
them.
When the clinic refuses to
'FarnOlJS Howard Miller Pulaski-Howard Miller
release the information, JoanGRANDFATHER ClOCKS
CURIO CABINETS
na.and Deborah get jobs there
under false identities, hoping
to break into the clinic's highSofas &amp;. Olalrs
. ly secure computer system.
REDUCED
Little do they know . that it is
Sof..s ·Chairs - Recliners
30%-60%
the beginning of their jour~
ney into fear. ·
The women are opposite in .
personality: Johanna is conserCocktail, Sofa &amp;. End
ALL BEDROOM
. vative and straight-laced,
FURNITURE
TABLES
while Deborah is a free spirit
with plenty of chutzpah. They
make an amusing team as they
argue, quarrel, and banter
their way to the horrible
truth hidden behind the clinic's heavy veil of secrecy.
No bullets fly and no
·cadavers roll in this novel, but

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• Uilnt to know how
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: Friday? Please see
:
Sports, Bt

has

special health care needs, you
may be eligible for assistance.·
Call the Gallia County Health
1
Drpanment, 441·2039, for
information. Call today and ease
the IlleS!.

Sets: /'for tlie largest selection
of today~ best styles
au value priced'
Cfiecf. us out before you
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•

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-••

As we age we·often
just need help with
certain things.

Nursing homes offer intensive care for very ill people, but
more often people just need help from time to time with
medications, meals or bathing.
·
Resi.d ents here can live independently in homelike surroundings and still receive nursing support and other
services when they're needed. Medication supervision
and administration, home cooked meals, transportation,
outings, housekeeping, activities -the list of amenities
and services isn't endless, but it's very· long.
.
And one of the best things about WYNGATE OF GALLIPOLIS is
something we didn't have much to do with: the interaction
of our residents. Sure we facilitate things, but people here
genuinely like each other.

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Dilled shrimp with rice .

'

1

...

Ours wedding

Most people don't
need nursing homes.

"Shock" is one
of Cook's most
memorable medical
thrillers.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Lisa Kay Tarvin and Jeffrey R alph Valle
were married July 7, 2001 in an ourdoor garden wedding at the
French Art Colony.
.
The bride is the da ughter of Gilbert and Sandra Mill iron of
Gallipolis, and th e granddaughter of the late Lewis and Essie
Lee, and Dorothy and the late Gilbert Milli ron, of Gall ipo lis.
The groom is the son of Joseph and the late Bette Valle of
Plymouth, Mich., and the grandson of the late Ralph and
Manila Funkhouser, and the late Florian and Hope Valle of
•
Youngstown. 1
Dr. Robert Ingram of Grace United Methodist Church performed the ceremony, with music provided by a string ensemble of Cathy Grant, and Scott and .Barbara Michael.
Lori Milliron, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, wearing
an A-line, lilac Ni cole Miller gown. Best man was Joseph Valle,
brother of the groom, wearing a classic black tuxedo.
Ushers were Mike Milliron, uncle of the bride, and Robert
Valle, brother of the groom. Laura Valle, niece of the groom,
registered guests and Maggie Valle, niece of the groom, handed
out the uniquely designed fan programs.
The bride wore a floor-length white, satin and tulle princess
cut Alfred Angelo gown with a bateau neckline and a chapel '
train.
Her father escorted her down the petal-strewn aisle to Pach•
Mr. and Mra. Jamal Michal Oura
Mr. and Mra. Jeffrey Ralph VaU.a
•
abel's Canon in D. The bride carried a bouquet of bluebird
•
roses and stephanotis. The groom wore a classic black tuxedo tary education from Bowling Green, State University, and a
with a matching boutonniere of bluebird roses and stephanotis . . master's degree in educational technology from NationalLouis University in Evanston, 111. She is a technology specialist
Floral arrangements were by Melvin Biars of Floral Fashions.
A dinner and dance reception immediately followed the cer- lllr Aon in Chicago, Ill.
GALLIPOLIS - Jacqueline Renee Merry and James
emony
at the French Art Colony. Wellington's of Poca, WVa.,
The ~room received a bachelor of science degree from the
Michael Ours. were united in marriage on June 16, 2001, at
catered the formal dinner, and the four-tiered white wedding University of Michigan. He is a command pilot in the U.S. Air
·3:30 p.m. at St. Louis Catholic Church, Gallipolis.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Merry of cake, adorned with lilac ribbon and fresh bluebird roses, was Force, and a pilot for American Airlines.
.
After a honeymoon cwising the Mediterranean Sea, the cooBidwell, ·and the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. William made by Susan Brandeberry.
The bride received a bachelor of scie~ce degree in elemen- pie will return to their home in Winnetka, Ill.
DeVault of Gallipolis, and Betty Merry and the late James R.
Merry of Bidwell.
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ours of Gal~ipolis and the grandson of Mrs. Mary Ours, the late Marvin
(Biggin) Ours, and the late Mr. and ·Mrs. Steven and Theresa
Geremesz of Gallipolis.
The bride, who was escorted by her father, was wearing a ·
white satin formal gown accented with pearls and sequins on
BY 'THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
garine over medium-high
the bodice. A cathedral-length train was fashioned with lace
The sprightly combination · heat. Cook and stir leeks, car: and roses. The veil featured a tiara.
oflemon and dill is a great sea- rots and pea pods in hot marShe carried a hand-held bouquet, with ashmir gold roses and soning for sweet pink shrimp. garine for 2 to 3 minutes or
Both For
' white daisies. Also in the bouquet were tree ferns and galas With these three ingredients until vege~ables are crisp-tenleaves, with a streaming yellow chiffon ribbon.
and rice it could take you all of der.
Dissolve bouillon granules in
Julie and Jodi Merry, sisters of the bride, served as maids of '25 minutes to produce a main
(, cup .water. Stir shrimp, rice,
:.honor. Kelly Hager, Erika Adkins, Stacie Lambert and Crystal dish for four diners.
Queen, all. of Gallipolis, and Amy Schilling served as bridesOne of the shortcuts avail- lemon peel and dissolved granable, explains the editor of Bet- ules into skillet. Cook about 5
.mal'ds .
The attendants wore yellow satin gowns accented with pearls ter Homes and Gardens' "One minutes or until heated
·and lace on the bodice and carried a bouquet of yellow roses Dish Dinners" (Meredith, rhrough, ·stirring occasionally.
and white daisies, hand-wrapped and tied with a gold chiffon · 2000, $24.95), which features Stir in diU. To serve, divide rice
'·ribbon.
the recipe, is the fully cooked, mixture among four bowls. If
Buy II
. '· Elizabeth Pyer, cousin of the bride, and Emily Belville, cousin peeled shrimp found in more desired, garnish with fresh dill
QUEEn Size
sprigs.
of the groom, served as flower girls. They wore white gowns and more supermarkets.
filr ft fuU
Makes 4 servings.
Dilled Shrimp WHh Rice
and hair pieces with white daisies and yellow and white ribbon
Size Price!
Nutrition informatior per
'streaming down the ·back.
(Prnparation and cooking time 25
minutes)
serving: 268 cal., 4 g total fat (I
Best man was Brian Ours, brot her o f t he groom.
1 lablespoon IJ18lllllrlne or butter
g saturated fat), 166 mg chol.,
• The groomsmen were Travis Ratliff, Brian Unroe,Joel Jagers,
\cup thinly alfced leeks
478 mg sodium, ,35 g carbo., 5
J'iffi~s Merry and Ben . Baird, all of Gallipoli,s, ·and Jeremy
1~ cupa ahtadded Clllnlts
.,.,
1
ll f
d
1 cup lnish pea pods, cut in ha~
g
fiber, 22 g pro.
we vi e o South Carolina. They all wore tuxe oes, as did the
1 teaspoon lnslant ~hlcken bo\JIIIon
_Jgroom ani! .h~d yellow: ros~ byd~~outonnieres. ,Levi Queen,
_
granules ---,-~:-:~ousin of the bride, served as ring bearer and wore also an all
12 ounces fully cooked paeled
· shrimp
:black tuxedo.
•
·
. 2 cupa hot cooked rice
.: Music for the ceremony was provided by Chris Bullion and
1teupoon finely shredded lemon
1inging by Jennifer Dyer, aunt of the bride. Maria and Megan
1 tablespoon ~ lnish dill or~
.Schilling. cousins of the bride, served in guest reception.
teaspoon dried e1111
: The ceremony was conducted by Monsignor William Myers.
In a large skillet, melt ma1
:A dinner-dance, held at the University of Rio Grande, imme:ctiately followed the wedding. The guests were served with a
:CUll sit down dinner.
...-----------,
: The couple honeymooned in Puerto Valletta, Mexico.
'£NGAGEMENT RINGS
: They nov.: reside in Bidwell.
.
: The new Mrs. James Ours was a 1995 graduate of Gallia
1Academy High School and a 1999 graduate of the University
;of Rio Grande. She is curre.mly employed by Ohio Valley
•Bank.
. ·
: The groom is also a 1995 graduate of Gallia Academy High
:School and a 1999 graduate of the University of Rio Grande.
:He is currently employed by Rockwell Automation.
·

Funds are now being collected to establish a

Scholarship in Honor of Dr. Paul W. Ambrose,

•
Marshall URiversity graduate killed in terrorist crash at The Pentagon.
Those wishing to contribute may send checks to:

\

Linda Holmes
Marshall University School of Medicine
1600 Medical Center Drive
Huntington, WY_ 25701
Checks should be made payable to Marshall University Foundation.

,.

Our Phone# Has Changed!!!
. If you are calling for cable service or billing questions, ,

Call toll free 877-998-3407 ·
For new service, upgrade or downgrade current service,

Call 800-800-CABLE
Please DO NOT call (304) 675-3398 in the Point Pleasant
. area or 800-766-0553 in the Jackson County area.
These phone numbers will sooii be disconnected.

Call us at 441-9633 or mail us this coupon.
Please send me more
information about your

community.

last name

first name
street addre~s

. Wj'yllft

state

city

zip

OF GALUPOLIS

phone ntJmber

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

MPON

�PageC4

the River

Sunday. September 23, 1001 .
SUNDAY, September 23

ADDISON - Preaching ll8fvice
at Addison Freewill Baplist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.
PENIEL- Homecoming at
Penial Church. Sunday school
10 a.m., worship 11 a.m., CCN·
ered dish 12:30 p.m., and program at 1:30 p.m. Special
singing.
POINT PLEASANT- Matt
Henry will preach at Gospel
Tabernacle, 6 p.m.
LEON - Absten reunion,
Baden Community Center,
W.Va. 87, noon. Covered dishauction in afternoon.
MONDAY, September 24
SOUTHSIDE -Chubs welghi
loss support group, Southside
Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a
short meeting.
POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side entoance
ot Casey Law Office.
POINT PLEASANT- Cameo
Ladies, .breast cancer support
group, 7 p.m. in Pleasant Valley
Hospital Fruth Conference
Room (located oft the lobby).
For info. call Lauri Johnson 6757997.
POINT PLEASANT- Reception lor 2000 Miss Battle Days,
Young Miss Battle Days and Ln-lle Mister and Miss Battle Days
and candidates for the 2001
titles; 6:30p.m., Meson County
Ubrary. Event sponsored by

SUNDAY

CARPENTER - Carpenter
Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
with New Horizon, Claudette
Harbin and Sarah Full. John
Elswick to speak.
DANVILLE - Gospel meeting,
Danville Church ot Christ, Sunday, 6 p.m., with Danver Hill.
MIDDLEPORT- Hymn Sing,
Ash Straet, Church, 8 p.m., wHh
Tammy Taylor, the Mlllart,
Gabriel Quartet.
_,.ONDAV ·
POMEROY- Ohio Hunter
Education class, Pomeroy Gun

Mason
Muon County Toys for Tots
AaiOCiatlon.
TUESDAY, S&amp;*mber 25
LETART- HaP Diet Class.
Lstart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK- Clothing closet .
·glw away every Tuesday at
Qood Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

•

preschool up lhrough 12th
grade, 1 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Ughthouse Church, Neal Road.
For information call 675-7229 or
675-6620.
POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 ,p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side entrance
ot Casey law Office.
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Board ot Health, 6 p.m.,
Mason County Hea~h Department conference room. · ·

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

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County board ot Helth meeting,
6 p.m. at Mason County Health
Department Conference Room.

MASON - Communny Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
unned Methodist Church. All
araa cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited.

REVIVALS
LEON - Revival at Leon
Church of Christ in Christian
Union beginning Sept. 16 with
Pete Cobb and Sampy Hart.

POINT PLEASANT- Revival
HENDERSON - Line dancing,
·
at
Manilla Chapel Church beginHendenJOO Communny Building,
ning
Sept. 24 whh speaker
with Instructor Dawn Halstead.
Beglnnars 6 p.m. and advanced Jimmy McKnight and special
singing.
7 p.m.
NEW HAVEN - Mason County
Community calendar Is pubEmergency Ambulance Service
lished as a free service to
Authority Board of Directors
meeting, 6:30 p.m., New Haven · non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and aoeStation 600.
ctal events. The calendar 11
printed as apace parmlts and ,
WEDNESDAY, September 26
POINT PLEASANt- Wednes- cannot b!l guaranteed to run
a spaclflc number of days.
day night Bible clubs for

•

Metgs
•

Club, Sept. 24 to 28, 6 to 9 p.m.
end Sept. 29 from 9 a .m. until
noon. Pra-raglater by calling
11112-4282.
POMEROY- Meigs County
Vttertna Service Commission,
7:30 p.m., Monday.

Hall. Spacial singing nightly.
MIDDLEPORT- Ohio Valley
Crusade tor Christ meeting,
Monday, 7 p.m. Middleport First
Baptist Church. All area church
members encouraged to attend.

RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, home of Pauline
POMEROY- Revival at Faith
Full Gospel Church, through Fri-· Atkins, 1 p.m. Anyone interested In gardening welcome.
day, 7 p.m. Evangelist Charles

Su~. September 23
GALLIPOLIS -Descendants of
Silas Cole Straight family
reunion, 10 a.m.- 3 p.m., Raccoon Creek County Park Sheltemouse 6 (Cardinal).

GALLIPOLIS - Emancipation
.Proclamation observation
begins a110 a.m., Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds.
ADDISON - Preaching service
with Rick Barcus at Addison
Freewill Baptist.Church, 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- "Arrowhead
Collecllon" as discussed by
owner Frank Cremeens, at the
Our House Museum 2 p.m.
GALliPOLIS- Watson reunion
at 0 .0 . Mcintyre Pari&lt;, Bob
Whhe Shaner, from 10 a .m. - 3
p.m. Dinner at 12:30 p.m.
CARPENTER - Gospel sing at
Carpenter Baptist Church, 2
p.m.. featuring New Horizon
Singers from Barboursville,
W.Va., Claudette Harbin and
Sara Full singing, John Elswick,
pastor.
CROWN CITY -Special
singing by Michelle Poling at
Bailey Chapel Churcf:l, 11 a.m.
Monday, September 24

Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
Columbus dinner and meeting,
6:30p.m. , Down Under Restaurant.
CENTERVILLE- Thunnan
Grange 1416, 7:30p.m. Installation of officers, potluck to follow.
CHESHIRE -Tops OH 1383,
Cheshire United Methodist
Church. Weigh-in at 8:30 a.m.
Information, call Janet Thomas
at 387-Q274.
l'~Maday,

September 25
EWINGTON - Vinton American
Legion Post 161 , 7:30p.m.,
Ewlngton Academy. All members urged to attend.

Wednnday, September 26
GALLIPOLIS- Grief Support
meeting at Bosserd Memorial
Library, Switzer Am. at noon.

NORTH .
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP)- BluesTr:iveler has postponed a concert
here because of transportation
and emotional concerns after
last week's terrorists attacks on
the World Trade Center and
Pentagon.
"We had every intention of
going ahead with the date but
logistical,, transportation and
emotional concerns related to
last week's tragedy simply
won't allow it:' the band and
the venue, The Plex, said in a
joint statement.
The New York-based musi-

sin~ajor

Young_ Nightly at
7:30p.m., and Sunday at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.
Revival at Church of God of
Prophecy, 380 WhHe Road, Gallipolis, Sept. 16-22, 6 p.m. on
Sept. 16 and 7 p.m. Sept. 1722. Preaching by the Rev. Joe
Gwinn of Nitro, W.Va. Special
singing.
Card Sho-r
Mildred Tope Is having a card
shower for her 90th birthday on
Sept. 29. Cards may b8 sent to
her at Scenic Hills, 311 Buckridge Ad., Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
Viola Mooney will celebrate her
99th birthday on Oct. 2. Cards
can be sent to her at 7724 St.
At. 7 South, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.

Nellie Shaw Houck will celebrate her 9Sth birthday on Oct.
1. Cards can be sent to .her at
Revivals
,
·
Revival at Crown City Wesleyan New Albany Care Center, 5691
Church, ~pt. 14-19, with evan- Thompson Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43230.
gelist Roger Parsons, and

"It's simply inappropriate to
cians said they were worried
about equipment arriving on play this soon."
time and were concerned . Plex General Manager Bob ·
about Oying. The concert was Shipley said nearly 800
advance tickets had sold.
scheduled ·for Thursday.

u..-r

IIIIAIIIIIIII

11.1001

After learning about Ajghanistan, be thanliful for living here

NAMES IN THE NEWS
Blues Traveler

Page CS

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Bedsl ·

GALLIPOLIS - Pakistan
and Afghanistan.
Lately we have a lot about
these two countries in the
news concerning the hijacking of the airplanes that
"ashed into the World Trade
Center buildings in New
York, the Pentagon and in
Pennsylvania.
These rwo countries are
right next to each other. They
are bordered by India, China,
Iran and the Soviet Union.
On one of my rwo trips to
China several years ago, I was
invited as several other people
in our_group 'to take a trip to
Pakistan and Afghanistan and
stay for five days at a reduced
price.
Out of our group of 16,
only four decided to go.
When they came back, tbey
were really sorry they took
the trip, saying it was terrible
how people lived there and
they would never go there
agam.
I have done some research
on these two countries and
thought I would like to share
..J:hem with you.
Pakistan has a population of
135 million. Its capital is
Islamabad. Ninety-five percent of the people are Muslim. Their literacy rate is 38
percent. The national language is Urdu, with their official language being English.
They have a parliamentary
form of government consisting of two houses, the Senate
and the National Assembly.
They e~porr cotton, textile
goods, rice, leather items, carpets and sporting goods. Their
·national flower is Jasmine. The
people are very poor. They
rely on selling narcotics for
,income. They have had a
drought for two years. Many
cattle and farm animals are

It is terrible, all the people killed
because of tire explosion. Many
children tvill never see their mother or
Max
Jatlzer again. I sure hope they capture
Tawney
Osama bin Laden and the other
terrorists that tvere in11ol1!ed.
GUEST VIEW
dying because they have no
water or grass for them to eat.
Afghanistan's capital is
Kabul. Its land is parallel on
the globe with Texas, but its
~limate and weather are very
different. Texas. does not have
the mountainous areas that
cover Afghan country, they
have very hot summers and
very cold winters.
It may be very h .. t during
the day, but cold at night. The
average daily temperature
almost never falls below freezing and rarely rises above a
spring temperature.
In the cities, camels, donkeys, horsemen and flocks of
sheep make up most of the
traffic. Most buildings are
constructed with mud and
unbaked brick. Sacred Muslim mosques are everywhere.
Most men wear the ancient
Muslim baggy trousers, long
shirt and turban; and the
women, for the most part, do
not go outdoors without
wearing their chadris, a veil
that covers the entire body
from head to toe except for
their eyes, as required by
Muslim religious law.
They have a population of
18 miUion. Sixty percent of
them are women l:recause the
me.n lost their lives in the
fighting that .has been going
on there.
Nothing is more important
to Afghans than their religion,
Islam, and the traditions of

their ancestors. Islam is the
official religion here. The
Koran is the holy · book of
Islam , which calls ori the
faithful not to sin. It is a sin
for Muslims to eat pork or
drink alcoholic beverages.
They believe that their God
is Allah, and Mohammed is
his prophe t. This is one of the
five piUars of Islam .
A · Muslim must also pray
five rimes a day and face
Mecca, the birthplace of
Mohammed, must be charitable to the needy, fast during
Ramadan, the ninth month in
the Muslim calendar, and fast
during the entire month from
dusk until dawn, and say at
least once a day, "There is no
God
but
Allah,
and
Mohammed is his prophet."
They consider Abraham the
father of the Hebrew people,
to be the first Muslim. They
believe as Christians that Jesus
·was hom to the Virgin Mary,
bur not that he was crucified.
They believe he was taken
away by God, who left a shadow in his place, and that Jesus
will return one day at the end
of the world . They also
believe that Mohammed was
God's last prophet. .
There are more than 20
languages that are spoken by
the countless numbers of
tribes and clans that make up
the population. Dari is the
dominant language spoken in
the capital of the country.

relative. Many women ignore
this, leaving the house without a chaperone. When girls
are under 10, they can play
outdoor games with boys,
after age 10 they are not
allowed to play outdoors with
boys. Marriages are arrangecj
by parents with or without
the consent of their children.
Girls marry between 16 and
18.
Five years ago, the Taliban
During the day, the police
captured the Afghan capital,
patrol the main citie~ to look
imposing an unbending brand
for people going up against
of Islam on a war-torn nation
Islamic Ia~. They force storeruined by civil war and by the
owners to close up shop and
Soviet invasion more than
attend daily prayers. The Talrwo decades ago.
i ban's supreme leader is
Today, thieves have their
Omar, most Afghans do not
limbs cut off. Women cannot
know what he looks like
work and are executed for
becaqse Omar bans phoadultery. Dancing, pop music,
tographing humans.
videos and tel evision are
A &lt;tudio in Kabul is only
banned. Even kite flying and
licens,·d to take passport pholaughing in public are prohib- ·
tos. But hidden in the back of
ited. Cigarettes are forbidden.
his store, he deve lops film that
Running water is scarce,
people bring in of weddings,
health care is nonexistent, and
parties and family gatherings.
only boys get a grade school
The people there are very
education . .Women are not
unhappy with these new
allowed to attend school.
rules.
Women also have to wear
The farmers in Afghanistan
burqas, billowing gowns with
once ·grew acres of poppies to
a mesh screen through which
be made into opium. They
they can see and breathe.
made their money this way.
Before the Taliban took
This is no longer ,allowed
over, they did not have to
under the Taliban. Now they
cover their eyes, but they do
have to raise wheat and are
now. The women can't leave
making no money. Thousands
their homes without a male
oflivestock
have died because
·

of the drought .
The people are leaving their
homes to seek refuge at shelters because they have no
water and a shortage of food
supply.
I think we all want to know
what these countries are like
and how the people live. We
should thank God that we are
forrunate to live in the U.S.
It is terrible, all the people
killed because of the explosion. Many children will ·
never see their mother or
father again . I sure hope they
capture Osama bin Laden and
the other terrorists that were
involved.

(Ltmgti me busiuessmm1 Max
occasioually submits articles to the Sunday Times-Sm tiucl ou Iris world rravels, and
memories of Cal/Jpolis and Gallia C1&gt;1mty)
Tawu~y

• All size extra long
lor added comfort

your body.

FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAME! FURIITURE AT DISCCIUNT ''"':~·- 1

Rt. Z, Gallipolis FelT)', WV

675·1371

NAMES IN THE NEWS
-Woody Allen

,,

.,

ROME (AP) - Woody
Allen, who's made a career of
depicting
Manhattan in
films,
said
Thursday he
was "terribly ,
shocked, but
not
really
surprised" by
the terrorist
attacks
in
Allen
New York
and Washington.
The actor-writer-director,
in Rome to promote his new
-'movie, praised President Bush
for his handling of the situation.
"It does seem that the president, whom I was certainly
very critical of be(ore he was
elected ... has got a good grasp
on the problem," Allen said,
adding that the Bush administration seems to understand
that "this is not just a military
problem, but a social, economic and political problem."
NJen said he was in New
York during the Sept. II
attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon.
"We knew that no country
in the world, no city in the
.! world was immune (from terrorism) . We didn't expect that
New York City would be
immune,'' said Allen.
" But we were shocked by
the irrationality of the act
itself ... the senseless murder
of 5,000 people:'
The 65-year-old Brooklyn
native is promoting "The
Curse of the Jade Scorpion:'
which is set in New York like
many of his other films,
including 1979's "Manhattan"
and 1994's "Bullets Over
Broadway."

Miss Michl1an
MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP)
- Despite being hobbled by
a fractured right foot, Miss
M ichigan Stacy Lynn Essebaggers continued clogging
during the artistic expression
portion of the Miss America
.pageant.
!

.

st
pageant
Organization, told
set for Saturday in Atlantic
The
Muskegon
Chronicle.
City, N.J.
Pageant officials decided to "She's emerging as quite a
proceed after consulting with leader amo11g the other conABC television and taking a testants .... She's showing forvote of . the 51 contestants. titude, facing adversity."
'TWo out of every three
entrants opposed canceling
DON'T WAIT
the event, despite nationwide
mourning and heightened
security fears after last week's
.terrorist attacks in NewYork
and Washington.
Essebaggers, 21, injured her
foot Monday night while
practicing. The University of
Michigan junior didn't win in
the artistic expression category Wednesday night - Marshawn Evans, Miss District of
Columbia, earned that honor ·
with a baton twirling routine
Call Your Health Care
- but she received a lot of
Provider Or The Gallla ·
praise.
~,;o~•mv Health Dept. At
441-2950
"She's a real trouper," Tom
O'Rourke, vice president of

Sale!

Veterans Memorial Hospital and Holzer Consolidated Health Systems
wish to congratulate Veterans Memorial Hospital Long-Term Care Emp~oyees for achieving their

·3rd Deficiency.;.Free Ohio Department of Health Surve

VACCINATE!

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Computer Eyestrain .
In a recent poll, fully 47% of office workers said
!eyestrain from computer usage was a serious concern.
so many of us using computers today, It's a real
problem. Fortunately, there are some simple steps to take
to relieve eyestrain. First, give your e~es at least five
minutes rest each hour. You can easily do this by getting
up from your desk and looking out the window. lr you
consistently do this every hour throughout the day, your
eyes and your body will feel less fatigued. Second,
eliminate as much glare and renectlon from the computer
scree~s possible. Move your monitor away from windows
and consider cutting your office lighting In general. Third,
your monitor should' always be at least an arm's length
away from your eyes and placed no higher than eye level.
Perhaps most Important, wear an updated prescription.
See your optometrist for a precise measurement of your
eyes, so they will be able to maintain their sharp focus on
your monitor.

The Ohio Department of Health surveys all nursing homes in the State of Ohio according to state and federal standards of care and safety each
year. Veterans Memorial Hospital's Long-Tenn Nursing Unit has completed three annual surveys without a citation or deficiency. Veterans
Memorial Hospital is very proud of how dedicated and caring our staff members are to the residents of our skilled facility. They take pride in
deljvering quality care in a compassionate manner to the residents, and we congratulate them for their accomplishments.
To see further results, log onto www.medicare.gov/NHCompare!home.asp.

Lifestyle
is getting in their ·
Great New Fall
Collection of
So as and Recliners!

PBICIS

ARB •••

to
·BJake
·. ·
.Ia.-- ~

-r o...,.....
~

Example: S Place Wrought Iron Group Reg. 81149.00

Slashed To Only $435.00
5 Place hloyd Flanders Group Reg. 81100.00 ·

Slashed To Only $419.00

0&gt;

• At these prices we muat charge for delivery.
• All Saitta Final • "Aa·la" Merchandise
• All Sales CASH • Credit card we muat add 3%.
• No Phone Calllnqulrtea pleaaa.

Lula Hupp
Cheryl Lehew
Julie McGuire
Doris Mertz
Rhonda Morris
Anna Nelson
Trina Noland
Melesha Pauley
Melissa Pauley
Stacie Reed
Linda Ryan
Kathleen Snyder .
· Joy Spaun
Mary Stein
Amanda Stewart
Betty Stover
Sharon Vickers
Christi Wilson
Sonya Wolfe
Darla Zuspan
Joyce Redman
Stella Stone

•

'

.

John Dailey
Angela Greene
Rebec&lt;;a Grueser
Cindy Pickens
Paula Stanley
J~son Waugh
Terry Phillips
Roger Starcher
Judith Carl
Laurance' Ebersbach
Linda Hudson
Pamela Ables
Bonnie Milhoan
Sharon Pratt
Ralph Fisher
Linda Jones
Karen Brozak
Kathy McDaniel
Sudha Agrawal
Stephanie Snyder
Melissa Colwell
Shawn Rayburn

Suzanne Henderson
Lois Clelland
Rosalie Secore
Nikki Roe
Carol Adams
Cindy Aeiker
Robert Schmoll
Sandra Almond
Cassy Biggs
Carol Clelland
April Colburn
.Joyce Day
Freda Eakins
Kim Fackler
Janice Fetty
Jackalyn Frost
Karen Hart
Anita Holter
Tanya Holter
Jane Huffman
Joseph Koskie

Congratulations on a job well-done!

~.. ~.f)

Dr. A. Jackson Balles 0.0.

~.l,e. N.

~

~k/1114

Robert Bowers, Licensed Nursing Home Administrator

224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Free 1-877

..

,.

'

.
'

�PageC4

the River

Sunday. September 23, 1001 .
SUNDAY, September 23

ADDISON - Preaching ll8fvice
at Addison Freewill Baplist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.
PENIEL- Homecoming at
Penial Church. Sunday school
10 a.m., worship 11 a.m., CCN·
ered dish 12:30 p.m., and program at 1:30 p.m. Special
singing.
POINT PLEASANT- Matt
Henry will preach at Gospel
Tabernacle, 6 p.m.
LEON - Absten reunion,
Baden Community Center,
W.Va. 87, noon. Covered dishauction in afternoon.
MONDAY, September 24
SOUTHSIDE -Chubs welghi
loss support group, Southside
Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a
short meeting.
POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side entoance
ot Casey Law Office.
POINT PLEASANT- Cameo
Ladies, .breast cancer support
group, 7 p.m. in Pleasant Valley
Hospital Fruth Conference
Room (located oft the lobby).
For info. call Lauri Johnson 6757997.
POINT PLEASANT- Reception lor 2000 Miss Battle Days,
Young Miss Battle Days and Ln-lle Mister and Miss Battle Days
and candidates for the 2001
titles; 6:30p.m., Meson County
Ubrary. Event sponsored by

SUNDAY

CARPENTER - Carpenter
Baptist Church, Sunday, 2 p.m.
with New Horizon, Claudette
Harbin and Sarah Full. John
Elswick to speak.
DANVILLE - Gospel meeting,
Danville Church ot Christ, Sunday, 6 p.m., with Danver Hill.
MIDDLEPORT- Hymn Sing,
Ash Straet, Church, 8 p.m., wHh
Tammy Taylor, the Mlllart,
Gabriel Quartet.
_,.ONDAV ·
POMEROY- Ohio Hunter
Education class, Pomeroy Gun

Mason
Muon County Toys for Tots
AaiOCiatlon.
TUESDAY, S&amp;*mber 25
LETART- HaP Diet Class.
Lstart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK- Clothing closet .
·glw away every Tuesday at
Qood Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

•

preschool up lhrough 12th
grade, 1 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Ughthouse Church, Neal Road.
For information call 675-7229 or
675-6620.
POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 ,p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side entrance
ot Casey law Office.
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Board ot Health, 6 p.m.,
Mason County Hea~h Department conference room. · ·

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

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County board ot Helth meeting,
6 p.m. at Mason County Health
Department Conference Room.

MASON - Communny Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
unned Methodist Church. All
araa cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited.

REVIVALS
LEON - Revival at Leon
Church of Christ in Christian
Union beginning Sept. 16 with
Pete Cobb and Sampy Hart.

POINT PLEASANT- Revival
HENDERSON - Line dancing,
·
at
Manilla Chapel Church beginHendenJOO Communny Building,
ning
Sept. 24 whh speaker
with Instructor Dawn Halstead.
Beglnnars 6 p.m. and advanced Jimmy McKnight and special
singing.
7 p.m.
NEW HAVEN - Mason County
Community calendar Is pubEmergency Ambulance Service
lished as a free service to
Authority Board of Directors
meeting, 6:30 p.m., New Haven · non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and aoeStation 600.
ctal events. The calendar 11
printed as apace parmlts and ,
WEDNESDAY, September 26
POINT PLEASANt- Wednes- cannot b!l guaranteed to run
a spaclflc number of days.
day night Bible clubs for

•

Metgs
•

Club, Sept. 24 to 28, 6 to 9 p.m.
end Sept. 29 from 9 a .m. until
noon. Pra-raglater by calling
11112-4282.
POMEROY- Meigs County
Vttertna Service Commission,
7:30 p.m., Monday.

Hall. Spacial singing nightly.
MIDDLEPORT- Ohio Valley
Crusade tor Christ meeting,
Monday, 7 p.m. Middleport First
Baptist Church. All area church
members encouraged to attend.

RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, home of Pauline
POMEROY- Revival at Faith
Full Gospel Church, through Fri-· Atkins, 1 p.m. Anyone interested In gardening welcome.
day, 7 p.m. Evangelist Charles

Su~. September 23
GALLIPOLIS -Descendants of
Silas Cole Straight family
reunion, 10 a.m.- 3 p.m., Raccoon Creek County Park Sheltemouse 6 (Cardinal).

GALLIPOLIS - Emancipation
.Proclamation observation
begins a110 a.m., Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds.
ADDISON - Preaching service
with Rick Barcus at Addison
Freewill Baptist.Church, 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- "Arrowhead
Collecllon" as discussed by
owner Frank Cremeens, at the
Our House Museum 2 p.m.
GALliPOLIS- Watson reunion
at 0 .0 . Mcintyre Pari&lt;, Bob
Whhe Shaner, from 10 a .m. - 3
p.m. Dinner at 12:30 p.m.
CARPENTER - Gospel sing at
Carpenter Baptist Church, 2
p.m.. featuring New Horizon
Singers from Barboursville,
W.Va., Claudette Harbin and
Sara Full singing, John Elswick,
pastor.
CROWN CITY -Special
singing by Michelle Poling at
Bailey Chapel Churcf:l, 11 a.m.
Monday, September 24

Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
Columbus dinner and meeting,
6:30p.m. , Down Under Restaurant.
CENTERVILLE- Thunnan
Grange 1416, 7:30p.m. Installation of officers, potluck to follow.
CHESHIRE -Tops OH 1383,
Cheshire United Methodist
Church. Weigh-in at 8:30 a.m.
Information, call Janet Thomas
at 387-Q274.
l'~Maday,

September 25
EWINGTON - Vinton American
Legion Post 161 , 7:30p.m.,
Ewlngton Academy. All members urged to attend.

Wednnday, September 26
GALLIPOLIS- Grief Support
meeting at Bosserd Memorial
Library, Switzer Am. at noon.

NORTH .
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP)- BluesTr:iveler has postponed a concert
here because of transportation
and emotional concerns after
last week's terrorists attacks on
the World Trade Center and
Pentagon.
"We had every intention of
going ahead with the date but
logistical,, transportation and
emotional concerns related to
last week's tragedy simply
won't allow it:' the band and
the venue, The Plex, said in a
joint statement.
The New York-based musi-

sin~ajor

Young_ Nightly at
7:30p.m., and Sunday at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.
Revival at Church of God of
Prophecy, 380 WhHe Road, Gallipolis, Sept. 16-22, 6 p.m. on
Sept. 16 and 7 p.m. Sept. 1722. Preaching by the Rev. Joe
Gwinn of Nitro, W.Va. Special
singing.
Card Sho-r
Mildred Tope Is having a card
shower for her 90th birthday on
Sept. 29. Cards may b8 sent to
her at Scenic Hills, 311 Buckridge Ad., Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
Viola Mooney will celebrate her
99th birthday on Oct. 2. Cards
can be sent to her at 7724 St.
At. 7 South, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.

Nellie Shaw Houck will celebrate her 9Sth birthday on Oct.
1. Cards can be sent to .her at
Revivals
,
·
Revival at Crown City Wesleyan New Albany Care Center, 5691
Church, ~pt. 14-19, with evan- Thompson Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43230.
gelist Roger Parsons, and

"It's simply inappropriate to
cians said they were worried
about equipment arriving on play this soon."
time and were concerned . Plex General Manager Bob ·
about Oying. The concert was Shipley said nearly 800
advance tickets had sold.
scheduled ·for Thursday.

u..-r

IIIIAIIIIIIII

11.1001

After learning about Ajghanistan, be thanliful for living here

NAMES IN THE NEWS
Blues Traveler

Page CS

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Bedsl ·

GALLIPOLIS - Pakistan
and Afghanistan.
Lately we have a lot about
these two countries in the
news concerning the hijacking of the airplanes that
"ashed into the World Trade
Center buildings in New
York, the Pentagon and in
Pennsylvania.
These rwo countries are
right next to each other. They
are bordered by India, China,
Iran and the Soviet Union.
On one of my rwo trips to
China several years ago, I was
invited as several other people
in our_group 'to take a trip to
Pakistan and Afghanistan and
stay for five days at a reduced
price.
Out of our group of 16,
only four decided to go.
When they came back, tbey
were really sorry they took
the trip, saying it was terrible
how people lived there and
they would never go there
agam.
I have done some research
on these two countries and
thought I would like to share
..J:hem with you.
Pakistan has a population of
135 million. Its capital is
Islamabad. Ninety-five percent of the people are Muslim. Their literacy rate is 38
percent. The national language is Urdu, with their official language being English.
They have a parliamentary
form of government consisting of two houses, the Senate
and the National Assembly.
They e~porr cotton, textile
goods, rice, leather items, carpets and sporting goods. Their
·national flower is Jasmine. The
people are very poor. They
rely on selling narcotics for
,income. They have had a
drought for two years. Many
cattle and farm animals are

It is terrible, all the people killed
because of tire explosion. Many
children tvill never see their mother or
Max
Jatlzer again. I sure hope they capture
Tawney
Osama bin Laden and the other
terrorists that tvere in11ol1!ed.
GUEST VIEW
dying because they have no
water or grass for them to eat.
Afghanistan's capital is
Kabul. Its land is parallel on
the globe with Texas, but its
~limate and weather are very
different. Texas. does not have
the mountainous areas that
cover Afghan country, they
have very hot summers and
very cold winters.
It may be very h .. t during
the day, but cold at night. The
average daily temperature
almost never falls below freezing and rarely rises above a
spring temperature.
In the cities, camels, donkeys, horsemen and flocks of
sheep make up most of the
traffic. Most buildings are
constructed with mud and
unbaked brick. Sacred Muslim mosques are everywhere.
Most men wear the ancient
Muslim baggy trousers, long
shirt and turban; and the
women, for the most part, do
not go outdoors without
wearing their chadris, a veil
that covers the entire body
from head to toe except for
their eyes, as required by
Muslim religious law.
They have a population of
18 miUion. Sixty percent of
them are women l:recause the
me.n lost their lives in the
fighting that .has been going
on there.
Nothing is more important
to Afghans than their religion,
Islam, and the traditions of

their ancestors. Islam is the
official religion here. The
Koran is the holy · book of
Islam , which calls ori the
faithful not to sin. It is a sin
for Muslims to eat pork or
drink alcoholic beverages.
They believe that their God
is Allah, and Mohammed is
his prophe t. This is one of the
five piUars of Islam .
A · Muslim must also pray
five rimes a day and face
Mecca, the birthplace of
Mohammed, must be charitable to the needy, fast during
Ramadan, the ninth month in
the Muslim calendar, and fast
during the entire month from
dusk until dawn, and say at
least once a day, "There is no
God
but
Allah,
and
Mohammed is his prophet."
They consider Abraham the
father of the Hebrew people,
to be the first Muslim. They
believe as Christians that Jesus
·was hom to the Virgin Mary,
bur not that he was crucified.
They believe he was taken
away by God, who left a shadow in his place, and that Jesus
will return one day at the end
of the world . They also
believe that Mohammed was
God's last prophet. .
There are more than 20
languages that are spoken by
the countless numbers of
tribes and clans that make up
the population. Dari is the
dominant language spoken in
the capital of the country.

relative. Many women ignore
this, leaving the house without a chaperone. When girls
are under 10, they can play
outdoor games with boys,
after age 10 they are not
allowed to play outdoors with
boys. Marriages are arrangecj
by parents with or without
the consent of their children.
Girls marry between 16 and
18.
Five years ago, the Taliban
During the day, the police
captured the Afghan capital,
patrol the main citie~ to look
imposing an unbending brand
for people going up against
of Islam on a war-torn nation
Islamic Ia~. They force storeruined by civil war and by the
owners to close up shop and
Soviet invasion more than
attend daily prayers. The Talrwo decades ago.
i ban's supreme leader is
Today, thieves have their
Omar, most Afghans do not
limbs cut off. Women cannot
know what he looks like
work and are executed for
becaqse Omar bans phoadultery. Dancing, pop music,
tographing humans.
videos and tel evision are
A &lt;tudio in Kabul is only
banned. Even kite flying and
licens,·d to take passport pholaughing in public are prohib- ·
tos. But hidden in the back of
ited. Cigarettes are forbidden.
his store, he deve lops film that
Running water is scarce,
people bring in of weddings,
health care is nonexistent, and
parties and family gatherings.
only boys get a grade school
The people there are very
education . .Women are not
unhappy with these new
allowed to attend school.
rules.
Women also have to wear
The farmers in Afghanistan
burqas, billowing gowns with
once ·grew acres of poppies to
a mesh screen through which
be made into opium. They
they can see and breathe.
made their money this way.
Before the Taliban took
This is no longer ,allowed
over, they did not have to
under the Taliban. Now they
cover their eyes, but they do
have to raise wheat and are
now. The women can't leave
making no money. Thousands
their homes without a male
oflivestock
have died because
·

of the drought .
The people are leaving their
homes to seek refuge at shelters because they have no
water and a shortage of food
supply.
I think we all want to know
what these countries are like
and how the people live. We
should thank God that we are
forrunate to live in the U.S.
It is terrible, all the people
killed because of the explosion. Many children will ·
never see their mother or
father again . I sure hope they
capture Osama bin Laden and
the other terrorists that were
involved.

(Ltmgti me busiuessmm1 Max
occasioually submits articles to the Sunday Times-Sm tiucl ou Iris world rravels, and
memories of Cal/Jpolis and Gallia C1&gt;1mty)
Tawu~y

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NAMES IN THE NEWS
-Woody Allen

,,

.,

ROME (AP) - Woody
Allen, who's made a career of
depicting
Manhattan in
films,
said
Thursday he
was "terribly ,
shocked, but
not
really
surprised" by
the terrorist
attacks
in
Allen
New York
and Washington.
The actor-writer-director,
in Rome to promote his new
-'movie, praised President Bush
for his handling of the situation.
"It does seem that the president, whom I was certainly
very critical of be(ore he was
elected ... has got a good grasp
on the problem," Allen said,
adding that the Bush administration seems to understand
that "this is not just a military
problem, but a social, economic and political problem."
NJen said he was in New
York during the Sept. II
attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon.
"We knew that no country
in the world, no city in the
.! world was immune (from terrorism) . We didn't expect that
New York City would be
immune,'' said Allen.
" But we were shocked by
the irrationality of the act
itself ... the senseless murder
of 5,000 people:'
The 65-year-old Brooklyn
native is promoting "The
Curse of the Jade Scorpion:'
which is set in New York like
many of his other films,
including 1979's "Manhattan"
and 1994's "Bullets Over
Broadway."

Miss Michl1an
MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP)
- Despite being hobbled by
a fractured right foot, Miss
M ichigan Stacy Lynn Essebaggers continued clogging
during the artistic expression
portion of the Miss America
.pageant.
!

.

st
pageant
Organization, told
set for Saturday in Atlantic
The
Muskegon
Chronicle.
City, N.J.
Pageant officials decided to "She's emerging as quite a
proceed after consulting with leader amo11g the other conABC television and taking a testants .... She's showing forvote of . the 51 contestants. titude, facing adversity."
'TWo out of every three
entrants opposed canceling
DON'T WAIT
the event, despite nationwide
mourning and heightened
security fears after last week's
.terrorist attacks in NewYork
and Washington.
Essebaggers, 21, injured her
foot Monday night while
practicing. The University of
Michigan junior didn't win in
the artistic expression category Wednesday night - Marshawn Evans, Miss District of
Columbia, earned that honor ·
with a baton twirling routine
Call Your Health Care
- but she received a lot of
Provider Or The Gallla ·
praise.
~,;o~•mv Health Dept. At
441-2950
"She's a real trouper," Tom
O'Rourke, vice president of

Sale!

Veterans Memorial Hospital and Holzer Consolidated Health Systems
wish to congratulate Veterans Memorial Hospital Long-Term Care Emp~oyees for achieving their

·3rd Deficiency.;.Free Ohio Department of Health Surve

VACCINATE!

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Computer Eyestrain .
In a recent poll, fully 47% of office workers said
!eyestrain from computer usage was a serious concern.
so many of us using computers today, It's a real
problem. Fortunately, there are some simple steps to take
to relieve eyestrain. First, give your e~es at least five
minutes rest each hour. You can easily do this by getting
up from your desk and looking out the window. lr you
consistently do this every hour throughout the day, your
eyes and your body will feel less fatigued. Second,
eliminate as much glare and renectlon from the computer
scree~s possible. Move your monitor away from windows
and consider cutting your office lighting In general. Third,
your monitor should' always be at least an arm's length
away from your eyes and placed no higher than eye level.
Perhaps most Important, wear an updated prescription.
See your optometrist for a precise measurement of your
eyes, so they will be able to maintain their sharp focus on
your monitor.

The Ohio Department of Health surveys all nursing homes in the State of Ohio according to state and federal standards of care and safety each
year. Veterans Memorial Hospital's Long-Tenn Nursing Unit has completed three annual surveys without a citation or deficiency. Veterans
Memorial Hospital is very proud of how dedicated and caring our staff members are to the residents of our skilled facility. They take pride in
deljvering quality care in a compassionate manner to the residents, and we congratulate them for their accomplishments.
To see further results, log onto www.medicare.gov/NHCompare!home.asp.

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~.. ~.f)

Dr. A. Jackson Balles 0.0.

~.l,e. N.

~

~k/1114

Robert Bowers, Licensed Nursing Home Administrator

224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Free 1-877

..

,.

'

.
'

�•

1ver

PageC&amp;

.,'

Becky
Collins
FAMILY
from my mind.We all have see horrible images of pain and destruction.
Allow yourself to grieve; express your
thoughts and feelings.
Talk about it at work, at church,
with friends. It's comforting to know
others feel the same way.
• Be kind to .yourself.Whether your.
involvement has been direct or indirect, you have been wounded. Give
yourself and those around you special
care. Tune into and respond to the
needs of your body. Get regular exercise, such as a brisk walk in the fresh
air, and take plenty of time for rest and
sleep. Do your best to eat food that
comforts you and properly fuels your
body. Remember to drink enough
water and other fluids. And be very
accepting, understanding, and gentle
with yourself.
• Breath! In the stress of grieving,
we often tighten our muscles, parricu-

larly in the lower stomach area. Thus
we fail to breathe properly, de-energizing and stressing ourselves. As you
go through the day, notice your
breathing. Avoid tensing the muscles
of your belly.
• Share your grief. Though you will
need time to yourself. it's also essential
that you freely talk- about your reactions to the attack on America and the
predicted long-term war against ter.rorism. Find at least. one person
whom you respect and trust, and pour
out your heart and soul. Do this regularly, a• long as you feel the need.
• Say no to persistent negative
thoughts.You .may be ·struggling with
a variety of repetitive negative
thoughtS, perhaps mental flashes of
the twin World Trade Center rowers
collapsing or intense thoughts of
revenge.
·
Acknowledge and face these
thoughts and the feelings they provoke. However, once you have felt
them, and learned from them - .· and
when you personally are ready to
move on -do your best not to dwell
ori these troublesome thoughts. When
unwanted devastating pictures come
into your thoughts, mentally say,
"Stop!" while visualizing a large stop
sign. Then immediately put your
mind on more positive, constructive

thoughts. Doing something physical,
like jogging or yoga, can also help you
to break loose fiom harmful, selfdefeating thoughts.
• Journal through your grief. Daily,
or perhaps a couple times a week,
record your thoughts and feelings in a
journal, diary, or notebook.
Let your pen do the talking as you
express your reactions, your concerns,
and your determination to create a
better world. You can write "Dear
Journal," letters, "talking" to your
journal as if it were a trusted and wise
friend; and then letting it respond
back to you through your own pen.
It's a creative way of dialoguing
with your inner self. Or you may
wish, for example, to address your
writing to the firefighters of New
York and their devastated &amp;milies or
perhaps to. God if you are a person of
faith.
.
Putting your genuine thoughts and .
feelings on paper is a therapeutic,
healing experience. It can strengthen
your immune system, your wisdom,
and your ability to help to those
around you.
• If you are spiritually inclined,
draw on this resource. Your relationship to God or a guiding power can
bring immense comfort in the wake
of · all this senseless and violent

•

destruction. Nourish yourself spiritually in whatever way works best for
you: prayer, community worship,
being with nature, meditation. Po\lr
out your heart; express your
heartache, rage, and frustration; ask'
questions. Then trustfully, patiently
open yourself to the inner guidance
you receive. Listen to and trust tile
whispers of your heart and soul.
• Know when to seek professional
help. If you find yburself feeling consistently fearful, edgy, hostile, or
depressed; or if your thoughts keep
dwelling on details of the terrorist
attack and the resulting violent deathS;
or if you are having nightmares or·
your health or job performance is suffering, reach out to a trained profesc
sional who can assist you.
.
• Look for .bright spots. Stay open
to your pain as it arises, but as you can,
balance that pain by embracing the
small, simple gifts of delight that come
your way: a beautiful sunset, the
laughter of children at play, the caress
of a gentle breeze, a co-worker who
makes you chuckle, or a warm hug
from a dear friend. The more you
look for bright spots, the more they
will find you and cheer you 9n.

(Becky Co/lim is Ga/lia County~
Extension age"t for family and consumer
sciePiles, Ohio Stare University.) ·

.

Addison Township was home to two if Gallia's more interesting pioneers
DDJSON
streets.
·When the AddiCharlotte York married Elison School was
jah Berry in 1821. Berry was·
established
in
one of the pioneer settlers in
the Kyger Creek bottoms.
1872, on land
between
the
Methodist
Like many pioneer farm £amChurch and land belonging
ilies, it was a rough life. The
to Sarah Reynolds, the school
couple ha.d seven children,
· children would not have to go
five of whom preceded their
far to study a couple of "real
HISTORY
mother in death.
-pion~ers·: for history class.
The Addison School was
Ltvmg JUSt a few miles frum banks of the Monongahela dosed for the first rime in
.. ' the school in Addison Town- River. Next, the family flat- 1935 when the two-room
ship were two of Gallia's all- boated to Pittsburgh and Addison School was built.
time most interesting persons, stayed a year. During that Due to ·overcrowding at
Thomas Shaver and Charlotte year, Mr. York found himself a Addaville, the one-room
Berry In 1872, both were in new wife, Miss Cooley.
Addison Schoo; was reopened
their old age, that is, in their
The family headed down for a time.
70s. Ironically, they both died the Ohio River, not knowing
The sch~ol was later sold to
-~--iro-thte same year,-1883.
--where theirnexr'Stopping-tfie trustees ofAdoison Towne
Thomas Shave.r was gre~tly place would be.
ship. They \Urned the school
adm1red for hts phySical
They landed at Gallipolis to into a community building
endurance.
.
tarry one night and lay in and a voting place. We note
He was a nattve of the state provisions. The Yorks found that the teacher at Addison
of Delaware, having arrived such kindness manifested from 1928 to 1931 was Anna
here in ·1817. His whole fam- toward them, that they decid- Berry.
ily came here by flatboat from ed to res(de in the Old French
There were sevt:ral Shavers
Pittsburgh. . .
.
City. Among the benefactors that taught in other Addison
Near Galltpohs, the farruly for the York family were some Township schools throughout
became ill and was treated by of the earliest settlers, includ- history.
Dr.Jonas Safford. The office of ing members of the VanTheir owh families could
Dr. Safford at that time was in denbemden family.
.
have provided a . Jot of ·
the 400 block qfFmtAvenue,
. One of Charlotte's most resources for life in pioneer
.. JUSt up from Our House. The VtVJd memones was as a 13- America.
~haver~ liV:ed for a few years year~old girl watching the
(James Sands is a special correm Galltpohs before movmg to proceedings dealing with. the spondent for tire Sunday TimesAddtson Townshtp. .
.
only public hanging Gallipolis Sentinel. He can be contacted by
.J.. Accordmg to one htstonan: ever had. She often told of writi11g to 346 Meadow Lane,
Shaver was noted as remark- how appalled she was to Circleville, Ohio 43113.)
able for hts endurance, and watch the guilty man, James
many fabulous tales are relat- Lane, sit on his own coffin
ed of his ability to run down eating gingerbread while the
foxes and deer on foot." In his preacher was giving Lane is
younger years, Shaver had run funeral sermon.
all the way to Chillicothe and
Before the long sermon was
back in one day, a distance of over, Lane reached into his
about 120 miles.
pocket and got out his tobacWhen Shaver worked for co. He then proceeded to
J.P.R. Bureau a.nd lived in chew and spit tobacco while
Addtson Townsh1p, he would the preacher was trying ro
walk to work (nine miles) rescue the man's soul.
every day, work a full, hard
James Lane had begun his
day, and then walk home. He crime spree by robbing the
did that six days a week for store of ].P.R. Bureau. The
store was then in a house that
some years.
In the 1840s, Adventist ~till stands today at First
-{ever hit Gallia County, that Avenue and State Street. Lane
its belief in the imritinent . later killed a person in conreturn .of Christ and the end necrion with another robbery
of the world. The Adventists during that same spree and it
in the 1840s had even set a was for that murder that he
AMERICAN PIE l
~15, 4:1,7:00, t.15
date in 1844 for that return. was tried and sentenced to
Shaver built himself a plat- hanging. The hanging took
1!1115 CIIIPII5 ":;" 2:1~ 4:1, 7:45, t.45
form, where he and his white place at Third and Pine
ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $ 4 .00
horse would ascend into the
clouds.
On the date in question,
Shaver mounted his steed and
climbed up the steps to the
stage.
He was there several days
before coming down. The
lo lasll, 11 CrediCheck
white horse died · of old age
some years after that. But even
in his old age, Shaver was still
talking about the end of the
world.
Charlotte Berry was born
218 Upper River Rd.
'
in New York, the daughter of
Gallipolis, Ohio
204 W. 2nd Street
Mr. and Mrs. Sandford York.
'I• Mile south of
Pomeroy, Ohio
. On the way west, Mrs. York
the Sliver Bridge
99~·0461
died in Pennsylvania. The
446-2404
u
.....
CC:700077.oo&amp;
family spent the winter on the
Uc- CC:700077-400 ... 001
U.011MCI750041.Q06

ONCE A SCHOOL- The Add~
son Community Building once
served as the Addison
School. Students studle~
about American pioneers, .
among other subjects. Two of
the more interesting Amerl·
can pioneers lived in Addison
Township. (Contributed photO)

Jatnes

Sands

T

?&amp;tl casn. ti{[ Payiay?

$CASH$

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING &amp; lOAN

lbe Mouse at 30: Where would Orlando be without' it?
BY MIKE ScHNEIDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

years Disney has underpaid its happened at Disneyland in
taxes
by claiming land as agri- Anaheim, Calf.
• ORLANDO, Fla. It's
cultural instead of commercial.
The Legislature, Foglesong
··.almost impossible now to
It has conipeted for bond argues, was sold on the idea
' imagine Orlando without Walt
money to expand its sewage that Disney needed such
' Disney World.
treatment plant against Orange autonomy and flexibility to
', Few companies have singleCounty. which wanted to sup- build Epcot (Experimental
"handedly changed a commuport affordable )lousing initia- Prototype Community of
' hity the way Disney did 30
tives. Disney rwice in the 1980s Tomorrow), a futuristic, model
years ago when it opened the
nixed plans for community- city that would showcase
'Magic Kingdom, the first of its
wide. rapid transit systems, . American industry, technology
four Florida theme parks, in
ignored affordable housing and education . Epcot never
what was then a sleepy citrus
issues affecting its workers and materialized as envisioned· by
· and cattle town.
_,
shirked paying development- Walt Disney, who died in
Orlando has ·since become
related impact fees, according 1966, five years before Disney
home to seven of the most
to Foglesong.
World opened.
. popular theme parks in the
" It's a marriage that has
Instead, Epcot · opened in
."world and more than 100,000
some
structural
problems
1982
as a schizophrenic theme
·hotel rooms. It is a destination FAMILIAR SIGHT - Main because of the low-wage
park with its dual personalities
for more than 40 million visi- Street U.S.A. in the Magic nature of employoi1ent and
split berween exhibits on techtors a year and one of the Kingdom, with Cinderella Cas·
tie in background, is shown at because of the community's nology and World Expo-style
fastest-growing cities in the
Walt Disney World Resort in dependence • on tourism,'' pavilions on foreign countries.
'nation. Metro Orlando's popuLake Buena Vista, Aa., in this Foglesong said.
Disney's nod to a planned
·lation has swelled from about
undated handout photo (AP
.Disney chose Orlando in the community was Celebration,
''522,000 people in 1970 to its Photo/Walt Disney World)
1960s because it was where opening i.n 1996 as a throwcurrent size of about 1.6 miltwo major highways, Interstate back to small-town America
' lion people.
·
"They
continue
to
generate
a
4
and the Florida "fitrnpike, rather than a community of
" But Disney World, which
large economic impact that intersected. Using dummy cor- . tomorrow as promised to state
:~elebrates itS 30th anniversary can't be replicated by anybody potations to prevent land speclawmakers in the 1960s:
·.Oct. 1, hasn't always acted like else in the community:'
ulation,
Disney
secretly
"I think lawmakers were
Prince Charming, and there
Orange County chairman acquired more than 27,000 deceived,'' Foglesong said.
have been periodic episodes Richard Crotty s~id Disney has acres where it eventually
"This is one of the biggest stoJhat raised questions about been good for economic would build the Magic Kingries of the century in Florida:
:Whether Disney and the sur- development but acknowl- dom, Epcot, Disney-MGM'
Disney said they were going to
'rounding community would edged that some old~ timers Studios, Animal Kingdom, I 8
'do one thing for the conceslive together happily ever after. lament the toll Disney~gener- · hotels and three water parks.
sions, but they turned around
While Disney's presence has ated growth has taken on
Disney has had a. unique and did something else."
brought low unemployment, Florida's natural beauty.
advantage over competitors
Dianna Morgan, Disney
international name recognition
"There are two stories about and
local
governments, World's senior vice president
and a tax base for local govern- Florida. One is before Disney. Foglesong argues because the
for public affairs, disagrees with
ments, it has also brought traf- The other is after Disney," said Florida Legislature in the late
that interpretation, saying
fic-jammed highways, over- Crotty, who had a college job · 1960s granted the company
"crowded schools and a low- delivering iron structures to planning and zoning authority
·wage economy.
the Magic Kingdom construe- and exemptions from local
,;, Most local leaders argue that tion site. "I think it's pretty land-use laws. Disney was
;Disney's presence has been ·undeniable that Disney put a!) owed to set up its own pri:well-worth any social costs.
vate government, the Reedy
. Orlando on the map."
~~OVlDlNG PlENATAL ,.
" "If Disney hadn't come,
CARE TO OHIO
In his recently published Creek Improvement District, •
RESIDENT!. 0\U ~
·would the community have . book, "Married to the Mouse," which could regulate land use,
U6-8SJB FOlAN f.
'.gotten anything? We'd still be Rollins College politics profes- provide firefighting s.ervices, •
APJIOINTMENl
~
•
'selling oranges and raising cat- sor Richard Foglesong com- build roads and license alcohol
•
•
FREE
tle,'' said Bill Peeper, executive pares Disney and Orlando's sales. It could also prevent
•
1 director
of
the relationship to a sometimes- tacky developments from
Al!llAYAilABII
~
•
Orlando/Orange
County rocky marriage.
being built around the parks as ~ fal&lt;e ~oi&gt;JOUnell..d~oumkoch;ld •
Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau.
Foglesong argues that in past
1\t
.

1 I 1 I I

&gt; : I 0 I 0 &gt; I I

t I 0 t 0 I I t 0 I I I

" '(

Florida lawmakers granted
Disney such immense powers
for economic development
reasons.
"The greatest aspect of the
story is simply that Walt Disney
World is probably the most significant economic incentive
initiative ever created,'' Morgan
said.
Disney World now employs
55,000 workers, pays $500 million a year in taxes and con·tributes S3 billion in direct
spending to the local economy,
according to Disney officials.
The national economic slowdown, though, has taken a toll
on attendance during the first
half of the year and 1,400 jobs
were eliminated at Disney
World as part of a companywide attrition.
Disney also has set high standards for the corrununity on
urban .lesign, customer service
and hospitality, said Orlando
Mayor Glenda Hood.
"We were srill a small town
at the time and Disney brought
us into a whole new age and
took us to a new level,'' said
Hood, a central Florida native.
The community wasn't
ready for a rapid transit system

in 1984 and the "maglev" train
proposed in the late 1980s
wasn't a genuine transit system,
Morgan said. Moreover, Disney also has built housing for
its college interns and foreign
workers.
"The truth is the free market
is working," Morgan said.

SPRING VAllll CltHIM
446 •4524

(\L[ H'&gt;&lt; "I

lo&gt;',/

·~-·'''"'

,....
'

_,

....

FRI912101· THURS 9127101
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"

$3.75 ADMISSION

ICFO&gt;T&amp;'" FUTURES MAY BE EXCLUDED)

THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10" 1:20
MATlttEES SAT I SUN 1:1013:20

12' ......... ........... $19•.00'~
15' .................... $26.99
lB' .................... $32..99
24' .................... $52..99

15X30 OVAL.. .... $47.99

IN-GROUND POOL COVERS

16XJ2 ........ $53.99

3 429

IBX36 ........ $63.99

20X40 ........ $74.99

OLIDAY POOLS, INC. ..

.'•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

I

A G EN E SIS .H 0 SPITAL

Ball

Room Danc:lq

Every Tuesday for three weeks, beginning
Tue. Sept. 25, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$15 per person
Minimum of 3 couples/6 individuals
or class will be cancelled ·
(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group
Monday, Oct. 1, 6:30p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

}'

•('
,.

Alzheimer's Support Group
Tuesday, Oct. 16, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236, Ext. 1383

r

''
•'

.. -

••Prices effective september 23"' thru 29"

Aphula Attoclatlon a Stroke
SupPort Group
Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation Center Conference Room
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

.

••
,I

$ 29

1/2 Gallon

reg, bun size, hot &amp;

·

Apple
Cider

•
••'

•
••
••

••~
''

¢

••
•••

Pre-Cooked

I

•'

Oscar Mayer

l

•

Bacon

I

Parkinson's Education
Thursday, Oct. 18, 11 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304) 675-2551

'

!

$ 99

I

I
I

}

Aeroblca
Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222

I

Ea.

I

I
I

'I

c-.n

He.Ip ••
''

I
,·

' .

spicy - 16 oz

Oscar Mayer
Wieners

I

CPR Tralnl.., (new or expired cards)
Tuesday, Oct. 9, 8 a.m. • 4 p.m. (new ccvds)
Thursday, Oct. 18, 12. 4:30 p.m.
(renewal class)
·
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Aerobics Room
$50/session (new cards)
$25/session (expired cards)
(304) 675-4340 ext. 2003

$ 49

Chuck

,

·Thursday, Oct. 18, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Aerobics Room
(304)6754340,Ext.2003

Diabetes Outpatient Classes
Tuesday, Oct. 9, 8 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Hartley Room
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

Ground

r
t

Heart to Hea1

DtCNdltloned Aerobics
Tuesday, Oct. 2, 11 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304)6754340, Ext.2005

At The Store

Boneless Beef
English Roast

Lb.

••
•

•
•

16 oz
Chuckwagon

Bacon
2/$ 00

Pkg

N
A
5·

, ~~~ ww.Hiflilv~oi·:;tgi~~

USDA INSPECTED
.'

j

I

ra
ngs you
save BIG on these items and other unadvertised
·udlifv products throughout the _store. .
~

we

"""001

Page C7

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~~~-unb---~~~--hn__ts_·_~__ta_rfi_'a_u_l____~------------~~==~~~~----------------~s~u=n=da~y~,s~e~~=e=m~~='~2=3,~2=00~t

u. zoo·,

Our nation mou~ns: Suggestions for grieving and healing
GALLIPOLIS- Whether we have
loved ones who were maimed or
killed in the terrorist attack on America, or whether our sadness comes
from a heartfelt identification with
and ,compassion .for these innocent
victims, we are part of a grieving
process that is both personal and
national.
Our lives will never be the same.
And to make it even more difficult,
America's expected prolonged war
against terrorism will tend to spark
new episodes of grief that in turn will
awaken previous wounds not-yethealed.
For each of us, our journey
through all this grief will be unique
and personal. With the help of hope
and faith, apd through the assistance
ofloved ones, friends, and community resources, we each will pass
through the anguish to eventual healing. As you move into and through
your grief. these guidelines may help
to ease your way:
• Don't underestimate your need to
grieve. The miracles of modern media
have transported each of us into the
midst of these terrible acts of violence
and into the hearts of the direct vic.Jtirns and their families.
I can't get the images of the people
jumping from the World Trade Center

..

�•

1ver

PageC&amp;

.,'

Becky
Collins
FAMILY
from my mind.We all have see horrible images of pain and destruction.
Allow yourself to grieve; express your
thoughts and feelings.
Talk about it at work, at church,
with friends. It's comforting to know
others feel the same way.
• Be kind to .yourself.Whether your.
involvement has been direct or indirect, you have been wounded. Give
yourself and those around you special
care. Tune into and respond to the
needs of your body. Get regular exercise, such as a brisk walk in the fresh
air, and take plenty of time for rest and
sleep. Do your best to eat food that
comforts you and properly fuels your
body. Remember to drink enough
water and other fluids. And be very
accepting, understanding, and gentle
with yourself.
• Breath! In the stress of grieving,
we often tighten our muscles, parricu-

larly in the lower stomach area. Thus
we fail to breathe properly, de-energizing and stressing ourselves. As you
go through the day, notice your
breathing. Avoid tensing the muscles
of your belly.
• Share your grief. Though you will
need time to yourself. it's also essential
that you freely talk- about your reactions to the attack on America and the
predicted long-term war against ter.rorism. Find at least. one person
whom you respect and trust, and pour
out your heart and soul. Do this regularly, a• long as you feel the need.
• Say no to persistent negative
thoughts.You .may be ·struggling with
a variety of repetitive negative
thoughtS, perhaps mental flashes of
the twin World Trade Center rowers
collapsing or intense thoughts of
revenge.
·
Acknowledge and face these
thoughts and the feelings they provoke. However, once you have felt
them, and learned from them - .· and
when you personally are ready to
move on -do your best not to dwell
ori these troublesome thoughts. When
unwanted devastating pictures come
into your thoughts, mentally say,
"Stop!" while visualizing a large stop
sign. Then immediately put your
mind on more positive, constructive

thoughts. Doing something physical,
like jogging or yoga, can also help you
to break loose fiom harmful, selfdefeating thoughts.
• Journal through your grief. Daily,
or perhaps a couple times a week,
record your thoughts and feelings in a
journal, diary, or notebook.
Let your pen do the talking as you
express your reactions, your concerns,
and your determination to create a
better world. You can write "Dear
Journal," letters, "talking" to your
journal as if it were a trusted and wise
friend; and then letting it respond
back to you through your own pen.
It's a creative way of dialoguing
with your inner self. Or you may
wish, for example, to address your
writing to the firefighters of New
York and their devastated &amp;milies or
perhaps to. God if you are a person of
faith.
.
Putting your genuine thoughts and .
feelings on paper is a therapeutic,
healing experience. It can strengthen
your immune system, your wisdom,
and your ability to help to those
around you.
• If you are spiritually inclined,
draw on this resource. Your relationship to God or a guiding power can
bring immense comfort in the wake
of · all this senseless and violent

•

destruction. Nourish yourself spiritually in whatever way works best for
you: prayer, community worship,
being with nature, meditation. Po\lr
out your heart; express your
heartache, rage, and frustration; ask'
questions. Then trustfully, patiently
open yourself to the inner guidance
you receive. Listen to and trust tile
whispers of your heart and soul.
• Know when to seek professional
help. If you find yburself feeling consistently fearful, edgy, hostile, or
depressed; or if your thoughts keep
dwelling on details of the terrorist
attack and the resulting violent deathS;
or if you are having nightmares or·
your health or job performance is suffering, reach out to a trained profesc
sional who can assist you.
.
• Look for .bright spots. Stay open
to your pain as it arises, but as you can,
balance that pain by embracing the
small, simple gifts of delight that come
your way: a beautiful sunset, the
laughter of children at play, the caress
of a gentle breeze, a co-worker who
makes you chuckle, or a warm hug
from a dear friend. The more you
look for bright spots, the more they
will find you and cheer you 9n.

(Becky Co/lim is Ga/lia County~
Extension age"t for family and consumer
sciePiles, Ohio Stare University.) ·

.

Addison Township was home to two if Gallia's more interesting pioneers
DDJSON
streets.
·When the AddiCharlotte York married Elison School was
jah Berry in 1821. Berry was·
established
in
one of the pioneer settlers in
the Kyger Creek bottoms.
1872, on land
between
the
Methodist
Like many pioneer farm £amChurch and land belonging
ilies, it was a rough life. The
to Sarah Reynolds, the school
couple ha.d seven children,
· children would not have to go
five of whom preceded their
far to study a couple of "real
HISTORY
mother in death.
-pion~ers·: for history class.
The Addison School was
Ltvmg JUSt a few miles frum banks of the Monongahela dosed for the first rime in
.. ' the school in Addison Town- River. Next, the family flat- 1935 when the two-room
ship were two of Gallia's all- boated to Pittsburgh and Addison School was built.
time most interesting persons, stayed a year. During that Due to ·overcrowding at
Thomas Shaver and Charlotte year, Mr. York found himself a Addaville, the one-room
Berry In 1872, both were in new wife, Miss Cooley.
Addison Schoo; was reopened
their old age, that is, in their
The family headed down for a time.
70s. Ironically, they both died the Ohio River, not knowing
The sch~ol was later sold to
-~--iro-thte same year,-1883.
--where theirnexr'Stopping-tfie trustees ofAdoison Towne
Thomas Shave.r was gre~tly place would be.
ship. They \Urned the school
adm1red for hts phySical
They landed at Gallipolis to into a community building
endurance.
.
tarry one night and lay in and a voting place. We note
He was a nattve of the state provisions. The Yorks found that the teacher at Addison
of Delaware, having arrived such kindness manifested from 1928 to 1931 was Anna
here in ·1817. His whole fam- toward them, that they decid- Berry.
ily came here by flatboat from ed to res(de in the Old French
There were sevt:ral Shavers
Pittsburgh. . .
.
City. Among the benefactors that taught in other Addison
Near Galltpohs, the farruly for the York family were some Township schools throughout
became ill and was treated by of the earliest settlers, includ- history.
Dr.Jonas Safford. The office of ing members of the VanTheir owh families could
Dr. Safford at that time was in denbemden family.
.
have provided a . Jot of ·
the 400 block qfFmtAvenue,
. One of Charlotte's most resources for life in pioneer
.. JUSt up from Our House. The VtVJd memones was as a 13- America.
~haver~ liV:ed for a few years year~old girl watching the
(James Sands is a special correm Galltpohs before movmg to proceedings dealing with. the spondent for tire Sunday TimesAddtson Townshtp. .
.
only public hanging Gallipolis Sentinel. He can be contacted by
.J.. Accordmg to one htstonan: ever had. She often told of writi11g to 346 Meadow Lane,
Shaver was noted as remark- how appalled she was to Circleville, Ohio 43113.)
able for hts endurance, and watch the guilty man, James
many fabulous tales are relat- Lane, sit on his own coffin
ed of his ability to run down eating gingerbread while the
foxes and deer on foot." In his preacher was giving Lane is
younger years, Shaver had run funeral sermon.
all the way to Chillicothe and
Before the long sermon was
back in one day, a distance of over, Lane reached into his
about 120 miles.
pocket and got out his tobacWhen Shaver worked for co. He then proceeded to
J.P.R. Bureau a.nd lived in chew and spit tobacco while
Addtson Townsh1p, he would the preacher was trying ro
walk to work (nine miles) rescue the man's soul.
every day, work a full, hard
James Lane had begun his
day, and then walk home. He crime spree by robbing the
did that six days a week for store of ].P.R. Bureau. The
store was then in a house that
some years.
In the 1840s, Adventist ~till stands today at First
-{ever hit Gallia County, that Avenue and State Street. Lane
its belief in the imritinent . later killed a person in conreturn .of Christ and the end necrion with another robbery
of the world. The Adventists during that same spree and it
in the 1840s had even set a was for that murder that he
AMERICAN PIE l
~15, 4:1,7:00, t.15
date in 1844 for that return. was tried and sentenced to
Shaver built himself a plat- hanging. The hanging took
1!1115 CIIIPII5 ":;" 2:1~ 4:1, 7:45, t.45
form, where he and his white place at Third and Pine
ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $ 4 .00
horse would ascend into the
clouds.
On the date in question,
Shaver mounted his steed and
climbed up the steps to the
stage.
He was there several days
before coming down. The
lo lasll, 11 CrediCheck
white horse died · of old age
some years after that. But even
in his old age, Shaver was still
talking about the end of the
world.
Charlotte Berry was born
218 Upper River Rd.
'
in New York, the daughter of
Gallipolis, Ohio
204 W. 2nd Street
Mr. and Mrs. Sandford York.
'I• Mile south of
Pomeroy, Ohio
. On the way west, Mrs. York
the Sliver Bridge
99~·0461
died in Pennsylvania. The
446-2404
u
.....
CC:700077.oo&amp;
family spent the winter on the
Uc- CC:700077-400 ... 001
U.011MCI750041.Q06

ONCE A SCHOOL- The Add~
son Community Building once
served as the Addison
School. Students studle~
about American pioneers, .
among other subjects. Two of
the more interesting Amerl·
can pioneers lived in Addison
Township. (Contributed photO)

Jatnes

Sands

T

?&amp;tl casn. ti{[ Payiay?

$CASH$

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING &amp; lOAN

lbe Mouse at 30: Where would Orlando be without' it?
BY MIKE ScHNEIDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

years Disney has underpaid its happened at Disneyland in
taxes
by claiming land as agri- Anaheim, Calf.
• ORLANDO, Fla. It's
cultural instead of commercial.
The Legislature, Foglesong
··.almost impossible now to
It has conipeted for bond argues, was sold on the idea
' imagine Orlando without Walt
money to expand its sewage that Disney needed such
' Disney World.
treatment plant against Orange autonomy and flexibility to
', Few companies have singleCounty. which wanted to sup- build Epcot (Experimental
"handedly changed a commuport affordable )lousing initia- Prototype Community of
' hity the way Disney did 30
tives. Disney rwice in the 1980s Tomorrow), a futuristic, model
years ago when it opened the
nixed plans for community- city that would showcase
'Magic Kingdom, the first of its
wide. rapid transit systems, . American industry, technology
four Florida theme parks, in
ignored affordable housing and education . Epcot never
what was then a sleepy citrus
issues affecting its workers and materialized as envisioned· by
· and cattle town.
_,
shirked paying development- Walt Disney, who died in
Orlando has ·since become
related impact fees, according 1966, five years before Disney
home to seven of the most
to Foglesong.
World opened.
. popular theme parks in the
" It's a marriage that has
Instead, Epcot · opened in
."world and more than 100,000
some
structural
problems
1982
as a schizophrenic theme
·hotel rooms. It is a destination FAMILIAR SIGHT - Main because of the low-wage
park with its dual personalities
for more than 40 million visi- Street U.S.A. in the Magic nature of employoi1ent and
split berween exhibits on techtors a year and one of the Kingdom, with Cinderella Cas·
tie in background, is shown at because of the community's nology and World Expo-style
fastest-growing cities in the
Walt Disney World Resort in dependence • on tourism,'' pavilions on foreign countries.
'nation. Metro Orlando's popuLake Buena Vista, Aa., in this Foglesong said.
Disney's nod to a planned
·lation has swelled from about
undated handout photo (AP
.Disney chose Orlando in the community was Celebration,
''522,000 people in 1970 to its Photo/Walt Disney World)
1960s because it was where opening i.n 1996 as a throwcurrent size of about 1.6 miltwo major highways, Interstate back to small-town America
' lion people.
·
"They
continue
to
generate
a
4
and the Florida "fitrnpike, rather than a community of
" But Disney World, which
large economic impact that intersected. Using dummy cor- . tomorrow as promised to state
:~elebrates itS 30th anniversary can't be replicated by anybody potations to prevent land speclawmakers in the 1960s:
·.Oct. 1, hasn't always acted like else in the community:'
ulation,
Disney
secretly
"I think lawmakers were
Prince Charming, and there
Orange County chairman acquired more than 27,000 deceived,'' Foglesong said.
have been periodic episodes Richard Crotty s~id Disney has acres where it eventually
"This is one of the biggest stoJhat raised questions about been good for economic would build the Magic Kingries of the century in Florida:
:Whether Disney and the sur- development but acknowl- dom, Epcot, Disney-MGM'
Disney said they were going to
'rounding community would edged that some old~ timers Studios, Animal Kingdom, I 8
'do one thing for the conceslive together happily ever after. lament the toll Disney~gener- · hotels and three water parks.
sions, but they turned around
While Disney's presence has ated growth has taken on
Disney has had a. unique and did something else."
brought low unemployment, Florida's natural beauty.
advantage over competitors
Dianna Morgan, Disney
international name recognition
"There are two stories about and
local
governments, World's senior vice president
and a tax base for local govern- Florida. One is before Disney. Foglesong argues because the
for public affairs, disagrees with
ments, it has also brought traf- The other is after Disney," said Florida Legislature in the late
that interpretation, saying
fic-jammed highways, over- Crotty, who had a college job · 1960s granted the company
"crowded schools and a low- delivering iron structures to planning and zoning authority
·wage economy.
the Magic Kingdom construe- and exemptions from local
,;, Most local leaders argue that tion site. "I think it's pretty land-use laws. Disney was
;Disney's presence has been ·undeniable that Disney put a!) owed to set up its own pri:well-worth any social costs.
vate government, the Reedy
. Orlando on the map."
~~OVlDlNG PlENATAL ,.
" "If Disney hadn't come,
CARE TO OHIO
In his recently published Creek Improvement District, •
RESIDENT!. 0\U ~
·would the community have . book, "Married to the Mouse," which could regulate land use,
U6-8SJB FOlAN f.
'.gotten anything? We'd still be Rollins College politics profes- provide firefighting s.ervices, •
APJIOINTMENl
~
•
'selling oranges and raising cat- sor Richard Foglesong com- build roads and license alcohol
•
•
FREE
tle,'' said Bill Peeper, executive pares Disney and Orlando's sales. It could also prevent
•
1 director
of
the relationship to a sometimes- tacky developments from
Al!llAYAilABII
~
•
Orlando/Orange
County rocky marriage.
being built around the parks as ~ fal&lt;e ~oi&gt;JOUnell..d~oumkoch;ld •
Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau.
Foglesong argues that in past
1\t
.

1 I 1 I I

&gt; : I 0 I 0 &gt; I I

t I 0 t 0 I I t 0 I I I

" '(

Florida lawmakers granted
Disney such immense powers
for economic development
reasons.
"The greatest aspect of the
story is simply that Walt Disney
World is probably the most significant economic incentive
initiative ever created,'' Morgan
said.
Disney World now employs
55,000 workers, pays $500 million a year in taxes and con·tributes S3 billion in direct
spending to the local economy,
according to Disney officials.
The national economic slowdown, though, has taken a toll
on attendance during the first
half of the year and 1,400 jobs
were eliminated at Disney
World as part of a companywide attrition.
Disney also has set high standards for the corrununity on
urban .lesign, customer service
and hospitality, said Orlando
Mayor Glenda Hood.
"We were srill a small town
at the time and Disney brought
us into a whole new age and
took us to a new level,'' said
Hood, a central Florida native.
The community wasn't
ready for a rapid transit system

in 1984 and the "maglev" train
proposed in the late 1980s
wasn't a genuine transit system,
Morgan said. Moreover, Disney also has built housing for
its college interns and foreign
workers.
"The truth is the free market
is working," Morgan said.

SPRING VAllll CltHIM
446 •4524

(\L[ H'&gt;&lt; "I

lo&gt;',/

·~-·'''"'

,....
'

_,

....

FRI912101· THURS 9127101
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"

$3.75 ADMISSION

ICFO&gt;T&amp;'" FUTURES MAY BE EXCLUDED)

THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10" 1:20
MATlttEES SAT I SUN 1:1013:20

12' ......... ........... $19•.00'~
15' .................... $26.99
lB' .................... $32..99
24' .................... $52..99

15X30 OVAL.. .... $47.99

IN-GROUND POOL COVERS

16XJ2 ........ $53.99

3 429

IBX36 ........ $63.99

20X40 ........ $74.99

OLIDAY POOLS, INC. ..

.'•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

I

A G EN E SIS .H 0 SPITAL

Ball

Room Danc:lq

Every Tuesday for three weeks, beginning
Tue. Sept. 25, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$15 per person
Minimum of 3 couples/6 individuals
or class will be cancelled ·
(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group
Monday, Oct. 1, 6:30p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

}'

•('
,.

Alzheimer's Support Group
Tuesday, Oct. 16, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236, Ext. 1383

r

''
•'

.. -

••Prices effective september 23"' thru 29"

Aphula Attoclatlon a Stroke
SupPort Group
Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation Center Conference Room
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

.

••
,I

$ 29

1/2 Gallon

reg, bun size, hot &amp;

·

Apple
Cider

•
••'

•
••
••

••~
''

¢

••
•••

Pre-Cooked

I

•'

Oscar Mayer

l

•

Bacon

I

Parkinson's Education
Thursday, Oct. 18, 11 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304) 675-2551

'

!

$ 99

I

I
I

}

Aeroblca
Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222

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Tuesday, Oct. 9, 8 a.m. • 4 p.m. (new ccvds)
Thursday, Oct. 18, 12. 4:30 p.m.
(renewal class)
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Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Aerobics Room
$50/session (new cards)
$25/session (expired cards)
(304) 675-4340 ext. 2003

$ 49

Chuck

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·Thursday, Oct. 18, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Aerobics Room
(304)6754340,Ext.2003

Diabetes Outpatient Classes
Tuesday, Oct. 9, 8 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Hartley Room
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

Ground

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t

Heart to Hea1

DtCNdltloned Aerobics
Tuesday, Oct. 2, 11 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304)6754340, Ext.2005

At The Store

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u. zoo·,

Our nation mou~ns: Suggestions for grieving and healing
GALLIPOLIS- Whether we have
loved ones who were maimed or
killed in the terrorist attack on America, or whether our sadness comes
from a heartfelt identification with
and ,compassion .for these innocent
victims, we are part of a grieving
process that is both personal and
national.
Our lives will never be the same.
And to make it even more difficult,
America's expected prolonged war
against terrorism will tend to spark
new episodes of grief that in turn will
awaken previous wounds not-yethealed.
For each of us, our journey
through all this grief will be unique
and personal. With the help of hope
and faith, apd through the assistance
ofloved ones, friends, and community resources, we each will pass
through the anguish to eventual healing. As you move into and through
your grief. these guidelines may help
to ease your way:
• Don't underestimate your need to
grieve. The miracles of modern media
have transported each of us into the
midst of these terrible acts of violence
and into the hearts of the direct vic.Jtirns and their families.
I can't get the images of the people
jumping from the World Trade Center

..

�Gallipolis, Ohio

Sunday, September 23, 2001

Efforts under way to preserve Monticello vistas Digging
BY CARUIS SANTOS

Martha Jefferson Hospital,
which has proposed to move to
Pantops over the neXt decade,
has already met with Monticello officials to lessen its intrusion on the viewshed, Jordan
said.
Joan McDowell, a planner
with the county planning
depattment, said the new section of the comprehensive plan
established the importance of
Monticello to the area and the
country.
"But no one ever said you
can't develop under the mountain." She said she has heard no
complaints from developers
about cooperating with Monticello. "But it's voluntary, that's
why we probably never heard
any complaints:'
But threats abound. Some
developers are annoyed at what
they perceive as •just another
laY.r ofbureaucracy and intru-

RICHMONO TIMEWISPATCH

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
(AP) - Looking out from
Monticello in 1820, Thomas
Jefferson as an old man would
have seen a rolling, tree-studded scene of beaury as far as
the horizon.
"The eye ranged over an
expanse of forty miles, and was
limited by the verge of the
horizon, which resembled that
of the ocean," one visiting
newspaper reporter wrote of
the view in August of that year.
lbat is not true today, of
course. Smog and haze have
changed the incomparable vistas which in part drew Jefferson to build on his little mountain. In Jefferson's day, Monticello had a greater population
than the hamlet of Charlottesville.
While there is no immediate
threat to Monticello's vistas,
officials are still concerned that
the seemingly inevitability of
growth and sprawl will taint
the view and lessen the
remarkable experience of Jefferson's home.
"Our goal is to save as much
of the viewshed as is possible,"
said Dan Jordan, the head of
-'the Thomas Jefferson foundation, which owns Monticello.
"That's a difficult challenge on
a mountaintop."
"The. viewshed is part of the
Jefferson legacy;' said Jordan.
"It's a way of understanding
Thomas Jefferson and why
Monticello is special. It's part of
the magic."
Jefferson understood that
magic, writing in 1786: "How
sublime to look down into the
workhouse of nature, to see 'her
clouds, hail, snow, rain, thunder
all fabricated at our feet! And
the glorious .Sun when rising
as if out of a dis.tant water, just
gilding the tops of the mounl:ains and giving life to all
nature!"
Viewshed is a planner's term
for the area within sight of any
particular point, such as a historic· property.
Beth Meyers, a University of

SCENIC VISTA - A view of Monticello and the surrounding
grounds in Charlottesville, Va. The development of Char·
lottesville and Albemarle County have changed the incomparable vistas which in part drew Jefferson to build on his little
mountain. (AP Photo(The Daily Progress, Andrew Shurtleff)

me to envisage that Viewsheds
won't be degrading" in the
furure.
Jordan admits that Monticello was not particularly concerned with the views until
"we had two wakeup calls in
the t 980s."
A huge building constructed
to serve as a retirement community sprang up along U.S.
250 east of Charlottesville in
the mid-'SOs and is easily visible from the entrance to Monticello.
"We looked out there one
day and there it was," Jordan
said.
"That shocked people in a
major way;• said Sally Thomas,
the chairwoman of the Alberil~rle Counry Board of Supervisors. "Since then . . . the
county has gotten better and
better at insisting that developers get an agreement with
Monticello about how things
look from Monticello."
In fact, there is now is an
· amendment to the Albemarle
County comprehensive plan
that requires cooperation
between county developers
and Monticello, though it does
not give Monticello a veto
over development.
Another shock came in the
late 1980s after the state proposed to begin constructing
office buildings, including one

_ ___;v~iirg~iru~·ha~:~~in~l~a~d:~ca~r-1:~-fc~o~rreth~e, state
preserving historic viewsheds
dates at least to the 1920s,
when a woman's group raised
concerns about the views from
Mount Vernon.
"Ultimately, its not just
about buildings and grounds,
but about views that control
and affect the visitor's experience;• she said. "Urbanization
and suburbanization have
encroached on a lot ofhistory."
Various tools such as use of
easements and land acquisition,
can help maintain the viewshed for historic properties,
Meyers said. "But it's hard for

easements, which limit growth,
have been voluntarily obtaiited
by Monticello neighbors, and
even big companies have
worked to lessen the impact of ~ion.
the groWth.
Power plants proposed for
Jordan praised the State construction in nearby Auvanfarm Insurance Company's na County are of concern, too,
cooperation when it expanded because of fears of potential air
its regional headquarters in the pollution. Jordan said he has
1990s on U.S. 250 at Pantops not opposed their construcMountain - a high-growth tion, but only raised concerns
area easily visible from Monti- about air pollution.
cello. "They came to us well in
A long-range proposal to
advance .. . and met with us expand U.S. 250 east of Charseven or eight times," Jordan lottesviile into a four-lane
said.
highway, which is certain to
The result of those meetings bring even more development,
was a better camouflaged is also of concern.
building with trees screening . Still, developers know they
State farm's parking lot and a are being watched.
change in roof lines and roof
The viewshed "is something
color that lessened the impact almost everyone is now aware

'

Sunday, September ll, 2001

the Poffenbarger home, 915
Viand St.
"The home that stood here
in the 1800s burnt to the
ground," Casto said. "The srudents have found burnt areas, readings at their site, results are
coal, bricks along with fiood monitored and graphed on
computer. ~rudents are also
water deposits."
Students participating in the recording what they find at
project include Cody Birch- what depth as they are dig~
field, April Rainey, Amanda ging. Casto said the class is get- ·
Smith, Charles Sullivan, Erin ling close to the Indian layer;
Darst, Kristina Sawtell, Emalea where they are likely to find
arrowheads and projectile
Neal and Ashley Russell.
"I enjoy finding all the arti- points.
Prior to beginning their
facts," Rainey said. "I've
work,
the srudents filed a site
learned a lot."
·
"I was really surpri!ed," form with the state's archaeolSmith said. "l didn't think we'd ogist. Based on findings, the
state could decide to come in
find this tile and sruff."
and
excavate even more.
Sullivan, who was participating in the clig for the first time, ' ·According to Casto, Mason
said with · a smile, "l like to County has over 200 registered archaeology sites and
dig."
In adclition to digging, the probably many more that have
students are also le,a rning not been discovered yet. The
about finding buried artifacts state itself has over 9,000 sites.
"Ohio has made strides in
by using a ·man-made electrideveloping museums and sites
cal instrument.
"When I worked this sum- for visitors and teaching,"
mer at the mounds, I was able Casto 5aid. "None ofWest Virto use a $25,000 fluxgate gra- ginia's sites are set up for that."
In the future, Casto hopes to
diometer which does the same
thing as a S66 instrument with write a grant for a fluxgate
parts from Radio Shack," gracliometer for the state,
;
Casto said. "The man-made which does not have one.
The students will conclude'
instrument uses metal barbetheir
digging this week and
cue probes and a lantern battery. The electrical current sent · the first rainy day they have,
through the ground is ham- Casto will teach them how to
pered when there are objects clean their artifacts. All of the
finds will be cataloged for
beneath."
With the students doing future reference.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest perfonned last week.
Each day's closing figures are provided by Advesl of Gallipolis.

...
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MON.

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IN PREPARATION -Jason Danford, maintenance employee at Ohio.Valley Memory Gardens, adjusts a U.S. flag In the
chapel of the cemetery's new mausoleum extension. An open house displaying the long-promised extension is scheduled today from 1·5 p.m. (Kevin Kelly photo)

General Electric

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GALLIPOLIS - In the face
of the unspeakable horror of
Tuesday, Sept. 11, Americans
have pulled together like never
before. We cannot begin to
express the enormity of the
loss of life or the incompre- ·.
hensible evil of the perpetrators. Yet the outpouring of
support for each other across·
the country renews· our faith
in the ideals of America.
As thoughts turn to rebuilding and restoring, a common
concern is that the attack
spark a recession.
. Certainly, some sectors of
~he economy may be particulady ha~ hit, for example airhne.s al).d. travel, msura~ce,
. retail and mvestment banking.
But others ar~ hkely to thnve, ·
such as secu~l~, consumer stapies and ut1bt1es. . .
.
After an event of th1s magm.
· . a] h
tu de, t h e hi stone s ort-term
.
h
II
response 1s a s ort-term se off followed by a recovery. For
e~mple, after Pearl Harbor
(Dec. 7, 1941), the Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell ·4.59 ·
percent in the first week.

will

.

••'
'

ull1.,77~7-6721.

Bryce
Smith
GUEST
VIEW
After a month; it had
regained some ground with a 1.45 percent return. After the
Reagan assa~sination attempt
(March 30, 1981), the Dow
Jones lost 0.06 percent during
the first week. Its one- month
return rose to 2. 94 percent.
And following the Oklahoma City bombing..{April 19,
1995), the Dow Joites' oneweek return was 2.90 percent
and one-month return was
"
'
J, 86 percen 1.
S
h
d ?
o, w at can we o .
K
h (; · h c
• eep t .C aJt · ens~m~r
confidence 1s one of the mdtcaroc:s Alan G~enspan g1ves
considerable wetght to when
PhNIH Ill! Smtih, Dl

tine 1 business news Item?

Give us • all at (740) ue-:z:w:z. ut.n
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said. to the public, its iongtime o:wmirs
Jack antl -SlieilaC:laxton of.Atnens
have owned the cemetery on Neighborhood Road since 1960, except for
two periods when they sold the 30-

acre· site on land contract to different
buyers.
The most recent sale ended with
lengthy litigation against the last set of
buyers, resulting in the cemetery
returning to the Cl:ixtons' ownership.
The Claxtons explained that a
pledge to build the extension was
made and contracts were sold, but no
action on building it was done until
the lawsuit was settled.
...... The Claxtons paid for the extension to assure clients the pledge was
~carried out.
· '
"What we want to tell people is
that .your mausoleum is here;• said
Mrs. Claxton. "They need to know it's

Tips for fall

•

Audiovox MVX 480

. GALLIPOLIS - Completion of
an extension to the mausoleum at
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens is not
only fulfillment of a promise made to
clients, but another service made avail-

~~~~~:~;;~~z~~~~4~'~J~~~~i_l~able
~

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road leading to Monticello.
The state, after protests from
Monticello and others, eventually abandoned the·· idea.
In 1990, Monticello called in
experts, a team from the Trust
for Public Land; to develop a
strategy to protect the view•
shed.
Their study suggestec:! Monticello acquire key parcels, promote conseTVation easements
and push for enhanced government regulations.
·
Monticello only owns 2,000
acres of what used to be a
5,000- acre plantation. Some

'-·. ·' - .

Page Dl

(first three months)

Four Ts' tell story
of fall book season

\

hmPIIpC1

ads, Pages D2- 7

for $40 $2a per month

of

"These are the kinds of
books that bring the customers into the store," said
Wietrak, a vice president of
merchandising for Barnes &amp;
Noble. "They bring the gift
buyer in. They create excitement about books in general."
With the economy still
slow, the publishing industry
is counting on consumers to
think of books as both relatively affordable (a Tolkien
paperback can be had for
under $10, cheaper than a
new CD) and widely accessible, bringing in everyone
from the fantasy golfer to the
reader of fantasies.
Any number of subjects
might produce best sellers this
fall. In "fire," Sebastian Junger ,
of "The Perfect Storm" fame
takes us into the , burning
· canyons of Idaho. Studs Terkel
gives us stories of mortality in
"Will the Circle Be Unbro~en?"
Authors
David
Edmonds and John Eidinow
turned a tO-minute argument
between two major 20th-century philosophers, Ludwi!l
Wittgenstein and Karl Popper, into the anticipated nonfiction book "Wittgenstein's
Poker."

~lassified

"The l1orne that stood
htre in tl1e 1800s burn;
to the ground," Casto
said. "The students
have fourul burnt areiU,
coal, bricks along with
.f1ood water dtposi ts. "

·2,500.minutes

~~~------------------------------1

NEW YORK (AP)- Bob
Wietrak, a sales executive at
Barnes &amp; Noble, sees the fall
book season as the story of
the "four T's": Tiger, Twain,
Theodore and Tolkien.
• Tiger is Tiger Woods, who
in "How I Play Golf'' shares
his insights with the swinging
masses. (Some might th~n
-ronslder Craij! Brass"'How to
Quit Golf: A 12-Step· Program").
• Twain is . Mark Twain,
author of" A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage," an
unpublished story written in
1876 anci:J!nally coming out
as a book.
• Theodore is Theodore
Roosevelt, subject of Edmund
Morris' long, long-awaited
biography, "Theodore Rex,"
the sequel to his award-winning "The Rise of Theodore
Roosevelt." It's Morris first
book since the notorious
"Dutch," in which Morris
inserted himself as a character
in his authorized biography of
Ronald Reagan.
• Tolkien is J.R.R. Tolkien,
the late British author whose
"Lord of the Rings" trilogy
has been a best seller for
months and promises to rise
even higher with the film version due out in December.

Inside:

(

'

\

here and this thing is behind us."
An open house to display the
extension is today from 1-5 p.m .
"They can come, inspect the place,
know that it's here and we will work
out what needs to be done," Mrs.
Claxton added.
The extension is one of several features added to Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens over the years. The site was
developed in 1959 and purchased
shortly after by the Claxtons, who
added special sections to honor young
children, veterans and Masons.
The extension is to an existing
. mausoleum built by one of the own-

Piean SH Svvlca, Dl

Five-state beif
initiative launched

GALLIPOLIS - At the
Gallia
County Cattleinen's
POMEROY - fall has
Association annual banquet
arrived with prospects of
a
few weeks ago, 'participants
sunny days and cool
were briefly updated on the
nights. Plants finish maturprogress of the "five State
ing and are storing muriHal
Beef
Initiative," an effort to
ents in the plant's root .and
which Gallia County has
stem structures for next
Kneen
never
been formally introspring's growth spurts .
d!lced.
Bring in your tropical
GUEST
VIEW
The five State Beef Iniand house plants that have
tiative was organized by
been spending the sumfinally,
select
the
proper
Michigan, Ohio, Indiana,
mer
outside. Tender
root
package
for
your
lllinois and Kentucky beef
perennials, which form
industry leaders to improve
tubers and rhizomes like planting. Plants with no
soil
around
their
roots
are
economic
opportunities for
sweet potatoes, cannas and
cattle producers,
dahlias, are almost ready called bareroot plants.
fhese
plants
need
to
be
While similar programs to
·
for harvest. Deciduous
help producers receive high(plants which lose their c~,refully handled to insure
er returns have come and
leaves · during the winter) that their roots ·don't dry
gone,
recognize that this Initrees and shrubs will soon out.
tiative addresses the issues
Plant as soon as your
be ready to be dug up and
that
iinpact sustainability as
transplanted within the receive your plants. Conland~cape.
·
'
well as profitability.
tainer grown plants are the
The regional scope of this
It is time to prepare for easiest tQ handle and plant
initiative is intended to offer
planting trees and shrubs as their entire root system
marketing power to producinto your yard. Keep in is in the container. Balled
ers
who create a uniform
mind the five steps of fall and burlapped plants have
· product, follow manageh1cnt
planting. Discover the been cut out of the soil at
guidelines, and unite their
attributes and disadvan- the nursery and their root
resources and goals to
tages of your planiing site. system packaged in burlap.
reduce input costs.
first, ask yourself if the site
When
planting, .
The goals of the initiative
is' sunny or shady, dry· or unloosen burlap from the
are: '(1) to create and coordiwet, good or poor soil or . plant stem and fold back
nate a system that facilitates
on a s)ope or level ground. the burlap so it can be
high qualiry beef production
Next, select the right buried and rot away.
among
Eastern Corn Belt
plant for the site, by learnLastly, plant the plant at
producers; .and (2) to solv,e
ing the characteristics for the same soil level as it was
the problems that prevent'
the plants you think you grown. Do not set the
them from achieving the
want to have. Lists are plant deeper than the surfirst goal.
available from the ex!iiJrounding ground. Stake
Although over simplified
sion office, libraries and
trees with the stake on the
here, each of the above goals
many local retailers (check
\vindward side. Mulch the
involves a multiiude of
planting tag tips).
new planting with one to
objectives that coordinate
Third, prepare the soil
two inches of bark chips ·
improvements in genetics,
ahead of purchasing any
or
shredded
bark.
Water
management, and marketing
plants. ModifY soil by
the
new
planting.
among participating herds.
incr~asing drainage and
' Just a few of these many
adding organic matter
Learn ways to control
objectives Include: designing
especially in the top
the
Multicolored
.
Asiatic
standardized health protwelve inches of the plaritgrams to nnmmtze disease
mg area.
PIHHHIKneen,DI

•••

)

I,

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

problems and anti-biotic
use; coordinating genetic
change and establishing
genetic criteria; developing
and using an economic
model of the entire beef
supply chain to identifY
types of businesses with the
most favorable return vs.
risk; using advanced techno'logy and non-invasive
approaches for dete~mining
beef tenderness; and identifYing the "postharvest partners" for marke nng the
product.
This effort involves participating state personnel
from all facets of the industry including leaders from
land· grant universities (such
as OSU). state departments
of agriculture, state cattlemen 's associations, livestock

marketing organizations, and
.the farm Bureau.
To achieve the aforemen. tioned objectives, personnel
from these industry facets
are organized into teams:
economics, genetics, reproduction, health, product
quality, certification, data
management,
integrated
resource management, and
coordinated system resource
management.
.
The information, education, and faciliiation system

Pl.... Hlltyrnll, Dl

�Gallipolis, Ohio

Sunday, September 23, 2001

Efforts under way to preserve Monticello vistas Digging
BY CARUIS SANTOS

Martha Jefferson Hospital,
which has proposed to move to
Pantops over the neXt decade,
has already met with Monticello officials to lessen its intrusion on the viewshed, Jordan
said.
Joan McDowell, a planner
with the county planning
depattment, said the new section of the comprehensive plan
established the importance of
Monticello to the area and the
country.
"But no one ever said you
can't develop under the mountain." She said she has heard no
complaints from developers
about cooperating with Monticello. "But it's voluntary, that's
why we probably never heard
any complaints:'
But threats abound. Some
developers are annoyed at what
they perceive as •just another
laY.r ofbureaucracy and intru-

RICHMONO TIMEWISPATCH

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
(AP) - Looking out from
Monticello in 1820, Thomas
Jefferson as an old man would
have seen a rolling, tree-studded scene of beaury as far as
the horizon.
"The eye ranged over an
expanse of forty miles, and was
limited by the verge of the
horizon, which resembled that
of the ocean," one visiting
newspaper reporter wrote of
the view in August of that year.
lbat is not true today, of
course. Smog and haze have
changed the incomparable vistas which in part drew Jefferson to build on his little mountain. In Jefferson's day, Monticello had a greater population
than the hamlet of Charlottesville.
While there is no immediate
threat to Monticello's vistas,
officials are still concerned that
the seemingly inevitability of
growth and sprawl will taint
the view and lessen the
remarkable experience of Jefferson's home.
"Our goal is to save as much
of the viewshed as is possible,"
said Dan Jordan, the head of
-'the Thomas Jefferson foundation, which owns Monticello.
"That's a difficult challenge on
a mountaintop."
"The. viewshed is part of the
Jefferson legacy;' said Jordan.
"It's a way of understanding
Thomas Jefferson and why
Monticello is special. It's part of
the magic."
Jefferson understood that
magic, writing in 1786: "How
sublime to look down into the
workhouse of nature, to see 'her
clouds, hail, snow, rain, thunder
all fabricated at our feet! And
the glorious .Sun when rising
as if out of a dis.tant water, just
gilding the tops of the mounl:ains and giving life to all
nature!"
Viewshed is a planner's term
for the area within sight of any
particular point, such as a historic· property.
Beth Meyers, a University of

SCENIC VISTA - A view of Monticello and the surrounding
grounds in Charlottesville, Va. The development of Char·
lottesville and Albemarle County have changed the incomparable vistas which in part drew Jefferson to build on his little
mountain. (AP Photo(The Daily Progress, Andrew Shurtleff)

me to envisage that Viewsheds
won't be degrading" in the
furure.
Jordan admits that Monticello was not particularly concerned with the views until
"we had two wakeup calls in
the t 980s."
A huge building constructed
to serve as a retirement community sprang up along U.S.
250 east of Charlottesville in
the mid-'SOs and is easily visible from the entrance to Monticello.
"We looked out there one
day and there it was," Jordan
said.
"That shocked people in a
major way;• said Sally Thomas,
the chairwoman of the Alberil~rle Counry Board of Supervisors. "Since then . . . the
county has gotten better and
better at insisting that developers get an agreement with
Monticello about how things
look from Monticello."
In fact, there is now is an
· amendment to the Albemarle
County comprehensive plan
that requires cooperation
between county developers
and Monticello, though it does
not give Monticello a veto
over development.
Another shock came in the
late 1980s after the state proposed to begin constructing
office buildings, including one

_ ___;v~iirg~iru~·ha~:~~in~l~a~d:~ca~r-1:~-fc~o~rreth~e, state
preserving historic viewsheds
dates at least to the 1920s,
when a woman's group raised
concerns about the views from
Mount Vernon.
"Ultimately, its not just
about buildings and grounds,
but about views that control
and affect the visitor's experience;• she said. "Urbanization
and suburbanization have
encroached on a lot ofhistory."
Various tools such as use of
easements and land acquisition,
can help maintain the viewshed for historic properties,
Meyers said. "But it's hard for

easements, which limit growth,
have been voluntarily obtaiited
by Monticello neighbors, and
even big companies have
worked to lessen the impact of ~ion.
the groWth.
Power plants proposed for
Jordan praised the State construction in nearby Auvanfarm Insurance Company's na County are of concern, too,
cooperation when it expanded because of fears of potential air
its regional headquarters in the pollution. Jordan said he has
1990s on U.S. 250 at Pantops not opposed their construcMountain - a high-growth tion, but only raised concerns
area easily visible from Monti- about air pollution.
cello. "They came to us well in
A long-range proposal to
advance .. . and met with us expand U.S. 250 east of Charseven or eight times," Jordan lottesviile into a four-lane
said.
highway, which is certain to
The result of those meetings bring even more development,
was a better camouflaged is also of concern.
building with trees screening . Still, developers know they
State farm's parking lot and a are being watched.
change in roof lines and roof
The viewshed "is something
color that lessened the impact almost everyone is now aware

'

Sunday, September ll, 2001

the Poffenbarger home, 915
Viand St.
"The home that stood here
in the 1800s burnt to the
ground," Casto said. "The srudents have found burnt areas, readings at their site, results are
coal, bricks along with fiood monitored and graphed on
computer. ~rudents are also
water deposits."
Students participating in the recording what they find at
project include Cody Birch- what depth as they are dig~
field, April Rainey, Amanda ging. Casto said the class is get- ·
Smith, Charles Sullivan, Erin ling close to the Indian layer;
Darst, Kristina Sawtell, Emalea where they are likely to find
arrowheads and projectile
Neal and Ashley Russell.
"I enjoy finding all the arti- points.
Prior to beginning their
facts," Rainey said. "I've
work,
the srudents filed a site
learned a lot."
·
"I was really surpri!ed," form with the state's archaeolSmith said. "l didn't think we'd ogist. Based on findings, the
state could decide to come in
find this tile and sruff."
and
excavate even more.
Sullivan, who was participating in the clig for the first time, ' ·According to Casto, Mason
said with · a smile, "l like to County has over 200 registered archaeology sites and
dig."
In adclition to digging, the probably many more that have
students are also le,a rning not been discovered yet. The
about finding buried artifacts state itself has over 9,000 sites.
"Ohio has made strides in
by using a ·man-made electrideveloping museums and sites
cal instrument.
"When I worked this sum- for visitors and teaching,"
mer at the mounds, I was able Casto 5aid. "None ofWest Virto use a $25,000 fluxgate gra- ginia's sites are set up for that."
In the future, Casto hopes to
diometer which does the same
thing as a S66 instrument with write a grant for a fluxgate
parts from Radio Shack," gracliometer for the state,
;
Casto said. "The man-made which does not have one.
The students will conclude'
instrument uses metal barbetheir
digging this week and
cue probes and a lantern battery. The electrical current sent · the first rainy day they have,
through the ground is ham- Casto will teach them how to
pered when there are objects clean their artifacts. All of the
finds will be cataloged for
beneath."
With the students doing future reference.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest perfonned last week.
Each day's closing figures are provided by Advesl of Gallipolis.

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IN PREPARATION -Jason Danford, maintenance employee at Ohio.Valley Memory Gardens, adjusts a U.S. flag In the
chapel of the cemetery's new mausoleum extension. An open house displaying the long-promised extension is scheduled today from 1·5 p.m. (Kevin Kelly photo)

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GALLIPOLIS - In the face
of the unspeakable horror of
Tuesday, Sept. 11, Americans
have pulled together like never
before. We cannot begin to
express the enormity of the
loss of life or the incompre- ·.
hensible evil of the perpetrators. Yet the outpouring of
support for each other across·
the country renews· our faith
in the ideals of America.
As thoughts turn to rebuilding and restoring, a common
concern is that the attack
spark a recession.
. Certainly, some sectors of
~he economy may be particulady ha~ hit, for example airhne.s al).d. travel, msura~ce,
. retail and mvestment banking.
But others ar~ hkely to thnve, ·
such as secu~l~, consumer stapies and ut1bt1es. . .
.
After an event of th1s magm.
· . a] h
tu de, t h e hi stone s ort-term
.
h
II
response 1s a s ort-term se off followed by a recovery. For
e~mple, after Pearl Harbor
(Dec. 7, 1941), the Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell ·4.59 ·
percent in the first week.

will

.

••'
'

ull1.,77~7-6721.

Bryce
Smith
GUEST
VIEW
After a month; it had
regained some ground with a 1.45 percent return. After the
Reagan assa~sination attempt
(March 30, 1981), the Dow
Jones lost 0.06 percent during
the first week. Its one- month
return rose to 2. 94 percent.
And following the Oklahoma City bombing..{April 19,
1995), the Dow Joites' oneweek return was 2.90 percent
and one-month return was
"
'
J, 86 percen 1.
S
h
d ?
o, w at can we o .
K
h (; · h c
• eep t .C aJt · ens~m~r
confidence 1s one of the mdtcaroc:s Alan G~enspan g1ves
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said. to the public, its iongtime o:wmirs
Jack antl -SlieilaC:laxton of.Atnens
have owned the cemetery on Neighborhood Road since 1960, except for
two periods when they sold the 30-

acre· site on land contract to different
buyers.
The most recent sale ended with
lengthy litigation against the last set of
buyers, resulting in the cemetery
returning to the Cl:ixtons' ownership.
The Claxtons explained that a
pledge to build the extension was
made and contracts were sold, but no
action on building it was done until
the lawsuit was settled.
...... The Claxtons paid for the extension to assure clients the pledge was
~carried out.
· '
"What we want to tell people is
that .your mausoleum is here;• said
Mrs. Claxton. "They need to know it's

Tips for fall

•

Audiovox MVX 480

. GALLIPOLIS - Completion of
an extension to the mausoleum at
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens is not
only fulfillment of a promise made to
clients, but another service made avail-

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~

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road leading to Monticello.
The state, after protests from
Monticello and others, eventually abandoned the·· idea.
In 1990, Monticello called in
experts, a team from the Trust
for Public Land; to develop a
strategy to protect the view•
shed.
Their study suggestec:! Monticello acquire key parcels, promote conseTVation easements
and push for enhanced government regulations.
·
Monticello only owns 2,000
acres of what used to be a
5,000- acre plantation. Some

'-·. ·' - .

Page Dl

(first three months)

Four Ts' tell story
of fall book season

\

hmPIIpC1

ads, Pages D2- 7

for $40 $2a per month

of

"These are the kinds of
books that bring the customers into the store," said
Wietrak, a vice president of
merchandising for Barnes &amp;
Noble. "They bring the gift
buyer in. They create excitement about books in general."
With the economy still
slow, the publishing industry
is counting on consumers to
think of books as both relatively affordable (a Tolkien
paperback can be had for
under $10, cheaper than a
new CD) and widely accessible, bringing in everyone
from the fantasy golfer to the
reader of fantasies.
Any number of subjects
might produce best sellers this
fall. In "fire," Sebastian Junger ,
of "The Perfect Storm" fame
takes us into the , burning
· canyons of Idaho. Studs Terkel
gives us stories of mortality in
"Will the Circle Be Unbro~en?"
Authors
David
Edmonds and John Eidinow
turned a tO-minute argument
between two major 20th-century philosophers, Ludwi!l
Wittgenstein and Karl Popper, into the anticipated nonfiction book "Wittgenstein's
Poker."

~lassified

"The l1orne that stood
htre in tl1e 1800s burn;
to the ground," Casto
said. "The students
have fourul burnt areiU,
coal, bricks along with
.f1ood water dtposi ts. "

·2,500.minutes

~~~------------------------------1

NEW YORK (AP)- Bob
Wietrak, a sales executive at
Barnes &amp; Noble, sees the fall
book season as the story of
the "four T's": Tiger, Twain,
Theodore and Tolkien.
• Tiger is Tiger Woods, who
in "How I Play Golf'' shares
his insights with the swinging
masses. (Some might th~n
-ronslder Craij! Brass"'How to
Quit Golf: A 12-Step· Program").
• Twain is . Mark Twain,
author of" A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage," an
unpublished story written in
1876 anci:J!nally coming out
as a book.
• Theodore is Theodore
Roosevelt, subject of Edmund
Morris' long, long-awaited
biography, "Theodore Rex,"
the sequel to his award-winning "The Rise of Theodore
Roosevelt." It's Morris first
book since the notorious
"Dutch," in which Morris
inserted himself as a character
in his authorized biography of
Ronald Reagan.
• Tolkien is J.R.R. Tolkien,
the late British author whose
"Lord of the Rings" trilogy
has been a best seller for
months and promises to rise
even higher with the film version due out in December.

Inside:

(

'

\

here and this thing is behind us."
An open house to display the
extension is today from 1-5 p.m .
"They can come, inspect the place,
know that it's here and we will work
out what needs to be done," Mrs.
Claxton added.
The extension is one of several features added to Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens over the years. The site was
developed in 1959 and purchased
shortly after by the Claxtons, who
added special sections to honor young
children, veterans and Masons.
The extension is to an existing
. mausoleum built by one of the own-

Piean SH Svvlca, Dl

Five-state beif
initiative launched

GALLIPOLIS - At the
Gallia
County Cattleinen's
POMEROY - fall has
Association annual banquet
arrived with prospects of
a
few weeks ago, 'participants
sunny days and cool
were briefly updated on the
nights. Plants finish maturprogress of the "five State
ing and are storing muriHal
Beef
Initiative," an effort to
ents in the plant's root .and
which Gallia County has
stem structures for next
Kneen
never
been formally introspring's growth spurts .
d!lced.
Bring in your tropical
GUEST
VIEW
The five State Beef Iniand house plants that have
tiative was organized by
been spending the sumfinally,
select
the
proper
Michigan, Ohio, Indiana,
mer
outside. Tender
root
package
for
your
lllinois and Kentucky beef
perennials, which form
industry leaders to improve
tubers and rhizomes like planting. Plants with no
soil
around
their
roots
are
economic
opportunities for
sweet potatoes, cannas and
cattle producers,
dahlias, are almost ready called bareroot plants.
fhese
plants
need
to
be
While similar programs to
·
for harvest. Deciduous
help producers receive high(plants which lose their c~,refully handled to insure
er returns have come and
leaves · during the winter) that their roots ·don't dry
gone,
recognize that this Initrees and shrubs will soon out.
tiative addresses the issues
Plant as soon as your
be ready to be dug up and
that
iinpact sustainability as
transplanted within the receive your plants. Conland~cape.
·
'
well as profitability.
tainer grown plants are the
The regional scope of this
It is time to prepare for easiest tQ handle and plant
initiative is intended to offer
planting trees and shrubs as their entire root system
marketing power to producinto your yard. Keep in is in the container. Balled
ers
who create a uniform
mind the five steps of fall and burlapped plants have
· product, follow manageh1cnt
planting. Discover the been cut out of the soil at
guidelines, and unite their
attributes and disadvan- the nursery and their root
resources and goals to
tages of your planiing site. system packaged in burlap.
reduce input costs.
first, ask yourself if the site
When
planting, .
The goals of the initiative
is' sunny or shady, dry· or unloosen burlap from the
are: '(1) to create and coordiwet, good or poor soil or . plant stem and fold back
nate a system that facilitates
on a s)ope or level ground. the burlap so it can be
high qualiry beef production
Next, select the right buried and rot away.
among
Eastern Corn Belt
plant for the site, by learnLastly, plant the plant at
producers; .and (2) to solv,e
ing the characteristics for the same soil level as it was
the problems that prevent'
the plants you think you grown. Do not set the
them from achieving the
want to have. Lists are plant deeper than the surfirst goal.
available from the ex!iiJrounding ground. Stake
Although over simplified
sion office, libraries and
trees with the stake on the
here, each of the above goals
many local retailers (check
\vindward side. Mulch the
involves a multiiude of
planting tag tips).
new planting with one to
objectives that coordinate
Third, prepare the soil
two inches of bark chips ·
improvements in genetics,
ahead of purchasing any
or
shredded
bark.
Water
management, and marketing
plants. ModifY soil by
the
new
planting.
among participating herds.
incr~asing drainage and
' Just a few of these many
adding organic matter
Learn ways to control
objectives Include: designing
especially in the top
the
Multicolored
.
Asiatic
standardized health protwelve inches of the plaritgrams to nnmmtze disease
mg area.
PIHHHIKneen,DI

•••

)

I,

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

problems and anti-biotic
use; coordinating genetic
change and establishing
genetic criteria; developing
and using an economic
model of the entire beef
supply chain to identifY
types of businesses with the
most favorable return vs.
risk; using advanced techno'logy and non-invasive
approaches for dete~mining
beef tenderness; and identifYing the "postharvest partners" for marke nng the
product.
This effort involves participating state personnel
from all facets of the industry including leaders from
land· grant universities (such
as OSU). state departments
of agriculture, state cattlemen 's associations, livestock

marketing organizations, and
.the farm Bureau.
To achieve the aforemen. tioned objectives, personnel
from these industry facets
are organized into teams:
economics, genetics, reproduction, health, product
quality, certification, data
management,
integrated
resource management, and
coordinated system resource
management.
.
The information, education, and faciliiation system

Pl.... Hlltyrnll, Dl

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

: ....., , Sept. 23, 2001
., iO

- Sentinel ~ l\e ster
CLASSIFIED
~rtbune

Ho.rWANTm

PT/FT Wor1c

11116

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

Ho.PWANIID

From Homo Director of

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Items have been donated fot a money
·
maker for church.
·

.

,;'

..
'.'

:12 gauge lhotgun &amp; BB gun
wae 11olen al Robert

Thla Ia Sentimtn·
tal. Aoklng thot ha rotumod

new dolls (Glory Plays
Musl&lt;, Paradise Gallery,
Doll and "Mtsc."
Porcelain dolls), recllnus,
Iaar•den tractor, trail behind mower, electrlt start

made.

j ~:.:;: hot dog warmer, gift certificate, picture,

Wtugfta.

and no chargee will be

•

Cbr""•nas

Owners • Southern Local School
Dan Smith • Auctioneer
Ohio #1344 • WV #515
Cash • Positive ID
"Not ~spons~ble ror accidents or loss of property.''

Iiiii~iij~~~~~~~~=~=~=~~i~

Items,

walkers.

tane,

wheelthalr,

Iml&lt;:roWI11e ltand, llllens, aman wooden barrel,
Ick&gt;ek, ata..wa.., two oraana, thlals a brief U.L

2728

There will be games for children, gospel

Now To You Thrift Shoppe

j,slraglngJII'OUIIS, an.d *nty or ~oocl. fooclt

9 Wttf Stlmoon, Athent

7-10-592·1842

----

Quality clothing and household ~mt. $1.00 bag sale

&gt;

ovory-Thuroday~ Monday­

Is the estale-ofHazenaliMiey
522 Grant St., middleport, Ohio. She
at the residence 65 yrs. and
worked at the Post
In
middleport 35 yrs.
HDTIQUES: Oak buffet w/mlrror, oak
library table, high boy chest, 5 leg oak
table w/claw feet, fancy small oak
stand, small oak dresser w/mlrror,
sewing rocker, sewing stand, chest
drawers, 6 oak T-beck chairs, 3 pe.
waterfall bechom suite, dresser &amp;

&amp;ELLING YOUR nMIIER?
IT PAYS TO GET PROFES·
SIONAL ASSISTANCE!
Contact IIIII Maxey, MSF.

omce

Conaulling Forester. RR 1

lloli o4S8 Leon, WV 25t23.

(304)458·t656. or emaillur·

aymaxOezwv.com. •For·
morty" 24yr. WOOd lndustl)'
. FDteater, ttyr. WVU For·.
eatry Profauor &amp; lyr Olrec·
lor ol WV Division ol Forest·
1)'.

To _,e the Eetlle o1 c.L. Spurlock, a public
auc11an will be held to "leper" of peraon•l
properly and Vlhlclel. Mr. Spurlock Wla a
mechanic lor many yeara and avery
tool nHdtd II htre. Auction will be
conducted 11 thlr mechanic garege In
Coolville to Hll VthiCitl and Iooft, IMn move I
lo Tuppere Pllllnl II lht corner ol Rl. 7 and
Bl•ka Road to 1111 the gune, lumber, 1nd
hou.. hotd lumlehlnga. DIRECTIONS; Rt.
belil•n B•lpre •nd Alhene, exit an county
Road 58 1crou from Coole pol, locetad In
Coolville on Mlln Streal, w..ch lor elgna.
Here we are toet In thought
Thinking of Y9U and the
mamorlee It brought
AI we alt wllh 1 anent tear, Ita
been 1 vary long two y11ara
You were c:alled upon to
help the angela above
To be with the Lord and
hie uncondlllonallove
You are sleeping now
and laid to rest
For we know he only lakes the beat
Gone II your face we loved 10 dear
Silent Ia your volc:e we loved to hear
A ellent thought, a eecret tear
Keepe your memory forever dear
Go reet high on that mountain
Grace for your work h11re on ·
earth Ia done.

..,Q J
Happy Ad

•

Oma Harris West

Happy 50th
Birthday

Sherry
Hensler
She's still
nlfty at fifty.
;IQ.t-,....
&amp;it.~,..... ~·

~

il'..'iit. ..._

8'. fW,!, ,.,.,, """
.0

••

(

110 Help Wanted

110 Help Wanted
CNA'I

·~-

7u-' fiMI'..e~~Ut
ffo4lle44.
- ...- ... - .

"1mb'~

110 Help Wanted

--··-.··-·
..
..
.
7ie 1-•ftlt ol
~

(Rio Orand Community}
Deeply apprec:late •nd th~tnk family,
trlanda, and neighbor&amp; during ~he
loee of our mother. Your kfnd
warda of comfort, prayera, food,
carde, flowara, and numeroua
other thlnge.
Thanke to Holzer Mitdlcal Staff,
Home Care, and Hoaplca for your
wonderful help and cera.
.
Thanks to VInton llaptlet Churc:h,"'
Calvary Baptlat Church Rev.
Luther Trac:y, Rav. Peter Conlin,
muelc by Emma Lee We~
Sharon Eblin, and Mc:Coyre
Funeral Home.

15101

AUSfniiglltlllll)'l Cofllllal¥

Card of Tha'lka

~

I

, _ (740) " '·1210

Sea, ""''"'It t - ?-14
~·--···

mirror, Ulctorlan hilt racll, oak wash
stand (Serp. front), old chairs, nice old
pictures, 111 lamps, filA"' linenS, tack
~,
~IUilts, uery early parlor rug (oriental),
QUiltS mUsl" •..J.IDel Wkker hamper
'
" 1.1111 '
'
old ulntage hats, 2, child's chairs,
graniteware, Rllby flash pitcher (Pl.
pt" 1904) depress1IR gIaSS, Dld dlshe S,
aid kitchen Hems, old buttons, head
uase, Chenille spreads, · silhouette
lamp, localadu. Items, Hull art uose,
much, much more.
HOUSEHOLD 6 mtSC: Queen IInne
style sofa, Uph. rocker, Gossip bench,
coffee table 6 end tables, se~~. 11111111
tables &amp;stands, Zenith color TU, Goese
nec:k rDCicer, chrome table 6 chllrs,
maytag washer &amp; dryer, Stonoture
sewlna modllne, china c:ablnet tiP,
Slllllll
bookshelves,
mlcrowouet
kitchen c:ablnet, old lamp$, 2 cedar
chests, 2 metal twin beds, maple
racker, Christmas dec., lots of jewelry,
lOtS Of· knlt:k-knocks, bath. fi kJtdJen

=-.
...
·-on..
1-:- -.GoliiOOIIII. OH

CLERK-TYPIST

.NURSE MANAGER

The City of Gallipolis Is seeking
qualified applicants for the position of
Clerk·Typist.
Candidates should possess: Good
communication skills, the ability to
Interact with the public In a positive
manner, a knowledge of basic
acco~nting, office machines, typing.
computers and general clerical.
Bonding
required .for
banking
depqslts. Mlnln:aum of high school
diploma or GED required. 40·hour
work week with bene.flt package.
Employer.
Equal
Opportunity
Applications are available at the
Office of tha City Manag•r,
Galllpolla Municipal Building,
518 Second Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio
45631-1219.
Applications must ba recalvad by 5 p.m.
Monday, October 2, 2001

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
O'Bieneea Memorial Hospital has
an Immediate Full-Time opening
for a Nurae Managar In their
Emergency
Department. · The
eucceasfu
applicant will · be
responsible for coordinating all
Emergency Department nuralng
praclfce. BSN and certification In
emargency nursing
preferred.
Exptrlenca
In
Emergency .
Department Nurtlng 11 preferred.
Manag•m•nt
experlenca
11
preferred, PALS &amp; ACLS provider
preferred. Good communication
akllla n1C8111ry. We offer a vary
competitive 1111ry range as wellaa
excellent t&lt;lucatlon and health
relattd beneflta.
'
Applications can be picked up In
the r.uman Reaourcee Depertmanl,
O'B enaas Memorial Hoapltal, 55
. Hoepltal Dr., Athans, Ohio, 45701.

(7 40) 592-9227
EOI!

AucnoN Moves To TUPPERS PLAINS
FOLLQWjNQ VEHICLES

COOK'&amp;

DIETARY AIDII

LAUNDRY AIDE&amp;
Acnvrrl!l AIDII

Excellent btnoflla.
6"'"""

--lon.

~':,~:.:, ~~'o':.:.":,·.:.=,~o

-~~''"'.n~O::':..~.,:.:'..'..,":,:::I

For

oppty

·~"=-~:.,~:~~
:!~
tldQI 'Road, Bidwell, OH
481114. Thoro luiabor dlt-

Valleu1 Tru(k Driver Training
CDL Clrilflmlon 5wi:IGIIII

i::':t~ti'::o'
~:!'":; MGn &amp; Frii:00-3:30 Wllllldasws !a1 &amp;Suii:00-4:30 12 wttb
- ' L...lr...ll'dlblt basad Gil"""""'1 " - ' - 1111
"'""'"11
'~...
_.,
'Jeb plaMnt Gil 0aa Anrq'

I:::pots

~~

Earn Coth tw IOOing 2-&amp;lbo.

pOlls, drying racks,
tools, muc:h more'"

,1:~~~~:•.:ii.!·';; ...........
"' .......
," "
_.-lock
gun""'·
-'"'··=~ :.:~ ~:'\:
loalnoool.

. ·

I.

bllles

***OUer 100 Boxes Packed
full In Attldll

L.-:;Can;:;llld;,;;r.i:;,::;:laN;:.I:.,:4eli;;:.;,;64:.,:136,;;,95;,;;111;,;;(7,;,;40-.l37;,;,).3iiio966-......

CLUB CALF BID SALE

IUcdDI81r:

reserve)

1111111. I.IIIIIJ
141-381-1823 ll•eJ
or 141· 245·9811 llarnJ

September 29

par -"· Lim~ Bt*H·

Blda accepted until 2:00pm
Calve• will be prapared
www.hoal!1y;4u.not
tor viewing by 11:110 a.m.
hay 1'oitphono Wort&lt;,
$600 minimum bid on &amp;tHrl
No SotHng, No I'J&lt;porl· Calva• AI elrad by DeBull, FearThle,
tnoo NtcMNI)', Full Or
HeettHker, and othare.
P.art·11mt, $7-$t21hr. Call Calva• c:en be viewed atlht farrr. or
1-800-572·3301
webtlte www.clubcalvas.com
I!ASY WORKI Great Payll
Jim, Otb~le, Bath, 8nd Clark Walker
l!am $500 Plua 1 WHk AI·
4omt&gt;ting ProdllCtl at Homo.
lllo E•pontnet NoctUII)'.
~111 Toll Free t·800·267·
No lund• Bualneaa Pleaae
N&gt;f&gt;ly

&amp; pans, flatware,

1977 Dodge Rspen, kept In garage,
31,000 actual miles) sells with

today,

(740) 245-9315

38ol&lt;l x138

I

1

clftrtd In plaoo of employ·
... lnvol)ftd In tho labor
dltpute, EOE. MIFIH.

CNA't, HtiA't Ctrtltltd
1\omomakorl-tO PIG'
tldt In 'horlio - . lor
ildtrlyfd- In MalOn &amp;
Putnom counly .arua. Call

\; I

Mull Seel This beautifully
home has plenty to offer. II has a SA's
112 baths. This home also has a new
roof, new heat pump, all new and ,·; nsul&lt;lled
windows and a new septic system. It
has a separate building designed Into
apartment. Interested In selling fast Call
view 1110.

•

.tllru Saturday 9:()().6:00.

'

wood mailbox from Rodne

frames, de!k, speaken and amplifier,

111

Disney lleac:h Vacations, 8
nlghtt, nlol hotel, will NCrt·
lice lor $199, (814)898·

cabinet and
Elementary SchooL
Wood

Ju•l MlnuiH From Town. This home has
all 3 bedroom, 2 baths with bam located
5.9 acres on State Route 218. $85,000.
to view f1K
Thl1 11 1 muel -1 This baaullful
rests on 5 acres of land mil. This.
has 5 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and 1 """ ~··
garage with a workshop to offer. II
looking lor a home wllh style and class
no further. Call to view 11114.
·
PRICI! REOUCEDI OWNER
SOLDIII Enjoy IM IUnlhlne on 54
land along wllh a 2 bedroom and 1 baduoom
mobile home, and on those really
.surnm1sr days enjoy the convenience of
swimming pool. Acreage great
hobby farm or any use you have In mind.
to view •183. NOW ONLY $50,000

"Licensed &amp; Bonded by State of Ohio"
Cash/Approved Check Only
Good Food
"Npt responsible for accidents or lost
property!" .
'''Please
note•. the early start time!! I
..

Estate of C.L. Spurlock
c... 1011111 Oenlel Spurlock, Execu1or
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Shlrrldan I Chrl1 Prlltr
Email: ehlrmrockauctlonOaol.cam
PH: 740-592~310 or 8110-419-9122

,

.,
r

ol thlr flnnl home• In the county!
home has 4 bedrooms, 3 112 baths Live
I with hard wood floors, a )el lub,
ICOI)P8f plumbing and oak doors $270,000.
Ito view.'•189
!Check this oull Located right In townl
fall In love with this 4 BR, 2 112
1nome. Call to vlewllt87 $140,000

Are you looking lor
location? Check out this cozy home
3 bedrooms and 1 112 baths. Located
Gallipolis. Have all the conveniences
In town. Call to view 1188
Home with tt,e family In mind This
badroom, 2 bath Home located In a
community on a 40 x 150 lot Is Ideal.
and aask for 11 83.
PRICE REDUCEO Small flmllyt Well we
have the Ideal home with 2 bedrooms and a
· It oats on t acre mil. Located In
' Me1roe•vllle. This home Ia.priced to sell. Gall
to view 1182 $30,000.00
lnlov lhe meny oomlorta ll!d
conwrnltrncee olllvlng In town In ttila 1 112
story home with 2 bedrooms and a balh.
Some comforts Include a stroll through the
park, shopping or going to the movies
tht achoole are wltflln walking dlslance.
more lnformauon on this hOrne, Give Allen
0111. Aak for 1172
l•le: Six Iota In Walter'• Hill
Sut&gt;dlvlallo·n . All a)x lots for )uat $7,500.00
I

V~~:~l!l I.AND 12020 9.45 'ACRES mil
cloae to town.

lo

PRICE REDUCED Looking lor lllnd In
nice location? Juat a r.w miles out
Gallipolis (G'reen Twp.), we have 2·acre
tracts to 8·acre tracts MIL. County water
available. There are aome restrictions.
and ask lor nqu,
Looking lor lend? We have ltl Available
5·acre tracts more or leas. Public
available. Driveways &amp; culverts alreadv
preHnt. Give Allen a call. 112023•.
w. hlrw ..,.,., a ac,. plue ·
IVIIIIble lor bulldlnglhll dre1m
yotJr uUIItles are available and each
road frontage. Restricted. . Near Ho11zer
Hospital. Ask lor 12028.
Mo,. Llndl have 115 acres of lar\d
~:II~H~s54.'~1':a In ·a nice area. Call 1o ·

commarcllll building 11
naw bu•lnou to filiUs 1760 sql.
the edge of town . Call for
inlormatlon. Aak for 15012.
II you are looking lor lnvtttmtnl property
wt h1wr aeveral to offer. C1ll 1nd aek lor
Allen.
We are alwaye glad 1o help you eell or
buy properly. Rtntll properly Ia elao
available. Give ua 1 ~all, we can help.

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

: ....., , Sept. 23, 2001
., iO

- Sentinel ~ l\e ster
CLASSIFIED
~rtbune

Ho.rWANTm

PT/FT Wor1c

11116

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

Ho.PWANIID

From Homo Director of

Nu'1ing -

11116

Ho.PWANrm

HEAD

iF

START TEACHER

iii

Ho.PWANTm

Ho.PWANTm

Scenic Hil~

ROOM AT THE 101'1

1110 Ho.PWANTm

Nu'1ing CO!'ter Special

Education

wv

Iro

iJunbap 1!rintrll· ,;rntintl • Page 03

HaP WANIID

IF ~~
BUICKSTONE

Prt·

1136

~I

PARA•

We Cover
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!
~U il

C-.ty, OH

WOOD
lmtLTt INC
32 LOCUST STREIT. GALLIPOLIS,0~10 45631

In one week ·w ith us

Allen C.Wood,Broker •446-4523
· Ken Morgan, Broker· 446-0971
JeaMtte Moore,· 256-1745
Patri:ia
740-446-1066

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS .YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
TO Place

Your Ad,

Call Today...

l\egtster
~rtbune
Sentinel
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675--1333
or Fax To

()fftee 1/oaJ~-~

Oeal~irec

Monday thru Fr!day ·

8:00 a.m.

to

or Fax To

446-3008

5:00 p.m.

992·2157

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

t(~~cfo.fe.r

Word Ads

Display Ads .

Dallv In-Column : 1: 00 p.m.
Monday-Fridly for Insertion
In Nt!Ct Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Da ys Prio r To

for sundavs Plptr

Are you looking lor a country "ttlng?
This 4 bedroom 3 bath home located on 2
acres mil with double layered dacltlng on lhe
!ront has a 1 car attached garage wilh a bam
and more. Call today and ask for 1200.
Wowl Qheck OtJI this 3 bedroom, 1
bathroom Gape Cod home priced at
$135,900.00 Don't pess this upl Call to

Pub ll cltlon
SundiY Otsptav : 1:00 p.m.
Thu r sday ror Sundavs

i'E'

11811

UPJajground .Equlpment"
Swing sets, slld.e, tHter Iotter, monkey ban. merry
ao round, play um, back stop and bukelball pl.

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign! ~ •
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
if11
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

" Kitrh•p"
Vulcan JO burner elec. !ltovt, 3 compartment stnk1

S.S. com•rdal mixer, lS cu. n. c:best deep freae,
work table, ~ervlna table, silverware holder, lllrae
paas, bench, touter, etc.

Nicol honw wHh • little
This
home features 3 bfRillllll.-11 · ms and
also.a 28o" 0\\ll!!l"\iWIIKI 5.6 acres
mil. This~· located on State Route
ns. Gall to view. t1a
1';:::~ . lor 1 home wHh lind? This 3
It
2 bathroom mobile home resting
acres of land could ba what your
1!""~l"ltfor. If you love the OtJtdoors this
perfect for you. This also offers a
wash house, hunting cabin
equipment. Call lor information .
•

\ '\ \ 01 \ t l \ II \ I \

.r~
FREE SEARCH I
-...SINGLES.com

,.

uAgtlq"' gr Cgllcstgn..

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday,
September 29, 2001
lO:OOAM

From St. Rt. 124 East of Racine, take
C:o. Rd. 35 to church, watch for signs.
Items have been donated fot a money
·
maker for church.
·

.

,;'

..
'.'

:12 gauge lhotgun &amp; BB gun
wae 11olen al Robert

Thla Ia Sentimtn·
tal. Aoklng thot ha rotumod

new dolls (Glory Plays
Musl&lt;, Paradise Gallery,
Doll and "Mtsc."
Porcelain dolls), recllnus,
Iaar•den tractor, trail behind mower, electrlt start

made.

j ~:.:;: hot dog warmer, gift certificate, picture,

Wtugfta.

and no chargee will be

•

Cbr""•nas

Owners • Southern Local School
Dan Smith • Auctioneer
Ohio #1344 • WV #515
Cash • Positive ID
"Not ~spons~ble ror accidents or loss of property.''

Iiiii~iij~~~~~~~~=~=~=~~i~

Items,

walkers.

tane,

wheelthalr,

Iml&lt;:roWI11e ltand, llllens, aman wooden barrel,
Ick&gt;ek, ata..wa.., two oraana, thlals a brief U.L

2728

There will be games for children, gospel

Now To You Thrift Shoppe

j,slraglngJII'OUIIS, an.d *nty or ~oocl. fooclt

9 Wttf Stlmoon, Athent

7-10-592·1842

----

Quality clothing and household ~mt. $1.00 bag sale

&gt;

ovory-Thuroday~ Monday­

Is the estale-ofHazenaliMiey
522 Grant St., middleport, Ohio. She
at the residence 65 yrs. and
worked at the Post
In
middleport 35 yrs.
HDTIQUES: Oak buffet w/mlrror, oak
library table, high boy chest, 5 leg oak
table w/claw feet, fancy small oak
stand, small oak dresser w/mlrror,
sewing rocker, sewing stand, chest
drawers, 6 oak T-beck chairs, 3 pe.
waterfall bechom suite, dresser &amp;

&amp;ELLING YOUR nMIIER?
IT PAYS TO GET PROFES·
SIONAL ASSISTANCE!
Contact IIIII Maxey, MSF.

omce

Conaulling Forester. RR 1

lloli o4S8 Leon, WV 25t23.

(304)458·t656. or emaillur·

aymaxOezwv.com. •For·
morty" 24yr. WOOd lndustl)'
. FDteater, ttyr. WVU For·.
eatry Profauor &amp; lyr Olrec·
lor ol WV Division ol Forest·
1)'.

To _,e the Eetlle o1 c.L. Spurlock, a public
auc11an will be held to "leper" of peraon•l
properly and Vlhlclel. Mr. Spurlock Wla a
mechanic lor many yeara and avery
tool nHdtd II htre. Auction will be
conducted 11 thlr mechanic garege In
Coolville to Hll VthiCitl and Iooft, IMn move I
lo Tuppere Pllllnl II lht corner ol Rl. 7 and
Bl•ka Road to 1111 the gune, lumber, 1nd
hou.. hotd lumlehlnga. DIRECTIONS; Rt.
belil•n B•lpre •nd Alhene, exit an county
Road 58 1crou from Coole pol, locetad In
Coolville on Mlln Streal, w..ch lor elgna.
Here we are toet In thought
Thinking of Y9U and the
mamorlee It brought
AI we alt wllh 1 anent tear, Ita
been 1 vary long two y11ara
You were c:alled upon to
help the angela above
To be with the Lord and
hie uncondlllonallove
You are sleeping now
and laid to rest
For we know he only lakes the beat
Gone II your face we loved 10 dear
Silent Ia your volc:e we loved to hear
A ellent thought, a eecret tear
Keepe your memory forever dear
Go reet high on that mountain
Grace for your work h11re on ·
earth Ia done.

..,Q J
Happy Ad

•

Oma Harris West

Happy 50th
Birthday

Sherry
Hensler
She's still
nlfty at fifty.
;IQ.t-,....
&amp;it.~,..... ~·

~

il'..'iit. ..._

8'. fW,!, ,.,.,, """
.0

••

(

110 Help Wanted

110 Help Wanted
CNA'I

·~-

7u-' fiMI'..e~~Ut
ffo4lle44.
- ...- ... - .

"1mb'~

110 Help Wanted

--··-.··-·
..
..
.
7ie 1-•ftlt ol
~

(Rio Orand Community}
Deeply apprec:late •nd th~tnk family,
trlanda, and neighbor&amp; during ~he
loee of our mother. Your kfnd
warda of comfort, prayera, food,
carde, flowara, and numeroua
other thlnge.
Thanke to Holzer Mitdlcal Staff,
Home Care, and Hoaplca for your
wonderful help and cera.
.
Thanks to VInton llaptlet Churc:h,"'
Calvary Baptlat Church Rev.
Luther Trac:y, Rav. Peter Conlin,
muelc by Emma Lee We~
Sharon Eblin, and Mc:Coyre
Funeral Home.

15101

AUSfniiglltlllll)'l Cofllllal¥

Card of Tha'lka

~

I

, _ (740) " '·1210

Sea, ""''"'It t - ?-14
~·--···

mirror, Ulctorlan hilt racll, oak wash
stand (Serp. front), old chairs, nice old
pictures, 111 lamps, filA"' linenS, tack
~,
~IUilts, uery early parlor rug (oriental),
QUiltS mUsl" •..J.IDel Wkker hamper
'
" 1.1111 '
'
old ulntage hats, 2, child's chairs,
graniteware, Rllby flash pitcher (Pl.
pt" 1904) depress1IR gIaSS, Dld dlshe S,
aid kitchen Hems, old buttons, head
uase, Chenille spreads, · silhouette
lamp, localadu. Items, Hull art uose,
much, much more.
HOUSEHOLD 6 mtSC: Queen IInne
style sofa, Uph. rocker, Gossip bench,
coffee table 6 end tables, se~~. 11111111
tables &amp;stands, Zenith color TU, Goese
nec:k rDCicer, chrome table 6 chllrs,
maytag washer &amp; dryer, Stonoture
sewlna modllne, china c:ablnet tiP,
Slllllll
bookshelves,
mlcrowouet
kitchen c:ablnet, old lamp$, 2 cedar
chests, 2 metal twin beds, maple
racker, Christmas dec., lots of jewelry,
lOtS Of· knlt:k-knocks, bath. fi kJtdJen

=-.
...
·-on..
1-:- -.GoliiOOIIII. OH

CLERK-TYPIST

.NURSE MANAGER

The City of Gallipolis Is seeking
qualified applicants for the position of
Clerk·Typist.
Candidates should possess: Good
communication skills, the ability to
Interact with the public In a positive
manner, a knowledge of basic
acco~nting, office machines, typing.
computers and general clerical.
Bonding
required .for
banking
depqslts. Mlnln:aum of high school
diploma or GED required. 40·hour
work week with bene.flt package.
Employer.
Equal
Opportunity
Applications are available at the
Office of tha City Manag•r,
Galllpolla Municipal Building,
518 Second Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio
45631-1219.
Applications must ba recalvad by 5 p.m.
Monday, October 2, 2001

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
O'Bieneea Memorial Hospital has
an Immediate Full-Time opening
for a Nurae Managar In their
Emergency
Department. · The
eucceasfu
applicant will · be
responsible for coordinating all
Emergency Department nuralng
praclfce. BSN and certification In
emargency nursing
preferred.
Exptrlenca
In
Emergency .
Department Nurtlng 11 preferred.
Manag•m•nt
experlenca
11
preferred, PALS &amp; ACLS provider
preferred. Good communication
akllla n1C8111ry. We offer a vary
competitive 1111ry range as wellaa
excellent t&lt;lucatlon and health
relattd beneflta.
'
Applications can be picked up In
the r.uman Reaourcee Depertmanl,
O'B enaas Memorial Hoapltal, 55
. Hoepltal Dr., Athans, Ohio, 45701.

(7 40) 592-9227
EOI!

AucnoN Moves To TUPPERS PLAINS
FOLLQWjNQ VEHICLES

COOK'&amp;

DIETARY AIDII

LAUNDRY AIDE&amp;
Acnvrrl!l AIDII

Excellent btnoflla.
6"'"""

--lon.

~':,~:.:, ~~'o':.:.":,·.:.=,~o

-~~''"'.n~O::':..~.,:.:'..'..,":,:::I

For

oppty

·~"=-~:.,~:~~
:!~
tldQI 'Road, Bidwell, OH
481114. Thoro luiabor dlt-

Valleu1 Tru(k Driver Training
CDL Clrilflmlon 5wi:IGIIII

i::':t~ti'::o'
~:!'":; MGn &amp; Frii:00-3:30 Wllllldasws !a1 &amp;Suii:00-4:30 12 wttb
- ' L...lr...ll'dlblt basad Gil"""""'1 " - ' - 1111
"'""'"11
'~...
_.,
'Jeb plaMnt Gil 0aa Anrq'

I:::pots

~~

Earn Coth tw IOOing 2-&amp;lbo.

pOlls, drying racks,
tools, muc:h more'"

,1:~~~~:•.:ii.!·';; ...........
"' .......
," "
_.-lock
gun""'·
-'"'··=~ :.:~ ~:'\:
loalnoool.

. ·

I.

bllles

***OUer 100 Boxes Packed
full In Attldll

L.-:;Can;:;llld;,;;r.i:;,::;:laN;:.I:.,:4eli;;:.;,;64:.,:136,;;,95;,;;111;,;;(7,;,;40-.l37;,;,).3iiio966-......

CLUB CALF BID SALE

IUcdDI81r:

reserve)

1111111. I.IIIIIJ
141-381-1823 ll•eJ
or 141· 245·9811 llarnJ

September 29

par -"· Lim~ Bt*H·

Blda accepted until 2:00pm
Calve• will be prapared
www.hoal!1y;4u.not
tor viewing by 11:110 a.m.
hay 1'oitphono Wort&lt;,
$600 minimum bid on &amp;tHrl
No SotHng, No I'J&lt;porl· Calva• AI elrad by DeBull, FearThle,
tnoo NtcMNI)', Full Or
HeettHker, and othare.
P.art·11mt, $7-$t21hr. Call Calva• c:en be viewed atlht farrr. or
1-800-572·3301
webtlte www.clubcalvas.com
I!ASY WORKI Great Payll
Jim, Otb~le, Bath, 8nd Clark Walker
l!am $500 Plua 1 WHk AI·
4omt&gt;ting ProdllCtl at Homo.
lllo E•pontnet NoctUII)'.
~111 Toll Free t·800·267·
No lund• Bualneaa Pleaae
N&gt;f&gt;ly

&amp; pans, flatware,

1977 Dodge Rspen, kept In garage,
31,000 actual miles) sells with

today,

(740) 245-9315

38ol&lt;l x138

I

1

clftrtd In plaoo of employ·
... lnvol)ftd In tho labor
dltpute, EOE. MIFIH.

CNA't, HtiA't Ctrtltltd
1\omomakorl-tO PIG'
tldt In 'horlio - . lor
ildtrlyfd- In MalOn &amp;
Putnom counly .arua. Call

\; I

Mull Seel This beautifully
home has plenty to offer. II has a SA's
112 baths. This home also has a new
roof, new heat pump, all new and ,·; nsul&lt;lled
windows and a new septic system. It
has a separate building designed Into
apartment. Interested In selling fast Call
view 1110.

•

.tllru Saturday 9:()().6:00.

'

wood mailbox from Rodne

frames, de!k, speaken and amplifier,

111

Disney lleac:h Vacations, 8
nlghtt, nlol hotel, will NCrt·
lice lor $199, (814)898·

cabinet and
Elementary SchooL
Wood

Ju•l MlnuiH From Town. This home has
all 3 bedroom, 2 baths with bam located
5.9 acres on State Route 218. $85,000.
to view f1K
Thl1 11 1 muel -1 This baaullful
rests on 5 acres of land mil. This.
has 5 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and 1 """ ~··
garage with a workshop to offer. II
looking lor a home wllh style and class
no further. Call to view 11114.
·
PRICI! REOUCEDI OWNER
SOLDIII Enjoy IM IUnlhlne on 54
land along wllh a 2 bedroom and 1 baduoom
mobile home, and on those really
.surnm1sr days enjoy the convenience of
swimming pool. Acreage great
hobby farm or any use you have In mind.
to view •183. NOW ONLY $50,000

"Licensed &amp; Bonded by State of Ohio"
Cash/Approved Check Only
Good Food
"Npt responsible for accidents or lost
property!" .
'''Please
note•. the early start time!! I
..

Estate of C.L. Spurlock
c... 1011111 Oenlel Spurlock, Execu1or
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Shlrrldan I Chrl1 Prlltr
Email: ehlrmrockauctlonOaol.cam
PH: 740-592~310 or 8110-419-9122

,

.,
r

ol thlr flnnl home• In the county!
home has 4 bedrooms, 3 112 baths Live
I with hard wood floors, a )el lub,
ICOI)P8f plumbing and oak doors $270,000.
Ito view.'•189
!Check this oull Located right In townl
fall In love with this 4 BR, 2 112
1nome. Call to vlewllt87 $140,000

Are you looking lor
location? Check out this cozy home
3 bedrooms and 1 112 baths. Located
Gallipolis. Have all the conveniences
In town. Call to view 1188
Home with tt,e family In mind This
badroom, 2 bath Home located In a
community on a 40 x 150 lot Is Ideal.
and aask for 11 83.
PRICE REDUCEO Small flmllyt Well we
have the Ideal home with 2 bedrooms and a
· It oats on t acre mil. Located In
' Me1roe•vllle. This home Ia.priced to sell. Gall
to view 1182 $30,000.00
lnlov lhe meny oomlorta ll!d
conwrnltrncee olllvlng In town In ttila 1 112
story home with 2 bedrooms and a balh.
Some comforts Include a stroll through the
park, shopping or going to the movies
tht achoole are wltflln walking dlslance.
more lnformauon on this hOrne, Give Allen
0111. Aak for 1172
l•le: Six Iota In Walter'• Hill
Sut&gt;dlvlallo·n . All a)x lots for )uat $7,500.00
I

V~~:~l!l I.AND 12020 9.45 'ACRES mil
cloae to town.

lo

PRICE REDUCED Looking lor lllnd In
nice location? Juat a r.w miles out
Gallipolis (G'reen Twp.), we have 2·acre
tracts to 8·acre tracts MIL. County water
available. There are aome restrictions.
and ask lor nqu,
Looking lor lend? We have ltl Available
5·acre tracts more or leas. Public
available. Driveways &amp; culverts alreadv
preHnt. Give Allen a call. 112023•.
w. hlrw ..,.,., a ac,. plue ·
IVIIIIble lor bulldlnglhll dre1m
yotJr uUIItles are available and each
road frontage. Restricted. . Near Ho11zer
Hospital. Ask lor 12028.
Mo,. Llndl have 115 acres of lar\d
~:II~H~s54.'~1':a In ·a nice area. Call 1o ·

commarcllll building 11
naw bu•lnou to filiUs 1760 sql.
the edge of town . Call for
inlormatlon. Aak for 15012.
II you are looking lor lnvtttmtnl property
wt h1wr aeveral to offer. C1ll 1nd aek lor
Allen.
We are alwaye glad 1o help you eell or
buy properly. Rtntll properly Ia elao
available. Give ua 1 ~all, we can help.

�Sunday, Sept 23, .2001 ·

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

Page 04 • 6unbap G:imtf •.,.tinrl

rro

SAVE TIME AND
SHOPTHE

CLASSIFIEDS!

~~ I ~.,rm--Rlll•ltot.-~.t:.·-....1t ~~~~ It ~~113 .I

FO&lt; aaJo ., 1eau 1g. rancn
.
lllylo homo, 4 br., 3 bo., w1 :::.:a~-~ ~a':.,
o c - In patio poroh, 2
· •.
•
car~,.""": beside
Sonon Rose
.,.. ,... $78,000.
monal
Gardens
Rt 33.rno1 114 acres. 3 br 2 fire .....
Commarical lOtS for sale 01
..loose, In Pl. Pfeosonl 304· ces. (basemen! inckJdes an
727 3318 call between extra kitchen, TV room,
!5pm-12.
bedroom.,;_ba'til) 21 carn·ga·
,---~..,--., rage , ,.. .._ a ruro sa lng,
501150 call 304·882·

16 Wido.
$195.00 Per
':l': Monlll.
8.99% Fixed lnl""""
Rate With Air And Uno

4

Only

"-'-'1-888-92a.3&lt;26
~ .,.•••• "

-----::-::'~:-:-::1966 Vendale 12x60 Mobile
Homo. 11186 Ford Ranger

2.3
Lttre..
s
spMCt.
(3041675-1091 or (304)6755292
- - - -- - -

-If

1978 14x70-., oidt by llde
rofrigoiiiDl Willi leo
&amp;
walor In i door.
no.•h
K.
o
r.•...,•. ~".! ~
~~~.
" " " l.... , II,Qfl - . . . - - -·
al Biroh c:oblnols In kilcllen
t I t f2 beth&amp; (llamt ~·elod) gao lumoce &amp; ,.,._
lot-· 3 BR., Ill plumbir,g
._from ..... !lillie,

Homo. -

'!..

2050 Ot304-882-3885.
1982 14x70 Fairmont Hap- underpinning
includf.d.
FO&lt; ao1e oy owner: Nice bl· pyhou$&amp; mol&gt;lo hOme. 3 $7500. 1740)742-2896
level home on 1 ocnt near bedroom's, $10.000. caM 1982 14XI56 Oolcbrool&lt; Chaster. Thfoo bedroom. (740)441.a959 loavt ,... bile Homo. Good Corollon.

-AINIII ...... utwalling
lnthllt tWW I,DP le
......... 10 ... , _

Fair Houolnt Act of 1111
wh~h milk• " Nlegalto

..,_IM "ony

'""'*•

pt ....
limitation or
dllcrllaaMMM bMid on
FM:e, cotor, ....~. ...

flmll.., 11etua or MlloNI
oritfn, CN' any tnt.nUon ta
mtl&lt;oonylllk:ll
prellrtnoe, llmltdOn or

-lnolton.•

Thfl-1101 wtll nal
kMwlngly-

ld\lerttMn••ta for ....
..... whlc:tl It In
-lonol111o-. Our

--lltroiiV
lnformod lholtll

c:twetllng• edv'lrtiMd In
thtl MWIF ptr ...
• ..,iilteble on an equ.a

.... bolhs, ......car garage,
famil'l room wi1h liropiace,
sun room . New central heAt·
ing &amp; ale \I)'Stom. One ITil·
nute ort Route 7, but still pri·
vale. (740)985·3981

=
..:!11"=· -- - - - - :

$5,000 (304)8112-38a3
~1e
80
1993 Ctayton 16x· """':"'
home 3 br., 2. ba. asking 181 T1mo lluytrao C&amp;H Oak$19,000 304·773-5885 after WOOd, Gallipolis 10da~l
5 pm.
ao., -ed program- buy
local (740)446-3093

Newty constructed. single
stOfY 1600 sq. toot home.
R 1E tatl Gene111l
Located 1o minutes trom , ---....!:~e:!a~;:::S::.:,=.,::::!::::.::__--:-­
Hotzer Hospital, 20 minutes
from Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal. off SR 160 on e privalo
1·112 acre Jot. 3 bedroom,
2-112 baths, big kitchen
w/oak cabinets, DR. LR

wlgas log flreplaco, central
air, laundry room, front
poroh &amp; 2·112 car ga111ge .
Immediate possasslort. A(r

praised at $125,500, asking
$1 25,500. Call (740)4484514 from 8·5pm, M·F, or
(740)446-3248 aftar 5prn.

Beautiful
VictorUin
Home
In Town

Full service house cleaning,
$7.00 hour, very l'lontat.
Aelerences available. carr
(740)446·29n
Geo&lt;goa Portable Sawmill,
don1 haul your toga to lite
mill just cal 304-675·1G57.
Quality hou1141Cioanlng, Immaculate, nollculoua, d..
taiiO&lt;I cloonlng. The abooluta boat CaM lor a lrH olll·
mate. (740)2156-1131 "' 1·
888-781-2412.
Wanted lo care loroldtrly.ln
their homo. Call at
(740)256-6503 II no answer.
Leave message on voice
mol.
WIU haul away, clean aut.
clean up, ITIO\Ie almoltany·
thing. Other odd joba. Call
(740)446-7804

NEED AN E'BLY a•y.
~n

c~

DAY?? .
Up 1o •500 lnatonlly by
phonol
1·(8n)•EARYPAV.
Lief 780008
laiADVANCE FREEl
-'-::TU-,II::N':"':D':DO__,..WN;.:,;,ON,.-..
SOCIAL IICUIIITV -?
No FM Unloll We Wlnl
1 888 &amp;Ba.a:MS

rro ~~

...WORK FROM HOMEI
$500-$1500/mo Partnmt.
$200Q-S7SOO./mo FuUTime.
Paid vacations. Call: 1-800479·7471
www,monty·
cash4ma.com

-

lnlerseclion of

us 33 a595

Just South of
Logan.

Real Estate General

"""""I.

r

New Double Wide. S195
Par Monlhi 3 Badroom, 2
Balh. Free Dallvory &amp; SOl·
up. 1.a88·1128·3426

*

446•6806

Br

h Offl
ano
ce
23 Locust St
Gallipolis, Ohio
45831 .

Real Estate General

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SIIITH, BROKER ...............448 11108
GAIL BELVILLE.................................. 44H201
TRISH SNI'DER ...... ........ .....................441·84N
JOHNNIE ~USSELL ..........................317-G323
DAVID SNI'DER &lt;.................................441-14111

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

iL--·FOII--~---,l
"·.-

~

; 32 acres wf1h pond, lots 01
standing limber, lovely 4
bedroom, 2· 112 beth home,
2 bamo. garage and cellar
house, mobtlo home renlal
apol, call (740) 446 •2861 or
174012156-8593 after 4pm for
more lnlormaUon.

~

Russell D . Wood. B roker 446-461 8
Judy DeWiu ...;...... .................... 441 ·0262
Dana Ath a............. .. .......................... 379-9209
K enneth Amsbary ........ ............ ...... ... 245-5855
Tqmmie DeWin.. ....................... 245-0022
Ruth Barr .. ..... ......... ... .. ........... ..........446-0722 Jim Slone..................... .................... .446-9483
Cheryl Lemley ................: ...... ....... ... 742·3 171

189 acres- approximately. 7
room, 1 bath house, bam
and outbulldlngo. Willowwood, Ohio. Fl111t Fed&amp;ral
Savings Bank (740)532-

OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlemlthreallllall.ootn
e-mail: vlsrealeste teOzoomnet.net

a-~...

Buy

01'

101. - - Fit-

- · 11 24 Eul Mllln on
SR 124 E. Potr•oy. 700.

992·25M. Russ
·

..__
... . ...

......... $150

Gd.(740)441-~

RESIDENTIAL HOlE
OWIIERS

•

Moore. GrUbb's Piano- Tuning &amp;

Rapoirs. P1ublomo? T - 1-f E-.cy 110%
TIJned7 cal Tho Pltno Dr. Gaa F - Oil Furno-

·-~
1 ond 2 New ""*- ,..,_,_ 0c- 7 ~ _
bo&lt;ltwm .. Ill- - I ll ~-~~....::..~
·-loge Manor ..., - - on ""' .,. In Mido:llowo1 Hardy IAlms $3.00 each 4
~·· In Middlo,;lo&lt;'. Ohio. (740)!1!12.Q2118
lor $10 Open $11. &amp;.5pnl. &amp;
rom 78-$348. Col 74().
.... ogs. W
992·501W. Equal Housing
ML&lt;nFJ
•
~
,
...
Alto. (304)895~
~
3740 le4... mosaoge. or

r

·~ ' " " - 2 ~oorm.
· - ._. •• -~ ~
_
WID '--up, ctose 10 HMC SO DOWN HOIItS NO
(740).46 8030
CREDIT OKI HUO, VA
FHA. Col lor l.ls!inOS
1-800-501·1m Ex19818
houao Apa""*'1s, 1SO DOWNI No redi1 ok
Water
5ewogo, Trash. Gov1 ........ 1 ~296$35M4o., 740 446 0008.
~

12 s- ._ "'-"' &amp;
All Cundi .........
- - .. " -· F,.. a WorTIIlly 111n&amp; Cooling. 18 0 0• 8 1 2 •5 96 7
.01-.b.c:om.llennelt

c:es.

--ling

(304)695-378!1

-

·cal

so

A WORK AT HOME OP·
POATUNITYI Earn up to
$500·$5000/mo.
PT/FT
Free Into. Toll FrH (886)
639·AICH www.alhoma44v·
er.com
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE
Eotabllohed Vending ADUlt.
Will !811by 1010812001 Un·
der $9K minimum lnv11t·
ment required . E•cellenl
Profit Polonllal. Finance
Available/Good Credit Toll

3
over full
car garage and
flnlahtd family room. lioma alii on 2
Ac. 11111 In Hannan Trace SchoOls.
Jual mlnutoa from downtown
O.lllpolll. Thla homt fulurea a
btautiful landacepad lawn, WOOd
pttflll 11ov1 ond canlral air. Located
lull olf Rock Lick Ad. on Mallia Dr.
In nlcl ,.lflhboltiOCd. ·Have a
gardln and !111M aomt flowera bul
make """ 10 look 11 thla. cau
JohMit II 387.()323 IOdiy for In
appolnlmonl.

..

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

Free""*.(888) 270.2168•••••

COMPUTERS: WE Fl·
NANCE DELL COMPUT·
EASI Evon wllh 1... than
porlact credlll 1·800·7237940
Codo
AC3t
www.omcsolutlon.com
E•n lSG0-13200 WMklylll
Processing Mall! Amazing
()pportunllyl FrH lnformo·
lion. 1·850-222.0844 24hre.
Send SASE : BGL Box
1232989 Sacramento, Call·
fomla 915623. www.Pruce. .
ingEnvelopea.com
Free SOitwaral Amazing
Web Slle will ahow Vou
How To Download Over
250.00 Shareware Programs Free t 1·900·32a·
8670 Ext 3933 , 12.9!1 Plf
min. Must be 18yra: s.....u·
(619) 845-843,4.
HOME BASED TRAVEL
AGENCY! $4,995.00·Worl&lt;
FT/PT, B0%-20% oommt•
slort oplll, full training arpport, travel dlacounta 4
more, Vieit our webelle at

a

.

I

'
DIUGtiTFUL HOllE
Prtlly u I plc1U111. Very ~I
poanntd 110M and frama ranch
h&lt;Kna oftara 3 bedrooma, walk-In
2 full balho, channing living
room wlflrtplloe. Ntw Olk cablllt!J
lint lha kltohan. Aanga, ralrigeralor,
dlthWalhar, and compiiCIOr.all ally.
Udllly 111011111 """" large. 211er deck
In lite rur wllh 38' lnground pool.
Many frutt lrtll, · and
ahruba. Sprinkler ayllern In lite rMr.
2 car aiiiChed garage and 1 carport. .
2 IIIOry bam building. Bflck1ap and
ClrfVtwlyt. A you'~ ba
proud 10 own. VL Smhh 448
f.40a2 WI!Gh tho fll- Irani , _
b&amp;Gkyard? lnjoy lite vltw from

eeoe

your boll dock cir -

-

· lhle 1+

.. mil whh • 2 lA 1 bath

mobflt

lUllforlitea
thing '"'11-.-May bt It
room
ga-. ~t&amp;K II 7113 81. AI. 7
Boulh. RaaUOICII
LOTI

TIME COULD PAY OFFI Vltw tlllt
lovely all brick home wnhf..
bedrooms, 2 balha, lormal dining
nn.. living nn., family nn., wf1h
t&lt;ftohtn
II replace., Patio, above 9""'nd pool,
room, garaon
, Plropllice In
,
.2.ose""lmo
ranteltac:hed garar and
Calhtdral celllnga, covered dock, "'
VERY LIVABL HOME
lbovt ground flool, cellar wl
MONEY. 5125,000.00
building, IIOIIIfll shed, 3 car
dllachtd
garage,
blacktop
driveway, fenced lot 22 acres ~ .

800-385-8497 • 110.
lnlemel Secreta! Lum How
to Take Control Of Ano1her
COmputer Over Thl •-·
nell
1·900·328·8870,
Ext 39:i4, $2.99 par min.,
Must be 18yfl. Sarv·U (81t)
845.a434.

IIITOIIIC
IIALUPOUI - Homo faoturaa 3
BR, ond I bath with ~Ullom
Clblnoll In kl1chen, very lerge lot
lhlt hal polonlial lor oovoral
,.
tllla h&lt;Kne

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERSI
Excellent

.=

c-.

www.aaeruiaeuncttravel.co
m Then call Adrienne al

Earn

EXTENBIVELY
III!MODIL!D
EXTERIOR 6 INTERIOIII Roof.
lldlng, wlndoWa, wiring and much
much morel Hardly nothing tlse
for you 10 do but rruwe In and
enjoy alllht hard worl&lt; lite owno11
Into lhla l01181y 2 atory hoine.
llfzld roomo. 2 balho, 3
roomo,loyer. Datached garage
and
m&lt;Kel call lo view lhla

Income

working from hOrnt atOUnd
your schedule PT/FT. 1·
800-81 3-15694.
Promolional OO&lt;npanysa1e1 proleallonal to dtYe..
op exclusive territory with

DlacountCoupone.oom.

Work 4 days a WHk and
make $50,000+ ptr y..r.
12500 Investment requlr~.
can 886·794.0011 .
Slln A Trovol Attncy:
Earn Big SSSI BualnMI
Support, Your own Travel
Website and Travel Ole·
counts/Perka.
Nominal
Stanup CoSII Froo Info. Call
1-888-699.()9()1 .

f40S4 12282 IT. AT. 180- Quiet
living but no1100 for out • This 1995
manufiCiurld homo on foundation
· II )ual whal you are locking for.
Home rHtl nn 8 acres mil with
bam, outbuilding, and all fooced ,
Grut lor horae or cows. Owner
wanlt 10 move and will lot his 2000
riding mower atay so you can ride
lho riiiCh. Priced at $00,000 this
could bt )ull what you noedl

Slart Your Buain111 Today... Pnmo Shopping Con·
·ter SpaCe .Available At Af·
fordable Rate. Spring Valley
Plaza. Call 740·448.0101 .

•

140011 HOllE 6
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 llulavllte
PI&lt;. 3 bedrm, 3 balh living quarttra.
Also 18' x 32' garage pluo 30' x 20
building 112 ac. olland. good lac. Priced 10 a&amp;ll. VLS

14021
COUNTRY
bedrQOm, 2 balha
w/huga
equipped · kllchen and Smlilt Oek
cablneta .. Family nn. leundry nn.,
carpon &amp; dj!Ck. 1~ acrta ~
feoced. 2 fishing panda. Thla flo
fa mily location lhal offtra prlvocy.
Green Twp. VLS 448 6808
140341 COIIMEACIAL IUIUIINO
Olive &amp; 3rd. 27156 sq. ft. mil. City
water, sewer &amp; gu. 411 Inventory
avaifable too. OWner wanta adlonl
14019
CDMIIE~CIAL
LOT·
Jackson Pk. Gillipollo, OH Comer
lc;tt with great potential.

I

room. dfnlng and
x 70 mobile homo
&gt; e.lc.llle•nt .condition, piWBnlly
used u a rental. Loll of fntlllreea
and landacaplng. 12123
COIIIIERCIAL· Sycamore StrHI
Location. Large 2 alory building
wtlh off alrtll parking. Ideal for
floral ahcp , etc. Call for mroo
dolalla. t2044
NIW ACREAGI LI8TIIIQI 94 112
ac:ret 11111 wllh road lrontsgo,
homnllt, finn find ond ldul
hunting land fill le ad)Ocoltl to
Waynt Nallonol ForrMI, 12140
GIGANTIC PIIICI! REDUCTION!
OWNIIII
HAVI . III.AIHED
121.000 Off Uallng Prloo. kltally
kx:alld c:tou 10 35 bypaaa
bttwMn Galfloofla and Rio
Grande. Over f2 ac:roa Included
with lhfl 3 bldrooma ronch, large
living room. oal.fn ldlehen,
basement, lomlly room, 2 Cjlr
allac:hod garage. 121~
PIIICI DROPPED TO 134,1100.001
1 112 Story hOrnt olluat&amp;K on nlct
lovot lot 3 bedrooma, onciOsed
front pun:h, large kl1chen &amp; dining
arM. Side poroh. Dt180hed
garage. OWNER WANTS SOI.DI
LW&lt;E AN OFFEAI 12038

~~~.100 IS THE NE\If A81&lt;1NO
lhls one floor plan
at 21 nell avenue. 3
bedrooms. ba&amp;ement, carpon,
amalleaay to malnlakl tot. 12112

11,000
CD8T81 Whal o doall Como
chock out lhla 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home with Florida room, large
l lzad living room &amp; dining area,
rear deck, detached 2 car garage
and
morel
IMMEDiATE
POSSESSION112080
$20,000.00 5 Acree approx.
lllualld In Gallipolis. Handy
kx:allonl 121&gt;44
3814 a-gee CrHk
A* 1&amp;8.800 N~o Bi·Level style
homa thai haa larga family room &amp;
dining area . that opens to large
rear dack and private back tawn.
Eol·ln kll~han 3 bedrooms, large
family room, garage, concrete
drive and morel
12015

LOTSI UHie K any excavaung
n&amp;ed8dl Mlnulac:tured· homea
walc&lt;lmo. 12103
NEW LISTINlll LOT..PRONTAGE
ALONG IR 110 I IULAVILL!
PIKE handy oonvonloni kx:aUon.
Laval, publ" Ulllllleo available.
Rosldontlal or c:ommtrclal. Selling
balow the appralaed value. 12141
TWO ACRE LDTSI Rio Grande
·area! COUnty water available.
112133

FOF1 ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP OY FOR A
FREF QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY
NEW UBTJIQ
lllt'T IIOIILE
H,OIIE ON RI!NTI!D LOTI
Excelltnl opportunity 1o own your
own home. Thle 1997 Clayton
home Ia In oxeeflenl condlllon. 3
Bedroomt, 2 bathe, nice sized
kllchon and living room area. All
aet up on a reaaonably priced
renlod lot Call lodayl Only
$22,500.00.

PRICE
545,000
RIDUC!D
TEXAS AOAD...TLC fa what lhla
homo has hod. LIHio 011er I aero, 3
bedrooma, living room, kllehen,
balh. allached carpon. Eastern
Schools! 12120
CHEAP CHEAPI $21,000.001
lnvaetmenllatarter... Aanch
style
homo ... ellualld at 738 Main
S1rool..2 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen, living room, bathl 12121

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
3&amp;812 lA 124.. 179,000 3.29
acraa· comoa along wtlh lhlo ranch
home. Uvlng room, dining room,
kitchen 3 bldrooma. 2 balha. 2
Car detached garege. Lovoty
pond, lrulllr- &amp; barriea. Lilt go
888112130
3&amp;8 112 N. :lid 8frell. One atcry
raised ranch, 2 bldroomo, living
room, kitchen &amp; balh, garage,
·baaomont. Priced right $38,000
12134

'

•

1993 01asmollilo Cutlls$
.,_
4 &lt;blt Red c~
....... - ···
•
~~
ro' lo/C 52500
' PWoeo
' Pl..

I""' - -

i

I

n--

.

•

(740)446-9238
11194 ~ I 9Q211anger:
1995 Cr-y truck
~.000 .-_ I IMH o.-j
~: 1992 a-.rt·.
. _ .,..._ ~- .
1993 ,
·-.,... _ . . . ~

·

F.;;;;y

j

Flturrs

I

I

bod~:,_-"-

i

j

car-··

a

::f

"'"! .:';

Call or stop by our office tor a tree Quality Homes Guiae ill color.

L1t '

Fermetly Blackburn Really "Serl1in,' Southern Ohio For Over A. Quar1er CentiU')' "

Real Eatate General

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446·3884 Cara Casey-245·9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990
Candace
446-7412
--~-----------4

colonl•l on .9+ acrea. Custcm
country home wllh 3 BA 2 112
BA, Smllh custom cabinets. two
car attached garage, 30 x 40
detached metal building, hot tub
and above ground pool.

Nics Size Lot for aole . 2
miles !rom city llmlls, Adda·
ville and River Valley
School dlslncl. 1 112 mllae
put Georges Crook .oN AI 7.
$20,000. Daytime (740)388·
8258. Evening (740)446·
4788.

I''
·

FlO

, 9am.-9pm.

I.ms&amp;

NEAR RIO GRANDE. A
beautiful&amp; acre tract located
on Cantarpolnl Ad, lor ONLY $12,320. For more Info
and FREE mapa contact
Anlhrlfty Land Ca., Ltd.
IQ0-21H385.
www.alctand.com

=

I

r~---

ACREAGE

· Looking To Buy A New
Home? Don't Have Land?
Wt Doll! Hurry Only 10 Lota
Loft, 304-738·7295.

341 ACRES WITII VINYL BIDED
AANCI1 STYLE HOllE..1.200 eq.
ft. of living space area wllh an
additional 2000 sq. " · wh ~h Ia
used presently as carpentera shop
bul could be easQy converted Into
· addlllonal living ares. Molal pole
barn 30 x 60 wllh 16 x 80 addition
on each aide. Partially wooded.
Fenced paalure. TIIIeble acraogo.
Private seiUng. Gall for dotalla and
oppotntmentiOdayl 12138

1992 Camero. v~. aulo.
25m Mrw«sary Edttoon.
$2500, (740)742·2357 .

·,own ::""

Indian Creek Equestrian Es·
latea, 3·6 acre lots, west ol
Rio Grimdo, !rom $25,900.
(740)245·5747

WITHIN ' 111NUTE8 OF HOLZER
HOSPITAL Located al 5153 SA
160 you will lind this over 1.7 acre
lot and mulllplo uoe dwelling. Ideal
for residential or commercial use.
Unlimited polenllal. Musl call lor
complata11011nglll2143
LOVELY SETTING for lhlo 2 ;1qry
home thai Ia only 2·3 ye0111 young
resting on approx. 2 acrea. Uvlng
room, kitChen, 8 bedrooma,
bal8ment.
Low
11derlor
maintenance, detached 24 x 30
garage, laigo front porch ond morel
112142

AUTOS

FOR SALE

"'**OOS· -Ha--.-,._-.,-Wi--To~~ ~~r
0::::. =.:=-31~"'; 'i;;:;::

~""'~~-~-.~

1.34 acraa with double car
garage. Has Electric. Priced
reduced. Also 1.25 acres
with aeptk: water hat place
for eiiKl. hook up. (304)5789929
NATURE'S PARADISE!
dtalrablt I 112 story bnck. Cus.lom
made
woodwor1&lt;
&amp;
doors
throughout this quallly constructed
home. Tucked away on over 26
acrta with a gorgeous view.
Formal living room, dining area,
family rQOm with fireplaCe, 3 plus
badroomo. 3 112 baths. flnlohed
walkout basement wllh 2nd
kitchen. allached 2 car garage
plua
bonus
· detached
garage/ohop ...baautifully
·
randacaped &amp; Iota more. Must see
thla one lo appreciate everything
there 11 to offer. Call at oncel
12137

r ..

• Page OS

low-·

8645

IT'S
P!IISONAUTY
PLUSI
ACRES.
HOllE·
BUILDINGS Old faohlon chonn
with modem convenience In thil 4
BR, 2 slaty homo, 2 btlhl,
(whlripool tub). Lovely equipped
kiVIamily rm combo wlhardWOOd
floors. cherry cablnlla. Enjoy
viewing the country from every
wondow. Formal dining nn
LM
wtbeamed ceilings. Porch &amp; pallo
72 ACRES of beautiful rolling land.
Pasture, woods &amp; some tlmber1
· pond &amp; mineral rights. Largo bam
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 448 8808

- Hound

r

~

EARN AT HOME. Stop-by•
altp
syatem.
$500$8000/Mo FREE Booklll 1•
800-9923. _
www.ln·
comeForYou.com

A HOME BASED TRAVEL
AGENCY! $4,995 lnv. Worl&lt;
FT/PT, 80%-20% """'ml•
slon split, full training support, travel discounts &amp;
more. Visit our Website at
www.aacrulsesandtraval .co
m Then call Adrla('lna at
800·365-8497 X 110

u,_

Al&lt;C Regisl- Boston RwSI•ed Angus Bul, Sinl
Tarrie&lt; ~ (740)256- OHb TRAVELER. 61101,
1825
by Woidgo F - .
-._or;, ......,JaM
P\.c)plos. 12 01 Harley Rico (740)667·
-ald. Ful ~.no 3261 or (740)ti67-3359
S50 (740~74
.
DAY &amp;
- . L-.gty , _ . . _
GRAIN
......... &amp; ~
•
$200. &amp; up. G&lt;*l cap con""'· (304)615-4787
Buck I llll8 - · RegiSirnd L.llb Puppies, bales $1 .00 - l l a y up 10
_._ -~ ~-~. $200 $200, ruurd bales $15.00

mix ... ·.

I

nr-..-"!!!'----.
FARMS

www .BIG- BEND REALTY .COM
Bet Be~Ut
, 1~ee,

li!lunbaP l!:tmn ·&amp;rnttntl

SOCIAl SECURITY DISAaturv a..n Doniod'l w.. .~ ·~ ~
_. ~75-41169
oldlpeotdllfC 1M- Spocilli.. In ~ and oach. malas and ·
For Product Or Heori wp. FREE CONSUL· (740)446-0080
n Grand Amo. cav-.,
Oppodunily. (740)441 - 1982 TAl lON.
Benefit Team
Y
-.,...
"" re ell:, o1 warranty. Wo
JET
TOI-Ir..: , _
AEAATlON MOTORS
~
• ble.
Herita ge
Farm. 4484.
Repaired. New &amp; Ral&gt;uillln STEEL BU1LD1NGS: Ur· Flulo, LeBiont: Vilo, U58d • (304)675-5724.
-:
,.:.='-::fir-oblt-:.-.,:-R)mw.Jia
::---350
- •
1996
3
Stock. Col Ron Evons, 1· genlll Must Move Nowll
T V8
~
801).537.s528.
25x30
30x40
45x110 4 limes, now $515, sell
L 1
, 6 ...-, ·
Tora TOWflhouso •··rt· -:-::- :-:----::.-::---~ 120· , , .._ .... ..;.. I-~ · 1350 muo1c Slandl case
$11 000 (740)11!12· 1111
manto, Very •··c.;;;
, 2 IOhp Murray riding mower
~
.....--- .. ·'
'
A
Bedn&gt;orns 2 ,;;.;;;._ CA. 1 w1 can $490.00
MOBIU' HOllE OWNERS Sizes l.aG0-211 ·9594 •-40 boOits. (740)367·10I16
FOil~
1997 Dodgt Neon. Sj&gt;or1s
112 Balh.' Fully carpeted, 0011 '1' 10ie - .. stamp
STOP • RENTING!
&amp;
~
Pockogo. 61 .000 mho. auMull Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pt· making 01111!1 wi1h type HUQ8 1n.... n1Dry. Discount DOWNI No Cfd okl Gov1.
VEGEI'AJIL&amp;'i
IO&lt;n&amp;tic, dlr1l blue, - ·
11o Start 1365/Mo No Pats, $300.00
Price$, Ott Vlftyl Sldrting, homos.
l-800-~
$0 DOWN CARS! POliCE condition. (740)44 1·9803
L.i.so Plus Secutffy Deposi1 Kelsey Star ~ pross Doors, Windows. """"'- m 4x65otl
·~
IMPOUNDS &amp; . AEPOS! Jay.
•
Required. Days: 740-..e. $50.00 304~11194
WO.Ier -tors, Plumbing &amp;
Pumpkins for sale, NIAil, HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S,
.
.
E1ecUicol Por1o. F...- a UnMiohed Pine willt wt ct ale Raymond JEEP'S LOW AS $2M.IO 1997 L--. TOWIII:ar Slg3481 . Evenings 140-357• •lor 1 CRUISE N •Et
0502' 7'h ''"" 0
• .
~
Heal.,._ BoroiOIIS - d!11Mr, $85, like new.
'
24 MO'S 0 19.9%. FoR nalllr8 Serios.lea-lnleri' ~· I .
~ ' ' Eu'-·...-.
(740)44&amp;0 198
LISTINGS CALL 1-800- "'·
1111 optionS,
7
" " " " " * " A - - _.Panama. Col Now! 1· bllo
Homo 5&lt;.wty, 451.()1)50 Oxt. C.9812
will .._ 1nr SOOurban "'
9416
COli
800-~45 41n - .- 1·
www.orvb.com/blln- Warm Moming healing
Tahoe, (740)992-2457 ...,.
1Win Rl- T . ....,........oom
slow. $100. (740)2511-1185 r10
FARM
1979 Ford T-Bird 351 ...,.. :;.flings.~'-:---:--::-· (304167HS111.
A&lt;lc:opllng Bids lor Ki1chort Stiht
- ·
WATER WELLS DRILLED.
fled, runs.
2000 camry LE . . , _ ,
lorllll!&gt;licallon. HUO subal- ~ B slngledoorwaM
. .. ~. -"~·· (740)886-?3II
~·
$300; oow patrol mud &amp; COndOion $170000800&lt;
dized apl.for -.ty and 2 cornai' 2 two aoor over
.,_ tires, $50, (740)992· take
.;.... · payments.
- . EHO.
"'lrig. &amp; · . -. Comer lazy NEW AND USED FUR· Wolorlino Special: 3/4 200 620 John Daore, (740)379- 4276.
(740)245-0519
V
lc
2 3 bod
......, lloor cabllnols 3 Wi1lt NANCES FDA SALE! We PSI 121.95 Per 100; I• 200 9381
,
1985 Chevy Cefobrily. GL 3 bldloOm houao, 7"""""
~,:;.,~· in
dro...;, lotmfCI counlar. 2 Install, Fr" Estimatoa, If PSI 137.00 Par 100:. All 2-N Ford TlliCIOI 3. HiiCII. 2.8 V-6, Good Condition, aJ. 1 oulbuilding, small bam,
::..... LA, $5ro&lt;m0. R~ llOOI wilt u sink, whirlpool Y"" doni C&amp;lt US. We bo1h ~:;"'~
~ Flltings Very Good Condition. so Free K1Hon, 6 - · Route 62, 5 miles '"""
.......,.. &amp; iloposlt required. sotf c:tMn double. oven Loosal (740)446-6308, 1· RON EVANS ENTERPfiiS.. $2200. (304)682~38
eau (740)2511-6735
Poim Pleasant Mason Co.
(740)446-3644
range wilh hood. 5erioualn- f!00.29HI098.
ES Jackson Ohio l.aofl.
can (304)67~
quires only! (304)675-4077
•
•
52 Case oc &amp; 5' Brush ""0 1985 Harloy Sporls1er, 1000
SIII.&lt;E
Nursas unHorms. Size 2x 537-9528
.
lo&lt; 11500, &amp; Small child's C\JSiom, $4500. 1979 t.tusarwl 3x 3 sots paid wor W'ndo
• · Cond' ·
Go-Kart 5 hOrse, $100 tang•. 4 speed, V-6. goocl -92-~-------v-.-..-.-~.-~
FOil........
AIIAZIIIGLI' LOW PRICES $100 . ~ -··
f
.. h
I w ~~~
IIIOI18r.
cond ·-- $1 ·~ 1979
-·~ ·-· ~. ~~u.
~
WOLFF••~IIQIEDS
· or ...,. Works Great $SO 0 80. 1740)843-5217
,.......:_:~mot
'' 01 -·- ·. -~ Hops, asking $2500,
Buy
Dlra&lt;:t
(740)992·7116
(740)992-7118
YANMAA YM 1500 TraciOr. ;;!~. $3,500;; ; ; (740)74H357.
Excellent Sorvico
PETCARER X.COM Save
BululiNG
diesel, 3 poin1 hllch, $2,150. Goo Prism, automatic.
BID Auto Sales
Flexible F1naroclng Avallble up 1o 50% on ALL pol modiAlso, now 4' finish mower, $2,000. 1987 Nove, 5· 1996 Pontiac Grand Am
Homo IComrnert:ial Ul)lls cations and supplies, In!il!PPI.us
stiM In c:rato, $850. Shipping speed. 15600. 10(125 ~- $2700. 1996 Milsublshi GalFREIColorcalalog
eluding Heartgard, lnta,_.
available. LOCated just out- cross bike, $1,000. Boar lanl 12700. 199 5 Chevy
Call Today 1-800-711.01156 lor, Fronlllno, moron FREE · brick, sower pipes, side ul Hunlaville, loJ (2156) Aoo engine Analyzer.wtlh 4 cavalier $2400. 1993 Ford
www.np.atslan.oom
SHIPPING. Order online uuindouus, linlefs, etc. Claude 776·~ www.maynarde- gos. Great lor beg1nnors, Probe SISOO. 1993 Pontiac
www.PeiCareRX.com
I· Winters, Rio Grande. QH quipmonl.oom
$300. (740)386·9516 or Gratid Am $1700. 1993
I BO&lt;Iroom Apartment, R•
-flal&gt;y
-bod
- -d-ra-sal- -tablo
- - fl00.844.1427.
call740-245-5121 .
(740)388-8071.
Chevy Lumina $1900. 1!192
lrlgDfator, Range, foJC In· AI&gt;PIIancas: Recondlllonod
i wtng, ~ chair: Rare baseball clgoreHo card
LIVESroCK 1
Pontiac Grand . Am $1200.
eluded, $289 Plus Oepoait Washoll. Dryers, Rangl!s. lltack le41har boots size 7 or picturing "Kid Elbartald" 8 ~ough Cui lumbar. 2x4's.
l992 Lincoln Towncar in 1989 Toyota Corulle $1200.
Aelaranca. HUD Approved. Reirlgralonl, Up To 00 Doys 7 112 and Sfzo med. Cool Pomeroy, Ohio native who 1x6's, cut In 8·16 loot ~
mint condition, loaded ;..;.,
B&amp;D Auto SOles
(740)441- l5l9
Guaranloodl We Sell New that maleh. (304)675-2601 pjayed bal- late 1890's oar- lengths, 1,000. board loot. · 7 month old Angus caW, AI options, loalhor interior, now
Highway 160 N.
1&amp;2 bedroom near Holzer Mayteg AI&gt;Pflanct s, French
.
ly 1900's, excellent condi· $250. 1740!441•1015
sired by EXT29ANI413. Michelin Hras. $5995. OBO
740-44&amp; 6865.
economical utilities 5279 10 Clly Maylag. 74()-448-7795. BaautKul handmade solid, lion. More Info call
Case Square hay baler. (740)985-3595
1379 per month pl~s ullllllos F
S
R ndltl
d
~~~
(740)44&amp;01961565.00
(740)379-2798.
(740)446-2957
or a1o:
eco
ono
S100
---------------'--waiiNirs, drye11 and rolrtg. dollt,
· !740!446.QI98
Real Estate General
Real Estate General
BEAUTIFUL
APART· erat018. Thompaons AI&gt;Pfl· CuSIO&lt;n Bul11 Shed. 8xl0. 1
IIENTS AT BUDOET PR~ ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- year old. (740)446-1278
CES AT JACKSON ES· nue, (304)675-7388.
EARN YOUR College 0.
TATES, 52 WoaiWood Drive
gree OUICKLYI Bachelors
f""" $2971o $383. Walk to
Main Sl- Fumilu"'
Mallefs ·Doclorole by cor&amp;hop &amp; rn008!1. Gall 740(304)875-1422
respondenco baood upon
446·2568. Equal Housing 51 5 t.1oln Slrooi,.Polnt
Opportunity.
prior education and short
Pleasant
sludy cou,.., For FAEE In·
Christy's Family Living
formation booklet phone
New &amp; Used Fymitura
33140 Now Lima Rd., Rut:
tend, Ohio, 740-742·7403. Naw 2 Piece Llvlngroom Cambridge Slate University.
Apartment homo and trailer Suites $399. Buy Bell t.aoo- 1164-8316.
,lij,4 Second. Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0i
c'
T d '
'
'
Electric cooktop, wall oven,
rentals. ommerclal store· ra e.
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•
microwave, 2r cOnsole TV.
Ironia available lor loooo.
kitchen cabinets, Island
-~
Vacancies now.
evan~moo®zoomnet.ne t
(740)379-2798

..,.,a.

New 2002 Fleo1wood only
sns down and $150.85 per
month,
call
Cheryl,
(740)385-4387
Naw bank rspo- 14x70, 3
bedroom 2 bath· Pay $499
move-1~ OakWOOd· Galllpotlo. (740)446-3093

M·F 8:30.8:00
Sat 9:00-6:00

.
F.umiohed o111clotx:r;ol ulii-pold, oho!o btlh. $12!1
month. 919 2nd A'"'""".
(740)U6 39.5.

i FOIIIIDrrm;
lb I::-W::kk~e.;:

9

t!hd U4, tJut At

Real Ettatt General

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

-oom.

a
Real Eatatt General

I Cj/~ qf ~1B'JM
r:lwtt ~

.._~...iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii..,..

740·385.4367

Closed Sunday

Will power wash nausea,
trailers, anything. Call

(740)441·4238 or (740)446·
0151 alii&lt; lor Ron . II no
answer, leave mauage.

2• 12x40 mobile Renl 10 _, on lend coo$1,800 MCh, 1- 10.38 mG-1fact, gooc~-. 2 bedrtlorn
bllehomo. $1 ,500 01 54,500 house
in
Porne&lt;oy
lor o1 ..... (740)4.41.()219 (740)698-12...
·
calaflor8.1Xlpm.
=;~~~B;d;;;;;;;;:t); Syracuse- now house un
28&gt;180 3 Or 4
Or&gt; river, 2 - . . . ,, • • ,., &amp;
ly ....-..
•••• 00 ,_
~ ...
~
- big
-~half,
2 car garoge,
8.99% .,_ . . _ Rate, dock. 15650 • """'"' pluo
1-888-928-342&amp;
$650 llopool1, (740)385~
,
~. -~ 1159.
14 70
-~ 2"~
~=~~~~~z~
ffiOYod. 2 bodt~tt,
lui Tolmg llpo1lcotior10 lor a 2
btlhl. comes Willi 8X1ras. bod&lt;oont&amp; ln a quio1 noigl&gt;SIS.OOO. 17401446-9337
borhood. !740 u . . . 939
:.::=::.!:..:.:!C:.:.::.:::::..,_ 1e4""
,_.,..
Allandonod ~blowide- ,
......_..
1roo SOI·up &amp; deltvery. Hur·
Mollu
fY' 1 only. (740)446-3093
Ashltnd FloolwOod 2002 ~
Doubt- 126,226 TOll 14X60 2 bedroom 2 bath
Froe ~19 10 min In
trailer~~ I mili
lrom · - - - ·
~·-.
~~~~;;;;d;;;;;;;;: from Helzer Hospilal. $275
Ashland FleetWOOd Sapt., llopool1, $275 monlh. AefO&lt;·
bar
2002 14x70 enc. required. (304)675·
3bd/2ba. $19,990 Free Dol. 2900 Leave II'I8SSOgO W no
a 5elup. lbll Free · - - -·
805-15619
.:.:.:-'--'----"--- 2 . Br. I 112 bath, 14 Doluxl homo, save $5,44$, With Iorge upondo &amp; c:ennew 2000 model Slcyline, 3 Ira! air, (740)992·2167
bodroom, 2 boll\,10tal-.
lrlc, 'linyl &amp; ahlngla, low 3 bedroom mobia homo In
monthly payrnanls dollv· Middleport,
no
pols,
erod &amp; oatup lnclooOS sklrl- (740)992·156156.
ing a ....... Colao Mobile 3 Br. 2 baths, 14x70 Newly
US 50 East, Ath- rornodeied (740)992·2167
ona, Oh, 74Q.592-1912
'
.
.
BoaU1ilul
Riv8&lt;
1/lew ldool
F~ 1 Daya, Noti~.:For 1 Or 2 Poople, Reforono
(;.~
ucl
ces, Deposrl, No Polo, Fos·
.:_..;.._ _ _ _ __
tor Trailer Park, 740-441Land-home packages· all 0181·
Proquallly by phone. Mobile homo lot 1nr ront
(740)4431563
Water eloclric and phone
• ••~
.
Limited Or No Cradl? ao.. ~- avaolable. (740)3118emmenl Bani&lt; Flnarce Only
AI n. ~.~ In Barbours·
'I -wv·~- .,~
~
VI • •
-··~~··
RlR lhNr
~ly ~~ "Z:·F3 ~room.
• · nse
Ivery 1 and 2 bedroom apart
&amp; Sal Up. 1-1188·928·2428 monts, fumlshod and unlur:
Now 1Bx80, 3 bedroom, 2 nishod ser:urily deposit robeth, only 15600 down, call qulred,' no pols, 740·992·
Nlldd (740)3e5-4367.
2218.

""'"*·

Real Estate General

David's General Contracting
Plumbing, electrical, paint·
ing, decks, roofs. Call
(740)256-9373 (304)833·
6265

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

~r~i&amp;~~Rlll~l~bSw;
~m;~~~ r~ ~ 1r ~a;:s 1t
..__~
___.,,r ~~= 1r M~ 1r. ._·...~
--.....,'~r~~W~'lSIUCK
~~·~I rm

.!i

._,unity-.

~

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Must be moved. Owner says
this 1979 home has newer heal
pump. There Is a small front deck, 2
bedrooms, 1 bathroom.
Horne
needs some repalre Inside.
· ASKING $8,000

backdrop
ba found In thlo 4
2
1/2 bath ranch. Localed in
Green township this remodeled
one revet home offers large open
spaces enriched with 8 central
kitchen and tamlly/sun room, A.
large level lot wilh shaded deck
area In the back ol lhe home
adda to the overall appeal. Let
this
llsl 01

uNLTI

NEW LISTING.' VANDERHOOF
ROAD- Jual past Tuppers Plains.
This 1 story frame home has vinyl
siding, newer shingle roof, 3
bedrooms; I full belh &amp; 1 unfinished
balh. Living room with wood burning
Equipped kitchen, FA,
fireplace.
Gao fumace, large deCking area,
3.12 acres. Nearly all mowed large
yard, garden area. Easy acceBS to
Balpre. Alhens &amp; Pomeroy. Call for
your showing. ASKING $75,000

t111 Spectacular river vlewa. a
atcluded wooded lot end nature
abound thla ralnd ranch on 3
AC m/1. Wllh )UII 8 shon drive
south of Gallipolis one will lind a
hidden treasure positioned high
o¥ertooklng the Ohio Valley, Wllh
hardwood floors, remOdeled oak
kllchen and ample living space
enhanced by a Unlohed lower
level, thie gem awaits you.
$119,000.00

.
Inside the owner ~as lavishly
adomed the home w.th hardwood
flooring In the entryway and
dinln.g room, tastefully ~orated
the living room wltl'l the. fireplace
as a focal point. In addll1on to lhe
oversized master suite with 6'
whirlpool tub , the owner has
sparecl no expense In creating a
fully equipped ·eat-in· cuslom
kitchen. Call lor a private viewing.

1109 Prlct R•ducodl
neighborhood Hlllng ~1oM lo
town can be found In thle 3
bedroom 2 1/2 bath on
Brentwood Drive . With
oversized rooms this spacious
home offers an equipped kitchen,
partially finished basement, and
a two·car
all for only
.,;:.., lhll • BUY.

t120 DrHmt can come truer
•
moduler In nice country
aettlng. Extras Include master
bath, garden tub &amp; shower
combination. detached storage
&amp; a 10 mlnule drive from
-~
~J::

Secluded and, conven iently
loc:aled, lhls lovely 4 BR 3 B"
home rests on 7.5 gorgeous
acres and has a stocked pond,
24 x 32 mela l building, 2 car
111 G OWNER WANTS AN attached garage , wrap around
OFFERIIII Bnnd new ucttonal ' porch and a beau tilully
homel Spacious 3 BR 2 BA with landscaped yard. With ceramic
dream kitchen, fireplace , tile entryways, Bruce hardwood
whirlpool tub, walk·ln closets In flooring, and lmrlcately laid brick
all BR, buill-In hutch &amp; desk. sidewalks, lhls superb home has
Land not Included. $68,000
every detail co\lered. Call for an
appointment fo r your dream

HI '\ I \I "1

HOUSilS

FOR RENT
1 -3 Bedrooms Forac:losed
Homaa From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Veara at 8.5%
APR For Lllllnga, 800-3193323 Ext 1709.
1 bedroom, PJC, 1 bath;
kllchan
hao appllancao.
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis ,
S350/mo. (740)446·4859

PRICE ~EDUCED • MIDDLEPORT
- Here Is a home wllh potential.
could be a tw o unll rental, or live In
one, rent one or live In the whole
houao. Total of 4 bedrooms, 1112
balhs up, 1112 baths down, F.P.
decks and porches. Localed In a
quiet, rural area.
AEDUCED TO 1&amp;0,000.

SR 124 • HAARIS • IIAPLE Q~OVE
SUBDIVISION - OHIO RIVER

acre

I today

2 bedroom home close to
town-, baaement. RiVer view,
$4251 month: 3 bedroom In
town, 1·112 balha. Good location. 15001 month. Refer·
encas and dlpooll required.'
(740)44e·3844.
3 bedroom hOrnt Mlnaravlllt
area, river vieW, references
required, dti&gt;Otll required,
no pt11, 740-992-&amp;m afler
5pm.

1 great

3 bedroom houH In lown,
(740)411 ·9216.

3 · bedroom newer home
near Porter, 5425/mo. De·
poal1 &amp; rtftrenoe required.
(740)441·2&amp;01 •""' 5pm.
3 bldroom. 2· 1/2 bath, 1
bedroom on 111 floor, lamMy
rQOm, In town. $625/mo. No
omoklng , no Inside pall.
(740)446· 1945, II no an·
awer, leave mnaage.
Collage sullable for lfngla
or couplt $250.00 Lincoln ·
Ave. call Hometltorl 304676-5640 ao1t for Nancy.
Pllol Program, Rante11
N -. 304-738-7295.
Quill Country SaiUng 3br
2ba. fO&lt; rtnl 0&lt; oa1t on land

conlrac:1. Avolablo October
111. can (304)675-2864

1121 The BEST ktpl oocr•l In
tawnl One ollho lEST built I
BEST cared for horMa In the
areal Huge living room and
muter bedroom overlooking the
Ohio River. This home Is a rare
find with many unique features
Including beautiful hardwood
floors, trim, crown molding and
poc ket doors . Beautifully
landscaped lOt tl'lat runs all the
way to the rive ~. You've seen the
reat, schedule
appointment 1135 Nice 1tt1r1er l'lome, down
alztr or • gr111 lnveatmentl
·Well kepi 2 BR 1 BA home In
town wtth many updates
Including siding, wlndowa and
roof. Also haa a carport witt)
storage are~ . Priced at on ty
$38,900.

POMEROY· CAAIIEN ROAD · Great secluded homesite or cabin. 120 acres
on SA 33, left on Long Hollow, right on Cannen Road.
ASKING •102,000.

Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259
Sherrl L. Hart .................................. 7 42·2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818
.Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·6191

tor 1 home
b111lnon? It Ia herel 4 BR 2 BA.
llvl11g room, family roomlollice
ptua a huge metal building that
can be used tor a hOme business
located near the juncti on of SA
180 &amp; SA 554, lhls convenient tl311mmacullllly kopl3 BR 3
loqlllon Ia a muSI 888 $110,000. BA ralatd ronch. This property
Ia ori over 2 prtvate acres Just
mlnulea lrom town. l,n addition to
tho formal living room, remodeled
kitchen and 2 car attached
garage and 2 car detached, lhls
well buill home offers a large
dining/family room addition wllh
working fireplace and screened·
1138NEW
thll one on Klneon Drive. 3 In porch. Private and lucked
la rg ~ be_drooms 1 balh. This away from the hustle of the city.
home hal a fenced In backyard,
wllh a big carport, nice level lol
and much more. $85,900.00.

VISIIUS

online at
www.EvansMoore.coiD
•

Llatlngl HERE'S A REAL
CHARMER YOU t.11SSEDIII Thle
home offers man~ extras 3
1139 In tho qul•l vllloge of ' ~room , 1 bath, LR, FA eat-In
VInton. Two story home wilh tree kitchen, screened In porch. JUST
shaded yard bordoring beautiful . WAITING FOR YOU. M5,000.00
Raccoon Creek. 3·4 BR, 2 BA.
office and modern kllchen.
$88,900.

Land Listings!
t105BI1 Vacant Lo1 on 2nd Avonut. Primo Location I M5,000
l!llil.Cornmerclal Properly I 146 ocraa mil near Rio Orondo.
UQY- VACANT LANDI One aero mil on 2 road frontageal Nloa
locallon. Prlcad balow $20,0001
1211ll· 8.125 Acrea mil In Green tawnahlp $59,900.
120§1-12-14acrea ~overlooking Ohio Valley.
1.2!1UA· 2 acrn ~ near Rio 129,000
.12tU1~ 10 acre• mil near Rio Grande.
mz2: 213 aorta ~ off ol Slalt Routt 218
12073- A hunlera drMm co1111 truo. 1 112 oiO&lt;Y. 3 BA home.
situated on 116 acres of beautiful land. 3.ponds. OWner wanta offer.
l2llll- LOTS! Fronlago on SA 554 and .Wooclsmill Rd. Aeslrictlona.
$1 2,500 each.
'
12085· Vacant Land· 85 acres on Hidden Valley Dr., lots of road
frontage.
tl24- 3 aero building loll Norllt Gallia Estates. $39,900.

·,

�Sunday, Sept 23, .2001 ·

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

Page 04 • 6unbap G:imtf •.,.tinrl

rro

SAVE TIME AND
SHOPTHE

CLASSIFIEDS!

~~ I ~.,rm--Rlll•ltot.-~.t:.·-....1t ~~~~ It ~~113 .I

FO&lt; aaJo ., 1eau 1g. rancn
.
lllylo homo, 4 br., 3 bo., w1 :::.:a~-~ ~a':.,
o c - In patio poroh, 2
· •.
•
car~,.""": beside
Sonon Rose
.,.. ,... $78,000.
monal
Gardens
Rt 33.rno1 114 acres. 3 br 2 fire .....
Commarical lOtS for sale 01
..loose, In Pl. Pfeosonl 304· ces. (basemen! inckJdes an
727 3318 call between extra kitchen, TV room,
!5pm-12.
bedroom.,;_ba'til) 21 carn·ga·
,---~..,--., rage , ,.. .._ a ruro sa lng,
501150 call 304·882·

16 Wido.
$195.00 Per
':l': Monlll.
8.99% Fixed lnl""""
Rate With Air And Uno

4

Only

"-'-'1-888-92a.3&lt;26
~ .,.•••• "

-----::-::'~:-:-::1966 Vendale 12x60 Mobile
Homo. 11186 Ford Ranger

2.3
Lttre..
s
spMCt.
(3041675-1091 or (304)6755292
- - - -- - -

-If

1978 14x70-., oidt by llde
rofrigoiiiDl Willi leo
&amp;
walor In i door.
no.•h
K.
o
r.•...,•. ~".! ~
~~~.
" " " l.... , II,Qfl - . . . - - -·
al Biroh c:oblnols In kilcllen
t I t f2 beth&amp; (llamt ~·elod) gao lumoce &amp; ,.,._
lot-· 3 BR., Ill plumbir,g
._from ..... !lillie,

Homo. -

'!..

2050 Ot304-882-3885.
1982 14x70 Fairmont Hap- underpinning
includf.d.
FO&lt; ao1e oy owner: Nice bl· pyhou$&amp; mol&gt;lo hOme. 3 $7500. 1740)742-2896
level home on 1 ocnt near bedroom's, $10.000. caM 1982 14XI56 Oolcbrool&lt; Chaster. Thfoo bedroom. (740)441.a959 loavt ,... bile Homo. Good Corollon.

-AINIII ...... utwalling
lnthllt tWW I,DP le
......... 10 ... , _

Fair Houolnt Act of 1111
wh~h milk• " Nlegalto

..,_IM "ony

'""'*•

pt ....
limitation or
dllcrllaaMMM bMid on
FM:e, cotor, ....~. ...

flmll.., 11etua or MlloNI
oritfn, CN' any tnt.nUon ta
mtl&lt;oonylllk:ll
prellrtnoe, llmltdOn or

-lnolton.•

Thfl-1101 wtll nal
kMwlngly-

ld\lerttMn••ta for ....
..... whlc:tl It In
-lonol111o-. Our

--lltroiiV
lnformod lholtll

c:twetllng• edv'lrtiMd In
thtl MWIF ptr ...
• ..,iilteble on an equ.a

.... bolhs, ......car garage,
famil'l room wi1h liropiace,
sun room . New central heAt·
ing &amp; ale \I)'Stom. One ITil·
nute ort Route 7, but still pri·
vale. (740)985·3981

=
..:!11"=· -- - - - - :

$5,000 (304)8112-38a3
~1e
80
1993 Ctayton 16x· """':"'
home 3 br., 2. ba. asking 181 T1mo lluytrao C&amp;H Oak$19,000 304·773-5885 after WOOd, Gallipolis 10da~l
5 pm.
ao., -ed program- buy
local (740)446-3093

Newty constructed. single
stOfY 1600 sq. toot home.
R 1E tatl Gene111l
Located 1o minutes trom , ---....!:~e:!a~;:::S::.:,=.,::::!::::.::__--:-­
Hotzer Hospital, 20 minutes
from Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal. off SR 160 on e privalo
1·112 acre Jot. 3 bedroom,
2-112 baths, big kitchen
w/oak cabinets, DR. LR

wlgas log flreplaco, central
air, laundry room, front
poroh &amp; 2·112 car ga111ge .
Immediate possasslort. A(r

praised at $125,500, asking
$1 25,500. Call (740)4484514 from 8·5pm, M·F, or
(740)446-3248 aftar 5prn.

Beautiful
VictorUin
Home
In Town

Full service house cleaning,
$7.00 hour, very l'lontat.
Aelerences available. carr
(740)446·29n
Geo&lt;goa Portable Sawmill,
don1 haul your toga to lite
mill just cal 304-675·1G57.
Quality hou1141Cioanlng, Immaculate, nollculoua, d..
taiiO&lt;I cloonlng. The abooluta boat CaM lor a lrH olll·
mate. (740)2156-1131 "' 1·
888-781-2412.
Wanted lo care loroldtrly.ln
their homo. Call at
(740)256-6503 II no answer.
Leave message on voice
mol.
WIU haul away, clean aut.
clean up, ITIO\Ie almoltany·
thing. Other odd joba. Call
(740)446-7804

NEED AN E'BLY a•y.
~n

c~

DAY?? .
Up 1o •500 lnatonlly by
phonol
1·(8n)•EARYPAV.
Lief 780008
laiADVANCE FREEl
-'-::TU-,II::N':"':D':DO__,..WN;.:,;,ON,.-..
SOCIAL IICUIIITV -?
No FM Unloll We Wlnl
1 888 &amp;Ba.a:MS

rro ~~

...WORK FROM HOMEI
$500-$1500/mo Partnmt.
$200Q-S7SOO./mo FuUTime.
Paid vacations. Call: 1-800479·7471
www,monty·
cash4ma.com

-

lnlerseclion of

us 33 a595

Just South of
Logan.

Real Estate General

"""""I.

r

New Double Wide. S195
Par Monlhi 3 Badroom, 2
Balh. Free Dallvory &amp; SOl·
up. 1.a88·1128·3426

*

446•6806

Br

h Offl
ano
ce
23 Locust St
Gallipolis, Ohio
45831 .

Real Estate General

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SIIITH, BROKER ...............448 11108
GAIL BELVILLE.................................. 44H201
TRISH SNI'DER ...... ........ .....................441·84N
JOHNNIE ~USSELL ..........................317-G323
DAVID SNI'DER &lt;.................................441-14111

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

iL--·FOII--~---,l
"·.-

~

; 32 acres wf1h pond, lots 01
standing limber, lovely 4
bedroom, 2· 112 beth home,
2 bamo. garage and cellar
house, mobtlo home renlal
apol, call (740) 446 •2861 or
174012156-8593 after 4pm for
more lnlormaUon.

~

Russell D . Wood. B roker 446-461 8
Judy DeWiu ...;...... .................... 441 ·0262
Dana Ath a............. .. .......................... 379-9209
K enneth Amsbary ........ ............ ...... ... 245-5855
Tqmmie DeWin.. ....................... 245-0022
Ruth Barr .. ..... ......... ... .. ........... ..........446-0722 Jim Slone..................... .................... .446-9483
Cheryl Lemley ................: ...... ....... ... 742·3 171

189 acres- approximately. 7
room, 1 bath house, bam
and outbulldlngo. Willowwood, Ohio. Fl111t Fed&amp;ral
Savings Bank (740)532-

OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlemlthreallllall.ootn
e-mail: vlsrealeste teOzoomnet.net

a-~...

Buy

01'

101. - - Fit-

- · 11 24 Eul Mllln on
SR 124 E. Potr•oy. 700.

992·25M. Russ
·

..__
... . ...

......... $150

Gd.(740)441-~

RESIDENTIAL HOlE
OWIIERS

•

Moore. GrUbb's Piano- Tuning &amp;

Rapoirs. P1ublomo? T - 1-f E-.cy 110%
TIJned7 cal Tho Pltno Dr. Gaa F - Oil Furno-

·-~
1 ond 2 New ""*- ,..,_,_ 0c- 7 ~ _
bo&lt;ltwm .. Ill- - I ll ~-~~....::..~
·-loge Manor ..., - - on ""' .,. In Mido:llowo1 Hardy IAlms $3.00 each 4
~·· In Middlo,;lo&lt;'. Ohio. (740)!1!12.Q2118
lor $10 Open $11. &amp;.5pnl. &amp;
rom 78-$348. Col 74().
.... ogs. W
992·501W. Equal Housing
ML&lt;nFJ
•
~
,
...
Alto. (304)895~
~
3740 le4... mosaoge. or

r

·~ ' " " - 2 ~oorm.
· - ._. •• -~ ~
_
WID '--up, ctose 10 HMC SO DOWN HOIItS NO
(740).46 8030
CREDIT OKI HUO, VA
FHA. Col lor l.ls!inOS
1-800-501·1m Ex19818
houao Apa""*'1s, 1SO DOWNI No redi1 ok
Water
5ewogo, Trash. Gov1 ........ 1 ~296$35M4o., 740 446 0008.
~

12 s- ._ "'-"' &amp;
All Cundi .........
- - .. " -· F,.. a WorTIIlly 111n&amp; Cooling. 18 0 0• 8 1 2 •5 96 7
.01-.b.c:om.llennelt

c:es.

--ling

(304)695-378!1

-

·cal

so

A WORK AT HOME OP·
POATUNITYI Earn up to
$500·$5000/mo.
PT/FT
Free Into. Toll FrH (886)
639·AICH www.alhoma44v·
er.com
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE
Eotabllohed Vending ADUlt.
Will !811by 1010812001 Un·
der $9K minimum lnv11t·
ment required . E•cellenl
Profit Polonllal. Finance
Available/Good Credit Toll

3
over full
car garage and
flnlahtd family room. lioma alii on 2
Ac. 11111 In Hannan Trace SchoOls.
Jual mlnutoa from downtown
O.lllpolll. Thla homt fulurea a
btautiful landacepad lawn, WOOd
pttflll 11ov1 ond canlral air. Located
lull olf Rock Lick Ad. on Mallia Dr.
In nlcl ,.lflhboltiOCd. ·Have a
gardln and !111M aomt flowera bul
make """ 10 look 11 thla. cau
JohMit II 387.()323 IOdiy for In
appolnlmonl.

..

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

Free""*.(888) 270.2168•••••

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Processing Mall! Amazing
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Send SASE : BGL Box
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fomla 915623. www.Pruce. .
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AGENCY! $4,995.00·Worl&lt;
FT/PT, B0%-20% oommt•
slort oplll, full training arpport, travel dlacounta 4
more, Vieit our webelle at

a

.

I

'
DIUGtiTFUL HOllE
Prtlly u I plc1U111. Very ~I
poanntd 110M and frama ranch
h&lt;Kna oftara 3 bedrooma, walk-In
2 full balho, channing living
room wlflrtplloe. Ntw Olk cablllt!J
lint lha kltohan. Aanga, ralrigeralor,
dlthWalhar, and compiiCIOr.all ally.
Udllly 111011111 """" large. 211er deck
In lite rur wllh 38' lnground pool.
Many frutt lrtll, · and
ahruba. Sprinkler ayllern In lite rMr.
2 car aiiiChed garage and 1 carport. .
2 IIIOry bam building. Bflck1ap and
ClrfVtwlyt. A you'~ ba
proud 10 own. VL Smhh 448
f.40a2 WI!Gh tho fll- Irani , _
b&amp;Gkyard? lnjoy lite vltw from

eeoe

your boll dock cir -

-

· lhle 1+

.. mil whh • 2 lA 1 bath

mobflt

lUllforlitea
thing '"'11-.-May bt It
room
ga-. ~t&amp;K II 7113 81. AI. 7
Boulh. RaaUOICII
LOTI

TIME COULD PAY OFFI Vltw tlllt
lovely all brick home wnhf..
bedrooms, 2 balha, lormal dining
nn.. living nn., family nn., wf1h
t&lt;ftohtn
II replace., Patio, above 9""'nd pool,
room, garaon
, Plropllice In
,
.2.ose""lmo
ranteltac:hed garar and
Calhtdral celllnga, covered dock, "'
VERY LIVABL HOME
lbovt ground flool, cellar wl
MONEY. 5125,000.00
building, IIOIIIfll shed, 3 car
dllachtd
garage,
blacktop
driveway, fenced lot 22 acres ~ .

800-385-8497 • 110.
lnlemel Secreta! Lum How
to Take Control Of Ano1her
COmputer Over Thl •-·
nell
1·900·328·8870,
Ext 39:i4, $2.99 par min.,
Must be 18yfl. Sarv·U (81t)
845.a434.

IIITOIIIC
IIALUPOUI - Homo faoturaa 3
BR, ond I bath with ~Ullom
Clblnoll In kl1chen, very lerge lot
lhlt hal polonlial lor oovoral
,.
tllla h&lt;Kne

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERSI
Excellent

.=

c-.

www.aaeruiaeuncttravel.co
m Then call Adrienne al

Earn

EXTENBIVELY
III!MODIL!D
EXTERIOR 6 INTERIOIII Roof.
lldlng, wlndoWa, wiring and much
much morel Hardly nothing tlse
for you 10 do but rruwe In and
enjoy alllht hard worl&lt; lite owno11
Into lhla l01181y 2 atory hoine.
llfzld roomo. 2 balho, 3
roomo,loyer. Datached garage
and
m&lt;Kel call lo view lhla

Income

working from hOrnt atOUnd
your schedule PT/FT. 1·
800-81 3-15694.
Promolional OO&lt;npanysa1e1 proleallonal to dtYe..
op exclusive territory with

DlacountCoupone.oom.

Work 4 days a WHk and
make $50,000+ ptr y..r.
12500 Investment requlr~.
can 886·794.0011 .
Slln A Trovol Attncy:
Earn Big SSSI BualnMI
Support, Your own Travel
Website and Travel Ole·
counts/Perka.
Nominal
Stanup CoSII Froo Info. Call
1-888-699.()9()1 .

f40S4 12282 IT. AT. 180- Quiet
living but no1100 for out • This 1995
manufiCiurld homo on foundation
· II )ual whal you are locking for.
Home rHtl nn 8 acres mil with
bam, outbuilding, and all fooced ,
Grut lor horae or cows. Owner
wanlt 10 move and will lot his 2000
riding mower atay so you can ride
lho riiiCh. Priced at $00,000 this
could bt )ull what you noedl

Slart Your Buain111 Today... Pnmo Shopping Con·
·ter SpaCe .Available At Af·
fordable Rate. Spring Valley
Plaza. Call 740·448.0101 .

•

140011 HOllE 6
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 llulavllte
PI&lt;. 3 bedrm, 3 balh living quarttra.
Also 18' x 32' garage pluo 30' x 20
building 112 ac. olland. good lac. Priced 10 a&amp;ll. VLS

14021
COUNTRY
bedrQOm, 2 balha
w/huga
equipped · kllchen and Smlilt Oek
cablneta .. Family nn. leundry nn.,
carpon &amp; dj!Ck. 1~ acrta ~
feoced. 2 fishing panda. Thla flo
fa mily location lhal offtra prlvocy.
Green Twp. VLS 448 6808
140341 COIIMEACIAL IUIUIINO
Olive &amp; 3rd. 27156 sq. ft. mil. City
water, sewer &amp; gu. 411 Inventory
avaifable too. OWner wanta adlonl
14019
CDMIIE~CIAL
LOT·
Jackson Pk. Gillipollo, OH Comer
lc;tt with great potential.

I

room. dfnlng and
x 70 mobile homo
&gt; e.lc.llle•nt .condition, piWBnlly
used u a rental. Loll of fntlllreea
and landacaplng. 12123
COIIIIERCIAL· Sycamore StrHI
Location. Large 2 alory building
wtlh off alrtll parking. Ideal for
floral ahcp , etc. Call for mroo
dolalla. t2044
NIW ACREAGI LI8TIIIQI 94 112
ac:ret 11111 wllh road lrontsgo,
homnllt, finn find ond ldul
hunting land fill le ad)Ocoltl to
Waynt Nallonol ForrMI, 12140
GIGANTIC PIIICI! REDUCTION!
OWNIIII
HAVI . III.AIHED
121.000 Off Uallng Prloo. kltally
kx:alld c:tou 10 35 bypaaa
bttwMn Galfloofla and Rio
Grande. Over f2 ac:roa Included
with lhfl 3 bldrooma ronch, large
living room. oal.fn ldlehen,
basement, lomlly room, 2 Cjlr
allac:hod garage. 121~
PIIICI DROPPED TO 134,1100.001
1 112 Story hOrnt olluat&amp;K on nlct
lovot lot 3 bedrooma, onciOsed
front pun:h, large kl1chen &amp; dining
arM. Side poroh. Dt180hed
garage. OWNER WANTS SOI.DI
LW&lt;E AN OFFEAI 12038

~~~.100 IS THE NE\If A81&lt;1NO
lhls one floor plan
at 21 nell avenue. 3
bedrooms. ba&amp;ement, carpon,
amalleaay to malnlakl tot. 12112

11,000
CD8T81 Whal o doall Como
chock out lhla 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home with Florida room, large
l lzad living room &amp; dining area,
rear deck, detached 2 car garage
and
morel
IMMEDiATE
POSSESSION112080
$20,000.00 5 Acree approx.
lllualld In Gallipolis. Handy
kx:allonl 121&gt;44
3814 a-gee CrHk
A* 1&amp;8.800 N~o Bi·Level style
homa thai haa larga family room &amp;
dining area . that opens to large
rear dack and private back tawn.
Eol·ln kll~han 3 bedrooms, large
family room, garage, concrete
drive and morel
12015

LOTSI UHie K any excavaung
n&amp;ed8dl Mlnulac:tured· homea
walc&lt;lmo. 12103
NEW LISTINlll LOT..PRONTAGE
ALONG IR 110 I IULAVILL!
PIKE handy oonvonloni kx:aUon.
Laval, publ" Ulllllleo available.
Rosldontlal or c:ommtrclal. Selling
balow the appralaed value. 12141
TWO ACRE LDTSI Rio Grande
·area! COUnty water available.
112133

FOF1 ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP OY FOR A
FREF QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY
NEW UBTJIQ
lllt'T IIOIILE
H,OIIE ON RI!NTI!D LOTI
Excelltnl opportunity 1o own your
own home. Thle 1997 Clayton
home Ia In oxeeflenl condlllon. 3
Bedroomt, 2 bathe, nice sized
kllchon and living room area. All
aet up on a reaaonably priced
renlod lot Call lodayl Only
$22,500.00.

PRICE
545,000
RIDUC!D
TEXAS AOAD...TLC fa what lhla
homo has hod. LIHio 011er I aero, 3
bedrooma, living room, kllehen,
balh. allached carpon. Eastern
Schools! 12120
CHEAP CHEAPI $21,000.001
lnvaetmenllatarter... Aanch
style
homo ... ellualld at 738 Main
S1rool..2 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen, living room, bathl 12121

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
3&amp;812 lA 124.. 179,000 3.29
acraa· comoa along wtlh lhlo ranch
home. Uvlng room, dining room,
kitchen 3 bldrooma. 2 balha. 2
Car detached garege. Lovoty
pond, lrulllr- &amp; barriea. Lilt go
888112130
3&amp;8 112 N. :lid 8frell. One atcry
raised ranch, 2 bldroomo, living
room, kitchen &amp; balh, garage,
·baaomont. Priced right $38,000
12134

'

•

1993 01asmollilo Cutlls$
.,_
4 &lt;blt Red c~
....... - ···
•
~~
ro' lo/C 52500
' PWoeo
' Pl..

I""' - -

i

I

n--

.

•

(740)446-9238
11194 ~ I 9Q211anger:
1995 Cr-y truck
~.000 .-_ I IMH o.-j
~: 1992 a-.rt·.
. _ .,..._ ~- .
1993 ,
·-.,... _ . . . ~

·

F.;;;;y

j

Flturrs

I

I

bod~:,_-"-

i

j

car-··

a

::f

"'"! .:';

Call or stop by our office tor a tree Quality Homes Guiae ill color.

L1t '

Fermetly Blackburn Really "Serl1in,' Southern Ohio For Over A. Quar1er CentiU')' "

Real Eatate General

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446·3884 Cara Casey-245·9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990
Candace
446-7412
--~-----------4

colonl•l on .9+ acrea. Custcm
country home wllh 3 BA 2 112
BA, Smllh custom cabinets. two
car attached garage, 30 x 40
detached metal building, hot tub
and above ground pool.

Nics Size Lot for aole . 2
miles !rom city llmlls, Adda·
ville and River Valley
School dlslncl. 1 112 mllae
put Georges Crook .oN AI 7.
$20,000. Daytime (740)388·
8258. Evening (740)446·
4788.

I''
·

FlO

, 9am.-9pm.

I.ms&amp;

NEAR RIO GRANDE. A
beautiful&amp; acre tract located
on Cantarpolnl Ad, lor ONLY $12,320. For more Info
and FREE mapa contact
Anlhrlfty Land Ca., Ltd.
IQ0-21H385.
www.alctand.com

=

I

r~---

ACREAGE

· Looking To Buy A New
Home? Don't Have Land?
Wt Doll! Hurry Only 10 Lota
Loft, 304-738·7295.

341 ACRES WITII VINYL BIDED
AANCI1 STYLE HOllE..1.200 eq.
ft. of living space area wllh an
additional 2000 sq. " · wh ~h Ia
used presently as carpentera shop
bul could be easQy converted Into
· addlllonal living ares. Molal pole
barn 30 x 60 wllh 16 x 80 addition
on each aide. Partially wooded.
Fenced paalure. TIIIeble acraogo.
Private seiUng. Gall for dotalla and
oppotntmentiOdayl 12138

1992 Camero. v~. aulo.
25m Mrw«sary Edttoon.
$2500, (740)742·2357 .

·,own ::""

Indian Creek Equestrian Es·
latea, 3·6 acre lots, west ol
Rio Grimdo, !rom $25,900.
(740)245·5747

WITHIN ' 111NUTE8 OF HOLZER
HOSPITAL Located al 5153 SA
160 you will lind this over 1.7 acre
lot and mulllplo uoe dwelling. Ideal
for residential or commercial use.
Unlimited polenllal. Musl call lor
complata11011nglll2143
LOVELY SETTING for lhlo 2 ;1qry
home thai Ia only 2·3 ye0111 young
resting on approx. 2 acrea. Uvlng
room, kitChen, 8 bedrooma,
bal8ment.
Low
11derlor
maintenance, detached 24 x 30
garage, laigo front porch ond morel
112142

AUTOS

FOR SALE

"'**OOS· -Ha--.-,._-.,-Wi--To~~ ~~r
0::::. =.:=-31~"'; 'i;;:;::

~""'~~-~-.~

1.34 acraa with double car
garage. Has Electric. Priced
reduced. Also 1.25 acres
with aeptk: water hat place
for eiiKl. hook up. (304)5789929
NATURE'S PARADISE!
dtalrablt I 112 story bnck. Cus.lom
made
woodwor1&lt;
&amp;
doors
throughout this quallly constructed
home. Tucked away on over 26
acrta with a gorgeous view.
Formal living room, dining area,
family rQOm with fireplaCe, 3 plus
badroomo. 3 112 baths. flnlohed
walkout basement wllh 2nd
kitchen. allached 2 car garage
plua
bonus
· detached
garage/ohop ...baautifully
·
randacaped &amp; Iota more. Must see
thla one lo appreciate everything
there 11 to offer. Call at oncel
12137

r ..

• Page OS

low-·

8645

IT'S
P!IISONAUTY
PLUSI
ACRES.
HOllE·
BUILDINGS Old faohlon chonn
with modem convenience In thil 4
BR, 2 slaty homo, 2 btlhl,
(whlripool tub). Lovely equipped
kiVIamily rm combo wlhardWOOd
floors. cherry cablnlla. Enjoy
viewing the country from every
wondow. Formal dining nn
LM
wtbeamed ceilings. Porch &amp; pallo
72 ACRES of beautiful rolling land.
Pasture, woods &amp; some tlmber1
· pond &amp; mineral rights. Largo bam
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 448 8808

- Hound

r

~

EARN AT HOME. Stop-by•
altp
syatem.
$500$8000/Mo FREE Booklll 1•
800-9923. _
www.ln·
comeForYou.com

A HOME BASED TRAVEL
AGENCY! $4,995 lnv. Worl&lt;
FT/PT, 80%-20% """'ml•
slon split, full training support, travel discounts &amp;
more. Visit our Website at
www.aacrulsesandtraval .co
m Then call Adrla('lna at
800·365-8497 X 110

u,_

Al&lt;C Regisl- Boston RwSI•ed Angus Bul, Sinl
Tarrie&lt; ~ (740)256- OHb TRAVELER. 61101,
1825
by Woidgo F - .
-._or;, ......,JaM
P\.c)plos. 12 01 Harley Rico (740)667·
-ald. Ful ~.no 3261 or (740)ti67-3359
S50 (740~74
.
DAY &amp;
- . L-.gty , _ . . _
GRAIN
......... &amp; ~
•
$200. &amp; up. G&lt;*l cap con""'· (304)615-4787
Buck I llll8 - · RegiSirnd L.llb Puppies, bales $1 .00 - l l a y up 10
_._ -~ ~-~. $200 $200, ruurd bales $15.00

mix ... ·.

I

nr-..-"!!!'----.
FARMS

www .BIG- BEND REALTY .COM
Bet Be~Ut
, 1~ee,

li!lunbaP l!:tmn ·&amp;rnttntl

SOCIAl SECURITY DISAaturv a..n Doniod'l w.. .~ ·~ ~
_. ~75-41169
oldlpeotdllfC 1M- Spocilli.. In ~ and oach. malas and ·
For Product Or Heori wp. FREE CONSUL· (740)446-0080
n Grand Amo. cav-.,
Oppodunily. (740)441 - 1982 TAl lON.
Benefit Team
Y
-.,...
"" re ell:, o1 warranty. Wo
JET
TOI-Ir..: , _
AEAATlON MOTORS
~
• ble.
Herita ge
Farm. 4484.
Repaired. New &amp; Ral&gt;uillln STEEL BU1LD1NGS: Ur· Flulo, LeBiont: Vilo, U58d • (304)675-5724.
-:
,.:.='-::fir-oblt-:.-.,:-R)mw.Jia
::---350
- •
1996
3
Stock. Col Ron Evons, 1· genlll Must Move Nowll
T V8
~
801).537.s528.
25x30
30x40
45x110 4 limes, now $515, sell
L 1
, 6 ...-, ·
Tora TOWflhouso •··rt· -:-::- :-:----::.-::---~ 120· , , .._ .... ..;.. I-~ · 1350 muo1c Slandl case
$11 000 (740)11!12· 1111
manto, Very •··c.;;;
, 2 IOhp Murray riding mower
~
.....--- .. ·'
'
A
Bedn&gt;orns 2 ,;;.;;;._ CA. 1 w1 can $490.00
MOBIU' HOllE OWNERS Sizes l.aG0-211 ·9594 •-40 boOits. (740)367·10I16
FOil~
1997 Dodgt Neon. Sj&gt;or1s
112 Balh.' Fully carpeted, 0011 '1' 10ie - .. stamp
STOP • RENTING!
&amp;
~
Pockogo. 61 .000 mho. auMull Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pt· making 01111!1 wi1h type HUQ8 1n.... n1Dry. Discount DOWNI No Cfd okl Gov1.
VEGEI'AJIL&amp;'i
IO&lt;n&amp;tic, dlr1l blue, - ·
11o Start 1365/Mo No Pats, $300.00
Price$, Ott Vlftyl Sldrting, homos.
l-800-~
$0 DOWN CARS! POliCE condition. (740)44 1·9803
L.i.so Plus Secutffy Deposi1 Kelsey Star ~ pross Doors, Windows. """"'- m 4x65otl
·~
IMPOUNDS &amp; . AEPOS! Jay.
•
Required. Days: 740-..e. $50.00 304~11194
WO.Ier -tors, Plumbing &amp;
Pumpkins for sale, NIAil, HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S,
.
.
E1ecUicol Por1o. F...- a UnMiohed Pine willt wt ct ale Raymond JEEP'S LOW AS $2M.IO 1997 L--. TOWIII:ar Slg3481 . Evenings 140-357• •lor 1 CRUISE N •Et
0502' 7'h ''"" 0
• .
~
Heal.,._ BoroiOIIS - d!11Mr, $85, like new.
'
24 MO'S 0 19.9%. FoR nalllr8 Serios.lea-lnleri' ~· I .
~ ' ' Eu'-·...-.
(740)44&amp;0 198
LISTINGS CALL 1-800- "'·
1111 optionS,
7
" " " " " * " A - - _.Panama. Col Now! 1· bllo
Homo 5&lt;.wty, 451.()1)50 Oxt. C.9812
will .._ 1nr SOOurban "'
9416
COli
800-~45 41n - .- 1·
www.orvb.com/blln- Warm Moming healing
Tahoe, (740)992-2457 ...,.
1Win Rl- T . ....,........oom
slow. $100. (740)2511-1185 r10
FARM
1979 Ford T-Bird 351 ...,.. :;.flings.~'-:---:--::-· (304167HS111.
A&lt;lc:opllng Bids lor Ki1chort Stiht
- ·
WATER WELLS DRILLED.
fled, runs.
2000 camry LE . . , _ ,
lorllll!&gt;licallon. HUO subal- ~ B slngledoorwaM
. .. ~. -"~·· (740)886-?3II
~·
$300; oow patrol mud &amp; COndOion $170000800&lt;
dized apl.for -.ty and 2 cornai' 2 two aoor over
.,_ tires, $50, (740)992· take
.;.... · payments.
- . EHO.
"'lrig. &amp; · . -. Comer lazy NEW AND USED FUR· Wolorlino Special: 3/4 200 620 John Daore, (740)379- 4276.
(740)245-0519
V
lc
2 3 bod
......, lloor cabllnols 3 Wi1lt NANCES FDA SALE! We PSI 121.95 Per 100; I• 200 9381
,
1985 Chevy Cefobrily. GL 3 bldloOm houao, 7"""""
~,:;.,~· in
dro...;, lotmfCI counlar. 2 Install, Fr" Estimatoa, If PSI 137.00 Par 100:. All 2-N Ford TlliCIOI 3. HiiCII. 2.8 V-6, Good Condition, aJ. 1 oulbuilding, small bam,
::..... LA, $5ro&lt;m0. R~ llOOI wilt u sink, whirlpool Y"" doni C&amp;lt US. We bo1h ~:;"'~
~ Flltings Very Good Condition. so Free K1Hon, 6 - · Route 62, 5 miles '"""
.......,.. &amp; iloposlt required. sotf c:tMn double. oven Loosal (740)446-6308, 1· RON EVANS ENTERPfiiS.. $2200. (304)682~38
eau (740)2511-6735
Poim Pleasant Mason Co.
(740)446-3644
range wilh hood. 5erioualn- f!00.29HI098.
ES Jackson Ohio l.aofl.
can (304)67~
quires only! (304)675-4077
•
•
52 Case oc &amp; 5' Brush ""0 1985 Harloy Sporls1er, 1000
SIII.&lt;E
Nursas unHorms. Size 2x 537-9528
.
lo&lt; 11500, &amp; Small child's C\JSiom, $4500. 1979 t.tusarwl 3x 3 sots paid wor W'ndo
• · Cond' ·
Go-Kart 5 hOrse, $100 tang•. 4 speed, V-6. goocl -92-~-------v-.-..-.-~.-~
FOil........
AIIAZIIIGLI' LOW PRICES $100 . ~ -··
f
.. h
I w ~~~
IIIOI18r.
cond ·-- $1 ·~ 1979
-·~ ·-· ~. ~~u.
~
WOLFF••~IIQIEDS
· or ...,. Works Great $SO 0 80. 1740)843-5217
,.......:_:~mot
'' 01 -·- ·. -~ Hops, asking $2500,
Buy
Dlra&lt;:t
(740)992·7116
(740)992-7118
YANMAA YM 1500 TraciOr. ;;!~. $3,500;; ; ; (740)74H357.
Excellent Sorvico
PETCARER X.COM Save
BululiNG
diesel, 3 poin1 hllch, $2,150. Goo Prism, automatic.
BID Auto Sales
Flexible F1naroclng Avallble up 1o 50% on ALL pol modiAlso, now 4' finish mower, $2,000. 1987 Nove, 5· 1996 Pontiac Grand Am
Homo IComrnert:ial Ul)lls cations and supplies, In!il!PPI.us
stiM In c:rato, $850. Shipping speed. 15600. 10(125 ~- $2700. 1996 Milsublshi GalFREIColorcalalog
eluding Heartgard, lnta,_.
available. LOCated just out- cross bike, $1,000. Boar lanl 12700. 199 5 Chevy
Call Today 1-800-711.01156 lor, Fronlllno, moron FREE · brick, sower pipes, side ul Hunlaville, loJ (2156) Aoo engine Analyzer.wtlh 4 cavalier $2400. 1993 Ford
www.np.atslan.oom
SHIPPING. Order online uuindouus, linlefs, etc. Claude 776·~ www.maynarde- gos. Great lor beg1nnors, Probe SISOO. 1993 Pontiac
www.PeiCareRX.com
I· Winters, Rio Grande. QH quipmonl.oom
$300. (740)386·9516 or Gratid Am $1700. 1993
I BO&lt;Iroom Apartment, R•
-flal&gt;y
-bod
- -d-ra-sal- -tablo
- - fl00.844.1427.
call740-245-5121 .
(740)388-8071.
Chevy Lumina $1900. 1!192
lrlgDfator, Range, foJC In· AI&gt;PIIancas: Recondlllonod
i wtng, ~ chair: Rare baseball clgoreHo card
LIVESroCK 1
Pontiac Grand . Am $1200.
eluded, $289 Plus Oepoait Washoll. Dryers, Rangl!s. lltack le41har boots size 7 or picturing "Kid Elbartald" 8 ~ough Cui lumbar. 2x4's.
l992 Lincoln Towncar in 1989 Toyota Corulle $1200.
Aelaranca. HUD Approved. Reirlgralonl, Up To 00 Doys 7 112 and Sfzo med. Cool Pomeroy, Ohio native who 1x6's, cut In 8·16 loot ~
mint condition, loaded ;..;.,
B&amp;D Auto SOles
(740)441- l5l9
Guaranloodl We Sell New that maleh. (304)675-2601 pjayed bal- late 1890's oar- lengths, 1,000. board loot. · 7 month old Angus caW, AI options, loalhor interior, now
Highway 160 N.
1&amp;2 bedroom near Holzer Mayteg AI&gt;Pflanct s, French
.
ly 1900's, excellent condi· $250. 1740!441•1015
sired by EXT29ANI413. Michelin Hras. $5995. OBO
740-44&amp; 6865.
economical utilities 5279 10 Clly Maylag. 74()-448-7795. BaautKul handmade solid, lion. More Info call
Case Square hay baler. (740)985-3595
1379 per month pl~s ullllllos F
S
R ndltl
d
~~~
(740)44&amp;01961565.00
(740)379-2798.
(740)446-2957
or a1o:
eco
ono
S100
---------------'--waiiNirs, drye11 and rolrtg. dollt,
· !740!446.QI98
Real Estate General
Real Estate General
BEAUTIFUL
APART· erat018. Thompaons AI&gt;Pfl· CuSIO&lt;n Bul11 Shed. 8xl0. 1
IIENTS AT BUDOET PR~ ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- year old. (740)446-1278
CES AT JACKSON ES· nue, (304)675-7388.
EARN YOUR College 0.
TATES, 52 WoaiWood Drive
gree OUICKLYI Bachelors
f""" $2971o $383. Walk to
Main Sl- Fumilu"'
Mallefs ·Doclorole by cor&amp;hop &amp; rn008!1. Gall 740(304)875-1422
respondenco baood upon
446·2568. Equal Housing 51 5 t.1oln Slrooi,.Polnt
Opportunity.
prior education and short
Pleasant
sludy cou,.., For FAEE In·
Christy's Family Living
formation booklet phone
New &amp; Used Fymitura
33140 Now Lima Rd., Rut:
tend, Ohio, 740-742·7403. Naw 2 Piece Llvlngroom Cambridge Slate University.
Apartment homo and trailer Suites $399. Buy Bell t.aoo- 1164-8316.
,lij,4 Second. Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0i
c'
T d '
'
'
Electric cooktop, wall oven,
rentals. ommerclal store· ra e.
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•
microwave, 2r cOnsole TV.
Ironia available lor loooo.
kitchen cabinets, Island
-~
Vacancies now.
evan~moo®zoomnet.ne t
(740)379-2798

..,.,a.

New 2002 Fleo1wood only
sns down and $150.85 per
month,
call
Cheryl,
(740)385-4387
Naw bank rspo- 14x70, 3
bedroom 2 bath· Pay $499
move-1~ OakWOOd· Galllpotlo. (740)446-3093

M·F 8:30.8:00
Sat 9:00-6:00

.
F.umiohed o111clotx:r;ol ulii-pold, oho!o btlh. $12!1
month. 919 2nd A'"'""".
(740)U6 39.5.

i FOIIIIDrrm;
lb I::-W::kk~e.;:

9

t!hd U4, tJut At

Real Ettatt General

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

-oom.

a
Real Eatatt General

I Cj/~ qf ~1B'JM
r:lwtt ~

.._~...iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii..,..

740·385.4367

Closed Sunday

Will power wash nausea,
trailers, anything. Call

(740)441·4238 or (740)446·
0151 alii&lt; lor Ron . II no
answer, leave mauage.

2• 12x40 mobile Renl 10 _, on lend coo$1,800 MCh, 1- 10.38 mG-1fact, gooc~-. 2 bedrtlorn
bllehomo. $1 ,500 01 54,500 house
in
Porne&lt;oy
lor o1 ..... (740)4.41.()219 (740)698-12...
·
calaflor8.1Xlpm.
=;~~~B;d;;;;;;;;:t); Syracuse- now house un
28&gt;180 3 Or 4
Or&gt; river, 2 - . . . ,, • • ,., &amp;
ly ....-..
•••• 00 ,_
~ ...
~
- big
-~half,
2 car garoge,
8.99% .,_ . . _ Rate, dock. 15650 • """'"' pluo
1-888-928-342&amp;
$650 llopool1, (740)385~
,
~. -~ 1159.
14 70
-~ 2"~
~=~~~~~z~
ffiOYod. 2 bodt~tt,
lui Tolmg llpo1lcotior10 lor a 2
btlhl. comes Willi 8X1ras. bod&lt;oont&amp; ln a quio1 noigl&gt;SIS.OOO. 17401446-9337
borhood. !740 u . . . 939
:.::=::.!:..:.:!C:.:.::.:::::..,_ 1e4""
,_.,..
Allandonod ~blowide- ,
......_..
1roo SOI·up &amp; deltvery. Hur·
Mollu
fY' 1 only. (740)446-3093
Ashltnd FloolwOod 2002 ~
Doubt- 126,226 TOll 14X60 2 bedroom 2 bath
Froe ~19 10 min In
trailer~~ I mili
lrom · - - - ·
~·-.
~~~~;;;;d;;;;;;;;: from Helzer Hospilal. $275
Ashland FleetWOOd Sapt., llopool1, $275 monlh. AefO&lt;·
bar
2002 14x70 enc. required. (304)675·
3bd/2ba. $19,990 Free Dol. 2900 Leave II'I8SSOgO W no
a 5elup. lbll Free · - - -·
805-15619
.:.:.:-'--'----"--- 2 . Br. I 112 bath, 14 Doluxl homo, save $5,44$, With Iorge upondo &amp; c:ennew 2000 model Slcyline, 3 Ira! air, (740)992·2167
bodroom, 2 boll\,10tal-.
lrlc, 'linyl &amp; ahlngla, low 3 bedroom mobia homo In
monthly payrnanls dollv· Middleport,
no
pols,
erod &amp; oatup lnclooOS sklrl- (740)992·156156.
ing a ....... Colao Mobile 3 Br. 2 baths, 14x70 Newly
US 50 East, Ath- rornodeied (740)992·2167
ona, Oh, 74Q.592-1912
'
.
.
BoaU1ilul
Riv8&lt;
1/lew ldool
F~ 1 Daya, Noti~.:For 1 Or 2 Poople, Reforono
(;.~
ucl
ces, Deposrl, No Polo, Fos·
.:_..;.._ _ _ _ __
tor Trailer Park, 740-441Land-home packages· all 0181·
Proquallly by phone. Mobile homo lot 1nr ront
(740)4431563
Water eloclric and phone
• ••~
.
Limited Or No Cradl? ao.. ~- avaolable. (740)3118emmenl Bani&lt; Flnarce Only
AI n. ~.~ In Barbours·
'I -wv·~- .,~
~
VI • •
-··~~··
RlR lhNr
~ly ~~ "Z:·F3 ~room.
• · nse
Ivery 1 and 2 bedroom apart
&amp; Sal Up. 1-1188·928·2428 monts, fumlshod and unlur:
Now 1Bx80, 3 bedroom, 2 nishod ser:urily deposit robeth, only 15600 down, call qulred,' no pols, 740·992·
Nlldd (740)3e5-4367.
2218.

""'"*·

Real Estate General

David's General Contracting
Plumbing, electrical, paint·
ing, decks, roofs. Call
(740)256-9373 (304)833·
6265

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

~r~i&amp;~~Rlll~l~bSw;
~m;~~~ r~ ~ 1r ~a;:s 1t
..__~
___.,,r ~~= 1r M~ 1r. ._·...~
--.....,'~r~~W~'lSIUCK
~~·~I rm

.!i

._,unity-.

~

Sunday, Sept. 23, 2001

Must be moved. Owner says
this 1979 home has newer heal
pump. There Is a small front deck, 2
bedrooms, 1 bathroom.
Horne
needs some repalre Inside.
· ASKING $8,000

backdrop
ba found In thlo 4
2
1/2 bath ranch. Localed in
Green township this remodeled
one revet home offers large open
spaces enriched with 8 central
kitchen and tamlly/sun room, A.
large level lot wilh shaded deck
area In the back ol lhe home
adda to the overall appeal. Let
this
llsl 01

uNLTI

NEW LISTING.' VANDERHOOF
ROAD- Jual past Tuppers Plains.
This 1 story frame home has vinyl
siding, newer shingle roof, 3
bedrooms; I full belh &amp; 1 unfinished
balh. Living room with wood burning
Equipped kitchen, FA,
fireplace.
Gao fumace, large deCking area,
3.12 acres. Nearly all mowed large
yard, garden area. Easy acceBS to
Balpre. Alhens &amp; Pomeroy. Call for
your showing. ASKING $75,000

t111 Spectacular river vlewa. a
atcluded wooded lot end nature
abound thla ralnd ranch on 3
AC m/1. Wllh )UII 8 shon drive
south of Gallipolis one will lind a
hidden treasure positioned high
o¥ertooklng the Ohio Valley, Wllh
hardwood floors, remOdeled oak
kllchen and ample living space
enhanced by a Unlohed lower
level, thie gem awaits you.
$119,000.00

.
Inside the owner ~as lavishly
adomed the home w.th hardwood
flooring In the entryway and
dinln.g room, tastefully ~orated
the living room wltl'l the. fireplace
as a focal point. In addll1on to lhe
oversized master suite with 6'
whirlpool tub , the owner has
sparecl no expense In creating a
fully equipped ·eat-in· cuslom
kitchen. Call lor a private viewing.

1109 Prlct R•ducodl
neighborhood Hlllng ~1oM lo
town can be found In thle 3
bedroom 2 1/2 bath on
Brentwood Drive . With
oversized rooms this spacious
home offers an equipped kitchen,
partially finished basement, and
a two·car
all for only
.,;:.., lhll • BUY.

t120 DrHmt can come truer
•
moduler In nice country
aettlng. Extras Include master
bath, garden tub &amp; shower
combination. detached storage
&amp; a 10 mlnule drive from
-~
~J::

Secluded and, conven iently
loc:aled, lhls lovely 4 BR 3 B"
home rests on 7.5 gorgeous
acres and has a stocked pond,
24 x 32 mela l building, 2 car
111 G OWNER WANTS AN attached garage , wrap around
OFFERIIII Bnnd new ucttonal ' porch and a beau tilully
homel Spacious 3 BR 2 BA with landscaped yard. With ceramic
dream kitchen, fireplace , tile entryways, Bruce hardwood
whirlpool tub, walk·ln closets In flooring, and lmrlcately laid brick
all BR, buill-In hutch &amp; desk. sidewalks, lhls superb home has
Land not Included. $68,000
every detail co\lered. Call for an
appointment fo r your dream

HI '\ I \I "1

HOUSilS

FOR RENT
1 -3 Bedrooms Forac:losed
Homaa From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Veara at 8.5%
APR For Lllllnga, 800-3193323 Ext 1709.
1 bedroom, PJC, 1 bath;
kllchan
hao appllancao.
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis ,
S350/mo. (740)446·4859

PRICE ~EDUCED • MIDDLEPORT
- Here Is a home wllh potential.
could be a tw o unll rental, or live In
one, rent one or live In the whole
houao. Total of 4 bedrooms, 1112
balhs up, 1112 baths down, F.P.
decks and porches. Localed In a
quiet, rural area.
AEDUCED TO 1&amp;0,000.

SR 124 • HAARIS • IIAPLE Q~OVE
SUBDIVISION - OHIO RIVER

acre

I today

2 bedroom home close to
town-, baaement. RiVer view,
$4251 month: 3 bedroom In
town, 1·112 balha. Good location. 15001 month. Refer·
encas and dlpooll required.'
(740)44e·3844.
3 bedroom hOrnt Mlnaravlllt
area, river vieW, references
required, dti&gt;Otll required,
no pt11, 740-992-&amp;m afler
5pm.

1 great

3 bedroom houH In lown,
(740)411 ·9216.

3 · bedroom newer home
near Porter, 5425/mo. De·
poal1 &amp; rtftrenoe required.
(740)441·2&amp;01 •""' 5pm.
3 bldroom. 2· 1/2 bath, 1
bedroom on 111 floor, lamMy
rQOm, In town. $625/mo. No
omoklng , no Inside pall.
(740)446· 1945, II no an·
awer, leave mnaage.
Collage sullable for lfngla
or couplt $250.00 Lincoln ·
Ave. call Hometltorl 304676-5640 ao1t for Nancy.
Pllol Program, Rante11
N -. 304-738-7295.
Quill Country SaiUng 3br
2ba. fO&lt; rtnl 0&lt; oa1t on land

conlrac:1. Avolablo October
111. can (304)675-2864

1121 The BEST ktpl oocr•l In
tawnl One ollho lEST built I
BEST cared for horMa In the
areal Huge living room and
muter bedroom overlooking the
Ohio River. This home Is a rare
find with many unique features
Including beautiful hardwood
floors, trim, crown molding and
poc ket doors . Beautifully
landscaped lOt tl'lat runs all the
way to the rive ~. You've seen the
reat, schedule
appointment 1135 Nice 1tt1r1er l'lome, down
alztr or • gr111 lnveatmentl
·Well kepi 2 BR 1 BA home In
town wtth many updates
Including siding, wlndowa and
roof. Also haa a carport witt)
storage are~ . Priced at on ty
$38,900.

POMEROY· CAAIIEN ROAD · Great secluded homesite or cabin. 120 acres
on SA 33, left on Long Hollow, right on Cannen Road.
ASKING •102,000.

Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259
Sherrl L. Hart .................................. 7 42·2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818
.Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·6191

tor 1 home
b111lnon? It Ia herel 4 BR 2 BA.
llvl11g room, family roomlollice
ptua a huge metal building that
can be used tor a hOme business
located near the juncti on of SA
180 &amp; SA 554, lhls convenient tl311mmacullllly kopl3 BR 3
loqlllon Ia a muSI 888 $110,000. BA ralatd ronch. This property
Ia ori over 2 prtvate acres Just
mlnulea lrom town. l,n addition to
tho formal living room, remodeled
kitchen and 2 car attached
garage and 2 car detached, lhls
well buill home offers a large
dining/family room addition wllh
working fireplace and screened·
1138NEW
thll one on Klneon Drive. 3 In porch. Private and lucked
la rg ~ be_drooms 1 balh. This away from the hustle of the city.
home hal a fenced In backyard,
wllh a big carport, nice level lol
and much more. $85,900.00.

VISIIUS

online at
www.EvansMoore.coiD
•

Llatlngl HERE'S A REAL
CHARMER YOU t.11SSEDIII Thle
home offers man~ extras 3
1139 In tho qul•l vllloge of ' ~room , 1 bath, LR, FA eat-In
VInton. Two story home wilh tree kitchen, screened In porch. JUST
shaded yard bordoring beautiful . WAITING FOR YOU. M5,000.00
Raccoon Creek. 3·4 BR, 2 BA.
office and modern kllchen.
$88,900.

Land Listings!
t105BI1 Vacant Lo1 on 2nd Avonut. Primo Location I M5,000
l!llil.Cornmerclal Properly I 146 ocraa mil near Rio Orondo.
UQY- VACANT LANDI One aero mil on 2 road frontageal Nloa
locallon. Prlcad balow $20,0001
1211ll· 8.125 Acrea mil In Green tawnahlp $59,900.
120§1-12-14acrea ~overlooking Ohio Valley.
1.2!1UA· 2 acrn ~ near Rio 129,000
.12tU1~ 10 acre• mil near Rio Grande.
mz2: 213 aorta ~ off ol Slalt Routt 218
12073- A hunlera drMm co1111 truo. 1 112 oiO&lt;Y. 3 BA home.
situated on 116 acres of beautiful land. 3.ponds. OWner wanta offer.
l2llll- LOTS! Fronlago on SA 554 and .Wooclsmill Rd. Aeslrictlona.
$1 2,500 each.
'
12085· Vacant Land· 85 acres on Hidden Valley Dr., lots of road
frontage.
tl24- 3 aero building loll Norllt Gallia Estates. $39,900.

·,

�Page D6 • ii&gt;anba.!' 1l1m~-ii&gt;rntinrl

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

,1~ r~~~B&amp;~O~~:~WDi~-~&amp;~~~' ri b~ Ir. to::::J -D-:-~:-A:-~5'-':-;-:-L:-sce_A_L_

·t. .

-. IK\Ii t..,

toa.
· ...
••..·:-·A·.:·L·:·bo-.. ...

1.111 or (liOIIOd 1M. $250., 111 1894 ChoNy 510 Biller
Boowoo... good lol
$3800 1993 ChoNy

wiring. , _ "' reAll . _ ol......,.,.y briclc. poq, Mutool.iconAd eiecb1oc1&lt; &amp; 51one 20 w&lt;&gt;. • - · R - . EIOCtrical,
-·
free ..ijmale, WV000308, 304-675-1 786.

"'&gt;"'*

~out $100, (3!)416J~ ~Blaze&lt; ..door $3800.

_7'982_______

CENTER

GALUPOLIS, OHIO
46631 •16119
1992 ChoNy S1 o Blazet
89 Omni 135 000 mites $2300. 1992 T - Plc:lo4&gt; (~)773-!1550
runo p1 $roo oeo' •x• S2600. 1992 Fom
Public Notice
Seeled bids will be
(740}256-123:3
Rol1gor Piclwp 4X4 S2200
BASEIIEHT
- - - - - - - - received for:
::..::::==-.:.=---- 1990 Dodgo C..Van
WATERPAOOANG
CONTRACT:
91 . _ CMc, 4 door, 5 $1200. 1995 Fon!Aeroslao Ut-Otloo!OI lifotime guo&lt;·
GENERAL TRADES
..-, ,_ liras. lllhoiA ""'$2000.
. . -. Lacof ,.,. .. .,.. furPUBLIC BID
ESTIMATE OF COST
bolloly, po1n1, 12«. good
B&amp;D - Sa1os
nishod. Established 1975.
ADVERTISEMENT
BASE BID S3S OOO 00
'
' " " - '· 1;2,300 (740~79HV-t IliON
Coli 24 Hrs. (740) 4-46:
•
•
2111 .
740-44&amp;6865
0870,
I-800-28Hl576. Bids will be rwc:elftd until October 1• 2001
iili
Aogols Wa1erproomg.
by lhe Gelllpolla abel 2 ' 00 p.m.; and will
lil&lt;e now 1999 Cadillac
•·to IOIIC'I'&lt;US
De..-'-mental
opened and r . .d
~~• ......_.- ~
"
.......,
publicly lmmed'~ely
-Slle.
.-Can..,,
c/o Steve
,.,
A1oo 1984 ChoNy 5-10
FetreiVAimecla
lhelufter.
1nd
ond 1983 Fonllnd, 1987- ~x '"""" - - - - - - - - p
S upport CONTRACTOR
THE
TRADE
al in gnoa1 shape. Call
..
·~ , ....
owe II •
(740)441.o279- 8:00
condition. many ol&lt;lras, C&amp;C Gene&lt;a'.Building. 2500 Ohio RESPONSIBLE FOR
. .
$ 1900080. (740)441-1716 !'""""' PUlling.~ . Avenue, Galllpollt, SCHEDULING THE
111111'"-~---...... 1999 Yamaha Banshee ~~-- ·~Ohio 45831 . for the PROJECT.
'I'Ruals
350. ereetlen1 condition. ropair _, more. For free following polljecl:
COORDINATING THE
L~--·--,;:S.W:=:;O.._.I. now tires, $3800
851ima1o cal Chat. 740-1192CONTRACTORS AND
~
(740)441-1716
6323.
COnAGE
PROVIDING OTHER
19831ladgoRorn6eyt.225 2000 J&lt;awOAlo Bayou 300
RENOVATIONS,
SERVICES
mloo. ""'''good 4M. $4.300. Cal (7~)4418UILDINGI044
CDIM1ib011. S80Q. 08Q 8959, leaw II Sage.

I

r

Maw::

I

r

060.

- .low

(:104~

2000 Suld Ca1a11o1 GFX
1987 Ford 4x4 XlT Llriot &amp;OOF. 5.500 miles. Like
New pain! dun, runs great New. $3.900 (:104)576-2668

$3500.(~7S-8859

COIDENTN:R;CEicTD

~

DOCUMENT, SHALL
BE
GENERAL
TRADES.
A Pre-Bid Meeting
will be ' held on
September 21. 2001
at 11 :00 a.m. al
Galllpollt
Denlopt,.,.,tal
Supporl
Building, 2500 Ohio
Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio, phone number
1740)US-1642, ext.
2119
o 'ne '1)
copy of
'
plana. specifications
and P[Oposal blanks
may be obtained by
prime contractor•
from Panlch, Noel +
Auoclales, Inc., 507
Richland
AVIInue,

c.na.r,

Real Estate General

2~7

i

r ~~-~~

Stt~ee

~~!. (7==

.,
lliuclgol
r·--4-·wn;-;,._.1.
VANS &amp;

your local F.W. Dodge
plan room.

2420.

September 11, 18,
2001

" DOSMETIC STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS
AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CODE
APPLY
TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES
OF SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED
CODE
CAN
BE
OBTAINED FROM
ANY
OF
THE
OFFICES OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES."
· The
bidding
documenll may be
reviewed
during
bualneu houra at

lnlhl
CLASSIAEDSI

205 North Second Ave.
OH
HIGH STREET· Mlddlepo.t - A one story home
wilh 2 bedrooms, a bath, laundry room, big
living rocm and kitchen, also has a lull
ba... ment. The heating and air condltlonlna Is
new and the roof Is brand new. HI
pemiu,at wood floors In the bedrooms. Re!llly
$38,000.00

1943

All Types,
Access To
OYer 10,000
Transmissions,

1

1997 Ford F-150 XLT, melollie blue, 75K, 4x4, llaroside. 3" llfl. 33' tires, leer 10pper, very dean.
(740)446-e323.
11196 Jeep Wrangle&lt; starodard ..., AJC alum. ~~
53,000 mites, al&lt;lendod 7:
yr.100,000 mila warranty.
304-675-6894
304-6752617 after 4pm $ 10,000.
112 Pontioo Tranapon, loadad, 1oo1ca good runs good
$3,000 oao.' (740)441:
1856

r

·

M~~

·I

IJIOR """""' .

1984 Coachman 22ft. travel
lnlllar slaops 4-5. Haa new
rafridg., hot water tank, 4
new tires, ale &amp; furnace,
"'ove.&amp;OVWl . Rllldy to go
campmg. Aakmg $4,100.
(:ID4)n3-5424

2000 Spoln1or, 27-t/2 1001
~. pull-out, Ook trim,
like-· S1e.OOO; 99 Forest
Rive•. 27 foot, $8,000; 89
Nomad Woeke&lt;Kie&lt; camper,
30 foot, $4,800. Call
97 Aalro Von, 55,000 miles, (740)446-8554
air, cruise, 1111. PW, PL,
AMIFM Cassella, dual air 89 Dodge Camper Van, sell
bogo, ABS, """'" 7, like contained, axcellanl condi·
new, (740)379-2134 leave lion, garage kept, low milomessage.
age, musl sell, leaving
slate. Call (740)709-4444

Located on a
6 IIC18, m/1, setting, you
will find this lovely Cape Cod
home featuring a lovely great
room with woodburnlng
fireplace, formal DR, gourma1
kitchen with eating area
1he pond, 5 BAs, 3
sitting area, 2
above ground
reduced to

·-tal

and decorald,
property offers a quiet family
neighborhood conveniently

located to town. Formal entrj,
LR &amp; OR, greal eat-in kitchen
with lots of cabinets and
countertop space, 4 BAs, 2

baths, large FR wilh fireplace,
(plus potential downstairs for a
,5th BR and 3rd bath.). 2 car

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

garage, attractive mutti·level .

deck and above ground pool
with decking and professional
landscaping compleles this
outslanding property. One like
this doesn't como on the
marttat
day. Reduced lo
THE REWARDS Benefil
alllhe money &amp; ex1onslve
remodeling lhis house has
undergone .lately. II Is in
absolutely lip-top shape. Groat
location in Green TWp. Plenty
ot room w/over 2900 sq. ft. of
living space, Including 4
bedrooms, large formal dining
room, FR. den &amp; sludyl Baths
and kitchen have been
completely redone. Fenced
yard. Super landscaping .
Paved drive. $184,9001235

Move up to
elegenland
llyllat 2 slory. From the

?

drama1ic marble f9yer with an
open windi n~ slalrcasa to lhe
open, yet pnvate, living room
with vaulted ceiling, you'll be
. very Impressed wi1h lhis
home. Contemporary eat-In
kitchen Is open to family room
and the den Is complete with a
cusiO&lt;n s""'vlng system. Each
bedroom has its own balh plus
much, much more. The .
stonelbrickldrivet ex1erior Is
virtually maintenance free. We
could go on and on, but that'
miQht spoil H tor you. Give us
a call lor a privata look at lhis
rare opportunity. Priced to sell
at5289,900. 1214
""'i!~:tJJ~·
"-

..

LOCATION+
STYLE+
QUALITY• 241 CENTENARY
AD. Outslandlng home from
all viewpoints. As you walk
through this home, you'll
only appreciate the size of
rooms, the quality of mal~rials
used In cons1ruction,
lhe ameni1Hes thai ara orrelfeo.
but also the livability of the
home. Wilh over 3600 SQuare
feet noor plan, there's plenty
of room. Very confortable FR
with firepleco, large rae room,
deluxe eal in kitchen along
With formal OR and formal
LR, 2 slory toyer and a
second slairway that makes
life·a little easier. This home Is
format enough for diner
parties yet casual enough for
evervdltV living. Screened

WilkeSville Township
• Resldenta

PUBLIC NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY 446 -2342 OR 992-2155

The Art School

I

410 Third Ave.- Old Tome
Charm
wilh
Mode r n
Conveniences is found ih this

2 slory home fealuring foyer,
LR, DR, eat-In kilchen wilh
mudroom, 3-4 BRs and 2 1/2
balhs. Updated items include
baths, wiring, 2 furnaces,
siding , roof and more.
$97,500- Owner
to
I .

meadow and lhe

valley, you'll tind ... well , no
one. Perfect privacy. Cape

Cod oHers 4 BAs, 3 baths, LR,
FR. rec. roo m. Super
condition .
Completely
remodeled. New windows,
doors, trim, kl1chen, baths,

Price 1600 SQ.

ranch style

home · features custom
woodwork, custom kitchen,
custom entertainment center
walls, floors and more. Great surrounding a gas tog

layout. 2 acres of privacy with fireplace and much, much
neighbors 1/4 to 1/2 mile more. 3
sized
LR,

Do You Like Wide Open
Specea? Then this property
offers approx. 4 acres, over
t 900 sq. 11. ot living area
featuring formal LA and DR
fireplace and bar area. Now wl1h tireplace, kitchen wllh
add a 2 car garage, an In- eating area open to FA, 4 BRs
ground pool and 1ha . and 3 full balhs situaled In a
lovely country selling in 1he
convenient location, this home
Rio Grande area. Priced al
is a winner.
at
~~,8625
Call

828

Oliver
Slree1,
Middleport- Add to your·rental
porttolio- Log cabin duplex
with one 1 bedroom and one 2
bedroom apartment ANO a
log efficiency apartment.
$65,000 1128

RUSTIC HILLS - A one story home with a two
story very large bedroom suite, an average
bedroom downslalrs, and a family room, dining
room, kilchen and beth all downslalrs. Houaa
lOOks very nice everywhere. You will love it.
Also
a storage building,
and

'

~'!.·.····

W-, :

New
Settlngl This 3 BR home
a prlvale 4 acre selling. Vary
nice home wilh 2 balhs, largo
LA, eat-in kl1chen wl1h dining
araa, vaul1ed ceilings and
more. Also, has a private
deck . Priced affordably at
$89,900. 1207
.

In Town Convonlenca Is
whal sells this cute llnle 3 BR,
walking
of 3
1 bath home. Potential for 2nd
bath, small room has fll&lt;lures community parks, public boat
but nol lnslalled. Built In the ramp and tennis court. Larga
lata 1800's, bul remodeled Hal lot wl1h 2 eXIra lots
·laalin t 9110, II haa vinyl aiding available. This 3 BR home Is
and windows. Property has . perlec1 for slarters and small
large outbuilding with electric. families. LR, aat·ln kitchen &amp;
Investor&amp;
may want to look at large utility room. Ons car
A LITTLE FACE
detached garage. Priced at
1111 were perlec1, II would this one al $49,900. 1302
$59,900, It's aa&amp;y lo aflord
a lot mora. Located al
lor moat pockelbooka. t20CI
Third Ave, lhla house
boasts a charming tormal
entry, LR w/French doors
leading lo lonnal Or. 4 BR'a, 2
batha, enclosed porch . 1 car
carport w/storage. Priced to
move a1 $69,900. Call Carolyn
1oday for a showing: HOt
ACAEBIN PERRY TOWNSHIP Lot's of road lrontaae
'. .·"·'ll
pri118C)
and prolec11on. Mosfly wooded. Small me,adow.
·(
creek. Great hunling. $39,9001118

FANTASTIC VIEW· Words cannot describe how
beautllul the view Is from this Riverview Drive
home. This ona story home has a sunken living
room with a big beau!Hul white stone fireplace
and glass alllhe way to the top of tha cathedral
I ;::~~~~an~~d glass windows on 2 walls. Has 5
II
3 baths, family room, dining area,
a beautiful kitchen. Thera Is lots of storage
2 car garage, and a aecurlty system.
NOW $171,100.00 ·

Toga Party &amp; Sexy
Silhouette Contest
Sat. Sept. 29th
Wear Your Toga
Win Cash Prizes!
Court Street, Gallipolis
441 -9371
Washington Elementary
School presents
"Meet &amp; Eat withe
Teachers"
Sept. 24
6:30 • Bpm
Picnic food &amp; baby-sitting
rovided

• First Year bonus
• Principal100%
guaranteed
• Interest tax-deferred
Ronnie Lynch

Avanue,

Gilllpolls, Ohio lor
t~ City of Gelllpolle
Fl .. Station Building
C$nslructlon.
Bids
will
ba
rej:elved at the above
named office until
1~:00 noon, l'!cal
time, on Monday,
Ocltober 15, 2001, and
publicly opened and
rafd at thet hour and
place. Bid forma may
be oblalned In the
office ol the City
Manager, 518 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis,
and OH 45831.

The Lynch
Agency

END OF SEASON
CLOSE OUT SALE
SAVE UP TO 60%
AND MORE. ON
SELECTED ITEMS
STARTS FRI. SEPT. 21
FINANCING•
'WITH APPROVED CREDIT APPLICATION

See what Gallia County
has to offer at the
2nd annual
Gallia Fall Business Expo
Saturday, September 29
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
At the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds
Area entertainment Saturday
Gospel Sing Sunday
Sign up' to win in the $4,000 in
prizes thai will be given away
Admission price $3.00 and
Free for those 12 and under
(See our ad in tonight's paper)

FOR RENT: Garage Apartment
with 2 bedrooms, central' air
.conditioning and healing.
19 Locust Street/Rear.
Call. 446-1652

Current Interest
Rates
3 Year- 5.00% Years 1-3
5 Year- 6.00% Year 1

2 Tickets
Ohio State at Indiana

7 Year- 6.20% Year 1
5.20% Years 2-7

Sept. 29, 2001
Call 446-0152

The Lynch
Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio·

Code Blue Medical Staffing
Now hiring dependable
AN's and LPN's for hospital
and nursing home shifts.
Premium wage, premium
shifts. Make your own
schedule.
Call

446~8235
Accepting New Clients
Will do general house
cleaning
Excellent references.
Affordable rates.

740-446-2367

740-446·1379

•

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-2342 or 992-2156

446-8235

23, 30,

downstairs and live
you could live downstairs and rent
upstairs, or you could live In the entire
hOuse. Has 10 rooms, 4·6 bedrooms, 2112
balhs. Has a front and rear porch and a lull
basement
$31,000.00
City
convenience
wllh lhls
4 BR, 4 balh home resting on
ovor 2 1/2 acres and offers a
large pa11o and wood deck
right o~ lhe edge of town. The
24' x 48' pole barn with
concrete lloor allows for
garage parking, plenly of
1
slorage and a worf&lt;shop area.
ll's a lot of house for only
$89,900. 1301

Courtside Bar &amp;
Grill

6.25o/o

It hereby
glllln that IHied
bl~a will be received
In• the office of the
Clay Manager, 518

Privacy
Porched on a
overlooking · a ~pe&gt;acoiful

Please be advised that
we will be spraying tar on
Frank Road, Morgan
Lane, McClaskey Road
Sept 19th - 28th
Morgan Township Clerk
Paula Justus

3rd Ave.; Gallipolis
Homemade Ice Cream,
Pies &amp; Cake
Hot Dogs, Coffee &amp; Pop
Sponsored by VFW
Ladies Auxiliary

'tlotlce

842 Second Ave. Gallipolis , OH

12 MONTHS FREE

Sept.9/29
3:00- 7:00
VFW Post 4464

UEGAL NOTICE TO
:
BIDDERS

m~~~~~·••.t~e yard. Paved

Pt. Pleasant
presents Karaoke with C.J:
Tuesday's 9 pm - 1 am
Party with her Fri &amp; Sat. nile
from 9-1 as she plays your
favorite dance tunes.

Ice Cream
Social

'

datached . Large

•

Double D Lounge

for more information.

; Public Notice

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
446-1405

(740) 441-1988

20jl1

SfCOnd

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

"For The Young Performer"
is still accepting new
students for most classes.
Some classes include
ballet I for ages 5 to 6 and
ballet 2 for ages 6 to 7.
Adult morning exercise,
adult ballet, and Mom &amp; Me
class are also open
to new students.
Please call

•

RUTLAND- New Lima Ad.- A one story home
with a lull basemen! thai Is garage and more.
The home has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, kllchan·
dining area and a large living room. Has a
pump lor cooling on the hot days, Ready
Immediate occupancy.

iounbap 0::1mr1 - i&gt;rntinrl • Page 07

BULLETIN BOARD

s.,Ptemb~r 23, 30,

car attached plus

brick ranch offering LR wilh
fireplace ; dining area wllh
beautiful wood floor open 10
large kitchen, 3 BRs: 1 t/2
Balhs, pius lull basement
offering
huge
FR .with

Slop
paying rent. Start building
squlty. Quality home in quality
neighborhood. 3 BR 2 balh,
LR, FR, eat in kilchen. 2-car
garage . Patio and small deck.
$99,000 1234

JUST OFF FLATWOODS ROAD- Approx. 3.07
acres of nice laying land wilh water and electric
available . The land abuts 1wo roads, posalblllty
of spiiUing into lwo Iota, Great for your mobile
home or new home.
$17,000.00

EASY MATH

Immaculate, low maintenance

117 TEODORA AVENUE, CITY PROPERTY:
This home has great curb side appeal amidsl the
~ driveway and lall timbers in lhc background
makes a stalely setting. This home is a couple
blocks from the Holter Sycamore Branch and The
Baptisl Church. Brick 2 slory features 2 t x 13 new
LR w/ k&gt;ts of glass and WBFP this is a beautiful
room. Fonnal entry, 2 BRs on main level. Complete
kitchen, DR and from there a large sun room.
SetGad Lenl: 18xl7 &amp; 19xl4. Full finished
basement. Huge FR 24.x28, An exercise room
13llll. Mostly alt" hardwood floors in this home.
Breezeway room w/same design as the sun o(
FJorida room. Gange. top of the around pool, 2
This home is on 4 lots whith
yan!.NO.m

Public Notice

:t:oo

P11ced lnlnamt•

1992 Ford XLT, al&lt;lendod ~rr:..: ~~ ~
cab. 8 foot bod. 302 8lJ1G- c:e11an1 Condim. (740)256mallc, 108,500 miles. 6239leaYO message
{740)3il7-7114
.

Public Notice

plt:ed

Buy, Sell or Trade

I

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

i:lue to lhe lock of
REQUEST
FOR
fuodlng cauaod by BIDS
ON
42
111e fallu .. of lhe levy, pouenger school
on November bua wllh wheelcholr
2000 bellot, 1he,. will lilt. Information for
no longer be gorbege bidders, lnatructlona
pickup
at
lhe and condltlona for
Tcri&lt;nshlp Gal8ge on submiHing bldt moy
the 2nd and 41h be
oblalned 11
Soturday of each Carleton · School,
month.
1310 Carlelon Streat,
P.O.
Box
307,
Wl!kltVIIIe Townthlp Syracuse,
Ohio
45779. Phone: 1740)
Tru•992-6681. Deadline
(1~19, 28,2001
lor aubmlttlng the
(111) 3, 2001.
required
bid
lnlormotlon and bid
opening Ia Monday,
; Public Notice
October 22, 2001, at
•
12 nocn .
LJGAL NOTICE TO
• BIDDERS
Steven E. Beha
Executive Director
Notice Ia hereby
gl t an that sealed 18) 23, 24, 2001
bldl will be received 110) 14, 15, 2001
In ;the office of the 4tc
CIIY Manager, 51 8
s~cond
Avenue,
Golllpolla, Ohio lor
tht City of Gallipolis
FIJI Station Site
Prtpa18llon.
llldt
will
ba
re~elved 811he above
named ofllca unlll
1
noon, local
tld.e, on Monday,
Dtllober 8, 2001, and
publicly opened and
reld allhlt hour and
plfCI· Bid form• may
b• obtained In the
olflca of 1hl Clly
Manager, 518 Second
AV,.nue, Gtlllpollt,
ani! OH 45831.

23,

1

,
TranafOf
Cases, 740-2451985 "~
__ ., s- 10 Blazer, 5lfT7
Cali· -·765
4x4, . asking
$1800
'
·~
·
(7~)992-2167
ONYX Black Fiberglass

SUnday,Sept. 23,2001

Public Nollce

Suite 301, Athena,
Ohio 45701, phone
number {74015112·

REAL.ESTATE

(7~~

85

Public Notice

Real Estate General

2001 ChoNy Tahoe, loodod,
llo.\TS &amp; ~
Green color, 21,000 ~,_ _Rlll;;o;iiSA;u~--.rl-1
miles,
(740)446-1833
(740)446-7315.
.
For sale "' llado anylhing o1
87 Ford F150 n,ooo value. 36 foot houseboat
aSking $1000. 304-675- wilh
V-bollom.
Call

Hunter

~:·:E

Sunday, Sept. 23, ·2001:

A DEERE

FOR ALL 'SEASONS

LT133 Lawn Tractor

W55 Lawn Tractor ·

•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on-the-go transmission

•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

HEims

2nd Avenue Loc•lonU Fixer
upper with potential. Thla 4

BA house needs some
attention, but has Iota of
potential to be a very nice
home. 9 rooms In all Including
LR, OR, FR, 2 baths, eat-In
kllchen. Coul~ ba converted to
a duplex fairly easily. Nice
yard. Off street parking .
S47,tooll 1110

IOIITSTAIIDIIIO
LAYING LAND Near Rio Grande lhls
lays exceptionally weil and has great

~~~·"!~u:e: Lola ot potential building sllaa. Soma pasture.
woode&lt;j. Large pond. Greal opportunity. t1 oe

JS60 WGik·Behlnd Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting heights

SYRACUSE • Colega Street • A 1'/o tlory home
with a lull baaament. Haa a lronl and back
porch. There Is 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, &amp; one
balh. Has a newer roof and nice yard.
$11,000.00

~~l!flliTAINDINO..IIUILDINO SITES From

T1 D5C Line Trlmmer/Brvshcuuer
• 1.05-hp (19.8 eel M·Series engine
• 15-inch·cutting;swath
• Only 8.5.1bs
• 2-year consumer warranty

510 11 plus
heart of Green Twp. Great views.
'!':
aomo a mixture ot woods and pasture and
All outstanding. Close to hospilal. Call for prices
1""'"""·1118 '

SST18 Lawn Tractor
•18-hp, V-Twin engine~ Two-pedal automatic 'ransmission
• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

o;~~.sllea In

885
lvor
MlddlaporlRental
lnvealmenlll Totally remodeled
2 bedroom, 1 bath hme tor
$35,000. Plus tri-plex wllh t
bedroom apartments for
$35,000. ,, 2t

EMBRACI!D BY SCI!NIC HILLS, nestled in
tall trees with natural seclusion. A lovely 2 year
old ~orne on 4 acres more or less. Wrap around
deckmg an~ 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hard~ood flooring all oalt trim and solid ook

mtenor doon throughout. Large family room wl
vent less fireplace. A·free flowing, floor plan of
space &amp; function . Private bedroom suile &amp; bath.
Several walk·in closets, large kitche'n with lois of
oak cabine1s. 3 additional bedrooms. Basement
and detuched 2 car sar"Be. NO. 320
ONLY $165,000.
COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only S .
from Gallipolis. Need a new place to start your
own business? Call for more details. NO. 301

loca1ed at 716 Third Avenue.
Affordably prlcad at $18,500
1231
Groot Blerter Home In
Everg'"nll Easy to afforctl At
$44,900 your payments will
be cheaper 1n&amp;n rant. 3 BR
home with 1 bath on a nice
lot
Several
oulbull~lnt;s.
Qulel counlry location. Don't
heallate ... won'l last long.

1203

For the past 163 yea.rs, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, quality, and commitment
to the customer. Stop in to your·.local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our time t ested reliability..
You'll find that our standards haven~t changed much over the years. Ask about easy financing options
at your participating dealer today.

40 ACRES WITH BUILDING BITE You'll see polanllal
homealtes everywhere you look. MoaUy wooded
the Gallia!Jackson county line. Lot's of potantlel
. Good hunting. $54,900 1221 · ·

Convonlently Located Grea1
location within walking
distance to downtown. Acron
lhe alroat from a aupannar1&lt;e1,
bank and drugalore. 2 slory
wllh 3 bedrooms. 1 bedroom
could ba downstairs tor lhoae
who don'l want stairs. 2
balhrooms.
Large
eat-In
kHchan, 11v1n11 room, off slrllel
parking. $59,900 8612

813

a

835 Oliver Streel,
Mlddlaporl·
Investment
properly conslsllng of 1
bedroom, t balh log home and
2 trailer Iota. 40 x 55 lot.
$60,000 1128

•

Before shopping for your New Address... $top by ours:
David Wlsemnn, GRI, CRS Broker 446·9555
Ctrolyn Wasch, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garnes · 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446.0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555

m.

40) 446·3644

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Live In one aide and
rent the other. Thla well kept duplex haa Iota of
newer updates. One aide hu 2 bedrooma and
an updated balh. The other haa 3 bedrooms
with an updalad kitChen and bath. Bolh have
equipped kiiChens, thel'lllopane wlndowa,
newer doers and atorma, plus many mora
ex1ras. The pallo, porches, and landecaped
yard make lhe oulalde anjoyable alao. Two
very nice homes In one, wllh an efficient
heatlna system.
$71,800.00

JohnDeere com

NOTHING

RuNS

LIKE
,.

(

A

JOHN DEERE

DEERE

CARMICHAEL's' FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

-EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike • 2 ml West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
. 740-446·2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304·529·3309

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokar........ 811Z.58112
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 1148-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING......... II4t-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS.................II411-2048
BRENDA JEFFER$...,...............992·3058

•S•• de tier for deteilt.
'•

'

�Page D6 • ii&gt;anba.!' 1l1m~-ii&gt;rntinrl

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

,1~ r~~~B&amp;~O~~:~WDi~-~&amp;~~~' ri b~ Ir. to::::J -D-:-~:-A:-~5'-':-;-:-L:-sce_A_L_

·t. .

-. IK\Ii t..,

toa.
· ...
••..·:-·A·.:·L·:·bo-.. ...

1.111 or (liOIIOd 1M. $250., 111 1894 ChoNy 510 Biller
Boowoo... good lol
$3800 1993 ChoNy

wiring. , _ "' reAll . _ ol......,.,.y briclc. poq, Mutool.iconAd eiecb1oc1&lt; &amp; 51one 20 w&lt;&gt;. • - · R - . EIOCtrical,
-·
free ..ijmale, WV000308, 304-675-1 786.

"'&gt;"'*

~out $100, (3!)416J~ ~Blaze&lt; ..door $3800.

_7'982_______

CENTER

GALUPOLIS, OHIO
46631 •16119
1992 ChoNy S1 o Blazet
89 Omni 135 000 mites $2300. 1992 T - Plc:lo4&gt; (~)773-!1550
runo p1 $roo oeo' •x• S2600. 1992 Fom
Public Notice
Seeled bids will be
(740}256-123:3
Rol1gor Piclwp 4X4 S2200
BASEIIEHT
- - - - - - - - received for:
::..::::==-.:.=---- 1990 Dodgo C..Van
WATERPAOOANG
CONTRACT:
91 . _ CMc, 4 door, 5 $1200. 1995 Fon!Aeroslao Ut-Otloo!OI lifotime guo&lt;·
GENERAL TRADES
..-, ,_ liras. lllhoiA ""'$2000.
. . -. Lacof ,.,. .. .,.. furPUBLIC BID
ESTIMATE OF COST
bolloly, po1n1, 12«. good
B&amp;D - Sa1os
nishod. Established 1975.
ADVERTISEMENT
BASE BID S3S OOO 00
'
' " " - '· 1;2,300 (740~79HV-t IliON
Coli 24 Hrs. (740) 4-46:
•
•
2111 .
740-44&amp;6865
0870,
I-800-28Hl576. Bids will be rwc:elftd until October 1• 2001
iili
Aogols Wa1erproomg.
by lhe Gelllpolla abel 2 ' 00 p.m.; and will
lil&lt;e now 1999 Cadillac
•·to IOIIC'I'&lt;US
De..-'-mental
opened and r . .d
~~• ......_.- ~
"
.......,
publicly lmmed'~ely
-Slle.
.-Can..,,
c/o Steve
,.,
A1oo 1984 ChoNy 5-10
FetreiVAimecla
lhelufter.
1nd
ond 1983 Fonllnd, 1987- ~x '"""" - - - - - - - - p
S upport CONTRACTOR
THE
TRADE
al in gnoa1 shape. Call
..
·~ , ....
owe II •
(740)441.o279- 8:00
condition. many ol&lt;lras, C&amp;C Gene&lt;a'.Building. 2500 Ohio RESPONSIBLE FOR
. .
$ 1900080. (740)441-1716 !'""""' PUlling.~ . Avenue, Galllpollt, SCHEDULING THE
111111'"-~---...... 1999 Yamaha Banshee ~~-- ·~Ohio 45831 . for the PROJECT.
'I'Ruals
350. ereetlen1 condition. ropair _, more. For free following polljecl:
COORDINATING THE
L~--·--,;:S.W:=:;O.._.I. now tires, $3800
851ima1o cal Chat. 740-1192CONTRACTORS AND
~
(740)441-1716
6323.
COnAGE
PROVIDING OTHER
19831ladgoRorn6eyt.225 2000 J&lt;awOAlo Bayou 300
RENOVATIONS,
SERVICES
mloo. ""'''good 4M. $4.300. Cal (7~)4418UILDINGI044
CDIM1ib011. S80Q. 08Q 8959, leaw II Sage.

I

r

Maw::

I

r

060.

- .low

(:104~

2000 Suld Ca1a11o1 GFX
1987 Ford 4x4 XlT Llriot &amp;OOF. 5.500 miles. Like
New pain! dun, runs great New. $3.900 (:104)576-2668

$3500.(~7S-8859

COIDENTN:R;CEicTD

~

DOCUMENT, SHALL
BE
GENERAL
TRADES.
A Pre-Bid Meeting
will be ' held on
September 21. 2001
at 11 :00 a.m. al
Galllpollt
Denlopt,.,.,tal
Supporl
Building, 2500 Ohio
Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio, phone number
1740)US-1642, ext.
2119
o 'ne '1)
copy of
'
plana. specifications
and P[Oposal blanks
may be obtained by
prime contractor•
from Panlch, Noel +
Auoclales, Inc., 507
Richland
AVIInue,

c.na.r,

Real Estate General

2~7

i

r ~~-~~

Stt~ee

~~!. (7==

.,
lliuclgol
r·--4-·wn;-;,._.1.
VANS &amp;

your local F.W. Dodge
plan room.

2420.

September 11, 18,
2001

" DOSMETIC STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS
AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CODE
APPLY
TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES
OF SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED
CODE
CAN
BE
OBTAINED FROM
ANY
OF
THE
OFFICES OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES."
· The
bidding
documenll may be
reviewed
during
bualneu houra at

lnlhl
CLASSIAEDSI

205 North Second Ave.
OH
HIGH STREET· Mlddlepo.t - A one story home
wilh 2 bedrooms, a bath, laundry room, big
living rocm and kitchen, also has a lull
ba... ment. The heating and air condltlonlna Is
new and the roof Is brand new. HI
pemiu,at wood floors In the bedrooms. Re!llly
$38,000.00

1943

All Types,
Access To
OYer 10,000
Transmissions,

1

1997 Ford F-150 XLT, melollie blue, 75K, 4x4, llaroside. 3" llfl. 33' tires, leer 10pper, very dean.
(740)446-e323.
11196 Jeep Wrangle&lt; starodard ..., AJC alum. ~~
53,000 mites, al&lt;lendod 7:
yr.100,000 mila warranty.
304-675-6894
304-6752617 after 4pm $ 10,000.
112 Pontioo Tranapon, loadad, 1oo1ca good runs good
$3,000 oao.' (740)441:
1856

r

·

M~~

·I

IJIOR """""' .

1984 Coachman 22ft. travel
lnlllar slaops 4-5. Haa new
rafridg., hot water tank, 4
new tires, ale &amp; furnace,
"'ove.&amp;OVWl . Rllldy to go
campmg. Aakmg $4,100.
(:ID4)n3-5424

2000 Spoln1or, 27-t/2 1001
~. pull-out, Ook trim,
like-· S1e.OOO; 99 Forest
Rive•. 27 foot, $8,000; 89
Nomad Woeke&lt;Kie&lt; camper,
30 foot, $4,800. Call
97 Aalro Von, 55,000 miles, (740)446-8554
air, cruise, 1111. PW, PL,
AMIFM Cassella, dual air 89 Dodge Camper Van, sell
bogo, ABS, """'" 7, like contained, axcellanl condi·
new, (740)379-2134 leave lion, garage kept, low milomessage.
age, musl sell, leaving
slate. Call (740)709-4444

Located on a
6 IIC18, m/1, setting, you
will find this lovely Cape Cod
home featuring a lovely great
room with woodburnlng
fireplace, formal DR, gourma1
kitchen with eating area
1he pond, 5 BAs, 3
sitting area, 2
above ground
reduced to

·-tal

and decorald,
property offers a quiet family
neighborhood conveniently

located to town. Formal entrj,
LR &amp; OR, greal eat-in kitchen
with lots of cabinets and
countertop space, 4 BAs, 2

baths, large FR wilh fireplace,
(plus potential downstairs for a
,5th BR and 3rd bath.). 2 car

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

garage, attractive mutti·level .

deck and above ground pool
with decking and professional
landscaping compleles this
outslanding property. One like
this doesn't como on the
marttat
day. Reduced lo
THE REWARDS Benefil
alllhe money &amp; ex1onslve
remodeling lhis house has
undergone .lately. II Is in
absolutely lip-top shape. Groat
location in Green TWp. Plenty
ot room w/over 2900 sq. ft. of
living space, Including 4
bedrooms, large formal dining
room, FR. den &amp; sludyl Baths
and kitchen have been
completely redone. Fenced
yard. Super landscaping .
Paved drive. $184,9001235

Move up to
elegenland
llyllat 2 slory. From the

?

drama1ic marble f9yer with an
open windi n~ slalrcasa to lhe
open, yet pnvate, living room
with vaulted ceiling, you'll be
. very Impressed wi1h lhis
home. Contemporary eat-In
kitchen Is open to family room
and the den Is complete with a
cusiO&lt;n s""'vlng system. Each
bedroom has its own balh plus
much, much more. The .
stonelbrickldrivet ex1erior Is
virtually maintenance free. We
could go on and on, but that'
miQht spoil H tor you. Give us
a call lor a privata look at lhis
rare opportunity. Priced to sell
at5289,900. 1214
""'i!~:tJJ~·
"-

..

LOCATION+
STYLE+
QUALITY• 241 CENTENARY
AD. Outslandlng home from
all viewpoints. As you walk
through this home, you'll
only appreciate the size of
rooms, the quality of mal~rials
used In cons1ruction,
lhe ameni1Hes thai ara orrelfeo.
but also the livability of the
home. Wilh over 3600 SQuare
feet noor plan, there's plenty
of room. Very confortable FR
with firepleco, large rae room,
deluxe eal in kitchen along
With formal OR and formal
LR, 2 slory toyer and a
second slairway that makes
life·a little easier. This home Is
format enough for diner
parties yet casual enough for
evervdltV living. Screened

WilkeSville Township
• Resldenta

PUBLIC NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY 446 -2342 OR 992-2155

The Art School

I

410 Third Ave.- Old Tome
Charm
wilh
Mode r n
Conveniences is found ih this

2 slory home fealuring foyer,
LR, DR, eat-In kilchen wilh
mudroom, 3-4 BRs and 2 1/2
balhs. Updated items include
baths, wiring, 2 furnaces,
siding , roof and more.
$97,500- Owner
to
I .

meadow and lhe

valley, you'll tind ... well , no
one. Perfect privacy. Cape

Cod oHers 4 BAs, 3 baths, LR,
FR. rec. roo m. Super
condition .
Completely
remodeled. New windows,
doors, trim, kl1chen, baths,

Price 1600 SQ.

ranch style

home · features custom
woodwork, custom kitchen,
custom entertainment center
walls, floors and more. Great surrounding a gas tog

layout. 2 acres of privacy with fireplace and much, much
neighbors 1/4 to 1/2 mile more. 3
sized
LR,

Do You Like Wide Open
Specea? Then this property
offers approx. 4 acres, over
t 900 sq. 11. ot living area
featuring formal LA and DR
fireplace and bar area. Now wl1h tireplace, kitchen wllh
add a 2 car garage, an In- eating area open to FA, 4 BRs
ground pool and 1ha . and 3 full balhs situaled In a
lovely country selling in 1he
convenient location, this home
Rio Grande area. Priced al
is a winner.
at
~~,8625
Call

828

Oliver
Slree1,
Middleport- Add to your·rental
porttolio- Log cabin duplex
with one 1 bedroom and one 2
bedroom apartment ANO a
log efficiency apartment.
$65,000 1128

RUSTIC HILLS - A one story home with a two
story very large bedroom suite, an average
bedroom downslalrs, and a family room, dining
room, kilchen and beth all downslalrs. Houaa
lOOks very nice everywhere. You will love it.
Also
a storage building,
and

'

~'!.·.····

W-, :

New
Settlngl This 3 BR home
a prlvale 4 acre selling. Vary
nice home wilh 2 balhs, largo
LA, eat-in kl1chen wl1h dining
araa, vaul1ed ceilings and
more. Also, has a private
deck . Priced affordably at
$89,900. 1207
.

In Town Convonlenca Is
whal sells this cute llnle 3 BR,
walking
of 3
1 bath home. Potential for 2nd
bath, small room has fll&lt;lures community parks, public boat
but nol lnslalled. Built In the ramp and tennis court. Larga
lata 1800's, bul remodeled Hal lot wl1h 2 eXIra lots
·laalin t 9110, II haa vinyl aiding available. This 3 BR home Is
and windows. Property has . perlec1 for slarters and small
large outbuilding with electric. families. LR, aat·ln kitchen &amp;
Investor&amp;
may want to look at large utility room. Ons car
A LITTLE FACE
detached garage. Priced at
1111 were perlec1, II would this one al $49,900. 1302
$59,900, It's aa&amp;y lo aflord
a lot mora. Located al
lor moat pockelbooka. t20CI
Third Ave, lhla house
boasts a charming tormal
entry, LR w/French doors
leading lo lonnal Or. 4 BR'a, 2
batha, enclosed porch . 1 car
carport w/storage. Priced to
move a1 $69,900. Call Carolyn
1oday for a showing: HOt
ACAEBIN PERRY TOWNSHIP Lot's of road lrontaae
'. .·"·'ll
pri118C)
and prolec11on. Mosfly wooded. Small me,adow.
·(
creek. Great hunling. $39,9001118

FANTASTIC VIEW· Words cannot describe how
beautllul the view Is from this Riverview Drive
home. This ona story home has a sunken living
room with a big beau!Hul white stone fireplace
and glass alllhe way to the top of tha cathedral
I ;::~~~~an~~d glass windows on 2 walls. Has 5
II
3 baths, family room, dining area,
a beautiful kitchen. Thera Is lots of storage
2 car garage, and a aecurlty system.
NOW $171,100.00 ·

Toga Party &amp; Sexy
Silhouette Contest
Sat. Sept. 29th
Wear Your Toga
Win Cash Prizes!
Court Street, Gallipolis
441 -9371
Washington Elementary
School presents
"Meet &amp; Eat withe
Teachers"
Sept. 24
6:30 • Bpm
Picnic food &amp; baby-sitting
rovided

• First Year bonus
• Principal100%
guaranteed
• Interest tax-deferred
Ronnie Lynch

Avanue,

Gilllpolls, Ohio lor
t~ City of Gelllpolle
Fl .. Station Building
C$nslructlon.
Bids
will
ba
rej:elved at the above
named office until
1~:00 noon, l'!cal
time, on Monday,
Ocltober 15, 2001, and
publicly opened and
rafd at thet hour and
place. Bid forma may
be oblalned In the
office ol the City
Manager, 518 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis,
and OH 45831.

The Lynch
Agency

END OF SEASON
CLOSE OUT SALE
SAVE UP TO 60%
AND MORE. ON
SELECTED ITEMS
STARTS FRI. SEPT. 21
FINANCING•
'WITH APPROVED CREDIT APPLICATION

See what Gallia County
has to offer at the
2nd annual
Gallia Fall Business Expo
Saturday, September 29
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
At the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds
Area entertainment Saturday
Gospel Sing Sunday
Sign up' to win in the $4,000 in
prizes thai will be given away
Admission price $3.00 and
Free for those 12 and under
(See our ad in tonight's paper)

FOR RENT: Garage Apartment
with 2 bedrooms, central' air
.conditioning and healing.
19 Locust Street/Rear.
Call. 446-1652

Current Interest
Rates
3 Year- 5.00% Years 1-3
5 Year- 6.00% Year 1

2 Tickets
Ohio State at Indiana

7 Year- 6.20% Year 1
5.20% Years 2-7

Sept. 29, 2001
Call 446-0152

The Lynch
Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio·

Code Blue Medical Staffing
Now hiring dependable
AN's and LPN's for hospital
and nursing home shifts.
Premium wage, premium
shifts. Make your own
schedule.
Call

446~8235
Accepting New Clients
Will do general house
cleaning
Excellent references.
Affordable rates.

740-446-2367

740-446·1379

•

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-2342 or 992-2156

446-8235

23, 30,

downstairs and live
you could live downstairs and rent
upstairs, or you could live In the entire
hOuse. Has 10 rooms, 4·6 bedrooms, 2112
balhs. Has a front and rear porch and a lull
basement
$31,000.00
City
convenience
wllh lhls
4 BR, 4 balh home resting on
ovor 2 1/2 acres and offers a
large pa11o and wood deck
right o~ lhe edge of town. The
24' x 48' pole barn with
concrete lloor allows for
garage parking, plenly of
1
slorage and a worf&lt;shop area.
ll's a lot of house for only
$89,900. 1301

Courtside Bar &amp;
Grill

6.25o/o

It hereby
glllln that IHied
bl~a will be received
In• the office of the
Clay Manager, 518

Privacy
Porched on a
overlooking · a ~pe&gt;acoiful

Please be advised that
we will be spraying tar on
Frank Road, Morgan
Lane, McClaskey Road
Sept 19th - 28th
Morgan Township Clerk
Paula Justus

3rd Ave.; Gallipolis
Homemade Ice Cream,
Pies &amp; Cake
Hot Dogs, Coffee &amp; Pop
Sponsored by VFW
Ladies Auxiliary

'tlotlce

842 Second Ave. Gallipolis , OH

12 MONTHS FREE

Sept.9/29
3:00- 7:00
VFW Post 4464

UEGAL NOTICE TO
:
BIDDERS

m~~~~~·••.t~e yard. Paved

Pt. Pleasant
presents Karaoke with C.J:
Tuesday's 9 pm - 1 am
Party with her Fri &amp; Sat. nile
from 9-1 as she plays your
favorite dance tunes.

Ice Cream
Social

'

datached . Large

•

Double D Lounge

for more information.

; Public Notice

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
446-1405

(740) 441-1988

20jl1

SfCOnd

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

"For The Young Performer"
is still accepting new
students for most classes.
Some classes include
ballet I for ages 5 to 6 and
ballet 2 for ages 6 to 7.
Adult morning exercise,
adult ballet, and Mom &amp; Me
class are also open
to new students.
Please call

•

RUTLAND- New Lima Ad.- A one story home
with a lull basemen! thai Is garage and more.
The home has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, kllchan·
dining area and a large living room. Has a
pump lor cooling on the hot days, Ready
Immediate occupancy.

iounbap 0::1mr1 - i&gt;rntinrl • Page 07

BULLETIN BOARD

s.,Ptemb~r 23, 30,

car attached plus

brick ranch offering LR wilh
fireplace ; dining area wllh
beautiful wood floor open 10
large kitchen, 3 BRs: 1 t/2
Balhs, pius lull basement
offering
huge
FR .with

Slop
paying rent. Start building
squlty. Quality home in quality
neighborhood. 3 BR 2 balh,
LR, FR, eat in kilchen. 2-car
garage . Patio and small deck.
$99,000 1234

JUST OFF FLATWOODS ROAD- Approx. 3.07
acres of nice laying land wilh water and electric
available . The land abuts 1wo roads, posalblllty
of spiiUing into lwo Iota, Great for your mobile
home or new home.
$17,000.00

EASY MATH

Immaculate, low maintenance

117 TEODORA AVENUE, CITY PROPERTY:
This home has great curb side appeal amidsl the
~ driveway and lall timbers in lhc background
makes a stalely setting. This home is a couple
blocks from the Holter Sycamore Branch and The
Baptisl Church. Brick 2 slory features 2 t x 13 new
LR w/ k&gt;ts of glass and WBFP this is a beautiful
room. Fonnal entry, 2 BRs on main level. Complete
kitchen, DR and from there a large sun room.
SetGad Lenl: 18xl7 &amp; 19xl4. Full finished
basement. Huge FR 24.x28, An exercise room
13llll. Mostly alt" hardwood floors in this home.
Breezeway room w/same design as the sun o(
FJorida room. Gange. top of the around pool, 2
This home is on 4 lots whith
yan!.NO.m

Public Notice

:t:oo

P11ced lnlnamt•

1992 Ford XLT, al&lt;lendod ~rr:..: ~~ ~
cab. 8 foot bod. 302 8lJ1G- c:e11an1 Condim. (740)256mallc, 108,500 miles. 6239leaYO message
{740)3il7-7114
.

Public Notice

plt:ed

Buy, Sell or Trade

I

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

i:lue to lhe lock of
REQUEST
FOR
fuodlng cauaod by BIDS
ON
42
111e fallu .. of lhe levy, pouenger school
on November bua wllh wheelcholr
2000 bellot, 1he,. will lilt. Information for
no longer be gorbege bidders, lnatructlona
pickup
at
lhe and condltlona for
Tcri&lt;nshlp Gal8ge on submiHing bldt moy
the 2nd and 41h be
oblalned 11
Soturday of each Carleton · School,
month.
1310 Carlelon Streat,
P.O.
Box
307,
Wl!kltVIIIe Townthlp Syracuse,
Ohio
45779. Phone: 1740)
Tru•992-6681. Deadline
(1~19, 28,2001
lor aubmlttlng the
(111) 3, 2001.
required
bid
lnlormotlon and bid
opening Ia Monday,
; Public Notice
October 22, 2001, at
•
12 nocn .
LJGAL NOTICE TO
• BIDDERS
Steven E. Beha
Executive Director
Notice Ia hereby
gl t an that sealed 18) 23, 24, 2001
bldl will be received 110) 14, 15, 2001
In ;the office of the 4tc
CIIY Manager, 51 8
s~cond
Avenue,
Golllpolla, Ohio lor
tht City of Gallipolis
FIJI Station Site
Prtpa18llon.
llldt
will
ba
re~elved 811he above
named ofllca unlll
1
noon, local
tld.e, on Monday,
Dtllober 8, 2001, and
publicly opened and
reld allhlt hour and
plfCI· Bid form• may
b• obtained In the
olflca of 1hl Clly
Manager, 518 Second
AV,.nue, Gtlllpollt,
ani! OH 45831.

23,

1

,
TranafOf
Cases, 740-2451985 "~
__ ., s- 10 Blazer, 5lfT7
Cali· -·765
4x4, . asking
$1800
'
·~
·
(7~)992-2167
ONYX Black Fiberglass

SUnday,Sept. 23,2001

Public Nollce

Suite 301, Athena,
Ohio 45701, phone
number {74015112·

REAL.ESTATE

(7~~

85

Public Notice

Real Estate General

2001 ChoNy Tahoe, loodod,
llo.\TS &amp; ~
Green color, 21,000 ~,_ _Rlll;;o;iiSA;u~--.rl-1
miles,
(740)446-1833
(740)446-7315.
.
For sale "' llado anylhing o1
87 Ford F150 n,ooo value. 36 foot houseboat
aSking $1000. 304-675- wilh
V-bollom.
Call

Hunter

~:·:E

Sunday, Sept. 23, ·2001:

A DEERE

FOR ALL 'SEASONS

LT133 Lawn Tractor

W55 Lawn Tractor ·

•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on-the-go transmission

•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

HEims

2nd Avenue Loc•lonU Fixer
upper with potential. Thla 4

BA house needs some
attention, but has Iota of
potential to be a very nice
home. 9 rooms In all Including
LR, OR, FR, 2 baths, eat-In
kllchen. Coul~ ba converted to
a duplex fairly easily. Nice
yard. Off street parking .
S47,tooll 1110

IOIITSTAIIDIIIO
LAYING LAND Near Rio Grande lhls
lays exceptionally weil and has great

~~~·"!~u:e: Lola ot potential building sllaa. Soma pasture.
woode&lt;j. Large pond. Greal opportunity. t1 oe

JS60 WGik·Behlnd Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting heights

SYRACUSE • Colega Street • A 1'/o tlory home
with a lull baaament. Haa a lronl and back
porch. There Is 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, &amp; one
balh. Has a newer roof and nice yard.
$11,000.00

~~l!flliTAINDINO..IIUILDINO SITES From

T1 D5C Line Trlmmer/Brvshcuuer
• 1.05-hp (19.8 eel M·Series engine
• 15-inch·cutting;swath
• Only 8.5.1bs
• 2-year consumer warranty

510 11 plus
heart of Green Twp. Great views.
'!':
aomo a mixture ot woods and pasture and
All outstanding. Close to hospilal. Call for prices
1""'"""·1118 '

SST18 Lawn Tractor
•18-hp, V-Twin engine~ Two-pedal automatic 'ransmission
• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

o;~~.sllea In

885
lvor
MlddlaporlRental
lnvealmenlll Totally remodeled
2 bedroom, 1 bath hme tor
$35,000. Plus tri-plex wllh t
bedroom apartments for
$35,000. ,, 2t

EMBRACI!D BY SCI!NIC HILLS, nestled in
tall trees with natural seclusion. A lovely 2 year
old ~orne on 4 acres more or less. Wrap around
deckmg an~ 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hard~ood flooring all oalt trim and solid ook

mtenor doon throughout. Large family room wl
vent less fireplace. A·free flowing, floor plan of
space &amp; function . Private bedroom suile &amp; bath.
Several walk·in closets, large kitche'n with lois of
oak cabine1s. 3 additional bedrooms. Basement
and detuched 2 car sar"Be. NO. 320
ONLY $165,000.
COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only S .
from Gallipolis. Need a new place to start your
own business? Call for more details. NO. 301

loca1ed at 716 Third Avenue.
Affordably prlcad at $18,500
1231
Groot Blerter Home In
Everg'"nll Easy to afforctl At
$44,900 your payments will
be cheaper 1n&amp;n rant. 3 BR
home with 1 bath on a nice
lot
Several
oulbull~lnt;s.
Qulel counlry location. Don't
heallate ... won'l last long.

1203

For the past 163 yea.rs, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, quality, and commitment
to the customer. Stop in to your·.local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our time t ested reliability..
You'll find that our standards haven~t changed much over the years. Ask about easy financing options
at your participating dealer today.

40 ACRES WITH BUILDING BITE You'll see polanllal
homealtes everywhere you look. MoaUy wooded
the Gallia!Jackson county line. Lot's of potantlel
. Good hunting. $54,900 1221 · ·

Convonlently Located Grea1
location within walking
distance to downtown. Acron
lhe alroat from a aupannar1&lt;e1,
bank and drugalore. 2 slory
wllh 3 bedrooms. 1 bedroom
could ba downstairs tor lhoae
who don'l want stairs. 2
balhrooms.
Large
eat-In
kHchan, 11v1n11 room, off slrllel
parking. $59,900 8612

813

a

835 Oliver Streel,
Mlddlaporl·
Investment
properly conslsllng of 1
bedroom, t balh log home and
2 trailer Iota. 40 x 55 lot.
$60,000 1128

•

Before shopping for your New Address... $top by ours:
David Wlsemnn, GRI, CRS Broker 446·9555
Ctrolyn Wasch, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garnes · 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446.0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555

m.

40) 446·3644

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Live In one aide and
rent the other. Thla well kept duplex haa Iota of
newer updates. One aide hu 2 bedrooma and
an updated balh. The other haa 3 bedrooms
with an updalad kitChen and bath. Bolh have
equipped kiiChens, thel'lllopane wlndowa,
newer doers and atorma, plus many mora
ex1ras. The pallo, porches, and landecaped
yard make lhe oulalde anjoyable alao. Two
very nice homes In one, wllh an efficient
heatlna system.
$71,800.00

JohnDeere com

NOTHING

RuNS

LIKE
,.

(

A

JOHN DEERE

DEERE

CARMICHAEL's' FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

-EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike • 2 ml West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
. 740-446·2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304·529·3309

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokar........ 811Z.58112
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 1148-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING......... II4t-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS.................II411-2048
BRENDA JEFFER$...,...............992·3058

•S•• de tier for deteilt.
'•

'

�.••
Gallipolis •

'

Las.Vegas
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The New
York-New York hotel-casino usually
draws in lots of high-roUm and
tourists with its Big Apple-style &lt;kyscrapers, its replic;a Brooklyn Bridge
and its Coney Island-type roUercoaster.
But after last week's terrorist attacks,
its blackjack tables have emptied out
and many slot machines have fallen
silent. Big-screen televisions used in
the sportS book have been tuned to
news channels. And the casino's 150-

Sunday, Siptember 23, 2001

Pomeroy • Point Pleasant

low numbers since

foot model of the Statue of Liberty tern. Hundreds of Las Vegas convenhas become a shrine crowded with tions have been canceled. Quickie
candles, flowers and cards.
• wecldin~ are way down.
'"We're cutting our trip short by • AtNew York- New York, there are
three days," said guest Norma lsiordia reminders of the tragedy all over. The
ofLosAngeles."ltdoesn'tfeellikethe place is built .ro include some of the
time to have fun right now."
most memorable pieces of the New
The scene is repeated along the Las York skyline, with a Statue of Liberty
Vegas Srrip. Tourists and their gan1- and a 529-foot, 47-story replica of the
bling dollar' are staying home in the Empire State Building. (The World
aftermath of the terrorist attacks, Trade Center is not part of the skywherher out of fear, grief or the line, which is supposed to represent
snarling of the nation 's air travel sys- the Big Apple of the 1940s.)

-••

Around Las Vegas, more than
After the terrorist attacks, the hotd's
shows were canceled, security W2S 50,000 corM:ntioneen ~ canceled
•
increased and piles ofT-shins, hats an\1 or postponed events this week alonec
coffee mu~ bearing emblem&lt; of the a $61.3 million hit in non-gaming
New York fire and police depa.rtnlents revenue, according to figures releasee!
Wednesday by the Las Vegas Visitort
611ed lciosks and shops.
and
Convention Authority.
"It has humbled all of us that visiSo far more than 240 corM:ntions
tors to Las Vegas have created a
memorial at New York-New York to planned for September, October anJ
honor the victims and offer support November have canceled. Last }'l!at
for the inspired efforts of the res- the 'city drew 11 percent of its esti-;
cuers," Felix Rappaport, president of mated 36 million visitors fiom con •
ventions.
the hote.l, said in a statement.

Television Li~tings For
23, 2001 - September

•

Sunday Times-Sentinel And The

•

Formerly homeless laborer who won $1 million Ads pulled after host calls~
McDonald's·prize charged with beating fiancee military action 'cowardly' ;
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - A
formerly homeless day laborer who won
a $1 million instant prize at McDonald's
this month was · arrested on charges of
beating his fiancee.
Patrick Collier, 35, was released from
the Volusia County Jail on $2,500 bond
Tuesday after being arrested at his
Ormond Beach home on a felony charge
of aggravated battery against 29-year-old
Sandra Fabian.
"It was just a fight ," said CoUier's attorney, J. Peyton Quarles. He said Fabian

Kneen

from PageD1

Lady Beetle and becoming
involved in researching out
the best methods of control.
Margaret Huelsman , Ohio
State University Integrated
Pest MaJiagement Program
specialist, is holding two local
meetin~ to discuss the beetle's
biology and ecology of the

had left the state, and that the · charge
against his client could be reduced to
battery.
'
According to a police report, Fabian
was left bleeding from her mouth and
nose, and had a swollen cheek. She was
treated at a hospital for head and ne.c k
injuries, police said.
Collier went into a McDonald's in
Holly Hill on Sept. 1 for a 99-cent
breakfast sandwich for Fabian, and
walked out the winner of a $1 miUion
instant prize, one ·of five being given ou~

lady beetle and suggested
management techniques.
There are no definitive conttol measures. The first meeting will be on Sept. 24 from
7 to 9 p.m. at the Athens City
Recreation Center located at
701 E. State St. The second
meeting will be held on Sept.
25 , at the Vern Riffe Vocational School, 175 Beaver Creek
Road (one mile east of the
intersection of U.S. 23 and
· U.S. 32 on 32), Piketon. Fur-

by the company.
McDonald's had announced the promotion in the wake of an FBI investigation last month into McDonald's
Monopoly gan1e.That game was aUegedly rigged by an employee of a company
hired by McDonald's to handle gan1e
promotions and security.
Just months before winning the prize,
Collier and Fabian were homeless, sleeping on cardboard boxes and earning $50
a day as laborers when they could find
work.

ther information may be
obtained from the OSU !PM
web site at www.ag.ohiostate.edu/-ipm,l.

house on Thursday.
Starring at 3 p.m., this even't
lets you talk directly to vendors of greenhouse structures,
soils, containers, plant liners
and chemicals. For further
details caU 843-5427.

•••

Are you a current commercial greenhouse operator or
are you t,hinking about growing fruits, vegetables or plants
in a greenhouse? Plan on
attending the Burton Floral &amp;
Greenhouse . (BFG) open

not letting the military d&lt;t
LOS ANGELES (AP) ·•
FedEx and Sears pulled out their job."
"If we don't face . ou(
as "Politically Incorrect"
problems
realistically, we
sponsors after host Bill
Maher caUed past US. mili- ·won't overcome them," the
tary actions "cowardly." ·
TV. talk show host added
itt
'
a
phone
interview.
Maher said Wednesday his
FedEx reviewed the ABC
comments were aimed at
political leaders, not sol- show's Monday edition
diers, and he defended his after receiving complaints,
right to ·offer criticism in spokeswoman
Carla
Richards said. The compa~
difficult times.
"I should have been more ny's 30-second spot, which,
specific," Mabee said. "I aired during the show, hai
never meam to imply nor been pulled indefinitely. ;
have I eve} thought that our · Retailer Sears, Roebuc!C
actual servtcemen are cow- and Co. also said Wednesday
ardly. ... It's our govern- it canceled its advertising
ment, it's our politicians, on the show after customet
who have been cowardly in complaints.

(Hal KtJeen is Meigs County~
ExtensiotJ agent for agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio Stale
University.)

from PapDI

created. by the Initiative is
intended to guide producers
to two market targets": (1)
Don't panic. Our tenden- high-quality, well-marbled,
cy is to give in to ·our emo- tender beef markets; and (2)
dens is managed for the Claxtiona! response to immediate leaner, yet tender beef prodPage D1 ·
concerns. These knee-jerk uct markets.
tons by Tanya Williams. Its onsite office, which can be
reactions are not always conWould your participation
Page D1
reached at 446-9228, is open · making decisions .that affect · sistent with our long-term require implementing pracweekdays from 9 a.nf. to 5 the U.S. economy.
goals. So, be patient and think rices that require added
ers during a land contract p.m., and by appointment on
Consumers have a powerful before you make a move. Stick expense or additional faciliMrs. Claxton said. weekends.
influence on the markets and
ties? Probably. However,
to
basic
principles
of
investPre-arrangement-details-for~economv;-c-eontinued-con-=
- -'"'-~
. "'-=~=7-'":--=;==---·worthwhileaclrieveme!lts are,.
ing, they still apply. Look to
tures a chapel.
the mausoleum and burial sumer confidence has been a
rarely made without some ·
your financial advisor to help
It also fills the need for the sites arc available, with key force against the econorisk.
Appreciating the economic
growing preference for mau- moncf.ly payment plans, a ser- my's descent of the past few you evaluate proposed actions.
the
Claxtons
believe
months
and
it
will
continue
to
The
skyline
of
the
nation's
hardships
of small to mid-size
vice
soleums the Claxtons have
financial
center
has
been
b
f
found with local families.
helps everyone at a difficuit be a strong force in the future.
ee operations, Initiative
There are many reasons to changed forever, but that does leaders have labeled partici"We're surprised at how rime.
"lt locks in the price, and remain confident in America's not mean America's ability to pating producers as "Stakepeople have accepted them,"
said Mrs. CLtxton. "We had a the husband and wife select future. Look at how we've overcome challenges and holders." The initiative seeks
sustainability for Stakeholders
cemetery in Athens County together, rather than leaving it banded together to form a emerge even stronger will.
(Bryce Smitl1 is atJ investment by encouraging them to
that we sold and the reception lor the family to do," said Mrs. unified front-Congress, interfor them there wasn't as great Claxton. "Basically, once faith memorial services, the executive with Smith Partners at abandon their individual goals
as before."
they've pre-arranged, a lot of orderly reopening of the Advest Inc. in its Gallipolis and methods, and adopt those
financial markets.
office.)
of industry consensus.
Ohio Valley Memory Gar- stress is taken care of"

.
Smith

Service

· I Page 3 I

I Page 5 I

- Soap Talk

•

fro•

from

the answer,
you're dissatisfied with th~
operation, set different, yet
realistic goals. For more infor~
mation about the 5-State Beef
Initiative, please call the
Extension office at 446-700i'
or visit the website at:
www.5statebeeforg.
,

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I

High grades for
Education of
Max Bickford

Advice On
Home
Repairs

I Page 4 I

I Page6 I
.._,

By LYNN ELBER
the first cable series to even gain a nomination as best
AP Television Writer
drama.
LOS ANGELES- Political intrigue, death and deceit make
We're not alone in our predictions. Fellow TV observers at
the Bartle! White House a tough place to work- and the the Web site www.Goldderby.com, which handicaps
leading candidate lor Emmy victory.
Hollywood contests, give 2 to 5 odds lor "The West Wing" in
In this nonpartisan race, we're pre~icting "The West both the drama and best actor categories. The odds are 3 to
Wing" will triumph al the 53rd Annual Primetime Emmy 1 lor a "Sopranos• best series win and 4 to 1 lor James
Awards, perhaps matching its own record of nine trophies Gandollini as best actor.
·
set last year.
Among c0medy series, "Everybody Loves Raymond" and
HBO's mob drama "The Sopranos" received 22 "Malcolm in the Middle" are ranked as Goldderby leader!! wilh
nominations this year to "The West Wing's" 18 bids, but the 3 to 2 odds. Last year's winner, "Will &amp; Grace," comes in at 3
NBC drama has top honors including best drama series to 1.
and best actor in its sights.
The Emmy truth, according to Goldderby founder and
The awards. ceremony, which was scheduled to air "The Emmys" author Thomas O'Neil, Is In the tapes. l;:ach
Sept. 16 on CBS, was postponed indefinitely alter terrorist ' performer submits one episode he or she. believes· represents
attacks Sept. 11 on New York's World Trade Center and on , .,his or her best w:ork lor the season, wliil~ serlt~,s...?~~Ijia~t.
the Penlagon.
•
·
, Judging panels g1ve awards based on those•samples ;~fifitTthe
Ellen DeGeneres will host the ceremony, during which ·entire season.
·
27 awards in acting, directing and writing categories will be t
"II you want to predict who's going to win the Emmys, you
presented.
._
~ave to see what's on those !apes. Stars live or die based on
. , ."The West Wing" already won lour Emmys at a creative . lhem," O'Neil advises In his online Emmy 16recast.
arts ceremony ·last week, including awards for casting,
Studying the submissions revealed one inescapable trulh:
cinematography, editing and sound mixing. "The Sopranos" ·~ryan Cranston, the masterfully befuddled dad .on "Malcolm
·In the Middle," was robbed of a nomination. His performance
claimed a single award, lor makeup.
In this new golden age of TV dramas, weighing the pn the tape submitted by co-star and deserved nominee Jane
chances of such superb shows can be dillloull But "The K,aczmarek was award-worthy. ·
West Wing" clearly deserves re-election as top TV series.
· In another injustice, the WB's witty "The Gilmore Girls"
It built on its first-year excellence with a high-powered was shut out of the nominations. Note to the TV academy:
story arc about President Bartlet's decision to hide a Youthful little networks can have dam good shows . ." · 1 .; ·'1
debilitating illness. It made the most of Its talented
Now on .to the nominees in the top categories and some
ensemble cast while giving Martin Sheen, as lhe president, more crystal-ball gazing. Heading into Sunday, NBC is the
the chance lor a memorable star turn.
leader with 11 creative arts Emmys (Fox matched that
A "West Wing" triumph would add a professional grace number but won't be a major factor in the main ceremony) .
note to a difficult personal year lor series creator Aaron HBO has eight trophies, ABC has seven and CBS, PBS and
Sorkin, who pleaded guilty in a drug possession case in UPN have live each.
- Best drama series: "The West Wing," "Law &amp; Order"
June and entered a diversion program .
There were standout "Sopranos" episodes and and ~ER ," NBC; "The Sopranos," HBO; "The Practice," ABC.
performances - especially from Its leading ladies -:- but No recounts needed as "The WestWing" takes the award.
- Best comedy series: "Everybody Loves "Raymond,"
the stakes and the drama didn't seem as high this season
lor mob boss Tony Soprano. Relatively conservativ~ Emmy cas; "Frasier" and "Will &amp; Grace," NBC; "Malcolm in the
voters also are more likely to snub the violent, sexually vivid Middle,• Fox; "Sex and the City," HBO.
In a perfect world, sophisticated cable charmer "Sex and
show in favor of the more staid "Tile West Wing."
Another factor weighing against "The Sopranos": No the CiV would be honored lor a lovely year of laughs and
cable entry has claimed the best drama or best comedy tears~ In the . real world, ·.we predict fresh-laced, inventive
series prize, and It's unlikely the network TV bias will be "Malcolm in lhe Middle," the worthiest network entry, gets the
broken this year with a strong entry like "The West Wing."
gold. Back-up selection: catego~opper (with 12 bids} "Will &amp;
·
. lt"wasn't unti11999, in fact, that "The Sopranos" become Grace."

'

Meet Area Businesses &amp; See What Gallia County Has to Offer At The 2nd Annual•.•

Gallia Fall Business Ex ·

.

J

Saturday &amp; StU1day; September 29 &amp; 30 at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
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The Wisemm Agency - Fail Wn:ath
Rio General Han:lware · 12 Dirt Demon Fumace Filters
AAA Tr:zvel - 1 Ycar of Free AAA M:mbership
Raymond james Financial Services - $50 GftCcrtificare
to Gal"'om Retail Merchants
Ohio Valley Bank - $125 CD Music System
Angd 's B.,athe-Rite - Indoor Air Purifier
O..kHiU Banks.-$50 GiftCertifica"
Holzer Medical Center- Digital Blood Pn:ssure Monitor
GJM Boan:l of Alcohol &amp; Mental Hcallh . $.30 Gift Basket
Holzer Oinic -·$200 Heallh &amp;Wdlncss Package
Farnx:IS Bank - Autwnn Lon~erger Basket Package
Wiseman Rcll Estate· Gallipotis Throw
Super 8 Motel - Free Nighis Stay in the Jacuzzi Suite
Bobs Market - (2) $50 Gift Certifica" s
Holzer Senior Care Center - $7 5 Cash
Buckeye Ruml Electric - $100 Wal-Mart Gift Certificate.
Compk:re Care Chircpractk - Free EAV T&lt;St
Wyng:ue ofG.u.ipolis · DVD Pla)'et
Ohio Valley Christian"SChool- Book Set on "LeadeiShip"
lnfocision Management - $75 Gift Basket
K &amp; LCaEring - $100-off Any Cat=d Event
Edward Jooes Invcsanents · $50 Cash
Sherwin-Williams Co. - Wall Magic Da:onting Kit
Buckeye Hills Career G:nter - "Thermos &amp;Tote Bag
Sa: rue Hills Nursing G:ntcr- $50 Gift Bas kct
Mary Kay - $50 Mary Kay Gift Basket
AT&amp;TWin:less- Prepaid Digi&amp;ll Phone Package
Unive.S ity of Rio Grande - Free &gt;-Oedit Hour Course

Home &amp; Garden Pany -·$1 00 Gft Basket
lnheating - Buy 1 Hearirig Aid, Get the Seao nd One Ft-ec
Vanco Aoor Covering- $50 Gift Certi!Jcate
Auto Trim Cenre.- (2) $50 G ft C.nificaES
Aural Fashions- Floml Arrangement
101.5 The River- (2) Family 4-Packs to OH Renaissance F&lt;Stivul.
Arbors at Gallipolis - Digital Camem
Pepsi - GolfBag
Sears- Craftsmen Six-Drawer Tool Center
Crafty Blind Spot·- $75 GiftCertifica.,
Good News Bible Bookst:&gt; re - $30 Gift Certificate
Essence Photographic - Fn:e Pomoi t Session w/ Free 8" by 10"
Eastman's Foodland -Gift Certificate
• Willis Funeml Home - Turl&lt;ey Deep Fl)Cr
• O.amber of Commerce- Galipolis Commemomtive Coin
• URG. Crossroads Program - $50 Gft G:rti&amp;:ate to URG Bookstore

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DON'T FORGET THE COUPON/I

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~--------------~----1
'
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.

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• ""~'"'"' "" "'"" " lf }l

J..,.,u·~•.,••,

•''« "'- t•

&gt;

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..., .... ",~ .''

.

At the ltd annual ..

Oallla Fall Business Expo
Ad.,mi66ion Price: $3 per person
(childral 1Z A UDder li"e)

Saturday, September29 · lOam- Spm
Sunday, Scptember"30 · 1 pm- 5pm
II /be Glllla £0. juntJr Rllr(founds

Saturday's En~ermnment
•

I

11:00 AM- Tumbling pelfonnances by Cheer Station's "AD San"
12:00 PM - Tumbling performances by WillPower Gymnastics
1:00 PM - Danae perfunnances by "fhe Art Sehoof'
2:00 PM - Vocal performance by the GAHS "Madtis&lt;ls"
3:00 PM - Vocal performmce by pmise band "Bcaer Day"

..... -.

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~

If the Emmys are held, here are some prediclions about winners

·aennifer L. Byrnes is Galliii
County~ Extension agent for
agriculture and natural resource4
Ohio State University.)
'

I Page 6 I

Seinfeld curse
strikes initating
Bob Patterson

Prod~cers with goals of
lifestyle farm for the benefit
of.the children and community. have the opportunity to
maintain very individualized
practices, indefinitely. However, when the goal is to make
an acceptable, profit in the
commercial cow-calf business, cooperation will be
essential.·
Of course, there are exceptions to every rule. Examine
your farm and determine: Is it '
a lifestyle operation, an oper~
ation that would benefit from
co. operation, or is it th~
"'ii~p'tion?-------:----;

.

Today's
Homes

I Page 3 I

a

Bymes

TV
Crossword

TV Pipe Line

- Best actor In a drama series: Andre Braugher,
"Gideon's Crossing" and Dennis Franz, "NYPD Blue," ABC;
James Gandolfini, "The Sopranos," HBO; Rob Lowe and
Martin Sheen, "The West Wing," NBC.
Sheen railing against God in the National Cathedral
alter the death of longtime confidant Mrs. Landingham was
one of the indelible Images of last season . Give the leader
olthe free world an Em my.
- Best actress in a drama series: Lorrai.ne Bracco and
Edie Falco, ''The Sopranos," HBO; Amy Brenneman,
"Judging Amy" and Marg Helgenberger, "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation," CBS; Sela Ward, "Once and Again," ABC.
What a dazzling contest between the "Sopranos"
aclresses. Watching Falco dissolve as a psychiatrist
brutally dissects her life, It's hard to believe she could lose.
But Bracco's submitted episode, in which she i~ raped and
then resists seeking mob vengeance, is superb. Her screen
time generally may not qualify Bracco as a series lead, but
her character's relationship to Tony Soprano is so pivotal to
the series she gets the· benefit of the doubl ~ and the
Em my lor great work.
- Best actor in a comedy series: Kelsey Grammer,
"Frasier," John Lithgow, "3rd Rock From the Sun,". Eric
McCormack, 'Will &amp; Grace," NBC; Frankie Muniz, "Malcolm
in the Middle," Fox; Ray "Romano, "Everybody Loves
Raymond," CBS.
· .
In a surprisingly weak field of submissions, the race is
between Grammer and McCormack. The former was
touching but not particularly Iunny in an midlile-crisis
episode; the latter was Iunny enough but missed chances
to make emotional hay out of his gay character's reluctant
coming out. We'.ll call it for McCormack, who at least had
the chance to play more shades than Grammer.
- Best actress in a comedy series: Calista Flockhart,
"Ally McBeal," and Jane Kaczmarek, "Malcolm in the
Mipdle," Fox; Patricia Healon, "Everybody Loves
Raymond," CBS; Debra Messing, "Will &amp;· Grace," NBC;
Sarah Jessica Parker, "Sex and the City," HBO.
Kaczmarek is a frantic wonder in a flashback episode
recalling a series of childbirths and marital crises, but we
found more range and charm In the flashback performance
submitted by Messing. Her gawky, lovelorn college student
was both Iunny and vulnerable as she discovers her wouldbe boyfriend, Will, is gay. How could academy voters reject
her?

·Entertainmen" Food., ~
(liye Awqys~ and fttore} .

Sundays Entmajpment
"Go sptl s;,g"
1:00PM- "Oteay Ridge"
2:00 PM - "Glory land Believers"
3:00 PM - "New City Singers"
4:00 PM- ''Forgiven Four"

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_,_ .. . __, . . ·---· +·
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. -- ----4'- ---..--·-

•

�.••
Gallipolis •

'

Las.Vegas
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The New
York-New York hotel-casino usually
draws in lots of high-roUm and
tourists with its Big Apple-style &lt;kyscrapers, its replic;a Brooklyn Bridge
and its Coney Island-type roUercoaster.
But after last week's terrorist attacks,
its blackjack tables have emptied out
and many slot machines have fallen
silent. Big-screen televisions used in
the sportS book have been tuned to
news channels. And the casino's 150-

Sunday, Siptember 23, 2001

Pomeroy • Point Pleasant

low numbers since

foot model of the Statue of Liberty tern. Hundreds of Las Vegas convenhas become a shrine crowded with tions have been canceled. Quickie
candles, flowers and cards.
• wecldin~ are way down.
'"We're cutting our trip short by • AtNew York- New York, there are
three days," said guest Norma lsiordia reminders of the tragedy all over. The
ofLosAngeles."ltdoesn'tfeellikethe place is built .ro include some of the
time to have fun right now."
most memorable pieces of the New
The scene is repeated along the Las York skyline, with a Statue of Liberty
Vegas Srrip. Tourists and their gan1- and a 529-foot, 47-story replica of the
bling dollar' are staying home in the Empire State Building. (The World
aftermath of the terrorist attacks, Trade Center is not part of the skywherher out of fear, grief or the line, which is supposed to represent
snarling of the nation 's air travel sys- the Big Apple of the 1940s.)

-••

Around Las Vegas, more than
After the terrorist attacks, the hotd's
shows were canceled, security W2S 50,000 corM:ntioneen ~ canceled
•
increased and piles ofT-shins, hats an\1 or postponed events this week alonec
coffee mu~ bearing emblem&lt; of the a $61.3 million hit in non-gaming
New York fire and police depa.rtnlents revenue, according to figures releasee!
Wednesday by the Las Vegas Visitort
611ed lciosks and shops.
and
Convention Authority.
"It has humbled all of us that visiSo far more than 240 corM:ntions
tors to Las Vegas have created a
memorial at New York-New York to planned for September, October anJ
honor the victims and offer support November have canceled. Last }'l!at
for the inspired efforts of the res- the 'city drew 11 percent of its esti-;
cuers," Felix Rappaport, president of mated 36 million visitors fiom con •
ventions.
the hote.l, said in a statement.

Television Li~tings For
23, 2001 - September

•

Sunday Times-Sentinel And The

•

Formerly homeless laborer who won $1 million Ads pulled after host calls~
McDonald's·prize charged with beating fiancee military action 'cowardly' ;
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - A
formerly homeless day laborer who won
a $1 million instant prize at McDonald's
this month was · arrested on charges of
beating his fiancee.
Patrick Collier, 35, was released from
the Volusia County Jail on $2,500 bond
Tuesday after being arrested at his
Ormond Beach home on a felony charge
of aggravated battery against 29-year-old
Sandra Fabian.
"It was just a fight ," said CoUier's attorney, J. Peyton Quarles. He said Fabian

Kneen

from PageD1

Lady Beetle and becoming
involved in researching out
the best methods of control.
Margaret Huelsman , Ohio
State University Integrated
Pest MaJiagement Program
specialist, is holding two local
meetin~ to discuss the beetle's
biology and ecology of the

had left the state, and that the · charge
against his client could be reduced to
battery.
'
According to a police report, Fabian
was left bleeding from her mouth and
nose, and had a swollen cheek. She was
treated at a hospital for head and ne.c k
injuries, police said.
Collier went into a McDonald's in
Holly Hill on Sept. 1 for a 99-cent
breakfast sandwich for Fabian, and
walked out the winner of a $1 miUion
instant prize, one ·of five being given ou~

lady beetle and suggested
management techniques.
There are no definitive conttol measures. The first meeting will be on Sept. 24 from
7 to 9 p.m. at the Athens City
Recreation Center located at
701 E. State St. The second
meeting will be held on Sept.
25 , at the Vern Riffe Vocational School, 175 Beaver Creek
Road (one mile east of the
intersection of U.S. 23 and
· U.S. 32 on 32), Piketon. Fur-

by the company.
McDonald's had announced the promotion in the wake of an FBI investigation last month into McDonald's
Monopoly gan1e.That game was aUegedly rigged by an employee of a company
hired by McDonald's to handle gan1e
promotions and security.
Just months before winning the prize,
Collier and Fabian were homeless, sleeping on cardboard boxes and earning $50
a day as laborers when they could find
work.

ther information may be
obtained from the OSU !PM
web site at www.ag.ohiostate.edu/-ipm,l.

house on Thursday.
Starring at 3 p.m., this even't
lets you talk directly to vendors of greenhouse structures,
soils, containers, plant liners
and chemicals. For further
details caU 843-5427.

•••

Are you a current commercial greenhouse operator or
are you t,hinking about growing fruits, vegetables or plants
in a greenhouse? Plan on
attending the Burton Floral &amp;
Greenhouse . (BFG) open

not letting the military d&lt;t
LOS ANGELES (AP) ·•
FedEx and Sears pulled out their job."
"If we don't face . ou(
as "Politically Incorrect"
problems
realistically, we
sponsors after host Bill
Maher caUed past US. mili- ·won't overcome them," the
tary actions "cowardly." ·
TV. talk show host added
itt
'
a
phone
interview.
Maher said Wednesday his
FedEx reviewed the ABC
comments were aimed at
political leaders, not sol- show's Monday edition
diers, and he defended his after receiving complaints,
right to ·offer criticism in spokeswoman
Carla
Richards said. The compa~
difficult times.
"I should have been more ny's 30-second spot, which,
specific," Mabee said. "I aired during the show, hai
never meam to imply nor been pulled indefinitely. ;
have I eve} thought that our · Retailer Sears, Roebuc!C
actual servtcemen are cow- and Co. also said Wednesday
ardly. ... It's our govern- it canceled its advertising
ment, it's our politicians, on the show after customet
who have been cowardly in complaints.

(Hal KtJeen is Meigs County~
ExtensiotJ agent for agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio Stale
University.)

from PapDI

created. by the Initiative is
intended to guide producers
to two market targets": (1)
Don't panic. Our tenden- high-quality, well-marbled,
cy is to give in to ·our emo- tender beef markets; and (2)
dens is managed for the Claxtiona! response to immediate leaner, yet tender beef prodPage D1 ·
concerns. These knee-jerk uct markets.
tons by Tanya Williams. Its onsite office, which can be
reactions are not always conWould your participation
Page D1
reached at 446-9228, is open · making decisions .that affect · sistent with our long-term require implementing pracweekdays from 9 a.nf. to 5 the U.S. economy.
goals. So, be patient and think rices that require added
ers during a land contract p.m., and by appointment on
Consumers have a powerful before you make a move. Stick expense or additional faciliMrs. Claxton said. weekends.
influence on the markets and
ties? Probably. However,
to
basic
principles
of
investPre-arrangement-details-for~economv;-c-eontinued-con-=
- -'"'-~
. "'-=~=7-'":--=;==---·worthwhileaclrieveme!lts are,.
ing, they still apply. Look to
tures a chapel.
the mausoleum and burial sumer confidence has been a
rarely made without some ·
your financial advisor to help
It also fills the need for the sites arc available, with key force against the econorisk.
Appreciating the economic
growing preference for mau- moncf.ly payment plans, a ser- my's descent of the past few you evaluate proposed actions.
the
Claxtons
believe
months
and
it
will
continue
to
The
skyline
of
the
nation's
hardships
of small to mid-size
vice
soleums the Claxtons have
financial
center
has
been
b
f
found with local families.
helps everyone at a difficuit be a strong force in the future.
ee operations, Initiative
There are many reasons to changed forever, but that does leaders have labeled partici"We're surprised at how rime.
"lt locks in the price, and remain confident in America's not mean America's ability to pating producers as "Stakepeople have accepted them,"
said Mrs. CLtxton. "We had a the husband and wife select future. Look at how we've overcome challenges and holders." The initiative seeks
sustainability for Stakeholders
cemetery in Athens County together, rather than leaving it banded together to form a emerge even stronger will.
(Bryce Smitl1 is atJ investment by encouraging them to
that we sold and the reception lor the family to do," said Mrs. unified front-Congress, interfor them there wasn't as great Claxton. "Basically, once faith memorial services, the executive with Smith Partners at abandon their individual goals
as before."
they've pre-arranged, a lot of orderly reopening of the Advest Inc. in its Gallipolis and methods, and adopt those
financial markets.
office.)
of industry consensus.
Ohio Valley Memory Gar- stress is taken care of"

.
Smith

Service

· I Page 3 I

I Page 5 I

- Soap Talk

•

fro•

from

the answer,
you're dissatisfied with th~
operation, set different, yet
realistic goals. For more infor~
mation about the 5-State Beef
Initiative, please call the
Extension office at 446-700i'
or visit the website at:
www.5statebeeforg.
,

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I

High grades for
Education of
Max Bickford

Advice On
Home
Repairs

I Page 4 I

I Page6 I
.._,

By LYNN ELBER
the first cable series to even gain a nomination as best
AP Television Writer
drama.
LOS ANGELES- Political intrigue, death and deceit make
We're not alone in our predictions. Fellow TV observers at
the Bartle! White House a tough place to work- and the the Web site www.Goldderby.com, which handicaps
leading candidate lor Emmy victory.
Hollywood contests, give 2 to 5 odds lor "The West Wing" in
In this nonpartisan race, we're pre~icting "The West both the drama and best actor categories. The odds are 3 to
Wing" will triumph al the 53rd Annual Primetime Emmy 1 lor a "Sopranos• best series win and 4 to 1 lor James
Awards, perhaps matching its own record of nine trophies Gandollini as best actor.
·
set last year.
Among c0medy series, "Everybody Loves Raymond" and
HBO's mob drama "The Sopranos" received 22 "Malcolm in the Middle" are ranked as Goldderby leader!! wilh
nominations this year to "The West Wing's" 18 bids, but the 3 to 2 odds. Last year's winner, "Will &amp; Grace," comes in at 3
NBC drama has top honors including best drama series to 1.
and best actor in its sights.
The Emmy truth, according to Goldderby founder and
The awards. ceremony, which was scheduled to air "The Emmys" author Thomas O'Neil, Is In the tapes. l;:ach
Sept. 16 on CBS, was postponed indefinitely alter terrorist ' performer submits one episode he or she. believes· represents
attacks Sept. 11 on New York's World Trade Center and on , .,his or her best w:ork lor the season, wliil~ serlt~,s...?~~Ijia~t.
the Penlagon.
•
·
, Judging panels g1ve awards based on those•samples ;~fifitTthe
Ellen DeGeneres will host the ceremony, during which ·entire season.
·
27 awards in acting, directing and writing categories will be t
"II you want to predict who's going to win the Emmys, you
presented.
._
~ave to see what's on those !apes. Stars live or die based on
. , ."The West Wing" already won lour Emmys at a creative . lhem," O'Neil advises In his online Emmy 16recast.
arts ceremony ·last week, including awards for casting,
Studying the submissions revealed one inescapable trulh:
cinematography, editing and sound mixing. "The Sopranos" ·~ryan Cranston, the masterfully befuddled dad .on "Malcolm
·In the Middle," was robbed of a nomination. His performance
claimed a single award, lor makeup.
In this new golden age of TV dramas, weighing the pn the tape submitted by co-star and deserved nominee Jane
chances of such superb shows can be dillloull But "The K,aczmarek was award-worthy. ·
West Wing" clearly deserves re-election as top TV series.
· In another injustice, the WB's witty "The Gilmore Girls"
It built on its first-year excellence with a high-powered was shut out of the nominations. Note to the TV academy:
story arc about President Bartlet's decision to hide a Youthful little networks can have dam good shows . ." · 1 .; ·'1
debilitating illness. It made the most of Its talented
Now on .to the nominees in the top categories and some
ensemble cast while giving Martin Sheen, as lhe president, more crystal-ball gazing. Heading into Sunday, NBC is the
the chance lor a memorable star turn.
leader with 11 creative arts Emmys (Fox matched that
A "West Wing" triumph would add a professional grace number but won't be a major factor in the main ceremony) .
note to a difficult personal year lor series creator Aaron HBO has eight trophies, ABC has seven and CBS, PBS and
Sorkin, who pleaded guilty in a drug possession case in UPN have live each.
- Best drama series: "The West Wing," "Law &amp; Order"
June and entered a diversion program .
There were standout "Sopranos" episodes and and ~ER ," NBC; "The Sopranos," HBO; "The Practice," ABC.
performances - especially from Its leading ladies -:- but No recounts needed as "The WestWing" takes the award.
- Best comedy series: "Everybody Loves "Raymond,"
the stakes and the drama didn't seem as high this season
lor mob boss Tony Soprano. Relatively conservativ~ Emmy cas; "Frasier" and "Will &amp; Grace," NBC; "Malcolm in the
voters also are more likely to snub the violent, sexually vivid Middle,• Fox; "Sex and the City," HBO.
In a perfect world, sophisticated cable charmer "Sex and
show in favor of the more staid "Tile West Wing."
Another factor weighing against "The Sopranos": No the CiV would be honored lor a lovely year of laughs and
cable entry has claimed the best drama or best comedy tears~ In the . real world, ·.we predict fresh-laced, inventive
series prize, and It's unlikely the network TV bias will be "Malcolm in lhe Middle," the worthiest network entry, gets the
broken this year with a strong entry like "The West Wing."
gold. Back-up selection: catego~opper (with 12 bids} "Will &amp;
·
. lt"wasn't unti11999, in fact, that "The Sopranos" become Grace."

'

Meet Area Businesses &amp; See What Gallia County Has to Offer At The 2nd Annual•.•

Gallia Fall Business Ex ·

.

J

Saturday &amp; StU1day; September 29 &amp; 30 at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
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The Wisemm Agency - Fail Wn:ath
Rio General Han:lware · 12 Dirt Demon Fumace Filters
AAA Tr:zvel - 1 Ycar of Free AAA M:mbership
Raymond james Financial Services - $50 GftCcrtificare
to Gal"'om Retail Merchants
Ohio Valley Bank - $125 CD Music System
Angd 's B.,athe-Rite - Indoor Air Purifier
O..kHiU Banks.-$50 GiftCertifica"
Holzer Medical Center- Digital Blood Pn:ssure Monitor
GJM Boan:l of Alcohol &amp; Mental Hcallh . $.30 Gift Basket
Holzer Oinic -·$200 Heallh &amp;Wdlncss Package
Farnx:IS Bank - Autwnn Lon~erger Basket Package
Wiseman Rcll Estate· Gallipotis Throw
Super 8 Motel - Free Nighis Stay in the Jacuzzi Suite
Bobs Market - (2) $50 Gift Certifica" s
Holzer Senior Care Center - $7 5 Cash
Buckeye Ruml Electric - $100 Wal-Mart Gift Certificate.
Compk:re Care Chircpractk - Free EAV T&lt;St
Wyng:ue ofG.u.ipolis · DVD Pla)'et
Ohio Valley Christian"SChool- Book Set on "LeadeiShip"
lnfocision Management - $75 Gift Basket
K &amp; LCaEring - $100-off Any Cat=d Event
Edward Jooes Invcsanents · $50 Cash
Sherwin-Williams Co. - Wall Magic Da:onting Kit
Buckeye Hills Career G:nter - "Thermos &amp;Tote Bag
Sa: rue Hills Nursing G:ntcr- $50 Gift Bas kct
Mary Kay - $50 Mary Kay Gift Basket
AT&amp;TWin:less- Prepaid Digi&amp;ll Phone Package
Unive.S ity of Rio Grande - Free &gt;-Oedit Hour Course

Home &amp; Garden Pany -·$1 00 Gft Basket
lnheating - Buy 1 Hearirig Aid, Get the Seao nd One Ft-ec
Vanco Aoor Covering- $50 Gift Certi!Jcate
Auto Trim Cenre.- (2) $50 G ft C.nificaES
Aural Fashions- Floml Arrangement
101.5 The River- (2) Family 4-Packs to OH Renaissance F&lt;Stivul.
Arbors at Gallipolis - Digital Camem
Pepsi - GolfBag
Sears- Craftsmen Six-Drawer Tool Center
Crafty Blind Spot·- $75 GiftCertifica.,
Good News Bible Bookst:&gt; re - $30 Gift Certificate
Essence Photographic - Fn:e Pomoi t Session w/ Free 8" by 10"
Eastman's Foodland -Gift Certificate
• Willis Funeml Home - Turl&lt;ey Deep Fl)Cr
• O.amber of Commerce- Galipolis Commemomtive Coin
• URG. Crossroads Program - $50 Gft G:rti&amp;:ate to URG Bookstore

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DON'T FORGET THE COUPON/I

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• ""~'"'"' "" "'"" " lf }l

J..,.,u·~•.,••,

•''« "'- t•

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.

At the ltd annual ..

Oallla Fall Business Expo
Ad.,mi66ion Price: $3 per person
(childral 1Z A UDder li"e)

Saturday, September29 · lOam- Spm
Sunday, Scptember"30 · 1 pm- 5pm
II /be Glllla £0. juntJr Rllr(founds

Saturday's En~ermnment
•

I

11:00 AM- Tumbling pelfonnances by Cheer Station's "AD San"
12:00 PM - Tumbling performances by WillPower Gymnastics
1:00 PM - Danae perfunnances by "fhe Art Sehoof'
2:00 PM - Vocal performance by the GAHS "Madtis&lt;ls"
3:00 PM - Vocal performmce by pmise band "Bcaer Day"

..... -.

.

~

If the Emmys are held, here are some prediclions about winners

·aennifer L. Byrnes is Galliii
County~ Extension agent for
agriculture and natural resource4
Ohio State University.)
'

I Page 6 I

Seinfeld curse
strikes initating
Bob Patterson

Prod~cers with goals of
lifestyle farm for the benefit
of.the children and community. have the opportunity to
maintain very individualized
practices, indefinitely. However, when the goal is to make
an acceptable, profit in the
commercial cow-calf business, cooperation will be
essential.·
Of course, there are exceptions to every rule. Examine
your farm and determine: Is it '
a lifestyle operation, an oper~
ation that would benefit from
co. operation, or is it th~
"'ii~p'tion?-------:----;

.

Today's
Homes

I Page 3 I

a

Bymes

TV
Crossword

TV Pipe Line

- Best actor In a drama series: Andre Braugher,
"Gideon's Crossing" and Dennis Franz, "NYPD Blue," ABC;
James Gandolfini, "The Sopranos," HBO; Rob Lowe and
Martin Sheen, "The West Wing," NBC.
Sheen railing against God in the National Cathedral
alter the death of longtime confidant Mrs. Landingham was
one of the indelible Images of last season . Give the leader
olthe free world an Em my.
- Best actress in a drama series: Lorrai.ne Bracco and
Edie Falco, ''The Sopranos," HBO; Amy Brenneman,
"Judging Amy" and Marg Helgenberger, "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation," CBS; Sela Ward, "Once and Again," ABC.
What a dazzling contest between the "Sopranos"
aclresses. Watching Falco dissolve as a psychiatrist
brutally dissects her life, It's hard to believe she could lose.
But Bracco's submitted episode, in which she i~ raped and
then resists seeking mob vengeance, is superb. Her screen
time generally may not qualify Bracco as a series lead, but
her character's relationship to Tony Soprano is so pivotal to
the series she gets the· benefit of the doubl ~ and the
Em my lor great work.
- Best actor in a comedy series: Kelsey Grammer,
"Frasier," John Lithgow, "3rd Rock From the Sun,". Eric
McCormack, 'Will &amp; Grace," NBC; Frankie Muniz, "Malcolm
in the Middle," Fox; Ray "Romano, "Everybody Loves
Raymond," CBS.
· .
In a surprisingly weak field of submissions, the race is
between Grammer and McCormack. The former was
touching but not particularly Iunny in an midlile-crisis
episode; the latter was Iunny enough but missed chances
to make emotional hay out of his gay character's reluctant
coming out. We'.ll call it for McCormack, who at least had
the chance to play more shades than Grammer.
- Best actress in a comedy series: Calista Flockhart,
"Ally McBeal," and Jane Kaczmarek, "Malcolm in the
Mipdle," Fox; Patricia Healon, "Everybody Loves
Raymond," CBS; Debra Messing, "Will &amp;· Grace," NBC;
Sarah Jessica Parker, "Sex and the City," HBO.
Kaczmarek is a frantic wonder in a flashback episode
recalling a series of childbirths and marital crises, but we
found more range and charm In the flashback performance
submitted by Messing. Her gawky, lovelorn college student
was both Iunny and vulnerable as she discovers her wouldbe boyfriend, Will, is gay. How could academy voters reject
her?

·Entertainmen" Food., ~
(liye Awqys~ and fttore} .

Sundays Entmajpment
"Go sptl s;,g"
1:00PM- "Oteay Ridge"
2:00 PM - "Glory land Believers"
3:00 PM - "New City Singers"
4:00 PM- ''Forgiven Four"

I

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�PAGE TWO

lSUNDAY
Oz returns for fifth season in 2002
By Taylor Michaels
OTVDala Features Syndicate

Q: What bas become of my

favorite TV show, Or.? -David
Garrity, West Palm Beach, Fla.
A: According to HBO. Teay
Kinney, Ernie Hudson, Lee

MoNDAY
Terry Kinney
. Tergesen, Rita Moreno and the
rest of the cast rerum for a fifth
eight-episode season of the vi&lt;&gt;lent prison drama in early 2002.
Q: Whatenr !!l!ppen~ to
Barbam Baln of Mission: lrit·
possible?
-R.
Stevens,
Pahrump, Nev.
A: Now 66, the fin;t actress to
win three consecutive Emmys
(for Mission ) is afamiliar face on
the Los Angeles theater scene and
also works for various charities, .
including BookPals, aScreen Acton; Guild progriun she founded
10 work with L.A. students. More
information is available online at
www.barbarabain.nel. Juliet Landau, Bain'sdaughter with ex-husband Mallin Landau, has had a
recurring role on Buffy the \Wn·
pire Slayer and Angel.
Q: I noticed an actor ..ned
Sam RockweU in The Green
Milt and the Clu!rfk's Ange&amp;
movie. What can yoo leU me
about him? Is he a ''new face,"
or have I just noticed him now?

Jordan (Jill Henneaay) Investigates the deatll of a cab
driver In Cro.sing Jordan Monday on NBC.

~Is=uN;:D:::A;:Y:::::;:::::::::;:::;:::;::::;;::::;:;:;::;::;::::;:;::;::;s~EP~TE~M~B~ER~2~3I Darwin's theory evolves "in PBS
documentary series
.·

Foolball. Ballimoro Ravensal Circinnali Bengals (LIV9) (CCI
MBNA.c:om 400 JlJvo)

'

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

By Stephen English
TVData Features Syndicate
A few people still think
the Earth is flat. Hardly
anybody believes the sun
revolves around our planet
anymore. ·
But people have a
tougher time accepting the
scientific proposition that all
life •• including humanity •• is
descended from one ancient,
simple being that sprung
forth from amino acids and a
few other special ingredients.
" It's the same reason
you can go irlto a bar and
start a fight by saying
something about somebody's
mother," says Dr. Kenneth
Miller, who appears In the
first episode of the four-part
miniseries Evolution, airing

Every planting season,
farmers wrestle with insects
that ar11 no longer killed by
pesticides invented just a few
years ago.
The reason lor this,
according to Darwin, is that
every insect •• a bee; let's
say •• Is born a bit diHerent
from all others. If a bee's
· diHerences allow him to
survive a pe·sticide only
slightly · longer than • the
others, he.'s got a better
chance at · mating with the
queen bee · and a qetter
chance at passing his
genetic material on to future
generations. These bees are
more likely to be born with
the same resistance as dad,
maybe even a better

misconceptions abound
among the lay public.
"I get this all the time ,.
people will ask questiorts
like, ' If we evolved fror:n
apes, then why are apes still
here?" Miller says. "And that
misconception is· related to
the Idea that evolution
involves the transformation of
one thing into anothe~.
Darwin· himself realizeq,
when he wrote Origin of the
Species, that people wouiO
misunderstand his idea that
way. So he included a
diagram •• the only diagram
in the whole book •• designed
to show how he thought ttie
species ' arose . And that
diagram is quite explicit fn
showing not that one species
Is transformed Into another,

Sept.
, on PBS (check
listings).
"We all care about where
we're from, and, to a lot of
people, the notion that we
have a biological ancestry In
the processes of this planet •
• In short, that we are a part
·of nature •• to many people
raised In the Western
tradition, (this) is scary, Is
threatening,"
continues
Miller, · who Is both an
evolutionary biologlst and a
devout Catholic.
Threatening as the Idea
may seem to some, evidence
is abundant that not only was
' Charles Darwin spot-on, but
: that his \heory is uniting the
biological sciences much In
the same way Einstein
. helped unite physics and
astronomy. For instance:

slightly different, too).
Meanwhile, pesticide kills
off all other bees until only
the resistant bees are left.
And voila •• a new-and·
improved bee has evolved.
The
series
also
demonstrates how HIV
sufferers are frustrated and
terrified by the virus' natural
trait of reproducing Itself with
slight genetic differences.
Inevitably, some of its mutant
virus babies aren't aHected
by drug treatments. Because
the virus replicates itself so
rapidly, the mutated, immune
HIV viruses can swamp a
person's bloodstream within
months.
This seems pr.etty easy to
understand, doesn't it?
"I think it is a simple
idea," Miller says. · But

'
of a branching
tree of life." ·

The miniseries itself Is
incredibly lucid and easy tb
understand. Episode t,
" Darwin's Dangerous Idea,"
also utilizes a rather novel
storyte.lling technique.,
interweaving documentar~­
style presentation of
information with vignettes
that dramatize Darwin's life. :
While re-creating the
scientist's Polaroid moments
may sound cheesy, th.e
drama actually is quite well·
written and avted and makes
for good entertainment. It
also shows what a struggle It
became for Darwiri to hold to
his theory. As the scientific
community, the Anglican
Church and ·his peers
pressured him and berated
Continued on Page 3

:l TUESDAY

SEPTEMBER 25 l

TuESDAY

- D. Eakes, Galena, Kan.

A: The ven;atile Rockwell, 32,
has been honing his craft for
more than a decade, but he really
broke out with critics in a little-

seen 1996 movie call~ Box of
Moon Light, followed by an
award-winning perfonnance in
the independent film lAwn Dogs.
Now, Rockwell is attracting the
attention of mainstream moviegoers in the two hits you mentioned, as well as his hilarious
rum as oily Guy Aeegman in the
comedy Galaxy Quest. The
stage-trained actor spent several
days this past summer at
Williamstown in two one-act
plays, and currently is featured in
the dark Vince Vaughn-Jon
Favreau movie comedy Made.
Roc~well has four other films
. lined up for futUre release: Heis~
Pret&lt;e/, 13 Moons and Welcome
to Col/inwood.
Q: What was the name or the
theme

song to SU1111r Spoons?

&amp;' Villag!'-!O~f.LPalm"""'L_

-~-~-SipBorlb~Sa~
A collwge fre1hman (Carla Gallo) 11 tom between a
new IIIII on campu1 1nd her off-campu• hlgh·echool

A: "Together" by Bob WU1h
"Here we are. face to face, acouple of silveT spoons, hoping 10
find we're two of a kind, making
it go, making it grow."
Q: · Was that the aetor wbo
used to play Pee-wee Kennan
hosting the show You Don't
Know Jack? My daughter says
it was. -Joanne C. MOler, Sur·
ing, Wise.
A: Yes, ''Troy Stevens,'' the
smarmy host of Jack. was another alter ego of Paul Reubens, the
actor best known for playing Pee-

SOAP TALK

Vilasuso works in the
North, plays in the South
By Candace Haven•

eTVData Features Syndk:ele

Seinfeld curse strikes irritating Bob Patterson
Bob Panerson is the name of
Alexander's chamcteT, acelebrity
OTVOata Features Syndleate
self-help guru in the style of in·
OK, maybe it's still too early to
fomercial king Tony Robbins.
' stan talking in tenru; of a "Sein·
Bob is the author of the best-sellfe/d curse" that is stalking alumni
ing book I Know More Than .You
of the erstwhile NBC hit comedy
and its equally successful sequel,
-at least until we get a look at the
{Still Know More Tlwn You.
new project Julia Louis-Dreyfus
The joke is - assume knee-slapreportedly is developing for her
ping position- Bob's own life is
old network.
amess.
Still, it bean; noting that, for the . .That, in a very moldy nutshell,
second season in a row, one of
is the meager premise for this
her old C&lt;&gt;-Stan; has returned lo
show, but il doesn't begin to exthe network airwaves in an ill·
plain why most viewer.; will want
cnceived vehicle that looks ear·
to have some extra-strength
marked for failure.
headache relief on hand if !)ley
Last year. it ·was NBC's The
tune in for this fin;t episode.
Michael Richatds Shaw. ajoyless
That's because Alexander debacle that became one of the . who looks nothing like a glossy
fall's filllt casualties. A similar
self-help messiah anyone woold
.fate looms for Bob Panerson, the
follow - has taken that grating
pointless and .irritating Jason
adenoidal whine he used as
Alexander sitcom premiering
George Costanza on Seinfeld.
Thesday, Sept. 25, on ABC.
amped it up a few decibels and

By John Crook

'

applied it 10 nearly every single
one of his lines. There may be
some funny jokes bwied in the
script somewhere, but Alexander
bashes the life out of them with
his vocal sledgehammer.

Darwin

Continued from pJJge 2
him about his vlewa·; ·he
became more and more
reluctant to publish his
seminal book. At one point In
the dramatized portions, he
has a nightmare that he Is
seized by authorities and
hanged for his theory.
" The whole treatment of
the series, from the first
episode to the last, deals
with the way that the
Darwinist outlook on life Is
PiJrsonally threatening to
people. I think creationism Is
the result of that backlash,"
says Miller.
Creationism Is addressed
in the series In the episode
"The Mind's Big Bang/What
About God?" Miller, for one,
has his answer to that
question already formulated.
"In a sense, (God) Is the
guy who made up ·the rules
of the game," he says In the
first episode. "He manages
to work within those rules."
Miller hopes the series
will enlighten many •• and,
perhaps, persuade a few.
"Human nature Is such
that no one ever says, after
listening to a speech or
watching a debate, no one
ever likes to say, ·well, that
changed my mind.' But I do
think that It Is extremely
Important for science to take
Its case to the people," he
says.

When he gets a few days off,
Guiding Light star Jordi Vilasuso (Tony Santos) heads south to
Miami, .where he managed to
spend a good part of this past
summer.
"I grew up there and my family is there," Vilasuso says. "I've
been so busy with school and
work this last year, that it felt
good 10 get out of town and go
down there. It's a very different
place from New York."
After a year in Manhattan, he
is learning to love that city, too.
"It's a great place for a young
peoon who wants 10 step out·
side their own little world,'' he
says. "There are so many differ- ·
ent cultures represented in this
city, and they hit you in the face
every day."
His work schedule this fall is .
nonstop, but Vilasuso is making
time to attend college. "I'm try·
ing 10 get a liberal ruts degree,"
he says. "I didn,'t take any class·
es this summer, which was a
nice break, but I'm ready to get

back into it."
1be young actor says he eventually would like to own a pro·
duction company and develop
film and TV projects. "I'd say
that's the ultimate goalfor me."
In other news: In a surprising
move, Darlene Vogel says she is
not renewing her contract with
One Life to Live. The actress is
moving back to the West Coast
to pursue her acting career
there.
No word yet on when the character depruts Llanview.
Dear Candace: Is Rebecca
Herbst (Elizabeth) pregnant on
General Hospital? She appears
to be a little heavier and they
keep covering her stomach with
big pun;es. They use some odd
angles 10 film her, too. - Diana
Barnes via the. Internet.
Dear Reader: Herbst and hus·
band Michael Saucedo (ex·

Juan, GH) are expecting a baby
bny in November.
Dear Candace: I read thai
Melody Thomas Scott might
leave the Young and the Rest·
less. She hasn 't had a lot to do
over the last few years, and she
· deserves a hot new story line. I
think the show should do whatever it takes to keep Nikki New·
man where she belongs. - Maris·

wee Hennan in movies and on

television.

Send questions of genenllnterest
to TV Pipeline, TVData Features
Syndicate, 333 Glen St., Glens
Falls, NY l:ZSOl, or ..m~u to
tvplpellne@tvdala.com. Only
questions seiKted for this oolumn
wiD be answered. Personal repUes
amnot be sent.

.sa Thompson via the Internet.

Dear Reader: While it went
down to the wire, Thomas Scott
did renew her .Contract with

Y&amp;R. She is back to work.

Channel Ustlngs
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WSAZ Huntinglon·Charleston (NBC)
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�PAGE TWO

lSUNDAY
Oz returns for fifth season in 2002
By Taylor Michaels
OTVDala Features Syndicate

Q: What bas become of my

favorite TV show, Or.? -David
Garrity, West Palm Beach, Fla.
A: According to HBO. Teay
Kinney, Ernie Hudson, Lee

MoNDAY
Terry Kinney
. Tergesen, Rita Moreno and the
rest of the cast rerum for a fifth
eight-episode season of the vi&lt;&gt;lent prison drama in early 2002.
Q: Whatenr !!l!ppen~ to
Barbam Baln of Mission: lrit·
possible?
-R.
Stevens,
Pahrump, Nev.
A: Now 66, the fin;t actress to
win three consecutive Emmys
(for Mission ) is afamiliar face on
the Los Angeles theater scene and
also works for various charities, .
including BookPals, aScreen Acton; Guild progriun she founded
10 work with L.A. students. More
information is available online at
www.barbarabain.nel. Juliet Landau, Bain'sdaughter with ex-husband Mallin Landau, has had a
recurring role on Buffy the \Wn·
pire Slayer and Angel.
Q: I noticed an actor ..ned
Sam RockweU in The Green
Milt and the Clu!rfk's Ange&amp;
movie. What can yoo leU me
about him? Is he a ''new face,"
or have I just noticed him now?

Jordan (Jill Henneaay) Investigates the deatll of a cab
driver In Cro.sing Jordan Monday on NBC.

~Is=uN;:D:::A;:Y:::::;:::::::::;:::;:::;::::;;::::;:;:;::;::;::::;:;::;::;s~EP~TE~M~B~ER~2~3I Darwin's theory evolves "in PBS
documentary series
.·

Foolball. Ballimoro Ravensal Circinnali Bengals (LIV9) (CCI
MBNA.c:om 400 JlJvo)

'

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

By Stephen English
TVData Features Syndicate
A few people still think
the Earth is flat. Hardly
anybody believes the sun
revolves around our planet
anymore. ·
But people have a
tougher time accepting the
scientific proposition that all
life •• including humanity •• is
descended from one ancient,
simple being that sprung
forth from amino acids and a
few other special ingredients.
" It's the same reason
you can go irlto a bar and
start a fight by saying
something about somebody's
mother," says Dr. Kenneth
Miller, who appears In the
first episode of the four-part
miniseries Evolution, airing

Every planting season,
farmers wrestle with insects
that ar11 no longer killed by
pesticides invented just a few
years ago.
The reason lor this,
according to Darwin, is that
every insect •• a bee; let's
say •• Is born a bit diHerent
from all others. If a bee's
· diHerences allow him to
survive a pe·sticide only
slightly · longer than • the
others, he.'s got a better
chance at · mating with the
queen bee · and a qetter
chance at passing his
genetic material on to future
generations. These bees are
more likely to be born with
the same resistance as dad,
maybe even a better

misconceptions abound
among the lay public.
"I get this all the time ,.
people will ask questiorts
like, ' If we evolved fror:n
apes, then why are apes still
here?" Miller says. "And that
misconception is· related to
the Idea that evolution
involves the transformation of
one thing into anothe~.
Darwin· himself realizeq,
when he wrote Origin of the
Species, that people wouiO
misunderstand his idea that
way. So he included a
diagram •• the only diagram
in the whole book •• designed
to show how he thought ttie
species ' arose . And that
diagram is quite explicit fn
showing not that one species
Is transformed Into another,

Sept.
, on PBS (check
listings).
"We all care about where
we're from, and, to a lot of
people, the notion that we
have a biological ancestry In
the processes of this planet •
• In short, that we are a part
·of nature •• to many people
raised In the Western
tradition, (this) is scary, Is
threatening,"
continues
Miller, · who Is both an
evolutionary biologlst and a
devout Catholic.
Threatening as the Idea
may seem to some, evidence
is abundant that not only was
' Charles Darwin spot-on, but
: that his \heory is uniting the
biological sciences much In
the same way Einstein
. helped unite physics and
astronomy. For instance:

slightly different, too).
Meanwhile, pesticide kills
off all other bees until only
the resistant bees are left.
And voila •• a new-and·
improved bee has evolved.
The
series
also
demonstrates how HIV
sufferers are frustrated and
terrified by the virus' natural
trait of reproducing Itself with
slight genetic differences.
Inevitably, some of its mutant
virus babies aren't aHected
by drug treatments. Because
the virus replicates itself so
rapidly, the mutated, immune
HIV viruses can swamp a
person's bloodstream within
months.
This seems pr.etty easy to
understand, doesn't it?
"I think it is a simple
idea," Miller says. · But

'
of a branching
tree of life." ·

The miniseries itself Is
incredibly lucid and easy tb
understand. Episode t,
" Darwin's Dangerous Idea,"
also utilizes a rather novel
storyte.lling technique.,
interweaving documentar~­
style presentation of
information with vignettes
that dramatize Darwin's life. :
While re-creating the
scientist's Polaroid moments
may sound cheesy, th.e
drama actually is quite well·
written and avted and makes
for good entertainment. It
also shows what a struggle It
became for Darwiri to hold to
his theory. As the scientific
community, the Anglican
Church and ·his peers
pressured him and berated
Continued on Page 3

:l TUESDAY

SEPTEMBER 25 l

TuESDAY

- D. Eakes, Galena, Kan.

A: The ven;atile Rockwell, 32,
has been honing his craft for
more than a decade, but he really
broke out with critics in a little-

seen 1996 movie call~ Box of
Moon Light, followed by an
award-winning perfonnance in
the independent film lAwn Dogs.
Now, Rockwell is attracting the
attention of mainstream moviegoers in the two hits you mentioned, as well as his hilarious
rum as oily Guy Aeegman in the
comedy Galaxy Quest. The
stage-trained actor spent several
days this past summer at
Williamstown in two one-act
plays, and currently is featured in
the dark Vince Vaughn-Jon
Favreau movie comedy Made.
Roc~well has four other films
. lined up for futUre release: Heis~
Pret&lt;e/, 13 Moons and Welcome
to Col/inwood.
Q: What was the name or the
theme

song to SU1111r Spoons?

&amp;' Villag!'-!O~f.LPalm"""'L_

-~-~-SipBorlb~Sa~
A collwge fre1hman (Carla Gallo) 11 tom between a
new IIIII on campu1 1nd her off-campu• hlgh·echool

A: "Together" by Bob WU1h
"Here we are. face to face, acouple of silveT spoons, hoping 10
find we're two of a kind, making
it go, making it grow."
Q: · Was that the aetor wbo
used to play Pee-wee Kennan
hosting the show You Don't
Know Jack? My daughter says
it was. -Joanne C. MOler, Sur·
ing, Wise.
A: Yes, ''Troy Stevens,'' the
smarmy host of Jack. was another alter ego of Paul Reubens, the
actor best known for playing Pee-

SOAP TALK

Vilasuso works in the
North, plays in the South
By Candace Haven•

eTVData Features Syndk:ele

Seinfeld curse strikes irritating Bob Patterson
Bob Panerson is the name of
Alexander's chamcteT, acelebrity
OTVOata Features Syndleate
self-help guru in the style of in·
OK, maybe it's still too early to
fomercial king Tony Robbins.
' stan talking in tenru; of a "Sein·
Bob is the author of the best-sellfe/d curse" that is stalking alumni
ing book I Know More Than .You
of the erstwhile NBC hit comedy
and its equally successful sequel,
-at least until we get a look at the
{Still Know More Tlwn You.
new project Julia Louis-Dreyfus
The joke is - assume knee-slapreportedly is developing for her
ping position- Bob's own life is
old network.
amess.
Still, it bean; noting that, for the . .That, in a very moldy nutshell,
second season in a row, one of
is the meager premise for this
her old C&lt;&gt;-Stan; has returned lo
show, but il doesn't begin to exthe network airwaves in an ill·
plain why most viewer.; will want
cnceived vehicle that looks ear·
to have some extra-strength
marked for failure.
headache relief on hand if !)ley
Last year. it ·was NBC's The
tune in for this fin;t episode.
Michael Richatds Shaw. ajoyless
That's because Alexander debacle that became one of the . who looks nothing like a glossy
fall's filllt casualties. A similar
self-help messiah anyone woold
.fate looms for Bob Panerson, the
follow - has taken that grating
pointless and .irritating Jason
adenoidal whine he used as
Alexander sitcom premiering
George Costanza on Seinfeld.
Thesday, Sept. 25, on ABC.
amped it up a few decibels and

By John Crook

'

applied it 10 nearly every single
one of his lines. There may be
some funny jokes bwied in the
script somewhere, but Alexander
bashes the life out of them with
his vocal sledgehammer.

Darwin

Continued from pJJge 2
him about his vlewa·; ·he
became more and more
reluctant to publish his
seminal book. At one point In
the dramatized portions, he
has a nightmare that he Is
seized by authorities and
hanged for his theory.
" The whole treatment of
the series, from the first
episode to the last, deals
with the way that the
Darwinist outlook on life Is
PiJrsonally threatening to
people. I think creationism Is
the result of that backlash,"
says Miller.
Creationism Is addressed
in the series In the episode
"The Mind's Big Bang/What
About God?" Miller, for one,
has his answer to that
question already formulated.
"In a sense, (God) Is the
guy who made up ·the rules
of the game," he says In the
first episode. "He manages
to work within those rules."
Miller hopes the series
will enlighten many •• and,
perhaps, persuade a few.
"Human nature Is such
that no one ever says, after
listening to a speech or
watching a debate, no one
ever likes to say, ·well, that
changed my mind.' But I do
think that It Is extremely
Important for science to take
Its case to the people," he
says.

When he gets a few days off,
Guiding Light star Jordi Vilasuso (Tony Santos) heads south to
Miami, .where he managed to
spend a good part of this past
summer.
"I grew up there and my family is there," Vilasuso says. "I've
been so busy with school and
work this last year, that it felt
good 10 get out of town and go
down there. It's a very different
place from New York."
After a year in Manhattan, he
is learning to love that city, too.
"It's a great place for a young
peoon who wants 10 step out·
side their own little world,'' he
says. "There are so many differ- ·
ent cultures represented in this
city, and they hit you in the face
every day."
His work schedule this fall is .
nonstop, but Vilasuso is making
time to attend college. "I'm try·
ing 10 get a liberal ruts degree,"
he says. "I didn,'t take any class·
es this summer, which was a
nice break, but I'm ready to get

back into it."
1be young actor says he eventually would like to own a pro·
duction company and develop
film and TV projects. "I'd say
that's the ultimate goalfor me."
In other news: In a surprising
move, Darlene Vogel says she is
not renewing her contract with
One Life to Live. The actress is
moving back to the West Coast
to pursue her acting career
there.
No word yet on when the character depruts Llanview.
Dear Candace: Is Rebecca
Herbst (Elizabeth) pregnant on
General Hospital? She appears
to be a little heavier and they
keep covering her stomach with
big pun;es. They use some odd
angles 10 film her, too. - Diana
Barnes via the. Internet.
Dear Reader: Herbst and hus·
band Michael Saucedo (ex·

Juan, GH) are expecting a baby
bny in November.
Dear Candace: I read thai
Melody Thomas Scott might
leave the Young and the Rest·
less. She hasn 't had a lot to do
over the last few years, and she
· deserves a hot new story line. I
think the show should do whatever it takes to keep Nikki New·
man where she belongs. - Maris·

wee Hennan in movies and on

television.

Send questions of genenllnterest
to TV Pipeline, TVData Features
Syndicate, 333 Glen St., Glens
Falls, NY l:ZSOl, or ..m~u to
tvplpellne@tvdala.com. Only
questions seiKted for this oolumn
wiD be answered. Personal repUes
amnot be sent.

.sa Thompson via the Internet.

Dear Reader: While it went
down to the wire, Thomas Scott
did renew her .Contract with

Y&amp;R. She is back to work.

Channel Ustlngs
Channel

Service

Channel

WSAZ Huntinglon·Charleston (NBC)
ovc
WGN·Chicago
Family Channel
6 WSYX Columbus(ABC)

2
3
4
5

Service

27 C·Span

28 The uarning Channel
29 E!

TNN

8 WCHS Hunlington·Charleslon (ABC)
9 WPBY Hunlington (PBS)
10 WBNS Columbus (CBS)
11 WVAH Hunlington (FOX)
ll WOWK Huntington· Charleslon (CBS)
•
13 WTAP Parkersburg (NBC)
'14 HBO

30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39

•ts Cinemax

40 America's Health Net.

7 Prevue

0

17 Showtime
18 Sneak Prevue

Lifetime
A&amp;iE
Headline News

CNN

.

"'20 Starz!
•21 Plcx(s)
'22 llll0-2(S)

23 Communily Watch 23
24 HBO Family (s)
25 WOUB (Athens) PBS
26

ESPN
Nickelodeon
Weather Channel
MTV

41 WrBS (Atlanta)
4i C·NBC
43 USA
44 Discovery
45 Fox News Network
46 CMT
47 VH-1
411 TV Land
49 Disney
50 MSNBC
51 FX

19 Community Bulletin Board

0

TNT

Trinity Broadcast Nelwork

• Denotes oremiumchannels

,,
'

__

�- ISATURDAY

PAGE FOUR

PAGE FIVE

-........-...·
..--..
-.~

~

....

.

.~

WED .NESDAY

-••...•

•....

.....

.!'·

.,..

Scott Balrstow stars as a resident of Woff t..ke, a
town In which the Inhabitants have ahape-ahlftlng
tendencln, airing Wednesdays on CBS.

Richard Dreyfuss

\ Sockhoff, The Fearing Mind),
who thinks she is pregnant.
~'· But Max's family life is peachy
,.; compared to work. After years in
f the trenches, he lost a promotion
to his fonner student Andrea
- Haskell (Marcia Gay Harden,
Pollock). Complicating matters,
· she also is a fo~r lover.
And. on the day Max is slapped
with the reality he will continue
to teach classes in At~~erican
' studies to apathetic studen~. his
best friend, Steve, returns after a
long absence- and a sex change
- as Erica (Helen Shaver, In
Praise ofOidu Women).
Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss
(Mr. Holland's Opus) flawlessly
assumes the mantle of the putupon Max. Rounding out the cast
as Max's boss is the always phenomenal Regina Taylor (1'/1 Fly
Away). She explains 'to Max that
ignoring staff meetings and
showing no i·nterest in promo-

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 271

THuRSDAy

tions pretty much landed him
where he is today. Smart as Max
may be, he can't see that clearly.
Sharp:-eyed viewers who spot
Ron Glass (Barney Miller)
should not get too excited; he's
only in the pilot, shot in Los An·
geles where he ' lives. The series
is shot in New York at Staten Island's Wagner College and at
Brooklyn College.
Though this may sound like a
lot to juggle in one episode, the
pilot does an excellent job of explaining who Max is and how he
got here, which is precisely what
. it is supposed to do.
Just as firefighters must feel
some sense of pride and empathy
when a show such as Third
Watch depicts their bravery and
kindness, college professors ' undoubtedly will cheer a scene be. tween a student and· Max. This ·
obnoxious grade-grubbing student demands Max raise the
grade on her paper so she can get

-- Tearns IO Be Annoooce&lt;!

Never mind that the paper is not
worth more, or that the tenured
professor who has graded thou1_ _sands.ot'papers knO•WS'WIUit-hC"S- ---1- -1•-"'i "--- 1'""-""--dOing. Each time she screams at
- - Maggie- tawaon- stara- a·sEVI!Morrls,- wllo racenuy
ditched her longtime boyfriend for a new, hunky
him, he lowers the grade.
prospect, In /na/da Schwartz, airing Thursdays on NBC.
Dreyfuss, who won an Oscar at
29 for The Goodbye Girl, says he
always has toyed with the idea of
becoming a teacher. And, he also
relates to a man enduring a
midlife crisis.
He recalls discussing the character with the show's creators,
saying, "He doesn't know what
his relationship to women is.
And so they've surrounded him
with women of various relationships."
Harden, who won the best supporting Oscar this past year for
Pollock, clearly is going to torment and captivate Max. And.
viewers who recall the torment
·of sitting through endless classes
need not worry that Max will
spend the entire show lecturing
iri his often abrasive manner.
"This isn't going to ~ just
-&gt;:-~:::::-t';,'- 1 , about him teaching,'" 'Dreyfuss
1',-.!f£--l ·''•.says, ::but about him learning."
Chances are he'll earn an A
••
with audiences - wlth011t gradegrl!bbing.

Producer, writer and comic Larry David (S./nfrJ/d)
atara In Curb Your Enthusiasm, a hllarloua sendup of
airing Sunday on HBO.

one of three daughters of a
former U.S. Senator In
Citizen Saine•, aIrIng
Saturdays on CBS.

----weekly Puzzler Answer _
---

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

'I

TV CROSSWORD

Peter Boyle (Everybody Lov~s
Raymond) was a monk in a
Christian Brothers order before
he decided to pursue a career in
show .business.

The identity of the featured celebrity is
within the
answers in the puzzle. In order to take the TV Challenge,
unscramble the letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
5. Ricardo's portrayer
1. King
6. Series set in Chicago
5. _ Valley Days (19527. Initials for Selleck's well75)
known TV role
9. The _ Steel Hour ('538. _ Boomer(1980-82)
'63)
11 . Either Chaney
· 12. Relations
10. Title role in a series
16. _ Company(197-7-84)
about a lawman
13. Word in the title of
17. Edward and Kitty's
Spade's series
daughter-in-law
14. Teri Hatcher role
18. HostTom
15. _ the Movies ('82-'90)
19. The _ Years (1988-93)
17. Hopper
21 , 4,840 square yards
19. _ Got It Made ('83-'84)
23. Persuade
20. Foreign leader
28. Gerald McRaney's '6 122. Petty officers: abbr.
'66 title role
24. The
Victor Show
30. Field
('51-'54)
33. Mr. Calhoun
25. O'er there
34. Plane letters
26. Miscalculate
35. Egg prooucer
27. Major _ (1989-93)
36. _ People ; '92 Jessica
28. Appear
Tandy movie
29. Jeff and Ira, to Cybill
40. Mex.'s location
31 . Word in the title of
41. Bole on The Nanny
Drew's latest series
42. Monogram for Jayne
:J?. Bole on The King of .
Meadows' hubby
Queens
·
43. _ American Tail ; '86
37. Acuff's monogram
animated film
38. Is obligated
OUIIQ
39. Movin'_ (1974-76)
41. Frasier and Martin
43. Home lmprovemsnt role
44. Actress Kuip
45. Thomas or Kaye

Jim Belushl and Courtney

Ancleraon Cooper returns to reality TV as host of The
Mole II: The Next Betrayal, airing Frldaya on ABC.

I

-, TRIVIA

Thorne-Smith star in the new

family':Oriented .sitcom Accord·
-ing to Jim, premiering Wednesday, Sept. 26. on ABC.
._
Jim (llelushi) is a guy's guy·
who managed to land himself a
heck of a gaL Cheryl (ThorneSmith) is a former jet-setter •
who's settled for the Jets on ••
Monday Night Football - and
an adoring husband.
Kimberly Williams (Father of
rhe Bride, Relativity) and Larry ·
'"" Campbell also star.

0

DOWN

, Academy Award·wlnnlng ector Richard Dreyfual pl1y1 the 11111 role In The Education of Max Bickford. The new l!ourlong
drallll aerln about 1 widoWed, middle-aged profeaaor of American etudlea at a women's college In New York p~emlerea
Sunday on CBS.

\'

•

1. _ Tanner ('74-'75)
2. First word in a soap
opera title
3. Initials for the star of
Mrs. Doubtfire

4. Home of the Elis

�- ISATURDAY

PAGE FOUR

PAGE FIVE

-........-...·
..--..
-.~

~

....

.

.~

WED .NESDAY

-••...•

•....

.....

.!'·

.,..

Scott Balrstow stars as a resident of Woff t..ke, a
town In which the Inhabitants have ahape-ahlftlng
tendencln, airing Wednesdays on CBS.

Richard Dreyfuss

\ Sockhoff, The Fearing Mind),
who thinks she is pregnant.
~'· But Max's family life is peachy
,.; compared to work. After years in
f the trenches, he lost a promotion
to his fonner student Andrea
- Haskell (Marcia Gay Harden,
Pollock). Complicating matters,
· she also is a fo~r lover.
And. on the day Max is slapped
with the reality he will continue
to teach classes in At~~erican
' studies to apathetic studen~. his
best friend, Steve, returns after a
long absence- and a sex change
- as Erica (Helen Shaver, In
Praise ofOidu Women).
Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss
(Mr. Holland's Opus) flawlessly
assumes the mantle of the putupon Max. Rounding out the cast
as Max's boss is the always phenomenal Regina Taylor (1'/1 Fly
Away). She explains 'to Max that
ignoring staff meetings and
showing no i·nterest in promo-

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 271

THuRSDAy

tions pretty much landed him
where he is today. Smart as Max
may be, he can't see that clearly.
Sharp:-eyed viewers who spot
Ron Glass (Barney Miller)
should not get too excited; he's
only in the pilot, shot in Los An·
geles where he ' lives. The series
is shot in New York at Staten Island's Wagner College and at
Brooklyn College.
Though this may sound like a
lot to juggle in one episode, the
pilot does an excellent job of explaining who Max is and how he
got here, which is precisely what
. it is supposed to do.
Just as firefighters must feel
some sense of pride and empathy
when a show such as Third
Watch depicts their bravery and
kindness, college professors ' undoubtedly will cheer a scene be. tween a student and· Max. This ·
obnoxious grade-grubbing student demands Max raise the
grade on her paper so she can get

-- Tearns IO Be Annoooce&lt;!

Never mind that the paper is not
worth more, or that the tenured
professor who has graded thou1_ _sands.ot'papers knO•WS'WIUit-hC"S- ---1- -1•-"'i "--- 1'""-""--dOing. Each time she screams at
- - Maggie- tawaon- stara- a·sEVI!Morrls,- wllo racenuy
ditched her longtime boyfriend for a new, hunky
him, he lowers the grade.
prospect, In /na/da Schwartz, airing Thursdays on NBC.
Dreyfuss, who won an Oscar at
29 for The Goodbye Girl, says he
always has toyed with the idea of
becoming a teacher. And, he also
relates to a man enduring a
midlife crisis.
He recalls discussing the character with the show's creators,
saying, "He doesn't know what
his relationship to women is.
And so they've surrounded him
with women of various relationships."
Harden, who won the best supporting Oscar this past year for
Pollock, clearly is going to torment and captivate Max. And.
viewers who recall the torment
·of sitting through endless classes
need not worry that Max will
spend the entire show lecturing
iri his often abrasive manner.
"This isn't going to ~ just
-&gt;:-~:::::-t';,'- 1 , about him teaching,'" 'Dreyfuss
1',-.!f£--l ·''•.says, ::but about him learning."
Chances are he'll earn an A
••
with audiences - wlth011t gradegrl!bbing.

Producer, writer and comic Larry David (S./nfrJ/d)
atara In Curb Your Enthusiasm, a hllarloua sendup of
airing Sunday on HBO.

one of three daughters of a
former U.S. Senator In
Citizen Saine•, aIrIng
Saturdays on CBS.

----weekly Puzzler Answer _
---

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

'I

TV CROSSWORD

Peter Boyle (Everybody Lov~s
Raymond) was a monk in a
Christian Brothers order before
he decided to pursue a career in
show .business.

The identity of the featured celebrity is
within the
answers in the puzzle. In order to take the TV Challenge,
unscramble the letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
5. Ricardo's portrayer
1. King
6. Series set in Chicago
5. _ Valley Days (19527. Initials for Selleck's well75)
known TV role
9. The _ Steel Hour ('538. _ Boomer(1980-82)
'63)
11 . Either Chaney
· 12. Relations
10. Title role in a series
16. _ Company(197-7-84)
about a lawman
13. Word in the title of
17. Edward and Kitty's
Spade's series
daughter-in-law
14. Teri Hatcher role
18. HostTom
15. _ the Movies ('82-'90)
19. The _ Years (1988-93)
17. Hopper
21 , 4,840 square yards
19. _ Got It Made ('83-'84)
23. Persuade
20. Foreign leader
28. Gerald McRaney's '6 122. Petty officers: abbr.
'66 title role
24. The
Victor Show
30. Field
('51-'54)
33. Mr. Calhoun
25. O'er there
34. Plane letters
26. Miscalculate
35. Egg prooucer
27. Major _ (1989-93)
36. _ People ; '92 Jessica
28. Appear
Tandy movie
29. Jeff and Ira, to Cybill
40. Mex.'s location
31 . Word in the title of
41. Bole on The Nanny
Drew's latest series
42. Monogram for Jayne
:J?. Bole on The King of .
Meadows' hubby
Queens
·
43. _ American Tail ; '86
37. Acuff's monogram
animated film
38. Is obligated
OUIIQ
39. Movin'_ (1974-76)
41. Frasier and Martin
43. Home lmprovemsnt role
44. Actress Kuip
45. Thomas or Kaye

Jim Belushl and Courtney

Ancleraon Cooper returns to reality TV as host of The
Mole II: The Next Betrayal, airing Frldaya on ABC.

I

-, TRIVIA

Thorne-Smith star in the new

family':Oriented .sitcom Accord·
-ing to Jim, premiering Wednesday, Sept. 26. on ABC.
._
Jim (llelushi) is a guy's guy·
who managed to land himself a
heck of a gaL Cheryl (ThorneSmith) is a former jet-setter •
who's settled for the Jets on ••
Monday Night Football - and
an adoring husband.
Kimberly Williams (Father of
rhe Bride, Relativity) and Larry ·
'"" Campbell also star.

0

DOWN

, Academy Award·wlnnlng ector Richard Dreyfual pl1y1 the 11111 role In The Education of Max Bickford. The new l!ourlong
drallll aerln about 1 widoWed, middle-aged profeaaor of American etudlea at a women's college In New York p~emlerea
Sunday on CBS.

\'

•

1. _ Tanner ('74-'75)
2. First word in a soap
opera title
3. Initials for the star of
Mrs. Doubtfire

4. Home of the Elis

�I
'AGE SIX

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORT YOUR COUNTRY! ·

Here's best in wood preservative
BY MoRRIS
AHO JAMES CAREY
FOR AP NEWSFEAl\JRES
Q."What we~ the products
you mentioned on your radio
show for washing and finishing a wood deck and where
can you find them?
.
A. The wood bleach that
we use is called Weather Biaster. The wood preservative

.

CHARMER
-G:J4.80t

. . . more than 15 years now is
I"JIF;.;..Penofin. The same company
makes both products. Their
Web site is penofin.com; their
. . ... .,-...... _,.._..;._::-~-~.
r-:_:~~
phone number : 1-800__...:..._
&amp;&gt;.,,...;:,"'i~a.!'',
PENOf;IN.
REAIIYIEW
The wood preservative is
made with Oiticica (oh-tahsee-ka) oil (rosewood oil), a
vegetable oil that is very thin
'
and has extremely unusual
TOday'S Homes penetrating power. With oil
COPYRIGHT
GARLINGHOUSE
CO.
in wood • the deeper 1t. peneCHARMER {634·6011
OVERALL D1MENSIONS: 38'-4' X36'-0'
trates, the longer-lastmg the
LIVING: 1415 square feet
protection. Don't buy anyFIRSTFLOORPLAN thing with wax in it. When
:.. .... ... ~ .
1001 sa FT

~..._.~

~ - ._

It

-

-

&gt;IASfER SUIIE
IZOX 14'11

-.

8E0;;;;;,;;
3
•zox 10'0

that prevent damage by ultraviolet rays of the sun and from .
attack by mildew.
•••
Q. In putting up crown
molding, I understand there is
a more attractive way to do
corners than mitering. What is
· it? How do you do it?
A. Mitering is the quickest
and easiest way to cut and JOin
moldings at comers where it is
important for the moldm""
.,. to
appear as though they have
joined without a seam. With
mitering, the ends to be

shape of one molding into the
one joining it -an end-toface connection.
A coped cut is best made
with a slight bevel to ensure a '
tight joint at the face of the .
molding. Coping cannot be '
used for outside comers. Here .
a miter must be used. Properly .
cut, a miter is every bit as ;
good as, if not better than, a .
coped joint, especially when ~
the molding is large and has •·
an intricate pattern. We usu- ·•
ally miter.
:

buy an expensive name-brand
aspirin product; or is the generic just as good? - SUE
LANGL Y, Oak · Harbor,
Wash.
DEAR SUE: Inexpensive
aspirin works as well as the
d
al
most expensive bran , so ways buy the least expensive

SE03
'lMC9'
19'7X 13'11
, liN.lTEO ,

... . -.

~

Charmer lives up to its name

approximately the same rate.
Each is absorbed into the
bloodstream to start relieving
pain in about the same length
of time . You can feel confident in buying the bargain
brand.
DEAR QUEEN: We have
quite an extensive collection

ACROSS

91 Fem:efamle
92 Declaration
The cove red porch wit h area.
both a tub and a shower. The
94 Ballyhoo
·
·
t1
1
Courtroom
figure
The ki tc h en 15 convemen Y dormer window provides a
columns and railing sets a tone
Metal
fastener
96 That girl
6
of comfort for this family .designed in an "L" shape with cozy comer area to sit and 1t Cruel
97 Kids·
home with a country touch.
a double corner sink, built-in read a book, or relax and t6 Hike
100 Impair
While e~onomical in size, dishwasher, microwave and meditate.
21 Chinese, e.g.
101 Engage In
22
there are no sh01tcuts in style many other extras that make
With all the various features
Talk on and on
swordplay
23 City in Maine .
104 Sadness
A
bl
k
or function. From the porch an amena e wor area.
available for the Charmer, it 24 Love
105 Resign
of the Charmer (G34-601), back door has been added off · lives up to its name. The two- 25 Emotional pains
106 Kindled
guests enter a large living the kitchen for easy access to a story look of this 1,415 square 28 Kingly
107 Kind
room with a vaulted ceiling, usable rear porch and to the foot home can be enlarged 27 Fish-eating mammal
108 Was brave enough
28
Steadfast
110 Inlet
oversized double windows, a b aTekhyar d ·
d
with the addition of a 1,007 29 Ripen
112 Small shelter for
.dormer window, and hearth
ere are two sec on ary square foot optional basement. 30 Not talking
birds •
fireplac~ The abundance oLbedrooms on the first floor. :Fot-a..Study- plan,- induding--31-Fiatfoot- - - - --"'.3-NappedJeather
light, space and warmth of this They are both comfortably scaled floor plans , elevations, 33 Fabric for suits
116 Cookout locale
inviting room makes it a nato- large with sizable windows sections and an artist render- 35 Stopped fast1ng
118 Bee housing .
·
d
d
k 38 Roman despot
119 Bird of pray
' ral gathering place for family and closets. They share a full mg. sen $24.95 to Lan mar 38 Frosl
12o Calm
and friends.
bath that contains a step-sav- Designs, 33127 Saginaw Road 39 In favor of
122 Family member
From the open living'room, ing laundry area located be- E., Cottage Grove, Ore. 40 -de Janeiro
123 Diswnce measure
traffic easily flows to the din- hind folding doors. A linen 97424. Please specify name 41 Writer Deighton
124 Attorney
42 Visage
I 25 Have on
ing and kitchen :ireas. The closet for both bedrooms and (Charmer) and the name 44 Circus performer
127 President Hoover
dining room, with a wonder- the bath is locatep in the hall- (G34-601) . A catalog featur- 481diot
129 Heart
ful bay window, is as perfect way, making towels and sheets ing hundreds of home plans is 51 Fund-raising event
130 Jet letters
for a morning cup of coffee as easily accessible.
available for $12.95, or save 54 Grow dim
133 FOOd fish
it is for family meals and en- An attractive, open stairway by ordering both for $29.95. 55 Andy's friend
135 Strange
·
h
d
1
1
d
h
c:
•
11
57
Greek
letters
136
.
d
F
1
tertaining. or mmg on t e with a han rai ea s to t e For ,aster processmg,_ ca
- 81 Zodiac sign
137 Crone
Recipe amount
lighter ~ide, serve small snacks private second floor master 800-562-1151 or VISit our 62 Lengthy
141 Ear: prefix
and casual meals on the pen- suite. This room features a web site at www.landmark- 63 Cheapskate
t42 Group of singers
insula counter that doubles as sloped ceiling, a large walk-in designs.com.
65 Freshman at
144 Youngster
an eating bar or preparation closet and a full bath with
Annapolis
145 Not well-done
66 'Elk
146 Spring
•
•
67 "Christmas Carol"
147 Last

Some of year's top tool1nnovat1ons ~~~=~gp~s

Bu1lders Show and the Inter- can clamp down on an item 73 Part of NATO
AND MORRIS CAREY
national' Hardware Show. in Jess than 2 seconds and 74 Burden
· h
t t
f75 Cal. abbr.
FOR PP NEWSFEATURES
Tools, tools everywhere! This w1t
over 1-quar er- on o 77 Macaroni shape
When we were kids, our year was no exception when it fori::e. The manufacturer calls 79 Muck
it the "quick vise." No, it 80Cirl'clrmatlteam ·
· first stop when we got home oame to tool innovations.
can't be used as an anvil, but 82 Approves . '
from school was - naturally
•••
- the kitchen. Mom always
One cool tool that we with the quick-vise handle 83 F:ondest hopes
. .
.
,
' 85 Dental problem
kept a basket on the counter found at this year's hardware spmnmg IS a thmg of the past. 87 Tiger the golfer
heaped with thin-sliced dark, show was a battery-operated Simply slide the jaw closed, 89 Mongrel
Russian rye bread.
device that the manufacturer turn the clamping dial a half 90 Fragment
A quick search of the bot- refers to as their "multi-tool." turn or so, and you· have
tow drawer of the refrigerator Essentially, this tool does it all, achieved instant grip. And,_
rendered some kind of cheese and it's cordless. What you ·get the quick vise weighs less than 1..-+-+--+-+-find, usually a package of is an ergonomically designed 3 pounds, and thus is .portable.
freshly sliced yellow Ameri- handle that is incredibly easy The flip of a latch on its pase !...+---ican. A piece of super-crunchy to hold and remarkably well re leases the vise from its '
bread _with a slice of cheese balan-ced for one that is so in- mount, allowing you to move 1...-+-+-was our standby afternoon expensive. The. grip reminds it to another location in your
snack.
us of a suitcase handle in that workshop. We feel that this is
Once our growing teen-age it wraps around the user's one new tool tlut will combodies were refueled, we ea- hand, protecting fingers and pletely change how people l.r-+---4-+--+gerly headed for our second knuckles from· little smashes perceive the terln .. vise."
destination - dad's work- and big crashes.
•••
For gardeners, a new a tool
shop. Dad has always reAs usual the handle is what
is
now available that is used t.,-+-+-mained in our hearts as our houses the battery, but that's
fix-it guru, the epitome of do- not all. At the front of the with a cordless electric drill to,
it-yourselfers. He wasn't as handle is a· push- larch system help plant flowers and bulbs in
vocal as Tim the Tool Man that allows thre~ifferent half the time - and almost
but was every bit as enthusias- tools to be attached. The without effort. Hate digging
tic. He had at least one of choices include a drill. a re- but love planting? If so, this is
every . tool ever made, and ciprocating·saw Gig saw) and a the tool for you. It' s,a 6-inch
every one of his tools had its detail sander. You couldn't round metal auger whose sole
own special spot in his work- ask for more versatility in a function is ta"ttrill holes in the
shop.
· compact design. With one ground. The twisted shape
Now th at we're older and contraption, you can cut, makes it self-driving, and that
have come to underst~d hiS sand, screw drill, grind. shape makes the digging much eas- 1=.+-+-fascination with tools, we and buff.
ier. If you like planting, you'll
can't imagine anyo ne who
"'
want to add this one to your b..+--1--1!'!1
loves working on his home
If you regularly use your tool chest. Dad would have.
not having the same intense bench vise as an anvil, you
For more home improve- tn.+-+--+-+-interest. That's why we . have might not find our next offer- ment tips and information, L-....0._,_.....,_,__
so much fun when we get to ing as interesting as we do. , visit our Web site at
attend trade shows like the You can now purchase a port- www.onthehouse.com.
National Association of Home able, plastic bench vise that
•••

BY JAMES

'

L
.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so cents ·September 24, 2001 ·Vol. 52, No. 28

DEAR GORDON: Here .
are some tips to keep your
tapes in tip-top conditiqn.
• Don't ,rewind videotapes ·
.after use. Wait until just be~:
fore playing. 'This flexes th,;:
tape and removes any linger"
ing humidity.
·

DOWN

83

Two~ome

84 Aqtress Farrow

t · lsland country
86 Experienced one
2 Application
88 Lummox
3 Eatery
89 Big cat
4 Joke
91 County, In England ;
92 Wrongly
5 Naval officer: abbr.
6 Evergreen tree
93 Esteem
7 Greek island
95 "Raven• poel
8 Anger
96 Charming and
9 Timemble abbr.
sophisllcated
10 Receive gladly
98 Call
11 Ring
·
99 Bovine animal
12 Museum's contents
102 Short sleep
13 Decays
103 Stuff
14 Look of contempt
105 Bedding Hem
15 Simgl~3!8!!!wf~U!!.I-~-'---'1~09.,_.Stop on a 16 Guy
111 Fractional part
17 'Much - About
112 Cried like a 'crow
Nothing"
114 Moisture
18 Kingly
115 Dlr.letters
19 Jalopy
. 117 Paddle cousin
20 Reddy or Keller
119 C~p handle
30 Domestic pests
121 Apiece
32 Sphere
123 Busybody
34 Well-behaved
124 Theater area
37 Bid
.. 126 Lodger
39 Soft candy
128 Big snake
43 Hirt and Pacino
129 Loving touch .
44 Cisterns
130 Up until now
45 On the - .
131 Set of steps
46 Give off
132 Mixer for gin
47 Most optimistic
134 Ross the singer
49 Energy
I 36 Place of safety
50 Building extension
138 Valuable thing
51 Speeder's undoing
139 Backbone
52 Ridge ·
140 Detests
53 Sclent~lc researcher
142 Cut
· 54·Concentrate
143 Poles
56 Vend
144 Box tops
58 Nomenclature
145 Shankar the altar
59
Concerning
.
player
153 Come to see
60
Run-down
148
Lawyers' org.
155 Excuse
62
Connects
150
GOP
mem.
156 Terminated
157 Roof part
64 Johnny 152 - de vie
67 Drew aimlessly
153 Big shot
158 Name meaning
88.
Not
wide
154 Wrath "peace"
69
Take
legal
action
159 Summary, for sho~
•
160 Speaks hoarsely 71 Guild
76 "The House of
161 Wrecks
Seven-"
162 "For- saksl"
78 Armed conflict
81 Hog

:::~:~:~~!New

www.mydailysentinel.com

AMERICA AT WAR

Bush seeks
to cripple
bin Laden

cooling controversy ~

WEEKLY PUZZLER

CRAWL SPACE OPTION

Meigs County's

•

1
BY LINDA Coaa
one. A study of aspirin found of videotapes. Any advice on ;
I THE QuEEN OF ClEAN (R)
that all brands contain the caring for them so that ther::
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION . same amount of aspirin in last longer? - GORDON_:•
~~I DEAR QUEEN: Should I each tablet, and all clissolve at FRANK, Palatine, Ill.
.

L----...l..-1 .............. ..
12'0X 10'0

joined on each. of the two
pieces of wood are cut at an
angle equal to half that of the
corner angle. For example:
miter cuts at a 90-degree corner would each be at 45 degrees. Coping is the other
technique that some say is
better than mitering. However, coping only can be used ·
for inside corners. Here, a ;

~~~- ;....;:;;"~Counterpoint in

(""if'

:'

you wet a wood surface !hat
has been sealed with wax, the
water will bead beautifully.
UnfortUnately, that beautiful
coat of wax doesn't penetrate
as far beneath the surface as oil
do~s. Worst of all, ·wax evaporates far more rapidly than
does oil - about 2- to 3times as fast.
A good wood preservative

BY ScoTT LINDLAW
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON - President Bush is trying to choke
off Osama bin Laden's money More than half of' Americans
flow as the White House pre- recently polled said they feel
pares for military action and depressed because of .the terrorist
steps up diplomatic efforts to a~acks, and more of them are ·
build an international anti-ter- women than men.
rorist coalition.
Have you felt deprell88d by the
Bush was to sign an execu- terrorist attack on the World
tive order identifYing terrorist Trade Center and the Pentagon?
groups and their operatives Yes
around the world and fre ezing - - - - - · 71%
their US. asSets, national secu- No
rity adviser Condoleezza Rice . . . . 27%
said.
Percent who have
"The president will sign an experienced ...
executive order about financial
... depression
QUEEN CONTESTANTS - Queen of the 2001 Sternwheel Rachael Morris, Chelsea Ray, Meghan Haynes, Amber Snownetworks, really squeezing the ~tJ,Pff!':!:!\MJ 62%
Riverfest will be crowned in ceremonies Saturday at 3 p.m. den and Erica Bryan, was held . Sunday. (Charlene Hoeflich
life's blood out of his organiza79%
on the parking lot stage. Judging of the contestants, from left, photo)
·
tion;· Rice . said Sunday on ·
CNN's "Late Edition." Bin
Laden's group "will ultimately
not be able to function if it
..:iniso
;m:n~ia:
26%
qmnot have access to money,"
:
40%
she said.
· All
·
Bush was meeting Monday Note:The poll of 1,200 was taken Thurlday
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ns.
Meigs County girls ages 16 to 19 torian costuming, they were judged by a ,
with Prime Minister Jean · rhi'OUifl Monday and has an enor margin of
ptus or minus 3.5 percentaQe points, larger
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
' . d to par t'1c1pa
. te m
. t he pane ] of t h ree out-o f.-county .JU
. dges,
,
were mv1te
Chretien of Canada - a key for subgroups.
POMEROY - Five candidates are
c
pageant.
.
. Sherry Bibbee of Athens, Virgima Merally, but one whose leaders and
~ompeting· for-1he·Fitle of queen of2001 ! · fMzes, to , the pageant w~nner~
ritt of New Haven, W.Va., and"Mlrilyn ·· · Citizens felt sriuobed 'in recen - ~j;"~~&amp;?~!P'r:sContar
AP
Stern~heeiRiverfestwiththewinner .to mclude a $1,000 scholarship for the PavlovskyofGalliaCounty. __
--da~
.
_ _ _ _ - -· ___ _
.. .
~~be announced~at-3-p.m:-S-aturday-from- queen-'anaa $500 Tcliolarship- fortheThe 0 t t. ts
· d, d
'fTh
'd
d'd
Cliret1en .'s under crmc1sm
,
,
.
,
c n es an were JU ge on a
e pres! ent 1 not men- fi
I
h
h
the parking lot stage.
runner-up, both from the Umverslty of . 1OO-point scale in five categories: Vic totion Canadian coo eration in rom. some at mme w o s_ay .e
The contestants, all Meigs High R1o Grande.
.
.
,
.
.
P
hasn t been bold enough m hiS
S
da
ii
h
d
'd
nan
costume,
IS
pomts;
commumty/
h1s
address
to Congress on
S·c hool students, are Amber Sno\"den
"
un y a temoon, t e can 1 ates met
h I. 1
.
d .
h d
. ·
h
h response to th e terror attac ks .
15
1
· B ryan, and JUmors,
· ·
M eg
· h an at M organ ,s R est B ed an d Brea kf:ast 10r
" . sc oo mvo vement,
pomts; aca cm1c
T ursda ayh mght.
He was expected to ouer
a:
an d E nca
C
d " d a dt oug ·
. d gmg
. and a recepnon.
. A ttlre
. d m
. v·ICan com,
H aynes, Ch eIsea R ay an d R ac h aeI .M or- JU
p I ease see Queen, A3
f&lt; anad l\ ouse clsIe fA
.
more o f C ana da's F- 18 Jet
orte t ousan o mencan fighters for joint patrols of
air travelers strand ed til ere ati:er
North American skies, along
dual attacks in Washington and with naval support and possible
New York on Sept. 11 · He did replacement of Canadian solpraise Britain, whose prime
diers for U.S. troops in peace-

The mood
of a nation

·-

• wom.n

5 vie for Riverfest queen crown
.wm.

Meigs, Gallia jobless
rates drop in August

FROM STAFF REPORTS
· ment co mpensation . claims
POMEROY
Area statewide was counteracted by
unemployment rates mostly a slight decline in employdeclined in August, with ment, officials said.
reductions in the numbers of
In Gallia County, unemjobless noted in Gallia and ployment was 5.5 percent last
Meigs counties.
month, down five-tenths of a
The news came from the percent from July's 6 percent.
Ohio Department ofJobs and
Meigs County saw a I perFamily Services, which tracks cent drop . to 8.3 percent in
employm~nt in all 88 coon- August. Joblessness was at 9.3
percent in Meigs during July.
ties.
Among surroun d'mg coonOhio's jobless rate was 4.2 ties, Athens was the only one
percent in August, unchanged that saw an increase in un em~
from July, DJFS reported.
A decrease in unemployPlease see Jobless. A3

Hlp: sos
Low: 40s

Toclay's

Sentinel·
o

Please see Bush.' A3

'

'

.

Lotteries

BY EMILY SWARTZLANDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
COLUMBUS - Garrett joined the
. Ohio National Guard for the college
tuition money it offered him. But ·after
packing his bags to prepare for active duty,
attending classes this winter is the last thing
on the 24-yeat-old ai rman's mind..
Garrett is one of the 1,400 members of
the 12\st Air Refueling Wing that are
preparing themselves; their employers and

Pick 3:-8-6-0; Pick 4: 7-3-5-7
Super Lotio: 27-32-39-40-42-48

Kicker: 4-2-1-8-9-8
W.VA.
~[: 23-27-34-39-40 (42) .

c

honored guest at the speech.

Ohio Guardsmen busy preparing for call-up·

OHIO

4

Jninister, Tony Blair, was an

BY BRIAN J. REED
Pomeroy parking lot, and
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
continued to Mizway TavPOMEROY Mem- ern, where music, food and
bers of Meigs County Bik- fundraisers were planned
ers AssociatiOn and other for Saturday afternoon.
bikers clubs in th e region
The bikers were led by
· made an impressive convoy Arnold Priddy of Pomeroy,
through Pomeroy, Middle- . who dons a Santa Claus
port and Rutland on Satur- costume every year, and
day for the association's were led through town by
16th Toy Run.
·
police
escorts · from
Organizers
expected Pomeroy and Middleport.
more than 300 bikers to Kind-hearted bikers from
participate in the run, as far away as North Caroliwhich began · m the
Piease see Toys, A3
'

Oetails, A3

1 s.ctlon - 1 Pllc•s

Calendar
A2
Classjfieds
A6-8
Comics
A9
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
A3
Sports
AS. 10
J.WJ.!e!&lt;!a! !tl!.h!.5eil.r_____~A!l.!.3

Annual Toy Run
draws convoy

2001 Ohio valley Publishing co.

their families for the possibility that they Columbus, said Sundav at the Rickenwill be sent to help with "Operation Inti- backer Air Force Base. " Now it's time to
nite Justice,"the U.S. retaliation m.ission for go."
the Sept. II terrorist attacks.
Th e National Guard did not allow
The unit received authorization Saturday members of the 12lst to give their. last
to be mobilized as part of President l:lush's names for security reasons.
call for a partial mobilization of the · Along with its 484 members, the 121st
Nation"! Guard and Reserve in America's, was authorized to send 18 KC-135 tanker
which mean'S if called to duty it can invol- 'planes to refuel fighters and bombers in the
untarily call 484 of its members to go.
air. The unit's primary task woufc:fbe to
"The trainin·g is done," Garrett, of refuel planes. ·
·
·

.Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy and Education Departments onnoun.ce their First Annual

Respl'r atory Fall Symposiu•
.
.

Tuesday, October 23 • 8:00 am - 4:30 pm ·
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
tlie opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and conc.epts in the respiratory field. ·

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

..

www.holzer.org

Fo,r more information, or to register, call Sandy Moore at

Pu:Zzle answer·on Page 4

\

(740) 446-5919

II

'

'

'\...

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