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ALONG THE RivER

LI\ NG

Building a playground

Travel &amp; Destinations

Syracuse kids have new place to play, Cl

Quiet thrills in the autumnal Blue Ridge, D1

enttnt

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...
....
•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

·-.Ohio Valley l&gt;ttblishing Co.
:~Wildcats fall to Burch in
f!nale. See Page Bl

·

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Sunday, November 8, 2009

$1.50 • Vol. 43, No. 42

·State begins case against Stewart
Proserulor Paul Scar~clla.
Assistant
Special
Prosecu(nr i\1indy Kowabki
GALLIPOUS - Jurv anl.l
Gallia
Count)
selection in the capital mur- Pro~ecutor Jeff Adkjns.
der trial of Walter Stewart indicated intentions to
was comph!ted Frida) and prove othcm ise.
jurors heard opening argu- . The first \vitnc:ss called by
ments along with the testi - the stale was 1\lark Still of
mony of two witnesses prior th.e Rio Grundc Police
to adjournment.
Department. Still was the
Stewart. 77. Welbton. is first law enforcem~nt officharged with two counts of cer to an·ive at the crime
aggravated murder ill con- scene on April 28.
nection with the shooting
He te:-.tified that on his
deaths of Carolyn Merr) v.•ay there he was informed
and John Paul Hollev as by i·adio that the shooter had
well as the attempted nlllr- left the scene. He said the
der of David Merryon April t1rst things h~ noticed upon
28 at the Holley Brothers arrival were two p&lt;irked
Stone Quarry in Rodne)
trucks and a female. lying
• DUJing opening argu- · facedown on the ground .
mems. Stewart':. attorney.
he
first
Still
saitl
. Robert Krapenc. indicated approached a maroon truck
that the shootings stemmed in which Stewart and his
from self-defense. The wife were seated and asked
state. represented hy Special if they were oka) before
BY ELIZABETH RIGEL

ERIGELCMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

approaching the driver's
side of the )&gt;Ccond vehicle. a
silver truck. and finding
Holley s1umpt!d mer inside
with a gunshot wound to the
forehead. though he was
still breathing. ~·
He called for EMS and
returned to the maroon
tn1ck to ask what had happened when Stewart held
out his band. which conrained a ~rent shell casjng.
He then asked i r he had a
gun at which point Stewart
handed him a revolver. handle first.
There was ~ome dispute
as to whether Stewart
retrieved the revolver from
the floorboard of the truck
or from down in the seat.
Still te:stified that he
brought it from within rhe
middle seat. however in his
initial report he wrote that it
was in the noorboard.

He said both doors on
Hollcy"s truck were closed.
though the driver's side
windov~ was down. He also
testified that a J 1 gauge
shotgun wa&lt;; lying next to
~terry.

Srill said when he first
a1Tived on the scene no one
else besides t11e Stewans,
Holley and Merry were
there. bm at !'Om~;; pomt people (not 1aw cnrorcemcnl)
began arriving and he had to
keep them away from the
truck and Merry to presen·e
the crime scene.
to
Still.
According
Stewart made no cffons to
t1ee and they had no trouble
taking him into custody.
The next witness called
by Lhe :;tate was Edward E.
Merry. Carolyn Men-y's
brother.

Please see Stewart, Al

OBITUARIES
Page AS
~Glen Ray Gibson
• Elizabeth J. Huntsman
• George Kemper, Jr.
• Timothy David Kern
• Walton Randall Manley
•.Wyman E. Sheets
'Jacob 'Jake' A. Wilson
'

$~0k

Durmg questioning in
Mitchell
allegedl) confessed to the
local robbery, adntiuing be
canied a rock in a grocery
bag into the Farmers Bank
office and told tellers it was
an explosive device.

Gallia County
VSC, local
schools to
honor veterans
this week

Andrew Carter/photos

BY ANDREW CARTER

•
8imitive Barn now
~en in Gallipolis.
See PageA6

MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County residents will pause
this week to honor and
remember United States
mjljrar) veterans past and
present with the observance
of Veterans Day 2009.
Veterans Day was initially
known as Armistice Day. It
was
established
by
President Woodro.,.. Wilson,
who proclaimed Nov. 11 .
191 9. a~ Lhe first Armistice
Dav in observance of a temporary cessation of hostilitie:. between the Allied
forces and Germany that
occun·ed in the "I Ith hour
of the II th day of the 1J rh
month'" in 1918. The Treaty
of Yersaille:. was signed
June 28. 1919. marking the
oflicial end of World War I,
knO\\ n historically as ''The
Gt'em War."
Th~ name of the obser\'ance was l.'han!red to ,
Veterans Dav b\ an act of
Congress on· June 1, 1954.
and Nov. 11 was declared a
day to honor American veterans of all wars. nor just
World War 1. which was the
primarv
purpose
of
Am1istice Day.
The
Gallia
County
Veterans
Service
Commission is hostine the
annual Veterans Day parade
:.tnd ceremony, beginning at
10:30 a.m. Wednesday with
the parade down Second
Avenue
in
downtown
Gallipolis. P;u·ade units \Vil1
line up at 10 a.m. al the cor-

T easures
French Art Colony hosts
Riverby Mirri-Crafters

WEATHER

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MDTNEWS@ MVDAILvTRIBUNE COM

Details on Page AS

INDEX
.

. 4 SECfJONS- 24 PAGF$

Atound Tm.vn

A3

.

C4
02-4

Comics

ns

Editorials

A4
B Section

@ lW09 Ohlo Vulle)' Publishing Co.

: llllli!IJIJI !1!1!1!1~ I

POMEROY -An Athens
man arrested Friday in
Mississippi
has
been
charged with the Sept. I
armed robbery of the
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. branch in Tuppers
Plains.
Sheriff Robert Beegle
said
Sean.
Bradford
Mitchell. 41. of Schaefer
Street. Athens. was arrested
tn. Ocean Springs, Miss ,
Fnday. for allegedly robbing the Merchants and
Marine Bank there. Beegle
said a customer o( the bank
who witnessed the robbery
followed Mitchell to an
apartment building, where
he was arrested.
Mitchell allegedly used a
handgun in the Mississippi

~fississippi,

The works of the Riverby Mini-Crafters are on display now
through Nov. 28 at the French Art Colony on First Ave. in
Gallipolis. The gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m . to 3 p.m. Saturday and 1
to 5 p.m. Sunday. For details, visit the FAC Website
www. frenchartcolony.org.

sports

REED

before he is set free.~

acine receives
for park. See Page A2
• Halftime restaurant
closes its doors.
SeePageA2
.: Middleport stimulus
projects in state spotlight.
SeePageA2
• Theft-related charges
addressed in Gallia Co.
court. See Page AS

Classifieds

J.

Beegle said law enforcement officers were at the
apcutment complex at the
time. sen ing a warrant in an
unrelated case, and took
Mitchell into custody.
Beegle said the charge of
aggravated robbery filed
Friday in Mejg::. County
Court will serve as a holder
on Mitchell. requiring him
to answer the charge here

'

brations

BY BRIAN

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

robberv

INSIDE
.

TP bank
bandit
nabbed in
Mississippi

•

GALLIPOLIS - Tne Riverby ,\fini-Crafters. a dollhouse and miniarutt's group. will ~hm-e rheir tiny treasures
in the French Art Colony gallt:ries now through Nov. 28.
The Riverby Ivtini-Crafters were organi1.ecl as a result of
a worbhop held at rhe Frcn~h Art Colony in I 99CJ. The
group now numbers approximately one dozen who meet at
the FAC on the third Sunda) of e\'ery month .
The 16th 5howing of the mini-crafters· work features 25
to 30 pieces. including complete dollhouses, numerous
room boxes. scene~ in :suitcase:s, individual mtnimure
pieces and club projects they created together. such .us ··A
Little Something from Europe:·
A small crafts and miniatures "Yard Sak'' and ··t-.t&lt;tke &amp;
Take" tlemon~tration.,.. ill be held from I to 3 p.m . SundaY.•
Nov. 15. giving the public an opporlunit) to watch handmade creations being ~on:,tnu.:ted nntl offenng people a
\.'hance to tmrclwse unique item~ to add to a collection of
their own.
Thi! Riverby Mini-Craf'ters have been involved in many
chantuble events throu~hout the years. including a Llollhousc or miniature SC"lle. traditional!) raffled off during
the mini-crafter e:\hihll at the rrench Art Colunv, and a
dollhousc for thr Ronald McDonald Hou!\c in Hm1tin!!ton.
W.Va.
~
Gallery hour~ are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tue:-.uay through
Friday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. &lt;Jnd I to 5 p.m. Sunday.
The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this program "ith
Stale tax dollars tn encourn!!e economic growth. eclt.u:ational excellence and cullural enrichment for all Ohioans.
(On the Web: French Art Colony, 11'11'\t Jrencharr-

Please see Veterans, Al

colony.org)

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�PageA2
Sunday, November 8,

Racine receives $800k for park
. PI•J)Iir; hoqri'1g

set

B v BETH S ERGENT
BSERGENHI MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE- A pubhc meet. ing has been scheduled from
: 4to 7 p.m on Thursda). Nov.
19 at the Racu1e Municipal
Building to infonn residents
of the S800,000 received by
the ' illage for improvements
to Star Mill Park..
The $800.000 is derived
from federal stimulus funds
released
umler
the
American Ret:overy and
ReinvesLment Act.
The funds are to be u~ed
only for upgrades to Star
Mill Park. According to

Mayor J. Scott Hill. these a chance to comment on and which is approximately
potential upgrades include ask quest10ns about the pro- I ,600-fect long, according
to Racine Clerk-Treasurer
resurfacing of the parking jecl.
lot a~ well as upgrades to
Hill ~aid sale date~:~ for Dave Spencer. wtll provide
the park's entrance, walking bids are scheduled for Feb. the ~ntrance to Home
track
and
drainage 24. 2010,though that is sub· National Bank. Last week.
upgrades. Hill ::-~aid this ject to change .
D.V. Weber Construction
money may potentially be
Racine is ulso nearing Co. of Reedsville was
used for sidewalk construe.,. completion of its extension av.Jrded the bid for paving
tion to extend the walking of Sycamore Street which is Sycamore Streel. Weber's
track at the park to the a project meant to promote btd or $23.215 was awarded
Racine Boat Ramp com- economic development in by the Meigs County
plete with track. lighting.
the village's new commercial Commissioners who conHill said prepared plans district. At this time Home tributed $20.000 tc• the profor the project will be aYail- National Bank is makmg a ject through fund~ it
able for review dunng the $2 million investment in the received from a Community
public meeting which the commercial district to build a Development BlOLk Grunt.
village is hosting along with new bank. A Dollar General
Hill said he hopes the new
the Ohio Department of Store also opened in Syc.-.more Street t·an open
Tmnsportation. Also at the September 111 the distnct.
to traffic this month. weathmeeting_ residents will have
fhe new Sycamore Street. er permitting.

Halftime restaurant closes its doors
B v HOPE R OUSH AND
A NDREW C ARTER
MDRNEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Halftime Sport-;
Bar and Grill in Point
Pleasant will apparently
remam closed pem1anentl).
The restaurant. located on
Vtand St. in the former
Benmgan's location, reportedly closed its doors on
Wednesda)'.
Halftime
Sports Bar and•Grill opened
dming the summer following
the
closure
of

Bennigan 's, which was
owned by Richard K. Rose.
Halftime opened at the
same location on July 31.
Rose also owned the
Halftime located in the
Charleston Town Centre
Mall, which according to mall
management. has been closed
for almost two months.
In July 2008. it wa&amp;
reported that restaurant
chains Bennigan's and
Steak and Ale filed for
Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, and stores owned by
the parent compan) shut

their doors. However. only Under is located in the hasccorporate restaurants were ment or the Lafayette MaU
affected by the closures and on Court Street.
Hughes emphasized that
tbe
Point
Pleasant
Bennigan \, remallled open the Down Under is a totally
because it was a franchise separate operation and has
operation.
no ties L&lt;&gt; Halftime or Rose.
Mike Hughes. who was Gallia County businessman
involved in the operation or Steve Chapman owns the
Halftime Sports Bar and space where the Down
Grill, :-.aid a downturn in Under is housed.
sales was the mam reason
Reportedly. the bar at the
the restaurant shut its doors. . Down Under opened on
Hughes i~ now in the Thursday mght and will be
process of re-opening the open on a limited basis until
Down Under restaurant in the full restaurant is ready
Galllpolis. The Down to go at a later date.

Stewart from Page AI
He testified that he arrived

\\ho Edward said he'd that Stewart had killed
known for about two or Carolyn, shot Holley and
shot at him He said he
which is near the stone yard. three years.
around 5:30 p.m. and was
Carolyn Merry drove thought they were both dead
sHting. talking to his toward the shop in the silver and he was trying to aet a ceil
younger brother David truck, David followed m his phone signal to call for aid.
Merry when they beard truck and Edward began
Edward said David continheavy equipment being driving the slo\.\ moving ued on down the hill to call
operated at the quaiT). He loader up to the shop.
for help and he stayed where
As Edward reached the he was and watched Stewarl.
said they were surprised to
hear it because they didn 't peak, the biggest hill in the He said Stewart walked
think &lt;mybody was sup· quarry. he said he saw David around the truck in a siO\.v.
posed to be over there due to fishtailing off the hill in his deliberate manner to look at
a dispute with Stewart over truck and speeding back to Carolyn and Edward got the
a lease. though some of his \.\here he was on the loader. impression he was checking
equipment was still there.
He said be saw Stewart and ro see if she was dead . He
The two decided to see the two trucks parked dri- then did the same with
what. was going on and ver's side by driver's side Holley and at some poinr
drove over to the stone yard and Carolyn lying on the waved the gun at Edward as
where Edward MeiT)· said ground near the passenger if warning him away before
he s.aw Holley dJiving a side, rear tire of Holley's getting back into Ius truck,
5500 Trojan loader up truck. He said the passenger the witness said.
towards the shop, a building door was open and he could
Edward then testified that
used to store equipment and see Holley slumped forward he saw Stewart's sons. Jack
Carolyn Merry in the dri- in the driver's seat facing and Terry, coming up the hill
ver's seat of Holley's truck away from him: the truck's toward him in a truck and he
near a second loader. They rear glass was broken. He told them they· d better get
stopped to talk to her and estimated that he was up there because Stewart
she asked Edward if he between 150 and 200 feet just shot Carolyn Merry and
would drive the second away from the scene.
Holley. He said they went
loader up to the shop, to
Edward Merry testified up there, talked with Stewart
which he agreed. She said that David Merry pulled up briefly, and then left.
they were getting ready to to him and cold him not to go Stewart then appeared to be
go up and talk to Stewart. any futther. David told him leaving. but he came back
at his mother's residence.

and parked his Lruck dose to
where it had been. Law
enforcement officers arrived
shortly thereafter.
Edward Merry testified
that he could not see the
:.hotgun near Carolyn Merry
from where his vantage
point, though he did say that
it was uwally kept in their
truck to ward off coyotes.
crows, black birds and the
like. He also said that he did
not see or hear any shol!i
fired bv Stewart.
Following Edward's testimony. court was adjourned
for the day. The trial is
scheduled
to
resume
Monday morning around
8:30a.m.

Middleport stimulus
projects in state spotlight
Bv BRIAN

the keynote speaker. She
works for the Veterans Affairs
office.
Raymond "Pete" Kloes. a
World War II veteran who
served in the U.S. AJ.my. is
one of the veterans who will
be honored at URG. Kloes
was stationed in France and
Germany and was later
awarded the Purple Heart.
Washington Elementary
School in Gallipolis will host
a Veterans Day program and
poster contest ac 10 a.m.
Tuesday. All events will be
held at the former Gallia
Academy High School building. located at 340 FoUtth
Avenue. Local veterans and
the general public are welcome to attend the events at
Washiogtnn Elementary.
South Gallia High School

J.

REED

BREEDC MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

~UDDLEPORT - Mayor Michael Gerlach told the Ohio
Governor\ office Middlepo11 was the ··poster child"
economic stimulus programs.
The state's economic recovery website features a . y
about the village's $2.9 mil lion ·award from the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency to address clean drinking water and sewage treatmenl. Mid.dleport also received
a $710.000 interest Cree loan ro complete fundh1g for these
two projects.
"We are the poster child for ~timulu~ fum.ls," Gerlach
said. "We had projects that could be shovel-ready very
quJckl). we applied and were awarded the dollars. We were
so surprised and gratefu l when we were given the news.''
The village will construct a new welL capable of providing 400 gallons of dean drinking water per minute and
replace more than 27,000 feet of water main pipe and 70
valves.
The coM of fire insurance is expected to decrease as 47
new hydrants are installed.
.'
Middleport also received stimulus runds w address its
aging sewage lagoons, ~hallow ponds designed to hold wa&lt;&gt;tewater while treated . A lagoon u~e~ sunlight, bacterial action.
and oxygen to purity water. but Middleport's two ! !-acre
lagoons are not adequate, the state report said. Middleport
.needs to mix or circulate the lagoon water in order to add oxygen and help the gooJ b~:~creria clean the water.
Village Administrator Faymon Roberts is quoted in the
story as saying the electric bill alone for necessary equipment
would have cost the town mor~ than $80.000 every year. ·
Stimulus fundi!lg will be used to bu) and install four
solc.~r-powered m1xers for the lagoons. called SolarB.
One unit alone saves the energy that 20 homes use
reduces carbon dioxide emissions by 150 tons per year.
SolarBees will operate day and night on energy produced
by the sun. The water the Village releases into the Ohio
River will be cleaner than the river water itself.
''This is a gift that will last 40 or 50 years and will benefit our citizens, their children and grandchildren... Fiscal
Ofi1cer Susan Baker told the govemor·s office. ··we could
not have done tllis without the stimulus dollars. We got an
incredible gift."

THANK
YOU
For Your Votes Of
Support In My
Re-election As
Clay Township
Trustee.

Ray Slone

ARISLft&gt;OLA~JR..

IDOL
VOCAL TALSNT
COMPeTl"'lON
NOV.HAT:TPM
WIN PR.rz..es
RS'{IST6R. TDt&gt;A'(

NOV. 2 1 &amp; 22 Dt 7PM
NOV 23at3PM

Patd for by the candidate

Veterans from Page At
ner of Second Avenue and
Spruce Street
World War II veteran Remo
J. Rocchi has been invited to
be the parade marshal. ·n1e
service medals he earned during his military career will be
awarded to him during the
Veterans Day ceremony,
which is scheduled to begin at
11 a.m. at the site of the
Doughboy Monument in
GaUipolis City Park.
Col. John Jackson will be
the keynote ~peake~ for thh
year ·s Veterans Day ceremony in Gallipolis. Col. Jackson
served in the U.S. Army
National Guard and U.S.
Atmy Reserves for 33 years.
Col. Jackson. a lifelong
farmer, former Lutheran
minister and active community volunteer. was inducted
into the Ohio Veterans Hall
of Fame tbis past Friday.
Veterans Day programs
are also scheduled at a local
church, the University of Rio
Grande and three local public schools in Gallia County.
Grace United Methodist
Chmch in Gallipolis will pay
\ribute to veterans and their
families during Sunday
morning services on Nov. 8
and Nov. 15.
All veterans and their famthes families or deceased
veterans and the general pubhe are invited to the 10:45
a.m. service at Grace UMC
for special ceremonies. A
reception for \ eterans and
their families will be held following the Nov. 15 service.
The URG oeremoayx u
scheduled for 1:15 p.m.
Tuesd&lt;ty in the cafeteria located jnsidc the Davis University
Ccmer. Peg Davis from the
River Cities Military Families
Support Community will be

2009

0 '8/eness has

will honor local veterans
during its program. set for 1
p.m. Tuesday at the new
school building. located at
55 Old Hannan Trace Road
near MercerviUe. Keith
Jeffers. executive director of
the Gallia County Veterans
Service Commission, will be
the keynote speaker. Local
veterans will serve as the
Color Guard for the occas10n
and members of tbe South
Gallia FFA will perform a
nag presentation.
River Valley Middle
School invites all local veterans ancl their families to a
Veterans Da\ program
schedulec;l for 10 a.m .
Wednesda.&gt;- at the school 111
Bidwell. Veterans will be
treated to a meal following
the program at RVMS.

the technology
and
the professional imaging team
to serve your healthcare needs.

O 'BLENESS
Memo1·ial Hospit al
www.oblcness.org

THANK YOU
Rutland Township
Voters
for your support!
TIM CALDWELL
Patd tor by the candidate..

THANK YOU
Cheshire Township Voters
:\. '"6·/ or your complimentary votes.
Cheshire Township Trustee

JOSEPH DEAN ROUSH
Paid tor by the candidate

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PageA3

. iunba~ ~im.e~ -ientinel

Su n day, November 8 ,

__
A_s_K_o_I_{.._._ll_R_o_T_H_E_R_s_ _

J

She is afraid of i
roaming packs of dogs

2 009

Gallia County calendar
County Conservatron Club,
6 p.m., Gallia County Gun
Club. Public welcome.
Wednesday. Nov. 11
BIDWELL - River Valley
Middle School Veterans
Day proram, 10 a.m. All veterans and families invited.
Meal will follow program.
Info: 446-8399.
GALLI POLlS Gallia
County
Veterans
Day
parade and ceremony,
10:30 a.m.,
downtown
Gallipolis. Ceremony foilows parade at 11 a.m. in
Gallipolis City Park. Parade
lineup at 10 a.m.
Thursday, Nov. 12
GALLIPOLIS Gallla
Academy High School parent-teacher conferences,
3:15 to 6:15 p.m., at the new
high school. Info: 446-3250 .
·
Saturday, Nov. 14
WILKESVILLE Free
Harvest
Thanksgrving
Dinner, 4-6 p.m .• Wilkesville
United Methodist Church.
Sunday, Nov. 15
GALLIPOLIS Grace
United Methodist will honor
Gaflia County veterans dur·
ing the 10:45 a.m. service. All
veterans. families and public
are invited to attend. Families
with deceased veterans are
encuraged to attend. A
reception will be held for veterans and their families foilowing the service.

Community

events

Sunday, Nov. 8
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS
GALLIPOLIS Grace
United Method1s1 will honor
Or. Brothers: A tev. weeks ago, rhcn:- v. as a horrihk Ga!lia County veterans dur·
event in our communiry: t.\n eltlerl) couple was ~macked hy a ing the 10:45 a.m. service. All
band of feral dogs. Ever since then.! have b\!en at raid to walk veterans, families and public
down our long driveway to get the mail, or to do anything in are invited to attend. Families
. this rural area that involve:,; being nwuy f'rorn Ill) home. 1 w1th deceased veterans are
don't want to have to give up walkin~, biking and gening the encouraged to attend.
mail! What should J dolO keep from tmagininl! pacb of dl)gs
Tuesday. Nov. 10
· at my heels? It's a 11.1raJ area and pretty wild.::_ F.F.
GALLIPOLIS
Dear F.F.: A lot of dogs are unowned m the rural area~
Washington
Elementary
our count!)'. :-.o it ·s not always po:-sihle to talk to the neighbors School Veterans Day proand ask. them to keep their dogs confined . When the dogs are gram and poster contest, 10
strc.t} or femL they are not predictable or sale to upproa1.:h , und a.m., 304 Fourth Ave., (old
~ are usuall) hungry and scm·ed of humans. This is not a good GAHS burlding). All veter~ &lt;.:ombination for anyone who has to u-y to make his or her way
ans and publ!c welcome.
home safeI) should his or her path cross th41! of a pack of clogs.
MERCERVILLE- South
·Even a single dog can kill a human. as I'm sun: )otl know.
Galli a High School Veterans
But there i:&gt; no reason for you to cower at home. A lew pre- Day ceremony, 1 p.m. Gallia
..caurions are in order, though. I would lirst talk to Jaw-enforce- Co. VSC Executive Drrector
ment or &lt;mimal-cont.rol officials - if there arc unv. You want Keith Jeffers, speaker.
[0 get un idea of the extent
the problem in your particular Local veterans serving as
·area. It could be that there are fewer stmv dogs than )OU imag- color guard. SGHS FFA flag
•ine. Why not stan a drive to have the animals spayed &lt;tnd presentatron.
neutered. or to have Jaws put in place to keep animals in their
GALLIPOLIS PERl
yards? The tragedy probably will have :-.purred others to Jo meettng, 1:30 p.m. room
r that. and you could join in and become more empowered lO 503. First Baptist Church,
1
help solve the problem. Walk or bike with some :mimalt'l.:pel- 1100 Fourth Ave. Election of
lent. anti learn the rules of not provoking an anirnnl to attack. officers . 2010 dues may
•This involves standing stilL not making eye conrnct and not ($4.00) be paid .
nning away. among other tips. Soon you will fed colllfOtt~
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
le enough to pick up the mail again, and you will have taken County District Library
eps to lessen the problem in your neighborhood.
Board of Trustees regular
•
•••
meeting, 5 p.m .. at Bossard
• Dear Dr. Brothers: About a month 8JO. there was u hor- Library.
rible accident in which a mother was dri\ in!! drunk and
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
stoned. She kilJed a whole bunch of children and adults Ill
·another car. Ever since then, have bt!en reading all the
1 blogs and news story comments online. and it seems there
• is nothing •vor~e than a driver who dl'inb and enda.r:ger...
children. l mean. people are glad :-.he is dead! l !\OllK'ttnH.&gt;s
take a few Lranquilizers when my kids are driving me nuts.
rAm I a terrible person'! - D.H.
~ Dear D.H.: r think that you are waking up for the first
~ time to the consequences that can come if you are more
:interested in numbing yom~elf to stress than in ensuring the
·•safety of the children \\ ho are your rcsponsihility.
Sometimes it does take a terrible accident for us to look at
.our own behavior amJ question what we are doing. So I am
•glad you have been able to relate the lessons of this acci~ dent to your own life. and not si! in judgment of the driver.
:as some of the people who made comment), on the lnte·met
FOOD STORE
:must be doing. Now is a good time(() examine exactly what
MAIN ST. POMEROY,
•you are Joing, and change it if neces:-.ary.
: You shouldn't be driving or even taking care of young chi I
:dren if you are under the influence of•·a fev. ·· tranquiliLers.lf
;your kids really do drive you craz). that is not an excuse to
·pop a few pills - it is a wake-up call for you to change the
Gthings you are doing as a mother and as someone who should
guiding and directing your children ·s activities. Work on
in~ ...ome structured time. paying attention to the rdationps u1 your children ·s world and taking note of ea~h of their
~interests and talents. If you need to hire a baby siner to get
some free time. do so. And see your doctor about what medication might be appropriate for you on an ongoing basis to
maintain a pleasant moot!. to replace your pill-popping habit:-..
(c) 2009 by King Featllres Synd1care

or

or

I

I

700 W.

740-992-2891

Bradbury.
Gallia-Vinton
ESC, at 245·0593.

Monday, Nov. 16
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy High School parent-teacher conferences,
3:15 to 6:15 p.m., at the
new high school. Info: 4463250.
ADDISON - Free digital
photo book classes at
Addaville
Elementary
School, 5:30·7:30 p.m .. with
instructor Kari LaBella. To
register,
call
Connie

.~

•.,

Marie "Diz" Richards is a
resident of Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis. Cards
may be sent to her in care of
Holzer Assisted Living, 300
Briarwood Drive, room 101,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

ta/lh ?/off.'

~ 1' 1. ..,
I .I)
•

Card Shower

4.J

•.• ' ·:· I

I1' ·~
"" ·.. ·... ~.·

•

1

lJ
~

I ' I~4'
'4

I .IJ
'
~ I 'I~

•!•••

4J

J

We pay tlze de fivery within 50 miles

jFf"'
D

FUR NITURE 151 Second Ave.
GALLERIES

Gallipolis, OH
740-146-0332

'

\t~L

f..~~:J

•O

-~~J

~~

GREAT FOOD AT
GREAT PRICES!!

OH

Mt. Dew • Diet Pepsi

Bone-In Whole

Pork Butt Roast

Pepsi Cola

Monday, Nov. 9
CHAUNCEY - Area 14
Youth Council. 9 a.m.,
Athens County DJFS.
Tuesday, Nov. 10
Bedford
POMEROY Township Trustees meeting.
7 p.m. at the town hall.
Wednesday, Nov. 11
CHESTER Chester
Township Trustees meeting
date
changed
to
a ednesday, 5:30 p.m. at
~nhall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Nov. 9
POMEROY
Meigs
"Band Boosters 6 p.m. in the
high school band room. All
parents, supporters, and
others interested invited to
join in planning band activities.
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club, 7:30
p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center. Election
to be held.
• POMEROY Meigs
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m. Meigs County
Courthouse.
·
Tuesday, Nov. 10
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Center Board of
Directors, 7 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 12

CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge, 7:30p.m. business and annual election of
officers. Oyster stew followrng meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7 p.m. with meal served at
6:30p.m.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Community
Center. Janet Bolin to have
workshop on holiday flower
show
arrangements.
Meeting open to everyone
interested fn exhibiting at
flower show or joining the
garden club .
Friday, Nov. 13
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisor'JVille # 255 0. E. S
103rd annual installation at
7:30 p.m. Pot luck after.

Limit 2 with
additional
purchase

2Uters

Meigs Coun,ty calendar
Public
meetings

e

Hickory Springs
Premium

Jimmy Dean

Pork
Sausage

$

1 lb.
roll

99

-

Sliced
Bacon

Frozen Tray Pack
Skinless
Boneless

Chicken
.
Breast

$199

Angel Soft

s

88
Lb.

Bone In- Whole·
Family Pack

Pork Sirloin Steaks

Bath Tissue

#

e

4 Roll

Internet

Wescott

Folgers

Vegetable

Country Roast

Coffee

sS!!can

S

Oil

J. 9 9
48

~.btl s

Fresh
31b.
Mini Carrots Yellow Onions

Ginger Evans
Self Rising

Flour

Asst. 26-28 oz.

Family Size

Banquet Dinners

59S

Limit 12

Sib. bag

Ea.

Michlgqn Red
DeUdous

, lb.
bag

Prices Good Thru Sal., Nov. 14 while quantities last.

t

• ....

'

..

�----~---~~-~--~-- -

PageA4
Sunday, November 8, 2009

i&gt;unbap ~fme~ -i&gt;tnttnel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

JOBS\

I

'"Er

~CONOtv\Y!

COM~1£~Ct. ~

/

\

www.mydailytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislrme11t of religion, or prohibiting tl1e free
exercise thereof; or abridging tl&amp;e jreedom of speeclt,
or of tl1e press; or tlze right of the people peaceably
to c1ssemble1 atzd to petition tlte Government
for a redress of grievattces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 2009. There
are 53 days left in the year.
Today·s Highlight in History:
On Nov. 8, 1909, the original Boston Opera House first
opened with a performance of "La Gioconda" by
Amilcare Ponchielll,
On this date:
·
In 1859, philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson delivered
a lecture in Boston in which he described abolitionist
John Brown. condemned for his raid on Harpers Ferry,
Va., as "the new saint awaiting his martyrdom."
In 1889, Montana became the 41st state.
In 1923, Adolf Hitler launched his first attempt at seizing power in Germany with a failed coup in Munich that
came to be known as the "Beei"-Hall Putsch."
In 1929. New York's Museum of Modern Art first
opened to the public at its original location in the
Heckscher Building on Fifth Avenue. a day after an Invitation-only showing.
In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated
incumbent Herbert Hoover for the presidency.
In 1939, the play "Life with Father," based on the stories of Clarence Day. opened on Broadway.
In 1942..operation Torch, resulting in an Allied victory,
began durtng World War II as U.S. and British forces
landed in French North Afrtca.
In 1960, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the presidency.
In 1988, Vice President George H. W. Bush won the
presidential election, defeating Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakis.
•
In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans
winning a majority in the Senate while at the same time
gaining control of the House for the first time in 40 years.
Ten years ago: Israeli and Palestinian negotiators
launched landmark talks. giving themselves an ambitious 100-day deadline to craft the broad outlines of a
peace agreement. Former President George H.W. Bush
was honored in Germany for his role in the fall of the
Berlin Wall 10 years earlier. President Bill Clinton participated in a "virtual town hall meeting'' on the Internet,
answering questions from prescreened online users.
Five years ago: Thousands of U.S. troops attacked the
toughest strongholds of Sunni insurgents in Fallujah.
Iraq, launching a long-awaited offensive aimed at ending
guerrilla control of the city. The U.S. dollar was eliminated from circulation in Cuba. Jason Bay became the first
Pittsburgh Pirates player to win the NL Rookie of the
Year award.
One year ago: Indonesia executed three Islamic militants for helping to plan and carry out the 2002 Bali
bombings that killed 202 people, many of them foreign
tourists. An accident on a Russian nuclear submarine
undergoing a test in the Sea of Japan asphyxiated 20
people on board. Florence Wald, a former Yale nursing
dean whose interest in compassionate care led her to
launch the first U.S. hospice program, died in Branford,
Conn., at age 91.
Thought for Today: "Religion Is an attempt, a noble
attempt, to suggest in human terms more-thanhuman realities." - Christopher Morley, American
author-journalist {1890-1951).

Forgotten battle ofWorld rntr II
Goldstein. The Americans
stationed there "kept the
Every Veterans Day pre- Japanese from the West
sents an opportunit} to Coast and from invading
commemorate those who the U.S. mainland .... from
served in some faraway a strategic point of view.
place long ago, many of ym• can't underestimate the
whom paid that ultimate' situation there. Look at a
sacrifice. World War II map! The Aleutians aren't
offers its share of remem- very far from Seattle:·
brances: Pearl Harbor,
In
the
Aleutians ~
December
7,
194 J: Amencan troops battled
Normandy, June 6. 1944: not only the Japanese. but
the Battle of the Bulge. debilitating weather and
December 16_ 1944: to boredom. To combat the
name a few.
fierce and unpredictable
Sadly. however, one williwaws, soldiers leaned
series of battles continues forwnrd as they walked.
before falling on their faces
to be ignored.
On June 3, 1942, the as the winds abruptly
Japanese bombed Dutch ended. They battled bhndHarbor, located at the ing. waste-deep snow.
Aleutian Islands, west of dense fog. sleet that felt
the Alaskan peninsula. like a sandblaster.
Three days later. they landTo escape the climate.
ed on the islands of Kiska troops spent hours inside.
and Altu, culminating in The boredom was so bad
the only barrles of the war that some drunk anything
fought in North America. Lhey could find. There were
Many of the men there stories of casualties from
•·torpedo juice." Morale
went through hell
Remarkably. the battle is was awful.
barely known.
"War is boredom mix.ed
One person who has not with moments of stark terforgotten is renowned ror." says Goldstein. ''You
World War J1 historian, sit and wait. And then all at
Donald
Goldstein. once it comes.''
And when it came to the
Goldstein.
a
retired
University of Pittsburgh Aleutians. It came with
professor. authored one of ferocity. Shortly after
Lhe only books on the cam- bombing Dutch Harbor. the
paign,
called
the Japanese took Attu and
"Williwaw War.'' named Kiska. Thirteen months
for the freezing. high- later, in Aue:ust 1943.
velocuy winds flowing American forces sought to
from Siberia and the drive them out. Kiska was
Bering Sea, which made easy. since Japanese forces
service in the Aleutians a had bailed oul two weeks
constant misery.
earlier. Attu. however. was
. "It was strategically very another story.
1mportant who controlled
Attu was taken back only
tho~e
islands."
says after a horrible fight. Japan
BY DR. PAUL KENGOR

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limtted to 300 words. All letters are
subject to edtting, must be signed and Include address and telephone
number, No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You~ letters
will not be accepted for publication.

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Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is to be
acctJrate. II you know of an error tn a
story, please call one of oor newsrooms.

Our main numbers are:
il:rtbunt • Gallipolis, OH

(740) 446-2342

Sentinel •

Pomeroy, OH

(740) 992-2155
:Rrgtstrr • Pl. Pleasant. WV
(304) 675·1333

.Qiu websltes are;
ll:nbune • Gallipolis. OH

www.mydallytrlbune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy. OH

www.mydallysentlnel.com
l\r!Itsttr • Pt. Pleasant, WV
www.mydallyregister.com
Our e-mail addresses are:
ll:nbunt • GaHfpolls, OH

mdtnews@mydallytrlbune.com
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l\cau~trr • Pt. Pleasant. WV
mdrnews@mydallyreglster.com
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every Sunday, 825

•

Third Avenue, Gallipolis. OH
45631 . Periodical postage paid
at Gallipolis.
Member: The Assoctated Press,
the
West
Virginia
Press
Assoctation, and the Ohio
Newspaper Association
Postmaster: Send address cor·
rections to the GallipoliS Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

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fought to the last man. get over it."'
Facing
defeat,
500
Still. getting over it wa.'&gt;,
Japanese soldierl&gt; commit- not that easy. Andrew died
ted suicide with their own in October 1966 at age 54.
grenades. Whereas Dutch
A SlLn ivor who outlived
Harbor witnessed fewer Andrew
was
Leonard
than 100 casualties, C.S. Levandoski of Wllkesburial patrols at Attu count- BatTe, Pa .. a member of the
ed 2,351 Japanese bodies. 11th Fighter Squadron.
Total U.S. casualties were who spent two grueling
3.829 - 549 killed. Some years at Attu.
believe it was the bloodiest
A few years back. while
battle of World War ll.
writing for a newspaper. I
And yet. few Americans tried
to
track
down
have heard of the battle. Leonard on a tip from lhe
Notes Goldstein: ··Even [at Department of Veterans
the timej there was hardly Affairs: ·'This guy is per-:
any press coverage. If you fecr for you to interview,''
a~k. most people today
~aid the press person
where Attu is they have no ''Every year he writes letidea .... It's forgotten."
ters-to-the-editor trying to
Do the veterans of this get people to remem.
campaign feel neglected?
what happened. He'II W
''Oh.
;es.''
sa) s thrilled to get your call..,
Goldstein. ''They're bitter.
When I called, Leonard's
These guy" never got the
wife. Geraldine. answered.
credit they deserve."
"Who IS this?" she said
Many of the unrecognized survivors suffered slowly. When I gave my
and
purpose.
premature dearhs once they name
Geraldine
began
to cry.
got home. One was Andrew
''Leonard
just
passed
Boggs Coven, a taU. lanky
away."
she
told
me.
"He
fellow who had worked at
Pullman
Standard
in waited years for someone
Butler. Pennsylvania prior to call."
Many of those veterans
to the war. Boggs found
htmself drafted into the have now passed away. The
Marines Corps as a 30- years have slowly faded.
year-old with seven chil- with no one calling about
dren. His surviving son, the Aleutians. It is about
Jim. recaHs riding to time we remember.
(Dr. Paul Kengor is proPittsburgh to sa} goodbye
je'isor c?( polifical science
to his father in 1942 . .
It was not a pe1manent a11d execurit·e director ofThe
goodbye. as Andrew sur- Center for Vision &amp; Values
vived the brutal combat. at Grm·e City College. His
"He told me about some of books include "Tize Judge:
the hand-to-hand stuff." V.7lliam P. Clark. Ronafd
says his son today. "11 was Reagan Top Hand" and
traumatic. But he was mat- ''Tize Crusader: Ronald
ter of fact: 'Do it. take care Reagtm and the Fall oj
of it. serve your country. Communism ,")
•

s

�'

Sunday, November 8, 2009

~unbap t!I:imrs -~cntin£1 •

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

'Obituaries

Deaths

nmothy David Kem

Wyman E. Sheets

• Timothy David Kern. 50. Middleport, Ohio. passed away
'on November 3. 2009. at hi:, home. He was born on Januarv
30. 1959. in Pomeroy, Ohio son of David Kern of Sterling.
Va .• and the late Wanda Sellers.
He is survived by his, daughter, Rebecah Kern of
, Ohio: father. David Kern of SLerling. Va.; sis, Rhonda Hess of Ponlund. Qhjo. and Carol (Ron)
bertson of Elyria. Ohio: nephew, Michael DePue of
Portland. Ohio
In addition to his mother. he was preceded in death by his
!)tep-father. Darrell Sellers and Grandmother Ball.
He was a member of the Mercy Mission in Chester, Ohio.
Private services are under lhc direction of Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home. A registry i~ availabie on-line at
W\Vw.ander:-.onmcdaniel.com.

Wyman E. Sheet~. 90. Gallipolis, passed away on
Thursday, Nov. 5. 2009, at his residence .
The Celebration of Life service will be at I p.m ..
Saturday. Nov. 14. 2009, at the Chlist United Methodist
Church with Pastor Kandt 'fuce and Pastor Jim Lusher ofliciating.
Friends ma} call from noon to 1 p.m. prior to the servic~.:.
A full obituary will appear later in the TrihuJ!c.

I

I

George Kemper, Jr.
. George Kemper. Jr.. 87, of ~allipolis. passed away
.Saturday. November 7. 2009, at ht.., residence.
: George was born on March 7. 1922 in Gallia County
:to the late George Kemper. Sr.. aud Ethel Josephine
·Haner Kemper. He was a retired Stock Pile Operations
~oremnn for the go' ernment al General Service
:Administration in Pl. Pleasanl. W.Va. He wa!:&gt; an L .S
:Army World War 11 Veteran: a lifetime member of the
•Amcncan Legion Lafayette Post 27, the AtvfVETS and
·the DAY.
: George was married to Helen Trene Mooney Kemper and
~he preceded him in death on March 15, 2001. Also pre:ceding him death were his parents, George and Ethel
:Josephine Kemper. Sr.: five brorhers, Raymond Kemper,
;charles Mills Kemper. Thomas Kemper, Kyle Kemper and
John E. Kemper
e is survived b) a son Ronald L. (Marge) Kemper of
lipolis. a grandson Ronald L. (Shelley) Kemper, li of
mton, three great grandchildren Timothy Lee Kemper,
Chase Allen Kemper. and Hayden Cole Kemper. Also surviving ts one Sister Mary Jo (Sonny) Chandler of Gallipolis
and a brother Gordon (Betty) Kemper of Gallipolis, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m., Monday, November 9.
2009, at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Bill Thomas officiating. Burin! will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.
Friends may call on Monday from 1 p.m until the time
of the services at Willis Funeral Horne. There will be full
military rites at the graveside by volunteers of area veteran
lodges.
Please visit www.willisfuneralbome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Walton Randall Manley

.

: Walton Randall Manley, 95. Reedsville, Ohio, passed
away on November 7. 2009, at his home. He was born on
May 18, 1914. at Pitty Me, Ohio, son of the late Corbet
Manley and Gay Rice Manley.
: He was a Master Mason and attended Middleport.
Harrisonville. Pomeroy/Racine and Shade River lodges. He
wa~ a member of the Athens County Shrine Club and an
Ambassador to the Alladin Temple. He was very active for
any years collecting alluninum to benefit the Shriners
spital and the St. Jude Hospital for burned and crippled
•
ildren. He was a Meigs County Deputy Sheriff for many
years.
He is survived by his: wife, Ruie Manley of Reedsville;
children. Jim (Kay) Manley of Brecksville, Ohio, Janet
Manley of Columbus. Carol (Phyllis) Manley of
MiddleP.ort, Ohio; step-children. Jack Stewart of
Reedsville. Sam (Cathy) Cover of Huntington, W.Va ..
James (Suzanne) Stewart of Dale City, Va; and many
grandchildren. great-grandchildren and great great-grandchildren.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in death by his
first wife, Susan Manley and his borthers and sisters.
Funeral services will be held on Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport. Burial
'will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens. Visiting hours will
be held on Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home
with Masonic serivces at 7:30p.m.
•
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Jacob 'Jake' A. Wilson
Jacob "Jake" A. Wilson. 27, Hartford, W.Va., died unexpectedly Thursday. November 5, 2009, at home. He was
born July 8. 1982, in Gallipolis, Ohto. a son to Thomas E.
and Sheryl Smith Wilson of Pomeroy, Ohio.
He wa~ a home bealth care giver and employed at WV
oice of Huntington, W.V.a.
esides his parents he is survived by his wife Angela
•
dson. and her -children Jeremiah Conley and Wesley
Jones, both of Hartford; brother Joshua Adam (Dawnya)
Wilson of Gallipolis: sister Abigail Wilson of Columbus,
Ohio: and several nieces and nephews, aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held on Monday, November 9,
-2009, at l p.m. at the Hillside Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
'Ohio. with Dr. James Acree, Sr., officiating. Burial will be
,in the Meigs Memory Gardens Pomeroy. Ohlo.
1
Friends may cal] from II a.m to I p.m. at the church on
Monday.
1 Deal Funeral Home is servicing the family.
Please visit dealfuneral @suddenlinkmail.com to send
condolences to the family.

Elizabeth 'Betty' J. Huntsman
. Elizabeth "Betty" J. Huntsman. 78. Bidwell, Ohio and
·formerly of Zanes_ville, died at noon. Thursday Nov. 5.
;2009, at the Holzer Senior Care Center in Bidwell.
! She was born January 21, 1931. in Gallipolis. Ohio. to
:the late Benjamin and Nellie (Reynolds) Frankljn.
• Betty attended Sharon Ave. Free Methodist Church and
:was a longtime member of Eastern Star Vinton Chapter No.
:375.
: Surviving are her son&amp;. Robert Dale Huntsman and
Norman (Sandy) Huntsman of Mesa, Ariz .. and James
.
arlene) Huntsman of Baltimore, Md.: nine grandchildren
.
d tive great grandchildren: a s1ster, Ruth (Clarence) Hash
,of Bidwell.
In addition 10 her parents. she v. as preceded in death by
:her step-mother, Nell Franklin. a sister. Mary Pt!gg: and
:brothers. Robe11. James. John and Bill Franklin.
' Graveside services will be held at II a.m .. Monday
:November 9, 2009. at J'vlemorial Park Cemetery Zanes\ ille
!with Pastor Steve Neville officiating. Bryan and Snider
:Funeral Home have been cntru~ted with an-angements.
: To shari! memories &lt;tnd condolences with the Huntsman
•family, visit Betty's memorial on-line registry at
:www.Bryan$ niderFuneralHome .com.
: Condolences from the site will be printed and bccoml! a
;part of the family's guest registry.

Cilen Ray Gibson
Glen Ray Gib.sun. 60, Henderson. W.Va .. died Thurstla}.
1
No'&lt; 5, 2009. after a long illnes!).
Service will be at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8. 2009, at Dl!al
Funeral Home with the Re\. Joe Nott Officiating. Burial
will follow at the Sycamore Valley Family Cemetery. on
Three Mile Road. Henderson .
Friend.s mav call on the fami1\' from noon until the time
of service Sunday.
·
Please visil dealluneral@suddenlinkmail.com to send email condolences.

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
Sunda} ...~unn}. High&amp;
around 70. South ~ inds
around 5 mph.
Sunday nigbt...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 40s.
Southeast v,.•mds around 5
mph.
Monday...Sunny. Highs
in the upper 60s.
Monday night ...Partty
cloudy
in
the
evening ...Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 40s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.03
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 61.25
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 35.45
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.07
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.17
BorgWarner (NVSE) - 31.84
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-8.99
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.85
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.86
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.27
Collins (NYSE) - 51.51
DuPont (NYSE~ - 33.38
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.73
Gannett (NYSE) - 10.52
General Electric (NYSE)- 15.33
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 25.73
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.48 .
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.27
Limited Brands (NVSE)- 18.18
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 52.07

.

""

...,

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. {NAS..
DAQ)- 21.45
BBT (NYSE) - 24.47
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.46
Pepsico (NYSE) - 61.76
Premier (NASDAQ) - -6.17
Rockwell (NYSE) - 43.32
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.31
Royal Dutch Shell - 60.33
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 67.65
Wei-Mart (NYSE) - 51.25
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.45
WesBanco (NYSE) - 13.10
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.79
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 5, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Theft-related
charges addressed
in Gallia Co. court
BY ELIZABETH RIGEL
ERIGEL@MYDAILYTRIBlJNE COM

GALLIPOLIS -1\lost of the indictmeJits recemlv i:-.sued
in Gallia County Common Pleas Court include theft-related charges ranging from aggruvated robbery lo r~ceiving
stolen property.
Indictments recently unsealed include:
• James A. Roberts. 23, 120 State St.. Gallipolis, has been
charged with one count of aggravared mbbl!ry fur allegedly having a gun, displuying the weapon. brandi'&gt;hing it. and
indicated that he posse;-;sed it in uttempting or committing
a theft offenl&gt;~? on or about Sept. 27. A gun specification
was adtled to the charge.
According to court records. Roberts allegedly gmbbed
the victim by the neck in the parking lot of fJalll1ill's Bur.
while co-defendant Joseph A. Collins removed lm wallet
from hi!&gt; pocket. Roberts then fled the scent! and while
being chased by a witness lifted his jacket nnd ..,howcd that
he had a gun. He was &lt;m·ested upon his return to shore after
jumping into the rh·er.
Robens pled not guilty to the charge and was released on
his own recogniL.ance under a $50,000 bond v. ith an additional bond set at.;., 1.500 ten percent secured.
His jury trial is scht.!duled for April 19.2010 .
• Collins. 25.763 Ohio 141. Gallipolis. has been charge&lt;.l
with one count of complicity for allegedly aiding and abetting Roberts in committing the aforementioned aggra\ ateu
robbery on or about Sept. 27.
. Collins pled not guilty to the charge and wns released on
h1s own recognizance under a $50.000 bond along with &lt;In
. additional'bond set at S 1.500 ten percent secured.
His jury trial is scheduled for April 7. 2010 at 9 a.m.
• Dustin Lee Fellure, 25,34 Left Fork Road. Bidwell. has
been charged with one count of burglary for allegedly trespassing in the residence of Vera West with purpose to commit a criminal offenl&gt;e on or about Aug. 30.
He pled not guilty to the charge and was relea&lt;;ed on his
own recognizance under a $15.000 bond v.irh an additional bond set at $1 ,500 ten percent ~ecured.
His jury trial is scheduled for April 8, 2010 at 9 a.m.
• Troy McDaniel. 43. 1770 Fairfield Church Road.
Gallipolis, has been charged with three count~ violating a
prOtection order for allegedly recklessly violatine the term'
of orders issued on or about Sept. 28. Oct. 14. and Sept. 2 I.
the said McDaniel having been &amp;reviously convicted of
violating a protection order in a Z 06 Gallipolh Municipal
Court case.
McDaniel pled not guilty to the charges and was
released 011 his own recognizance under a S I 5,000 bond
with an additional bond set at SJ ,500 ten percent secured.
His jury trial is scheduled for April 6. 20 I 0 at 9 a.m.
• Kyle Wolfe. 20. I 195 Centenary R9ad, Gallipolis. has
been charged with one count of receiving sLOlen property
for allegedly receiving. retaining. or disposing of a I 987
19-foot Wellcrafr boat and a Mercury 460 165 hp bout
motor. property of Twin Rivers Marina on or about Aug.
18, the value of sa1d property being more than $500 or less
than $5 .000.
Wolfe pled not guilty to the charge and \\aS released on
his own recognizance under a $5,000 with an additional
bond set at $1.500 ten percent secured.
His jury trial is scheduled for April 12.2010 at 9 a.m.

Local Briefs
Grace UMC to
honor local
veterans
GALLIPOLIS - Grace
United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis will honor Gallia
County veterans during its
10:45 a.m. service on Nov.
8 and Nov. 15.
All veterans, theit families
and the publtc are invited to
attend. Families of deceased
veterans are also inviLed.
A reception will be held
for veterans following the
Nov. 15 service.

Post 4464
November
family night
canceled
GALLIPOLIS - VFW
Post 4464 has canceled its
family night planned for
Tuesday. No·... 10. For information.
contact
Keith
Jeffers at 446-2005.

6:30p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 17
at Holzer Medical CenterJackson. For information,
call446-9840.

Veterans Day
observance
POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39 will conduct its annual observance
of Veterans Day at 10:55
a.m. Wednesday at rhe
Meigs County Courthouse
in Pomeroy.
Commander
Tom
Anderson and members of the
post invite everyone to honor
the veterans of all wars by
attending the observance.
This year marks the 9lst year·
of the original Annistice Day
of World War I in 1918.

Clyde Evans (R-Rio Grande)
will be holding open door
public meetings for constituent) in southern Ohio.
The meetings will provide
an opportunil)' for the generaJ
public to discuss their views
and opinions with Rep. Evans
on stare government tssues.
The following meetings
will be held at the following
times on Monday. Nov. 9: ~
• 9 a.m. - GaJlia County
Courthouse. in Gallipolis
·
• 1 p.m. - Public Library

Rep. Evans to

in Oak Hill, in" Jackson
• 3 p.m. - Community
Building in ~lcArthur, in
Vinton Countv
All are "welcome and
encouraged to attend.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.
The Sunday Times-Seminel
Subscribe today
446·2342 or 992-2155

tJvtcCoy-Moore
Punera[ t]{omes
Servi11g Our Communities for O-ver 100 Years
Herb. /ran. lmrd. Mel!. .rt1 ¢?'ion\loqrr.- Dirprtoq

hold meetings

420 ist A,;nuc, GaUipuJit&lt;,
(7~0) .W6-0!'t52
208 Moaln Street, \'inh•n, Oll • ('740) JIUl-~321

OH •

COLUMBUS - StateRep.

"Ask me about the

TB clinic

AARPAuto
Insurance Prog am

office closed
POMEROY - The TB
Clinic office w11l be closed
for Veterans Day. Nov. II.

Library trustees
to meet Nov. 10
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallia Counti District
Library Board of Trustees
will hold irs regular meeting
at 5 p.m. on Tuesday. No\'.
J0. 2009. at Bossard
Memorial Library.

1

. ..

Tuesday...Partly sunny
with a 40 perl:enl chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
60s.
Thesday
night
and
Veterans·
Oav ...Partly
cloudy. Lows around 40 .
Highs in the mid 50s.
Wednesday night through
Thursda~·
night•..Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 30::;.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Friday.•.Mo~tly sunny.
Highs around 60.

Page As

SEOEMS board
meeting
rescheduled

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THI
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JACKSON - The n:gular SEOEMS District Board
of Trustee!:&gt; meeting .scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 10
has been rescheduled for
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PageA6

i&gt;unbap~(me~ -ientinel

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Middleport benefit
scheduled for Tuesday .
By BRIAN J.

decoration&amp;. to be placed at
Dave Diles Park and the
freight depot. and the
Farmers Bank Park on
North Second Avenue.
The annual Middleport
Christmas parade wi ll be
held at 4:10 p.in. on Dec. 5.
with lineup at 4 p.m.
Poochie Brewer is the
parade chairman.
Gerlach said there are
some program changes this

REED

BR~ED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Andrew Cartet/photos

Shannon McMahan. above left, is co-owner of the Primitive Barn located on Ohio 160
north of Gallipolis. Also pictured is Jante Nibert. Below 1s one of the "Grinch" trees available during this Christmas season at the Primitive Barn.

Primitive Barn now open in Gallipolis
B Y ANDREW C ARTER
,_. MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

GALI.:lPOLIS
Amanda
. Brown and Shannon McMahan
are lifelong friends li\ ing the
dream of a lifetime - owning
their own business.
"It's both of us watching our dreams
come true,'' McMahan s.:'lid. "I can't
explain the feeling. It's wonderfuL''
Brown and McMahan are coowners of the Primitive Barn.
located next to Haffelt"s Mill Outlet
on Ohio 160 north of Gallipolis.
The Primitive Barn opened its
doors on Oct. 19 and celebrated its
grand opening on Saturd a).
"We've always just loved everything to do with primitives and
crafting, so we both got to the
point where we could afford to just
Jump into it, get our feet wet and
see how it went," McMahan said.
McMahan said the shop is carrying
"-Grinch., trees for the Christmas season and specializes in anything
"prim."

The Primitive Barn is open from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m.
Sunday. The phone number is 4468600 .

MIDDLEPORT - Bob
Evans Restaurant in Mason.
W.Va .. will host a fundraising event to beneftt the
Middleport
Community
Association and orher organizations in the community
Tuesday.
Those who present a
coupon at the restaurant
from 4-8 p.m. -will help the
association raise funds for
prizes for holiday drawings.
and for donations to the
Meigs County Council on
Aging.
tbe
Mulberry
Community Center and the
Middleport Church · of
Christ's Christmas Day dinner.
That dinner is hosted
annually for those who
might otherwise not enjoy a
Christmas dinner.
Traditionally. the association has asked Middleport
retailers to donate prizes for
the holiday season drawings. but this year, plans to
buy them. That.Association
President Debbie Gerlach
l;aid, will help retailers in a
difficult economic climate,
and reward their year-long
support of association
events and activities.
Bob Evans will donate J5
percent of its sales between
those hours to the association. when a coupon is presepted. Coupons were
inserted in Friday's The
Daily Sentinel. and Gerlach
said association volunteers
will be at the restaurant to
distribute them. too . so anyone arriving at the restaurant during those hours wiJJ
be able to participate.
Gerlach said the association is moving forward on
purchasing new holiday

year. The annual tree-light.
ing ceremony sponsored b
the M1ddlepon Ministerial
Association will be held
prior to the parade. at 4 p.m.
on the ''T."
The association will spon"10! free carriage rides in the
vtllage from 3 to 4: 15p.m.,
and Santa Claus will be at
Peoples Bank following
parade for free photos and
refreshments.

Guarding Angels Chltdcarc Center Is

hosting o 8reokfost with
Santa, Cr4ft Sale &amp; Tour of HOUta
for the Chrfdm45 Seaon. The Event
wlU toke pte~ce on

December 5th from Scsm to 8pm.
The breokfoet will be $6.00 for adult
end $3.00 for children 12 end under.
Th kid wiU otto be able to get their
plcturc~t taken with Sonto.
The touf'fi wHI tart at 6pm csnd wltl
cover the Rt. 160/Vfnton oreo. The
T1
lck ta for the tour will b $10.00 ptr
per on. If you oro Interested In o toble
to el l croft or If you Gre on
lnd p@ndent ol rtp., they ore $25.00
each or 2 for $40.00. PI 1011 cot I 3888671 to r ~ rvc your pace end oak for
Tofiha or 1-fae~thor. W will be giving

cswoy an @Xtrovogant f@ttlve door prize.
htdp

So bring your fomUy ond
~ c l@broto the birth ol our
L.ord ot1d Savior.

..

~

.
II

..

II

"•

Pre-owned Specials at ·
E ST

."'....••

www

ithsuperstore.co

1900 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, OH ~
-~--~
---

Local740-446-2282
Toll Free 1-877-446-2282
•

EE

.,'

"

•
••
•
$

'~

.·

-

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litside
TOe OVP Scoreboard, Page B2
~~nkees t·etebrate in NYC, Page 83

PORTS

G~lipolis MFL, P~e BS

~EEKllPREP
.OTBALL GAMFS

White Falcons playoff bound after win at Buffalo Big Blacks
beat Tigers
BY SARAH HAWLEY

Friday's Results
Wahama 58, Buffalo 22
P9int 48, Champanville 20
Burch 54, Hannan 20

GAMS
"'

7TH GRADE BOYS
BASKETBALL

• All

gentlemen that are to
p_articipate in the upcoming
7-th grade basketball squad
at Gallia Academy Middle
School are to attend a meet
ing Monday. November 9.
at 3:30 p.m. The meeting
will take place at the gymnasium
at
the
Elementary/Middle School.

2009

FOOTBALL STATISTICS
NEEDED

... GALLIPOLIS
All
Qhio varsity football coaches in Gallia and Metgs
. ties are asked t? ~ubmit
ar season statistics •
both offense and defense from their respective teams
to
the
Ohio
Valley
Publishing spm1s department for district consideratlOns.
Alon~ ~ith the stats.
please mclude the heights.
weights. posnions and class
of each nommee - as well
as an order of recommendation for possible selections.
Submissions should be
mailed to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. c/o Bryan
Walters. 825 Third Avenue.
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Statistics may also be
emailed
to
bwalters@mydailytribune .c
om or sent via fax to (740)
446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must be received
bdore 5 p.m. on Tuesday.
Nov. 10 for consideration .

Sunday, November 8, 2009

MOSSPORrS@ MVOAILVSEN nNELCm~

BUFFALO. W Va - The
Wahama White Falcons (~ 2) clin~hcd a playoff spot
with a 58-22 victory over the
Buffalo Bison. Wahania
will have to wait umil early
next week ro find oul who
thier tournament opponent
11. ill be, and the location of
the game .
.
Wahama earned the VICtory Friday with 468 y&lt;trd
mshing effort. with the
majoriry of the yards comi1lg
from Micaiah Branch and
Unlike the
Rvan Lee.
Wahama offense, Buffalo
focused most of their
offense on a strong passing
game mostly on the arm of
Levi Jordan.
Wahama scored early in
the first quarter on an eight
yard run hy Branch. with the
extra point kick by Tyler
Kitchen. Waham wa:-. up 7-0

less than two minute into
the game.
Bumtlo answered ' 1 a
touchdwon of their , • on
un II yard pass I rom
Cameron Jonefi to Jarrt:tt
&lt;;mith. A two point conversion run by L~vi JorcJan gave
the Bison a one poinL advantage
Wahama
quid..ly
answered with another score
bv Branch. thb one from 31
yitrds out to make the score
14-8 following the Kitchen
extra point ktck.
With just under four minutes left in the first quarter,
Buffalo ~cored again. this
time on a two vard run bv
.Jones. Joseph r\1oore added
thl' two point run to give the
Bison the twn point advantac.e.
Elijah Honaker added a
third Wahama touchdown in
the first qua11er of play, with
10.7 ~econds left. running it
in from 13 yards out. Ryan

Lee adJed the two point
conversion run to give the
Whirc Falcons the lead 2216 at the end of the first
quarter.
The second quarter went
:-;cureless umil the 6:24 mark
when Bn11kh intercepted the
Jordan pass. returning it 28
yards for the touchdown.
The Wahama two point con·
version allempt failed leaving rhe White Falcons ahead
by a ~core of 28-16. The
remainder of the second
4uarter saw neither team
make it to the end zone.
The third qua1ter began
\Vith what would b~ the final
touchdown for the Bison. a
three yard run by Moore.
\Vith a failed two point conversion allempt. Buffalo
trailed 22-28 after the score.
Wahama handed the ball
off to Branch for two third
quarter scores. The first
came on a nine vard run with
6:55 remaining: and the sec-

ond on a 38 yard run at the
I :55 mark. Branch added
the two point conversion.; on
hoth touchcJowns. Wahama
had doubled up the score on
the Bison. leadin~ 44-~22 at
the end of the th1rd quarter
of play.
The fourth quarter saw the
White Falco11 offense put an
additional I 4 points on the
board. Anthony Graham
added a 1wo yard touchdown
run just 46 seconds into the.
linal quarter of play, with
Lee adding the two point
conversion run. Wahama
made a final trip to the end
zone with ·7:47 remajning 1n
the fourth quarter as Lee ran
the ball 24 yard for the
score. The two point conversion attempt failed leavin!! the White Falcon~ ahead
by¥ a 58-22 advantage.
Wahama was led in rushing by Branch who had 284

Please see Wahama, 83

Wildcats falls to Burch in season finale
BY BRYAN WALTERS
SWALTERsO MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ASHTON. W.Va. - For
the second consecutive vear
on the gridiron. Han n'an 's
offense posted a season
high in points against
Burch.
Unfot1unately for the host
Wildcats on Friday night.
their defense couldn't quite
keep pace \\ ith the offense •s
output during a 54-20 setback to the Bulldog~ in the
Week 11 regular season
finale for both clubs in
Mason County.
Hannan (0-10) churneu
out 28~ yards of total
offense - includmg 254
mshing yards on 57 carrie~
- en roure to scoring a season·best three touchdowns
in the finale, bur the
Bulldogs (5-5) extended the
hosts· current losing streak
to I4 straight after producing a whopping 429 yards of
total offense.
BHS - which lost to
CINCINNATl (AP) Ray Lewis took aim and a Hannan in Week 5 last year
delivered a jan·ing hil by a 36-6 margin - quickly
intended to do more than made sure that a repeat outbreak. up a pass. fn his bruis~ come did not occur at
ing style. the Ravens line- Wildcat Field on Friday.
backer was trying to wrap establishing a 36-8 adv&lt;mtage at the intermission.
upaY&lt;in.
Didn't work out that wav. More impressively. the
When Benga1s receiver Bulldogs needl:!d just a
Chad Ochocinco - one of dozen offensive plays in the
first half to churn out 269
Lewis' lom!time friends srn.acked the ground and
lost his tiger-striped helmet.
a yellow flag landed at the
point of impact. The high
hit drew a 15-yard penalty
that aided Cincinnati's drive
DENVER (AP) - The
for a last-minute touchdown
and a 17-14 win in show do\\ n beL ween Lhe
Pitlsburgh Steelers and
more last month .
Broncos
on
ocinco wasn't down Denver
f6t ong, popping to his feet Monday night feature~ two
in a mauer of seconds. By of the AFCs top teams. a
cO.ntrast. the Ravem (4-3) couple of the hardest-hitare the ones trymg to get ting defenses in the league
back up as they head into and a pair of the NFL's
the rematch Sunday against brightest young coaching
the Bengals (5-2), who have minds.
a two-week window of
Hired when he was 34.
a~ortunity to take control Mike Tomlin won a Super
&lt;1! the AFC No1th.
Bowl in just his second
·.::-They·ve got a lot on the ~eason in Pittsburgh last
Hue. but we've got a Jot year after guiding the
UiQre on the line:· Bengals Steelers to u division title
~arterback Carson Palmer and a playoff berth in his
first season.
:ta.~d.
'
: Cincinnati's win on Oct
He is ~0-13 since replac U completed a stunning ine Bill Cowher in 2007.
SJt:etch. The Bengals ran off including 5-2 this season.
three straight wins over
Like Tomlin, Dell\'el··s
cfi'vision opponents Josh McDaniels never was
Pittsburgh, Cleveland and a head coach at any level
J3altimorc - by pulling out before he was hired at age
games with last-minute dri- 32 to replace Mike
v~s. In Baltimore. Palmer Shanahan la:&gt;t winter. His
led the Bengals 80 yard!&gt; Broncos are 6-1 and rhe
with the help of three biggest surprise of the first
Ravens
penalties
that half or the
~enson.
mted for 30 yards and McDaniels' deci:-.ion to
pJe of tirst downs.
send Pro Bowl paso;er Jay
•'
When he found Andre Cutler to Chi~agu for Kyle
Caldwell open for a 20-yard Orton or to ship his firstrouchdown catch wilh 22 round draft pick nexl year
seconds left. the Bcngals to Semtle don't look likt:
were atop the division. They such cra:t,) ideas anymore.
can take control of it by
Both
Tomlin
and
beating the R~1vens and then McDaniels say the opporwinning in Pmsburgh (5~2) tunity to coach u superst&lt;~r
next week. leaving them 5-0 during their days as an
in:division play.
assistant &lt;H.:cderated their
'
careers and prepared them
· Please see 8engals, 84

'fengalscan
take control
of AFC North

Bryan Walters/photo

Hannan's Robert Warth carries the ball during Friday evening's contest against Burch.
Hannan's Christopher Smith helps to block on the play as Burch players Jacob Butcher
(44) and Austin Dempsey (52) go for the tackle.

yard:-&gt; of total oifen~e and,
that comfortable 28-point
halftime margin.
The Wi Idears ..,.. ho
dres1)e&lt;.l only 14 players for
rhe Senior Night contest never led in the conte~t and
never came closer in the
second half. despite a touch-

down apiece in lhe third and
fourlh cantos. The loss also
wrapped up a winless 2009
campaign for the Blue and
Gold. their first since the
2004 campaign.
Burch estahlishecJ an eady
8-0 advantage \.\ ith 6:17
remaining in the first quar-

ter following a 37-yard
scoring run by Thomas
Crum. Tbe guests then came
up with the only turnover of
the mght just I :07 later as
Mikie Burke picked off a
pas-. b) HHS 4ll&lt;1fterba&lt;.:k

Please see Hannan, 84

Steelers-Broncos pits 2 bright young coaches

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_

_,_ .......

- - ..

-

for the rigors of an NFL
head coaching job \Vhile
they were still in their
early or mid-30s.
For Tomlin. that player
was safety John Lynch,
whom he instructed as
Tampa Bay·s defensive
backs coach. his first NFL
gig. Together. they v. on a
Super Bowl ring in 2002.
For McDaniels. il was
New England quarterback
Tom Bradv, whom he
tutored from 2004-08.
They won the 2004 Super
Bowl when McDaniels wa~
Patriots
quarterbacks
coach.
·
"Tom is the hardest pia)'er r ve ever had to coach.
and ·that"s a compliment to
him, not a knock on him in
any ~~.ay:· McDaniels said.
.. He was the hardest
because he required the
mo:-.1 information and he
required me to use every
minute thai I had to spend
with him in a productive
way.''

McDaniels
woulc..ln L
cJnrc rry to fill up an hourlong meeting with 30 minute.; of instructjon. So. he
never went home the n1 eht
before unlit he was certi:un
he hacJ enouuh new le:-~on
plans for BT;\dy. a notoriAP photo
&lt;His hookworm and film Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker LaMarr Woodley (56)
ramfreak.
bles into the end z.6ne after recovering a tumble by
McDaniels said all lhat

Please see Steelers, Bl

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre and returning it
77 yards ror a touchdown In the fourth quarter of an NFL
football game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Oct. 25, 2009.

BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

CHAPMANVIL LE.
W.Va.
The Point
Pleasant Big Blacks offense
dominated
the
Chapmanville Tiger~ last
night in a manner not seen
sine~
Coach
George
Custer's men played at
Little Big Hom Stadium.
The lOlh rated Big Blacks
rolled up some 468 total
yards en route to a surprisingly easy 48-20 win over
the 12th ranked Tigers in
the regular season finale for
both teams.
To illustrate JUSt how
dominant the Btg Blacks
were. consider the following. Point had 9 offensive
posse~sions in the game.
The 9th was the final possession of the contest and
lasted just one pia)' when
quarterback Eric Roberts
took a knee to end the game.
Their 5th possession also
was a one-play drive and
ended when Brandon Toler
was intercepted on a halfback option pa!:&gt;s. ON ALL
OF THEIR OTHER POSSESSIONS IN THE FOOTBALL GAME. THE BIG
BLACKS SCORED A
TOUCHDOWN. No Lh1s
was not a typo or a misprint.
The Big Blacks scored a
touchdown on 7 of 9 offensive possess1ons in the football game and didn't even
try to mn their offense on
their final possession. That
means they misfired on just
one possession.
A look at the statistics for
the game shows Point
rushed for 34-l yards on 42
carries. an average of 8.2
yards per carry. The Big
Blacks were 6 of 7 through
the air for another 124
yards. Nathan Roberts led
the rushing attack with
another huge night -- 265
yard~ on just 23 carries and
three touchdowns. Chris
Blankenship added 48 yards
on 9 carries and a score. and
Jerrod Long looked good -rushing for 32 yards on 8
carries and a score. Nathan
Roberts added another
touchdown on a 65 yard
screen pass from brother
Eric. while Toby Martin tallied the other Point Pleasant
rouchdown on a 6 yard
touchdown toss from Eric
Roberts.
'"Our offense
really
clicked tonight.'" said PPHS
Head Coach Dave Darst.
"Our offensive line is gettine. better each week.
Nathan had another big
game and I thought Jerrod
Long ran very well. l know
1 sav this each week. but
Eric- Roberts had probably
his best ..~arne of the season
Lomght. w'e are playing with
so nJUch confidence right
now and these guys just
want to get better. Thev are
having fun and so are the
coache:&gt; ." added Darst.
Actually. this game didn't
start our so well for the
locals. Chapmanville took
the opening kickoff and put
to~ether an 8-play. 70 yard
dnve that resulted in the
game·!&gt; first touchdown.
Passes on their tirst two
plays g&lt;lined 21 yards and
big Todd Terry tool... care of
the rest. gaining 46 of his
I 14 yards in the opening
drive. Teny capped the relatively easy scoring drive
with a 17 ) art! touchdown
run.
After those first three
minutes. it was all Point
Pleasant. For the rest of the
half it went like this -touchdown. punt. touchdown. punt, touchdown .
punt. touchdown. punt.
Fortunarel) for the locals.
the\ cot the best of this
exchange. All of those
touchdownl&gt; belonged to the
Big Blacks and all of the
punts belonged to the
Tigers. Nathan Roberts
scored the first three touchdo\\ ns -- one on a 43 yard
1Un. one on a 65 yard screen

Please see Point, 84

...

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�Page B2. • ~unbm&gt; t!rintrS -:%&gt;rntind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, November 8, 2009

The Ohio Valley Publishing Scoreboard

Same frustrations for
Newman after Talladega

0:17

PREP FOOTBALL
Friday's Boxscores

Wahama 58, Buffalo 22
• Wahama
Buffalo

22

Hi

6 16 14 0 6 0 -

58
22

Scoring summary
First Quarter
W-Micaiah Branch 8 run (Tyler
Kitchen kick) 10:09
- 8-Cameron Jones 11 pass to
Jarrett Smith (Levi Jordan pass to
Sm•th) 6:38
W-Banch 31 run (Kitchen kick)
5:30
B-Jones 2 run (Joseph Moore
run) 3:46
W-EiiJah Honaker 13 run (Ryan
Lee run) 10.7
Second Quarter
W-Branch 28 Interception return
(two point attempt railed) 6:24
Third Quarter
8-Moore 3 run (two point attempt
failed) 10:07
W-Branch 9 run (Branch run) 6:55
W-Branch 38 run (Branch run)
1:55
Fourth Quarter
W-Anthony Graham 2 run (Lee
run) 11;14
W -Lee 24 run (two point conversion failed) 7:47
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

w

B

18
45·468
74
542

13
25-76
254
330
13-38-4
4-3
33·30

4-8-0
3-2
5-50

Individual S1atlstlcs
Rushing: W-Micaiah Branch 17284, Ryan Lee 18-163, Anthony
Graham 4-38, Elijah Honaker 3-9,
Crandol Neal2·(·7), William Zuspan
1·(·19).
B-Joseph Moore 7-69, Cameron
Jones 7-27, Dustin Reed 2·12, No.
31 H·l)Levl Jordan 8·(-31).
Passing: W-William Zuspan 4-8·0
74.
B-Levl Jordan 11·32·4 200,
Cameron Jones 2·6·0 54.
Receiving: W-1Yier Kitchen 4·74.
B-Joseph Moore 5-144, Cameron
Jones 5-33. Chris Jividen 1·34,
Jeremiah Hartwell 1-13, Jarrett
Smith 1-11.

Burch 54, Hannan 20
Burch
Hannan

22 14 12 6 8 0 6 6 -

54
20

Scoring summary
First Quarter
B-Thomas Crum 37 run (Mikie
Burke pass from Ryan Hatfield)
6:17
B-Crum 4 pass from Hatfield
(Dakota Dempsey run) 4:32
H-Robert Warth 13 fun (Brad
Fannin run) 2:29 •
B-Crum 29 pass from Hatfield
(Bryan Cantrell pass from Hatfield)

Second Quarter
B-Crum 7 run (pass failed) 3:31
B -Crum 35 run (Jacob Butcher
run) 0:03
Third Quarter
a-Butcher 11 run (run failed) 8:45
H-Fannin 47 run (pass failed) 5:53
B-Trevor Woolum 37 run (kick
blocked) 4:52
Fourth Quarter
H-Jared Cobb 6 run (run failed)
4:46
8-Messer Steven 54 run (run
failed) 4:27
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
•
Pen~lties-yards

8

H

12
20-329
100
429
5·9-0
0·0
9· 75

14
57-254
29
283
4-71
2·0
6·25

Individual Statistics
Rushing: 8-Thomas Crum 6-191
Messer Steven 3-62, Trevor
Woolum 2-40. Jacob Butcher 3-20,
Dakota Dempsey 3-13, Kyle King 14. Ryan Hatfield 2-(·1 ).
.
H-Robert Warth 23-99, Daniel
Reynolds 10-95, Brad Fanntn 10·
36, Jared Cobb 13·33, Jerry Diaz 1•
(·8)
Passing: B-Ryan Hatfield 5·9·0
100
H-Brad Fannin 4·7-1 29.
Receiving: B-Dakota Dempsey 139. Thomas Crum 2-33, Jacob
Butcher 1-1 9, Jacob Stratton 1·9
H-Daniel Reynolds 3·23, Jared
Cobb 1-6.

Point Pleasant 48,
Chapmanville 20
Pt Pleasant 14 14 13 7 Chapmanville 6 0 8 6 -

48
20

Scoring summary
First Quartet
C-Todd Terry 17 run (kick failed)
8:58
PP-Nathan Roberts 43 run (Brock
McClung kick} 5:13
PP-Nathan Roberts 65 pass from
Enc Roberts (McClung ktck) 2:23
Second Quarter
PP-Nathan Roberts 5 run
(McClung kick) 10:22
PP-Jerrod Long 1 run (McClung
kick) 4:04
Third Quarter
PP-Nathan Roberts 28 run
(McClung kick) 9:41
c- Terry 3 run (Terry pass from
Josh Easterling) 5:01
PP-Toby Martin 6 pass from Eric
Roberts (McClung kick) 1:18
Fourth Quarter
PP-Chris Blankenship 13 run
(McClung kick) 4:52
C-Terry 9 run (pass failed) 0:26
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards

pp

c

25
42-344
124
468

17
43-210
73
283

Comp-att-int
Fumbles lost
Penalties-yards

6-7-1
0 ·
9-60

9·14-0

0
7·50

Individual Statistics
Rushing: PP-Nathan Roberts 23265, Chris Blankenship 9·48. Jerrod
Long 8·32, Derek Pinson 1·0, Eric
Roberts H-1).
C-Todd Terry 22·1 14. Jake
Robinson 10·102, Trevor Payne 312, Jacob Browning 1-5. Zach
Maynard 1-2. Josh Easterling 6-(25),
Passing: PP-Erlc Roberts 6·6·0
124, Brandon Toler 0·1·1 0.
C--Josh Easterling 9·13-0 73, Todd
Terry 0·1-0 0.
Receiving: PP-Nathan Roberts 2·
80, Derek Pinson 2-28, Toby Martin
2-16.
c-zach Maynard 3-34, Nick
Conley 1-17, Craig Johnson 1-12.
Todd Terry 2· 10.
OHIO SCORES
Division 2 Region 5
Quarterfinal
Ashland 28, Chesterland W Geauga 7
Canfield 31, Aurora 14
Mentor Lake Cath. 34. Ravenna 16
VtJarren 1-ioYAand 28, Mecina Highland 21
Division 2 Region 6
Quarterfinal
Avon Lake 56, Maumee 35
Maple Hts. 36, Tal. Rogers 26
Tol Cent. Cath. 35, Rocky River 7
Tot St. Francis 35, N. Ridgeville 7
Division 2 Region 7
Quarterfinal
Brool&lt;haven 27, Walnut Ridge 20, OT
Cols. Marion-Franklin 14, Louisville 7
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange
28, Dresden Tri-Valley 21
Logan 30, Canal Winchester 7
Division 2 Region 8
Quarterfinal
Cin Turpin 44, Wilmington 21
Winton Woods 59, Hamilton Ross 7
New Carlisle Tecumseh 55. W.
Carrollton 23
Trotwood-Madison 41, Mt Healthy 6
Division 3 Region 09
Quarterfinal
Akr. Hoban 14. Parma Padua 11
Hubbard 30, Medina Buckeye 14
Poland Seminary 38, Akr. SVSM 14
Youngs. Mooney 42, Mogadore F'~eld 14
Division 3 Region 10
Quarterfinal
Cols DeSales 45. Bryan 21
Cols. Watterson 26, Bellefontaine 0
Napoleon 28. Cols. Eastmoor 14
Tlpp City Tippecanoe 34,
Sandusky Perkins 6
Division 3 Region 11
Quarterfinal
Canal Fulton Northwest 28,
Rayland Buckeye 20
Dover 42, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 0
Salem 38, Granville 31, OT
Steubenville 34. Alliance Matlington 26
Division 3 Region 12
Quarterfinal
Cin. Wyoming 34, Eaton 32
Logan Elm 28. New Richmond 12
Monroe 12, Chaminade.Jullenne 7
~pring. Shawnee 28, Goshen 7

Division 5 Region 17
Quarterfinal
Columbiana Crestview 20, E.
Palestine 14
Cuyahoga Hts. 28. Apple Creek
Waynedale 7
Gates Mms HawXen 14, Independence 7
Youngs. ursuline 28 Garf1eld Hts.
Trinity 0
Division 5 Region 18
Quarterfinal
Defiance Tlnora 45, Sherwood
Fairview 6
Hamler Patnck Henry 41, Nonhwood 14
Jeromesville Hillsdale 33, Ashland
Crestview 23
L1ma Cent. Cath. 49, Hicksville 0
Division 5 Region 19
Qusrtertmal
Fredericktown 47, Caldwell 7
Oak Hill42, Coal Grove 14
Lafayette Ridgewood 36, Minford 1
Wheelersburg 52, Woodsfield
Monroe Cent. 42
Division 5 Region 20
Quarterfinal
Anna 20, Cols. Ready 17
Coldwater 41, Hamilton Badin 0
St. Henry 28, Richwood N. Union 3
W Liberty-Salem 3, W. Jefferson 0

o

w

WEST VIRGINIA SCORES
Bndgeport 53, North Marion 15
Brooke 14, Musselman 13
BuCkhannon-Upshur 35, Elkins 12
Burch 54, Hannan 20
Cabell Midland 24, Hurricane 7
Calhoun County 14, St. Marys 12
Cameron 13, Valley Wetzel 6
Capital 28, Huntington 20
East Hardy 33, Petersburg 0
Ervinton, Va. 42. Montcalm 14
Fairmont Senior 31, East Fairmont 6
Frankfort 35, Hampshire 33
George Washington 54. St. Albans 29
Gilbert 30, lug Valley 0
Hedgesville 28, Be~eley Springs 27
James Monroe 42. Summers Co. 0
Jefferson 24, Washington 0
Keyser 41, Mountain Rid~e. Md 14
Uberty Raleigh 34, VVyom1ng East 12
Madonna 28 Clay-Battelle 2
Magnolia 25, Gratton 3
Meadow Bridge 40, Big Creek 0
Moorefield 17, '!Ygarts Valley 0
Nicholas County 42, Preston 6
Oak Hill 40. Mount V1ew 17
Parkersburg South 48, John
Marshall20
Pendleton Co. 36, Bath Co., Va. 35
PikeView 68, Midland Trail 14
Poca 36, Tols1a 6
Point Pleasant 48. Chapmanville 20
Princeton 49, Woodrow Wilson 6
RappahanhocK County, Va. 36.
Hundred 14
Richwood 68, Gilmer County 26
Ripley 10. RavenswOOd 7
Roane Co. 32, Ritchie Co. 13
Scott 32, lincoln County
Sherman 26, Mount Hope 19
South Charleston 45. Riverside 6
Spring Valley 34. Winfield 13
Tucker County 48, Philip Barbour 22
Tyler Consolidated 40, We~r 10
Valley Fayette 42. Williamson 14
Wahama 58, Buffalo 22
Wayne 34, Logan 14
Wheeling Central 36, Unsly 35
Williamstown 28. Parl&lt;ersburg Cath. 14
Wirt County 48, South Harrison 20

FORT WORTH. Texas
(AP) - Ryan Newman is
still sore and frustrated from
Talladega
What frustrates Newman
more than anything after his
harrowing crash with five
laps remaining last weekend
is thai it's the o;ume kind of
situation he \Vas concerned
about after the last race at
Talladega six months earlier.
·'It's very ironic situation
.. living out the things T was
fntstrmed about ftrstl1and six
months later:· Newman said
Friday at Texas Motor
Speedway. ··r want it to be
safer because 1 plan on being
there in the spring.racihgjust
the same. trying to win that
race:•
On the last lap of the previous race at Tallal.lega in April.
Carl Edwards was trying to
block Brad Keselowski when
their cars made contact.
Edwards then spun into
Newman ·s path, and the second hit sent Edward~· cal'
soaring over Newman·s hood
into the air and the
frontstretch safety fence. The
battered car returned to the
track while debris injured
seven fans in the stands
Last week. Newman was
left upside down in the grass
and was trapped inside the
car for almost 15 minutes
before safety workers were
able LO cut him free.
Newman. who made it
clear that he ··wasn't dissatbfied" with the way he was
removed from the car. said he
met
Wednesda\'
with
NASCAR vice president of

o

a

competitiOn
Robin
Pemberton and Sprint Cup
Series director John Darby.
talked about the extrication of myself from the
accident and. secondly. the
reason why we were in that
position in the first po··
·which to me was m
important,'' Newman sa .
"From an aerodynamic stand
point. obviously our biggest
thing is just to keep the cars
on the ground."
Newman described the
meeting as "good'' and "very
constructive·· and said he
learned about some testing
that had been done, but that
more testing needs to be
done. He said thev talked
about the car and lie shared
his perspective on a few
things.
So what needs to happen
before NASCAR returns to
Talladega next spring?
"There are for sw·e things
that could be done and should
be done ba&lt;:ed on what we
saw. both Mark's accident
and my accident and the
:-.prin&lt;&gt; accident with Carl,"
said Newman, adding that it
needs to be a coUective effort
by ~A SCAR and the teams
to find solutions ...Six monthS
is plenty of time to m~
those changes:·
Regardless. Nev. man loo
forward to gettinfo back into
the car at the
l/2-mile,
high-banked Texas track.
..After last weekend, it will
be nice to get back in the car
and use some muscles I
haven't all week:' Newman
said .

··we

Robert Vance
Would Like to Thank
All That Supported Rim

In The

Scipio 'rownship
Paid for by the candidate

The hunt for camouflage that fools prey
GLENVILLE. NY. (AP)
- Covered in his old forest
camouflage. Steve Balser
proved he's nearly invisible
to humans. His hunting partner walked within 25 feet
and didn't see him.
"I'm just not that sure
about deer:· Balser said .
His suspicions are backed
up by scientist!) who have
:.tudied the sensor) advantages deer have over
hunters. Hence the continuing quest for slrategies and
camouflage that wilJ lip the
odds in hunters' favor.
Balser's pants. jacket. hat
and mask all have brown.
gray and green patterns that
resemble the autumn hardwood forests of upstate New
York. While he can also sit
qutetly, the longtime outdoorsrnan is pretty sure that
his human smell is a dead
giveaway to wildlife, despite
garments meant to conceal
that as weU,
Researchers studying animal vision and behavior say
that pre} have certain evolutionru) advantages in perception, triggering their
decisions to run or hide.
Scienc.;e·c;
understanding,
based on both biological
analysis and behavior. isn't
complete, but it supports
. several hunter theories,
mcluding that superior sense
of smell. which deer use to
communicate . find food and
avoid predator~.
'The most important thing
1s to watch the wind. ..
Anything downwind doesn't
exist lo vour nose." said Dr.
Karl Miller, a professor of
wildlife ecology and management at the University of
• Georg1a, And while deer
·probably hear only a little
:better than people, in the
higher frequencies, they
have a better sense of unusual sounds and large external
ears that help them localize
. the :,ource, he said.
Scientists say you also
have to appear initially to be
something that's not a threat.
That led to modern camou11age. evolving from red
·and black checked coats that
broke up a hunter's silhouette lO clothing patterns that
mimic the fields and forests,
to raggedy suits that resem: ble a fluttering leaf and
·brush pile. to digitally
designed clothing meant to

fool a deer's eye into seeing
nothing recognizable at all.
"Based on some very preliminary stuff we've done.
deer don't see quite as clearly as we do:· said Miller.
who is also a hunter. "Thev
don't see 20/20. That's not
their purpose to see
detail. Their purpose is to
see movement."
That. said Miller. coauthor of a 2008 paper on
the visual specialization of
white-tailed deer, is something they do very we 11.
"They have a harder time
identifying an object, buL a1)
soon as you move on a deer.
it busts you ... he said.
The¥ also see far better
lhan people in dim light and
have a larger pupil. Like
dogs and horses. they have a
reflective layer behind the
retina that causes light to hit
their photoreceptor rods and
cones twice. With big eyes
on both sides of their head
that don't constantly move
like human eyes. they have a
300-degree tieJd of vision.
giving them an advantage in
detecting motion even at the
periphery. Miller said.
In their 2005 paper in the
journal
Equine
Ophthalmology. researchers
Paul Miller and Christopher
Murphy identified the vision
issue for prey animals. processing a vast amount of
information for the Important bits that require attention.
"A critical aspect of vision
is that an object (a wolf, for
example). is identified as
separate from its surroundings (dense vegetation),"
they wrote. "Because this
distinction is so important
for
survival.
animals
(includin~ humans) with
normal v1sion. can 'see' an
object if it differs sufticiently from its surroundings in
any one of five different
aspects: luminance. motion,
texture. binocular disparity
(depth). or color.''
Cal Welch estimated he's
seen hundreds of deer in 53
years of hunting and shot at
least 20, though not the three
that carne within 25 feet of
him last year during turkey
season. "1' ve found that
even wearing orange. when
you don't move, the deer
don't see you," he said.
He's also found he can

raise hi5- rifle or pivot very
slowly without al~uming the
animals. He'd been told
early by an old hunrer not to
wear anything shiny that can
reflect light. or blue jeans,
which make an unusual
n01se if they rub against
something.
'·Basically as hunters we
talk to other hunters.
Between)'ou and me. there's
a lot of BS that goes around.
You really have to ~ort it
out," Welch said.
There's scientific support
for both points. that deer see
shininess in the bright part
of the spectrum, and they
see color. though in a more
limited range than people.
They have photo pigments
on their cones for blues and
yellows making blue blob!)
a likely cause for alarm.
"They don't see as far into
the red prut of the spectrum
as we do. which means they
don't see blaze orange the
way that we do.'' Miller said.
It's probably as a less
intense color. and there 'c;
probably no reason for
hunters to avoid wearing it
as a safety measure, since
there are often a lot of
oranges in the autumn
woods, but you need to
break it up with a pattern so
it doesn·t look to a deer like
a large. stra11ge blob. ne
said.
"Animals take inventory.
Say you definitely use some
kind of mimicry camouflage. it's something the deer
processes," said Dr. Ja)
Neitz, professor of vision
science at the University of
Washington. "It may be the
pile. of leaves that was not
there before.''
Neitz consulted with W.L.
Gore &amp; Associates for the
gray-and-tan digital camout1age new ro the mru·ket this
year with a large pattern to
disguise rhe symmetry and
silhouette of a hunter and a
micro pattern meant to make
the hunter fade into something unremarkable to deer.
''You want to be able to
break up the pattern so
whether you're not moving
or you are moving, what the
animal sees never rums into
a reco~nizable form," he
said.
If ym1 do that and sLay
down wind you've got a
shot.

Heroes
On November 1I, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly sen •ed their country duri.,;g times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune will publish a very special tribute honoring area veterans. You can joi1l in our salute by including the veterall ill your life, living or deceased, who has served or is currently sen •ing i11 any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Sryles ...
Ad Only $10.00
(shown actual size)

In Honor Of

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love. Your Family
Ad With Photo- $ 15.00

r----~------------,

Please Fill Out And Return With
Your Payment to:

VETERAN SALUTE
C/0 Gallipolis Daily Tribune
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631
In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates of Active Duty
Branch of Service
Conflict/War

(Shown actual size)
Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Photo of
Your
Veteran

AD DEADUNE FRIDAY, NOV. 6
12 Noon Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

Your Name; ____________________
Address:----------Phone:-------------

In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992

L-----------------~

®allipolts iJBailp ~rihune
825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Marines Desert Storm
Lo·ve, Your Family

Phone (740) 446-2342

I'

'

J

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..

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-

-

-

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~-- - ------~---------~~--~~--~~~-----~·

· Sunday, November 8, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Crowds roar, confetti falls as NYC fetes Yankees
NEW YORK (AP) Crowds roared, church
, bells rang and streams of
paper rained down on
Broad-., ay as the New York
Yankees celebrated their
27th championship Friday
· in a way only thi~· city can.
•with a parade up lhc
A myon of Heroes.
~he players, joined by a
fe\\ celcbritv fans ami
Yankees of th~ pa~t. drank
: it all in as they rode on
tloat:. and double decker
_buses through Manhattan's
financial district.
· It has heen vears sinLe
. the cit\ used actual ticker. tape
celebrate its Worlu
: Series wins, but the experience was still authentic Lo
· the manv tho~1sands who
crammed the sidewalks
along the three-quarter: mile pMude route near
Wall Strcel.
_ .. L lov~ it!·· said ci£y !\an ~
· itation
worker
John
-Freeman. as he raked up
APphoto
. confetti and toilet paper New York Yankees baseball players Alex Rodriguez] front right, Francisco Cervelli, third
rolls thrt)\\ n from sky· from left, and entertainer Jay-Z. second from left, celebrate on a float during a ticker-tape
scrapers.
parade along Broadway celebrating their 27th World Series championship on Friday in
Whole families skipped New York.
W()rk and ~chool to he asked me to remind even·- ~aid Michael Rheubottom. the Phillies. returning to
therc. Players recorded the one. pitcher~ and catche.rs a city jail guard. who the ne\\ Yankee Stadium
· crowd with their camera~ report in 96 days. Be ready attended with hi:- 13-)t:al'- lor the first t1me since
they rode lo a second to defend it."
old son. Jason. ''Thi~ is the opening Juy.
• , lebration at Cit) Hall.
Brooklvn nati' e Jav-Z hou~e that Jeter built. w~
His :-on. Hal. took over
..,where the mayor presented capped "the celebration don't C\' cn remember the the day-to-day operations
the team with keys to the with a performance of his lwu:-e that Ruth built."
of the team about a yenr
city.
song '"Empire State of
Pitcha ManHnn River~.
who wc.l\·ed a Panamanian ago.
: Shortstop Derek Jeter r..lind."
"A magical Jay." Hal
· carried the trophy. hoisting
Yankees fans muy be ling as he rode ~n tht.'
.
.
..
'it high above his head used to winning, but that parndc. called the outpour- S,te!u~reun~r satd. ~-ew
• while the crowd screamed didn ' t make the da) any ing of .,upp~m "beatlliful." . ;o•k JU~I ha~. th..: bc:-.t f.ms
"The citv of !'Jew Yor!... 111 the \\Orld.
··we
are
the less spedal for th~ mullJ and
Yan.kee wears ?f the
~&gt;"Champions" blasted on tudes along the parade the fans .. : you ,can't put it
~ loudspeakers.
• roulc - espe&lt;.:ially chit- into words. It's maenifi- past, 1ncludrng Yog1 Berra
~
and Reggie Jack~on, were
'! "Ic's been too long. has- dren Jiving {I championship cent," he ,aid.
~ n·t it?'' he told the crowd. a for the first time.
Alox Rodriguez.. finally on hand for the celebra,:reference to the team's
"This is an experience of frec or all ~he cri1idsm that lion. Jackson urged the
eight- vear absence from a lifetime:· suid Nicole had been heaped upon him pia) ers to enjoy the ex peri!the top of the sport. "It Orrico. who let her fifth- for falling to win a chan1- ence. noting that as play: feels good to be back:'
grade daughter. Koranda , piomhip. wore a bla~o:k hat crs, "You never know if
Fans and players brim- skip school to attend. ··You ancl a wide ~mile.
it'll happen aoain."
0
1ming
with classic New have to mix life with learn''We waited a long time
Some fans were more
.
,.
'· York confidence let it be mg.
for this." he said. 'Tve confident the trophy would
'!known that they didn't
The Yankees beat the never seen "(l many people be back soon enough on
~plan to relinquish their title defending
champion cvll~clell in o.nc place. lower Broadwav _: the
anytime ...oon.
Philadelphia Phillies to ~xcrternent. II JU~&gt;t seem:. narrow Canyon ~f Heroes
The crowd at City Hall win the best-of-seven lrke the!) were as hungry as that has !&gt;een some 200
~ chamed "28:· Manager Joe ~eries in six games. The we wt:re. The. fans really
. . ~.
. .
.
Girardi said he had already title was the team's first wanted thi~. Thev were ticket-tape p.~rt~des lor
·
astronauts. fo.rctgn lea~ers.
ked on ihe phone with stnce
beating
the hun,•rv."
Tl~c;·e wa!) one notable sports champ10ns and flveorgc Steinbrenner about crosstown !\lets in the
Steinbrenner. star generals.
ot leuing up next year.
2000 "Subwav Series."' ab:-.ence:
"We're going for 28.
"He told me this morning and came duriiig the first "The Boss" has made few
, ... the only thing greater :-.cason of the new $1 .5 bil- public appearance.&lt;: sint'e baby,''
sai.d
Ulysses
hi:-. health deteriorated in Coleman, ol Manhattan.
than this celebration is lion Yankee Stadium.
doing it two years in a
"There's no better way to recent year!.. He attended ·'Next year it's ours, it's in
row." Girardi said. ··so he inaugurate a ne" stadium." the first t\\ o game~ again:.! the bag.''

to

-

't

Steelers
fromPageBl
late-night crammin!:! and
the time they spent together made him a better
teacher as he honed the
skllls he's now u:,ing to try
LO restore Denver's dominance.
"You had tO e:o -above
and beyond and iou had to
look at thin!:!s differentlv
and you had to prepare
, harder and you had to
i study harder." McDanic.!ls
· said. "It was a challenge to
into those meetings and
• ake a player who was
. already I:Joreat even better.
When I had an opportunity
to coach him. he had
already won two Super
. Bowls, and then to coa~h
him just demanded so
much from myself and it
made me a bellcr coach.''
Tomlin
understand~
. completely.
: "I think every coach that
' has been given an opportunity to rise up through
the ranh and excel
(knows it's) because of a
. relationship or an interac. tion rhar he's had with a
· player or with some players that have been shmificant to him.'' Tomlin -:.aid.
"Really, the same thing
can be said for players.
~ Great players usually have
. been inStniCtcd in some
form or fashion or assisted
• in their growth and devclment ~by some coach.''
mlin said. "They art~
ountless examples uf
that. You can go back to
the (Bill) Parcells and
, Lawrence Taylors. the Bill
:walshes,
the
.Joe
Montana~. 1 think it's a
delicate eco~ystem. 1 think
,. there is some codcpenden:cy there:·
And nobody mcam more
rromlin's rapid rist
.. through 1hc ranks than
I

l

:to
..

•

Lynch. who wound up his pump better than figer
career in Denver in 2007. Woods after a win.
the same year T(lmlin took
He \\ c.1rs hb emotions
over in Pittsburgh after a on hi::. hoodie ~keve.
sea:-.&lt;111 as l'vlinnc.sota's
"1-le has a lot of l!ner!!V.
defcn~i vc coordinator.
Whl.!ther it !s !lood or t1.1J
'·He's a ~pecial ....!!UV"
energy. he's going to Jet
"' ' (
Tomlin said. "My interac- you know how he feels
tion with him and to haw e\ ery day." Bailey Mlld .
an opportunity to \\ ork ·T m getting us~d to it. T
with him was trUl) n bless- kinu M like it becau~e you
ing."
know \\here it 's coming
Broncos
cornerback from ."
Champ Baik) said Lynch
The Br(lm:os sa\\ plenty
used to praise Tomlin hack of McDaniels ' ··bad enerwhen he wasn't a house- gy"' during the week alter
hold name and was still their 30·7 beatJown in
risinu tlirough the assis- Baltimore that endcJ their
tant ranks. ..unbeaten
streak. The
"He always spoke high- Steelers bring the samt:
ly of him.'' Bailey said . •·J son of challenge with
wasn't surprised when h'-' th~ir physbll style of
got the (Steelcrs) job."
play.
So. what did Lvnch have
So. the Bronco ... arc Irvto say about Tomlin?
ing to get. their mojo back
.. He's a great moti\·U- by returmng to th~ \\elltor," Bailey said.
coached. physical and disJust like Mt&gt;Danicls
dphned team they were
"Thc.:v're
both }10UIH!.
h~forc the Ravens outrnus•
'1.e~lergetic. the) both deiJ- cled anJ o11t11U:stled them.
mtcly know how to get
"You knn\\ that next dav
their ,guys ready.'' Bailev you will be huning;' sai~l
said.
• Broncos linebacker Andra
~h'Danicls. \\ ho look" Davis. explaining that
much younger than his 33 heing physical i.::. mostly
years. ha~ proven a much m\!nl&lt;tL "So jn,.;t accept tht.'
more t'iery coach tlu111 facl. go in tl1ere and bang.
Shunahan, never sh~ to get throw your bod) around
in players' or coachc8 · and lry tn knock your gu}
faces on the sidelin~ when hack. Tt w1ll he an all-day
things go bad. Or to fi:-.t- effort . You havl;' to go in

and bang. bang.
bang."
Returning to Denver
~huuld bring back ~ome
happy memories for the
Steelers, who thumped
Denver in the 2005 AFC
championship on their
wav to their Ja~t title under
Co\\ her.
··Jt wa~ a long time ago,''
Steelers quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger
said.
··when l come up there l
think more about (John)
Elway than I do about that
game."
Still. Lhe S[ee lers have
22 players left from the
team that won the conference &lt;:hampionship on that
watershed afte1 noon. and
the Broncos luLve just
three holdovers: Bailev.
linebacker DJ. Willian1s
anu guard Ben Hamilton.
These teams have !!one
in difl'erent directions
since then.
but rhe
Broncos seem to be turning things around. and
McDaniel:. wouldn't minu
following in Tomlin's
foot:-.teps~
''lie's certainly a guy
that most 1 of us would
emulate," McDaniels said .
'·winning a Super Bowl in
hi:. second year and being
as successful ils he's been
so far.'·
there

The Sternwheel RJverfest COmmittee•
would lil&lt;e to thank the following
for their generous donations to the 09' Rlverfest.
ClassiC Brands
Melgs County Touti.:;m

Peoples Banl&lt;
Downing Childs Ag~y
Meigs County Economic. ~opment Wild Hnr!oe Olfe'

PDK Construction

·

Home National Bank

vrw- SteWart johnson Post
Ohfo Valley SUpermarkets
Brogan Warner Insurance
AE.P

Hotz.er Clinic Metgs' Branch
Pcmeroy·MLddleport Uons Oub
fanners e. ,nk
GatJing Coal
Tom &amp; lor&lt;..&gt;tta fal1s

Pteasant Valley t'lospftal
jack's Septic 5ervlce

Thank vou to everyone who ITldde donadons 8.. purchnsed ads for our
program book. A spedal th.mks 10 the numerous voluntee1s who gnve their
ri~ to llelp make the Qt) Sternw~l festiVcll a great soccess.

Tomlin motivates with
Denver's No. 1 message
.

PmSBURGH (AP) The more coach Mike 1bmlin
keeps talkin~ about it. the
more agitatea his players get.
Exactly
the
response
Tomlin w&lt;tnts from his
Pittsburgh Sreelers.
Tomlin keeps referring to
the Bronco:- a-; havine "the
world's best defense,"~ a reference to Denver's spot atop
the NFL team yarcla~e statit-rics. He mentioned Jt during
the weekly team meeting.
practice
on
Before
Wednesday. Before practice
on Thursday. And he'lllikely
keep :-aying it until game
time Monday.
"We've
heard
coach
Tomlin sav it I .000 times
already this week."' _quarterback Ben Roethhsberger
said. "The)"re a great
defense. a b1g challenge for
us ... an awesome challenge:·
By constantly reminding
that the Bron~os (6-1) are
playing better statistically
than the Steclers (5-2) .
Tomlin is trying to motivate
both his offense and his
defense. He wants hh offense
determined to prove it can
move the ball in Denver. and
his defense mad that it's no
longer No. I.
"Thctve put in a very
agcress1ve style of defense."
Steelers offcn~ive coordinator Bruce Arians said. '"They
changed to a system very
much
like
ours
and
Baltimore's. They've got the
personnel to run it right now:·
The Steelers were lhe
NFL·s best defense statistically the pa.'t two. seasons.
but they're No.8 tl11S season.
They're No. I againsl the run,
but are I 6th against the pass.
which is dra.gging down their
overall ranking.
"When you prepare for a
team like this. 1t's like playing a division team. like a
Baltimore," safety Troy
Polamalu said. "It's always
defen~ challengmg defense.
It's an imporumt goal in
every game for us: As a
defense. we always want to
outplay lht' other defense.''
The Broncos didn't do that
during a 30-7 lo~s Sunday to
Baltimore, which allows
Tomlin to also sell this to his
players: The Broncos are
determined not to have
another letdown in a game
that potentially could prove
import&lt;mt when the AFC
playoff seeding is determined.
"I just think the Den\'er
Broncos ran into a buzzsaw:·
Tomlin said.
What the Steeler.; defen. e
might run into is a Broncos
offense that looks much different than it did against

Baltimore.
When Broncos coach Josh
McDaniels was an assistant
coach with New England. the
Patriots had success against
Pittsburgh with spread-type
formations
that
forced
Polam..'llu to play deep coverage and didn t allow the
Steeler~&gt; to blitz a'i much.
The Broncos had trouble
pass protecting for quarterback Kyle Orton against
Ballimore, and the Stcelers
are capabk of bringing the
same kind of pressure the
Ravens did. If the Bronco~&gt;
spread it out at times. Orton
can get rid of the ball quicker
and perhaps Jessen the intensity of the Steelers · pass rush.
"He doesn't rake sacks, '
Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau said of
011on, the fom1er Bears quarterback ...He doesn't throw
interceptions. He's very good
at getting the right play. He's
a veteran. and you're not
going to confuse bim."
Of course. the Steelers will
try to do exactl} that.
Linebacker James Harrison
believes the Stcelers will be
ready for whatever the
Broncos do.
'·It's really whatever coach
LeBeau feels works for that
game. for that opponent,''
Harrison snid. ··some game~
we might msh a little more
and there are quarters and
games where we might not
blitz at all. That's part of
being a linebacker io coach
LeBeau·.s defense. Rush the
pa.,ser arid drop into coverage, that's part of the whole
package."
Just a~ Orton probably
must remain patient and wan
to rake advantage of whatever the Steelers give him.
Roethlisberger understands
he cru1't be too eager to go
downfield with safety Brian
Dawkins and cornerback
Champ Bailey waiting to
make plays.
While Roethlisbergcr has
b\!en the NFL'~ most-sacked
quarterback since entering
the NFL in 2004. his ability
to improvise when his pa:.s
protection breakS down has
repeatedly created big plays.
Roethlisberger also has been
succes~ful running the nohuddle. which Lhe Ravens
used on 31 plays against
Den\'er.
"It change~ the tempo. it
keeps defenses on their
heels:· wiJe receiver Hines
Ward said. '"It's a matter of
wanri ng to get inro a speededup tempo. We hop into it to
try to get some things Eming.
Will \\e ~e it? I don·t know.
But we have il - every
week. evel)' game. the pack~
age bin."

Wahama

Moore havin~ five receptions for 144 yards.
Wahama
imcrcepted
Jordan four times in the
e.ame. as well as recoverine:
three of the four Bison fum':
ble10.
Waharna did not
throw an i.nteception in !he
game. but fumbled three
time~ with Buffalo recovering two of the fumbles.
The White Falcons were
in a tie for ninth place going
into Friday night's conte:-t.
with the top eight teams
hosting thetr t1rst round
playoff game. Wahama will
have to wait until the fir~t
part of the week to find out
the details of their playoff
game.

from Page Bl
vards on I 7 carries includIng four rushing touchdowns. Rvan Lee also had a
lriple digit rushing game
with 163 yards on 18 carries. [n the air, William
Zuspa.n was 4-8 for 74 yard.
all of which were to Tvler
Kitchen.
For the Bison, Moore had
69 vards on seven carries.
whiie Cameron Jones added
27 yards on seven carries.
Levi Jordan was 11-32 in
the air for 200 yards. with

Bob Morris
Wishes to Thank
all the People of
Letart Township
Who Voted &amp;
Helped Me Win
Another Tenn as Your

Township Trustee
Your Help Was
Greatly Appreciat
Again,

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis ·

LeBron: No timetable for free agency decision
NEW YORK (AP) LeBron James thinks his
present is too good to
spend time worrying about
his future.
James said Friday he has
no timetable for deciding
what he will do next summer. The NBA's MVP said
it will be his first time getting to be an unrestricted
free agent, so he"s not
going to rush any decision.
Nor will he even consider it for a while. Not with
the Cavaliers on the short
list of legitimate contenders to \.vin a title this
season.
"For me. honestly. I thmk
this season is going to be
really good and I feel hke
our team is set to where we
can play really deep into
the playoffs and possibly
contend for the NBA championship," James sajd. "So
mainly that's the main
thing that I m focused on

now."
The Cleveland All-Star
can opt for free agency on
July 1, but satd before a
100-91 victory over the
Kmcks he isn't sure what
he will do in the days that
follow.
''I don "t know because
it's the first time ru be in
this position, being an
unrestricted free a~ent: I
haven't been there yet. so I

don't know." James said
"There's no umetable. I'm
not going to rush it, I'm
definitely going to stay in
shape and stay in the gym
next summer like I've
always done and we '11 see
what happens:·
The Knicks are one of the
teams that will have money
to offer James a maximum
salary contract. He enjoys
playing in New York and
does it well. He and
Michael Jordan arc the
only visiting players with
multiple 50-point games at
the
present
Madison
Square Garden. and James
raised his career scoring
average at the building to
30.4 points after scoring 33
Friday.
He made it clear after the
game that he's not coming
to New York - or anywhere else - just for the
money.
"1 think at the end of the

day, a max deal or anything
like that doesn't really matter to me:· James said. "It's
all about winning for me.
SO I'm going tO put myself
in a position when that day
comes next summer.
"I want to win, and if I
feel like the team is capable of winning, then I make
my decision like that. ..
Friday's game wa~ the
only one this season in
New York for the Cavs. and
James won't say which
umform he'll be -wearing
next time he comes back.
.. , don't know who made
the !-.chedule for the
Cleveland Cavaliers to
only be here once, I'm kind
of disappointed in that:'
said James. a Yankees fan
who slept through the
World Series championship
parade Friday morning
after the Cavs played in
Cleveland on Thursday
night.

Sunday&gt; November 8, 2009

Indians hires Belcher as pitching coach
CLEVELAND (AP) During his search for
Clcvefand's pitching coach,
new Indians manager Manny
Acta was meeting with gen·
eral manager Mark Shapiro
when Tim Belcher·s name
came up for discussion
After a few mmutes. A&lt;.:ta
had heard enough.
··He said, 'Why are we
goin~ any farther'? This is the
guy: 'Shapiro said.
Belcher, who has done just'
about everything but pitch for
the fndians, is the fin.t member of Acta's new staff. The
48-year-old Belcher · had
spent the past eight seasons
as a special assistant. instructing. evaluating and scouting
Qlayers
.
throughout
Cleveland's system.
Now. he'll coach their best
ones.
·'I view it as a good opportunity
and
challenge,"
Belcher said Friday.
Belcher replaces Carl
Willis, who was let go after
seven seasons when the
Indians [ired manager Eric
Wedge and his entire coaching
staff last month.
Cleveland had its worst season since 1991, a slide that
was tied in many ways to the
Indians' pjtch.ing problems.
fl"s up to Belcher to get
them worked out.
The fonner major leaguer.
who won 146 games over a
14-year career with seven
teams, is very famiHar with
Cleveland's arms. Belcher
served ac; an interim pitching
coach in each of Cleveland's
minor-league levels and was
an in-unifonn instructor during spring training. His
knowledge of the Indians
pitchers made him attractive
to Acta.
"He has all the intangibles
that we were looki~~ for."
said Acta. who is sriu inter-'
viewing candidates to fill the
other coaching vacancies.
''We wanted to bring in a ~uy
who could right this ship.'
Belcher bas turned down
other coaching opportunities
in the past. but couldn "t resist

Point

Bryan Walters/photo

Hannan's Jerry Diaz (1) carries the ball during Friday evening's season finale against Burch. Teammate Daniel Reynolds
(3) goes for the block of Burch lineman Brandon King.

Hannan
from PageBl
Brad Fannin, giving the
guests possession at the
Hannan 43.
Two plays later. the
Bulldogs led 16-0 after
Crum hauled in a 4-yard
TO pass from
Ryan
Hatfield at the 4:32 mark.
Hannan retaliated on its
ensuing drive, as Robert
'Pokey' Warth capped a 5play, 35-yard drive with a
13-yard TD scamper at 2:29
to pull the hosts to within
16-6.
Burch. however, countered that score with one of
its own when Crum hauled
in a 29-yard scoring pass
from Hatfield with just I 7
seconds left in the opener

Bengals
from Page Bl
"I see this as a two-game
season,'' Ochocinco said,
"from the standpoint that
with a win this week and
next week in Pittsburgh, it's
really setting us up for a
playoff berth. And after
that, continuing to win and
be successful throughout
the season could really give
us a bye week."
Ocbocinco was referring
to the playoffs, of course.
Baltimore knows it can't
let that happen if it wants to
reach the playoffs again.
:Yhe Bengals are rested.
coming off their bye. The
Ravens have their swagger
back, coming off a 30-7 win
over previously unbeaten
Denver.
This one means more than
)nost.
....--

for a 22-8 edge.
by Trevor Woolum gave the
Crum
increased
the guests a 48-14 advantage
guests' lead to 28-8 with with 4:52 left in the third.
3:31 remaining in the half
The score stayed that way
on a 7-yard TD run, then until the 4:46 mark of the
gave the Bulldogs a 36-8 fourth. when Jared Cobb
cushion with three seconds plunged in from six yards
left before halftime after a out to cut the Hannan
35-yard run to paydirt. [t deficit to 48-20. Messer
was also the last of Crum 's Steven, however. concludfive touchdowns on the ed the scoring just 19 secnight.
onds later with a 54-yard
Jacob Butcher started the run to the house. making it
second half scoring for a 54-20 contest with 4:27
BHS with an 11-yard jaunt left in regulation.
at 8:45 of the third quarter
The Wildcats produced
for a 42-8 lead, but Fannin two more first downs (14gave the hosts' their first 12) than the guests and
second half score on the were penalized only six
ensuing possession after a times for 25 yards. Burch
47-yard run on 4th-and-J was flagged nme rimes for
made it a 42-14 contest 75 yards.
with 5:53 left in the quru1er.
Warth Jed the HHS
The Bulldogs. however, ground attack with 99 yards
needed just 61 seconds to on 23 carries, followed by
re-establish a 34-point mar- Darnel Reynolds with 95
gin after a 37-yard TO run yards on 10 totes Fannin
"We know who's on the
schedule,·' Ravens safety
Ed Reed said. "We know
what's at stake. They know
what's at stake. So, let's
go."'
Reed returned an interception 52 yards ror a
touchdown in that game last
month, and the Ravens were
in position to close it out
after Ray Rice turned a
short pass into a 48-yard
touchdown and a 14-1 0
lead. The Bengals failed to
get a tirst down. ·and Joe
Fiacco had a chance to finish them off.
Mark Clayton ran free
down the left sideline on a
third-down play. but Fiacco
overthrew the pass. If it's on
the mark, the Bengals are
finished.
Instead. they got another
chance and pulled it out with the help of Lewts' rattling hit on Ochocinco on a
high pass that the off-bal-

-

----,

To the Voters of Clay Township,
I sincerely thank you for all the
support and votes that now make
me your new trustee.
I'm looking forward to serving you.
11

Bobby Fanklin

. I

Paid for by the ~~te

ance receiver couldn't
catch. His helmet tumbled
off his head after Levvis flattened him.
A few days later. the NFL
fined Lewis $25,000 for
that hit and for kicking a
Bengals player earlier in the
game. He's still stewing
over it.
"You don't go helmet to
helmet, you're running
toward the ball, you make a
clean hit and then you get
penalized for il." Lewis
said. ''So then you can a&lt;;k
yourself: Are you going to
s.low down t~e way you
play. or are you going to
keep playing football the
way you know how to play
football?"
Ochocinco knows the
answer.
''That's the way football
is played," said the receiver,
who counts Lewis as a mentor. "Ray knows that. T
know that. If I was to catch
him slipping in midair, I'd

fromPageBl

the chance to accept one
about a 90-minute drive from
his home in Sparta. Ohio.
He's got his work cur with
Cleveland s p1tchin~ staff.
The Indians' 5.06 E.KA waf&gt;
the second-highest in the AL,
while opponents batted .294
against the club's starters.
The Indians are counting on
Fausto Carmona to bounce
back after disasu·ous
and hope Jake Westbr
makes tt back from el
surgery.
Acta said. he and Belcher
have discussed pitching
philosophies and they already
share a common belief.
'·Pound the strike zone:'
Acta said. "Whether your
name is Fausto or Zausto, if
you· re uot missin~ bats. you
bettct not be walking people.'·
Acta said he .strongly considered three candidates for
the job, but came away con~
vinced Belcher was the best
qualified because of his background. preparedness and
mteflect.
··one of his ex~tearnmates
told me that he's too smart to
be a pitching coach," Acta
said.
Belcher has not spent much
lime with Acta. but he has
with
been
impressed
Cleveland's new manager.
Belcher said before acceptmg
the job, he did his research to
learn about his new boss.
"I got nothmg but r'
reviews from anyone 1 talke
to.'' he said.
Belcher made 373 starts in
the majors before retiring in
2000. He won at least 10
games in rune seasons and in
seven of them pitched more
than 200 innings. He's been a
workhorse before and isn't
afraid to take on the Indians'
pitching staff, another heavy
load.
"I'm challenged by it. but I
wouldn ·r view~it as a daunting task," he said. 'Tve o-ot a
lot of work to do in buifding
trust with some of the new
guys and building relationships with them."

a seJt

fl

just 283 total yards and 78
of those came on their final
drive when the Big Blacks
didn't ha"·e a starter on the
field. Layne Thompson led
the way with 10 tackles,
while Derek Pinson bad.
Junior Michael Musgr
was in on 7 stops. w
JaWaan
WiUiams
and
Nathan Roberts were both
credited with 6 tackles ..
Brock McClung. Trey
Livingston.
and
Ryan
Warner were all credited
wilh a quarterback sack,
while Pinson Clay Krebs
lived in the Chapmanville
backfield all night
·'They did some things
early that hurt us, but we
made some good adjustments and played a pretty
good defensive football
Eame after that.'" said Darst.
·we were very aggressive
and after that opening drive,
we tackled pretty well. Thls
was a total team effort and I
just can ·r say enough about
the effort these guys have
been giving us. We are
going into the playoffs with
some momentum· and l am
pleased with that. I'm not
sure where we will play
next week, but whereve· ·
is, I know we will go ,
play bard and represent our
school and community in a
positive manner," added
Darst.
The Big Blacks finish the
regular season with a 7-3
mark and are riding a five
game winning streak.. The
official bracket won't be
released by the WVSSAC,
until Sunday. but most projections have the Big Blacks
going to Keyser next week.

who accumulated 33 pass, and one on a 5 yard
rushing yards on I 3 carries run. Jen·od Long got in on
- went 4-of-7 passing for the action when he bulled
29 yards while throwing his way over from the one
one interception and zero vard line to close out the
touchdowns. Reynolds led frrst half scoring.
the wideouts with three
And, just for good meacatches for 23 yards
sure. the locals added
Burch - which had 329 another touchdown on their
rushing yards on 20 carries, first possession of the secan average of 16.5 yards ond half. Starting from their
per carry - was led by own 34 yard line, rhe Big
Crum with 191 yards on six Blacks needed just five
attempts, followed
by plays £0 reach pay dirt.
Steven with 62 yards on Chris Blankenship had one
three totes. Hatfield fin- carry for 7 yards 10 the
ished the night 5-of-9 pass- drive. whlle Nathan Roberts
ing for 100 yards. with two took care of the other 59
rouchdowns and zero inter- )yards, capping the drive
ceptions. Dakota Dempsey with a 28 yard scoring jaunt.
led the BAS wideouts with That touchdown also ended
one catch for 39 yards.
a 35-0 run that saw the Big
It was the final football Blacb effectively put this
contest for seniors Warth. game awa'v.
Cobb, Terry KaUffer and ~ The Tigers scored on their
Brandon Waugh in the Blue next possesston and then
and Gold.
'"'
after· the Big Blacks tallied
twice more, added a meaningless score with just twentry to take his head off, too. ty six seconds left in the
Then I'd help him up and game. The Big Blacks'
tell him, 'I love you.' You touchdowns came from
all know how our relahon- Toby Martin -- the first of
.ship is. He's the closest per- his career. and Chris
son I have as a father figure Blankenship. Martin caught
in the NFL besides coach a 6 yard pass from Eric
Roberts for the first score.
(Marvin Lewis).
"That's . Lhe way it is. while Blankenship ended
That's the way it's going to the Big Blacks' -;cormg on
be thts Sunday. If he gets a the night with his 13 yard
run.
chance to hit me again. l
It wasn't the bes£ game of
hope he
do the same the year b) the defensive
thing:·
unit, but they played pretty
This time, the Ravens well overall. They gave up
need more than one big hir.
Another loss to the Bengals
would leave them 0-2
against Cincmnati and make
them a long shot for the
dtvision title.
··so what we have to do.
our mtndset now, is we have
t9 put it b~ck on the even
Ulaying ground," receiver
The Gallia County Council on
Denick Mason said. ··we
have to go down there and
Aging, Senior Resource Center
figure out a way to pick up
would like to express appreciation
a win in their house.''

·n

••

Thank You,

Voters of Gallia County

Thank you
To Guyan Township Residents
For Electing Me As Your New

Township Trustee.
I Look Forward To Serving You
For The Next 4 Years

'llic£ie Swain
.

\

for the levy passage.
We are extremely appreciative
that services for the elderly of our
community will not be interrupted.
Meals, transportation, personal
care and adult day services will
continue to be available to those
in need, thanks to the
compassionate and supportive
residents of our county.

�r··

Sunday, November 8,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

~-

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fa,unbap ~tmes -fa,entinel • Page Bs

·Gallipolis MFL completes final2 weeks of action Cleveland's football·circus
GALLIPOLIS
The
fourth week of the Gallipolis
Midget Football League was
held Saturday, October 24,
on Memorial Field. Two
teams that had battled
through the previous three
game and remainedunbeaten
would meet in a showdown
· the last game of the night,
sibly for the 2009 league
ampionship. At the end of
the night, only one team
would be 4-0.
The first contest of the
night featured the Saunders
Insurance Browns and the
Norris N orthuo Red skins.
Both teams held identical 12 records, so this game
would
determine
who
evened their record to 2-2.
The Browns scored on their
very first possession when
QB Scott Mash charged
around the left end of the 43
for the touchdown . Still in
the
first
half, Jacob
Dovenbarger brought it in
from the 11, and Logan
McCorkle added the successful two point attempt.
The Browns led it 14-0 at
the half.
In the second half of play,
the Browns Mathew Bailey
took it in from the eight on
the sixth play of the drive.
Good deense by the
dskins David Hammack
•
nied the two point conversion try, making the score
20-0 in favor of the Browns,
who improve their record to
2-2.
In the second game, the
Bob Evans Cowboys and the
Eastman Foodland Steelers
battled back and forth as
theri respective defenses
kept each other from getting
it to the red zone. Punters
from both teams, Zach
Fisher of the Steelers and
Ryan Terry of the Cowboys,
got a workout. . The game
was scoreless until there was
only 1:38 left in the first
half. The Cowboysdrove it
down field to the one yard
line and Jacob Mabe bulled
across for the score. The
pass attempt for the two
point conversion was intecepted by the Steelers Josh
Henry, and the Cowboys led
.6-0.
. In the second half of play,

the Steelers defense again
held tough with good tackles
by Colton Coughenour and
Brian Hurt, not allowing the
Cowboys to rush it in after a
12 play drive that ended
with a fourth and goal from
the eight. With time running
out, the Steelers were
backed up on their own ten
yard line and couldn't
advance. A sack by the
Cowboys Cody Houck
ended the drive, and the
Cowboys improved their
record to 2-2.
In the final game of the
night, The Gallipolis Elks
and the Gallipolis Career
College Packers met to
decide
the
League
Championship.
Even
though there would be one
more game to the season,
these two teams were the
only two without a loss on
the year. It looked like these
two weel matched teams
would send it into overtime,
but that all changed in the
final minute of the game.
The Packers got the ball
and went on a controlled 12
play drive, winding up on
the Elks four yard line. The
Packers Devin Henry rushed
across from the four for the
first touchdown. The Elks
Eric Ward sacked QB
Landon Hutchinson when he
tried to sneak it in for the
two point conversion , and
the Packers took an eary 6-0
lead. Both teams mounted
long drives in the remaining
minutes of play but neither
could break into the end
zone in the first half.
With only six minutes of
play remaining in the game,
The Elks Brawley recovered
a Packers fumble on their
own three yard line and took
it in for the score. The extra
point try failed and the score
was tied at six. It looked
like overtime was a sure
thing, but with a nine play
drive, with seven of those
plays run by Henry, the
Packers got the ball to the
Elks
28.
Quarterback
Hutchinson swept it around
the right end for the score,
with Henry adding the successful two points after. The
score was Packers 14, Elks 6
with 1: 15 left in the game.

around the left end for a 70
yard touchdown to start the
game. Henry scored again
from the 39, and a completed pass from Landon
Hut&lt;;hinson to Austin Hill
was good for the two points
after. Hutchinson added to
his total by intercepting a
FINAL WEEK GAMES
pass on the Cowboys 38,
The final week of the running it all the way for the
Gallipolis Midget Football TD. The Cowboys goal line
defense held, and the
League was held Sunday Packers led it 20-0 at the
afternoon, November 1, on
Memorial Field.
After half.
weeks of rainy, cold weathThe second half saw the
·
'f 1
Cowboys defense come on
er, It was a beaut! u sunny strong as Isaac Sheets recovday
for
football.
Unfortunately, the football ered two fumbles, excellent
field was still suffering from tackling by Colton Bartrum
the bad weather, and the and Ryan Terry, who saved a
TD with a solo stop la~ in
mud took its toll on some of the game. Neither offense
the tetqns ability to run the was able to get it in the end
ball.
zone however, and the game
In the first game of the ended the same as the half,
afternoon, the Saunders with the Packers winning the
Insurance Browns took on game and the League
the Eastman Foodland Championship.
Steelers.
Although the
In the last game ofthe seaSteelers had not yet won a son, t.he Gallipolis Elks met
game, their defense held the the Norris NOithup Redskins
Browns to only 14 points in on a pretty roughed up field.
the first half. The Browns The Elks got the ball first
Matt Bailey ran it around the and scored on the fourth
right end for the first TD, but play from scrimmage. Wes
the Steelers Zach Graham Brawley busted it up the
knocked down a pass middle for a 57 yard TD.
attempt for the two pint con- Isaiah Holley reversed to the
version try. The second TD left to add the two points
of the half came when QB after giving the Elks the
Scott Mash snuck it in from early 8-0 lead.
the six. Bailey added the
The Redskins defense
two points after, anp the then came on strong with
Browns led it 14-0 at the sacks by JD Dummitt and
half.
Brody Thomas, and a pass
In the second half, Jacob interception by Dylan Nunn
Dovenbarger cliarged in kept them from scoring
from the three, and Logan again in the first half.
McCorkle ran it in for the
The Skins got the ball first
two points after. The finalB at the start of the second
Browns sco~e came when . half, but the Elks defense
Wes Jarrell p1cked up a fum- held them on downs on their
bled snap and crash_ed into own 38 yard line. This set
the end zone, makmg the up B.rawley for his second
final score 28-0 in favor of TD from the 25. The final
the Browns.
score was also Brawley, set
The second game of the up by a 27 yard pass comday pitted the unbeaten pletion from QB Brett
Gallipolis Career College Hively to Miles Cornwell.
Packers against the Bob Brawley took it in from the
Evans Cowboys. Starting five for this third TD of the
on their own 35 yard line, game. Final score 20-0 in
the first play saw the favor of the Elks.
Packers incur a 5 yard penalty, moving the ball back to
Information provided by
the 30. Devin Henry 'didn't Kim Canaday Gallipoli
seem to mind as he swept MFL Statistician.
The Packers defense shut
down the Elks and time ran
out. Unless the Packers
should get upset by the
Cowboys in the final week,
they wi II be the 2009 MFL
League Champs.

:Martin, Gordon know the Chase race is for 2nd
FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) - Mathematically,
Mark Martin and Jeff
Gordon still have a chance
to win the NASCAR Sprint
Cup title.
The reality with three
races left?
"We've still got a great
battle going for second in
points,"
Gordon
said
Friday. "If for some crazy
reason those guys had trouble, we've got to make sure
we capitalize on them. Our
focus right now is winning
races, and trying to get to
second in points."
In his run for an unprecedented fourth consecutive
title, Jimmie Johnson's
closest chasers are his
Hendrick teammates. But
nson takes a comfort•
e 184-point lead over
Martin into Sunday 's race
at Texas Motor Speedway,
with Gordon eight points
further back.
. Martin, already a season
runner-up four times, is
facing the realistic possibility of being .in that spot
again. His deficit increased
by 66 points after an airborne crash with two laps
to go at Talladega last
week.
· "Definitely no heartbreak
·whatsoever. But Talladega
did rub ... I would rather go
,down fighting than flip'ping," Martin said. "I didn't take this job to go try
•and get a championship
'trophy. I took this job, you
know why, and doggone, it
,has worked out pretty
_good. We have been in a
position; it still could hap. The race is still on for
top six positions."
cept Johnson needs
only to average a lOthplace finish over the last
three races, or 11th if he
leads at least one lap in
every race, to clinch the
championship. Johnson has
;.n average finish of 3 .4 in
the seven Chase races so
· 'far, finishing top 10 in all
:of them.
• Both his close-chasing

1

teammates will start ahead
of Johnson, who qualified
12th. Gordon is the polesitter for the first time this
season and 68th time in his
career. Martin will roll off
seventh on Sunday.
Johnson finished second
at the 1 112-mile, highbanked Texas track in April
behind Gordon, who then
broke a 47-race winless
drought and finally found
Victory Lane at one of the
two active tracks where he
had never won. (The other
is Homestead, site of the
season finale is in two
weeks) .
That is Gordon's only
win this season, though he
has 17 top-1 0 finishes the
last 26 races.
The 50-year-old Martin
returned to full-time racing
this season after landing a
ride with Hendrick. He has
repeatedly insisted that he
didn't come back to make
up for finishing as a season
runner-up twice to Dale
Earnhardt (by 26 points in
1990) and to Gordon and
Stewart - the latter by 38
points in 2002. He finished
third three other times.
In 1989-, his second sea-

son with Jack Roush,
Martin was second in
points going into the final
race before blowing an
engine - he wound up
third behind Rusty Wallace
and Earnhardt. He then led
the standings for most of
the next season and
thought he could beat
Earnhardt, a seven-time
champion.
"As it turned out, I was
wrong. And that was the
one that I wanted to win
and probably the most of
all when I was young and
when it looked like we
were going to," Martin
said, before chuckling.
"Since then, I have learned
a lot and I have seen a lot
and I have come to realize
that I'm no Dale Earnhardt.
My record don't stand up
to his, just doesn't. And
when you stand me up
against Jeff Gordon, it just
don't stand up to it. I
understand that."
Martin carried the points
lead into the Chase for the
Sprint Cup championship,
then
won
at
New
Hampshire to open the
final 10-race stretch. But
he slipped behind Johnson

after a four-race stretch in
which he finished 17th in
Charlotte and 28th last
week at Talladega after his
late crash.
In 755 career starts,
Martin has 40 wins and 415
top-1 0 finishes. The only
thing missing is a season
title.
"I think he's one of the
best out there still today.
He's proven that t}?.is year.
You put him in solid equipment, look what he can
do," Gordon said. "He certainly deserves to be a
champion. In my opinion,
he is. But I know that
nobody else is going to
consider him that until he
has the actual trophy. "
Gordon has four of them,
but his last was won in
2001.
And unless something
totally unexpected happens
over the next three races,
Johnson will be soon be a
four-time champion himself.

BEREA (AP) Just
hours after Cleveland's fired
general manager walked
down the front steps in disgrace carrying his belongings in travel bags, two disgruntled fans climbed the
same steps inside the team's
headquarters for a meeting
with the team's camera-shy
owner.
One of them wore a plastic
dog bone hat. He used to go
to' games dressed as a french
fry.
Welcome to the bizarre
world of the Browns. Once a
flagship NFL franchise, now
seen as a farce. The Oakland
Raiders of the Midwest.
Halfway through coach
Eric Mangini's first season,
the Browns ( 1-7) are tumbling at ari alarming rate.
They reached the bye week
in such disrepair - their
offense is ranked 31st, their
defense 32nd - it may take
years from them to get fixed.
Inept.
Overmatched.
Laughable. Embarrassing.
All of those words have
been used to describe this
team, starting quarterback
Derek Anderson, Mangini
and owner Randy Lerner.
On the field, the Browns
are terrible. Off it, they are in
turmoil.
This week, Lerner fired
GM George Kokinis, a dismissal that followed the resignation of Erin O'Brien,
Mangini's personal assistant
in New York who worked as
a team operations director in
Cleveland. Also, former
Browns quarterback Bernie
Kosar has been brought in as
a consultant and the team is
searching for an experienced
executive, "an overarching
person" as someone in the
organization put it, to run its
football department and
oversee a new GM.
The Browns seemingly
need an intervention. They
need help, and the season is
only half over.
"We're just going with the
flow," Pro Bowl tackle Joe
Thomas said.
Fired after last season by
the New York Jets, Mangini
came to Cleveland with a
plan to restore the Browns,
bring
them
back
to
respectability, make them
winners again. He brought in
10 former Jets, overhauled
the roster with 25 new players - so far. He traded
and
offensive
stars
headaches Kellen Winslow
and Braylon Edwards,
benched quarterback Brady
Quinn for Anderson just 10
quarters into the season, and
may make a switch again.
"It takes time," Mangini
said earlier this week.
He may be running out of
it.
Although Lerner offered
his support to Mangini this
week, saying he could not
envision any scenario in
which he would make a
coaching change in 2010. if
the next eight games go as

Thank You
Chester
Township
Voters For Your
Continued Support

Blair Windon
Paid for by the candidate

Sports Medicine GRANT
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Next clinic date is Friday, Nov. 20
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
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•

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I

poorly as the first eight, he
may have little choice but to
replace his coach.
Mangini may have reasons
to be nervous.
Lerner's firing of Kokinis
seemed to strip the coach of
power.
Kokinis
was
Mangini's
hand-picked
choice, hired away from
Baltimore and reuniting two
friends who worked together
in the 1990s in Cleveland as
underlings to then-coach B1ll
Belichick.
But from the start, the
Kokinis-Mangini management marriage seemed destined for a divorce. The two
were rarely seen together
and when Kokinis addressed
the media before April 'i
draft, Mangini sat a few feet
away on the dais shooting
his GM a watch-what-yousay glare.
Kokinis' stunning and
strange ouster came less than
24 hours after Lerner said he
wanted to bring in a "strong·,
credible leader" to oversee
the club's football operations. That would mean filling an executive void the
Browns have not addressed
since their expansion return
in 1999.
Lerner, who has yet to
address the media on the firing, had hoped Kokinis
would evolve into that person. But did Mangini give
his friend the freedom to
grow?
.
Kokinis was all but invisi•
ble during his nine months
on the job. When the club
traded Edwards to the Jets
last month, it was Mangin~
who explained the rational to
the media. Kokinis wa$
never heard from, a strong
sign he had already lost
whatever authority and
stature he had been given.
Now, Lerner is looking for
his third GM in less than
year - Phil Savage was
fired in December - and
Mangini believes he will
have input into the next hiring.
"Randy and I talk a lot,"
Mangini said, "so I'm sury
we'll be very engaged in that
(decision)."
Ernie Accorsi. Cleveland's
GM from 1985-92 and a
close friend of Lemer's, has
been mentioned as a possibility to serve as a vice president of football operations.
a role similar to Bill
Parcells' job with the Miami
Dolphins. The problem for
the Browns is tha candidates of Parcells· caliber are
few, and trying to hire one in
the middle of a season is difficult.
Mangini has yet to show
he can successfully build a
team. He mismanaged the
quarterback position, tlamaging Quinn's confidence
with the early hook and
diminishing any trade value
for the former Notre Dam~
star or for Anderson.
Somebody needs to fix
them.

..

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a

�ll

l
z Page B6 • !a&gt;unba!' ijf;imes5 -~entincl

Sunday, November 8,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

NFL:
What happened to the power divisions?
t
Bv

Roethlisberger creating big
plays that seem to come
straight from the sandlot. not
the playbook? He did it.on the
dcclSlve touchdown m the
Super Bowl. and he's kept
right on. d&lt;?mg it. altering the
style of hts team along the
way.
" I think some of it comes
from that being what the
Steelcrs always did in the
past. 1always say you have to
keep up with the times;·
Roeth.lisberger said. '"TI1at's
kind of evolving into a passing offense league-wide.
People talk ahout Lhe Steelers
and the run game ~ecause we
want to be phystcal. When
you want to be physical. peo
ple assume that s the run
game. But that can mean a lot
of ?ifferent thmgs.
·I guess you can go all the
way back to the '70s and we
were a grind-it-out team.
We're not that '70s team.
We're our own identity and
that includes a lot of no-huddie stuff. It's been good.''
And consider what the
Ravens have become. ranking
seventh on offense and only
13th on defense. Sme. Ray
Lewis and Ed Reed still are in
Baltimore and still are difference makers. But the. Ravens

BARRY WILNER

APFOOTBALLWRITER

...._

The toughest divisions to
make a living in the NfL
these days are not the NFC or
1\FC East. This popular
notion has gone the way of
the efficient offense in
Washington and Buffalo. lt's
disap~ared.

To fi nd the most competitive climate in pro football.
look to the north. The AFC
~orth probably is the best
Sector in the league, followed
~losely by the NFC North.
Does that mean the Vikings
will face the Steclers in the
Super Bowl? Or the Packers
will take on the Bengals?
flardly.
• But for weekJy excitement
and excellence, the old Black
and Blue Divisions are gold~

en.

Consider how the Steelers
{5-2) built on their champi~Smship not by diving even
i:!eeper into their time-tested
philosophy of winning with
the running game and bigtime defense. No. these
Steelers can pass with anyC&gt;ne, which has been especjallY significarlt because their
nmning game has stagnated.
~ What's more electrifying in
lbe
NFL
than
Ben

are ddlned just as· much by
what ~1uarterback Joe Flacco
and the three-pronged running at?ck does,.
.
··octcnsc wrns champ•onships . but you need the
offense to s~ore points. To. be
saymg we _re _an ~ffens!vc
team doesn t ftt us, runntng
back Ray Rke said. ··when
they talk about this Ravens
team. they're go in~ to say,
'That team is a phystcal. good
football tean1.' That's what
we aspire ro he.''
Lest we forget, the
Bengals' stunning run of
down-to-the-wire garnes has
marked t~~m not only as a far
more resl11ent bunch than we
can remember representing
CinciMnafi. but also as a contender. TI1e Bengals of the
past would have floundered
after that Ouky last-second
loss lo Denver in the opener.
This team ha&lt;&gt; flourished.
'"Bringing together a group
of guys that understand what
a team ·is all about makes it
enjovable;' coach Man in
Lewis said. "Every time we
enter this bui lding. we leave
better than we are. Aud if we
keep doing that. then things
will be good."
•
The rise of the AFC North
has overshadowed the col-

l~pse of the AFC Eastthrough
eight week!&gt;. At 5-2. the
Patriots are about where
everyone expe~ted, even ~f
they were anything but dormnant until the last two games.
Then .again those routs. by a
combtned 84-7. came agamst
Tennessee and Tampa Bay.
both winless when they were
crus!Jed by New England.
What ha&amp; happened to lhe
rest of the division?
Remember. Miami won the
AFC Ea~t a year ago going
11-5 and unveiling the wildcat, which has spreaa Like,
well. wildfire through the
le~gue. The !?olphins ·~e 3:4,
wtth two ot those vtctones
over the Jets, &lt;md if they lose
at Foxborough on Sunday. the
division race pretty much
becomes a Patriots jog fO the
playoffs.
For all the bluster corning
out of Jct!i camp, they have
had breakdowns in every
facet of football, negating a 30 strut. While the Jets are a
thousand times more entertaining under Rex Ryan than
the dour Eric Mangini.
they're still headed for a .500
season that would be worse
than their record under
Manginj in 2008.
Buffalo? That Terrell

Owens-Lee Evans combo has
a total of 46 cat~hes and four
TDs. Not much Improvement
or excit~ment there.
,
Over m the.NFC. the North
has one domtnant squad and
two wild-card contenders. It
also. ha~ an elan s~n~e~hat
lackmg tn the other dtvtsJOns.
Even some Cbeeseheads
would now have to admit
watching that graybeard guy
at quarterback for the Vi kin~
is enthrallin~ - especially
after what tsrett Favre has
done to the Packers twice
already. No game bad more
intriguing elements lhan
F~vre 's return to . Larnbe.au
F1eld. and he certarnly dehvered.
The Vikings as a whole are
deliveting. too, thanks to a
superb pass rush led by Ja~d
Allen, and the best runnmg
back in football , Adrian
Peterson. But that doesn't
make Green Bay or Chicago
an also-ran .
Consider that the Packers
have lost only to Minnesota
(6-1) and Cmcinnati (5-2).
The Bears have fallen to
Green Bay, Atlanta and
Cincinnati. all winners. Jn
Aaron Rodgers and Jay
Cutler. they have QBs as
capable as Favre. They trail

behmd n~ainly because each
has a maJor weakness on the
offensive li ne that plays ,
directly into Minnesota's
hands.
While the NFC East has .
th re~ teams all capable of
makin,g the postseason. those
teams dommance has gone
missing.
New York started 5-0. theJ.
was routed by New Orleans
and Philadelphia and outmuscled by Ariwna. The Gjants·
secondary is a sieve and
teams are bulking up to
thwart lhe pass rush that has
become their only real line of
defe~se .
.
Phtladelphm and DaJJas are
an enigmatic S-2. When at
full strength, which has been
very rare through seven
~ames, the Eagles are ~ynan1~c on offense, effictent on
defense. Then they throw in
the biggest stinker of the year
by any favorite, ·l o~ in g at
Oakland.
The Cowboys are on a
three-game roll and they're
linally pressuring quarterbacks. But lhe pass defense is
mediocre and they have just
nine takeaways: winless
Tampa Bay has 11.
So. for now. let's shift the
spotlight from East to North .

ilj

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IVER

Sunday, November 8, 2009

•
Another committee compos~d of
Bentley. Ord, VanMeter. Larry Fields.
May or Eric Cunningham. and Rollie
, YRACUSC- Whether you want H~:mslt!) ma1.k decisions on sur·face
to play on the wiggle worm, take applications.
a try at the sky rail climber. or go
As the project progres!&gt;cd. so did the
down the spyro slide. it's all right number of people volunteering their
there on the new Syracuse Village services. Ron Annes checked the area
Playground finished last week.
for underground electrical \Vires
:'fhe cost to Syracuse village for before the~ cxc~n at ion bl!gan. Greg
developing the parK was minimal with Hennccke gave guidance al)d safety
most of the money coming from a information. Kim Romine and Racine
grant supplemented with time. talent. Mayor Scott Hill who had both
~ equipment from numerous volunworked on Racine's playground
. '
and supportive services and installation offered al.lvicc. Rollie
ons from businesses, organiza- Hemsley ami Jay Hemsley did the
•
. and others.
excavation and levelin&lt;&gt; on ~ite with
·'It was a matter of a community their equipment.
e
coming together lo make something
The Meigs County Highway
gQod happen for the village," said Jov Department donated gravel and
Bentley. Syracuse Council member Sutton Township trustees delivered it
an:d chairman of the playground to the :..ite. Bill Davis drew up the
oevelopment committee.
drainage system plans, the Syracuse
f.,.ocated below London Pool near Community Center donawd grass
the banks of the Ohio River next to the seed, Roy and Pat Holter gave strav./,
tennis courts. the playground is easily and Dwight Hill provided ground
atcessible.
cloth.
The funding to build it came from
Then there were numerous busitb~ 2008 Capital Budget through the
nesses which contributed in various
~sistance of Sen. Jimmy Stewart
ways including Dettwiller Lumber.
Rentals.
when he was a member of the Ohio Gheen
and
P.D.K.
House of Representatives. The gram Construction. along with Dynamic
amount was $35.000. It didn't require Installations and Carleton School.
matching funds of any sort, according
Other volunteers took care of proto Bentlev.
viding food and beverages for the 30
There
nine individual pieces of or so pitching in to help on special
n~ equipment - a log roll. curved
work days and other:-; used their vehibalance beam, wiggle worm. spring cles to haul in supplies needed.
Jay and Rollie Hemsley used their
rider fire truck. track ride. stationary
cycler. stand-up spinner. sky rai I tractor to move the gravel and mulch
climber and a large unit which into position on the playground.
iJ;lcludes a spyro slide. double slide. "They saved the day for us because
ftre 'pole, corkscrew climber. loop without their help , we'd still be
climber, belt bridge.' and a verti- wheelbarrowing the gravel and
pe climber.
mWch.:;..quipped Bentley.
ides Bentley scrvmg on the \'ll''Ttf~ proJect evolved' v. ifh the help
lage playground committee which and support of many \ oluntecrs.
mal.le some equipment location deci- Nearly everyone I askedLo help dill ~o
sions were Donna Peterson. Mike willingly. ·Ask and ye shall receive,'
Vani\teter. Mike Jacks. Bob Ord. and cenainly applied to thb project," :-.he
Dorothy Amberger.
concluded.
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAtLVSENTINELCOM

are

~

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Sixteen-month old Danae Lynn Hemsley. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Hemsley, enjoys a ride down
the big slide at the playground.

Submitted photo

Vqlunteers John Bentley and Gordon Fisher assemble the kiddie spring fire
tn.~ck playground equipment.

'

Submitted photos

Bo Wi llis and Denzil
Hudson assemble a piece of playground equipment.
Above:

Charlene Hoefltch/photo

Lots of excavation was required In the development of the Syracuse playground. Handling much of that. was, from the left, Jay Hemsley, Roger Hook,
Rollie Hemsley and Larry Fields.
l

Right: Bob Deemer and Mark
Allen roll out the coil of drainage
pipe to be inserted to move water
from the park.

�PageC2

iunba~ tttimes -ientinel

Sunday, November 8, 2009

COMMUNITY CORNER
The
Middleport
Community As ocintion is
lookmg for a color photo of
the Middleport Pool - one
taken in the late 50 or 60s
fmm the &lt;;idcwalk on
General H at1m~cr hlrkway.
If they c&lt;~n lrnd just the
right one, they plan to usc it
to pattern a "Cats Meow" as
a companion piece to the
~liddleport High School
one done several year ago.
So ....get out ) our old
photo album~ nnd begin
looking. You may find one
of the pool that's just right
1 to
hare
with
the
Community As ociarion.
Bl!t if )OU don't, the time
:-.pent looking through pa12e"
of old pictures is sure~ to
result in an enjoyable trip
down memoT) lane.

•••
Cadot-Biessmg Camp #126 SUVCW membrs David Carter, Ph1lhp Stephens, Ron McClintock, Henry Myers, Chris Roy
and J1'11 Oiler visited with students at Hannan Trace High School.

Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War participate
in local school programs
GAl I IPOLIS - l\1emhcrs of the local Cndot
Hies 1ng Camp #126 Sons ofUmon Veteran-. of the
Cl\il \\ar panacipated rn two different school program5 recently.
In connection \\ 1th the Emanctpation
Proclamation Celebration. the Camp escorted
Frederick Douglass rc-cna(.·tor M tchael Crutcher to
both River Valley Middle School nnd South Ga!Ha
Junaor High School. The fnmou abolitionist ~poke
to tudent&lt;; about has life a a slme and how he had
made a dtffercncc wnh hi!\ good fnend Abraham
Lincoln and challenged tudent today to make a
dtflcren~;t:.

The other program pa111cipatcd an b) the camp
\\ "' the Old Timers Da} at HaAnan Trace
Elclllcntat) School. 'I he m~mbers ol the camp met
with studcnh from kindergarll:n through sixth
grade and taught them hm\ Civil War soldier-.
dre ·sed, drilled and liH~d in camp. The students
\\ere shown man) piece of equipment that scldicrs
used and many question~ \\ere asked.

Frederick Douglass re-enactor Michael Crutcher, center, met with
students at River Valley Middle School and South Gallia Junior
High School as part of Gallia County's annual Emancipation
Celebration. Also pictured are David Carter. left, and Jim Oiler,
right, from the Cadet-Blessing Camp #126 SUVCW.

• Gran de H s star
.
10
DaIIas Garber R
·

Bv JAMes SANos
wa~;

50 years ago this
momh that Dallas Garber,
star athlete at Rio Grande
High School in the middle
1950 and later nt Marietta
College, set a national collegiate football record that
stood for several years.
Pln) ing
for
Marietta
College in a 1959 game
uguin:;t Washington and
Jeffer:.on
College
of
Washmgton, Pn.. Garber
ru hed for 373 varus on 28
carrie , brealdng the old
record of 370 vards set.
ironicall), by his O\\ n teammate, Jim Hi som, in 1958.
Garber et an Ohio
Conference record that day,
too. for the most points
scored in one game - 42.
A.., a tc.un, Marietta set the
record for the most yards of
oflense by one team m a
single game 717.
lronicall). the pre' ious
record \\as 693 et bv
Mu,kim~um in 1957 agamst
M,mcna, \\hen the Mu kJes
pounded the Paonecrs, 74-0.
Wh\:n Garber broke the
record m 1959, Manella
hcnt
Washington
and
Jefferson, 90-0. In that
game, Gurbcr scored on
nms of 44, 2 I. 37. 3. 42 and
10. But he .slso threw a 30ynrd pas for n score and ran
in three extra pomts. His
picture appeared in new papers all .tcro :; the countr)
that week.
Gomg into the last game
of 1959, Garber had a
chance to set a national
rushmg record for the most
) ard gained in a inglc ca·
son. He hud 1,124 ) ards
before the final game '' ith
Beth 11) But right with
G.trber were three other
pla}ers
Dale Mills of
Northeast Mic;souri, Brad
Hu ..tcd of Lmher College
.mel ''Cannonball'' Couper
of MU&lt;;killglllll.
As it tut ned Olll. Garber
did break the national
rcc()rd, but o did Cooper,
who posted the new rccOJd
b) ju.,t .1 few ) ards O\ er
Garber. Cooper rushed for
125 )'Jrds in the final 1959
Mu~kte game agamst Mt.
L.:ntun to barely !"-.urpns
G.trbcr
CoopcF nnd
Gnrber
plu~ cd the ~.nne year!&gt; at
thcar rc pective schOQI and
It

•

·

•

had fin~ career~. While
Garber was at Marietta, the
Pioneers had ver:- compctitivc teams (unusual for
Marietta in this era). The)
were only 2-6 in 1957. But
after Garber became a
Marter at fullback in 1958.
Marietta went 16-11 O\er
the next three ~easons.
Included ·,n the total were
two impress,ve victories
over Capital and a win over
Mt. Union.
"Cannonball'' Cooper. a
member of the College
Football Hall ofFame. start·
ed hi career with a bang by
conng a touchdown on an
interception and rushmg for
85 ) ards a" a freshman in
the 1957 opener. Cooper,
like Garber. \\as as good on
defense as he was on
offen~e. Garber pla)ed tackle on defen~e and Cooper
played linebacker.
Garber. \\ ho e pla) ing
career at Mariena ended in
1960, still held in 1984.
when elected to the Marietta
Hall of Fame. several school
record - most touchdO\\ ns
in one game (6). mo~t touchdowns in one scas;on (15).
most career touchdowns
(34) and highest career n.rsh-

ing U\erage (5.4).
A few of tho e records
\\ere broken about a dec.tde
later. By the \\a), Cooper'
career rushing average wa:5.4 ) ards per carT).
Mu kingum 's undefeated
1960 team was called the
greatest team in school history and perhaps the greath
Oh'
e~t
team
t ·e
to
Conference had ever produced by its quarterback
and later longtime Muskie
basketball
coach
Jim
Burson.
That 1960 season started
with . a game between
Cooper·:~ Mu kies and
Garber's Pioneers. Experts
believed Marietta had one of
tts be t team in years. Cooper
and Garber traded touchdowns in the first few minut~ of the game. but then
Mu&lt;;kingum reeled off the
next 58 points to \\in ensih.
Marietta had seven tumo,er~
in that game. Marietta \\COt
on to finbh 6-3.1n their three
los es to
Mu:;kingum.
Wmenberg and Otterbcm,
thl:) \\ere outscored b) a
combined mmgin of 162-26.
lu six wins. the oppo ition
averaged only eight points n
gwne.

•

In 1958 and 1959.the two
rival fullbacks pla)ed do~e
~ame::.. but the Mu kics still
won.Jn the 1959 game, the
almost flawless Cooper
even fumbled and had a
punt
blocked
versus
1.ar:ietta. Oh, yes, besides
play:ing fullback and lineb k c
1
d
ac er. ooper a so punte
and kicked extra points.
Both Cooper and Garber
were drafted by NFL teams

•••

Mcan\\hile,
Pall\
Grosnickle.
MaKinc
Whitehead
and
Mary
Cowdery nrc busy collecting
Barbie dolb and acccssoric:&gt;
for the arwuul holiday dis·
play at the Meigs Museum.
A Barhic exhibit \\.'Us
~elected bccau-.e this is the
50th anniversary of •
Barbie ·s birth. Perhaps }
ha"e ~omethinc of Barbie
which you'd like to loan for
lhe display. If) ou do just let
one of the comrruttec members knO\\ or take ) our contribution to the Mu,eum.

•••

Again this ~ear the Ohio
Depanment of Agriculture
is partnering \'li ith the Ohio
Christmas Tree Association
and Fed l:.x to provide
Christma:-. trees to militar)
unib stationed overseas
during the holidH\ sca,on.
;\lore than 200 trees donat·
ed b)' various Christma!&gt; tree
growers in Ohio will be
packag:d along with donated
decorallons. cards, b&lt;mners
and es~ay!:&gt; nnd shipped to
soldit:r~ sen ing in Iraq,
Mghani-.tan ami Kuwait.
The) ·re expected to go out
Tuesday and should be de !iveredaroundThanksgiving.
(Charlene Hoeflich is
ge11eral · mana~er of T&amp;
Daily Seminelin Pomer~

·

Gallia County toddler wins
West Virginia queen pageant

,Jazahera Moore

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rclieo,ing your JOmt pain.
Local orthopaedic urgeon Dr. Jason Reed will
be discussing:
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I

So

GALLIPOLIS - Twoyear old Jazahera Moore
won the title of West
Virginia State Queen.
She won the natural photogenic award, glitz photo·
- ·Cooper by the 49'cr~ and genic a\vard and overall
Garber by the Colts. Cooper photogenic award. She
played six ~ea~ons in the will be competin~ in
NFL as a backup fullback December for the national
and Linebacker for San title, which will be held in
Francisco. He \\Cnt on to Tennessee.
It is reported that she
tart a commercial real estate
love~
to compete and is
brokerage business. Garber
honored
to hold four major
headed to the University of
Toledo where he earned his titles. A re::.idcnt of Gallia
Ph.D.
and
e\'entuall) County, :\loore competes in
became director of the pageants in Ohio, \Vest
Virginia and Ken tuck).
Toledo Student Union.

BIDWELL
HARD ARE

Buck Wood and Coal Stove
Spacial This Waak
$788.00
Rag.$871.99

Mo"t holida\ craft fairs
come and go, but the one at
East em l ilgh School just
keeps rolling olong.
This \viii be the 2211(1 year
for the fait to be held to
rai~e moncv for th~ band
and other music aL·tivities at
tht.! high school.
Some of the money raised
this ) ear will go into the
band'~ trip to Gmlenburg.
Tenn. in i\larch. 'f11e band
member . directed by the
talented and energetic Cris
Kuhn, will be perfonning
''hilc there.
Cri::-. doe" it all when it
com~s to mu"ic at Eastern.
Some )Cars back she organiLed a bell choir which
again this year will do a holiday concert at the Chester
Courthouse
in
early
December.
•••
That brings me to other •
holiday happenings which
are ah·c&lt;ldy scheduled.
This afternoon members
of the. P?mcro_) Mcr~h.ants
Assoctatwn wtll be JOrned
by community member~
and a Middleport church
youth group to trim the .
town for Christma .
Again thio;; year three of the
I tO\\n's churche hme \Oiunteered to decorate the gazebo~
at either end of the parking
lot. and the stage in the center.

''ill

The young people
be
putting up decorations in
the Court Street park~,
while others decorate the
period light po ts. \\ ith
greenery and wreath .
Volunteers are not onh'
welcome, but needed.
come lend a hand toward
making the "ill.tge a holiday
scene sure to cause us to
sing "It's beginning to look
a lot like Chri unas ......"

55 Hospital Drive
Room014
Athen~ OH 45701

When:

Saturday, November 21, 2009

"Risltt ajirr tl"• oprmtion,
/Iarew that it luul b,(fr t1

Time:

10:00 am (light refreshments \vtll be scm:d)

sU«css ... 1/un-c my life bilck
I m lrvmg 11 full-umc::

Space is linmed' So, regJstcr today!

agam

life"
Cindy Goodfellow, S4
Stryker K..- Replacenwnt

2005

To regtster wlii-888-Sf:RYKF.R. or
go to www.aboutltryker.com/seminars
Spon ored bv: Stryker Orthopaedics
and O'Bicn Memorial Hospital

�.....
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.r----~~-- -~~--------~------~------------------------------------------~~------~--~----

PageC3

: iunbaplimes -jlenttnel

Sunday, November 8, 2 0 09

.Big Bird's still huge as 'Sesame Street' hits 40
• B Y F RAZIER MOORE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Big Bini
is lea\ ing Sesame Street!
That ·s what he decide~ on
th~ "Sesame Street .. season
cner. A rapping real-estate
• ent pitches him on migrating to n new habuat (''h&lt;tbitat." Lhc episode'l&gt; "Word on
the Streot"). After siting up
a beach and a swamp for hi~
ne\\ habitat. Big Bird choos~ es a rain fore~t.
• But then he comes to his
sen&lt;;es with a musical number.
' "Sesame Street is mv
habitat!" he sings. ··sesame
Street is my home!''
Indeed. Big Bird - th&lt;U
'towering. yellow-feathered
,6-year-old - has been calling Sesame Slfeet home for
four decades. evet since the
show premiered on Nov. 10,
1969.
.
• Now. as it marks it'i 40th
anruversary on Tuesday on
"PBS (check local listings).
-he remains an essential
member of the tlock.
He is still brought to life
by Caroll Spinney, who also
plays trash-can denizen
car the Grouch.
iand-picked by Muppet•
. meister
Jim
Henson.
,Spinney was 35 when
, ··sesame Street" began. He
turns 76 the day after
Christmas. ln his dressing
room at Kaufman Astoria
Studios in Queens, where
the show is taped. he was
pondering an existential
question not long ago.
, ·'If you dido 't know when
you were bom. how old
~would you think you are?"
,he mused. ·•J can appl) that
to Sesame Street's longevity: It seems like years. but
I'd NEVER guess 40!"
Maybe that's because the
self-renewing . "Sesame
Street'' is forever young.
A realm of sunny days
where everything's A-OK.
the series starts its new sea.soo with epil.ode 4187.
wh1ch features the letter H
and. naturally, the number
40. With it and the 25 new
urs that follow. "Sesame
reet'' will continue to
•
plore its chosen habitat
- and experiment with
how it does the job.
"We think of every year
as experimental:· says
Carol-Lynn Parente. the
_show's executive producer,
''and thi::; new season is just
part of that continuing evolution.
" "It was always designed
:to emulate the TV-viewing
:environment," she notes.
•"Back 10 1969. it had a
;magazine format that emu:tated what was then on tele;vision."
~ To meet expectations of
:its audience 40 years later,
"'each new episode has been
.. reformatted as an hourlong
block composed of modular
programming parts. .
Murray Monster. a hvely
orange Muppet. hosts each
episode\ four segments.
These
include
Abby
dabby in the new
bby's Flying
Fairy
hool.'' v.bich marks the
-.first time a ··sesame Street"
'"character has been transwformed into C:GJ animation.

: The program is also kick'"ing off "My World Is Green
&amp; Growing." a two-year
·science initiative designed
. to increase positive attitudes
toward nature and the environment.
With that in mind, First
· Lady Michelle Obama visits
. Sesame Street to planl vegetable seeds with Elmo and
several young flesh-andblood gardeners.
Then Big Bird steps up.
"Wov.·, did I just hear
: right'?" he says. ''The first
' lady eats seeds? I love
seeds!''
Not exactly, says Mrs.
Obama, but "I do ear what
grows from these seeds."
Big Bird absorbs this infor. rnation with the thoughtfulss of any curious 6-yeard, which is what he is.
But that wasn't hO\V he
was originally hatched .
•
"For the first few shows.
he was just a silly. goofy
guy." recalls Spinnt:v.
''Then one day l s~\id, 'Big
Bird should be a kid. Forget
the fac t that he's eight feet
tall.' And real children
accepted him.''
Indeed. Big Bird l'ast
became a stgnature figure
on "Sesame Stre~:t." Early

•

In this April
10, 2008 file
photo, Big
Bird is seen

during the
taping of an
episode of
"Sesame
Streef' in

New York.

Murray Willock

'Liquidambar' topic of October
Floral Friends meeting
"Autumn CJ a second Spring when every lea} :s a .flower...
- Albert Camus

AP photo

on. he appeared solo on lhe
cover of Time magazine.
which dubbed his- show
''TV':o&gt; Gift to Children."
But even if he has never
grown older, he has never
stood still. Spmne) continues
to refine the perronnance.
"I study tapes to see how
to get ne\\ expression~ out
of his face," Spinney says.
"I see something good that l
did. and I take note to make
sure T do it again.''
As the silver-haired. nattily
bearded Spinney speaks with
a reporter in his dressing
room. Big Bircl'... lower half is
hanging in the closet: fuay
orange fleece pants with platter-size feet. into which
Spinne) climbs almost like
pulling on waders.
Then. on the set. \\ ith a:n
assistant's help. he encases
himseU' in the feathered yello'w bOdy and head before
each scene is taped. A tiny
televisiOn monitor harnessed to his chest lets him
glimpse the outside world.
He recites Big Bird'~ lines
as his upraised right hand
supports the head and animates its mouth and eves.
··Tht! head weighs about 4
112
pounds."
reports
Spinney. ··one fellow says.
'That's no big deal. I can do
that.' And I said. 'All right.
Lefs hold our hand up for
five minutes. You don't
even hnve to put anythmg in
it.· And in a couple or minutes. he said. 'My God!'
"There's a rule with puppetry: If it's comfortable.
you're probably doing it
wrong." Spinney laughs.
"My am1 has gotten much
strom!er than it was \\ hen I
started. r m real!\• great at
painting ceilings.'~ Spinney is ont of but a
few charter members of the
show still on the Street.
Among them:.Bob .McGrath
(Bob) and Loretta Lon!!
(Su&lt;;an). as well as camera
man Frankie Biondo.
They and so many others
pioneered a strategy for
cbannelim! tele\ ision t&lt;.&gt;
help
~underprivileged
youngsters. Cradled by a
nonprofit organization lllO\.\
called Sesame Workshop).
the mission continues. its
mandate expanded to reach
middle-income kids. roo.
Just as in the fom1ulation
of the show's original game
plan. research continues ro
play a major role.
"That is the model that
·sesame Street' has always
been based on: The education and research department works hand•in-band
with
producers,'' says
Rosemarie Truglio. who
heads
up
Sesame
Wor~shop's

research effor1.

In-house testing help~
idcnti~ key curriculum
goals, ape the show·~ content a track its success.
Meanwhile. independent
academic researchers have
conducted more than 1.000
studies, making "Sesame
Street'' the most researched

TV how in history.
One notable study rec~n­
nectcd with adokr.cents
who had 1va11icipated in
"Sesame Street'. research as
pre~choolcrs. lt found that
teens \\ ho watched "Sesame
Street" 1n preschool had
higher grades and spent
more time reading for pleasure than other teens "' ho
had missed the .show as
.
children.
··we feel :.o passionately
about gelling ·Sesame
Slf~el· in the hands of as
many kid'\ a::. possible
because we know it works:·
sa)s Carol-Lynn Parente.
These day..,. it'" not only
available on PBS. but also
on cable's Sproul network.
online and video podcasts.
Last ~cason, ··sesame
Street" ~veral!ed more than
5 mfllion viewers each
week. nnd beyond that,
logged 135 million imprc::.sions throu~h medin sources
other than~ PBS bt:twet:n
January and September.
And the shov. goe~ on,
"Sesame Street.. is cun·emly
midvv·av through production
of its 41st seusun. anJ one
recem afternoon was shoot~
ing a scene on a rare rainy
day. In Studio J, the diminu~
tive \luppds Elmo and
Rosita are having &lt;1 problem
sharing an umbrellu with
Big Brrd.
"You can't fil umh:r the

We offer the
best prices
and protection
for you.
$ D.O

md~:patdc:n·

,---..:~!Ieney, we C.MI t.1ilor

CADMUS - The floral Friends Garden Club held their
October meeting in the home of Dr. Murray S. Willock with
hostess Dolores Baker and co-hostesses Anne Baker and
Pauline Myers. For devotiom, Jean Davis read a poem.
"The Flower Of Friendship."
One guest was present: Henry Myers who brought tWO
sizes of black walnuts (1uglans nigra). One was the regular
size ·walnut but the other one a lot larger and came from a
rree in his yard .
Club president Josephine Elder called the meeting to
order and 12 members answered roll call by naming a tree
leaf they had brought with them. Plans were made for the
club to serve the breakfast at the regional meeting.
For "Show And Tell ," Josephine Elder rold about The
National Grove of Trees in Washington. D.C., where all 50
states are represented and she named rhe official tree for
each state and had a picture of each tree.
for the program "Liquidambar," Dr. Willock showed a
umbrella iJ I'm b()ldin!! it." video of Autumn foliage aJong our countty roads and we all
Ro~ita \\Orries.
agreed with the author. Beecher, who said. "October is the
"Oh. surer can.'' say~ Big opal momh of the year. It is the month of glory. of ripeness.
Bird. 'Til just make my:-;clf It is the picture month."
short.'' And down Spinney
Then. Dr..Willock lead a tour of his gardens. pointing out
sinks inLo a Big Bird the burgundy lace elderberry. nine bark. variegated cannas.
crouch. Good knees!
crim~on redbud. witch hazel and Japanese, blood grass. We
With nn sign of ~lowing then viewed The Liquidambar Lane (Sweet Gum) with irs
down. Spinney &lt;;ays he aims ma.ny colors of leaves. We saw the orange leafed sugar
to keep alit as Big Bird and maples, sassafra.~. pin oak and bald cypress. The red leafed
Oscnr.
sourwood, bradford pears. dogwoods, smooth and .!&lt;taghorn
l•J still llave the job. and 1 sumac, sour gum .larch. catalpa. aspen. redbud. honey locust.
have contract::. for lhe future mulberry and tulip trees . To quote William Shakespeare:
in hand:· he savs with a ·'Now Autumn's tire bums slowly along the woods.''
smile. '·and I'm delighted.''
The November meeting will be held al the Cadmus
After 40 years and count- Community Center with Jean Davis as hostess and Sherie
ing (plus spelling and other Kapp and Lori Sanders as co-hostesses. Our guest speaker
explorations), on "Sesame will be Beck) Scott and the program \Vi11 be '·Decorating
Str~et'' everything·~ A-OK.
Gourds - Bounty of The Fall Garden:·

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�... .,
PageC4
Sunday, November 8, 2009

A RNOLD ANNI VERSARY
POMEROY - Dan and
Pat Arnold will celebrate
their
50th
wedding
anniversary at an open
reception lo be held at rhe
Middleport Church of
Christ social room Sunday.
Nov. 15.
The Arnolds. previ
owners of Dan's. are
retired. They were married
on Nov. 21. 1959 at the
Bradbury Church of Chris
by Dan's brother. John
Edmonds.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have
a a son and daughter-in-law.
John and Patti Arnold, a
daughter. Melanie Daniels,
and grandchildren, Justin
Arnold in the U.S. Navy
and Casi Arnold, a freshman
at Meigs High School.
The couple request that
gifts be omitted. Cards may
be sent to them at 37600
Arnold Road. Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769.

BAIR D -HAL FHILL R EUNION
Kaleb and Stacey Reeder

ELDRIDGEREEDER WEDDING
Kaleb Allen Eldridge and Stacey Nicole Reeder were
married June 20. 2009. at the Reeder r~"sidence in
Manchester. Pa.
Kaleb is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kent Eldridge of
Bidwell. Stacey is the daughter of Debbie Reeder and the
late Rick Reeder of Manchester. Pa.
The bride was escorted by her brothers. Rich and Matt.
She \\as given away by her mother with the blessing of her
father. Stacey honored her father's memory by marching in
to the song ·'Butterfly Kisses.'·
· The maid of honor was Anna Pyles of Gallipolis.
Bridesmaids included rhe bride's sisters. Missv and Mandie
Reeder of Manchester, Pa.; sister-in-law, Megan Reeder of
Pittsburgh, Pa.: ·and friends Chris Corsnitz of Harrisburg.
Pa., and Emily McDivid of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
TI1e best man was the groom's brother, Jacob Eldridge.
Groomsmen included Andrew Holcomb of Gallipolis;
brothers of the bride. Rich and Matt Reeder: and John
Wildman of Warsaw. Tnd. Friends of the bride, Ronni and
Robby Wolfgang. served as ring bearer and flower girl.
Baskets of flowers grown by the bride's friends were
used as decorations for the oudoor ceremony. Wedding
table decorations were arranged by Kara Mattin of
Lexington. Ky. The bride's brothers performed "Much of
:You.. by Steven Curtis Chapman during the lighting of the
unitY candle.
Stacey is a graduate of Nmtheastem High School in
York, Pa .. and Cedarville University in Cedarville. Ohio.
She teaches Spanish for Middletown Schools near
Cincinnati.
Kaleb is a 2005 graduate of Ohio ·Valley Christian
School jn Gallipolis, and Cedarville University. He is a
technjcal writer and application specialist at YSI
Incorporated in Yellow Springs. Ohio. The couple resides
in Centerville, Ohio.
. The ceremony was officiated by Carlos Kelly.

CUES If l RE
The
Baird-Hallbill reunion was
held Sept. 13, 2009, at the
Gavin Shelter House.
Those in attendance
included Richard and Linda
Macias; Savannah. Wyatt
and Sammie Jo Halfhill;
Chri:&gt;ten
and
Wayne
Bennett; Phil and Tanya
Baird: Dorothy Baird; Gail
Baird; Dorothy Taylor;
Adam and Lottie Israel;
Lola and Mark McCoy;
Kelly. Ann and Kaci Ager:

Tracy and Cat'ly Burdette:
Grace Cheney: Frank and
Anne Ryther: Harold and
Margie Mayes: Roscoe
Mayes; Jim. Judy and Pam
Baird: Bonnie Cremeens;
John and Becky Pasquale:
Cindv
Baird:
Barbara
Halfhill; Marvin. Wendy,
Cassie,
Elijah
and
Nathaniel Baird: Shelly,
Ryan and Hunter Terry;
Chance
Byers:
Tim
Cheney; Delman Cheney;
Susan Brock; Matthev. and

GALLlPOLfS - The 50th
Milton Brown reunion was
held Saturday. Aug. 15,
2009. at 0.0. Mcintyre Park.
More than 55 people
attended. A gift bag con'taining a golden pencil and
mints was given to each
famBy.
Special guests included
Bevo Francis (Rio Grande

College basketball star) and
his wife. Jeannie.
The following people
were recognized:
• Farthest traveled: Amy
and
Emily
Sechler.
Kensington. Md.
• Oldest member: Eulah
Brown, Gallipolis.
• Youngest member:
Celena Brown. daughter of

S A N DE R S
GALLIPOLIS The
annual Sanders family
reunion was held Sunday.
Sept. 6. 2009, at the First
Church of God shelter
house.
A basket dinner was
served. Eddie Sanders asked
the bl~ssing.
Those. attending from the
Gallipolis area included
Gracie Dotson and Rick
Barnes; Ed. Diana and
Andrew Sanders; Craig and
Jeni Sanders: Penny. Sean
and Kelsey Sands: Joe,
Wyllodene and Tammy
Eskew; Dave. Kelly and
Jack Allison; Jill Sanders:
Randi
Tawney:
Zenia
Evans: Ona Ray and Luella
Sanders: Carl and Norma
Sanders; Marlin and Pennv
Haner: Bill and Nancy
Henry: Larry and Faye
Johnson; Ronda and Kevin
Johnson; Kayla and Kyle
Mooney; Delores Beaver:
George
and
Robin
Shamblin; Chris. Deshawn.
Kayla, Brianna and Grant
Sanders: Robbie, Teresa and
Gracie Harrison. Kevin
Lockhart; and Donovan
Sanders.

Those attending from
Jackson were Curtis and
Nathaniel White Nolan: and
Jam1e Sanders.
Those in attendance from
the Bidwell area included
Rita
and
Samantha
Simmons; Charlie. Tracy
and Jacob Turner; and
Justin Nolan.
Those attending from the
Crown Citv area were Jim
and Rhonda McCarty;
Travis McCarty; Brittany
Chapman: Ryan Geiger:
Dewey Cantrell; Leann ru1d
Brandon Harrison; Chandra
Canaday; Ronnie and Elaine
Barnes: Terry Neal; Geno,
Glenna. Stacy and Samantha
Johnson: Tina. Kirk and
Lexie Johnson: Megan and
Allison Meade: and Cline
and Audrey Sanders.
Those in attendance from
the Vinton area were Lany
and Brenda Burris; Shirley
Nolan; and Jacob McGhee.
Also attending were Phil
Sanders. Marysville. Ohio.
Hank. Sharon and Jodi
Fasone, Columbus: Derek
and K risttn Bragg aml
Keith and Jan Bragg. Rock
Hill. S.C.; Zach Haislop.

• ffe[9&amp; (/otm{~

20((9 .C/l.ec.qgrliliort 0 t/ute/'
/foe-r}tCUIIoll,
'

O'BRIEN
ANNIVERSARY
LE1J\Rl' FALLS - Larry and Phyllis Adams O'Brien of
Letart Falls celebrated their 50th anniversary on Friday.
Nov. 6. with a family gathering and a trip to Branson. Mo.
The couple was married on Nov. 6. 1959 by the Re'
Hubert Sharp al the home of her parents. the late Marshall
"Bo" and Florence Adams.
They have three children. Jim (Sheny) O'Brien: Linda
(Dale) Teaford. and Carol Pape and her fiance. Kelvin
Hoover. They also have nine grandchildren. Dale (Kara)
Teaford, Derek. Darin and Lindsay Teaford. Josh, Chelsea
and Adam Pape , Jamie OBrien, and Erin Chapman.

Visit us online at
www.mydallys entl n~l. com

Kay Doss.
The oldest man in atten~
dance was fran k Ryther.
The oldest woman was
Grace
Cheney.
youngest person was C
Burdette. The person w .
traveled the farthest was
Susie Brock.
Marvin Baird said grace
before the meal.
The 2010 reunion will be
held the second Sunday of
September at the Gavin
Shelter House.

It

BROWN R E UNION

GYmm6e/· eJYlomme.1&lt;ce

Phyllis and Larry O'Brien

Peggy Baird: Aaro~,Alexis .
Jordon,
Kayle1
and
Matthew Baird: Amanda.
Dustin
and
Serenhy
Russell; Cricket. Ellen.
Savannah, Dakota and
Nathan Baird. Brenda and
Mike Baird: Demetras .
Timothy. Clarissa. Cha!;tity
and Luci Parsons; Rhonda
Mayes; Robert, Becki and
Bra.yden Merrill; Denny
Baird: Heather. Tamara and
Brianna Cox; Marvin and
Phyllis Baird: and Mary

,q:e;I(Hflt~ohtp ,of'{llt.fiwi(m.

ftltletcw,

Mr. and Mrs. Chad Brown,
Pomt Pleasant. W.Va. (17
months)
MaJora Brown won the
door prize, which was- a
dated ceramic canister.
Nancy Fowler Clark gave
a brief history. Richard
Brown provided a look back
at the first reunion held on
Fortification Hill. Each

family was introduced and
shared how they were related to Milton Brown.
The new officers for 20 I 0
are Gabe Russell. president,
and Peggy Huber, secretarytreasurer.
The next reunion will be
held on the third Saturday in
August 2010 at 0.0 .
Mcintyre Park.

~!;.n~~.~5?ck~Luree
Dalton and Samara Queen.
Long Bottom; John and
Kim Sanders. Rutland:
Darrell and Jaine McFann,
Kerr: Everett and Phvllis
Hardy. Patriot: Dillard-and

Sanders, Scottow'

Shelly Casto. Jenn ifer
Stover. Marjorie Alford and
Geri Tolliver, Ashton,
W.Va.: Jesse Reynolds, Pt.
Pleasant;
and
Ashley
Henline. Wellsburg. W.Va.

r.\,

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A Preacher from the
Beijing Church of Christ,
in China, is visiting home!

When?- November 15th-19th
Sunday at 1Oaf!1 11 am, and 6p
Monday to 1hursday lpm

(.~l. ·. 6:~/r"we- tffJ&lt;eRt!e.l' &amp;:
,9/Mtt.l&lt;ctn.&lt;•e (flY!C'Itlioe

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Contact Michelle 992-5005 or
michelle®r!Jeigscountych&lt;mlber.com
For more infom1ation, tickets,
or a sponsorship.

David Langley, a Tennessee native who
served as a chaplain in the 2008
Beijing Olympics, will be holding a
gospel meeting. He will share
information about his work in China,
where he serves as minister for the
Beijing Church of Christ, and he will aid
us in understanding our work, here.
Be sure to come for this
once in '! life~time opportunity.
The building of the Church of Christ at
Rio Grande is located right off of the Rio
Grande exit from Rt. 35W. Take the first
or second driveway on the right.
Look for the

• www.mydailytrlbune.com

•

�PageCs

:iunba~ mimts -itntinel

SWlday, Novetnber 8, 2009

HO.L IDAY FILM PREV I EW

Carrey's Scrooge rings·in Hollywood holiday spirit
B Y D AVID G ERMAIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

•

•

•

OS
ANGELES
lywootlloves money. So
EbeneLer Scrooge. So
what better way to launch
the holiday season than
putting the old money-grubber at the head of the line to
separate movie-goers from
their cash?
The latest version of
Charles
Dickens'
"A
Cbtisrmas Carol" features
Jim Carrev as Scrooge.
Coming on Ebeneze)··s
coattails will be everything
from vampire romance
{"The Twilight Saga: New
Moon") and end-of-theworld stories ("20 12," "The
Road") to epic science tlclion ("Avatar'') and a new
incarnation of the world's
greatest
detective
(''Sherlock Holmes").
Presented
in
3-D.
''Disney's A Christmas
Carol" is the latest from
Oscar-winning
director
Robert Zemeckts ("Fonest
Gump''). who presents
ckens' London with the
me performance-capture
technology he used on "The
Polar
Express''
and
"Beowutr:·
Carrey and such co-stars
as Garv Oldman. Robin
Wnght 'Penn. Colin Firth
and Bob Hoskins workl.!d on
'a bare soundstage, their
bodies covered with sensors
so digital cameras could
record their pelformances in
360 degrees. Sets. costumes
and other details were filled
in later by computer animation.
The process allowed
'actor~ to take on multiple
Toles, with Carrey playing
Scrooge and the Ghosts of
Christmas Past, Present and
Yet to Come that teach him
'the meaning of the season.
· While Zemeckis loves
Alastair Sim's 1951 "A
Christmas Carol ." he said
previous adaptations never
captured the full impact of
ckens· surreal images. As
made
"Beowulf,''
Zemeckis realized he now
had the tools to bring ·'A
Christmas Carol" to the
screen the way he imagined
it on the page.
·'It was the idea of being
able to actually recreate
London and not have any
limitations
whatsoever.
Anything that existed at the
time we could present,''
Zemeckis said. "Then the
idea that Jim could play
Scrooge in all the different
ages, and the ghosts, they
could be his alter-ego, and
he could play those.
Everything just fell into
place."
With ·'Sherlock Holmes,"
Robert Downey Jr. and
director Guy Ritchie also
recreate old London while
reinventing Anhur Conan
Doyle's brainy. monkish
detective as an action hero.
verbal quipster - and even
bit of a loveL
Downey's Holmes fights
with fists. clubs. pistols and
hammers. trades odd-couple
banter with best buddy and
roommate Watson l]ude
Law). and shares romantic
moments with the only
,woman (Rachel McAdams)
who ever got the better of
him.
l t was a mce change of
pace for Downey after he
leaped to the box-office Alist with la~t year's comicbook blockbuster "Iron
Man.''
'·Jr was such a radical
departure," Downey said.
"A period ptece. A very,
very es tablished kind of
iconic image comes to mind
when you think of Sherlock
~ Holmes. Whereas Iron Man
was a relatively unknown
~uote-unquote second tier
superhero ... until last year."
Another
series
that
. mped to blockbuster stalast
year
was
s
ollywood's take on author
S tephenie Meyer's love
storv between a sensitive
schoolgirl (Kristen Stewart)
.and her immortal vampire
;boy toy (Robert .Pattinson ).
• T he second msrallment.
:"The Twilight Saga: New
:Moon," is a lesson in teen
;heartache as Pattinson ·s
•Edward dumps Stewart's
'Bella. realizing the danger
.he represent&lt;.; LO his human
girlfriend.

AP photos

In thts film publicity image released by Disney, Ebenezer Scrooge, voiced by Jim Carrey is shown carrying Tiny Tim, voiced by Gary Oldman are shown

in a scene from "A Christmas Carol."
The broodinl! Bella finds Parker and Hugh Grant) in a
solace with a school chum rocky marriage find new
(Taylor Lautner) and his twists in their relationship
werewolf gang and eventu- after they see a murder and
ally winds up pulling are hustled into witness proEdward out of a jail}.
tection.
''Edward breaks up with
·'It's Complicated" - A
Bella for her own protec- messy love triangle develtion. but Bella believes it's ops among a bakery and
because he doesn't love her restaurant owner (Meryl
any more, and she goes into Streep). her ex-hubby (Alec
a terrible depression." said Baldwin) and an architect
·'New Moon" director Chris (Steve Martin) in the latest
Weill. "In the end. there's from
director
Nancy
kind of a lovely turnaround Meyers
("Something's
whereby Bella has to go and Gotra Give'').
save Edward, having been
FOXES, FROGS
saved by him throughout
AND RODENTS
their past."
Meryl Streep abo join::;
Also in the fantasv realm. George Clooney and Bill
James Cameron [!; back Murray among the voice
with his first fictional fiJm cast of Wes Anderson's anisince 1997's ·'Titanic" mated comedy ''Fantastic
swamped Hollywood to Mr. Fox:· lhe tale of a wily
become king of the Oscars fox waging war with ·human
and the biggest modem farmers.
Anderson gave his voice
blockbuster. ''Avatar" also
marks Cameron ·s return to actors a taste of rustic life
his sci~nce- fict~~n ;oot.~ and by taking them to a real
a reumon With Ahens star · fann to record the vocals.
~i~ourney Wea.ver. \Vho
"It was like going to
JOms Sam Worthmgton and camp:· Clooney said at
Zoe Saldana among the cast October's London Film
of the filmmaker's 3-D epic Festival, where "Fantastic
about h~fmans taking .on the Mr. Fox·· was the openingform of extrate,rrestnals as night movie. "We were out
they explore a dtstant world. in the middle of nowhere on
' 'Wha! we ha~e on the people's farms. doing sound
screen nght now ts 150 per- effects and rolling around in
cent of what I imagined. the fields."
The other 50 percent is the
Also
among
the
part I could not have imag- menagerie:
ined without having the
"Alvin
and
the
actors there. without work- Chipmunks:
The
ing with a team of artists Squeakquel" - The folwho come up with all these lowup to the family hit
amazing,
outlandish about critter crooners Alvin.
designs,'' Cameron said. Simon and Theodore has
"My job was really kind of the threesome findin2 their
herding the cats, getting the hearts ~nd singing talents
artists to kind of be cohe- tested m a battle of the
sive about the aesthetic bands against a trio of
decision, so it was all one female chipmunks.
world. so it seemed like part
"The Princess and the
of an evolutionary or eco- Frog'' - Disney animation
goes old-school as the stulogical system."
Hollywood has dozens of dio releases its first handotl1er films, big and small. drawn cartoon in five years
comiQg before year's end. with this update of 'The
Here's the lowdown on Frog Prince'' fairy tale. set
some highlights:
on the jazzy Louisiana
HUSBANDS, WIVES
bayou.

In this film publicity image released by Warner Bros.. Jude Law portrays Dr. Watson, left,
Robert Downey Jr. portrays Sherlock Holmes. and Rachel McAdams portrays Irene Adler,
right, in a scene from ''Sherlock Holmes."
.. It's like a Noah's Ark
story in a way:· Cusack
said. "It mirrors a few of the
ethical dilemmas that are
posed by asking the question of who gets to go and
who doesn't.''
.
Also on the apocalypse
front:
"The Road" - Author
Cormac McCarthy's starkly
poetic vision of doom
comes to the screen in this
adaptation starring Viggo
Mortensen as a father on a
desperate road trip across
the wreckage of America.
seeking some hope of a
future for his young son.

INSPIRATION ON
THE PLAYING FIELD

Clint Eastwood _taps
''Million Dollar Baby'· and
''Unforgiven··
co-star
Morgan Freeman to pia)
Nelson
Mandela
in
"lnvictus:· a post-apartheid
drama about the South
African president rallying
black and white behind his
country's rugby team during
an underdog run in the 1995
AND LOVERS
THE END OF
World Cup.
"Chicago" director Rob
THE WORLD
Malt Damon. who coMarshall orche:mates his
,.
ste~r~ as the captain of South
latest musical with "Nine:·
The Mayan calendar predicted an end of days in Africa ·s rugby squad said
based on the Broadway 2012.
Freeman was the only
adaptation of Federico
D irector
Roland choice to play Mandela.
Fellini's foreign-language Emmerich makes good on
''Someone would have
classic "8 I /2."
·
been
keelhauled if he hadn ·r
that prophecy ~ith his latest
It 's the story of a film- doomsday
story ··20 J2.' played Lhat role.'' Damon
maker (Daniel D ay-Lewis) featuri ng John Cusack. said.
and his many, man_y Amanda Peet, Chiwetel
Also from the wide world
women: Hrs wife (Marion Ejiofor. TilandiC Newton of sports:
Cotillard). his mistress and Danny Glover in a tale
"The Blind Srde" - Just
(Penelope Crl!z), his mom of a world devasta.ted by in time for his rookie :.eason
(Sophia Loren).hls film star cataclysm and Mruggling with the Baltimore Ravens
(!'Jicole Kidman). his cos·h
· 1
~
tume designer (Judi Dench). Wlt a temb e· quandary: comes this real-life drama
Who do you choose when about
Michael
Oher
a lover from his youth
1 f
·
(Stacy Ferguson), and a you can save on y a ract10n (Quinton Aaron), a black
youth surviving on his o\l.n
fashion journalist (Kate of humanity?
Hudson).
Singing in a recording
"PEOPLE CARING FOR PEOPLE"
studio was a new challenge
for some of the cast. mcluding Cruz .
"You feel ver)' vulnerable.
because you can't hide anythi ng." Crul said at this
year's
Cannes
Film
Festival. "But it was so
much fun. After you are
there and you start singing
and everything starts to
come together, if you can
reall} be in rhe moment and
enjoy it, it's an amazing
experience."
Also in the mood for lo\'e
"Did You Hear About the
Morgans?'' -A Ma nhattan
couple
(Sarah
Jessica

who 2ets a shot at a better
life after he's adopted by a
white
couple
(Sandra
Bullock and Tim McGraw).

FAI\ULY AFFAIRS
"Lord of the Rings'' mastennind Peter Jackson turnsto the homefront while
keeping a foot in otherworld!) realms with "The
Lovely Bones,'' an adaptation of Alice Sebold's novel
about a slain girl (Saoirse
Ronan) watching over her
family from heaven.
The cast includes Rachel
Weisz. ~1ark Wahlberg.
Susan Sarandon and Stanley
Tucci.
Jackson said he cried
v.. hen he read the novel.
"If the tllln!!s that l was
imagining that made me
cry could be put on screen.
I thought this would be
really amazing;· Jackson
said. "Because I rhink the
book is an incredible book.
but it's -.. ery personal. And I
think what you get out of
that book depends a lot on
what experience you' \'e
had in your life and \\·hat
~x perience of death that
you'\e bad. and lo:-,ing
loved ones."
Also in a familv wav:
''Up jn the · Air'·

Happily living life without
connections, a corporate
hatchet
man
(George
Clooney) travels Lhe country aiming for a I 0 millionmile frequent-flyer milestone onlv to discO\·er that
family bonds might be the
greater \ alue. after all.
..Old
Dogs··
A
divorced
guy
(Robin
Williams) enlists his womanizing best buddv and
business partner ·(John
Travolta) to help care for
the twin kid~ he never knew
he had.
"Brothers..
Jim
Sherida11 directs this rever-·
sal-of-role~ drama about
siblings (Tobey :Maguir~
and Jake Gyllenhaal), one a
Marine presumed dead il~
Afghanistan. the other ~
black sheep who becomes
man of the house for hi~
brother':-~
wife (1'\atalie
Po11man).
"E\ eryl:iody'' Fine.. _.
Robert De Niro co-stars
with Drew Barrymur~. Kate
Beckinsale
and
Sam
Rockwell in the story of a
widower ~ ho ...ets off tQ
reconnect 'v\ ith hi~ grO\\ n
kids in tJ1is remake of th~
Italian
original
from
G iuseppL' Tornatore.

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INSIDE
Farm • Garden, Page D6

Sunday, November 8, 2 009

T ave &amp;
th a

ati

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1

Bv CALVIN WOODWARD
ASSOCIATED PRESS

FRONT ROYAL, Va. ~
Skyline Drive specializes in
~olitude mixed with pulseracing exhilaration. You can
get that three ways as autumn
colors come alive across the
Blue Ridge Mountains.
)'ou can bike it, all 105
miles of Skyline Drive's ups.
downs. twists and vistas.
You can hike its backcountr) trails through a land of
ridges. waterfalls, hardwood
forest and pesky bears.
Or you can drive it. just as
Hiking on Stoney Man Mountain, overlooking the Shenandoah
the .distant generation that
Valley, from Shenandoah National Park
.
ed the road intended
e generations to come.
DRIVING
on some days. The govern•
yline Drive took shape
Completed
in
1939. ment says visibility has been
in the Depression, the handSkyline Drive has been a cut by half over 50 years.
lW.ork of a government that
If the human imprint etchfavorite jaunt by motorcar
really did have projects
since the start. At [he drive ·s es the sky. it recedes in the
shovel-ready.
southern poinl. the route forest.
Shovels carved a road
There, the occasional
AP photos becomes the Blue Ridge
along the serpentine spme of The vista from one of the 75 scenic overlooks on Skyline Drive ls seen during a bicycle Parkway and rides the crumbled chimney. rotted
the Blue Ridge, creating trip. The Blue Ridge Mountains are named for the blue hues often cast over the hills by ridges for 469 more miles to cabin lo~s and family cemedesperate!} needed jobs and water droplets evaporating from the trees and plants.
Great Smoky Mountains tery testify to settlements of
opening panoramas to the
National Park.
another time, before people
masses that were once the second day. just past Big Shenandoal1 classic replete to any one willing to test
Skyline ·s 75 overlooks were moved and the Ci viltan
preserve of mountain people Meadows. Along a 22-mile with cascading water. It's their upper-body strength.'' are a string of jewels: stop Conservation Corps got to
and moonshiners scattered stretch. the elevation drops reached from Skyline mile- she said. ·'Excellent views. on a whim and you can't go work wich shovels.
in the hills until the feds nearly I JOO feet. \Vith a few posts 43 or 45.5. or from Fascinating geology.
wrong. The park· service
They paved a ribbon of
drove them to valleys below. punchy climbs along the way. Route 600 outside the park.
"We had to pass our packs points people especially to:
paradise. put up some park)oday.• Americans strug- · This section is why north
• Signal Knob. milepost ing lots. Then let deer. bobExperts and determined along to each other to make
gling with economic calami- to south is recommended. novice~ come together on it through some of the crack!&gt; 5.7. a Civil WarConfederale cats. v. ild turke) and those
ty of their own enjoy a Long climbs are demanded the old favorite, the trek Lo and up some of the boulders. semaphore ~ite.
pesk) bears have the run of
reclaimed wilderness hand- dther way but over these Old Rag peak. a bracing 1 left that u·ail more curious
• Range View, milepost the place.
ed down from their ances- particular miles. you want hike and rock scramble that about rock climbing than I'd 17.L simply for the magnifTtps: Shenandoah also has
tors· "stimulus package."
icence of the vista.
180 miles of horse trails and
to be going down.
requires some hand-over; ever been."
By wheels or foot, Skyline
• South River, milepost licensed fislung, but no huntWithin this stretch is a band climbing and navtgaTips: Thts 1s black bear
Drive and the national park pure downhill dropping tion of tricky crevasses. country. Attacks are rare; 67 .2. to watch the sunrise.
ing. Pets are allowed in
it dissects - Shenandoah I ,000 feet over rive miles.
A haze often hangs over campgrounds and a few units
Count on six hours on lim encounters. more frequent.
offer a breathtaking
Just hpng on. tickle you1 route. which is reached on Read up on way~ to behave the hills. The Blue Ridge is at Sk)l~nd. but not rooms ~t
respite from the clamor of brakes on sweeping turns. Route 600. Cheehy and her and camp in their vicinity. so named for a hue created Big Meadows. Leashed dogs
Washington some 70 miles grin and fly .
husband did it as an And check for deer ticks on by trees releasmg water are pennitted on most trails.
. It's also a road less
you. no matter how !\hort the droplets and gaseous mole- not some of the most popular
Tips: Starring at the overnight trip in winter.
led for long-distance Dickey Ridge Visitor Center
''lt was an amazin~ Iitke walk. Fret! permit required cules. Power-plant emissions ones. such ao; Dark Hollow
•
mrs willing to trade the more than four mil~ mto the and I absolutely sugge~t ir for backcountry camping.
add to the atmospheric brew and Old Rag.
utilitarian speed of pam11el park avoids one of the steep'
north-south Interstate 81 for est and lea&lt;&gt;t scenic climbs. lf
the 35-mph peace of the riding the route without vehiPaid advertisement
mountains.
cle support. pack enough
water. snacks and first aid to
BICYCLING
last hours at a time. Food and
Skyline is an exquisite drink are available near milebicycling route. if the legs posts 24. 42. 51 and 80 umil
hold up.
services shut for the season at
An end-to-end. two-day various dates in November.
expedition is perhaps best
done north to south. from
HIKING
Front Royal to Rockfish
Shenandoah
National
Gap. Big Meadows is the Park is home to I 0 I mile::. of
A'IHE~S'LOGAN The area's largest
natural halfway place to stay the venerable Appalachian
automotive group is bucking tradition, and
for the night. in lodge rooms Trail and hundreds more
Jeff Wood, prc~ident of Don Wood
overlooking Shenandoah miles of walkable wilderAutomotive. 1s once again creating a surge
of excitement among southeast Ohio resiValley. in cabins or the ness, much of it accessible
dent!.. He\ olferlng Dar-After-Thllnksgivcampground.
Another from Skyline Drive.
ing :.pedals on ~cores of ne\\ tmd
choice is Skyland resort less
Big Meadows (milepost 51)
prc-ov.:ned cars through the month of ~o­
than 10 miles north.
draws familie!) not only to its
\·ember.
The road is two lanes with high alpine· sweep of open
The day after Thanksgiving has long been
two-way traffic and no space and rare plants but to
the biggest shopping day of the year•.. and
for good reason. Many tailcrs offer
shoulder, ordinarily a recipe nearby hiking trails that kids
irresistible incentives tor shoppers ro buy on
for trouble. But with only fmd magical and doable. Dark
that day. But Jeff decid\.-d to improve on the
four entrances along its Hollow Falls, for one. is a 1.4idea. "I don't think it's right to make people
. e length. no commercial mile round trip, with steep
wa1t until the end of the month and then
ic and 75 spectacular sections, starring a 70-foot
have to wake up before sunrise and stru1d in
-off
overlooks diverting frothy waterfall (The ~hortest
line to get a great deaL So I've decided to
•
make ''Black Friday" deals available the
drivers and cyclists, the hike to·a waterfall in the park).
whole lllOnth."
route IS usually uncrowded The Story of the Forest trail is
llere's how "Black No\'embet·" works:
ana bike-friendly.
an easy 1.8-mile circuit.
The entire "Black ~ovember" im·entorv
If hills are your friend.
Dedicated Shenandoah
selection is marked dov.n to retlect the •
Stats tell the tale. from a backpacker
Jt!/) Wol!ll. Presid~nl oj'Dun If-bod Automotil'l! awwwzces ·Black Frida.l•'' dt•lll!f all month
Stephanie
!owe)t prices of the year,
/on{!. The emirr• ''Black Vowmber ·· invento11' ~·election is marked d&lt;nm to the lowest pricf!s of'
group trip in the spring Cheehy favors multi-day
These mammoth discounts on new and
the~vem; cmd rmde-inJ ure wonh em £'J;tlu SJ.OtJO '" e1· NADA vulue• .\fake 110 payment.~ umil
pre-owned vehrcles are NOT :-..tARKED ON
measured by GPS: 10,749 expeditions and backcoun7.0 I 0 und lwep mun• numeyjor tlztt lzulida) ~. Visu uuy show mom ta get your "Black Nowmbt~r"
TJ IE VEHTCLES. Customrn can get tbcir
feet of climbing and 9.290 try camping often on hikes
Ji.~cuunt sh(!t!f. To ~!?Ill private &lt;1ppoimmelll c&lt;sll (7411J 593-6641 (,1the1L~') or (74f)j JHS-.~624
''Black
:'\on·mber
..
di)count
sheet
at
!lin'
feet of descending. It was a intersecting
with
the
(Logan).
Don Wood Auwmotive showroom.
character-building, calorie- Appalachian Trail.
No oayments until20TO. bO you can
made n dilliculr for some people and S&lt;&gt;mc
ne"' and pre-owned vehicles people enjoy
burning labor of limbs. a
·'The · classic backpack of
keep your money for specialthrng$ lor the
f:umlics tl' keep up with thear bills. That•s
d.ri\ mg. to teature for this tipecial sale. The
continual cycle of gritted Shenandoah will always be
holidays:
why we creat.:d DonWoodSaysYc~ to help
best sekctcon will go to those \1i ho arrive ·
Our d~.-dicated financing group.
teeth and ~ns tliat added trekking the AT through the
meet those challenge~.
first. And you· [I get $1,000 over'\ ADA
DonWoodSaysYes, will g&lt;l to work to U1
up to an eptc weekend ride. park:· she says. "However, its
"Th&lt;: DonWoodSaysY\.'S credit arproval
loan vuluc for vour old car on sdcct
the
flnandng
each
customer
needs.
The climbs may be the eat- hollows are so enchanting
program ts about pro' iding extru help to
Hecause U$ed car:. are in hagh demand
pre-t)\\TICJ cari; O\'er $8.000 and select new
your-veggie:; portion but they that I would suggest getting
people who are conccmed about their credit. cars.
right m''''· ypur trade "ill be worth SI.OOO
do offer reward.., to the spirit. off the most famous beat~n
[hat mean~ more pauence, more
over :"APA hum ya!ue durioe "Hiack
Like they say, ..lirst come, first served ...
You smelt the wild. see tbe path to enjoy a series of tv,;o-.
:lioHmbgr." So you can ~ave mort on s~lect unuerstanding, more ;Jppr&lt;lvals. and more
We purcha~cd ~tra vd1icles for the Black
ne'' and us.:d ve-hicles. 11u~ mean~ you can
flowers and become swal- three-day overnights."
~top maktng n.:maimng loan or kasc
lo\ved by ~olitude. Avoid pain
The Overall Rw1 (reached
payments and may alsl' l'l&gt;sttllm an
by having the patience to inch from Route 630) leads to the
DonWoodSaysYes credit approval program is
additilmnl price reduction on the car yuu
alQng in a low gear.
park's tallest v. aterfall, visichoose.
about providing extra help to people who are con• The downhills? Dessert ble from a ledge a~ it crashWuod say:., "This IS &lt;One of my fa\iorite
'-*lth a cherry on top.
cerned about their credit. That means rnore patience,
tum:::.
of
the
)car.
rm
excit..:d
to
help
my
es far below. The Whiteoak
neighbors anJ 11ther people an SllUtheast
The sweetest descent Oak Canvon-Cedar Run
more understanding, more approvals, and more emOhio get :1 nicer. newer vehiclc ...und gttt the
to)nes on the moming of the route is · a challenging

BLACK OVE BER
Local Car Dealer Bucks Tradition and Offers ·
''Black Friday'' Deals All Month Long

''rhe

If You Go ...
, SKYLINE DRIVE: Th1s parkway tllrough Shenandoah
National Park in Virgin•a - http://www.nps.gov/SHENI - 1s
closed only in snow or ice, and at night dunng doorfthunting
season. Lodges, visitor centers and campgrounds with ser·
Vices close during November, reopen in March. Seven-day
vehicle park pass through November: $15. Day veh1cle pass
December-February: $10. Annual vet1icle pass: $30. Pass for
bicyclist or hiker entering without a motor vehicle: $8 through
• ~Jovember. $5 December-February. Fall tollage reports:
http://www.nps.gov/shen/parknews/fall-colors.htm.

BliST DEAl. av:1ilablc on nc\\ and newer
cars wnhmu waitmg until after
Thanksgiving or setllng the ulann li.1r two
hours b..d'orc sunnse ..
!It: went &lt;&gt;ll to :&gt;ay. ••Jthink p..:oplc ha\'e
otht&gt;r tlun).ts to do that wcekend ... likc
geuing ,t3ftcd on C'hrhtma~ shoppmg or
-.pending umc \\ ith fum1l)' or vc,luntecnng to
hclj&gt; other~. But I've scm how good pcuple
feel after gerting a real st.!al on Bhll'k
I· riday. .:md want them to feel that samt

\\ ay wh.;n they buy a car from

l~n Wood

Automurivc uny time tha:. month.
Anothl.'r Reu1oon To Gh·e 1 hank':
Cr~dlt llelp I'or Good People
1 he people ut Don Woutl Auwmot1vc
understand thnt recent finan.:ial strlllllli have
2003597

phasis on the future instead of the past. We're belpmg good people get back on track.,,

emph~is

on the future instt'Od oftht.' l'ast.
wc·r.:: hdping good pt-oplc gel ba.::k on
track. And a tair loan on 3 nicer, n&amp;:\\cr car i:,
JU!i.t the thmg many peopla need n hand \Hth
right now. DonW\"lt1dSaysYc~ is dcdic.ttcd 111
g:.&gt;Hing )'UU hack on the road w1th n cur
ycm'll be proud ofllriving.'' Wovd
c~plaancd

Rut 't'ou Need to llurn
"''ve personally sclccrcd the mo~t popular
\ ehiclcs my ~rsCllli.tllavoritcs and thost'
Paid advertiSement

November C\'Cill. and shipml!nt'- are arrivmg
all the tune. But the best sclecttM will go
fas1 with deals like these,'' said Wood.
Customers catl pick UJ) our ''f31ack
NtwcrniJcr Discoum Sheet" a1nnv Don
Wol1d Automotive !&gt;how room. '
Th~ BlacJ, ~on~mher ~,·ent is going
00\1, onh nt Don \\'ood Automothe

on

location; in ,\tht'm and Logan. For tastest
\crvic4.'. cull (7.&amp;0) 59~-0641 (.\thllns) or
(740) J8S..5624 (Logan).

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Sunday, November 8, 2009

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www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydallyregister.com

PLU_S YOUR AD N.OW ONLINE .

To Place

Sentinel

\!rribttne

l\egister

Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 448-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

c~UfJG~Aft!

DE

•

[)Ult!Aire~

Wor.d.Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW JO WRIT.E AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items

To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES•
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
~&gt;Errors
Must Be
Reported on tl1e firs
day of publication
~nd
the Trlbune-

~ntlnei·Regfster wll

lbe responsible for no
imore than the cost o
11e space occupied
~y the error and onl~
!the first Insertion. We
ls11all not be liable fo
~ny toss or expense
hat results from the
publication
o
!omission
of
an
!advertisement.
!corrections will bE
!made
In the firs
!available edition.
)sox number ads arE
~!ways confidential.
&gt;Current

rate care

~pplles.

lo&gt;AII · Real

EstatE
art
lsubject to the Federa
Fair Housing Act o
~dvertisements

1968.
»This

newspape
only l1elf
~anted ads meetln!
EOE standards.
~ccepts

200

Announcements

will

no

~nowlngly accept an~

!advertisement
In
lviolatlo11 of the law,

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Frtday for ln•er'tlon
~n Next Day'&amp; Paper
sund•V In..Columnt 9:00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

•t

POUCIES: o~ ..-uey Pubhll\lng reMrvot the rtght 10 «SII.rejeet. or ce'*l•nv O:d arTY tlmt EITOI'&amp; mullt bt ft!X&gt;rt«&lt; on the llr81 Gay ot putlllellliCfltncltlll
Tribll'le-Sel'llnef.FlegiJior will bl respol'llib!e tor no mQI'It tl'llln the COlt otlhe epact occ:upltd by tiM error 1nc1 only 1111 UrlllnMnton. Wtllhlllnot billable tor
lilY loa or tl1J)81111 thai rtiiJlte trom tiM pub41ctlloll or OI'IIMion of en t&lt;l'ltltlllmfnl. Conection 'Will bl mld&lt;l In the firll available «!Ilion. • 8ox numbtt O:d~
11• 81Wllyl conlldtntlaL • CI.Trent 1110 CliO tppHn. • All till .uta .clvtr11etrntntt ara tubjlct IO lht Feclenl Faif Houtlng AC1 or 1888. • 1111t IWW119«1*
ICO!lpll onty IM:Ip WlntcG aclt mo«lll; EOE 41flndardt. Wo W~l not kT10¥11ngiV accept 011y tdvt!1111ng In ytollltiOII Ol thf lOW Wtn not be '"POfiOlble for
llf&lt;Ortln tn ad tllk'lf\ OYfr IM pl1011C',

O.crlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

• Include Pflonc Numbcf And Addr~ Wtlen Needed
• Ads Sllould Run 1 Days

Profeuionol Servicfl

..

Other Services
To do: Housecleaning.
Experienceo. Have reier·
ences. 440.()426 II no Pet
Cremations.
Call
answer, leave message.
740·446-3745

CLASSIF-IED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .................... w .................... 200
Blrthday/Anniversary..................................205
Happy Ads .................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals .....................................................230
Wanted ..............................,......................... 235
,Servlces ....................................................... 300
Appllance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors.......................... ,.......................316
Domcstics/Janftoriat ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financla1 ......................................~········· ..., ..322
Heallh ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical,....................................340
Professional Servlces .................................342
Repalrs .......................................................,.344
Roo11ng .........................................................346
Secur1ty ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................362
Financlal...................................................., .. 400
Financial Servlces....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educatlon .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School. .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal .......................................................520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horlles .....................................: ....................&amp;1 0
Livestock ......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy....-..............................................625
Agrlcultu re ...................................................700
Farm Equlpment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auclions .......................................................916
Bargain Basement....................................... 920
Collect! bfes .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
EqulpmenVSupplles....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture....................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 956
Kid'&amp; Corner.................................................960
Mlscellaneous ..............................................965
want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

All Display: 12 Noo n 2
Bu&amp;ln~ Day• Prior To
Publlc:atton
Sunday DhJptay, 1:00 p.m.
Thur~ay for Sundays Paper

.. All ads must be prepaid'

500

F'all
special
TURNED DOWN ON
sen.dlscount.afforoable
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
Lost &amp; Found
)landyman pwer wash· No Fee Unless We Win!
lng,
gutters, odd jobs,
1·688·582·3345
Found Femal Yellow Lab 304·882·3959
I
Mix w/ black collar. 304-8t2·3004
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Please
call
Gatlia Co
OH 8tld
(7 40)245·5580.
Mason Co. wv. Ron
Founc!JWalker
Coon
Evans
Jackson,
OH
Services 800·537·9528
Hound 1n Rio Grande. 300
Please
Call
(740)395-1298
Lost: Kodak Easysnare =•B-ul;;;;ld;;;;in;;;igi;;;M=o•te;;;;n;;;;·a..
ls=
400
Financial
Camera. C18, Silver. Re·
waro. Call 578-6605
Steci.Arch Buildin!•
I· all Cenrnnce repo" btuld·
Notices
In~&gt; TeJd)' foa resale" Suv~
Money To Lend
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY lh&lt;&gt;u&lt;aoo''
~ll • .'ll 'l!lx1&lt;i.
PUBUSHING CO. rec- -\•k l•h~•ut our di't'la) di'
&lt;'t&gt;unt' 10 your area' call 1&lt;' · NOTICE Borrow Smart.
ommends that you do d .•y 1 . ~1&gt;(,.JSl.{).t69
business with people you "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Contact the Ohto DlVl·
slon of Ftnancial lnshtu·
know. and NOT to send =
Child / Elderly Care
lions Office of Consumer
money through the rna~
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
until you have lnvestlgat·
1ng the offering
Will take care of lhe nance your home or ob·
elderly In their home tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
Pictures that
call 3:&gt;4-675·3264
advance payments of
have been
lees or Insurance. Call
placed in ads at
the Office of Consumer
the Gallipolis
Home Improvements
Afliars
toll
lree
at
1·866·27S·0003 to learn
Dally Tribune
if the mortgage brol&lt;er or
must be picked
Basement
lender 1s properly li·
within 30 days.
Waterproofing
censed. (This is a public
Unc:ondttionalliletime
Any pictures
service
announcement
guarantee. Local reler·
from the Ohio Valley
that are not
ences lur111shed. Estab·
Publishing Company)
picked up will be
tished 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740-446·0870. Rogers
discarded.
Basemen! Wate(Jlroofing
Wonted

)We

How you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
Jl ~
Borders$3.00/ perad
I!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

D.isplay_Ads

• S1art Your Ad1 Wlth.A Keyword • Include Complete

Wonted

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINEAD NOTICED

f

Recreational VehJcles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ......................................................1010
Boats1Accessorles .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ........................w . ... ............................ 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1 035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease .....................................2{)05
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques .......................................2015
Commercialnndustrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessortes .................................. 2025
Sports Utillty ..............................................2030
Trucks..................................,...................... 2035
Utility Trailers ..... " ..................................... 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots..........................................3005
Commercla1 ................................................3010
Condominlums..........................................3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale .........................................3025
Land (Acreage) ..................................., ...... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................3510
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent ...................................., ......... 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ......................................... ,.............4015
Sales...........................................................4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent.. ......................... 5050

Buainess &amp; Trode
School
Gallipolis Career
College
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Today!740·446·4367
1-800·214·0452
gal.·pohscareereoltag&amp;.odu
AC$1edrte&lt;l MQmber Aectedn·

lng Cbunc•l for lndepend€111
Collayes and Schools 12748

600

Animals

HorMs

5 Reg Minawre
horses $750 00 •
$2000.00, Wendling
Paint $750.00. 1 Reg.
Georgian Grande
horse 1/2 saddle bred
1 yr. old $7000.00
304·675·2308 or
304·593·3499.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Pets

Education

ACA
registered
Pem·
broke Welsh Corgis. 2
males. 14 weeks old,
740·949·2908

\ ~AW 1~ -AU..1~

C)u\-:;\1£ t\AYf L.or,I[~'R

-I!CKC Reg \.hni

hunds ht 'hm• &amp;
asking S~5()J)(J if
Cllll 'lt.).l 593·3820.

i£AY~7, 5P \ Wt46 JU~/
MJ{(c.MJ!V~ l~tl~ ONz;; •

AKC mtntature Schnauzers Partl &amp; Chocolates.
Parents on premises.
740·441·1657
CKC Registered Blchon
Fnse
Puppaes
Vet
checked,
shots
&amp;
wormed.
non·sheclding,
very loving F $500, M
$400 (740)373·3838.

For Sale 2 AKC reg
Yorkie Terriers
contact
bellejoe234@gmail.com
Free to goo&lt;! 11ome neut
male Maine-coon cat In·
door/outdoor
304-674-0t2t'

,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!!!

700
Agnculture
Uvestock
-=======For sale Angus bulls 1
112
yr.
old
call
Farm Equipment
740·288·1460.
====~===
~-'!"---~
EBV,
INTEGRITY
For Sale. Ali, Paddy KIEFER BUILT,
0 Malley, &amp; Sun Seeker VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
Steer. (7401645.5984 or STOCK
TRAILERS,
(740)84S·2707
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS
Polleo Herefords 2 hell· CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
ers 5 mon. old. 1 bull 6 HOMESTEADER
1/~ mon old, t bull here· CARGO/CONCESSION
tor&lt;! &amp; angus 18 mon. Old TRAILERS.
B+W
304·682·2774
GOOSENEQK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Yearling
Angus
Bulls. TIRE TRAILER INVENTop Bloodline &amp; Perform• TORY AT
ance $1200, Bred Angus WWW CARMICHAEL·
Cows
S1000
Call TRAILERS.COM
740·286·5395 or Cell 740-446-3825
740-4t8.()633

. . . .-

Have you priced a John
Pets
Deere lately? You'll be
2 6 wk. old krtlens, free. surprised! Check out our
Inventory
at
1 M &amp; 1 F. Mate very used
www CAREO.com
Car·
light blond. Female, hght
m1chael
Equtpment
cahco. 74Q.44Hl145
740-446-2412

ll - - -- -- - In Memory

In Memory

www. comics.com

Form Equipment
===;;;;;;;i;;;;;;i;;= = STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available at Cannl·
chael
Equipment
740·44&amp;2412

Miscellaneous
•=======
Bridal set, 14 kt. whlte
gold. 1.5 kt total d1amonei
weight,
From
za1es.
Never wom. Valued at
over
82.000.
She
dumped me. My loss ts
your gain. Asking $1200
OBO.
Call
(740)248·9439.

W ont To Buy
Absol~e

Top Dollar · sd·
ver/gold
coins,
any
10K/14K/18K gold jew·
elry. dental gold pre
t935
us currency
proollmint
sets,
d1a
monds, MTS Co1n Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
polis. 446·2842

Frmtk Herald Jr.
In Memory

10/6/39. 10/10/09

We would Jike to than!-; relatives. friend~ and
neighbor~ who sent card:-:. messages of
sympathy, food. !lower-;, made phone calls
and visited at thi!. sad time. AI Hanson for hb
kind words. Ronald Herald fot• his eulogy for
Frank. The Bradford Church of Chrbt for the
meal. Ge1lrgc Mora and Bobby Adams for
their help. The Pallbearers. You have touched
our lives and helped us through thi~ dit'licuh
~

Dinah

&amp; the Herald Familv

In Memory

In Memory

Cbarles E.
" Chod" Carter

il

1/29/2006
Another birthday
has come and gone,
but \\ith in m)
heart alwa~ s.

-I

Lon. your wife
Anrull.ou

In Memory

In Memory

In Memory

2007
Suzu~
DRZ·400·SM. Blk. 2941
mi. 740.245-0611
2000

Automotive

A utos
========2002·Camaro, pwr win·
dowsllocks. cro1se clrl.
cd player. 78000 m1,
55000 080. 256·1147
2005 Cavalier. •
$4.
2003 Cavalier S3,
2004
Cavalier 536
Truck
2007
Colorado
$6850. 256-6169
Sports

Utility

2001
Dodge
SLT
Loaded,
614·553·7066.

Durang6
$4,500.

2001 Dodge
New
740·645-7965.

Durango,
Eng1ne,

Trucks
t9~
Ford F·250 7.3
Power Stroke
DJesek
Ext. cab, while, tool box.
5th wheel. New Trans·
mission.
174,000 m1les.
S8,700. 740-416.()865

~~~--~------------~------~~ ----~--------84 4WD, Standard, 4x4
5795.
245·56n
740-645·7 400.

or

87 Forti PICkup Truck.
f·250, 300. 6·Cyl. 2WO,
Aotomat1C, Runs Good
$795 OBO. 446·4190

Employment...............................................6000

Accountlng/Finanofsl .... , ........................... 6002
Administrative/Professional .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies ..............................6020
Entertainment............................................ 6022
Food Services............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help onted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ......r ............................. 6030
Malntenance/Oomesuc ............................. 6032
ManagemenVSupervlsory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs ..................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time-Temporaries ............................. 8042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
TextllssiFactory ............,............................ 6052

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers
========RV ServiCe at Carmi
chael
Trailers
740·446·3825

ln Loving memory
1

Time.

..

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

!!!

Motorcyclfl

Fuel/ OU / Cool /
Wood/Gas
Seasoned hrewood.
All Hardwood.
740·853·2439
or
740·446·9204.
"'!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!!:!!!!!!:=!!!!!!:=~
"'
M iscellaneous
= = = =;;;;;;;;:== =
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans1-800·537·9528

Recreational '
Vehicles

1000

Debi Wintz

Vans

917/55. Jln/08
Mommy.
I! has been hard to find our W&lt;•) this pa~t year.
but in the face of the mo~t difficult times we
recall your ~tmle and the many sacririce~ Y.ou
made for your famil) which remind us of all of
the love and jo) you brought into our live~ and
the lives of so muny others. Your children and
grandduldren who you loved denrly rnis~ you
, very much ;y1d we conunue lo grow and ~hine
in your honor as an example ot the gifts you
instilled mto each of us.
l.u'c you, forever and always,
Urema, Dec Dee DaYtd and Foster

PS. Team Deb ll'tJII first pl(l(:e!"

1992
Ply.
$1550, RtlbUIIt Mtr.
MI. All Elec.
Painted. 740.245·5014.
3000

Real Estate
S.1les

In Memory of

Mirailda Sue Pearce
1118/1980 . 41312003

We wonder where _vou 'd be
tzow- we love you
Mom &amp; Dad
Brian, Donald. :\Iissy &amp; C harlie

For Sole By Owner
12 Unit Apl. Complex.
448-0390.
Beau1iful
home
end
hunter's
dream.
For
More delatls
go to
www.orvt&gt;.com or call
740·794·1132.

�·---- ~·---~------

Sunday, November 8, 2009

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

Auction

Auction

AUCTIO!'j
J.'Rf NO\'. 13. 2009 ca (,:oo pm
Glen~ood WV
~ IMiO;-\/C,\llELL I I !I.E 0~ RT 2
~It:\\'

8UILDISG WATCH l'OR SIG:\S
2(1 mile' North of Huntington ()II Rt 2
20 mile' South of Pt. Plc.t,.mt on Rt 2
"\ /C/1 Cl.£.l.\ A.\'rJQUJ' SA/.1;•·.

•••

1\:dal Car, Oak Wall Telc!phnne. Budd) I. 50's
1\nn) l·lectnc Trud. Red 40':; Structo Dump
, Old Kecord~. GriS\\Oid No 'I Skillet
Slanted l.etrers, Wagner Wnflle l«,n. Pnt.
Scptl'mbcr I 5.1925, Broad Ax. B&lt;m S.tw,
n Sh\wt:l, Bru~h A"&lt;. J Prong Pitch Fotk,
Wllnd Sl1.1ft Golf Cluh. Rt'd GardL'll Plo", Com
Plunh:r, linN• Cnllnr Hnnc~. c:'O('fl&lt;'r Boiler
L.trg.: Well Pump, 3 Gallon Crock Jug Onrm
With Dn~her. C.opper F1rc l!xungubher.
\\'ont..lcr Hobby Horse. Chtld'~ Roll T()p De
\\ ith Chair. T\\0 Burner Ga' Stove, Pian11 Stool
\\ 11h Cla\lo Feet. 5 Gallon Crock{ Butter Chum
\\ 1th Oasher. Wood.:n Butter Chum \\'ilh
D.t~ho.'r. Lurgc Ca'1 Iron Ladle. Double lluckct,
Hanging Scales 0·2Jl0 Pt,unds. Large Bross
Seal~~. Small

j

Kem~cne Stove, New York

Cl·nrrul Kailroad Lamp. Penn. Railroad 1 .unp,
l:lo~ Scout H&lt;~rchel, ~herry 1'1ltcr, Ouyan
Crcamcl) Milk·Borrlc. Holley Pop fi,ltllc
"Bcuy Hnop", Ginger Beer Bonk. Apple
Bmwr Kettle. Apple Buller Surrcr, Rapid
Wa~her, Sled, One Man Saw.1\\o Sad Iron~. 3
ca~t Iron Slnllch, 3 Hand Blown Gla~s HatS.
Wataing Gin,~ Globe,, Whuc Fenton GIIISI.
llam Lllntcrn, Coffee Gnnder, Wlme Mtll::
Stool. I Gallon Wbt,kc) Jug, 2 Gallon
Wlu:.kl)) Jug. 3 Gallon Wh1~key Jug, 5 go~llon
Whbkcy Jug. 2 Gallon McCny Whi~c) Jug.
~et OJ Cturicr h'es Dishc,, Ser 01 1\lart~
Washington Di~~. Old Life Magutinc.o..
Archie Cnmic B1X1ks, Hanging Scab. ~ Wash
2 Old Tobacco Cans. S l.t11lguberger
I
Basket-., I men,, Scan·~. Boyd nc.lfS Gla.~s
Buller Chum 2 McCm Cookie Jars.
Coffee Pot, Bean Put.
Rud:ct, Dcrring Tractor Sent,
Kettle Pat 1866. Egg Cmte Pnt. 1922. Coca
Cola Cooler, Egg Craie. Egg Scnlc,, CobOit
Blue P1tcher. Ford Light, 01ell 1 rnffic Ltght.
• :\lilk Can, OIJ frunk. Miners Hut \\ 1th L•sbt,
• (iri~wu)J P.llty Set. Largl! Cov. B.:ll, Buggy
• Lantern, 3 ft. Rope Thermomctt·r, l'cpsj
rh.•rrntmtt•tt&gt;r, Mail Pouch ThcnmHnct~.
Miners Dmncr Bucket, White Moumam Apple
Pct'ler, 2 Ruggy, \\Theeb. Cmss Cut Saw, 4S
Star Amcncan FlaiL 7 Barb1e Dolls. C &amp; 0
Rmlrond Can. S:tU,agc Stuffcr. Hair Kit, Keen
Ku11cr Sau,age Stuffer, 11199 Carb1de BtC)Ck
• Light, Hras~ School Bell, RcJ Kcro,ene
Lamcm Traffic Lighr, Rolhn Pm, Combread
Stkl; Pan. Ga~ "'on Pat. 190~. Wood Handle
Sad Iron, Cowbo) Skilleb. Wooden Plane,
Railmad S\lo uch Light Electric. Old Sutt Case.
L.al\!c Aluminum Roaster, Esso kc Scraper,
Kr.tut Culler Pat. Date April II!, 1905.
Spnnkling C:tn, Brown Croci; Bowl. Gmy
it.:wuro.:. White And Slut&gt; Crock, Fl•l\\C:red
Crock, Large White Granttc Coflcc Pot,
Wnu.·r Pilcher und Set Of Gla~~es. Blue Bn11
Jars-1·#13 qUArt.
TOOl.S. Craft man Circular S:m, Jig
Sunder. J8 Volt Cordle:-.,, 3 Hnr"t~nou.·,.J~ •
l &lt;&lt;&gt;mo&gt;rt&gt;•.&lt;;nr Push mower'. \\ecd cuter. several
. hand tool~. and much mMe.
Juc Arrington W\' 1462 (.304) MI2-8J 14
Erick &lt;.:onr;ld WV 1796 13041 675-11947
••""BRING A FRU£NTJ••~••
CO.VCF.SS/0.~' STAADM'Ail.ABI F..

Houses For Sale
3 yr 01&lt;1 1152 sq II
tanch l1omo. 2 BR, 2 BA
wl Whtrlpool tubs. 41 LA.
Eat-In kitchen. All P.IO!f·

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l. .

r;.r} .;;;-

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6unbap 1li~ -6tntintl • Page 03

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· ·....... s ·U ' N ID AV TELEVISION GUIDE
-

I

tnc. Relng. Rang&amp;. D1sh
washer.

Galltpolts

City

School

OISirict
2.99
acre&lt; 6x2.; decli 5 mln
from City Umll $69.500
(740)446· 7029

Macl!soo Me Pt. PIC3S
ant. lramG house on 2
lots. excellent loe!ltklo for

2 future rentals, $8,000
740-709·1858

1999

doublo

Clayton

Wlde 28x44, 3 badroorn
2 bath, S22 500 OBO

740-591·9721
740-992·159-3 .

Pomenr)'.
3 bedroom, 2 bath ga

rage, 740-992·5969
Package Deal, 4
blh, 2 story, 3/4 basi!
ment, fenced on yard
central air &amp; heat nnwer
ductwork &amp; lhermo con·
trot camper system Ia rty

new 92°~ etiiCioncy ru··
nance 1 small house 2
br , 1 ca• garage alrbady
has tenal' ~ 1 larg"
80x20 wns• addor &amp; at·

be, former boat &amp; momn
shOp; 1 ad&lt;liliona' 01.
level &amp; cleared 0~ an 4
are COilVlenl!y connoctad
on a coty block. take ono
take all will not spill up,
Cleland
Reoluy.
740-992·2259 Cass Clo
tano or James Pickens al
225-810-9927
ask1ng
5109.000 080

House for sa!e. 3 BR, ~
SA Ranch on Woocflano
Dr.
www.orvb com
740·441-7443

Open House
Sat. 14ltl2-4, Sun 1Sth
2-4, 3 BR. 1 1r.! Ball'

Futunstie shower, Wh rl·
pool.,large eat In !uu:hen

freshly pam~ed nOYt
hardwood Hoors, at
!ached garage, pool~,&lt;;
deck, stotage bu•ldlng In
qu1et neighbOrhood on
Bus Route. Only 2 m1
trom hospital 122 Ma·
bellne Dr GalllpoliG, OH

4

6

$77.000.

lob

11

Co. 16 acres
$16,500 or Me1gs Co. 5

12

Gallla

aaes

lots

Rod

Hm

S16.500+up
l.j

acws

$26.500'
CRt
740-441-1492 tor maJ.)S
or
see
www.brunenand.com,

ftnance!

§ot Sonte'th i118 to ~ay
t'o 'that" SJ'ecia{ Son1eone.?

Say it in
~:'l.ik'T'he C (ass ifieds 1~~f~F.A
Auction

Auction

Auction

FAR~l EQl U'MEKT At!C'I'I0:-.1
Bodin Road. Nt" :\!nr~hOtld. OH
Saturda), :\'ovcmber 14,10:00 a.m.

•

DIR£CTIO~S: From Athen~

~

6&amp;2156 junction, turn on

take Rt "6 wesL 7.5 mile-; from Rt
Run Road tWaterlvo T""P· '.'!fl~) ~ll .3
• nulc. turn leti on Boom Ruad (\\':ucrloo '1\\ p 445), go ro top of h!ll and
tum h;ft mto field. watch for signs.
• TRACTORS &amp; FARM EQllJPM~NT: J\llis Chalm.:r~ CA Trauor
(overhllulcd/ri,)COnditioncd), rmJ ~000 Tractoo (ga~. 5 sp.), Ma,~C)
l·crgusnn 1080 Tractor rPcrkulS diesel!. Kelley end loader. bale l'nrk. 6
It hucket, Ford 5000 Tractor (diesel. 8 sp.).lntem.ttional544 lnda~tn II
J'ructQr w/canOp) (hydro~tat gas). ~nd load w/5 ft bucket, bal~ '-pear.
m:mure fork. Ford 3 pt 5COOp, \'icon RPJ211 RQund Baler. MF ::1
square b:tler, New Holland ground dnvcn roike, .20 ft electnc ha;
ele\ator, 16 ft. d~rk grain clc\ utnr. 16 ft. grain t;Uger on frame, gr:lln
auger, John Deere 7 ft. grain drill. ha; wugon, rord ~ pt. pull disk. 3 pt
• CUhllf sav. for llllCtor, ford tractur hc&lt;td protC\."10t, Ford 3 pt l·m\\
spnng moth culuvator. Ford 6 II rotolhJC, ForJ 3 pt. 16" .3-holt(llll
• plow,, Ford·ferguson 12" 1-ho!lom plow~. Oln .:r ~ pt single plcm. J
pt. 6 ft. lanthcaping rake, .~now blauc &amp; br:dct lor Ford .1000, hll'tl4
II Brush Culler. 3 pt. boom Jl\11c, Nc" lJc corn picker. Ford 3 pt. 2.,.
tO\\ corn pl.tnter, corn 'Pr&lt;~ycr, 2·gntvtty w~n~. 2-whcel tool tr:ulc1,
2-wh~-el lt".tiler nxle. flat bed tih 4·\lihl'el trnilcr w goatJ,heep c:~rricr
buill on, ·I pt. !;(~I earner, bah: haull.'r on trnllrr, feed mill. iced bll:\C~,
everalleeder trough~. 3-40 gallon \liater trough~. 25 gallon v.ater tank.
• l&lt; ft fence feedet'&gt;. Crcc!Jl feeder ()O skid\, fence panels, bandtng de~ ICC
lor goalS, 4-box pet carrier, 'cales. trucror ure chuin.~. 6-16 trllctor tin:
• Fordson bell pulle}, Port! 9~ transmtsSIOil. Hocking Valle~ cnst m&gt;n
implement seat.
.
11~,\IJ.ER. GOLF CART &amp; CAMPI·.ItS: lnternaunnal 5th \\heel
g&lt;lQ-cn~ck 16 11. w/4 ft. dO\el:ul trnilcr.h-Z~Go Golf Cart (4 L)cl~
\~ll.lttmp bed). 1990 Terry 5th ''heel C.Hllper 29 fl. sleep) 6 (VCt) gllOd
couditinnl, 1969 Dodge Tra.,.co 210 moltu home (rough), tntck sltdc-m

•
•

Grn~~

camrer (!'l'lll£h),
TOOl$ &amp; MJSCELI.A:O..r:ous II EMS: X hp. 110 gcnc111tor.
'lm\bllt mrorillcr. B &amp; D radml am1 snw, M~rer M~:ch:.uu~ 10'' rahle
'l\\: Cral1~man 6" gnnder, bench top drill press, Portu Pu\\er. hydmuht•

frnwc JaCk. !&lt;heet metal brake. dir tank. 'and blaster. OC\\ paint ~prayt-r.
wa,her. ure l:pangcr, battCl) ~;h:u'gcr. wench. 3-55 go~IIon dsums.
M-ed eater. v.ater pump.•ptckup truck tool box. a.~&gt;-Oftment of lumber.
cl.:ctnc fence ~harger'&gt;. cant hook. fence Mretchcr. \liOven v.trc red fnr
traL1or dmwbar. scaffoldmg ladder. ~0 It alununum ~tcnston ladder.
grease guns. ntr compn:ssor. VIses. \:JCUum blm1er. mtscellancous
toob. lots llf,good tire:-.. pile of -c:rup metal. firepl:.tce grate. Fngit..I.Lire
WH~hcr. \\ hirlpoo1 dryer, Amana rdngc1.11N, kerosene hearer, w.1tcr
pump, . cm1 air compn.'losm, g,r, uir ~·omp1essor. tructor jack, squirrel
c;~gc blower. King Way he;~d llllll, 5 g.JIIOJt grea~c gun. 12 It pln~tic 12"
di;uncter cui\ ert. and other m•~~-ell,lncvus rtem'
'I'ER\JS: Ca~h or check w/po lh''e I D Nu Credu Cards. ChcckS&lt;I\er
S:lOOO mu&gt;t ha\C bank: authorizatiuu of fund.~ 8\BIIiilile. All ,;al~ are
finul Food \\ 1ll be a\ ailable Not rt'sponstble for lo-:; or acC!dems
0\\ l\ER: .Jack C11nke}
SHAMROCK At:C110lli 4R\ ICE
AXCTIOl\r:F.RS: John t•atrick "fat" Slu~ridun
K"r11 Sheridan Bu)d. Mike Df,lyd, Brent King
J iccn~e:d &amp; Bonded in Ohio· ;\lt·mbcr. or Ohio &amp; ~afiuna1
jX)\Io~·r

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...

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Auclionrrr's As,odiilion

Email: ShamrockAuction@aul.t·om \\ 1&lt;.:8: Wll\l ... hmnnK·J..·
aut·tions.cmn
PH: 740-592-43111 OJ 81lO..l9-9l22

BULLETIN BOARDS
. $13.00 Column Inch Weekday~ $22 Column InclrSundays
ANNUAL
FALL SHOOT
GALLIA COUNTY
GUN CLUB
SUNDAY
November 8, 2009
10:00 am to?
Cash prizes. 50/50,
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

:1-lear:tland Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We are lookmg lor someone sk11led and
expenenced m both page destgn and copy
edit1ng. Th1s person will need to design
front pages pagmate HlStde pages, and
wme great headlmes. Expenence wrth

layout, knowledge of Quark and
PllotoShop ls a mus1 Full time pos;llon
wttr benefttfJ. Aexibility wtlh work schedule
tsa must
Send a cover letter and resur1e to
•.!Jalhpolt!l iL),uh• Q:;nbnnt
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Attn,: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@hearttandpubllcatlons.com

Food &amp; Bev.
Stationary &amp; Trap Shoots
300 Buckridge Road
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

740·441-0 104

�paw

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. ~leasant, WV

Page 04 • &amp;unbap 'Citfmtt-&amp;en«nel
Real Estate
Rentals

3500

Apartments/
Townhouses

-::=~~-=---=-=•
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
furniShed
and
unfurnished. anq houses .n
Pomeroy and Mtddlepon,
security deposit required.
no pets. 740·992·2218
BR Apt. Tn·Levef,
Close to Holzer Hospttal
No Pets, Ref + Dep.
Aeq 740·794·0831
2 BR Apt. Downtown
Gallipolis.
WatertSewer,
Trash 1nc: $400 mo.
+$400
sec.
dep.
74,.'339
""
•24'u
""'
or
740·208.0383.

Aportmenb/
Townhouna
Apanment available now
AIVerbend
Apts.
New
Haven
Now accept·
lng
applications
tor
HUD·subsldlzed,
one
Bedroom Apts. Ullht1es
Included. Based on 30%
of adjusted income. can
available
304.882·3121.
tor Senior and Disabled
people.

wv.

8eau tlfu1 Apts . at Jack•

son Estates. 52 West·
wood Or, from s365 to
$560
740-446·2568.
Equal Houstng Opportu·
nlty, Thts lnshtUIIOn is an
Equal Opportunity ProV1'der andEmp1oyer.

---~-""!"'--

Houses For Rent

Rentals

1 BR Furnished House In Trailer 1n town Racine. 2
town. Excellent location br., 1 bath, all electnc,
No pels 740·446·1162. •
carport, large Iron! porch,
~------- close 10 school, library &amp;
Pomeroy· 2 br, 1 bath, park, $425 deposit, $425
garage, peaceful, ready per month water &amp; gar·
Dec. 1, 74o-856·8863
bage Included. NO Pels,
38R 1 bath home n Le- 740·949-2217
Grande Blvd 650 rent ~-----....$650 dep. renter pays In centenary 2 BR,
utilities. NO PETS. Call Range, Ret. AC &amp; WID
tum. $350 .. dep. No
448-3644 for applicaton.
pels 446..()945
3br,
$475.Jmonth
In
•
·
Syracuse. Deposit, HUD Nice 3BA, 2 Bath, 16x80,
approved
No
Pets Country
Setting.
304 •67 5-5332 weekends 367.0 266 or 339·3366.
74_0_.5_91.;.-.o;.265
,.
_____
Soles
616 Thtrd Ave. Gallipolis,
3 SA, 1 &amp; 1/2 bath, no Country IMng· 3·SBA,
In·g $6'0'
..6'0
dep. 2·3 BA on property.
' · mo ;:o
'
.;;;.Cal.-r_446....,-o;;.;5-.55;;.·---- Many floor plans! Easy
""'F
or rent 3 br. brick ranch Financing! We own the
on A12 N. next to Roose- bank.
Call
today!
II
E'A
ve
...m.
schoQI 866-215-5774

s

~~---~~- p
· apt· for rent
s ta1rs
2 BR apt. lor rent In Can • own·
.., n1
2 b 1
tenary, .,,.,75.. water &amp; In r-1. ,. easant
r.,w
"""
k't hen appliancft"
ACt
'c
..... '
trash pd: Call256·1135.
gas ' furnace WI WD ~304-~8-.95;..·;3..1-.
29;;...___
238 1st Ave . Lg. Upslatrs hook·tJp Lg. lront porch For Rent. 5 Room House
'"''er S375·00
a mon· + In Gallipolis. 446-0794
apt·
Overlookl "~g ·••
Fum. kitchen. 2 persons. $200.00
dep.
or
cell
$425-tutll. Dep. req. Ref. 304-675-6375
can446-4926
so4·6n-862t.

2BA APT.Ciose to HOI· - - - - - - - •
zer Hospital on SA !60 For Rent, 2 BA, Duplex
CIA ( }
•
tn
town,
$475/mo.
740 441 0194
DeP+rel. No pets. Quiet
CONVENIENTLY
LO· place. 446-1271
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ;....._ _ _ _ _ _ _
ABLEI Townhouse apart· Gracious Living 1 Sfld 2
small Bedroom Apts at Village
and/or
mant s.
houses for rent. Call Manor
and
Riverside
740-441-1111 for appii· Apts. In Middleport, lrom
cation &amp; Information.
$327
to
$592 •
740 992 5064
ree
Rent
S""clalllt
•
•
'
Equal
F
,..Housing Opportunity.
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
up, Central Air, WID Island View Motel has
hookup.
tenant
pays vacancies
S35.00!Night.
electric.
Call between 740·446·0406
the hours of 8A·8P
~
Nice--1~B~A-w
_a_sh-dry-.
EHO
Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili·
Ellm VIew Apts.
ties. call 740-446-9585.
(304)882-3017
SSOO/mo.·$500 dep.
Twtn Rivers Tower IS ac· ...;..,--.....- - - - cepUng applicatiOns for Sm. efficiency tn PI
waitmg list for HUD sub- Pleasant stove. ref. all
sldized, 1·BR apartment ulil. pd. 5385·00 a mon.
for the efdertytdisabled, dep req. 304-67 5- 7783·
1
G
"'679
cafl675""
Spong
Val ey
reen
~
Apartments 1 BA at
~
$395..2 SA at $470
- - - - - - - - Month. 740·446·1599.
3 room and bath downTownhouse
stairs first months rent &amp; Tara •
deposit. references re· Apanments • 2BR, 1.5
quired. No Pets and bath, back pat1o, pool,
clean. 740·441·0245
playground, (trash, sew·
age. water pd.)No pets
2BA apts. 6 mi. from Hoi· allowed.
$450/rent.
zer. some utllrties pd. or
$450/sec.
dep.
eau
appliances
avail.
$400/mo
+
dep. 74Q-645-8599
or
Commerdol
740-577-6866
988·6130
1 &amp; 2 ar fumfshed apt.. Business space in Gamstart $450 &amp; up plus polis Ferry tor rent, 2 tanning
beds
lor
sate
_ 3dep., No pets, Aactne. 0 h
.
304 59 4654
740·591·5174
Mtddlepon Beech St., 2
Houses For Rent
br., fumtshed apts., utili!· $
ties pald, dep &amp; ref., No 199'mo\ 3 bed. 2 lxlth.
Pels (740)992·0165
Bank Repo! (S% down. IS
;..;,;,;;.:.;.....,......,..;;.;,.;;;...____ )'ear.., 8% APRI tor li&gt;tings
Modern 1BA apL Call
800_620-49-l6 c~Ro17
740.446·0390
Real Estate

Real Estate

78 EJcona Trailer 14·70,
Good Shape, "rou Mova
s7ooo 080 635 Paxton.
or
740 •645•1646
74 446.2515. •

o

6000

Employment

Dairy Queen In Middle·
port·
cake
decorator
Administrative/
needed. piCk up appllca·
Prof.uionol
lion Sunday Nov. 8th be·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-=-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; tween 1pm-5pm.
Life Enrichment Coor- ~~~~~~~~
dlnator
Help Wonted- General
Rocksprings
Rehabllita· ;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-==
tlon
Center.
36759 Direct care &amp; ProfesAocl&lt;spMgs
Road, sional postlions available
Pomeroy. a skilled nurs· wol1&lt;ing w•th Individuals
lng
and
rehablhtatton with developmental dis·
center Is accipt•ng appll· ablhtles.
Go
to
cations for an cv""'"· www.patswv.com or call
~
~ Life Ennchment (304 373-101110 apply.
Coordinator.
Rote: to provtde a Life Cosmetologist
needed
Enrichment Program to lor busy local salon call
meet the social, physical, 740·992·2200
cultural. sptritual, emollonat and recreational Quality Control. eam up
needs and Interests or to S15 an nour, evaluate
each resident.
retail stores, training pro·
ed
11
Successful
appliCants v1d ·
ca
.., 694
will have a 8$ In Thera· 1•800·901·4
peulic Recreation or ~e- Quality Control, eam up
lated lt&amp;ld. Actlvalies
I· to $15 an hour. evaluate
r&amp;~:tor Certification and retail stores. training proexperience 1n LTC pre· v•ded,
call
!erred.
4
9
0
1
2
6
1
9
800
To apply.· Andl Ayres at _._ _·_ _._ _ _ _ _ _
aayres@extendfcare.co

-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; AA-Tired of paying rent? m

~

Rentals

We can get you into a Email

to: VISit our web·

;;;;;;;;;;;~-=-=---=--= new manufactured home site
2 BR Mobile Home. No for as low as !l"'o dOwn. www.extendlcare.com

pets. Water. sewer, trash call to be pre-quaiHied and submit application
Included. AI Johnson's 866-838-3201
and resume
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!:
Mobile
Home
Park - - - - - - - 740·645·0506.
.
AAA BRAND-HEW!
dericol

=

HUGE 4 BR

2 br. 1n Gallipolis Fry
w/covered patio. w/
app. hp. $375.00 00
amon + $300.00 dep.
no pets no smok1ng
inside HUd approved
304·849-2932.1eave
message.

-~--..-..--2
Traller
Lots
Rent-Addison
Pike·$150/mo
+
dep.
Water

for
sec.
pd.

44~8-~3644
~
--·- - - - -

2BR, 1 BA mobile home;
all elect. Xtra NIC'e. No
pets. $450/mo (Inc. water
&amp; trash) 3667 Bulavllle
Pike (740)446-4234 or
(740)20B·7861 .
.;....~-----2BA, Ideal for 1 or 2 peo·
pie, $300/month,
Refemces. No Pets. NO
CALLS
alter
7pm

Business Office Assis·
tant
Rocksprings
RehabHI!a·
bon Center a 100 bed fap
cility 1ocated 1n Omeroy
Is curran II~ . seeking a
htghly qualifted, self-mottvaled Business O~tce
$47,651
Assistant.
Respons•blll·
MIDWEST HOMES
lies will Include process·
mymldweslhome.com
lng payroll, submttling
740.828.2750
aocoun~ payab~e and
answenng
tncom•ng
10
N
- -ew_ 3_B_A_, _2_ B_a-th- O calls. Your opportumty
01
Money Down, for land join a leading ~rovfder .
qualtty care Wtth quality
owners. 446-3384.
staff members IS now!
- - - - - - - - - Please forward your reOHIO'S
sume to Stephanie Cfe·
BEST BUYs
land,
Administrator
at

_74-0-·4-4""'
1·01_8_1_~--

2 Bath SECTIONAL
2x6

walls. lnrge chefs
k•tcha&lt;l. 5Q yeoar s•lhng.
Dtxappllanc:e""A, Pvl
"""
ublity rm. Glant walf&lt;·ln
etosets, P•tch ce•tings.
Giant gro.altoom _....,..
NEWFHAFINANCINGl

2010 3BR Doublewide
$39,9n
HUGE 2010 4brl2ba
FHA S349 mo
2010 3brl2ba Single
from S199 mo
MIDWESTHOMES

..,
2br.in Galllpoi'IS Ferry 4
br. &amp; 2 ba. $675.00 a mymidwesthomes.com
mon. + $675.00 dep. call
740.828.2750
740.973,8999.
The BIG Sale
3 br. trailer for rent on
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Pine Grove Rd. Racine
Financing· New-2010
Oh, $385 plus 'depostl,
Doublewlde $37,989
Ask abQut $8,000 Ae·
you pay all utililies, good
location In country setbates
Ung, call &amp; leave mes·
mymidweslhome.com
sage It no one answer's
0_
74 828 2750
740·992·2458
~------Trade in your old single·
For rent-Mobile home,
pnvate lot, no pets. dep. wide lor a new home. 0
$475/mo. 446·7275.
money down. 446·3570.

Real Estate

Help Wonted- Generol

Food Services

sclelaod@extendicare.co
viSit the laclllty at
36759 AOCkspnngs Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 to
submit your application.

m or

Education
Part-time
lnstructoiS
needed during the day
m: mathematics, economics, and accounting.
Mathematics and eco·
nomic instructors must
have a master's degree
In the discipline. 11 mter·
ested please email a resume and cover letter to
jdanicki@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

Spears

·o -o - yo_u_ e-nj-oy- he-lp-in-g
people? II so, I Will give
you FREE RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an
Income just for moving in
and helping my 87 year
old mother. You will live
here as 11 It were your
own home, mtnus lhe elt·
penses. 740·416·3130.

-~~~~~~Gel Paid What You're
Worth!
Our best performers
k
s
tt
ma e up to 12.25 a er
six months!
Recruit volunteers lor
non-prolil organizations
No experience requ~redl
No Cred•t Card Seres!
No Collections!

300

Security

Services

ADl

Local pharmacy seeking
overnight phannaclst, Of·
Financial
feling fleJCJble schedule,
compelittve wages and ---=-=-=-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:
benehts.
Call
740·450·7964 for tnforSETTLEMENT
mallon.

Free Home Security System
S850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitor·
ingservices from
ADT Securrty Serv·
Ices
Call1·888·274-3888

OEBI

USA

-------Ohio
Valley
Home
Health,
lno. accepting
applications for Aides
Apply at 14SO Jackson
Pike Gallipolis. on Inter·
net at www.ovhh.org or
phone
740·441-1 393.
Competitive wages and
benefits tneludlng mileage and health lnsurance.
-------Part nme oayshlft
Ft'x"" Sched"fe 28
""'
v
hrs/wk
8.·00·1:30 +weekend
day
Make fundraising calls
for conservat•ve organl·
zatlons such as the NAAI
Conducting lntervrews
Now

Asst
recepltonlst Call and schedule your
needed lor local dentist
Interview today!
offtce tn the PI Pleasant
1·888-IMC·PAYU ext
area, must nave knowt2311
edge
or
computers,
http:t/)obs.lntoolsion.c
phones, and good cus·
om
tomer skills, will train for
position. please send resumas to Dental Office Quaiiry Conrrol
EliR!Ii up ro SIS.OO an br..
3984 lndtan Creek Rd
ElkView. WV 25071.
evalwtt~ remit •tore&gt;, tram·
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or Sell Shirley
304·675·1429

Sunday, November 8, 2009

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Rd,
Racine, Ho 45n1

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825 Third Avenue
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy! Oh1o 45679

200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, 'IN 25550

740·446·2342

740·992·2155

304-675-1333

•

�Sunday, November 8, 2009

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

&amp;unbap ~t~ -&amp;rntfntl • Page 05

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

BLONDIE

CROSSWORD

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun
r---------~~~~~~

.

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Hot
1 B ..-- boy 41 Go by
5 Gift
DOWN
toppers
9 Extremely 1 Niche
2 Placed tn
10Zodiac
ram
the hold
1 2 "Get outta 3 Some golf
herE)!"
clubs
13 Book or
4 BrusselsTodav's Answers
'film
based
category
org.
26 D1gs fot
19 Gonllas
14 Question
5 Sack
and
travelers
to a brown 6 Mine
gibbons
27 Kicks out
matter
cow
20 Road
28Some
7 Cold and
16 L1ght
sealer
turns
metal
raw
22 Spring
29Colors
17 Preceding 8 Regular
shape
300pera's
show
nights
23 Boxing
Callas
18 Loath1ng · 9 Theater
poke
33 Lend a
21 Warning
worker
24 Sweethand
11 Transmit
color
talks
35Smoked
22HMO
15"1 had no 25 Compassalmon
outlays
idea!"
sionate
36 Attempt
23 Wild card,
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! ~nd $4.75 (C:lCCkifl\.o.) IO
often
Thomas ~ph Rook 1, P.O Box 536475, Ortam1o. Fl 32853·6475
24 Fetters
26Gibson of
"Braveheart"
29 Dead
ringer
30Chess

Mort Walker

EE:TLE BAILEY·

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

turn
31 Orange
tuber
32 Speculative
question
34 Glorify
37Build
38 Mister, in
Madnd
39 Buoyant
tunes

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

II

'1

HOE"s\ -e-

~·Vt:R

"Tf.i0~50AY:s

NO GOOD, HERB ... IT'S LORETT~5
ANNUAL. 3qTH Bf~THDAY PARTY."'

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
~'(ZJNG~IC

INDIFF~I~TOO

AMWICAL-CCNOmON!

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

1

3 9 4
7
6

8
9

2

•

8 6 2
3
1
5
4 ,

5
4

7

" The trees would stay warmer if they
held on to their leaves In winter."

DENNIS THE MENACE

1

4
2

3

8 3 7
Difliculty Level *

Hank Ketchum

11'119

gr

6 G8
9~9
v
6- G
B 8 IL
9 ~ L

-11-9

''WOULJ) 'I'OU MINt&gt; liW&lt;.I!'i '!OUR 't'ARO ~ W£0 LOSI
.LJ~ t3ALL IN )'OUR 1.6A\I~S. ''

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7

--

~

1

HAPPY BIRlHDAY for Mtmday, 1\o\ 9, 2009:
This ye.:~r, others will n&lt;•te th.1l wu are far more
a\'ailable than in the pa~ You rould't-.e co~rned
about m:my different projects, a~ well A&lt;; your immediate communit\' Others ,~;11 know what you !iTt! think
in&lt;&gt; and why Vaguenes.&lt;;surround~ your peN:mal domeslic liie. On c111tllher le\ -el, bel&lt;~ use ul a nt&gt;ed to
be do~ to wat"''i you might psychlc;illy create ,,leak in
yuur house. Crtt.ltivity will :;urf&lt;we 1f you allow yourself
to take fra1uent walk.-; b}" Willer or bring water dose to
you in some form: for instan~. a l,lble Willer fountain.
If you &lt;lre ~ingle, meeting someone oi inlere&gt;l h.1ppen.,
with E'&lt;ISe. If you are atladled, ii the two ol you ca11
commit to a project or !'Qme Jorm of communitv
iiivolvernen~ together, vou \,;Jl be:ome much closer.
LEO pushes you inlo ~1e limelight
,
Ott' Star:; $Juno lht Kmd of.Day You'll Hlftle· 5-Dynmmc;
4-Pflstlrt'C.; 3-i\r•erugt; 2-Sa-s.:J. 1·Difficull
ARlES (JI;farch 21-April 19)
~ure builds. lne&gt;viwbly1 yuu look lo repri
oriti;.rjng or tmding &lt;h'ih.ortCllt, Conside~ delegal:ing .md
saying no more often. Others keep seeking you ouL be
il in 11 mt&gt;eling, on the phoJW or 11llunrh. Your under~nding grows as you listen. SWI, know when you
ha,·e too much on your plate. Tonight: "G;ke a nece&gt;,o;.~ry
break.
tAURUS (April20-M.,y :!.OJ
'~~'** A famify meml:'t'r appears to demand O.)nce.&lt;;sion afhn oo:1re;sion. You knciw th.1t you hnve many
options: Try testing them out on someone t'l&lt;ie Be open
to the possibilities. Much of a current problem itwol\'t'S
a m~underswnding. Gel pcl~l ,m u-runedic1te Uf1!'oeL
1cmight: Head horre.
GEr·.n~I \~l&lt;~y 21-lune 201
*****You dear nut a pl\)blem qtucklv.

i

****

Under:&gt;t&lt;tnd n~ w11l evolve !o i'lllt"W level i{vou sld{e

y()ur case dt&gt;ady md eflic!t!l'lll)'- Many opportunities
pop up if you detadl and relax Someone's \ague ,,ltitud~ ruukl be annoying. ·ronight: Talkinf, up a !;t._,rm.
CA..~CER Oune 2.1 lulv 22l
*** Curb wild spendins. Pre~"ure build.,lin:md.llly. and/ or ll·.e wge to spend emerges. Confu.'\lon surrounds t'Om:nwlicatic,n. You WCJnl [tl Stll) on top of
your game: L.istt!Yl to yo_ur im~r ,·oice, e!-.p.&gt;Cally
regc11\iin~ finances. Torur,h{: Your treat.
LEO (July 2.3-Aug. 22)
,
*****You are ;ul '&gt;rnik•..... Remain 1m.1ginali\ &lt;! ~el
alscl m.1inlain a sen~ of re.1lic;m. Sf&amp;) tn rontati 1\itl'l

your need-.. e\ en though S&lt;&gt;mt!(ln~&lt; rrught corwmce vou
not {O wllrry. Slilrt 1&lt;\!&lt;.10g better C'.:l.l'e orVtrun.-elf
l{l!lighl: En~JY bemg kmgpin.
\'IRGO (Aug. 2J:.Sepl 2:!)
*** Lit.; ten to news that he,,&amp;, in \"(lur dmrlion.
You might Wi1nt tO rethink a dea&lt;;l('lll silw tion. Yotl
could feelo,t•rwlwlmt:od b) all your work. call.; .md
meetings. J..:now tlu1t y(lu can do iL Tonight Choose d

or

~tre;s-bu:-ler.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**..,.....,. YtlU .ue all ;;miles ,md reild\ ll" le&lt;~p into
agion.l\1eeling&gt;o)uld bt• pJr&gt;nJU1ti\ebut giwyou
excellent reedback. If you pnoriti.t.~ and kno\\ ,, haL
you want, vou will gtow&lt;tlnd t'\'Oiw in anf•lher Jire•'bon. li:&gt;night: 'Vhere peopl~ are Th~ ki~i in vou
emerges, one more li:ne
SCORPIO (Oct l.1-No,~21l
~ -\ mui&gt;t apptwane£ make!' a big differenc~ in
how other" respond Sometimes ynu n.~l r,) l\"mind
them. of wht' you are·or wh.-n&gt; you are cmmng irom.
'IIU.bt Y'&gt;Llr jud~ment. Evaluate i:l Slfu.Jtio}n w1th nn
auth\Jrily ligute. Tonight. A must tlppeamn.l?,
SAGITrARnJS (ri:~1': 22-fM·. 21)
***h Read belwt'elllhe lines, and' ou \\llll~rt\ t!
a greater understanding than :n•)'&gt;t uf tlw p;!Ople
around you. Ask youi'St'lf wh.1t bn't being .;aid.l'ute
people's reactiOf!!; Tunight; Confinu~ being il pS) cllological o;leuth.
.CAPRICORN t Ot'C. '2.2-J&lt;~n 19)
1nfrll"1r"!t A p.lrtnfr demands mum more o{ your
Un'\1! iiOd cl!lt.&gt;nlion. Yt1U ha\ e whclt jt wke. U,ten lo
your innl:!r \'&lt;&gt;ice, yel understand that u~1ers mighl
need more facts or understanding. Play along. lunight
A muslappear.m~.~.
•
AQUARIUS Oan 2~ft&gt;b. lb)
•* * 11 * * Def~r lO oth~ ,1mt gc~m mml! urKl~r.st.md•
ing y,,u ~ olherr- lr) mg ~ar..l t.' g~l your ,1ltention.
Listen well and o.&gt;mmunicate \"Ollf in!ere;l You ha\'e &lt;l
lot of confusion .Hound') Oll Confirm meeting.&lt;; .1nd Jet
your cre.Jlhily spea"-. !hnicil!. !?a}' yes loan im ilallon
PISCES (Feb 19-Hlrdi2(1l
An enm appJ'(.'&lt;~m due$ mum to nmke peace
in your immediate ~rroundmg~.l( \'t&gt;u ax~? tired, pull
b,1ck. take a bn&gt;ak or pos1pon~ '\'\}tlwut tn!mding to
}""JU aUr)\\ negali\'ll) t..1 Jl.)al in. lvnight Squ~o~~e in
~m~ e.-.:erose.

**'*

/•!a]Utlillr" lli¢'" t&gt; ., th } ,,.,,.,
1:t ldtp;J/:t,tru·.rlcque!ind.\~llf'.ct!l

.mJ ai Jlri une.com
,.,

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*

"'1 -

PageD6

iunbav.. ;imes -i.entin.el

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Flower bulbs make a
-EXTENSION (ORNER'box lunch' for garden pests
Bv HAL

Pest-resbtant bulbs . get people tn check with
are deer magnets but their local extension agent
other, less appetizing bulbs 10 see w]!at's allowed in
Bulbs are perfect. self- are ignored, ~aid Becky each urea.· Heath said.
contained packages for gar- Heath. co·ownet• of Brent
• Lights, sprinkler.s and
deners. They're equipped and Becky's Bulbs in barking dogs. Motion detec'h1th everything necessary Gloucester. Va. "ln populat- tors attached to water sprinto make flowers grow and ed areas, where hunting is klers and spotlights can be
dangerous and there are no effecri ve. •· A tethered dog
bloom.
Problem ts that makes natural predators 1 deer have often works." Perry said.
them a prize for predators, become brazen. going right ··But it doesn't take long for
too. 1
up to the front door to eat deer to learn the length of
"The perfect lunch box:· something in a pot on a the tether and ignore it."
said Leonard Perrv. an porch... she said. "Choose
• Other ideac;:
extension professo1 whh the plants that either taste bad
Try planting closer to the
University of Yem1ont. "Put or arc (natttrall)) poiso- house or gh·ing bulb-eating
them in the ground this fall nous:· Inter-plaming daf- animals a distant. alternaand I guarantee you the fodils or alliums, both deer- tive garden of their own.
re:-.tstant bulbs, among the
Shooting and poisons are
plant pests wi 11 come."
But there are ways to min- more delectable tulips ulso the ultimate ~auctions, but
imize animal damage. and it ce:u1 be effective.
both come with safety conbegins by not un&lt;Jerestimat• Fencing. wire co-vers. ~ems: Both ri-.k injury or
ing your enemies. Squirrels. cage::; and other ban iers. darnug~::: beyond tht:: imendchipmunks. rabbits. deer. Voles. moles and chipmunks ed target.
mice. voles. moles and the are notorious for tunneling
"l don· t like using poi~ons
many other critters that their wav to bulb~. shrubs even if you don't have kids
feast on flower bulbs are and tree· roots. "Put a wire or pels." Perry said. "They
me~h cage around them
crafty. Observant. too
can work their W:J) into the
"Just the fact you're dis- when you plam.'' Perry said. food chain and get into editurbing the earth is a tip- Fencing b expensive hut it bles. I'd much rather use
off.'' Perry said. "These will keep Jeer out of the gar- biological controls such as
guys are curious. They'll den. Build them at least 7 burying bulbs with someknow something is going on feet hi2b, however. since thing unappetizing like
and come to investigate. deer arc excellent jumpers. ground up shells."
Once they discover the An electric fence is another
Trapping is yet another
newly planted bulbs. they'll garden option.
alternative. although many
• Unpleasant smells and communities have rule!:!
assume it's food for getting
them through winter and tlavors. "We put bulbs in a against relocating wild critthere you go. So much for plastic bucket and spray ters. Check with city hall
any spling flower displays: · them \\ ith something that before making 1wy moves.
Deer and rabbit5 lik.e graz- taste~ nasty (but) that's not
Successfully controlling
poisonou:-.:· animal pests around the
ing on the tender stems a. . necessanly
the)' surface in early spring. Heath said ··Ler the spray yard will depend on your
Sqmrrels. chipmunks. voles dry and then plant the bulbs. riming,
methods
and
and moles. amon!! other~. For insurance. we often resolve. Be aware that what
often dine underground. spray the ground when the may have worked previousThat requires designing a new shoots begin to ly for you or a neighbor may
emerg~:· Many such repelnot work ae:ain. ··use a few
bulb defense i,n layers.
Here are some proven lents are sold and most different ttllngs in different
deterrents. For best result". come with strict guidelines areas to stay ahead of the
for their use. "We usually game." Peny said.
use them tn combination:

Bv D EAN FOSDICK

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Tulip~

Pasture For Profit Workshop set for Nov. 16·18
GALLIPOLIS
Livestock producers are
encouraged to reglliter for
and attend the upcoming
Pasture
For
Profit
Workshop schedule&lt;) for
~onday
through
Wednesday, Nov. J 6-18.
The
Mondav
and
Wednesday sessions will be
from 6 to 9:30 p.m. in the
large meeting room of the C.
H. McKenzie Al!ricultural
&lt;:::enter. located ~ at I II
Jackson Pike. Gallipoliii
{tight beside rhc Gallia
County Junior Fair Grounds).
The Tuesday session will be a
pasture tour from 3 to 6 p.m
The agenda for the two
evening sessions includes
such topics as: What 1s MlG
{Manage melll
lmensi ve
Grazing), Evaluating Your
Resources. Pasrure Weed
Control. Forage Species
Selection. and Grazing
Systems. The afternoon pasture tour will view conservation practices such as:
watering systems. fencing.

access roads. and livestock
feeding pads.
Boh Hendershot. State
Grazing Specialist from the
Re-.ource-.
Natural
Conservation
'Service
(NRCS) will be lhe lead
speaker along with Rory
Lewandowski. Ohio State
University - Education
(OSUI3,)-Athens County.
and Richard Stephens
(0Sl'E)-Gallia County).
The school is being organized b) the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District
(Gallia SWCD) with several
local ·bu!&gt;ines:-.es covering
the cost of the "Pasture For
Profit" manuals. Tho~e
businesses are: Altizer Farm
Supply.
C:armichael
Equipment. Inc.. Central
Supply.
Corbin
and
Saunders Fencing. The feed
Stop. Hines Fencmg. Jim's
Farm Equipment. and
Jividen's Farm Equipment.
This workshop entitles
participants to t'ecctve credit points if they apply for

KNEEN

Arc you planning to use
warm your home with a
wood fi re this winter? Take
precautions to maxim ii:e
your enjoyment of a roaring
lire in the wood stove or
firepla(:e. Start with inspecting the exterior of your
chimney for any detelioration of brickc;, mortar. and
flashing. Inspect for loose
mortar and dark streaks
which could indicate sooty
water or smoke has flowed
it. [s the chimney foundation free of settling cracks?
Inspect the interior of the
fire box and Oue. Fix any
loose mortar. Check to
make sure the damper is in
working order. When was
the last time the tlue was
swept out ror excess soot
and creosote? Bird nests,
leaves and other blockages
should be checked. Test the
draw of the flue wifh a lit
roll of newspaper. Check
the tirl.! screen for. chinks in
the chain mail or cracks in
the glass that may allow
sparks to exit into the room.
Clean out the ash pit. If i11
doubt. do not use the tireplace until it has been professionally looked at.

your family and friends to and shrub~ by leaf shape,
enjoy a walk outdoors. fru its, bark and plant shape.
These days of ' Indian Who knows, it may be a
Summer· are few, but wi ll beginning of a science fair
be fondly remembered project or a way to interest
when the cold, dark days of the next generation in sciv.mter arrive. Most of our ence. Capture on the
forest leaves have fallen. the sights of fami ly. natu
however look at the trees' and a beautiful fa ll day.
beau tiful silhouettes and Bring along a picnic or just
contrasting bark against the a snack to enjoy along the
blue sky. Bring a bag to path. Consider bringing a
stuff with leaves. nut.o;, and second r~cyclable bag. to
other items found along gather trash others have left
your walk. Plan to identify beh ind. Enjoy this day. as
them this winter as a fa mily winter will soon be coming!
project. The pu blic library
(Hal Kneen , 'Agriculture
has several books and web- &amp;
Natural Resources
site search engines to help Extension Educator, Ohio
assist in identifyi ng trees State UniJ,ersity ExteJZsion .)

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GAUIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. livestock
report of sales from Nov. 4, 2009.

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Lower
275-415 pounds, Steers, $75-$ 109. Heifers. $65-$ 103:
425-525 pounds. Steers. $75-$ 107 . Heifers, $65-$85:
550-625 pounds. Steers. $70-$95, Heifers. $65-$78:
650-725 pounds. Steers, $70-$90. Heifers, $65-$75:
750-850 pounds. Steers, $65-$82. Heifers. $60-$70.

Cows-Lower

•••

This is rhe last reminder to
clean out your gutters before
winter tUTives. It is amazing
Ihat clogged gutters can
cause so much damage to the
roof and household ceilings.
After heavy rains and melt
ing snow lay m the house
g!Jtters they freeze when
temperatures fall when the
next cold front comes
through. The frozen water
lifts the roof shingles off the
roof at night only to allow
melting water the next momin~ to seep under the raised
shingles. Check the downspouts too for blockages!

Environmental
Quality
•••
Incentives Program (EQIP).
Take advanrage of these
So. participants are encour- warm. sunny days to gather
aged to attend both nights of
training and the aftemoon
pasture tour. Registrarion b
needed to determine thiZ
number of notebooks (one
per family) that will be furnished to producers who ·
attend the three sessions.
Light refreshments will also
be furnished.
Registration needs to be
completed by 4 p.m .. Friday
Nov. 13. 2009. Registration
and agendas can be obtained
by stopping in the office of
Gallia SWCD at the above
address or by calling our
office at (740) 446-6173.
Additional agendas will be
available from local sponsors.
Thh school will be a valuable asset to people who
currently graze li\'estock or
plan to graz~ livestock in
tl1e futur~ . Topic!) co\ered
in the workshop will be
meaningful for all grazing
livestock species.

Well Muscled/Fleshed. $35-$42; Medium/Lean. $30$35; Thin/Light. $ 10-$30: Bulls. $45-$58.

Back toEarm
Cow-Calf Pairs. $390-$825: Bred Cows. $300-$875:
Baby Calves. $75-$ 190 ; Goats. $51-$76: Hog:., $50down: Lambs. $40-$ 106 .
Manure to give away. Will load for you.

Upcoming specials
Fat eattle sale. Wednesday. Nov. II. 9:30 a.m.
Ohio approved feede r sale. Wedne:.day. 'lov. 18. 10 a.m.
Closed for Thanksgiving. Wednesda}. Nov. 25.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits . Contact Oewayne at
(740) 339-0241. Stacy at (304) 634-0224. or Mark at (740)
645-5708, or visit the website at www.uproducers.com.

,

201 0 Midwest Organic Lawn Care and
Landscaping Conference planned for January
MADISON. Wis. - Tht! ways:· said John Weiss.
1010 Midwest Organic president of Chickity Doo
Lawn Care and Landscaping Ooo of Madison, an emergConference will bring the ing national leader in the
nation's preeminent horti- organic marketplace. ··Lawn
cultural leaders to the care is one practical method
Midwest for a first-of-its- that has immediate benefits
kiJld two day symposium for your community. family
focusing on environmental- and pets. The problem is
ly acceptable solutions for that consumers and lawn
cart: professionals have
an evolving industry.
Featuring
SafcLawns many questions on how to
Foundation founder Paul make the transition. As a
Tukey as keynote presenter. . re~ult we partnered with
along with reno\\'ned land- Paul Tukey and the
scape architect Howard SafcLawns Foundation who
Garrett.
revolutionary have been recognized as
arborist Peter Wild. and industry leaders. "
Tukey. autl;lor of the bestaward-winning golf course
superintendent Jeff Carlson. selling book The Organic
the conference will be pre; Lawn Care Manual. said he
sented by Chickity Ooo Ooo personally ~elected Garren.
Organic Fertilizer on Jan. from Dallas. Texa,., , Carlson
28-29, 2010. at the Monona of Martha's Vineyard. and
from
Bo~ton.
Terrace Convention Center Wild,
in Madison. Open to the Mas:-achusdts 'to join him at
public - as well as lav.n the Madison ~vent.
"AU of these men have
and landscape professionals.
golf course manager:- and been offering organic, effective solution~ in the field for
~uperintendents. govemm~nt
'Officials. soil and ilgronomy more than 30 vear;-;," ~aid
scientist~ and municipal offi- 'fukev. "llnward Garrett has
cials and grounds staff- the built· natural. sn,tainable
seminars '"'ill !.howcase suc- landscapes a1 corporate headcessful techniques w save quarters across the country
time. money and protect und advi~ed dozens of golf
M'ater suppltes a~ weJI &lt;tS courses on making tne organic transJtton. Peter Wilt! ha~
human and anim&lt;tl health.
''We often hear that indi- run an organic h .:oe care comviduals. families and ~om­ pany since 1977 anti is conpanies wam to participate in sidered a lending expet1. He
the 'green' movement in hal-&gt; also parented tree inje~.·­
practical and meaningful tion technique~ for dealing

with exotic invasive pests,
including the emerald ash
borer that is decimating some
Midwest forests. When it
comes to organic care or golf
courses, Jeff Carlson is the
world's leader. Evety single
day he creates championship
level playing conditions
without pestkides.'·
The
2010
Midwest
Organic Lawn Care and
Landscaping Conference
will be divided into two
days. with Jan. 28 focusing
on the needs of professionals across all landscape disciplines. The Jan. 29 session will showcase political
trends and practical solutions for municipalities.
with a special emphasis on
emerging pesticide and fertilizer restrictions.
All attendees mav atteml
both days' sessions, which
v.,iJI include! the Jan. 28
evening premiere of A
Chemical
Reaction
(WW\v.ChcmicalReactionM
ovie.com), the critically
acclaimed film product!d by
Paul Tuk~y that focuses on
the firs! ·town in North
America ever to ban lawn
and gurdeu pesticides.
For information about
ticket
pnccs.
exhibitor/sponsor registralion, and spedlk session
information as it becomes
available, visit www.nrganic lawnconference .com.

Vent Free Gas Fireplace
' "11Jc Mantd:tire ..
Duel Fnel. Auto

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