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'

Page B8 • The Daily Serllinel

" Friday, August 25, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

LiviNG

ALONG THE RIVER
.
Skate-A-Way:
Sunday open house marks rink's closing, Cl

Travel &amp; Destinations: By high road and
low road, a wee tasting of Scotland, D1

-

"' If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. C/o The Gaston Gazette,
AI ltmel E-rl

"'......,~,.c~'*!.'-'· ~- 1'

4

:ntrl

Shorpie 'soo,

.........

7p.m.. ~

•
1

rood CIIY 2!50,
7:30 p.m., Friday

larger in his mirror - was avoiding
the mistakes that cost him those
other three races. Kenseth, 34,

1 Race: Sharpie 500
,

1 Where: Bristol {Tenn .) Motor
Speedway (.533 mi les), 500

~

laps/266.5 miles.

J!

1

was probably a little hard on hunself. In two of the three races he
mentioned , another driver- Kurt
Busch at Bristol . Gordon at
Chicagoland- knocked his No. 17
Ford out of the way. In the final 14
laps, Gordon tnmmed tne lead
from 2.072 seconds to .622. Finishing m positions 3·5 were Tony
Stewart, Kasey Kahne and Mark
Martih, none of whom ever led a
lap. Dale Earnhardt Jr. led 40 laps,
second only to Kenseth. but he
had to settle for si)(th. A key factor
in Kenseth "s favor was the fact
that. on a day in· whicl'1 more yellow
flags (10) waved than at any time
in Michigan International Speed·
way history, none occurred in the
final 37 laps.

When : Saturday, Aug. 26

1 Last year's wlnBer: Matt Kenseth
~

'!Nell....

~

~o.='Rel'=~~y"'-=:::Pilrls...,-,200==-.-~
9p.m .. ~

Qualifying record: Ryan New.
man, Dodge, 128.709 mph, March
2l, 2003.

o

1 Race record : Charlie Glotzbach.

Chevrolet, 101.074 mph. July 11,
1971.

• Last week: The 2003 Winston
(now Nextel) Cup champion has
another title in range, and Matt

•

1&gt; nwas soaJ&gt;Qpera week In
Michl(.an. Jeremy Mayfield, hBY'

lng been flred by Ray Evemham.
went public (In court, I!Ctualiy)
wlttl the "absenlae owner·
chllll8, whi~E;vemham responded by al~ng that May.
fiekl basically ·~ldn't try" In his
ftnal weeks as driver. New driver
Elliott Sadler wisely remained
-the fray.
1&gt; At this point In his career, k's

' appropriate to refer to Martin as

Kenseth's GFS Marketplace 400

:--.

victory was his third of the sea·
son. In Ken seth"s mind. though, he
should've won three more, and
what was foremost in his mind
over the final laps at Michigan International Speedway- as Jeff
Gordon's Chevrolet grew larger and

c

JlJ· Ji,

'

REED SORENSON

~ -JI
7111
;s:
Jr...l!=

-

• Rac:e : Food C1ty 250
• Where: Bristol (Tenn.)

Motor Speedway (.533
miles j. 250
laps/:133.25 miles.
• Whan: Fri tlc:;.. Aug. 25
•Last year's winner:
Ryan Newman
• • Qua!Hytng record:
Greg Biffle, Ford,
127.132 mph, March
26, 2004.

• Race record : Harry
Gant. Buick, 92.929

mph, April 4, 1992. ·

• Last week: Dale Earn-

hardt Jr. drove a Chevrolet to victory at Michigan
International SpeedWay.

&gt;,). '·' j , ,,,,,

I

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

• R11ce: O'Reilly Auto
Parts 200 Presented by
Valvoline
• Where: Bristol (Tenn.)

Ohio\ alit·~ l'uhlishing l'o.

Motor Speedway (.533
miles), 200 iapsfl06.6

• High school football
action. See Page 81

Mike Skinner
,
o Qualifying record: Ken
Schrader, Chevrolet,

l26.922 mph, Aug. 25,
2004.

• Race record: Travis
Kvapil. Chevrolet

88.8l3 mph, Aug. 20,
2003.

..-.

I Ji 1!:"'1'. II Jf·?Jl

I

Jl ._:_. ':..;..t~..r'

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

41

v
TARGET DODGE

E

•stry d ~Iring." He retired
from the Busch ~s at the

R

end of 2000 and reiumed

In
, 2004. Supposedly he was going
to retire from Cup competition at
the end of 2005, but he came

s
u
Earnhardt Jr.

beck for one more year. Now, he
seems likely to do~ again.

sist they aren't spending any

!loti, Terry

Labonte and Ricky

Rudd talking about giving lt an·

other whirl. Martin appears ready
rJlilke his third consecutiiJe
"one more year~ pronouncement.

to

Largely obscured by other rookies, Sorenson having nice debut
By Monte Dutton

ner ward Burton. who sat out

2005 but has been actively

seeking a ride all ~ar and never

actually retired.
• Michigan was loaded with con-

troversy. That being the case,
what, pray tell, is Bristol going
to belike?
I&gt; Another consequence of the

driver switch at Evemham Motorsports was public disclosure of
the relationship between Ray
Evemham and Craftsman Truck
Series driiJer Erin Crocker. Evern"
ham is separated from wife
Mary. In court documents filed in
North Carolina, Mayf1eld alleged
that Evernham had become an

absentee manager largely be-

cause of his .. close personal relationship with a female driver
he e,_es to dri110 in NASCAR's
ARCA, Truck and Busch Series.~

1&gt; Most everyone expected Sadler
to wind .up In Evemham's No.
19, but few expected the switch

to happen immediately. David
Gilliland became Sedler's suc·

oessor at Robert Yates Racing.

J&gt;WIIo'allot

-Matt
Kenseth cut
Jimmie Johnson's Nextel

CUp points

lead nearly in
half. He's fin-

, lshed In the
top 10 In 13
of the 23
..as arid led the most laps
fo( ~ third t!me this )'ear.
1&gt; Wllo'a not - It wasn't much
of a day for the Busch brotlr

ers. Kyle finished 39th and
· Kurt was 40th.

e PJ &gt; ~ hJ w. 1 ._,., 1 H'·'&gt;
'
""

-.

'&gt;!1,

.,

N!X1II. CUP
Jimmie John.On
2. Mall K8nseth
a. l&lt;evln Ha!VIck
!· Mark Martin
1.

••
••7.

'Tanv Stewart

Jeff Gol\lon
K~ Busch
Oen!Jl
Hamlin
•• Jeff Burton
••
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr.

.J ,

··!-"~

3,i65
·58
~ 311
·395

·106
. 434

. 443

· 445

·449
. 484

8usclt SERIES
1. Kevin Harvlck
2. Oen!Jl Hamlin

3,920
. 484

s. Carl Edwards

C486

4. Clint Bowver

. 585

J.J. Yel~
Paul Menard
Greg Biffle
K~le Busch

. 656
· 1022
. ~,05l
· 109l
· l,235
· l,236

••
••

'·

••t.

10.

Johnr)~ Sauter
Ken~

Wallace

TRIICK SERIES
TOdd Bodine
2.454
John~ Benson
·l44
3. David Reutimann
·194
. 239
4. Ted Mu!iJ:rave ·
Rick Crawford
· 255
Jack S~rague
' 302 '
••7. Tern:
. 306
Cook
. 3l4
David Starr
,· 315
Ron Hornada~
10. Dennis Setzer
· 391
ClwrsMAN

1.
2..

••
••
••

With less than two lap~ remaining in the Busch Series race at
Michigan. a tap from Earnhardt's
Che'w)' sent Edwards' Ford spinning
to the inside and, after contact with
another Chevy driven by Robby Gor. don, out of control. Edwards had

BROOKLYN, Mich. - At age ZO,
Reed Sorenson came 'to the Nextel
Cup Series with much to learn.
"I don't have a family at home to
take care of," said the young bachelor,
"so racing has pretty much taken
over."
It's· not easy for Sorenson to find
much recognition in a huge rookie
class, and Denny Hamlin's spectacu·
lar performance has obscured the
more modest accomplishments of oth·
ers, but Sorenson, from Peachtree
City, Ga., has had his moments to sa·
vor. He finished fifth on June 18 at
Michigan and became the first rookie
since Brendan Gaughan to lead a road
race when he spent two laps at the
front of the pack at Watkins Glen.
NASCAR's premier series can be
quite taxing, as Sorenson has learned.
He's also competing regularly in the
Busch Series.
"It's definitely been a little busier,
that's for sure, running both the
Busch car and the Cup car every
weekend," he said. "It makes life in·
teresting. It's pretty fun. You have
two chances every weekend to run
well and have a good time doing it.
We've had OK years in both cars.
We've had a pretty good last five
races in the Busch car. In fact, we've
got some really good tracks coming
up for us in the Cup car.
"You're at the track every weekend,
so your life is racing. You get here,
you practice, you race, qualify and
race for four days : A little bit more
testing this year than last year, and
two sponsors to try to keep happy. It
just kind of doubles everything this
year, and next year will be a little bit
easier."
Sorenson said it didn't bother him to
be racing in such a Raybestos Rookie
of the Year class of six. The others are
Hamlin, Clint Bowyer, Martin Truex
Jr., J.J. Yeley and David Stremme,

won it. Edwards, after limping to pit
road, droiJe back on the track and
bumped the side of Earnhardt's car
as the final lap was being run under
caution. ~I didn't mean to spin him
out.w said Earnhardt. ~I don't go
around wrecking people:
NASCAR Thlo Week's Monte

Dutton glveo hlo take: "Once again,
Edwards get wrecked, and onCe
again, it isn't his fault. At least this
one was In the Busch series:

title or 'Ultimate Tal'-er'
Who's America's Ultimate Tail-

gator? According to celebrity chef

•

Board
certifies
issues for
November
ballot

It's Cathy Phillips of Chincoteague Is-

land, Va. lifetime Products, which
manufactures folding tables and
chairs, hosted the championship at
Michigan International Speedway on

Aug. 19 and awarded Phillips a
$l0.000 cash prize, Finalists were

given 90 minutes to create their ultl·

mate tailgate celebnations, including

a three-course meal. Phillips prepared
a dish of scallops wrapped in bacon
and lemon mousse with fresh berries.
Her setup was designed to honor driv-

er Elliott Sadler. Judges Batall, Emle

lrvan and Richard Hendrickson based
Phillips' selection on the preparation
i!ind quality of food and decor.

Page AS
• Franklin Brinker
• Orville Lee Henson
• Ray. W. Lemley
• Eva Jean Roush ·
• Russell Wilkinson

BY BRIAN

INSIDE
• Campaign launched
to push early childhood
inHiatives. See Page A2
• Annie's Mailbox.
SeePageA3
• Funeral home gets
makeover. See Page AS
• Guest speaker.
SeePage AS

WEATHER

Only 20 years old, Reed Sorenson took over the No. 41 Dad!IB of Chip Ganassllhls season
after one full Busch Series season resulted In a pair of wins and 1 fuurth·plape mnklq.

who also happens to be.one of Soren·
son's two teammates.
"It's kind of cool, actually, with
everybody moving ·up," said Sorenson.
"I think every one of us had a little bit
different situation to deal with in each
organization. I have a rookie team·
mate, and our team hasn't won a race
in fow years now. We're trying to
build our organization where we can
get top lOs and top 'fives and then win
races. We're definitely getting a Jot
closer to that.

"Denny (Hamlin) has somebody like
Tony (Stewart) to rely on, and he won
a championship last year. We're try·
ing, as an organization, to get better
as a whole. I'm lucky to have Casey
Mears (his other teammate) there.
He's been a great help. We're just at a
different point as a team than some of
the other teams, but we're definitely
getting better."

•

Renewed optimism - Elliott
Sadler expects to do well in his
The Tony take - Tony Stew·
new role as driver of Ray art, who has won a champi·

.

Smith won the flrat
Jack Smith. driving a Pontia'c,
won the flrst race at Bristol Motor
Speedway on July 29, 1961. It was

New dealer, new attitude at Mark Porter GM Supercenter·

(he 16th of Smith's 2l victories in

what (s now the Nextel Cup Series.

He averaged 79.225 mph, whiCh is-

BY ' BETH SERGENT

n't far off Kurt Busch's average

speed, 79.427, 1n the most recent
race at the track. ·smith, originally
from Sandy Springs, Ga., died at age

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSE~TINEL.COM

76 on Oct. 17, 2001. Smith's career

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

began with NASCAR's first official

race, on June 1949, at Charlotte
Speedway, a .75-mile dirt track. His
final race was a second-place fin ish
in Savannah, Ga., on Dec. 29, 1963.

onship under the old , full·sea· Busch Series victory, is offiCup drivers have won all but
son system and the Chase for· cially Sadler's replacement in two' of the season's 25 races to
mat, said he'&amp; good with the the No . 38 Ford, and his crew date, and Harvick has won five
system the way it is.
chief is going to be Todd Pal" en route to a 443-point lead in
"I think it turned out fine," rott, who directed Dale Jar- the standings.
'
he said. "I liked it the way (t rett's 1999 championship at
"They need to. quit griping
was, but, with .the old system, I RYR
and Jearn how to win," said
would've been worried every
Gilliland, 30, is from River- Harvick. "That's what all of us
week about where we stood . . side, Calif., and once served as had to do. This is not something
But now? I can't even tell how a crew chief for his father, that's new. It's just something
many points out of the lead Butch Gillilantl, who competed that's more widespread
(447) we are because I don't in a total of 10 Cup races in the through the media.
even know.
1991).99 time frame,
"I've al.ways been the type
"The good thing atiout the
David Gilliland won the Mei- tbat, if you get beat, you need
new point system is that it jer 300 at Kentucky Speedway to figure out why. That's what I
gives the good teams that have on June 17. It was the first vic- was do if I was them instead of
historically been in the top 10 tory by a non-Cup driver in a worrying about how we can try
the flexibility to try things, Busch Series event this year to be more COIIlpetitive with
knowing that if you have a bad and made its winner an getting rid of people. That's not
week, it's not going to be that overnight sens.ation. He has really the answer to things."
dramatic. The moral of the s~o- only competed in 10 Busch
ry is still the same: If you get races, and the victory is his
into that top 10, you better .only top·10 finish to date.
have your stuff ready to go for
Kensetb's win his 13th of cathat last JQ.week stretch and
reer- Kenseth's victory was
not have any mistakes, because
· his third this year and 13th
mistakes in that final, l•O·race
Let them eat cake - Run- overall. Kenseth, Dick Rathsprint will cost you big.''
away Busch Series points mann and Tim Richmond are
leader Kevin Harvick ex- tied for 46th all·time in victopressed little sympathy for the ries .
plight of-the series' specialists, ·
Back at the ranch - David i.e., the drivers who don't run
Contact Monte Dutton at
Gilliland, he of one spectacular Next~! Cup as well.
hmdutton50@aol.com

Submitted graphic

.

The groundbreaking ceremony for the new Gallia Academy High School will be held on Friday, Sept. 8 at 5:30p.m. at 2S55
Centenary Rd .. Gallipolis. The first 300 'in attendance will receive a commemorative Shovel.

NASCAR ,_at Brllltol

Details

on.Pace A6

INDEX
4 SECITONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town
A3
CelebriJ.tions
C3-4
Classifieds
D Section
Comics
insert
Editorials
A4
Movies
A3
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2,A6
Sports
B Section
Weather
A6
© 2006 Ohio

Valley Fubllshing Co.

POMEROY When
asked what sets his dealership apart from others,
Mark Porter, owner of Mark
Porter GM Supercenter
(formerly
Don
Tate
Motors), answered, "Me."
''I'm very hands-on,"
Porter said. "You deal with
the dealer when you deal
here. I've been involved in
over 50,000 car sales and I
know how 10 make a deal ."
Porter has been in the car
business since 1978 where
he worked in Columbus and
believes that experience and
automotive career gives him
an edge in a competitive
business. It also doesn't hurt
that he freely admits he.
likes to negotiate the deal

Please see Porter, A1

88th Sergent; photo

Mark Porter (pictured), owner of Mark Porter GM Supercenter in Pomeroy offers a new atti·
tude, new cars and a hands-on approach to making the deal happen for customers.

•

•

•

•

J. REEO

BR EEQ@MY DAllYS ENTI NEL.CO M

John t:lark/NA.SCA~ This Week

Evernham's No. 19 Dodge,
though he wasn't quite ready to
predict thai he would do what
his predecessor, Jeremy May·
field, had done a year JJgo.
Mayfield, now on the sidelines, won the GFS Marketplace 400.
"I come from a team that I'd
been with for three and a half
years," said Sadler, "so f've got
to switch my mentality around
a little bit. I've got to Jearn the
new faces, the new people, and
learn what different teams do.
I think that's going to be my
biggest learning.curve.''
Sadler expects there will be
no hard feelings between him
and his previous team, Robert
Yates Racing.
"Let liygones be bygones,
·and Jet their team move ahead
and Jet me move ahead," he
said. "I think it's going to work
out great for both of us.'' ·

•

OBITUARIES

Mario Batali and a panel of judges,

By Monte Dutton

BROOKLYN, Mich.- When
rookie Reed Sorenson was
asked about the "Car of Tomorrow," which NASCAR officials
were scheduled to test here on
Aug, 21, he delivered a few gag
lines with a style that would've
impressed Jay Leno.
"I think they're the ugliest
cars I've ever seen," he said. ''I
don't even want to get in it. I'll
wait until they make us next
year.
"They're pretty ugly. The
last time I drove one; I got into
the wall a little bit at Bristol
'and broke the piece of wood in
the front We had to go to
Home. Depot and get more
wood to fix 'er up . (Kevin) Har·
vick said at Martinsville that
the whole inside of his car
smelled like a campfire.''
Drum roll, please.

Ready to brea~ ground on new GAHS

Vlllllnla w- earn•

Sorenson among those who think 'Car of Tomorrow' is ugly
NASCAR This Week

presentation. Taft discu"ed th '
importance of education. whal jobs
require higher education. and the
. GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis average earning one can expect at
e1gh1h graders had a chance to dis- varying educational Ieve'-.
cuss their plans for the future with
One of the requiremems of Ohio
Governor Bob Taft during a panel Core requires all students to comdiScus sion Friday morning at plele four years of math , including
Gallia Academy High School.
Algebra II : three years of lab-based
In add ition to eighth graders, two science, including physical science
seniors joined the panel to di scu" and biology and one year selected
where they are, academically from disciplines of chemistry,
speaking, and their plans for pursu- physics. or higher-level biology;
.ing a higher educa1ion.
four years of English: three years
In part. the purpose ofTafl's visit of social sludies: and two years of
to Gallipolis was to discuss the new
education initiative the Ohio Core. foreign language.
If enacted, completing the Ohio
which, if enacted by legislature,
Core
would be a condition of
will establish a rigorous core cur- .
Mlchalle Miller/photo
riculum as the default standard for admission to Ohio's state-funded,
Governorr Bob Taft discusses the importance of education and the new edu· all of Ohio's high school studenls. four-year colleges and universities and remedial education will
cation initiative The Ohio Core with a panel. of eight graders and two seniors beginning with the class of 20 II .
at Gallia Academy High School on Friday.
With the aide of a powerpoint
Please see Taft. A1
BY MICHELLE MILLER

MM JLLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CO M

been leadirt the race, but Earnhardt

NASCAR This Week

~ Meanwhile, still on the side-

lines is 2002 Daytona 500 win-

Edwards

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
vs. Carl Edwards

. .,. TO'JQt8 officials continue to inmore money than anyone etse,
1&gt;ut It's not nostalgia that has
drivers like Mark Martlt1, Bill fl.

s

SI.:)O, Vol. 40, No. :11

visns

Aug. 23

• Last year's winner:

Nashville Superspeedway in Gladevilte, Tenn.
"..vrr ~.- f?

1'&lt;111ll'I'O~ • \li&lt;ldll'prwl • (;allipolis • \uJ;ust 27,20116

SPORTS ·

miles .

• When: Wednesday,

• last race: Johnny Ben·
son, in a Toyota. won at

.:::..,..~

'

1)1 • l

.

•'

'
t•

3i3.Third Ave. •

1•4•~6-:26'i'3 ~Gallipolis, OH 45631
'

.\0

'

'~

POMEROY
Two
county-wide ballot issues
and a contested race for
Meigs
County
Commissioner will be
inducted on the general
eleclion ballol on Nov. 7.
The Meigs County Board
of Elections will mee t
Monday morning to certify
petitions for the election.
following Thursday's filing
deadline. according to Rit ~
Smith . Director · of ih,,
Board of Election&gt;.
At Thursday's regular
meeting. Meigs County
Com'mi,ioners approve,!
ihe placement, again, uf a
50-cent tel'ephnne lino·
charge on the ballot to help
establish E-&lt;J II service in
the county. The telephone
char~t·

would

cenerah~

approxim&lt;ilely $3{000 fo r
the service, to be operaied
in conjunction with the
county sheriff's d~panment :
II woukl also allow the
couniy In access funds set
'"ide at ihe \talc level
throu ~ h :t monthly fee
charged to ccllula1: ie l~­
ph011c CllSh1lllCrs.
The i"ue failed in last
No1·ember's clcclion.
The
Meigs
County
General Health Di&gt;tri.ct
seeks renewal of a one-mill.
five-year levy fo r cmrent
expcn&gt;es .
In the onlv contested race.
Meigs County Commissioner
Davenr.ort.
a
Mick
Democrat.
will
face
Republican
Ernest
E.
Spencer. Davenport is. seeking his third term in office.
Other candidaies Ol\ 'the
ballot are County Audi10r
Mary T Byer-Hill, Common
Pleas Court Jtidge Fred W.
Crow Ill. and Coumv Court '
Judge Steven L Stoiy who
arc unopposed.

Please see Ballot. A2

�•

PageA2

REGIONAL
Campaign launched to push early childhoOd initiatives
iunb4~ lim~ -ienttnd

Bv JULIE CARR 'SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
An
influential state panel recommended Friday that Ohio
combine early childhood
learning under a single state
agency, provide tens of
thousands of additional day
care openings in the state
and offer ali-day kinder,
garten statewide by 2015.
The ideas presented by
the School · Readiness
Solutions Group were
immediately backed by a
new lobbying coalition of
parents, teachers and business
leaden;
called
"Groundwork."·
The recommendations to
State
Board of
the
Education sound costly, but
volumes of evidence suggest that investing in chi!-

Porter
from PageA1
but more importantly he
likes his job and cares about
· the product he sells.
Mark
Porter
GM
Supercenter sells all five
· GM
lines,
including
Chevrolet,
Cadillac,
.. Pontiac, Buick and GMC.
:: Although Porter and his
··wife Theresa. who also
:· wor.ks at the dealership, cur; rently live in Canal
; Winchester, they have puri chased property in the Rock
· Springs area where they
: plan to move.
· So why does a Columbus
; car dealer seasoned in the
; art of the big city deal pur~ chase a dealership in Meigs
: County?
: "We wanted to go where
; we could make an impac't,"
· Porter said of the move he
: and his family _made. "You
: don't make an impact in
Columbus."
"We saw an opportunity
: in the community to sell
: GM cars and be the largest
· dealer in Meigs County,"
Porter said with a touch of

Sunday, August 27, 2006

dren from birth to age 5 for implementing the rec- services for the youngest display behavior problems
which children under one state later in their school careers.
actually saves government ommendations,
money in the long run, said were 14 months in the agency. That wpuld include struggle academically or
Carl Kohrt, -chief executive making. Costs to imple- behavioral and physical drop out.
officer at Battelle Memorial ment the ideas have not health resources, services
Kohrt conceded that the
Institute, who chaired the been determined.
for the disabled, educational study group's decision to
panel.
A growing number of offerings and programs for recommend broad access to
He cited one recent study states among them needy families.
early interventions could
by the Federal Reserve Florida, Oklahoma and
Don
Owens,
a give the report more tracBank of Cleveland, which Georgia - have .already spokesman
for
the tion with both average citifound that for every dollar extended publicly funded Washington, D.C.-based zens and elected officials.
spent in early education. education
to
include Pre-K Now. said states
Even after loosening
$1.62 was saved in other preschool for 4-year-olds. aren't only pursuing educa- entrance requirements, Gov.
government costs during a But the Ohio plan takes the tion for younger children Bob Taft could not · fill all
child's school years. Other concept further than other because it's good for the 10,000 available slots earlistudies suggest positive states have so far, calling for kids: They're feeling pres- er this year in his Early
early childhood experi- Ohio to create a new sure from the No Child Left Learning Initiative's Head
ences can help curb pover- preschool teaching license; Behind Act to improve Start pro~ram for lowty, crime, ill health and job- to convene a legislative task school performance.
income chrldren. The proforce; to establish a Board
"That's causing them to gram m1arked Taft's second
lessness.
School Board president . of Early Education and reach younger and younger overhaul of Ohio's staleSue Westendorf said a Care; and to make its exten- to pull those scores up," he funded Head Start, replaccommittee will be appoint- sive msources more readily said.
ing Head Start Plus, which
ed
at
the
board 's available to families.
Still, said Owens, studies was phased out in June
September meeting , to
The recommendations have shown that it isn't just 2005 after only about half
begin hashing out detail s also include combining all low-income children who its slots were tilled.

In California, meanwhile,
a "Preschool for All" initiative backed by Hollywood
director Rob Reiner failed
in June, after asking
wealthy Californians to foot
the entire $2.4 billion bill
through a tax increase.
Groundwork campaign
director Lori McC lung
sa id all Ohio familie&amp;
would share in the costs
and benefits of Ohio's
plan,
and
legislators
appear supportive.
"We have more and more
legis lators that now have
young kids and that ha~e
grandkids,'· she smd. "So
they"re seeing it, they're
experiencing it first hand,
and are wanting to see it for
their own family. I think
we're going to see a lot
more success than we've
seen in the past"

humor, adding that of
cour~e it was also the only
GM dealership in the county which was a selling
point to him. Anoth~r selling point according to him
was selling cars at a fair
price and being able to service them.
Mark
Porter
GM
Supercenter also has a full
service garage and body
shop. The entire complex
employs 2.5 people.
But why buy a dealership
now with the major car
manufactures having their
share of !inancial woes?
"It is risky to enter the
business right now but I
believe in GM and the
American people as well as
American made products
and workmanship," he
explained.
Porter, who purchased
Don Tate Motors on May
23 was born in Wheeling,
W.Va. He and his wife have
two sons, Chase, a junior at
the University of Rio
Grande and Chane, a
sophomore and football
player at Ohio Northern
Umversity. ·
"This will be a famil_y
owned and operated busrness," Porter added.

Township,. cemetery operation and maintenance,
replacement of A mill, five
years; Rutland Township.
cemetery operation and
maintenance , replacement
of .3 mill; Middleport
Village, current expenses,
replacement of three mills,
five years; Olive Towns·bip,
road maintenance, additional 2.8 mills, five years;
Olive Township, maintaining and operating cemeterif)S, renewal of one mill,
five
years;
Salem
Township, road m&amp;intenance, additional 2.9 mills,
five years.
The Country Corner DSB
Convenience ·Store in
Columbia Township seeks
approval of a local option
petition
for
Monday
through Saturday beer sales.

Ballot
from PageA1
The following local issues
w111 also appear on the
November ballot: Syracuse
Vi lla~e , lolice protection,
additron:i two mi lis, two
years; Syracuse Village,
current expenses, renewal
of one mill, five years;
Syracuse Village, fire protection, meewal of one mill,
additional .5 mill, five
years; Rutland Village,
police protection, additional
two mills, five years;
Middleport Village, fire
protection, renewal of two
mills, live years.
Racine Village, current
· expenses, replacement of
1.7 mills, five years; Sutton

OA!J!!~~~"E~~S.b4.h§~I!Y!.£~
Principal Guaranteed
Fixed Annuity*
Submitted photo
The sign change from Don Tate Motors to Mark Porter GM
Supercenter made the sale official in the minds of many
Meigs countlans.

school systems.
that more than 40 percent of capacity and student learnTaft said, though students factory jobs will require in~ in high school math,
may not want to hear it, he post-secondary education. scrence, and foreign lanwas in favor of finding ways by 2012,
guage in preparation for the
from PageA1
According to Taft it is the Ohio Core.
for schools to extend the
According to Taft, who
be directed to Ohio's two- sch9ol year if it is heeded to job of the local government
as
well
as
the
State
to
make
will
be unable to run again
properly
educate
students.
year campuses. .
sure
schools
are
properly
he hopes to conthis
year,
Another questi.on posed
Also included in the Ohio
funded.
.
tinue his involvement in
Core .is a work-ready and by an audien~e member - In June, Taft signed into education.
questioned
the
cost
of
highcollege assessment to be er education.
law House Bill 115, which
"(Education) is what I
·
completed during a stuinclude
s
$13.2
million
for
really
care the most about,"
Taft answered that while
dent's junior year and an he Understands the cost is a FY 07 to build teacher Taft said.
added measure to the factor and that college is
•
School Report Card to mea- expensive, there are numersure how well high schools ous funding options for stuare preparing students for dents to continue with their
college and work.
education.
After the panel discussion,
"No matter what you
Taft opened the lloor tO ··· choose to do after high
questions from the audience. school, you'll need a strong
One audience member academic
background,"
asked whether plans to Taft said.
Todd Simms
extend the school year were
According to Taft, highin the works because of paying unskilled jobs are on
Millennium Force
added requirements to the the decline. They predict

Taft

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LAMB/

ANNIE'S MAILE OX

Affectionate moves have changed with. times

stans at 6 p.m.

Card shower

Sunday, Aug, 27
PROCTORVILLE
Fulks reunion. noon. VFW
Building in Proctorville.
Monday, Aug. 28
RIO GRANDE - Fall
semester begins at the
of
Rio
University
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College. For
information. call the admis,
sions office at 245 -7208.
GALLIPOLIS
- Ac,
Plannin•
session
for Gallia
·lden1ve

Bv

KATHY MITCHELL

GALLIPOLIS - Ruby
AND MARCY $UGAR
McGhee will celebrate her
92nd birthday on Aug. 22.
Dear Annie: I am an 82Cards may be sent to her at year-old grandfatller and
Holzer-Wyngate,
300 have a recent problem. At
Briarwood
Driv.c. least, as far us I know. it is
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
recent.
BIDWELL
Mary
I used to kiss my fath~r. 1
p ar ks wr·11 . be celebralrng
·
k.· rss my so ns. ncp hews.
her 87th btrthday on Aug. brother~-in - lnw and sons-in22. Cards may be sent to her law. I hug . mal.es and
at Holzer Senior Care , temales. I Jon 1 paw. Hugs
Center, 380 Co1onra
· 1 D. rrve.
·
an d .·k-rs,es are fornb 0 f
Brdwell, Ohio 45614. or grectrng to me. I hu g
call her at 441 -0834 .
strangers. too.
GALLIPOLIS - Emma
A week ago. after dinner
Lee Martin will celebrate with my chi ldren and grandher 90th birthday on Sept. 1. child re11. I was saying goodCards may be sent 10 her at bye 10 my grandson·,
651 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. teenage g irlfriend. She
Ohio 45631:
always hugs me hello and
GALLIPOLIS
goodbye. She leaned over to
Marguerite H.ineman will give me a kiss (she i.' a tall
celebrate her 94th birthday girl), a11d I kissed and nibon Sept. 1. Cards may be hied her neck. She squealed,
sent to her ~t427 Third Ave.. ~nd that was all.
Gallipolis. Ohw 45!\31
Two days later. one of my
GROVE CITY -- Paul 'ons came over to excoriate
Northup will celebrate his me for patting the girl \ botR8th birthday on Sept. J. I tom . I . don't remember
Cards may be sent to him at doing this. Apparently my
2430 Harrisburgh Pike, grandson said I had. Both he
Grove City. Ohio 43123.
and his girl friend thought it
GALLIPOLIS - Hattie was funny, hut my son lit
· Belle Gothard will celebrate into me. He told me his wife
· her 89th birthday on ·Sept. said I somet imes patted heJ
12. Cards may be sent to her fanny.' She had never felt
at 242 Magnolia. Drive, offended. My son. however.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
had blood in his eye and let
CHESHIRE- Luther and me have it for touching thi s
JanaAmos will celebrate their young lady. etc.
54th wedding anniversary on
I got tired of his tirade and
Sept. 24. Cards may be sent to told him to leave. I called
them at 1631 Turkey Run my daughter-in-law and
Road, Cheshire, Ohio 45620. apologized. My wife spoke
BIDWELL
Nellie to her a little later, and my
Watson will be celebrating daughter-in-law said she
her 96\h birthday on Aug. never felt violated by. me.
31. Cards may be sent to her My son, however, called his
at Holzer Senior Care older brother and told the
Center, 380 Colonial Drive. whole "sordid" story. Now,
Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
my older son says I commit. E-mail community calen- · ted a criminal offense by
dar items to kkelly@mydai- "fondling" this 17 -year-old
lytribune.com.
Fax girl and I should stop doing
announcements to 446- this awful thing. I assured
3008. Mail items to 825 him I would keep my hands
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio in my pockets from now on.
45631. Announcements
Am ·I a big. bad, senile,
may also be dropped off at undocumented sex offendthe Tribune office.
er? - Still a Little Awed
1

High School class of 195'7
reunion, 7 p.m., home of
Shirley Graham,
1041
Second Ave. For information.
contact Shirley Graham at
446-1304, Molly Plymale at
446-1214 or Celestine
Skinner at 446-3237.
Saturday, Sept. 2
WILKESVILLE - I 38th
annual Wilkesville Bean
by
Dinner
sponsored
American Legion Joseph
Freeman Post 476. Flag raising at 10 a.m., beans will be
served around II a.m.
Sunday, Sept. 3
NORTHUP
Descendants of Henry "Doc"
and Angeline Tope Crem~ns
reunion, Northup Baptist
Church shelter. A ba&gt;ket lunch
will be served at 12:30 p.m.
GALLWOLIS - Annual
Samuel L. Lewis family
reunion, Bluebird Sheller.
Raccoon Creek County Park .
A brief church service will be
conducted by the Rev. Jerry
Lewisatll:30a.m. The meal
starts at 12:30 p.m., with a
short business meeting
immediately following.
THURMAN
Descendents of Ann Richards
reunion at Tyn Rhos Church.
Basket dinner at noon.
Thesday, Sept. 5
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Retirees will meet for
lunch, at the Holiday Inn,
noon.
Thursday, Sept. 7
CHESHIRE ·- Back to
School Night, Meet the
Staff and PTO meeting at
Kyger Creek Middle School

Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Drive.
Thesday, Aug. 29
POMEROY - Special
meeting of Meigs County
Board of Elections, 8:30
a.m., to certify petitions and
· issues for general elections,
board office in County
Annex. Regular meeting to
immediately follow.

Concert of Prayer, 7 p.m. , Union Baptist Church,
Eastern High School. gospel
concert
with
Teachers, administrators, Master's Four Quartet from
school personnel, students South Bloomfield, 6:30
and parents invited.
p.m. at the church located
near Carpenter at 39091
C~rpenter Hill Road.
Monday, Aug. 28 ·
MIDDLEPORT
.
Sunday, Aug. 27
.CHESTER Gospel Revival at the old Bethel
sing (bluegrass style) 10 Freewill Baptist Church
a.m., Chester Church of the south of Middleport at the
Nazarene, featuring Ju st Route 7, Story's Run Road
intersection, through Sept.
For Now.
CARPENTER . Mt. I. Pastor is Ralph Butcher.

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

''

••• • ti.drs
,.,_.".... "'~~~ h ..
1111111 Dept.

1or those

~·ho

qualify"

PLAN YOUR FUTURE TODAY!

......
'D'' Jti

"

'

';

\B)

Spomo~~~~- • •...,

1·800.·214~0452

Fall Quarter

Begins Oct. 2

740-446-4367
)

www.galllpollscareercollege.com

•

~ol' I

7

Am!!&amp;
The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents

. SHOWBOAT
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM Nightly
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
Sec. Ave. Gallip ~Hs, ?H
740-446-ARTS 127877

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Rt" li &lt;lb le lnl l'l 111'1 At Ct'"&lt;; Slllll' 1994

'

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
Plabttes Sa)f-Managemant Classes • In Jaclcson
August 28, 29 and 30 (Monday- Wednesday) from 9:00am- t2 Noon at Holzer Medical CenterJackson in the Community Education Room, located just inside the Main Entrance of the Hospital at
500 Burlington Road. For more information, please call (740) 395-8500 or (740) 446-5971.
Freedom From Smokjng . Session 3 - Quit pay -.In JacbsOa
Monday, August 28 at 6:00 pm at the Holzer Medical Center- Jackson Community Education
Room. For more information aboullhis seven-session series developed by the American Lung ·
Association, call (740) 446-5940.
freedom from Smoking - Sesslpn 7 - Celebrj!!lpn - In PomeroY
Tuesday, August29 at 6 :00 pm at the Meigs County Council on Aging and Senior Citizens Center
at 112 E, Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio. Session Seven will cover relapse prevention and
graduation from Ihe program. Registration for this program Is currently closed. Those who
are ·pre-registered are welcome to attend. For more Information about upcoming Freedom From
Smoking classes, call (740) 446-5940.

Freedom From Smoking .. Sasslon 5 • The New You .. in Jackson

1!1' Job Placement Assistance 1!1'
Flexible scheduling g
. Financial Aid Available [i1'
3 days or 3 nights is full-time 1!1' Associate &amp; Di'ploma Degrees [i1'

1

I

I I II '

preparallon for Childbirth - In GaUiPo/ls
Sunday, September 3 from 2 00 pm- 6:00pm at the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp;
Conference Center Room AB In Gallipolis. Call (740) 446-5030 to reg1ster or for more i~formation .

Small class sizes

When: Tues., Sept. 5, 2006
.a
For: Meigs County Residents Only
·¥
Thne: 4-6 pm
•
Cost $6-00 per dog/cat
.
.It Where: Meigs Co. Health Dept. te
~ .11
~2-00U,
Ia ...

•••••

VALLEY

"II II

Oak Hill ys Chillicothe Football - In Oak Hill, OH
Saturday, September 2. 7:30pm Kick-Off Holzer Health Systems will be at the Oak Hrll vs.
Chillicothe varsity football game in Oak Hill to pass out free water to lans coming through the gate .

"Careers Close To Home."

: RABIES VACONATION :.
:~
O..INIC
•.,.

....

, I: l

Point Pleasant vs. Slssonyjlle Football - In f&gt;ojat Ple«sant wv
friday, S&amp;ptember 1. 7 30 pm Kick-Off. Holzer Health Sy~tems will be allhe Point Pleasant vs.
Sissonville varsity football game in Point Pleasant passing out free water to fans comrng through
the gate.

Career College

:. Cares far .... ud Wldlllln taD! "•

. 0 .

SPRING

4c.l6 .. ), I '"'' ,, ~ mi!IK
FRI 8125106- SUN 8127/06

Me)gs 'ys, Athens Football - in Pomecor
friday, September 1. 7:30 pm kick-off. Holzer Health Systems w1ll be at the Me1gs vs. Athens
varsity football game in Pomeroy passing out free water to fans coming through the gale
·

Galli~olis

It..

:•
·
.•

PROUD TO BE APART
· OFYOURLIFE.

co nversation between -area leaders m business, commumty service, education, government

Thursday, Aug. 29 _
TUPPERS PLAINS "Pray for School 2006"

.

· how Mom imparts her pretentious. She shou ld just
knowledge of how lo buy ask the staff to u&gt;~ her title
decent. quality clothing. So. when patients are present.
start small. u,e your - Letter Writer Steve
Dear Steve: We disagree .
allowance to buy one inexpensive item. and show it to The problem was that the
Mom. Tell her you ' re proud &gt;taff only did this with the
of yourself for picking it out female doctors. In a profeson your own and you hope sional setting, titles should
'he approves. After doing be used at all times.
Annie's Mailbox is writlhis a few limes. vou can
ten
by Kathy Mitchell and
then ask Mom about hanMarcy
Sugar, longtime edidling your own 'hopping,
but if there\ a major pur- tors of the Ann uwders
chase coming up. she may column. Please e-mail your
sti ll come along. Please put questions to ann.iesmailup with it. You 'II be doing box@cOI~~ast.ne_tl or write
all your own shopping soon .to: A111ue s Mat box, P.O.
Box /18190, Chicago, lL
~nough .
Dear Annie: The recent 60611. To find out more
Annie's Mailbox,
letter from a female doctor about
and read feature!· by other
who wa&gt; upset because the Creators Syndicate writers
staff called her by her tirst and cartoonists, visit the
name reminded me of an . Creators Syndicate Web
incident. My uncle (a doc- page at www.creators.com.
tor) stopped by the house
with a friend (also a doctor).
He introduced him to my
father as "Dr. Smith:· My
father immediately . said to
call him "Salesman Doug:·
My own doctor is my age . The Sunday 1imes-Senrinel
He introduced himself to
me by name. and that's why
,Subscribe today
I like him. I think · that
446-2342 or 992-2155
femal e doctor is snobby and

·and private enterpnse. Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy Services Department For more
info~m~ tion . please call (740) 446-5053.

School events

.. • •• ... •• 'Ill.,.

and Confused
Ucar . Awed
and
Confused: We doubt it. but
sti ll. the rules governing
mak-female
interaction
have changed. nnd apparently, you rni ssed the
memo. It is no longer considered appropriate to pat a
woman's bchiml or nibble
her neck, unless she is your
wife or girlfriend. It is especiall y egregious if rhe
woman i' underage . We 're
glad you r female rclaii ves
Jon't mind, but one of these
day;. someone coulJ decide
Ill prc&gt;S charges. In the
future, you'd best liniit ~our
affectionate greet in.gs to
pecks on the cheek and a
brief hug .
Dear Annie: I am a Inyear- old girl. and I have a
slight problem with mv
mother. My Nrents pay for
my clothing. and for thi.s
reason alone. my mother
feel&gt; she &gt;hould accompany
me any time I need new
clothes.
I am very responsible ami
give the m no reason not to
trust me with their money. I
don't make .enougll to buy
my own clothes, so how can
I convince my mother to let
me shop alone without
sounding rude or ungratefu)'J - Clueless
Dear Clueless: For some
mothers, shopping together
is a way to bond. It also is

Commynhv Co!fee- In GaU/ooUs
friday, September 1 from 8:00am-· 9 00 am in the HMC Edtrcation and Conference Center.
Holzer Medical Center invites alllo an informal and ongo1ng community coffee promoting

· Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m. Pomeroy
Library.
POMEROY Meigs
County Library Board, regular meeting. 3 p.m. at the
library.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Right to Life. 7:30
p.m,, Pomeroy Library.
RACINE Southern
Band Boosters, 7 p.m. in the
high school band room. All
band parents and supporters
invited.

4H-Club

THANK

Community
events

Public
meetings

ability of Principal Life lm.urance Company
To)(•quolified retirement orrongemflnli, ~uch os

on annuity should be u1ed to fund on IR A, or
other tax qualified retirement orrongemerd, to
benefit from !he annuity's featu res other tl'lon
tax deferral. Tfuue featurel moy include

Gallia County calendar

Sunday,August27,2006

Meigs County calendar

Includes 3.65%
base interest rate
Includes 2.00%
Premium Credit on
premiums received
in contract year 1 .
Rate subject to
change at any time.
•Guoronte•• ere

ARoUND ToWN

iunba~ Itmel ·itntintl

.Page.AJ

1176 Jackson

Pike ·Gallipolis, OH

Monday, September 4 at 6:00pm allhe Holzer Med1cal Center - Jackson Community
Educat1on Room, located al 500 Burlington Road in Jackson, Ohio. Session Five will cover
stress management and weight control. Registration for this program is currently closed . Those
who are pre-registered are welcome to attend . For more information about upcoming Freedom
From Smoking classes, call (740) 446-5940.

�'

OPINION

6unba~ 1Eimes -~entinel

i?unba~ VL:ime~ -i&gt;ttttinel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publis.her
Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

'

Lerrer.'i 10 rlu' nliror are ~n' {('(mll'. They slwut.l he less
tlum 300 mnrls. All Inters are .\ltl~il'n ro edithlg and mwa
be signet! and indtu.fe addrt!.\",\" a11d telephone mtmhe1: N_v
wBigned lertas H i// he puhf1.,hed. Leuer.: _shot4/d be m
good ra.nt. addre.\·.\·ing ;,,·.mes. not fU' r.,·onahiu•s.
1

TODAY
IN HISTORY
.
'

Today ·is Sunday, Aug. 27. the 239th day of 2006. There
.
are 126 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in Hist?ry: On Au~. 27, 1859 ~ Col.
Edwin L Drake drilled the ltrst successful ml well Ill the
United States, near Titusville. Pa.
On this date: In I 770, derman philosopher Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was born in Stuttgart.
In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa blew up; the resulting tidal waves in Indonesia's Sunda Strait claimed some
36.000 lives in Java and Sumatra.
In 1892, fire seriously damaged New York's original
.
..
Metropolitan Opera House.
In 1894, Congress passed the Wtlson-Gorman Tantf Act,
which contained a provision for a graduated inwme tax
that was later struck down by the Supreme Cottrt . .
In 1928, the Kellogg-Briand Pact was signed in Paris,
outlawing war and providing for the peaceful settlement
of disputes.
.
In 1962, the United States launched the Manner 2 space
probe, which flew past Venus in December 1962. . . . ,
In 1975, Haile Selassie. the last emperor ot Ethwpw s
3,000-old monarchy, died in Addis Ababa at age 83 almost
a year after being overthrown.
In 1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten was
killed off the. coast of Ireland in a boat explosion claimed
by the Irish Republican Army.
Ten years ago: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton
addressed the Democratic convention in Chicago, forcefully making her husband's. case for re-election while rebutting
her Republican critics. California Gov. Pete. Wilson signed
an executive order· aimed at halting state benefits to illegal
immigrants. Actor Greg Morris ("Mission: Impossible")
was found dead at his Las Vegas home; he wa~ 61.
Five years ago: Israeli helicopters fired a pair of rocket~
through office windows and killed senior PLO leader
Mustafa Zibri. Peru's Congress voted to lift the constitutional'immunity of former President Alberto Fujimori, so that
prosecutors could charge him with crimes against humanity.
One year ago: Coastal residents jammed freeways and gas
stations as they rushed to get out of the way of Hurricane
Katrina, which was headed toward New Orleans. President
Bush asked Americans in his weekly radio address to be
patient with the U.S. military mission in lraq as thousands
of pro-Bush and anti-war demonstrators competed for atten·
tion in his tiny hometown of Crawford, Texas .
Today's Birthdays: Cajun-country singer Jimmy C.
Newman is 79. Actor Tommy Sands is 69 . Bluegrass
singer-musician J.D. Crowe is 69. Rock singer-musician
Tim Bogert is 62. Actrcs&gt; Marianne Sa~ebrecht is 61.
Actress Barbara Bach is 59. Country mus1cian Jeff Cook
(Alabama) is 57. Actor Paul Reubens is 54. Singer Willy
DeVille is 53. Actress Diana Scarwid is 51. Rock musician
Glen Matlock (The Sex Pistols) is 50. Actor Peter Stormare
is 48. Country singer Jeffrey Steele is 45. Gospel singer
Yolanda Adams is 44. Country musician Matthew Basford
(Yankee Grey) is 44. Writer-producer Dean Devlin is 44.
RRap musician Bobo (Cypress Hill) is 3X. Actress Chandra
Wilson is 37. Rock musician Tony Kanal &lt;No Doubt) is 36.
Actress Sarah Chalke is 30. Rapper Mase is 29. Rock musician Jon Siebels (Eve 6) is 27. Singer Mario is 20. Actress
Alexa Vega ("Spy Kids") is 18.
Thought for Today: '"What is everybody's business is
nobody's business - except the journalist's." - Joseph
Pulitzer, Hungarian-born American newspaper publisher
(1847-1911).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Lellers to the edilnr are welcome. They should be
less than 300 words. All letlers are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
number. No umigned letters 11·il/ be published. Leller.\
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters'!/' thanks to organi~ation.\ and indi·
viduals will not be accepted .lin· publication.

~unbap

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'

PageA4

Sunday,August27,2006

i;&gt;unbap \!::imrli -i;lrnttnrl • Page A5

Sunday,August27,2006

Local Briefs

The Iraq solution
·war h a performance
business. That is: if you get
in it - you better win it.
Stalemates are not acceptable, especially in America
where we worship victory
and do not suffer defeat
easily. Despite what revisionist hi.;torians say. the
USA did not lose militarily
in Vietnam: we simply did
not defeat the Communist
enemy. ·And shortly atier
we withdrew. they violated
the signed treaty and took
over South Vietnam.
Today. we are facing a
similar situation in Iraq .
The
latest
Opinion
Research poll ·says 61 o/r of
Americans now oppose the
Iraq war: just 35% support
the action. But this is misleading.. The opposition is
not against the campaign to
bring democracy to Iraq the dissent is about our per·
formance there. In other
words, if the Coalition was
winning in Iraq, the folks
would be behind the effort.
The far-left is trying to
make this a moral issue; it
is spinning that so mehow
America is bad for deposing a murderous dictator
and making free elections

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

dominate Iraq . That will
heighten Iran's power in
the Gulf region and give
Hezbollah and other terror·
ist outfits, including aifar more opportuniQaeda,
Bill
ties to develop their homiO'Reilly
cidal plots.
So cutting and running is
irresponsible and dang&lt;:r·
ous to America. and anypossihle. If that'&gt; bad, one who promotes that
then George Washington strategy should be aggr'' ~·
is Satan. That's how sively challenged.
dopey the mnral ohjectton · But the Bush administration does owe a new battle
to Iraq is.
to
the
fallen
But the folk s arc correct plan
when they say that unlimit- American' soldiers. If the
ed sacrifice in Iraq is not sectarian violence cannot
good for the nation. So far, be brought under control
the USA has spent hun- by. say, the end of this
dreds of billions and lust year, then a partitioning of
·
thousands of. good people Iraq should occ ur.
Already,
the
Kurds
· in
to death and grievous.
injury in that chaotic place. the north have a state that
If victory is not assured, pretty much does what it
then we need to change want s without Baghdad's
approval. Similar states
direction.
There is no question that could be establi shed in
Iran, the world's m!lSt dan- the Shia &gt;O uth and the
t·riangle,
with
gerous country, is behind .S unni
much of the instability io Baghdad . becoming an
Iraq. If the USA follows open city. There would be
John Murtha's advice and a centralized government
pulls out quick ly, Iran will in the capital. but all three
partner up with the killer states would largely be
Shiite cleric ai·'Sadr . and autonomous. sharing oil
r

Eva Jean Roush
revenue based upon pop·
ulation.
lr;m wou ld intluet1cc the
Shia. no questi(•n. nut it
would nut be able to dominate the entire country if
the US kept a strong presence to make sure coups
did not take place.
This mi~ht he the best
solution w"a had sitttation ,
P1:esident Bu,lt shot1ld real·
i7e his current Iraqi policy
is not acl-cptOJhlc to most of
the fulks It Mr. Bush co ntinue s to :-.t&lt;IV lhc course

based simpl y t1 pon hope,
his party and his legacy
will suffer dramatically.
So, once agai11, no good
deed goes unpunished. The
United States and Britain
held a mass niurdcrer,
Sadd:im Hussei n, accuunt ·
able for hi s misdeeds and
his repeated violations of
the Gulf War ccasefire.
They removl;(l him and
gave millions of lr:tqis a
chance at freedom. That
was noble. But the action
has gone unapprec iat ed.
because the world is not a
noble place.
Tiine to ·recogni ze that
and impose a new. w&lt;irkable solution .
jstahler@dispatch.com

a brother, Carl Wilkin,on am! hi&gt; wife, Jean. or Washington,
W.Va.; sisters: Ellen Rodriguez and her hu•.hand, Fidel, of
Lake Bueno Visita. Fla .. Karen Curd 11fThc Vtliagc, Fla., and
Ruth Wilkinson of Ripley: and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he wa&gt; preceded m death by a daughter, Deborah Jo Wilkinson Mullin,: and two brothers,
Lloyd Wilkinson and Louie Wilkinson.
Service will be at 2 p.m. on Sundity, Aug. 27, 2006, at Roush
Funeral Home in Ravenswood, with Rev. Fred Basnett, Jr.,
officiating. Burial will be in Ravenswood' Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Saturday at the
funeral home, and may express their condolences to the
family at mush I us2000@yahoo.com.

Eva Jean Roush. 81, of New Haven, W.Va., went home
to be with her Lord and Savior Thursday, Aug. 24, 2006.
due to compli~ations from a 30-year struggle with
Parkinson's disease.
·
. She. was a homemaker and had worked at the TNT plant
111 Pumt Pleasant during Worltl War II . She was a ~0-year
memher of tltc New Haven t:nited Methodist Church a
member of the Smith-Capehart American Legion Post 140
Ladies Auxiliary and the New Haven Garden Club.
She was born July 19, 19:25. in New Haven. daughter of
the late Cloyde Roush and ~lester Roush Fields:
· Also preceding her in death were her son, Jeffrey Lee '· - - - -- -- - - - -- - - - - - - - -- Roush: and a sister, Patty Horvath.
j
Survivors include her hu,band of 63 years, James Roush
of New Haven; daughter and son-in -law, Linda Lou
(James) Mixter of Lincoln Park, Mich.; daughter-in-law.
Dawn Marie Rouslt . nf New Haven: grandc hildren .
M1chelle Roush, Victoria Roush, Emily Mixter and
Stephen Mixter; sister, Sara Lee McGuire of Lincoln Park:
Orville Lee Henson, 58, of Chesapeake , Ohio, died
brother and sister-in-lmv. Ed Curtis (Delores) Roush of
Lincoln Park: and several nieces and nephews.
.
· Friday, Aug. 25, 2006, at his hqmc.
He is survived by his wife. Marjlyn.
Funeral service will be at II a.m .. Monday, Aug. 28, in
Funeral service will bear 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27, 2006,
New Haven United Methodist Church with Pastor Brian
lit
Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, .with Clifford Skip
May and the Rev. Bill DeMoss officiating. Burial will fol·
low in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be 6-8 Hughes officiating. Entombment will follow in Rome
p.m. Sunday at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason . Cemetery. Friends may cal l from 6".8 p.m. Saturday, Aug.
26 at the funeral home. Condolences may be expressed to
E-mail condolences to foglesongtucker@ myway.com.
the family at www.timeformemory.coni/hall.

Scout car wash
POMEROY- The Boys Scouts of America, Troop 235,
will have a car wash Sunday (today) noon to 4 p.m. at
Alligator Jacks.

Special meeting
GALLIPOLIS The Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold a spe·
cial board meetipg on Monday. Aug. 28. 2006 at 3:45 p.m.
at the CH McKen~ie Ag. Cen1er for the purpose of h1ring
personpel. If there are any questions, please call the office
at 740-446-61 73.
·

Deaths

Orville Lee Henson

Russell Wilkinson

Ray. W. Lemley

Russell Lee Wilkinson. 73, of Ravenswood, W.Va .. went
·Ray W Lemley, 84. of Pmcturville. Ohio. died Friday,
home to be with his Savior Jesus Christ on Thursday. Aug. .Aug.
25, 2006 in Hospice of Huntington .
24, 2006, at Jackson General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.
He was born Sept. 22, 1932, in Leroy, W.Va., son of the . He is preceded in death by his wife, Fern Lemley.
Funeral services will be at II a.m. Monday, Aug. 28,
late Raymond Lester and Maysel Pursley Wilkinson. He 2006,
Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville. Burial will be in
retired from Kaiser Aluminum and Century Aluminum in Rome atCemetery,
Proctorville. Visitation will' be from 6-9
Ravenswood. He was a member of the Calvary Baptist p.m. on Sunday. Aug. 27 at .the .funeral home.
Church in Ravenswood, where he served as an usher for
many years. He was a corporal in the U.S. Army during the
Korea Conflict.
He loved farming , fishing and hunting and spending
time with his family. He was a loving husband, father and
Franklin W. Brink er, 64, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. ,. died
grandfather.
Friday, Aug. 25, 2006 at Cabell- Huntington Hospital.
Surviving are his loving wife of 50 years, Betty Patter,,on
Funeral service will be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, Aug.
Wilkinson of Ravenswood: a sun, Timothy Lee Wilkinson of 29. 2006, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
Leroy: a daughter, Beverly Ann Collins of Racine; two grand- where friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Monday. Burial
children, Chance Logan Collins and.Merri Kathleen Collins; will be in Evergreen Cemetery in Letart. W.Va.

Franklin Brinker

For the Record
Man air-lifted after accident
SYRACUSE - An unidentified 45-year old man was
air-lifted by Med-Fiight to Cabeii·Huntington Hospital.
Huntington , W.Va. to receive treatment for injurie s he sustained i.n a one-car rollover accident on Friday afternoon on
Ohio 124 between Minersville and Syracuse. The victim
was entrapped in his vehicle, extricated and treated by
emergency personnel from the Pomeroy and Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Departments, Racine, Syracuse and Meigs
Emergency Medical Squads. The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is investigating the accident.

NASA delays launch
of space shuttle Atlantis
BY MIKE SCHNEIDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CAPE CANAVERAL,
Fla. NASA officials
decided Saturday to delay
the launch of the space shuttle Atlantis by 24 hours to
give engineers more time to
determine whether a lightning strike a day earlier
caused any problems.
The launch, planned for
Sunday, now won·'t be until
at least Monday.
The lightning didn't hit the
shuttle, but it struck a wire
attached to a tower used to
BY MICHAEL MELIA
protect the spacecraft from
ASSOCIA.TED PRESS WRITER
such striKes at the'Jaunch 11ad.
Engineers
wanted time to
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
check
out
some
readings on
- Tropical Storm ·Emesto
ground
and
flight
systems.
strengthened over the
The
lightning
strike was
Caribbean Saturday as . it
one of the most powerful
headed toward Jamaica and
ever
to hit a launch pad at
the Cayman Islands, threatSpace Center,
the
Kennedy
enin~ to become the first
said
Leroy
Cain,
launch
hurrtcane of the 2006
integration
manager.
Atlantic season, the U.S.
"We know just enough to
National Hurricane Center
know
that we don't know
said.
enough
to press on into a
Ernesto, packin~ 50 mph
launch
situation,"
Cain said.
winds, was proJected to
THANK YOU
NASA managers also had
reach hurricane strength by .
been concerned about
Ohio Valley Bank
Tuesday but it was too soon
storms
passing
through
the
to predict whether it would
For purchasing
area before launch time
hit the United States, said
Sunday.
my2006 .
Michael Brennan, a meteoweather
offi~ers
Shuttle
rologist with the hurricane
MMketHog
had said earlier in the day
center in Miami.
at the Gail/a County Jr.
that there was a 60 percent
"People should pay
Fa/rand for
chance the weather would
attention, especially people
your continued support/
prevent the shuttle from
on the Gulf coast,"
at
the
scheduled
blasting
off
Btennan said. "We're in
Alys§a Dray
launch time of 4:30 p.m.
the middle of hurricane
EDT Sunday.
Hilltop Hillbillie.,
season and it 's a good tinie
NASA
won't
launch
if
for people to update their
there are storms within 23
hurricane plan.s."
liP Photo miles of the shuttle landing
Jamaica and the Cayman
runway, in case astronauts
Islands, which both were in The Louisiana Superdome is shown in downtown New Orleans as an afternoon thunder- need to make an emergency
the storm's path, issued hur- storm approaches the city Saturday. People who expected to participate in joining hands landing.
ricane watches, meaning around the dome gathered under the tents shown at left hoping to wait out the rain storm.
severe conditions including While this weather had nothing to d.o with Tropica l Storm Ernesto, many area residents are
r---------------------~--,
winds of at least 74 mph keeping on eye on the storm which is expected to reach the Gulf of Mexico.
were possible over the next
48 hours . Tropical storm Ernesto had maximum sus- groc~ry store yesterday to ly," Mayfield told CNN's
Flaming 5 Mile Road Race ·and Challenge
warnings also were in effect tained winds near 50 mph , stock up," said Kennett , 47. Wolf Blitzer. " We've got
some
time.
We
don't
want
"
I
don't
want
to
overreact
or
with
higher
gusts.
The
fifth
fur Jamaica and Haiti's
Saturday, September 9th, 2006
named storm of the Atlantic anything. but I am worried." people to get too excited
southern coast.
City Park lst Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Fears that the storm could about this, but they certainErnesto was on a course hurricane season was cenly
need
to
be
watching
it."
• Flaming 5 miler • Chili Pepper Challenge
that would bring it over tered 250 miles southwest damage offshore energy
Associated
Press
Wriler
facilities
in
the
Gulf
of
of
Santo
Domingo
,
• "Now I Can El!t More chili" 1 Mile Fun Run/Walk
Jamaica by Sunday afternoon, dumping heavy Dominican Republic, and Mexico sent oil and natural- Howard Campbell con·
... ........... ,. ....... .;. ........................... ....................
. . ..
___ Yes, I would like more information about the French
showers. Fishermen were 420 miles so utheast of gas prices higher. Oil pro· rrihuted 10 this report from
ducers operating in the Gulf Kingston, Jamaica.
City Chilifest 5 Mile Road Race!
warned to return to shore Kingston, Jamaica .
they
were
prepared
to
said
The
storm
was
moving
Contact Name:---~-----------­
and Prime Minister Portia
Business/Group:--_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
- _Simpson Miller met with northwest at nearly 14 mph , evacuate nonessential per·
Address:
__......:._ _
disaster agencies to prepare. It was expected to bring 3 to , sonnel if needed.
Max
Mayfield ,
the
Jamaica is sued advi- 4 inches of rain to Haiti and
National
Hurri
cane
Center
the
Dominican
Republic
as
sories by radio and televi·
passed
south
of director, sai d it was too
sion for residents in low· 'ii
The Kant Patch
early to say whether the
lying areas across the Hispaniola.
·Registration fee
tor.purchasill mv
People were advised to storm would hit the U.S.
island to be prepared to
$HJ.OO
complete !heir weather Gulf 'Coast, which is st ill
2006 Markel HDUII
evacuate if necessary.
recovering from la~t year"s
~/(,"/{
''We are concerned about preparations on Saturday.
Hurricafle
.Katrina.
Jacky
Kennett,
who
the tlood risk to parishes
Court11ey
" It 's too early to pinpoint
that were affected in the moved to the Cayman
Shriver
past, so that is the major Islands with her family . unto speci fi~ location hut I
concern right now," said from Britain a year ago, was think message is. e~pec iall y
Nadine Newsome, a spokes- preparing for what could be to the folks that are in temporary hou sing.
tltese
woman for the Office of her first hurricane .
'"I went and put fuel in the 115.000 fwnilies mostly in
Disaster Preparedness and
car;
got some money out of th e FEMA trailers, tltcv
Emergency Man.agement.
At II a.m. EDT Saturday, the bank, and stopped m the need to watch tf1 is carefui-

Tropical Storm Ernesto strengthens over.·
southern Caribbean, heads tow~rd Jamaica

Camping and Lewis and Clark ·
Now that it's warmed up,
1' m thinking about. camp·
ing. Don't misunderstand
me: I'm not thinking about
actually going camping, in
the sense of venturing outdoors and turning my body
into an AII-U-Cait-Eat buffet for insects. I'm just
thinking about camping.
What got me on this
topic is a book I'm reading,
called
"Undaunted
Courage." by Stephen E.
Ambrose, about the ultimate camping trip: the
Lewis and Clark cxpedi·
tion. If you're a product of
·the U.S. educational system . you np doubt remember this historic endeavor,
in which a tiny band (they
didn ' t even have a key·
. board player) set out in
three tiny ships - the
Nina, the Pinta and the
Merrimac - and became
the first We sterners to
make the perilous voyage
around Plymouth Rock and
discover the
Monroe
Doctrine, without which
the cotton gin would never
have been invented.
That 's pretty much how
I remembered it, too, but
the actual facts, as set
forth
in
"Undaunted·
Courage," are these:
In
1803,
President
Thomas Jefferson made the
Louisiana Purchase, in
which he paid France $10
million for a humongous
batch of lanJ without having any idea what was in it.
Why would Jefferson make
such a purchase'' The
answer is simple : He didn ' t
have a wife. Thert: · was
nobody to say to him : "You
spent $_10 million for what''
Take it back right now'"

better roure. Reading about
their brutallv difficult.
extremely dangerous trek
across the continent, I was
reminded of the summers
when I was a counselor at
Dave
Camp Sharparoo11, and I
Barry
~sed to· set off. leading a
party of I0- and 11 -yearold boys, into the vast,
uncharted
wilderness
around
Dover
Furnace,
Guys w(thout wives are
always making impulse N.Y., . fully aware that we
purchases that border on would have to survive for
the insane. If hang gliders an entire night with nothing
had .been invented in 1803, to sustain us except rough·
Jefferson would have ly 200 pounds of marsh·
mallows, graham crackers ·
bought one of those, too.
and
Hershey bars. We u'ed
Anyway, the United
States found itself in pos- these to make the famous
ca lled
session of this extremely campfire treat
large parcel of land. and s"morcs. Sometimes we'd
nobody knew what it con- hook up with a group of
tained in the way of geog- girl campers . and make
raphy, natural resources, !&gt;'tiiores together; this is
shopping, etc. So Jefferson when I observed a fundasent Lewis and Clark 011 an mental difference between
expedition to check it out boys and gi~ls:
How girls make s' mores:
and also see if they could
find a way across the con- (I) Place Hershey bars on
tinent to tl1e Pacific Ocean, graham cmckers. (2) Toast
which Jefferson hoped marshmallows . (3) Place
would be a better trade toasted marshmallows on
rottte for beaver pelts Hershev bars to melt
bound for the Orient. Back chocolate.
then, .the beaver pcits had · How boys make s'mores:
to be transported by river (I) Eat Hershey bars. (2)
to St. Louis, then overland Eat marshmallows . · (3)
to the East Coast, then by Throw graham nackers at
ship to London, then by other boys.
Anyway, Lewis and
another ship to the Orient,
where they had to be Clark - whether because
burned
immediately, or rei igious rea., ons, or
because. as you can imag- sheer ignorance. we shall
ine, after all that travel nevt:r know - did not take
they .smelled like tho; inside any s'mores in gredients on
· of Marlon Brando's laun - their expedi tion , so they
dry hamper.
had to survive by ~hoot in g
"Forget it!"' the Orientals and eating thin gs like' elk. I
would '"Y· "We'll just go am deeply impressed by
naked' ''
this. I haw always pruSo in 1804. Lewis and .curcd my meat hy taking a
Clark set out in s~arch of a number ;tt the supermarket;

you could leave me out 'in
the woods for a year with a
mw:hine gun and an electronic elk detector. and I'd
still never be dble to shoot
an elk. And if I did somehow manage to shoot one. I
wouldn't have 01 clue how
to eat it. I mean, what part
do you eat'J You can definite-ly rule out the cyenalls,
but then what? You just
pick up a ltaum;h and start
chewing') I don't eve~
know what a haunch is.
Guess what else Lewis
and Clark ate'' Dog. that's
what. In fact , Le wis is
quoted on page 322 or
"Undau nted Courage" as
saying that - bear in mind,
this is after two solid ye01rs
of camping out - he liked
dog even better than elk.
My fe~ling is, · you have
to be pretty desperate to eat
a dog . I mean. with elk , at
least yuu know they don"t
like you. But a dog is going
to be hangin g loya lly
around you r campsi te,
thrilled to he there, ready to
fetch you a stick. How can
you just pick up a fryin g
pan and say. "Here. boy'"!
The point i, that things
were pretty. rough for
Lewis and Clark. anJ since
this year marks the 1\IOth
anniversary of their return,
I think it would be nice if
Americans comm emorated
their courageous effort to
open up our conti nent.
Perhaps some of us will

. 'fRE*R ((fY (H'L'- fff'f

~

;,.

Join 14 Area Chamber
For Exciting ·
Ohio Bobcat Football
You loa't Bavt 'ro II

.A Chamber • • • 'ro Attend!

even want to paLk our

sleeping bugs anLI retrace
their steps through some of
th e
still
relatively
unspoiled wilderness they
explored. Others or us will
want to wait until there is
plumbing.

The foreca st· was expect·
ed to improve dramatically
for Monday and Tuesday,
with unlv a 20 percent
chance th;Jt weather would·
prevent a launch on either
of those days. NASA plans
had four potential launch
times over five day s.
Shuttle weather officers .
also were tracking Tropical
'Storm Ernesto, which was
likely to enter the Gulf of
Mexico on Tuesday or
Wednesday and threatened ·
to reach hurricane strength. '
Ernesto wasn't expected to.
affect a launch early in the
week, but it could cause
problems if Atlantis doesn't
lift off until later in the week.
In a worst-case scenario, if
Ernesto were to strike Texas
after the shuttle's launch and
workers were forced to evacuate Mission Control in
Houston, the shuttle astra- ,
nauts would have to leave
the station and return to
Earth at the first opportunity.

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We can help you create a plan for your future and retirement years.
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6unbap limes ·6entintl

•

REGIONAL

FUNERAL HOME GEl'S MAKEOVER
BY JoY KocMouo
· JKOCMOUDOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
A
remodeling project that
began on Feb ..27, 2006. has
been completed.
' The public is invited to tour
the newly renovated Willis
Funeral Home during an
open house later this week.
· The funeral home was
founded on March 20, 1974,
by Cleeland and Wanda
Willis, after th~y purchased
the Stevers Funeral home in
Mercerville and moved the
operation to its current localion on the corner of
Avenue
and
Garfield
Portsmouth Road. Their son,
Matt, now runs the business
with the help of his family..
A new handicap accessible ramp, refurbished
lounge, and a handicap
accessible bathroom are just
a few of the additions to the
building.
Construction
crews also removed a side
wall and extended the
chapeVviewing area by 20
feet. The new room is about
83 feet long and has a partition the can be adjusted or
completely removed according to customer needs.
Two original stained glass
windows were saved during

Scoreboard

Local Weather
Sunday... Partly cloudy.
A slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
morning ... Then !I chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Highs in th.e upper 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph . ,Chance of rain 50
percent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy ,with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. West winds

around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Monday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
60s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thesday••.Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
· Thesday night and
Wednesday ••. Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Highs around 80.
Wednesday
night
through Friday ..•Mostly
clear. Lows around 60.
Highs in the lower 80s.

Joy Kocmoud/photo

Inside
League standings, Page B2
Hannan-South Gallia, Page B2
Boxscores, Page B3
.
Alexander-Eastern, Page B6

Bl

6unbap QI:tme• -6entinel

Sunday, August 27, 2006

avenge painful loss to Sheridan

The newly renovated Willis Funeral Home features an extended chapel/viewing area, refurbished lounge, and a handicap accessible ramp and bathroom. Matt Willis, owner of the
funeral home, will be hosting an open house on Wednesday.

BY STEVE EBERT

the d~molition, and they
adorn the newly constructed
portion of the building.
The open house will take
place from 4-7 p.m. on
Wednesday, Aug. 30.
·"We just needed more
room and wanted to
expand," said Matt Willis.

SPECIAL TO THE TIME S-SENTINEL

THORNVILLE - Gallia
Academy made the return
trip to the cornfields of the
Somerset area and avenged
last season's home overtime
playoff loss to the Sheridan
Generals.
· The Blue Devils built a
17-13 halftime lead, and
then totally shut down. the
Generals the rest of the way.
en route to the 30-13 victory
in the high school 'football

school's in, sale's on

opener Friday.
The Generals exhibited
opening game miscues as
they rushed for 147 yards in
26 attempts in the first half,
but that success was offset
by three fumbles; all recov.
erect liy the Blue Devils.
Sheridan recovered the
opening kick and returned it
Io its own 27 to get things
going. Three plays later,
junior back Adrian Balser
fumbled and Austin King
made · the recovery for .
Gallia Academy.

It took the Blue Devils I 0

plays and nearly four minutes to cover 40 yards culminating when King
blasted into the end zone.
The' point after was blocked
and the Gallians led 6-0
with 6:4.1 remaining in the
first.quarter.
Sheridan returned to following kickoff.to its own 21
and again began to move the
ball. Seven plays netted 29
yards before another costly
Please see Sweet. Bl

Mike Brace/photo

Gallia Academy's Jayme Haggerty fends off defende rs during Friday's 30-13 victory over
the Sheridan Generals.

Raiders
outlast
Panthers

cingular phone sale

Symmes
BY

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Tracy Calvert Voss
Tennessee.
Tracy is the daughter of
Judy and Steve Calvert.

Kroger - 23.28
Ltd.- 24.78
NSC -42.40
Oak Hill Financial 24.87
OVB -25.26
BBT- 42.72
Peoples - 28.79
Pepsico - 64.18
Premier - 14.80
Rockwell - 57.00
Rocky Boots .:.... 10.97
Sears - 143.33
Wai-Mart - 43.88
Wendy's - 62.37
Worthington - 19.45
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons
In Gallipolis.

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SPORTS CO RRE SPONDENT

. BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRlBUNE.COM

Local Stocks
ACI- 35.38
•AEP -35.92
Akzo- 56.65
Ashland Inc. - 63.38
BIG -18.00
Bob Evans - 27.53
BorgWarner -' 55.63
CENX- 34.20
' Champion- 7.20
Charming Shops 11.84
City Holding - 38.44
Col- 52.45
DG -12.28
·DuPont - .3 9.25
Federal Mogul - .36
USB-32.12
Gannett- 54.97
General Electric --33.84
GKNLY- 5.65
Harley Davidson 57.76
JPM- 45.52

County

Sunday,August27,2006

How sweet it is: Blue Devils

Guest speaker
RJO GRANDE - Tracy
Calvert Voss of Gallipolis
will be a guest speaker at the
University of Rio Grande
College August 29th with
the Pharmacy Technician
Program with · (Instructor
Camille McNeil).
Tracy's presentation will
include How The Pharmacy
Technician ·Program has
helped her to become a certified Pharmacy TechnicianIV Technician. Her presentation w(ll include preparation for IV medications.
in
Tracy
resides
Clarksville Tennessee and
works as a Pharmacy
Technician in Nashville,

PageA6

LONDONDERRY ·
Fans in attendance at R.L.
Davison Field Friday night
could easily see that it was
the first game of the 2006
· .seaso&amp;.for both RiveF Valley: .
and host Southeastern.
· The two schools combined for six turnovers and
collectively had 18 penalties for 112 yards, anything
·
far from a
flawless
evening.
in
But
between
the mi.scues
and mistakes. the
fans were
also treated
to something else.
Cordell
A very
competitive
and entertaining football
game.
In the end, the Raiders
(1 -0) extended their winning streak to five consecutive , games following a
hard-fought 18-12 victory
over the Panthers.
Tied at 12 entering the
fourth
quarter, • River
Valley came up with the
clincher when quarterback
Bryan Morrow found
Jason Jones on a 12-yard
Jessica St. James/photo
slant with 7: 17 remaining
Southern
quarterback
Jordan
Pierce
rolls
out
of
the
pocket
arjp
looks
for an open receiver
in the contest. That score
capped the Rai(lers' only during Friday's win over Symmes Valley.
sustained drive of the second half- a nine-play, 66
yard effort that allowed the
visitors to maintain the
lead permanently.
SEHS (0-1) . had two
more offensive possessions to tie things up - or
BY DAVE HARRIS
Ramsburg
possibly take the lead SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
dOWQ
the
but the Silver and Black
right sidedefense came through
POMEROY Meigs
line
66
when they held on a pair of scored early and often as it
yards
for
fourth-and -longs.
the score.
Afterward
fifth-year rolled out to a 49-8 win
over
the
Oak
Hill
Oaks
in
P o o I e
RVHS coach Gregg Dee!
the
season
opener
Friday
at
added
the
now 5-0 against
kick
to
Bob
Roberts
Field.
Southeastern in season
give Meig s
Meigs exploded for a 34openers - admitted that it
a
7-0 lead ·
0
lead
in
the
first
period.
wasn 't exactly the prettiest
Poole
·
with
· 10:43
of victories in his career. including 20 in "the first six
rematntng.
Bu! he was also quick to minutes of the. contest.
Oaks
put
the ball on
The
nqte that it was one of the s·enior fullback David the ground on lheir first
Poole rambled for three
most satisfying.
scrimmage play and the
"We've still got a long touchdowns in a span of 5 Marauders '
Cassidy
way s to go. Obviously minutes . in the period Willford pounced on the
we're not happy with our before retiring to a bench ball giving the Maroon and
turnovers or penalties, and in late in the first period Gold the ball at the Oaks
we need to get more out of with a knee injury.
45. On the second play.
Oak Hill won the toss Story found Ram sburg
our running game,"· said
Dee!. "We can correct and deferred to the second once again, this time down
tho se mi stakes, but you half. On the Marauders' the left sideline for 34
can't coach heart. The kids third play from scrimmage,
Aaron Story hooked · up
Please see Raiders, BS
Please see Meigs, B4
with a wide-open Brad

Quick-strike Marauders
hammer Oak Hill, 49.;.8

WILLOW WOOD
Southern came up eight
first downs short of the
Symmes Valley Vikings
Friday night, but the only
statistic that counted was
the 14-7 margin of victory
the Tornadoes brought
home over.
the
host
Viking s to
succes;fully hegin the
c o a c h

Mamhout

Denni s
Teafo rd
era.
T h e
Viking&gt; (01)
were
guilty of
f

o

u

r

turnover~

h a t
enabled the
Ra c ine
Southern
Tornadoe s
( 1-0)
to
rally past
them 14-7
Riffle
in the non league season opener for both teams.
This is the fi rst time
Southern has &gt;larted the
season with a win .in many
seasons, and is perlwps an
omen of good things to
come.
The winning touc hdown
was set up by a fumble
recovered
by
We,ton
t

Counts· at the Vikings 23 .
Butch Marnhout, who started the season like he ended
Ia &gt;! season, had a 15-yard
run to the 9 and two plays
later he scored on a 4-yard
run to win the game. He
al so ran for the conversion
to finish the game at 14-7.
Marnhollt
led
the
Tornadoes with 78 yards 011
23 caries in what Teaford
hopes is. a common occurrence. Symmes Valley,
noted for their staunch
defense. held Southern to
four first downs and. 109
total yards. Marnhout had
all but 26 yards of the
Southern offense. Weston
Counts ran for 27 yards on
six carries. Southern had
ju st 19 net positive yards at
the half.
Symmes Valley tried to
outsmart Southern to. start
the ga me with an onsic..lc
kic-k: which was recovered

by
freshman
Lemley.
A

huge

Taylor

cha nge

of ·

mome1\tum came tn the
seco nd canto. Fi~st,- in the
second qu arter Symmes
Vallev took a 7-0 lead. then
Torn&lt;ido wrner ·Wc s Riffle
picked otl a Chris Capper
pa" ancl ran it hack 40
vards fm a touchdown . The
kil'k failed for' Southern bu t
the Tornadoes pulled close
at 7-6.
The momentum jump started a stagn ant Southern
Please see Southern, B6

�PREP FooTBALL

iunba~ m:tme' ~itntintl

Rebels thump Hannan
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MVOAJLVTRIBUNE.COM

MERCERVILLE- In the
first of only three games at
· home this season. South
Gallia made sure its fans
.
went home happy.
''This is a good team and
they've only got three home
games," smd Hannan coach
Wayne Richardson, who was
making his football coaching
debut. "[ knew they were
going to come out fired up."
Indeed.
·
The Rebels scored on
every first half possession,
including 27 points ,in the
second quarter, as they rolled
to . a 39-7 victory over
Hannan in the high school
football opener on Friday.
It was the second straight,
and second all-time, seasonopening win for South
Gallia. Last ye!lf a win in
Week l helped pave the way
toward the program's ftrst
winning season and playoff
berth.
.
Aside from some typical
early-season mistakes, the
Rebels certainly looked the
part of playoff veterans in
they way they took care of
business Friday.
South Gallia's by-design
methodical offense yielded a
6-0 lead at the end of one
quarter and the game was as
close as 13-7 early in the second quarter before Justy
Burleson's club began to pull
away. The Rebels, aided by
Wildcat turnovers, scored
back-to-back touchdowns
within a half-minute span to
open the flood gates.
"I was really pleased with
the offense, it seemed to click
most . of the time ," said
Burleson. "We were able to
stick to the basics and made
sure we put together efficient
drives."
South Gallia ran the ball 41
times for 186 yards, amassing 13 first downs and controlling the clock.
"We weren't trying to
make quick scores, we were
trying to make sure we did
things in a manner that we're
going to do as we go along in
the season - keep an opponent off balance."
South Gallia mi)\ed in an
efficient passin&amp; game to go
along with its trademark
rushing attack. New starting
quarterback John Wells com:
pleted 5-of-6 passes for 70
yards and a score.

Sweet
fromPageBl
fumble was recovered by
Seth Haner at midfield.
Any potential Devil drive
was hurt with an i lie gal
procedure penalty on the
first snap· from center. After
· a three an&lt;! out, The GAHS
.punt went to the five and
was returned to the SHS 40.
The first quarter ended with
the ball on the Galli a 3 7.
It· took just two plays; the
last of which was a 30-yard
run up the middle by Brian
Crader with 11:08 remain. ing in the half. The point
after was good and"
Sheri3an had what would
be its first and last' lead of
the game, 7-6.
The teams exchanged
possessions until the third
General fumble was recovered by King on the GAHS
46 at the 7:23 mark.
Gallipolis drove 46 yards
on seven plays; Golden
went 3-for-4 on the drive
· with the last I5 being a
beautiful hookup . with
Shawn Thompson on a
fourth and I0 play. The two
point pass from Jeff Golden
to Jayme Haggerty made it

• '· _..
''

Sunday, August 27,

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
North Division
SEOAL
All
W-1. PF PA
W·L PF PA
1.() Z7
().{) 0 0
6
Warren
1.()
53
13
().{) 0
0
Zanesville
().{) 0
0
0·1 16 56
Athens
0-1 0
().{) 0
0
38
Logan
I)-I
().{) 0
0
13 26
Marlena
South DIVIsion
All
SEOAL
W-l PF PA
W·l PF . PA
0-0 0
0
Chillicothe
1·0 14 5
0.() 0
0
Gallia Academy
1·0 30 13
Ironton
0.() 0
0
1·0 24 21
Por1smouth
o-o o o
1·0 71 44
().{)

0

0

0·0

0

0

Friday, September 1
Athens at Meigs
Logan at ChillicOthe
Gallia Academy at VInton Co.
Ironton at Olentangy Liberty
Jackson at Waverly
Mar1eHa at Cambridge
Portsmouth at Portsmouth West
Warren at Philo
Zanesville at Newark

Friday's results
Nelsonville-York 56, Athens 16
Chillicothe 14, Brookhaven 5
G Academy 30, Sherictan 13
Ironton 24, Wheelersburg 21
Lancaster 38 , logan 0
Parkersburg S. 28, Mar~etta 13

Portsmouth 71. Chesapeake 44
Warren 27, Belpre 6
Zanesville 53, Whitehall t3
Saturday's result
Jackson at Wellston, late

Ohio Valley Conference·
OVC
W-l
W-L PF PA
0.() 0
0
1·0
0·0 0 0
1·0
0·0 0
0
0·1 '
. 0-1
0·0 0 0
0·1
0·0 0 0
0.() 0 0
0·1

Coal Grove
River Valley
Chesapeake
Fairland
Rock Hill
South Point
Friday's results
Por1smouth 71 , Chesapeake 44
Coat Grove 30, Lawrence Co. 6
Portsmouth W. 35, Fairland 28
River Valley 18, Southeastern 12
Tolsia 33, Rock Hill 24
'
Johnson Central 35, S.Point 7

All
PF PA
30 6
18
44

28
24
7

12
71

Friday, September 1
Chesapeake at Wayne
FaiNiew at Coal Grove
Winf1elct at Fa~rland
River Valley at Nelsonville-York
Wheelersburg at South Point

Trl-Valley Conference
Ohio Division

TVC

AleKander
Meigs
.
N'elsonville-Yort
Vinton County
Wellston
Belpre

Brad Sherman/photo
South Gallia's Dewey Cantrell (15) fends off Hannan tacklers during the Rebels' 39-7 victory over the Wildcats Friday at Rebel Field.
The touchdown pass coverect 19 yards to Tyler
Duncan, who found himself
wide open on the play to give
Sou'th Gallia some breathing
room 19-7 with 3:54 remaining in the first half
Less than a half minute
later, Hannan fumbled the
ball away and set up the
home team in prime scoring
position again.
The Wildcats fumbled
balls away on four occasions
and lost three of them. But
mistakes were expected, after
all, it was the first game
action they've seen this year.
"We played this game with
no scrimmage," explained
Richardson. "I'm not making
an excuse, but its hard to simulate a *arne situation with
16 boys.'
·
After the first Hanna.n fumble; South Gallia 's Vance
Fellure finished off the short
two-play drive with an 18yard scoring rumble through
the heart of the defense.
·Fellure was one of many

Rebel backs employed on ·the
evening. Derrick Beaver led
the ground attack with 80
yards on 12 carries · and
scored the first two South
Galli a touchdowns on runs of
one and 14 yards. .
Dewey Cantrell added 49
YflfdS on eight touches, as well
.as a pair of scores. the tirst of
which was the back-breaker
just before intermission.
After the Wildcats fumbled
the ball away again on their
next possession - it set
South Gall ia up at the
Hannan 22 with three minutes to play before halftime.
It took the Rebels live plays
to negotiate the distance as
Cantrell scampered in from
I 0 yards out to give his club
a 33-7 lead.
Cantrell's other score finished off a long opening
drive to begin the second
half. His 14-yard dash to pay
dirt
rounded out the
evening's scoring.
Hannan also found some
success on the ground, most-

Southern

Waterlord
Eastern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Trimble

W-l PF PA
0-0 0
0
0·0 0 0
0·0 0 0
·O·O 0 0
0·0 0 0
0·0 0 0
Hocking Division
W-l PF PA
0·0 0 0
0-0 0
0
0·0 0 0
0-0 0
0
0·0 0 0

I

.#

'·,\,

seconds left in the third
quarter. It took the Devils
27 seconds to tack on their
final points, a three yard
run by Haner with the
extras being kicked by
Haggerty, and scoring concluded 30-13 in favor of
GAHS.
Balser. Crader and Lance
Sweeney led the General
ground attack with 14 carries for 55 yards, 77 yards
on 12 carries, and 51 on
only 8 respectively.
Haggerty led Gallia
Academy with 72 yards on
four totes. Golden had 54
on I0, and King finished
with SO, also on I0.
The Blue Devil road
show continues next week
with a trip to Vinton County
and a match up with the
Vikings.

l

Friday; September 1
South Gallia at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Wahama
Hannan at Symmes Valley

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Individual Statlotlca
Rulhlng: Wah-Jacob Roach 4·
20, Mlcaiah Branch 5-13, Derek
Veazey 9·10, Brenton Clark 12-(·
17).
.
Water- Jason Sampson 36-247,
Michael Fulton 10•26, Bradley Lang
6-( -8) .

Pealing: Wah-Brenlon Clark 2-90 18.
Water-Bradley Lang 7·16-4 110,
Jason Sampson 1-1·0 33.

~

With Someone You· Trust

1

mately did the Falcon~ in.
VeaLey collecting I0 yards
Sampson , the workhorse in nine -attempts. Brenton
of the Wildcat offense. led Clark connected on two ul
WATERFORD- A tutal the Waterford attack with nine pa"e' for 2~ yards
domination in the trenches ~47 yards in 36 carries with with Garrett Underw.9od on
and a non-exi stent offense synor quarterback Bradley the receiving end Of both
were the most glaring inef- Lang scoring once · and tosses.
ficiencies to plague the throwing for another as
Sampson ran rampant for
Waharna White Falcons Waterford ran for 265 yards Waterford . with 24 7 yards
Friday evening after the on the ground and passed in 36 carries with Lang ,
£3end Area team dropped a for 143 more through the conneclJ ng on seven of 16
12-0 season opening loss to air. Lang completed a 17" passes fur II 0 yards with
the Waterford Wildcats.
yard scori ng toss to Derek one touchdown and four
Wahama forced seven Hoge early in the second inte rception s. Sampson
Waterford turnovers on the quarter to complete a 76 aho completed one pas s for
night after picking off four yard, 10 play dme for a 6- 33 yards. Hoge was the
Wildcat passes and recov- 0 Wildcat lead before tuck - Wildcats leading receiver
ering three mor-e enemy ing on an in~urance score with four c&lt;ttches for ~4
fumbles, but an ineffective following a six yard jaum yards and une touchdown.
White Falcon offense failed with 10:22 remaining in the
·'We experienced a gre:ll
to capitalize on the host\ final period to seal rhe vic- de al of difficulty with their
generosity.
tory.
six man dcfehsive align:
The Bend Area defense
Wahama musrered a mea ment and that hampered our
allowed Waterford to score ger 18 net yards on the nffense;· Cromley said.
one time in each half while ground while gaining just
"We've got to work on our
rolling to over 400 yards in 28 yards in the air as the alignment schemes and be
tow!
offense . Wahama . White
FalcO I\ __, offense
despite coming up with coughed and sputtered all ready for that kind of
Jefense 111 the future
seven turnovers, failed to night long.
IJecause rm certain we'l'l
reach the end zone and
The BeAd Area team
sec it more than once down
were limited to just four scored an apparent touch- the road." ·
first down s and onl)• 44 Jown on its opening offen. posse 55 ·ton w h entre~
· 11Junior~ Caleb Roach and
offens ive yards in the sea- s1ve
· h Derek Veazey turned in
man t.ulib ac k M'1cata
son opening toss .
.•
. "We simp ! ~ couldn't han·- Branc,I wen I 40
, yarus 1·or impressive performan ces
J
h
b
die them up front ," a t e score ut Ihe p 1ay was for the WHS defen se while
dejected Falcon cuach Ed ca II e d b ac k due to a WHS freshmen Micaiah Branch.
Ct:umley· said following the penalty. Wahama threat- William
Zuspan . and
.
Garrett Underwood all had
setback. "We can't take the cne d on Iy one more I nne
football away seven times . throu ghout the l·e l·,,.,,·
' ,,~e
" · 1· promising . fir&gt;t-g•ame outand not turn them into of the contest after march- ings for Cromley's grid.
'"
ld •
ing to the Waterford 25 but ders.
pomts. nc cou 11 1 get the drive stalled there and
Wahama will try and
anything going at all offe nsively and as a result our the f'alcons were turneJ rebound from its disappointing season opening
defense was forced to be 011 away empty handed.
f
ld
h
··
Jacob
Roach
emerged
as
loss
when the Bend Area
h
1 c te muc too 1ong.
the Bend Area teams lead- team welcomes Federal
· Despite the glaring dominance 'in the games final ing rusher with 20 yards in Hocking for a 7:30 p.m .
statistics the White Falcons four carries. Branch netted contest in the Falcons·
remained 111 con tention 13 yards in five tries wirh 2006 home opener.
~\~,~gk~ 1 ;~~1a ~;~ir ~?~n11t~rc~~: ~-----" .._ .._ -_ .. -- ------------BY GARY CLARK

SPORTS CORRESPOI'IDENT

tions by Derek Veazey and 1
one each by Brenton Clark I
and Bill Zuspan in addition ,
to fumble recoveries by
Micaiah Branch , Nate
Stafford and Adam Barton .
However in the end it was
the hard running of returnTri-Valley
iitg
all
Conference running back
Jason Sampson that ulti -

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1

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yard field goal. as time
··
expired.
Gallipolis took a 17-13
lead into the locker room
and owned the rest . of the
game.
Whatever adjustments the
Blue Devil coaching staff
made at the break worked
to perfection: Sheridan had
169 total lirst half yards,
but were held to 62 in the
more
second. · Four
turnovers were partially
responsible and · the Blue
Devils were swarming .tO
the ball and gang tackling:
Conversely, the · Gallians
rushed for l 02 first half
yards, but tacked on 152 in
the second.
GAHS scoring plays in
the second half came from
Haggerty on a 62 yard jaunt
to the end zone with seven

I

Service
~ f#tteU6/tl9 "" 2006

· All
PF
29
49
56
26

ly in the person of Wes. Gue,
0·0 0
0
. 0·1
0
whu toted the ball 14 times
.
FridaV'• results
Friday, September 1
for I07 yards. He broke a AleKander
29, Eastern 21
AleKander at Trimble
long 64-yard gai n in the sec- Warren 27, Belpre 6
Fort Frye at Belpfe
Athens at Meigs
ond quarter, which set up his · Meigs 49 , Oak Hill 8
Nelsonville· York 56, Athens 16
River Valley at Nelson\iille-York
scoring plunge from four yards Vinton County 26. Unloto 0
GaUia Academy at Vinton Coun ty
out. Zach Sturgeon added 24 Caldwell 6, Federal Hocking 0
Minford at Wellston
Maysville 41, Miller 0
Sourh Gallia at Eastern
yards to the running game.
Southern 14. Symmes Valley 7 Fecteral Hocking at Wahama
Despite
the
loss, Berne Union 20, Trimble 0
Millersport at Miller
Frontier at Watertorct
Richardson said he was Waterford 12, Wahsma 0 ·
result
Saturday, September 2
pleased with the etlort of his JacksonSaturday's
at Wellston, late ·
Southern at Notre Dame
club. And with such a young
team, stili learning the game,
Cardinal Conference
CARDINAL
All
he'll surely be able to live
W-l PF PA
W·l PF
PA
with the mistakes · as he Herbert Hoover
0-0 0
0
1·0 33 6
Sissonville
~-0
34
14
builds the program.
0·0 0 0
Wayne
0.() 0
0
1-0 21
15
"We've got something to Logan
0·0 0
0
0·1 13 18
go to practice Monday and Poe a
0·0 0 0
0-~
12
40
Pt. Pleasant
0.() 0 0
0·1 20 28
build on, that's what we're Winfield
0·0 0
0
0·1
0
21
·
trying to do," he said.
Frtday'a reautta
friday, September 1
South Gallia plays seven of Herbert Hoover 33, A'wood 6'
Herbert Hoover at Roane Co
Man 18, Logan 13
Logan at Johnson Centra!, Ky.
its next nine games on the Nitro·
40, Poca 12
Poca at Ravenswood
road beginning at Eastern Ripley 28, 'Point Pleasant 20
Sissonville at Point Pleasant
Friday. Only a two-game Sissonville 34, Chapmanville 14 Winfielct at Fairland .
Chesapeake at Wayne
21, Winfield 0
home stand in Weeks 5 and 6 Hurricane
Wayne 2~, Mt. View 15
break up the string of road
contests.
Non-League
All
Hannah hits the road again
W-l PF PA
and takes on another playoff South Gallia
1·0 39 7
0·1
7
39
qualifier · from last season,. Hannan
Wahama
0·1
0
12
Symmes Valley, this Friday.
Friday's games
South Gallia 39. Hannan 7
Waterlord 12, Waham.a 0

14-7 with 4:58 retl)aining.
Following the ensuing
kickoff out of bounds, The
Generals elected to begin·
·their drive.on their own 35.
Twelve plays, 10 of which
were runs, netted tl'te final
SHS score of the nig'iu on a
seven-yard pass
froni
Michael Swinehart to
Collin Smith with 37 ~ec­
onds remaining. The PAT
hit the crossbar making it
14- 13 GAHS.
The Devils set .up shop
from the 30 with no timeouts. On the first play,
Golden dodged and weaved
his way 60 yards all the
way to Sheridan's I0. He
spiked the ball with four
seconds left and Haggerty
came on to the field and
split the uprights from the
right hash mark for a 27-

W-l
1-0
· 1·0
1·0
1·0
0·0
0·1
W-1.
1·0
1-0
0·1
0-1
0·1

Receiving:
Wah-Garrell
S.Gallla 39, Hannan 7
Fourth Quarter
Hannan
o 7 o o - 7 Underwood 2-18.
So-Butch Marnhout 4 run
Soulh Gallla 6 27 6 0 - 39 Waler-Derek Hoge 4·84, Cody (Marnhout run) 11 ·50
Strahler 2-46, Jason Sampson 1· 7.
Gary Tornes 1·6.
Scoring summary
So
SV
First Qusner
First Downs
4
12
Meigs 49, Oak Hill 8
SG-Derrick Beaver 14 run (kiCk
Rushes-yards
35·1 04 47-131
failed) 5:33
Oak Hill
0 0 8 0 - 8 Passing yards
5
33
Meigs
34 9 6 0 - 49 Total yards
Second Quarter
109
164
SG-Oerrick Beaver 1 run (Aaron
Comp-an-int
1·3·0 4·8-1
Scoring summary
Phillips kick) 10:32
Fumbles·IOSI
1· 1
5·3
First Quaner
H-Wes Gue 4 run (Victor Ericsson
Penalties-yards
6·44
3·31
M-Brad Ramsburg 66 pass lrom
kick) 9:14
Aaron Story (David Poole kick)
SG-Tyler Duncan 19 pass from
Individual Statistics
10:48
John Wells (kick failed! 3:54
Rushing: So-Bulch Marnhoul 23·
M-Poole 1 run (Poole kick) 8:48
SG-Vance Fellule 18 run (Wells
126, Was Counts 6·27.
M-Poole 4 run (kick failed) 5:38 • SV-Kirl
run) 3:37
Shipley t2 ·54, Chris
SG-Oewey Canlrell 10 run (pass M-Poole 38 run (Brandon Fisher
Capper
11·30,
Kyle Bowman 7-31,
pass from Slory) 3:13
failed) :41
Stephen
Thompson
6·8, Robbie
M-F1sher 59 run (run failed) :53
· Third Quarter
Miller
7-33,
Jesse
Graybeal
2-17,
Second Quarter
SG-Dewey Cantrell 14 run (run
Tyler
Dickess
4·8.
M-Cornelius English 22 run
failed! 8:20
Passing: So-Jordan Pierce 1·3·0
(Poole kick) 11 :52
4.
M-Safely 7:08
H
SG
SV-Ghns
Capper 4·8-1 33.
Third Quarter
First Downs
7
13
Receiving: So-Butch Marnhout 1Rushes-yards
32·175 41-186 M-Brandon Shupe 23 run (kick
4.
failed) 8:09
Passing yards
0
70
SV-Kirl
Shipley 3-23 , Kyle
OH-Cody Lewis fumble return
Total yards
175
256
Meadows
1·10
I
(J.D.
Hale
pass
from
Chase
Comp-an·int
1·3-0 5-6·0
Allman) 3:36
Fumbles-lost
4·3
2-0
River Valley 18,
Penalties-yards 5·31 9-60
OH
M
Southeastern 12
3
10
Individual Statistics
' First Downs
RVHS
6 6 0 6 - 18
38-48 43-279 SEHS
Rushing: H-Wes Gue 14·107, Rushes-yards
6 0 6 0 - t2
16
100
Zach Sturgeon 7-24, Joe Kelley 5- . Passing yards
66
379
18, Victor· Ericsson 3-16, Joe 1Tolal yards
Scoring summary
3·11·3 2·2·0
Kinnard 3-1 o.
.
I Comp·att·mt
First Quarter
4·2
3-2
SG-Derrick Beaver 12· 81 Dewey , Fumbles-lost
SE-Jacob Deity 3 run (kick
Cantrell 8-49, Vance Fellu~e 5·34, Penalties-yards 10·83 8·65
blocked) 5:20
Zach Craigo 7-29, John Wells 2-6,
RV- Michael Cordell 19 pass from
Nathan Bainter 2·2. Healh While 1lndtvlduar Statistics
(kick blocked) 1:40
2, JacobJarrell3 -(-16).
Rushing: OH-Chris Dupree 12- Bryan Morrow
Second Quarter
Passlng: H-Joe Kelley 1·3-0 o.
26, Evan Workman 5-25, Brandon RV-Ryan Henry 1 run {pass failed )
SG-John Wells 5·6-0 70.
Pons 7·17, Donnie Carr 5-t2, Zach 9:23
Receiving: H-Zach Sturgeon 1·0. Parker 1·6, Chase Allman 4·(·6) ,
Third Quarter
SG-Dustin McCombs 3-39, Tyler • Bobby K1dd 5·(-32).
. SE-Jordan
Elam 20 pass lrom
Duncan 1·17 Kalob Ludwig 1·14. M- Brandon F1sher 3-72 , Dav1d Hunler Ralliff (run
failed) 2:46
'
Poole 4-45, Cornelius English 6-41.
·
Founh
Quarter
Alexander 29, Eastern 21 , Jeremy Smilh 7-41. Brandon Shpe RV-Jason Jones 12 pass from
Eastern
o 8 7 6 .,... 21 · 10-35, . Aaron Cordell 3·20, Cory Morrow (run iailed) 7:17
Alexander
6 6 3 14 - 29 : Hu11on 4-13, Cody Laudermill 2·6,
Aaron Story 2·5, Jacob Well 2·1 .
RV
SE
, Passing~ OH-Brandon Potts 1-4Scoring summary
First
Downs
II
14
1 2 14, Chase Allman 2·7·1 6.
First Quarter
Rushes-yards
30·79
4
5
.
M-Aaron
Story
2-2-0
100.
.
A-Zach Hedrick 5 run (kick iailed)
130
Receiving:
OH-·Garland
Stiltner
8:16
151
75
1-14, Jordan Slrickland 1·6, Chris Passing yards
Second Quarter
Total
yards
230
205
Dupree
1·(-2).
A-Ryan Thomas 21 pass lrom
Comp·att·int
7·1 4·2 6·14-1
M-Brad Ramsburg 2-100.
Matt Demosky (run lailed) 6:09
Fumbles·lost
2·1
3·2
E-Derek Young 9 run (Young run)
10-59 8·53
Ripley 28, Pt. Pleasant 20 Pe11alties-yards
:39
Ripley
0 14 14 o - 28
Third Quarter
Individual Statistics
Pt.
Pleasant
6
0 8 6 - 20
A-Thomas 15 lield goal 4:06
Rushing: AV-Bryan Morrow 9-18.
E-Kyle Gordon 1 run (Young kick)
Zachary Baird 2-t6 Ryan Henry 8·
Scoring summary
4:06
15, Tyler Canaday 7. 15, Michael
First
Quarter
Founh Quarter
Cordel14-15.
PP-James Casto 5 run (kick
A-Thomas t2 pass lrom
' failed)
,
SE-Jus11n Hoffman ·20·1 09, Jacob
Dernosky (kick failed) 11 :55
Second Quarter
Dally 18-46. Hunter Ratlill7-(·25).
A-Demosky 5 run (Aaron Boch
i A--J .J. Garnes 5 run (Thomas
Passing: AV- Bryan Morrow 7-14from Demosky) 3:57
2 151 .
'
.
Moles kick)
E-Young 99 kick return (pass
A-Games
10
run
(Motes
kick)
SE-Humer Aaltiff 6·14·1 75.
failed) 3:40
Third Quarter
Receiving: RV-Michael Cordell4·
.E
A
A-Logan Manin 5 run (Moles kick) 114, Jason Jones 2-13, Ian Lewi s 111
15
· R-Manin 35 run (Motes kick)
24.
First DownS
25·t55
51-258
PP-Jarod
Stouffer
3
run
(Troy
SE-Kevin
Dunn 4·55, J&lt;l'tdan
Rushes·yards
80
73
Leport lrom Casto)
Elam 1-20, Justin Hoffman 1·0.
Passing yards
l
Fourth Quarter
Tolal yards
235
331
PP-Will Slone from Casto
G.Academy 30, Sheridan 13
Comp-an-int
9-t7-2 '. 5-7·0
Gallipolis
6 11 6 7 - 30
Fumbles-lost
1-1
3-1
pp
R
Shendan
0 t3 0 0 - 13
Penalties-yards 9·75
6·50
First Downs
14
12
48·215 28-112
Individual Statistics '
Rushes-yards
GA
s
76
173
Rushing: E-Codey Gerlach 12· Passing yards
Rushes -yards
39-254 42·176
291
285
70, Chadd Whitlach 3·34, Kyle : Total yards
Passing yards
78
55
3-4-0 12-22· Total yards
Rawson 3·20, Derek Young 3·17, Comp-all-inl
332
231
Kyle Gordon 4-14. .
0
Comp·an·int
7·12·0
4·9·1
0-0
0·0
A-Zach Hedrick 22·153, Adam . Fumbles-lost
Fumbles lost
t
6
McCarty 9-58, Mall Demosky 16·
Individual Statistics
27, Seth Fowler 4-20.
Passing: E-Kyle Gordon 9·1"7·2 Rushing: A-Logan Martin 21-132.
Thank You
J.J. Games 22·83. Thomas Moles
80.
3·2, Robie Bostic 1·2, Seth Parsol'ls
A-Man Demosky 5-7-0 73.
Receiving: E-Codey Gerlach 4- 1·(-4)
PP- James Caslo 14·70, Tyler
39, Josh Collins 2-25, Derek Young Granl1
0-34, Jared Slouffer 4-8.
3·16.
Passing:
R-Seth Parsons 3-4-0
A- Ryan Thomas 2-33, Tim
76.
Croxlord 2-33, Selh Fowler 1·7
for buying my
PP-James Casto t2·22·0 173.
Waterford 12, Wahama 0 Receiving: A-Jared Stalnaker 22006 .
Wahama
0 0 0 0 - 0 42, J.J. Garnes 1·34.
Waterford
0 6 0 6 - 12 PP-Kris Dewit1 3· 72, Jarod
Market Hog!
Stouffer 4·33, Will Slone 2·24, Tyler
, Grant 2-34, Troy Leport 1·10.
Olivia Woodward
Scoring summary
Second Quoner
Southern 14, Symmes V. 7
Triangle 4-H
Water-Derek Hoge 17 pss from. ,' Southern
0 6 0 8- 14
Bradley Lang (kick failed) 9:22
0 4 0 0- 7
1S.Valley
Fourth Quarter
I
Water-Lang 6 run (run failed)
Scoring summary
10:~2
,
Second Quarter
Water
.
SV-Kirt
Shipley 14 run (Kyle
Wah
I Meadows kick) 7:21
22
First Downs
4
Riffle 37 interception
Rushes-yards
30-26. 52·265 'I So-Wes
relurn
(kick
failed) 3:59
143
Passing yards
18
Total yards
44
408
Comp·an·lnt
2-9·0 8-17-4
Fumbles·lost
H
5-3
Penalties-yards 6·45
6·50
ASPECIAl "THANK YOU" TO
1

35
33
35

~ttnbuv -a:::mtt.'S -i&gt;rntm£1

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Friday's Football Boxscores

2006

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�.'
Page B4 • i&gt;unbap m:imrs -i&gt;rntind

27, 2006

Bucket will reside
in Ripley for awhile

Meigs
from Page Bl
yards~

Ramsburg was tackJed at the Oak Hill I . Two
plays later Poole rammed
it from a yard out. Once
again Poole's . kick was
true and Meigs held a 14-0
Jead .with 8:48 left.
Meigs held on down&gt;
and forced the Oaks to
punt, .but the snap W&lt;IS low
and the Marauder' took
over at the Oaks 16. One
first down . Story kept the
ball for 13 yards to the
three ya rd line . rhre e
plays later Poole went
over from three vards out.
Poole's kick was blocked
but the Marauders h~ld a
20-0 lead with 3: 13 left in
the first.
Once again Meigs held
on downs and for ced a
punt. Brandon Fisher
gained II on first down,
and Poole went the final
37 yards · for the score.
Story hooked up with
Fisher for the extra points
with 3: 13 left.
After a four-and -o ut,
Meig s wasted littl e time
when Cornelius blasted in
from 59 yards. the ex tra
points were no good and
the maroon and gold was
ori top 34-0 and the end of
the first period.
On Oak Hill's first play,
Austin Dunfee picked off a
Brandon Potts pass and
returned it fvur yards to
the Oaks' 38. Four plays
later, English scored from
30 yard' out. Pooled added
the extra points and Meig'
was on top 41-0 on the
first play of the second
period .
The Marauders made it
43-0 at the 7:08 mark of
the half when Brandon
Dodson blasted threw the
line and threw the Oak Hill
punter down for a safety.
Meigs closed out . its
scoring with 8:09 left in
the third period when
Brandon Shupe scbrcd
from 23 yards out.
The Oaks scored their
touchdown with 3:36 left

Sunday, August

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Bv

ANDY lAYToN

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Submitted photo

Brad Ramsburg (86) of Meigs makes a reception good for 34-yards in the first quarter of
action against the Oak Hill Oaks in the 2006 season opener on Friday.

in the third period, when
Casey Richardson went in
punt formation and had the
snap sail into the end zone
and Cody Lewis recovered
for Oak Hi II for the score.
Chase A I man passed to
Cody Hill for the extra
points .
"The kids played well
and played hard tonight,"
Mike Chancey said after
the contest. "We took
udvantage of some mistakes, it was a good team
win. we will enjoy it
tonight and get ,ready for

Athens next week."
Brandon Fisher led the
Marauders on the ground
with 72 in just three tries.
Poole added 45 in four carries , English and Jeremy
Smith both picked up 41
yards, English in six tries,
Smith in seven. Shupe
added 35 in I 0 tries.
Story went to the air
twice, completing both to
Ramsburg for I 00 yards
and a touchdown.
Chris Dupree led the
Oaks on the ground with
26 yards in 12 carries.

Evan Workm irn added 25
in five tries. Brandon Potts
was one of four in the air
with two interceptions and
14 yards. Chase Alman
was two for seven with an
interception and four
yard!;.
Garland Stiltner had one
catch for 14 yards. Jordan
Strickland added one for
six yards.
Meigs wi II host future
T'IC roe Athen s next week
at Bob Roberts Field. Oak
Hill .
,will
play
Sou thea, tern.

POiNT PLI:ASANT. W.Va. - Offense and defense are normally known as the t\~o most important components in the
game of football, but in Friday's game, special teams was the
deciding factor in the outcome. The Point Pleasant Big Blacks
suffered a 28-20 setback in the battle for the Old Oaken Btu;ket
against Ripley, perhaps the last battle for a while.
"My greatest fear came true for me tonight," said head coach
Steve Satford. "You can't give any football team the kind of
field position that we gave them and expect to keep a team out
of tl1e end zone.''
The Big Blacks defense ·held up for the most · part of the
game, but the Vikings seemed to start every drive around midfield. They only started inside the 35 a small number of times;
leading to a Jot of small dlives for the visitors.
The Vikings offense seemed to run on all ~:ylindcrs at times.
They rushed for a total of 215 yards on the ground, with 48
overall attempts. Logan Martin ran for a team, and game, high
of 132 yards on 21 ca~Ties with two touchdowns. Teammate J.J.
Games also rushed tor 83 yards with two touchdowns as well.
"J thought we (lid well at times tonight,'' said Ripley head
coach Jimmy Frashier. "I thought Point Pleasant really came to
play."
•
Senior James Casto Jed the Big Blacks in both passing and
rushing. Casto rushed tor 70 yards on 14 canies. and had 173
ya~·ds through the air. l:le rushed for one touchdown, and _
threw
one as well. Senior Kris Dewitt led the Big Blacks in receiving
with three grabs for 72 ya~·ds.
"l think that Casto is one heck of a quarterback,'' said the
Ripley head coa&lt;.:h Frashier. "He is as good of a gum1erback as
I have seen run that kind of offense."
The Big Blacks came out strong in the first period. The
defense applied immense amounts of pressure, &lt;md the offense
put up an early touchdown. Senior quarterback James Casto
· had a miraculous 40 plus yard run down to the three yard line,
which eventually set lip hts own touchdown run on a quai1crback sneak a few plays later. After an extra point mi ss by fresh- •
man Brock McClung, Point was up p-0 early.
The defense continued to hold up tor the rest of the firs t CJUarter, and with 9:19 to go in the first half. Ripley cashed in on
their first touchdown with a tive yard run by senior J.J. Games.
Thomas Motes added the extra points tor the Ripley lead, a
lead they would not let go of'.
Ripley added their second touchdown just four minutes later
with another Garnes touchdown. After another extra point,
Ripley was up _14-6, and would carry that lead into the half.
The relentless ground anack of the Vikings did not stop in the
first half. After initial struggle, Ripley put up their third touchdown of the game when Logan Mat1in ran for a live yard score.
Once again, unfortunately for Point Pleasant, Ripley scored ·
· its touchdowns .in pairs. Just three and a half mrnutes later.
. Martin would score from 35 ymds out for his team's final score.
The Big Blacks refused to roll over and die though like most
team.s would at this point. Casto led the team on a drive. highlighted by a great catch by senior Kris Dewitt, and eventually .
senior Jarod Stouffer scored his lirst touchdown of the year to
make it 28-12. Casto would connect on thc ·two-point convcrsion to Troy teport to make it a 28-14 ga me.
Ripley then proceeded to drain the entire f(,wth yu;u1er dock
with their relentless running attack. As time expired however.
Point scored one last touchdown as Casto hooked up with
senior Will' Slone for a great catch in the back or the end zone
to make the linal'score ~8-20.
.
.·

Sunday, August

27, 2006

~Unba!' m:intrs -~rntinri • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Bs

Ohio High School Football Scores
Oh+o High Schocll Football Scores
Hudson 17, Can. GlenOak 15
Friday's Reeulta
Huron 17, Vermilion 0
Akr. E 52 Norton 6
Ironton 24, Wheelersburg 21
Akr Ellet 28, Akt Spring. 7
Jefferson Area 35, Orwelf Grand Valley 20
Akr. SVSM 43. Shaker Hts. 24
Jeromesville Hillsdale 14. Ash rand
Albany Alexander 29, Reedsville Eastem 21
Mapleton 8
Anna 42, Sidney Lehman 0
'
Kansas Lakota 28, Plymouth 0
Apple Creek Waynedale 22, Zoarville
Kent Roosevelt 35. Cha9'in Falls Kenston 28
Tuscarawas Valley 12
•
Kenering Alter 33, Kenering Fairmont o
Arcadia 41. Danflury Lakeside 14
Lafayette Allen E. 35. Lima Bath 25
Arcadia 41 , Lakeside Danbu~ 14
Lakewood 14. Berea 9
Art1ng1on 52, Mt. Blanchard R1verdale 0
Lancaster 38, Logan 0
Ashland 44. Willard 6
Lewis Center Oleritangy 24, Cllblin Scioto 0
Attica Seneca E. 49, N. Robinson Cot.
LewlsOOrg Tn-County N 34, Middletown
Crawford 0
Madison 8 ·
Aurora 34, Streetsboro 12
Lexington 43, Mansf1eld Ontano 19
A..,on La~e 41. Tol. Woodward 10
Uberty 18. Struthers 6
Baltimore Uberty Umon 29, Bloom-Carrol 16
Liberty Center 14, Detlance Tinora 6
Barberton 40, Akr. Kenmore 6
Lim~ Sr 26, Celina 24
Lisbon Beaver Local 26. Minerva 23. 20T
Bamesv111e 21 , New Concord John Glenn
19. OT
lockland 27, Williamsbu rg 0
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 17, Bloomdale
london Madison P1a1ns 413, Ceda1V1IIe 6
Elmwood 10
Lorain Clearview 30, Sandusky Perkins 12
Louisville 35, Poland 13
Beallsv1lle 38 Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 6
Bedford 31 Cle E Tech 0
louisville Aquinas 54. Cle E 8
loveland 14, Cin. NW 7
Bedford, Mich. 28, Holland Spring. 7
Lucasville 13. Chillicothe Huntington Ross 6
Bellbrook 34, Mlam1sburg 21
Macedonia Nordonia 49, Amherst Steele 7
Belleville Clear Fork 51, Loudonv1lle 14
Madison 53. Cle. John Marshall 13
Bellevue 46, Castalia Margarena 7
Maple Hts. 54. Hubbard 28
Beloit W Bralich 55. Ravenna SE 41
Maria Stein Marion Local 55. Troy
Berne Union 20, Glouster Trimble 0
Ct:lriStian 6
Beverly Ft. Frye 13, Hannibal River 7
Mar1ins F8ny 72. Sir Wilfrid Laurier.
Bexley 20, Canal Winchester 8
London, OntariO Canada 0
Blanchester 22. Morrow Little Miami 7
Massillon Perry 7. Wooster 3
Bluffton 25. Gory-Rawson 22
Massman Tuslaw 51 , Rinman 14
Bowerston Cononon Valley 41. Sebring
Mass1non Washington 68. N. Par~ .
McKinley 0
Ontario. Canada 6
Bradford 46 New Pans National Trail 6
Mayfield 31. Cle. VASJ 0
Brookfield 48 Conneaut 12
McComb 35, Tiffin Calvel1 0
BrookviUe 55. Jamestown Greeneview 0
Medina 24, BrECksville 6
Brunswick 36, Mansfield Sr. 28
Medina Buckeye 14, Cols. S. 12
Burton
Berkshire
47.
Andover
Metamora Evergreen 41, Northwood 7
· Pymatunlng Valley 7
Middlefield Cardinal 10, Garrensville
8yesv111e Meadowbrook 22 , Belmont
Ga rtiel~ 3
Umon Local 13
Middletown Fenwick: 24 , St Bernard
Caldwell 6. Slewa11 Federal Hocking 0
Roger Bacon 21
·
CambridQe 48, Philo 7
Mnan Edison 34, Norwalk 24
Centerville 42, Fan1ield 6
Millersburg W. Holmes 35, Woosler
Chagrin Falls 17, TwinSburg Chamberlin 7
Triway3
.·
Chardon 42, Med1na H~hland 0
Millersport 56, Grove C1ty Chnstian 6
amireRr.-ervaJev 18,FU110d0ale SE 12
Minford 21, Piketon 7
Chillicothe 14, Co1s. Brookha..,en 5
Minster 23, Ft. Loram1e 6
Bryan Walters/photo
C!n. Anderson 28. Cin. Oak Hills 13
Mogadore Field 24. Atwater Waterloo 14
Cin. Chnstian 35, Yellow Springs 14
River Valley's Ryan Henry, left. and Zak Dee! (7) combine to bring down Southeastern quarMonroe 48, Union City M1ssissinawa
Gin Country Day 16, Clermont NE o
Valley 7
Cin. Indian Hi1113, Hamilion Ross 3
terback Hunter Ratliff (15).
·
Monroeville 45, LaGrange Keystone 26
Gin. McNicholas 23, W. Carrollton 3
Montpelier 49, Hicksville 0
Cin. Princeton 34. C1n. Western Hills 0
MI. Vernon 37, McConnelsville Morgan 32
just 37 seconds.
grabs for 13 yards. Jan Gin. Sycamore 31 , Cin. Withrow 6
N. Can. Hoover 35. Can. Cen. Cath. 12
Cin . Wyoming 37, Cln. Mt. Healthy 7
Detty returned the ensu- Lewis also had one catch 0/t'.IEMile Logan Elm 21 , Washington CH 20 N. lewisburg Triad 28, ,Milford Center
.
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 32. Cols. Fairbanks 27
ing kickoff 78 yards for a for 24 yards in the tri- Hamilton
N. LimaS. Range 42, Mogadore 12
Twp. 6
N. Royalton 28,l.odi Cloverleaf 14
SEHS score, but the play umph .
.
Cle. Gen. Cath. 12, Newbury 9
Napoleon 13, Defiance 0
Cle.
Cent.
Cath.
12,
N9wbury
9
Besides HotTman 's · 1DO- Cia. Hts.,24, Warrensville Hts. 22
was nullified when an illeNavarre Fairless 36, Magnolia Sandy
Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 42, Ashtabula Sts. Valley 13
plus
yard
effort,
SEHS
gal
block
was
called.
On
Nelsonville-York 56, Athens ~6
gave the whole effort
John &amp; Paul 20
received
46
yards
from
New Albany 56, Grandview 21
their
next
possession,
the
Cle.
Rhodes
22,
Brooklyn
0
throughout the game, and
New Carlisle TECumsell 33, Fairbom 27
Cle.
South
24,
Lorain
Admiral
King
6
on
18
carries.
Detty
New Lebanon Dixie 10, W. Alexandria
that's what I appreciated Panthers fumbled the ball
Cle. St. Ignatius 8, Youngs. Boarcfman 6
Ratliff, becau se of the Clyde 14. Pemberville Eastwood 7, OT Tw1n ValleyS. 0
at
the
RVHS
44.
away
more than anything about
Cot11ns Western Reserve 20. Sullivan · New Lexington 35, Lancaster Fairfield
sacks, rinishcd the night BlacK
Umon 33
The
guests
took
that
River 8
this win."
New Middletown Spring 28, Campbell
minu,-25
yards
on
with
Cols.
Atricentric
46,
Day,
Belmont
6
The Raiders outgained miscue and sustained a seven attempts .
Cols. Beechcroft 44, Cols. Independence 19 Memonal21
·
New Philadelphia 38. Wintersville Indian
Cols. Bexley 20, Canal Wmchester 8 ·
the Blue and White 230- · drive that lasted early into
Creek 7
Cols. DeSales 24, Tol. St. Francis 21
Ratliff
completed
6-ofNewark 48 , Cols. Northland o
Eastmoor 40, Cols. E. 14
205 in total yards of the second frame.
Niles 28, Girard 16
14 passes for 75 yards, Cols.
Cols. Franklin Hts. 28, Rtversk:ie SlebDns 21
Ten
plays
and
55
yards
NorwOOd 55,. N. Bend Taylor 7
offense. but only 79 of
Cols. Hartley 25. Cols. Centenn1al '7
includinl! one tou'chdown Cols.
Oak Harbor 27. Genoa 0
Reaey 45, DeGraff Riverside 9
those came on the ground. · later. RVHS held a 12-6 and one mterception .
Old Washington Buckeye Trail 13,
Cols. St. Charles 45, Cols. Briggs 0
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 6
The great equalizer for advantage when Henry
Cols.
Watterson
24,
N.
Olmsted
7
· Kevin Dunn Jed the
Olmsted Falls 49. WickUHe o
43, Utica 14
Orang9 24, Bay Village Bay 6
RVHS was irs passing scored from a yard out on Panthers with four grabs' · Coshocton
Coven1ry 26. E. Can. 0
Ore~n Clay 18, Sylvania N011hview 3
situaa
fourth-and-goal
Covington
35.
New
Bremen
22
attack, which produced
Orrv111e 30. Canal Fulton NW 14
(or
5~ yards.
Creston
Norwayne
46.
Wellington
34
Onawa-Glandor121. Fostoria 19
!51 yards and two touch- tion. The score came with
Ci"' ~. Gallia 39. Hannan. W.Va. 7
River Valley next heads Crown
PaJresvil~ Hwvey 27, Co~ard l.akevMlw 12
·
9:23
remaining
on
the
Cuyahoga"J:::alls CVCA 58. New London 27
downs.
Pandora-Gilboa 28, Columbus Grove 27
to Nelsonville- York to Dal!on 21 Sugarcreek Garaway 16
Parma 26. Middleburg His. Midpark 17
Southeastern - on the clock and would serve as take on the three -time Day. Carron 21 , BeavercreeK 20
Parma Normandy 15, Richfield Revere 7
Day.
Christian
35,
Cassto'Ml
Miami
E.
7
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 34, Grove
other hand - had 130 the final points of the first 'de fendin g
Tri -Valley Day. Dunbar 22, Spnng. S. 18
City Cent. Crossing 0
half.
Day. Trotwood-Madison 61, Day.
yards on the ground, with
Conference Ohio Division Meadowdale
Perry 28, Painesville Riverside 21. OT
14
Perry 7. Wooster 3
River
Valley
held
a
136I 09 of those coming from
champion
· Buckeyes. Defiance AyersviUe 28, Archbold 8
Pickeringlon Cent. 34, Reynoldsburg 0
95 advantage in total yards NYHS will also be open - Delaware Buckeye VallEly 35, Galion 0
Pickenngton N. 21, Cols. Walnul Ridge 7
tailback Justin Hoffman.
De~s Jefferson 39, Cols. Harvest Prep 28
Plain C!lv Jonathan Alder 21. Newark
Delphos St. John 's 28, Worthington licking
But even with a · 14-J I at intermission, including ing its new state-of-the-art Kilbourne
Valley 3
~2
edge in first · downs, two an 89-27 edge through the football facility. Dave Della 42. Rossford 3
Doylestown Chippewa 34, Hanoverton
•
less penalties and a 61-48 air. Each team had six first Boston, Sr. Stadium.
United 27
of
downs
and
a
pair
Though it ·may be a tall
E. Cle. Shaw 44, Cle. Collinwood 8
advantage in plays from
Eastlake N. 27. Lyndhurst Brush 23
turnovers
during
the
opentask
for
th
e
Raiders
to
be
scrimmage, the Panthers
Eaton 37, O.IC!ord Talawanda 27
Elrnore Woodmere 33, Port Clinton 6
the opponent on such a Elyria
were just not able to take ing 24· minutes.
34, Grafton Midview 20
Both
squads.
exchanged
memorable
occasion,
Elyria Cath. 34, Youngs. Wi lson 6
advantage of those extra
Fairview Park Fairview 25, Rocky River
turnovers to start the sec- especially against a formi - Lutheran
opportunities.
W. 14
Franklin 13, Carlisle 7
They did, however, ond half, but the hosts cap- dable foe. Dee.! is still
Franklin Furnace Green 34, Buffalo, W.
italized on their second looking forward to bein g Va.
20
strike the first blow.
Fremont Ross 62. Penysburg 14
After
holding
the drive by marching 58 part of history.
Ft. Recovery 33, Ansonia 30
"That program is where Gahanna
40, Mifflin 0
Raiders to three-and-out in yards in 10 play s and 4:59.
Galion Northmor 46. Creslline 13
we'd
like
to
be."
said
Jordan
Elam's
20-yard
the openiqg drive, SEHS
G11adenhutten
Indian
Valley
41,
0
proceeded to . march 64 touchdown grab from Dee!. ''You play for expe- Newcomerstown
Gfeen 26. Stow 14
yards down the field in Ratliff with 2:46 remain- riences like this , we're Greenwich S. Central 16. New
Buckeye Cent. 6
eight plays for an early ing in the third tied the going to be part of openin g WaShington
Grove Cily 48, P1qua 41
game at 12, setting up the that stadium . Hepefully it Groveport 29, Marion-Franklin 7
lead.
·
Hamilton Badin 63, Day. Jefferson Twp_ 6
will be a losing · note for
dramatic
conclusion.
Hamilton New·Miami 28, Bethel-Tate 15
Jacob Detty's three-yard
them."
Hamler Patnck Henry 41 . Leipsic 0
The
Raider
defense
run at 5:20 in the first
· Hardin Northern -67. Ada 38
Kickoff
in
Nelsonville
is
Harrison 20, Kings Mills Kings 14
quarter gave the hosts a 6- recorded six sacks on the slated for Friday a·t 7:.10 Haviland
Wayne Trace 14. Pauk:.ting 0
of
which
came
night,
four
0 advantage.
Hilliard Darby 31. westerville N. 14
p.m.
in the ,decisive second
Hilliard Davidson 35, f\1iddletown 26

Raiders
from PageBl

Pomeroy Me1gs 49. Oak Hill 8
Portsmouth 71. Chesapeake 44
Portsmouth Sciolov1lle 22. Sc1oto
McDermon NW 1
Powell Qlenlangy Liberty 50 Cols
Whetstone 0
Preble Shawnee 21 , Arcanum 8
Racine Southern 14, W1UOW Wood
Symmes Valley 7
Ravenna 42, Rootstown 7
Rayland BucKeye Local B. Carrollton 2
RiChwood N Umon 40, CndersVIIIe Perry 12
Rocky River 48. Independence 21
Sandusky 12, Sylvama Southview 6.
Sandusky Per~ms 30 Lorain Clearv1ew 12
Sarahsvrlle Shenandoah 35. New
Matamoras Frontier 15
Sha9)'slde 28, Toronto 6
Sheffield Brooksk:te 65, Oberlin F1relends 0
Sherwood Fairv!Bw 42. Wauseon 21
Smithville 51 Akr. Manchester 18
Spat1a Highland 42, Fredericktown 0
Spencervme 28, Lew1stown Indian Lake 7
Spnng. Calh. Cenl 21. Spnng. Shawnee 6
Spring. Greenan 31, London 0
Spnng. Kenton Ridge 31 . Spnng. NE 14
Spnng. NW 33, S. Charleston SE 13
SpnngOOro 33. Spr1ng. N 6
St Clairsville 41 , Richmond Ed1son 0
St. Marys Memorial 28, Sidney 14
Sugar Grove Berne Union 20, Glouster
Trimble 0
Sunbury Big Walnut 14, L1ma Shawnee 7
Sycamore Mohawk 20. Findlay Liberty· .,
· Benton 13
Sylvania Southview 43. Tol. Bowsher 32
Tallmadge 34, Cuyahoga Falls 7
Thompson Ledgemont 47. Fa11port
Harbor Hard1n~ 18
Tiff1n Columb1an 10. Tot Whitmer 0
Tipp City Bethel 39, Day. Norlhndge 7
Tol. Cent. Cath. 21, Detroit Cath. Cent. 17
Tol Christian 14, Tol . 'L1bbey 12
Tol. Ottawa Hills 43. Gibsonburg 21
TaL St. John's 24, F1ndlay 16
Tal. Waite 27, Maumee 21
Tontogany Otsego 47, Bowling Green 26
Troy f6. Dublin Coffman 13
.
Uhnchsv111e Claymont 18. CadiZ Hamson
Cent. 12
Uniontown Lake 34, Copley 12
Upper Arlington 41, Galloway Weslland 35
Upper SanauskV 27, Carey 26
Urbana 28. St. Paris Graham 21
Van Buren 42, Fostoria St. Wendelln Q
Van Wert 18, Bryan 13
Vandalia 33, Greenville 14
Versa1Ues 20, Day. Oakwood t4
V1enna Mathews 44 , Berlin Center
Western Reserve 21
W Alexandna Tw1n Valley S. 0. New
Lebanon Dixie 10
W. Chester Lakota W. ~3, Cin. Moeller 12
W Jefferson 13, Mechanicsburg 10
W. Lafayette R1dgewood 27. Crooksv1lle
17
W. Liberty-Salem 33 , Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 0
W. M11t0n Milton-Union 28, Tipp City
Tippecanoe 21
W. Portsmouth Portsmoulh W. 35.
Proctorville Fairland 28
W. Salem NW 44. Ashland Crestview 14
Wadswor1h 31, Akr. Firestone 7
9.
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Warren Hard1n9 56, Cle. JFK 6
Waverly 55, Chillicothe Zane Trace 14
Waynesville 35, Lees Creek E. Clinjon 6
Wellsville 22. Strasburg-Franklin 1'4
Westerville Cent. 10, Dublin Jerome 0
Westerville S. 55, Mass1llon Jackson 31
Westlake 20, N. Ridgev1lle 7
Wheeling (W.Va.) Cent Cath. 34, Salem 0
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 25, Tol.
Rogers 24
Williamsport Westfall 47. Ashville Teays
Valley 35
Willoughby S. 35. Geneva 7
Windham 18, N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 6
Xenia 41, Hamilton 28
Youngs. Christian 41 , Oberlin 21
Youngs. Uberty 18. Struthers 6
Youngs. Mooney 20. Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit 14
Yo!,Jngs. Ursuline 54. E. Liverpool 13
Zanes..,ille 53. Whitehall-Yearling 13
Zanesville Maysville 41. Corn1ng Miller 0
Zanes\litle W. Musk1ngum 30, Hebron
Lakewood 7

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half.
Cordell Jed RVHS with
129 yards of total offen se,
roughly 50 percent of the
team's total output. The
senior . hauled 111 ·four
catches for 114 yards including one score - and
also had four rushes for 15
yards.
Morrow, who threw two
touchdowns and two inter.
ceptions. finished the
night . 7-of-14 for 151
yards passing. Morrow
also led the Raiders with
18 yards rushing on nine
attempts.
Zachary Baird follo.wed
Morrow with 16 yards on
two totes , while both
Henry and Tyler Canaday
added 15 rusping yards
apiece .
Jones, who caught the
game-wmner, had two

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RVHS picked up its first
first down around the six
minute mark after Morrow
found receiver Michael
Cordell on a 53-yard gain.
Cordell was brought down
at the Southeastern I 8, but
the Raiders fumbled the
ball away on the next snap.
SEHS returned the favor
with 2:17 left in the opening stanza when a tipped
pass at the line of scrimmage fell into the hands of
.River Valley 's Ryan Henry
at the Panthers 21-yard
·
line.
, River Valley converted
that miscue into points at
the I :40 mark when
Morrow Jobbed a pass up
for grabs in the endzone. ·
Cordell came down with
the 19-yard tying score
between a trio of defenders -capping a two-play,
21-yard drive that lasted

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Sunday, August 27, 2006

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Cl

Demosky, Hedrick lead
Alexander past Eastern
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYOA.ILYREGISTER .COM

ALBANY
Matt
Demosky didn't pass much
Friday night, bur when he
did: he made it counl.
Demosky used a pair of
scores through the air and
one on the ground to help
push Alexander to a season
opening gridiron victory
over the Eastern Eagles 292'1 Friday night .in Albany
as football season got
under way in Ohio .
Demosky, along with
teammate Zach Hedrick.
racked up 331 yards of
total offense to Eastern's
235 yards and controlled
the clock for most of the
evening to help start the
season off right while Vic
Wallace. the new head
coach at Eastern and former Alexander assistant ,
fell to his former school.
Hedrick rushed for 153
yards and a score on 22
carries for Alexander,
while Demosky threw for
73 yards and rushed for 27
more . Both touchdown
tosses were to Ryan
Thomas, who ended the
evening with two receptions for 33 yards and two
touchdowns.
On the Eagles end, Kyle
Gordon spent a lot of the
first half airing the ball out,
going 9-of-15 for 80 yards
and an interception, but
clock . control by the
Spartans in the second half
kept the ball out of the
hands of the Eagles and in
control of the home \earn
as
Gordons. numbers
dipped to 0-for-2 with an
interception:
Codey Gerlach sparked
most of the offense for
Eastern, rushing for 70
yards, while Derek Young
got things done through the
air, on the ground and on
special teams. Young had
17 yards and a touchdown
rushing, had three receptions for 16 yards and
returned a kickoff 99 yards
for a score late in the
fourth quarter to help keep
the Eagles alive late into
·
the game.
Both teams played to a
deadlock heading into the
final quarter as a late third
quarter touchdown by
Gordon knotted the game
at 15-15 heading into the
final frame. But Alexander
quickly responded to open guarded, the Spartans were
the fourth as Thomas able ·to escape some
'scored on a 12-yard toss improbable holes and keep
from Demosky to pull the game going and the
ahead by six after the . clock rolling. Alexander
scored again at the 6:22 ·
missed extra· point.
After a quick possession mark of the third quarter
by Eastern:·, the Spartans when standout receiver
went to work with another Thomas used his legs
clock eating drive and instead of hi s hands to push
ended with Demosky jog- throu gh a 15-yard field
. ging into the end zone after goa l for a 15-8 Spartan
nearly five minutes to pull lead.
,
.
the home squad ahead by
Just a few minutes later,
14 after a -two point con- after .a nearly 85 yard kick
version
throw
from return by Gerlach, Eastern
Demosky to Aaron Boch.
was able to punch it in
On the ensuing kickoff, from one yard out on a
the ball rolled past Young quarterback keeper to knot
of Eastern and looked to be the score at 15- 15.
heading out of bounds . But
From there, the Spartans
an unlucky bounce left the let time run out on the

Southern
from PageBl
offense a·nd inspired the
defense enough to play
shut-out ball the rest of the
game.
After a scoreless third
quarter, Southern scored
·early in the final round and
now the Vikings had to
play catch-up. Southern
grabbed th~ lead early in
the tourth when Mahout
blasted away for a four
yard run and also ran in the
extras. Next Southern's
defense went to work and
brought home the sweet
WIO.

Southern
quarterback
Jordan Pierce wa.s injured
in the second period and
Ryan Chapman quarter. backed the remainder of
the game. Southern had
already missed the services
of running back Jesse
McKnight who was injured
last week with a dislocated
finger and spiral fracture

•

Eastern's
Cody
Gerlach (9)
avoids tacklers during ·
the Eagles'
29-211oss
to the
Alexander
Spartans on
Friday in
Albany.

ball sitting on the one yard Eagles .
line, forcing Young to pick
Along with Hedrick and
it up and try to make some Demosky, Adam McCarty
magic - and he did .
added 58 yards on nine carYoung weaved in and out ries and Seth Fowler ended
of defenders down the field with 20 yards on four caron his way to a 99-yard ries . Tim Croxford also
touchdown kick return that came down with three
ended with a celebratory receptions for 33 yards.
dive into the end zone.
For
Eastern,
Chadd
That dive drew a ·personal Whitlach followed his
foul penalty and backed teammates with 34 yards
Eastern up 15-yards and rushing, followed by Kyle
forced a two point conver- Rawson with 20 yards .
sion run which came up Gerlach also came down
short and left the game at with four receptions for 39
eight points with nearly yards, with Josh Collins
four minutes to play.
coming up with 25 yards
The Eagles tried . for an on two receptions.
onside kick. but the ball
Eastern will return to
rolled into the hands of an action Friday when South
awaltmg
Spartan and Galli a, fresh .off a 39-7 win
essentially ended the game . . over Hannan, comes to
A couple of penalties . town.
backed Alexander up, but
sti ll
didn' t ·· help
as
Demosky managed to eat
enough clock to end the
game with an eight point
Spartan victory.
And it was with clock
management they managed
to do it.
'
The Spartans played very
closely -with Eastern in the
first half, but a dominating
second half saw Alexander
with _1 7 minutes of offense
to roughly only 5 minutes
for Eastern. That difference
proved crucial as the
Eagles tried to make their
late run.
And while Alexander
ended the game w'ith a
strong late showing, they '
also began the game on top
as well. Alexander put up
its first points of the game
at 8:16 in the .first quarter
when Hedrick scampered
five yards for the score and
put up it second ·score late
in the second half with a
21-yard touchdown pass
from Demosky to Thomas.
Eastern finally got on the
board with 39 seconds left
in the first half when
Young ran it in from nine
AWD. auto., remote starter
yards out followed by
MSRP $35,045
·another run by Young for
After Rebate
the two point con.version to
see the home squad on top
12-8 at the half. .
But once the second half
got under way, it was
Alexander who did most of
the talking.
On the legs of Demosky,
who dropped back to pass
on numerous occasions
only to find his receivers

Southern had big defensive games from Mike
Brown, Darin· Teaford,
Nick Buck, and R.J. Leach.
Buck and Leach also had
fumble
recoveries.
Southern also had three big
games from freshmen.
Lemley played every down
at offensive guard, while
Michael Manuel filled in
for Pierce at linebacker,
making a tackle late in the
game that perhaps saved a
winning Symmes Valley
score; and Greg Jenkins
who
often
spelled
Marnhout at tailback.
Southern
pulite.r
Chapman was also credited
with two strategic punts
away from Viking defend erb late in the game that put
the hosts deep in the hole.
For Symmes Valley, Kirt
Shipley. had 54 yards on 12
carries, Robbie Miller 33
on seven attempts, Kyle
Bowen ran for 3 1 yards
and Chris Capper had 30.
Southern
goes
to
Ports.nlOuth Notre Dame
next Saturday.

Sunday,August27,2006

Larry

Crumlphoto

...

.

\

111881

06 Buick Terraza

07 Chevy Tahoe LT

Sunday opetl lw1Jsc
marks rink's dosir~~

•07 Cadillac CTS

BY BRIAN

J. REED

8REEO®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

C

HESTER - · In the last 50
years, the Skate-A-Way has
hosted thousands of birthday
parties and first dates, but all
good· thl!lgs rnllst come "to ~~n ·end.
and f&lt;)~ .. the Jandmark ~atM!g rink,
the end comes today.
·
Bob and Marilynn Trussell of
Chester will welcome the public at an
open house, from I to 5 p.m. It will be
the last opportunity for skating rink
patrons to don a pair of skates, take a
trip around the rink. and re-live the
happy days of their youth.
· P.M. "Marion" and Dorothy
Cowdery and their daughter and sonin-Jaw, the Trussells, began construelion on the rink. located on Ohio 7
between Chester and · Pomeroy, in
September. 1955. Hot asphalt was
pulled up to the roof by ropes, and
concrete for the floor was wheeled
into the back door by wheelbarrow.
Labor from the Cowdery Farm at

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Photos courte&amp;y of Skate-A-Way

. One of the buses used in the Skate-A-Way's early years transported customers from communities in Meigs and Athens counties.

a-.-..-.

18,399
CD, 4cy\57!.SIIarp ·
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Above:

Marilynn
Trussell is
pictured at
her station
behind the
counter of
the Skate-AWay in
Chester. •
She and
husband ,
Bob, will
welcome
the community at an
open house
this after·
noon, mark·
1ng the
closing of
the landmark skating rink.

Ma~ion

Cowdery and Bob Trussell are
pictured behind the concession counter
at the Skate-A-Way in its earliest years.

Long Bottom helped build the rink.
There were 200 in attendance for the
grand opening of the Skate' A-Way on
Mar~h 15, 1956. That week, The Daily
Sentinel reported rec~ding l'loocfwaters in Pomeroy (it was Marcl),,. after
all). Popular President Dwigh t
Eisenhower was defending Richard
Nixon as his '56Tunning mate.
Postage was abo ut to increase, from
three cents an ounce to four, and
Kroger was advertising·chuck roast for
32 cents a pound and ground beef for
33 cents. Bob Hope was starring in The ·
Seven Little Foys at the Mason DriveIn, and Anne Baxter was featured in
"Bedevi lled." On television, you could
·catch Ernie Kovacs. Tennessee Ernie
Ford and Howd y Doody. and the
soaps: Love of Life. Guiding Light and
Search for Tomorrow.
It cost 45 cents to get into the SkateA- Way back then, a quarter to rent
skates, and 15 cents just to watch. Hot
dogs and hamburgers sold for 15
cents, candy bars were a nickel, and
potato chips or a boule of Pepsi cost a
dime. Dorothy Cowdery made hot dog
sauce from a recipe originated at
Jake's Restaurant in Pomeroy.
Those growing up in the early days
of the rink, remember riding the bus to
skate. There were three buses in the
Skate-A-Way's history. They traveled
to Rutland , Harrisonsville, Racine,
Syracuse, Pomeroy. Middleport . and
Coolville on different nighl'sl. Countless
other Meigs County youth remember
car pools, with one parent making the trip to the rink, and another picking
kids up at the end of the night.
There are lots of other memories for
generations of skaters: the .calls for
"Couple Skate." "Ladies' Choice,"
"Limbo" and "Corner Skate.'' and the
organ music records . which were
replaced by pop nm_sic in later years.

Please see Skate, C1

Right: A

masquerade party
marked a
Halloween
celebration
at the
Skate·A-Way
in 1958.

..

Celebrating the Skate-A-Way's 40th anniversary in' 1996 we~e. from left. owners
Bob and Marilynn Trussell, Bob's sisters. Roberta Ridenour and Sandra Kerns .
Assistant Manager Betty Lieving. and Mary Grace Cowdery.

,,

�•

YOUR ·HoMETOWN

iunba~ limes -ientintl

CHESHIR E

BURNETT
ANNIVERSARY
REYNOLDS BURG- Janice Folden. Gallia A'a&lt;kmy
·Hi gh Sehool cla ss of 1949, met Ali~n Burnell of
Reyno ld,burg in June of 1955 at the Kro ger Co
Manufacturing Division in Co lumbus. Alan's fath'r was
the personnel manager and he hired Jani ce as th~ pnsonnel ass istant.
The cou pl ewere married on Sept. 2, 1956. by th e Rev.
Warren Wilson at Grace Method ist Chu rc h. They have
two sons, Steven Alan and Stanley Brian (Dian e!. and
two grandchild re n.
Alan is retired from Columbia Gas with 39 years of service. Janice contllltles the writing of news letters and memory books as she has been doing for the past 30 years. They
reside in Reynoldsburg .

1

.

~

dents which they may
have forgotten.
\

The weather is
.. and so are our

...

.

rates!-

John Brogan lik~s to
reflect on his years in the
CCC (Civilian Conservation
Charlene Corps) man)' years ago. He
Hoeflich joined the CCC on July I 934
when he was I 6 years ago
and served until 1939. The
project he best remembers
working on was the con- ·
struction
of Boulder Dam.
that Meigs County students
•••
are not more out of shape
And just so you know.
than others around the
country or a wellness poli· While some of Meigs
cy wouldn't have been County's roadside markets ·
mandated by the · federal selling local vegetables will
be closed down soon after
government.
Of course schools can't Labor Day, most will
take care of nutrition and remain open until the end of
activity problems without September, like the one at
the assistance and coopera- Forest Run.
tion of others, so parents are
•••
Annual Percentage Yield
being asked to step up and
If you want to put a little
get more involved
fun in your Labor Day
This special rate is also available for IRAs.
•••
weekend, you might want to
Roger Williams is sure attend the River City
THE ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD ISA\AILABLE AS OF THE DATE OF THIS ISSUE
to be missed as the director Players' production of
BUT IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE. THIS CO IS AUTOMATICAllY RENEWABLE AND REQUIRES
A MINIMUM DEPOSIT OF $10JXJO 00. THE ANNU4LPERCENTAGE YIELD ASSUMES
of
the
Big
Bend Fiddler on the Roof. That's
INTEREST WILL REMAI~ ON DEPOSIT A WITHDRAWAL OF INTEREST WILL REDUCE EARNINGS:
Community Band. He has the musical with songs
retired after seven years of including "If I Were a Rich
leading the group of adult Man," "Sunrise, Sunset,"
musicians. lri appreciation "Matchmaker" and many
he was presented an auto- more.
graphed picture of the
It will be presented on
band members after the Sunday, Sept. 3, with pe_r27 N. College Ave.
328 Viand St.
420 Third Ave.
3035 St. Route 160
last concen in the park.
forrnances at 2 and 7 p.m. m
Gllllpolls
GaiUpolla
RIO Grande
Pt. Pleasant
As of now, the Rtverbend the Meigs J;Iementary
Arts Council which spon- School auditorium. Tickets
446-2631
446-20!0
245-5373
67A660
sors the band, has not are on sale at several place
announced a new director, in Pomeroy and Middlepon. .
just Inside Food/and Just Inside Wal-Mort Just Inside Save-A-Lot
but members pledge to
(Charlene Hoeflich is
keeping the band together.
general manager of The
446-2168
992·2357
· Daily
Sentinel
in
If you don ' t already Pomeroy.)
know. the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles have
expanding their online
customer
services · to
include unofficial driv.ing
record s. The information
can't' be used in a court
case, but it is there so that
people can examine the
Whether your kids get stck or simply need a well-check, Holzer Clinic has 11
record s for information
Pediatricians available 7 days a week, 365 days a year to care for them, That
and review aspects of inciway, your little ones can grow up healthy and achieve their dreams.

9

MONTH

•

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OHIO VALLEY BANK.

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I.I
I'

DAVISON
ANNIVERSARY
GALLIPOLIS - Pat and Tammi Davison ·of 5642 State
Route 14 1. Gallipolis, celebrated their silve r anniversary
on Aug. 19, 2006.
They were married in Emporia. Va ., on Aug. 14, 198 1.
They are the prm1d parents of two dau ghters. Amber
(Tim) Epling and Alysia Davison.
·
In celebration of thei r anni ve rsary. a party, hosted by
their girl s, was held at the Elks Farm on State Rout e 5K8.
An informal dinner was held with guests be111 g enteruuned
by local band. So~thbound.

the Holzer Clinic Pediatrics
Department. She received her Medical Degree from the Marshall Unive1111ty .
ISd1ool of Medicine in Huntington, WV and completed. her Pediatric
Re!;ideney at Geisinger Health System in D~nville , Pennsylvania.
. Cappelletti is Board Eligible and is a.member of the American
AL:.arde·~ny of Pediatrics.

a.

Dr. Cappelletti and Or, Neely are both accepting new patients. They are seeing
patients In Gallipolis, Jackson, Meigs, and Pl. Pleasant

'· .,., ·

Gallipolis (740)446~5371 Meigs (7 40)992-0060 . .
Jackson (740)395-8805 Pt. Pleasant (304)675-4498

Youth gardens educate students from the ground up
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
f'O R THE ASSOC IATE D PRESS

BERRYVILLE, Va. - .
Spencer Trask, who enter'
sixt h grade thi s fall, ha s
been gathering 1a bumper
crop of academ ic skill s
from his school garden .
"I like (doing) vegetables
more. because food is my
favori te thing,'' Spencer
said while preparing raised
tl ower beds one day last
spri ng with a hal f-do zen
other
fifth- g\aders
at
Cooley Elementary School
in northern Virginia.
UnJer the g uidance of
srudent volunteers from the·
local high school' s garden
club, the group was tran splanting seedl.ings, weeding
and tossing debri s onto a
compost pile.
''I'm not a big vegetable
person but I like cucumbers
and broccoli ,'' said Spencer,
II , who has ~ gardening _
in school for several years .
"We' II be putting up some
weather instruments pretty
soon to see how they affect
gardening."
While this may sound like
a pleasant way to escape
class for· a few hours, the
children are gaining more
than a little practical knowledge, said Ann s·owers, who
teaches fourth and fifth
grade at Cooley .
"Through
gardenin g,
kids
learn
academic
things," she said . "This
garden is a springboard for
·poetry,
for
example.
Spencer already ha·s had
two of his poems publi shed
in the local newspaper.
'· You also ''an pick up
sume math skills by sizing
up the rows and totalin g the
perimeter of the garJ en.
l .ast year, we had an
American Indi an garden.
where they .learned a littl ~
historv:·
Youth gardenin g i&gt; an
interdi~ c iplinary project at

.
"Registration 7:00am - 8:45am"
Course: 5K 3.1 miles Fun Run is llat with one slight dow n grade, on city streets,
through scenic Point Pleasant , WV
Entry Fee: $12.00 prior to September 15, 2006 .... ... .$15.00 day of race
Awards: T-Shirts to the first 200 entrants: 1st , 2nd &amp; 3rd overall for Ma!e &amp; Female:
1st &amp; 2nd Place finishers both Male &amp; Female age grou ps:
1sl Male &amp; Female Mason County Finishers Award : .
·
· Middle of Pack Runners Award
~esults: Will be posted after the race
.
. ..
Facilities: Restrooms are available; No shower or dress1ng fac1l1t1es
Aid Stations: Water stations &amp; medical aid wi ll be available.
AGE DIVISION
Both Men &amp; Women t9 &amp; under, 20-24, 25-29, 30-34, 35-39, 40-44, 45-49,
50-54, 55·59, 60-64, 65 &amp; above (ENTER ONE CATEGORY ONLY)
POINT PLEASANT LIONS CLUB
P.O. Box 241
DETACH AND MAIL

----t-____ _. ___ ,

1
1

EvetyWhere

Bas

t

Bingo

Thursday, August 31st
6pm

.Syracuse Community Center

I
I
I

Open House

F~rst
Middle
Last
(on 1017106)
Address--..,..,------c-:::.1ty:-------~:;:-----:;-:--

l
Street &amp; Number
.
State
Zip
. 1Telephone
SEX . M F
I In consideration ol the f\CCeptance of this entry. I hereby. for mysell, my heirs. my execulo~s &amp;
1 assignees, waive &amp; release any &amp; all rights &amp; claims lor damages I may have_against The Lions
1 Club. Battle Days representalives. Retail Mercha_nts Assn., &amp; the C1ty of Po1nt Pleasanl f_or all
1 cla1m el damages, demands, aclions whatsoever 111 any &amp; all1n;unes ansmg oul ol my partlclpa1. tion in said event I altest that I am physically l1t &amp; have tramed suff1cremly fqr th1s event.

~

I

invites you to attend an ·

Age - --

IN

l ame

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring·

many schools nati onwide. to about37,000 adults annu- doin g in the garden as a
Some teac hers get help ally by teaching teachers, schqol workshop.
with training ·and currku- offerin g . intern ships. and
"They' re coming in for a
lum from organ ization s / scheduling classes. work- classroom lesson." she said.
such as the American shops and tours.
"We've set out particularly
Horticultural Society, the
In one insta nce, the the sc ience standards. We
National
Gardening Brooklyn Botanic Garden meet the standards iri some
Association
and
the works with an environmen- other di sci plines -too.''
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, tally focuseJ publi c high
There's also plentY of
some of which have been school,
the
Brooklyn elbowroom in the Brooklyn
offerin g educa tional pro- Academy of Science and Botanic Garden for pregrams for decades.
the Environment.
s~hoolers.
"You learn so many
"There's a lot of academ"Even at the tender age of
lessons when yoLI _gt;_t your ic rigor in meeting goals set 3, 4 and 5 they can come in
hands m the SOil. sa1d· . for and by the school s," where they 'll be assigned a
Stephame Jutlla, education- Myrie said . referring to gov- plot with a team of kids,''
al programs manager tor the . ernment-based standards.
Myrie said. · "An instructor
American
Horticultmal
'·For a tot of schools it 's will work with them in
Society, at Al~xandria. Va.
hard to get permi ss io~ to helping to' de sign a plot,
"K1ds aren t grow111g up get out of the class room select seeds and learn weedon !arms today for the most and go to the Botan ic ing . They'll be taught how
part and ;nany of the1r fam- Garden. What we 've done to select and use tools safe1hes don : have. gardens at is try to help connect as ly. And they ' II begin to
home. That means schools clearly as possible what learn how to work as a
have to take a greater the children would be team."
emphasts m passmg those
skills along."
Nutrition is getting more
attention in today's lesson
plans, she said.
"We want students to get
acquainted with vegetables.
to get involved in that cycle
and see how things grow.
Kid s are bringing salad
dressings to class .so they
can taste something from
the work they 've done."
Doors open at 5:00
. The Brooklyn Botani c
Garden, too, emphasizes
environmental education.
Established in 1910, it had
20 Games • 3 Spe(ials
created the first children's
2 Raffles • Door Prizes
garden in the nation by
1914, said Sharon Myrie, its
.$20.00
vice president of education.
The institution now has
·more than 200 peopl e
involved in an edu cational
effort · reaching more than
150,000 children a year
through on-site, in-school
and l:omliiUnity-based in i~
tiati ves. It al so reaches out

9:00 A.M. Saturday, October 7, 2006

1T-Shirt sizes: S M L XL (circle one)

CLINIC

Hefner, Mike Johnson . Con ley, Lisa Cox, Katelyn
Misti Jones, Devin Kirby, Foster, John Jackson, Olivi:t
Craig Long, Megan McCoy, · Kostival. Christian Mullins.
Kelsey Nelson. Lindsey Allison Porter. Ashley
Polsley, Kelsey Potter, Randolph , Diane Russell ,
Mariah Richardson, Zach Kel sey Sands, Kyle Sands.
Robe(ts, Delia Russell, Jason Shaver, Jeremy Sides,
Travis Shaver, Eri c Snvder. Kristin S,mathers, Alex
Bill Workman, Kru z White . .Smi th , Drew Spaulding,
Mrs. Diddle, 7B Sarah .Veith. Britni Walker,
Savannah Baird, Kelsey Meila Wellman , Cody
Butcher, Brody Cottr ilL Wimmer, Matt Workman.
Brittany Garnes, Tyler
Mrs. McG.uire, 88 Gaus. Morgan Gillenwater, Cassie Ahrens, Jonath an
Greg GuoJ, Je&gt;Sil:a Halley. Cli nton, Shasta Clay, Jamie
Abby Hammond , Aaron Fooce , Tricia Forsythe,
Harrison, Jason Luckett, Billy Kay. Blake Kl ein .
Beth Misner, Tera Myers, Tommy
Long ,
Brody
Trey Noble , Sara Porter Lookado. Denise Madriz.
Ochs . Dustin Oxyer, Jordan Charlene Master, Kim
Rife,
Aust in
Sheets. McGuire, Tayler Moore .
Nathaniel Shuler. CoJy Caitlin Ni bert . Tyler Noble,
Spaun, Andrew Stephen s. Jade Roush, Elizabeth
Savannah Th acker, Ryan Russell. Ellyn Sanders,
Thomas.
Courtney Saxon, Cameron
Ms. Walker, SA Sl:ott, Will Smith, Le vi
Katelyn Birchfi eld. Jacob Stroop, Rose Walburn , Nick
Brown. Zane Carro ll . Watson, Nichole Wise.
Megan Clonl: h, Jayla Caris,a·Wolfe.

Sponsored by Point Pleasant Lions Club

r-------------·

HOLZER

!...

SECOND ANNUAL LIONS "RUN FOR SIGHT"

RETURN WITH CHECK:

Cleveland, Ohio, where he served as Chief Resident. Or. Neely
received his Medical Oeglee from case Western Reserve
University In Clevelend, Ohio and completed his Residency at
MetroHaallh Medical Centar. In addition, Dr. Neely has completed
his Master of Public Health from case Western Reserve University.
Dr. Neely Is Board Eligible and Is a member of the American Academy
Pediatrics.

Surtday, AuJ?ll!t 27, 2006

~FL7JZUFD~~ZUZU2ZQZU2ZUzn2ZazUZZUzn2Z~

Danle//e T. C•ppel/etU, MD recenHy joined

Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH also recently joined the Holzer Clinic
Pediatrics Department from the MetroHeallh Medical Center in

$699.95

Mr. and Mrs. Pat Davison

·We're luept~ !:jOur ~tots V\ec:tltVItj, so tV\etj .
cttV'.- ttcV\Leve tVIeLr otrettV\-tS ...

"

2 Pc. Sofa
&amp; Chair

i

l'lre jiJ!-

Winters.
ImrinR homeroom list foir
Mrs. Jacks; 6A - Chri&gt;
2006-07 ar Kyger 'Creek Bate s, Michael Clark.
Middle School has i&gt;&lt;'en Shalin Comer. Hanna Edge,
released:
Tony Felix , Josh Glassburn ,
Mrs. Willey, SA LD. Halfhill, Jon Kostival,
Bing, Andrew Dalton Masters, Dillon
Hayley
Brown , Kasey Eblin, Jesse McCoy, Brandon Mooney,
Moore -Costelli,
Edwards. Garrett Good. Amelia
Morgan Harrah, Destiny Lenae Penl:e. Jesse Roach.
Hy~ell ,
Li bby
Leach. Emil y .VanSickle, Austin
Nadline Mooney. Collen Whobrey.
Oxyer. Kayla Pope, Tiffany
Ms. Warden, 6B - Katie
Ril:hmd,on . Jessica Sanders, Campbell. Addy Coldren.
Tristan Sears, A.J Stamper, Ethan Dovenbarger, Kanoa
Nathan Stan ley, Jennifer Facemire, Jacob Gi lmore.
Stump, Trenton Wolfe.
· Danielle· Johnson, Jasmine
Mrs. Lambert, SB -. Jones, Marshall Kline ,
Wa yne Baird , Trenton Jacob Leach, Lexi Mole s,
Briggs, Briann Burris, Eric Hannah Overstreet. Cayla
Cox, Aust in Hamilton, Spau n, Burnie Stanl ey,
Brittany Hefner, Katelynn Ryan Stump, Carolin e
H~nry, Shyla Hood, James
Wil son, Li sa Wi se. Lukas
Jackson. Molly Lookado,- Wel ls.
Cameron
Oiler.
Rya n
Mrs. Baughman, 7A Poirier, Ki mberly Ree&gt;, Stephen Brown, Emily
Scann Robe rt s. Ka ssie Coleman, Chelsey Ebl in.
Shriver, Nathan Smi th, Chey Eblin, Derek Flint,
Cheye nne Spires. Jacob Kristin Harr ison. Jacob

Mr. ·and Mrs. Alan Burnett

Skate

- (OMMUNI TY CORNERSchool meals becoming more nutritious

·PageC3

Kyger.Creek Middle School homeroom ~ist

But the age of the cigar about 20 a day staying in to coast in this country.
would not really be over Gallipolis hotels.
Stogie smokers who tasted
William Sibley wrote of his stogies waiued no othFrom 1896 to 1926. Billy until after World War L In
GALLIPOLIS The
Shurtz ra n what was called the
I 890s, Americans Billy Shartz's Smoke ers, and so it came that he Schuster Center in Dayton
the Smoke House in down- smoked ann ually 4.5 billion House that "It was in every developed a retail mail was the location for the gradtown Gallipolis. It was here ' cigars. The total went to 6 respect a public reson for order business that extended uation ·ceremony for the
that a man could go to be billion by 1901 and to 7 bil- men in their hours of to twenty or more states in 2006 Wright State University
wi th hi s friends who lion by 1904. By the first lei sure, where they met the Union."
School of Medicine. KaraN.
"He was often urged to Denny received the docior of
enjoyed a good cigar. ·
decade of the '20th century friends, chatted, laughed
his
bu siness, medicine degree, graduating
· Richard Kluger 'in his cigars made up 60 percent and told reminiscence s, and expand
book Ashes ro Ashes writes of the tobacco bu siness. at all times 'felt at home .' which could easily have with honors.
abou t the changes relative Ciga rettes, which made Billy made his Smoke been done, but having a
She was inducted into the
to tobacco goi ng on in some headway in the 1890s House just that at all times, prosperous one-man busi- Alpha
Omega
Alpha
America at the tum of the vers us cigars, went back and his patrons appreciated ne ss he kept it that. Medical Honor Society and
Sometimt;s
_ century.
,
some due to a heavy tax put it highly.,
he
was also received the American
"I n thi s faster-movmg on cigarettes in 1898 to help
But no only did Billy sell swamped with orders, and Medical
Women 's
• world of electric lighting, pay for the Spanish- tobacco, including impons the mail orders had to wait Association Glasgow-Rubin
transportation, and commu- American War. In I 900.. from Cuba and other until his stogie expert, Certificate of Commendation
nication. as the midday din- over I00 million cigars Caribbean countries, he also John White, could manu- for Academic Achievement.
Dr. Kara N. Denny
· ner gave way to the quick were even imported from · made his own cigars . A facture enough to catch up.
Kara graduated magna cwn
lunch away from home and Cuba.
piece in the Gallipoli s He never denied his home laude from Miami University Medicine.
the horse moved over for
Of course, Shartz sold Bulletin in I 9 I 9 stated that trade. When stock ran in 2001 and had been elected
Dr.
Denny
is
the
the a utomobile, old. ways of tobaq::o products at the . Billy had just received an short the mai I orders had to the Phi Beta Kappa Honor grandaughter of Edna L
Smoke House but in provid- order for 500 lots of cigars to wait, not the home Society. After taking a year Rodgers and the late James
smoking lost favor.
"Chew ing tobacco was ing newspapers, magazines, from the U.S . Navy. It trade, which was large ."
off to travel, she entered M. Rodgers of Gallipolis,
· . ·no longe r merely· messy but comfortable chairs, and marked the 25th straight . Billy Shurtz died in 1926 Wright State Univesity and the niece of Lois
socially disagreeable in even a billiard table or two, year that the U.S. Navy had and the Smoke House · School of Medicine in 2002. · Snyder of Gallipolis. Kara' s
more
crowded
urban he allowed men to smoke , ordered cigars from Billy. · closed shortly thereafter. In Her junior year, she received mother is Nancy Crowell, a
Shartz grew up in 1926, Gallipolis had five or the Pediatric Clerkship 1972 graduate of Kyger
· America, and its inevitable away from home, much to
by-prod uct, spitting, now the delight of all wives.
Gallipolis, but in the 1880s six other stogie makers in Award within the School of Creek High SchooL
was 'identifed as a spreader
Similar type smoke hous- had gone off to Wheeling, town, a few of which conof tuberc ulosis and other es were also established in where he learned the ends tinued on for a few years.
"Pop" Boyles, was an
contagions and thus an offi- Ponsmouth, Chillicothe and and outs of the tobacco Of course what killed
ardent skater himself, and
smoke
houses
across
the
· cial health menace . The Ironton. In fact, the, business. When he came
introduced his children and
leisurel y pipe all at once Portsmou th Smoke House back to his hometown, he country was radio. Men pregrandchildren to the hobby .
seemed a remnant of a even sponsored their own brought John White with ferred to be at home in the
. from Page C1
The rink has been sold to
slower-tempo age, and semi-pro football and base- him, who in time became evenings listening to the
Contractor
Tom Karr, but it
the manager of the stogie radio.
cigar fumes were newly · ball teams.
Betty Lieving, the rink's is likely that most will
(James Sands is a special
offensive amid thronged
At the Smoke House, men works.
city life, The cigarette. by could catch up on the latest
According to Sibley, · correspondent for the assistant manager, is an always think of it as the
· contrast, could be quickly gossip and also do some Sham made the best stogie Sunday Times-Sentinel. He institution, too. She has Skate-A-Way, a reminder of
consumed
and
easily networking. It was a good on the market. It was a can be contacted by writing helped run the rink and a special time in the history
snuffed out on the job as place for traveling salesmen ···product that has been to 1040 Military Road, oversee the operation for 37 of the community, when life
years Her father, Clarence was "smooth skating."
well as to and from work." who in 1900 numbered enjoyed almost from coast Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)
BY JAMES SANDS

Things are changing in
the schools, what with the
state and national requirements for more nutritional
meals, the elimination of
soft drinks in vendor
machines, and the addi.tion
of more physical activity.
Now students can't guzzle
. down can after can of pop,
: but can only buy water,
: juices and sports drinks,
' that's like Gatorade, from
; the machines. Milk is, of
; course, always available as
: a regular cafeteria item. ·
. But not only have soft
: drink items changed, but
· also so have some of the
: food items. Take potato
~ chips. No more regular
; ones, just low fat and baked
: ones, according to Marilyn
: Meier. food service supervi: sor for Meigs LocaL She
: said th~t a nutrient analysis
: is done on meals and the
· lunch program is kept
; below 30 percent fat.
! · With obesity a major con:. cern in many schools around
:: the nation, this year districts
. are required to have a well: ness policy · in place.
: Research suggests that there
: is a positive correlation
between a student's .health
' and well being and his or her .
. ability to learn. The policy
· · defines the requirements.
: That policy not only sets
, goals in an effort to. enable
: students to establish good
: health through nutrition, but
also sets guidelines for
. physical activity during the
school day.
As you may or may not
remember
the , Meigs
County Health Department
: did a fat analysis "of elementary students last year
and the results were astonishing with the percentage
of overlll(eight students
way too hi gh.
However, it would seem

COMMUNITY

i&gt;unbap limes -ientinel

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Woman with local ties
earns medical degree

Smoking parlors were a·gathering spot in community
'

PageC2 .

Wednesday, August 30, 2006
~

Jj.
~

SIGNATURE

.

·

to tour our newly
Renovated Facility ·

Pure11L~ signalu re if under 18 years

.

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

mmmmr/7nn77777777/J'T7Tfl7777n7777777n7777Tzrr/r7777TT//T"''nTTTTn.

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4pm -7pm
Garfield and Portsmouth Road

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iunba~ ~ime~ -ientind

Page C4 .

CELEBRATIONS

Sunda~August27,2006

.iunbap lime' -ientinel

PageCs

LIFESTYLE

Sunday, August 27, 2006

How to pack for college without hiring an 18-wheeler)
BY MELISSA RAYWORTH
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Patricia Shields and Zachary Kisner

SHIELDS-KISNER.
ENGAGEMENT

Katie Childs and David McClure

Crystal Coleman and Robert Erickson

COLEMANERICKSON
ENGAGEMENT

•,

CHILDSMCCLURE
ENGAGEMENT

MIDDLEPORT- M\ck and Twila Childs of Middleport
nee the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Kathryn (Katie) Joan Chi lds to David Blaine
McCure, son of Jim and Angie McClure of Pomeroy.
RACINE - Crysta l Lynn Co leman and Robert
The bride-elect is a 2004 graduate of Meigs High School
Charles Erickson announce their engagement and and attended the University of Rio Grande. She is current. ly employed by Holzer Clinic and also teac hes dance for
approaching marriage.. ·
The bride-elect is the daughter of Sandra Melott of the Galli a-Meigs Performing Arts.
.
Middleport. and ~r. and Mrs.~David Kucsma of Racine. A
The prospective groom is a 2003 graduate of Meigs High
graduate of Southern High School and Berea College, the School and attends Hocking College. He is employed by Life
bride-elect is currently employed as superv tsor at the ambulance and Meigs County Emergency Medical SeFvices.
Heartland Girls' Ranch in Benson. Minn.
The open church wedding will be held 6:30 p.m. on
The groom-to-be is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saturday, Sept. 16, at the Heath Methodist Church, South
Erickson of Benson, Minn. A graduate of Benson High Third Ave .. Middleport. A reception will follow at the
School and the University of Minne.snta, he is employed as Riverbend Arts Council on North Second Avenue. Middleport
general manager of Runnings Farm and Fleet in Benson.
A wedding is being planned for 3:30 p.m. on Saturday,
October 21 at the Pentecostal Assembly. Tornado Road,
Racine. Pastor William Hoback, Pastor Gary Hughes, and .
Pastor Ronald Johnson will be officiating.
A rec'eption will he held at the Riverside Golf Club,
Mason, W.Va. immediately following the ceremony. An
additional reception is being planned in Benson.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Pam and Randy Sludus of
Tuppers Plains announce the engagement and upcoming
marriage of their daughter. Patricia Jeat\. to Zachary
Charles Lewi.s Kisner. son of Meli\Sa Kisner and George
Adkins or Middleport and Keith and Marsha Kisnl'r of
Fain nont W.Va.
The bride-elect graduated from Eastern High Sdmol in
200~ and received her Associate of Applied Bustness
degree from 'washington State Community College in
Marietta in 2005. She is employed as a resident services
assistant ·at Holzer Senior Care Center in Gallipolis. She is
the granddaughter or the late Anna Jean and Ru"cll Shields
and Edna StobarL
.
Her fiance is a 2003 graduate of Meigs High School and
is currently employed by Sun Technical .Services and is
·located at Sporn Power Plant 111 Ravenswood ..lie ts the
orandson of Minnie and Charlie Young ol Langsvtlle. Suttc
~nd Raymond Adkins of Middleport, and Beatrice and the
late Sherman L&lt;isner of Fairmont. W. Va.
The wedding will he I :30 p.m. Sept. 9. at the Grace
Brethren Church in Coolville. A reception will follow at the
Legion hall in Middleport.

Carrie Caldwell and Jimmy Wiseman

Dr. Christopher Good and Tracl Sisson

Kimberly and Patrlr:k Dewees

REYNOLDSDEWEES
WEDDING
LANGSVILLE- On July 15 Kimberly Lynn Reynolds
and Patrick Eugene DeWees were united in marriage at the
Bradford Church of Christ, with the Reverend Doug
Shamblin officiating.
Kimberly is the' daughter of Raymond and Penny
Reynolds of Langsville, Ohio. and Putrick is the son of Earl
and Peggy DeWees of Mason, West Virginia.
The b'ride wa&gt; escorted down the aisle by l1cr father. and
. given in marriage by her parents . ,
.·
The bridesmaids were Bctl1apy Tobin or Rutland. Ohio.
sister of the bride. &lt;tnd Brittany Cremeans of Middleport.
·Ohio, friend of the bri'de.
The !lower girls were Mariah Reyuolus and Aaliyah
Tobin. nieces of the hride . The ring hearer was Dylan
Davidson. nepl1ew of the groom. (ir()('lllsmen were Scott
and Brandon DeWees. hrnthers of the groom. both of
Mason. West Virginia. The ushl'r.s were Raymond Reynolds,
brother of the hride. and Charlie Eblin. rricnd of the bride . .
Guests were registered by Keely and Alii DeWees and
Amber Daviusonnieccs of the groom.
A reception was held at the dlUrch's social building
immediately following the ceremony.
The new Mr,. DeWees is empluyed at the Meigs County
Courthous~ in the Clerk or Courts orfice. an~ the groom is
a registered nurse, at Hol1cr Medical Center in Gallip.olis:
The couple honeymooned tn the Pocono Mnuntatns Ill
Pennsylv'!mia. and the) now reside in Rutland.

Submit engagement.
·. wedding and anniversary
announcements online at
www.mydai.lysentinel.com or
www.mydailytribune.com

SISSON-GOOD
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS- Traci Sisson and Dr. Christopher Good
are announcing their engagement and l!pcoming wedding.
The bride-elect is the daughter of James and Cathy
Sisson of Gallipolis. She is a graduate or Gallia Academy
High School and Marshall University, where she earned
bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees in speech
patholllgy/communications disorders. She is employed at
Holzer Medical Center.
.
The prospective hridegroom is the son of Donald and
Joyce Good of Chillicothe. He .is a graduate of Huntington
High School, and earned a hachelor of arts in biological
science from Ohio University, and his doctorate from the
Palmer College of Chiropractic. He is employed at Good
Health Chiropractic of Chilli&lt;;othe.
· The wedding wi ll be 3 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23, 2006 .
at the Church of Christ in Christian Union, 2 173 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis.

CutJJe~
Come OCehratef
qrs our 3 Y'ear .A,.nnlversa7 &amp; we want
to cefehrate with rout
It' you are a past
. member or ready to
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en program

308 Walnut Street • Ravenswood WV

CALDWELLWISEMAN
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Carlos and Breqda
Caldwell are announcing the upcoming marrhtge of their
daughter. Carrie, to Jimmy Wiseman. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom and Libby Wiseman.
·Carrie is the grand&lt;JUghter of Lowell (Buz) and Betty
Call, and Carroll and Adell Ctldwcll. She is the greatgranddaughter or Willard Call and the hile Bess Call. and
Florence Ragan and the late Thoq1as Ragan .
Jimmy is the grandson of Shirleen Wiseman and the late
Harold Wiseman, and Jim and Alice Salver.
The wedding· will take place on Saturcfay. Sept. I (,, 21)()(,,

Parents who packed for
college themselves more
than two decades ago may
be amazed by what appears
on the "must-have" list for
dorin life today.
"It used to be people came
with a couple of boxes and
suitcases. Now it's the minivan ·and the U-Haul trailer
attached to it," says Ann
Hower, director of the
Office of New Student
Programs at the University
of Michigan.
Cqmputers and DVD
players, microwave ovens
and paper shredders crowd
the small, shared bedrooms
built on campuses decades
ago. The amount of stuff
some students bring has
grown so much that dorm
designs are changing to
accommodate the crush.
"Many of these students
don't have experience sharing rooms or bathrooms,
and they have a lot of
expectations for their residence hall experience," says
Hower. "The long, shotgun
corridors aren't being built
anymore."
·
Parents being asked to
shlep carloads of gear might

well ask how, in this era of boys mostly, who threw a
50-inch televisions, can couple of things in a suit·
they bring their children to case and then spent a couple
college without renting an of hours at the local Linens18-wheele~
n-Things once they got to
Some advice from the the campus."
experts:
Last
summer,
Rew
• Check the school's Web packed the car and drove
site, and ask for in forma- · her daughter to
the
tion.
University of Michigan: But
Most schools send a pack- her
neighbor,
Cindy
ing checklist and in forma- Handler, can 't stand roadtion about dorms and room- trips. She'll fly with her son
mates. But it may not arrive to Washington University in
until mid-August, so some St. Louis this fall, shipping
parents Gall ahead to request most items in advance and
it. You might ask: How buying the rest there.
large is the room? Is there
Shopping on arriva I at the
air conditioning? An eleva- campus
has
become
· tor? Strict rules about where increasingly popular. 'The
and when parents can drop problem is that everybody is
off students and their hitting those Target stores or
belongings?
Costcos or whatever, and
What's not permitted? you can get there and find
Many schools don't allow . out that your kid can't get
halogen
lights
or sheets,"
says
Marie
microwave ovens, for Reynolds of Pelham Manor,
instance.
N.Y., whose daughter just
• · Flying or driving? completed freshman year at
Bringing it all or buying it Carnegie
Mellon
there?
University . .
Consider your temperaOne alternative is orderment and your child's.
ing items online and having
"I have a planner and a them sent directly to schooL
shopper for a kid," .says Just be sure to contirm
· Judith Rew, of Montclair, exactly where and .when
·N.J., whose daughter just they will arrive.
completed freshman year.
• Give your child a voice
"But I know parents, of in the process.

Try, budget permitting. to
allow your child to personalize the new room.
"It 's hi&gt; room in his dorm,
not his room in your home,"
says Marion Edelman
Borden,
author
of
"KickStart to College" and
mother of a college-bound
freshman this fal I. "They
want to put their best foot
forward, make a good
impression
and
make
friends." ·
Of course, you may need
to set limits . Consider
allowing your child to
choose one or two important items to splurge on luxurious sheets, perhaps,
or an electronic · .item
they ' ve been coveting.
• Use resources offered by
stores, but be wary.
Some large furnishing
stores, including Bed, Bath
&amp; Beyond and lkea, provide
colleges with model dorm
rooms,
along
with
brochures. in hopes parents
and students wi II buy the
look for themse!ve&gt;.
"All the big chains ate in
on it," says Rew. "At
Linens-n-Thmgs, a personal
representative will meet you
at the door with a checklist.''
Some stores even offer

online gift registries for college-bound students.
These services can be u 'eful, but the stores may suggest items - such as ironing boards - that your
child won't use . Crosscheck the store's list with
your own list of items your
child actually uses during a
typical week at home.
Checklists, sans salespiteh, are also available
at many non-retail Web
sites. such as princetonre-

immediately.
:
Computers can be pur- :
cha,erl on campus and wm-.•
ter clothing can be brought;:
later. Your child's tastes&lt;
may change, so don't spend :
too much on new clothes.
"They're
going
to:
change
their
whole:
wardrobe when they get:
there," says Reynold s. :
"They want to fit in. and · ·
the arts students tend to j
wear one set of clothing, i
the engineers another."
!
view.com .
Stock up only on what's :
, • Seck space-making vital, like enough socks and ·
ideas.
underwear to prevent con- .
Rather than packing 111 stant trips to the laundry :
•·ardboard boxes, consider room. , .
:
using plastic bins that can
In the end. anything you :
double as closet organizers. forget can be bought. '
Some families bring cin- Options .like Wai-Mart's :
derblocks to lift the bed- "Freelbader" gift card, to :
frame. creating a larger which parents can add :
under-bed storage area.
money remotely. gtve the ·
And don't buy super- student an ·'allowance'' to
sized detergent or shampoo. spend on necessities.
Smaller bottles are easier to
And. of course , with
store and carry.
.
overnight delivery, even the
• Remember: Everything most remote campus is
·
doesn't have to be there within reach.

This fall, a seismic shift: Big on top, skinny on the bottom
Bv SAMANTHA

lets us show them otT."
(That's a new· tune than
CRlTCHELL
P.P FASHION WRITER
women have been hearing
for the past decade from
NEW YORK -The fash- tastemakers who touted
ion industry apparently is boot-cut pants to balance
ready to forget and forgive: the hips.)
Longtime nemesis The
On the runways, Charles
Legging has been welcomed Nolan offered a good examback by women who are ple of how to wear this look
changing their unifonn to by putting black leggings
tunic tops and slim bottoms. under a tobacco colored
It started on the runways, skirt suit with a black lurtlewith Ralph Lauren showing neck and a thick black belt
Ioden green knit leggings around · the waist. He also
under a cozy cableknit wrap showed super-slim cigarette
and Derek Lam pairing pants worn under a luxe
gray ones with a trapeze- brown kidskin doubleshape coat.
breasted coat.
Next
came
the
All those are items that
Hollywood starlets, such as should be on your shOpping
Lindsay Lohan who was list any,way, since knits,
photographed in knee- pencil skirts, belts, leggings
length leggings and a baby- and military-inspired coats
doll top. And even though ' all feed into the seasonal
it's•still summer, women on trends.
the streets of New York
If you're wary about slim
already are covering up pants and a tunic - often
their fre~h-from-vacation offered in a clingy jersey or
tans with leggings.
tight-weave knit- a coat is
The look marks a striking alternative to get the volume
shift in proportion and that is the core of the look,
shape than what we've suggests Bloomingdale's ·
become used to ·over the Solomon. You could even
past few years, though, in wear the coat and either a
retrospect, the popularity of cardigan or tunic under it,
skinny jeans last spring she adds, because there is
should have been a clue this literally more room in this
was coming.
silhouette.
Actually, this fall's fash"I love the sweater layion plate lar~ely mimics an .ered over a tank top, lay- .
old one - the shoulder- erect over a short skirt, laypadd,s:d power woman who ered over leggings -· or a
stomped through the 1980s . pair of narrow pants in
in skinny pants and high- wool or gabardine or skinny
heel pumps. This time jeans. It makes a woman
around the style is softer, look taller and thinner. And
with
chunky sweaters add a boot or chunky shoe,
instead of double~breasted the same color as your botblazers over the tapered tom," she says.
Her other hints include
trousers.
"This is the most interest- wearing a wide belt to help
ing season we've seen in a define your shape so you
very long time," says Sally don't look like "an A·line
Singer, Vogue's fashion Christmas tree"; choosing
news director. "Over the leggi ngs that ·are either
past few years, the changes brown, black or another
that have come through dark neutral color; and makfashion have been about ing sure your tunic top hits
refining bourgeois elegance, the right spot on your
asking 'What defines a thighs. It should be fingertip
lady? Is it attention on the length, Solomon advises.
"The shorter the. tunic, the
watst or trims like ribbons,
or crystals?' This season is a longer the leg Jooks.
fundamental change in how Dresses over leggings?
you're going to get dressed Could be great. could not
in the inorning."
be. It shou ld not be a midThat's the issue- a lot of calf dress with boots. Either
won'ten aren't going to the skirt should be shorter
know how to get dressed in or wear ballet tlats, which
also look good with a longer
the morning .
Voluminous tops and skin- skirt and leggings peeking
ny bottoms are tricky. Done out For boots, try a shorter
the right way, an outfit can length skirt, dress or tunic,"
be flattering, len~thening she says.
Another option that
the body and providmg camoutlage in the middle. Done tweaks the trend is riding
the wrong way, you risk a pants. They're a fall classic
that can remain in your
stuffed-sausage look.
But fashion insiders insist closet for years but they still
that, overall, jt's not a hard have the "right look" for
this particular season.
look to wear.
The riding pant, classical"It's a great look for
women of all sizes, particu- ly paired with a 3/4-Jength
larly bigger women," says jacket and dark tlat-heel
Stephanie Solomon, fashion leather boots, was created to
director
for serve as a practical and utilitarian garment - and it
Bloomingd~tle' s. "We tend
to be fuller around the hips still serves that function
and derriere. This is a look today, says Robert Chavez,
that hides all that. More president and .CEO of
women have good legs - ·Hennes USA.
It 's an easy wardrobe
believe it or not - and this

SOLID OAK BREAKFAST NOOK

solution because it's neat ern woman's wardrobe, a
and understated, making it . classic that can often defy
appropriate for almost any convention depending on
occasion. It's . also often the woman and her needs,"
made from forgiving Lycra- Chavez says. "A pair of ridwool blends, which tends to ing pants, or a version of it,
smooth out or at least can be a refined alternative
bypass bumps.
to complement a sweater,
"It is a key part of a mod- blouse, or jacket."

MANY THANKS TO

THE WISEMAN AGENCY
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6unbap limes -ienttnel

ENTERTAINMENT

PageC6

.

INSIDE
Down on the Farm, Page 02
Gardening, Page 06

Sunday, August 27, 2006

·At the Movies: The Quiet
their secret relationship iu
AP MOVIE CRITIC
graphic terms that make you
feel ,ick in the ptt of your
(tThe Quiet'' i~ a drama stomach. If this is intended
about a pretty teenage girl as a piercing look at how
who's lost her hearing pampered f;unilies can keep
but did the movie itself have powerful ·secrets. 11 nnsses
the mark entire ly. In stead,
to be tone deaf?
Not a single moment feels it's just shame less.
believable in the film.
Into this tox,ic mix comes
which is trying very hard to Dot (Camilla Belle), Paul
be a sexy, ,intense psychq- and Olivia\ goddaugh ter
logical thriller but msteau who moves in with them
just feels lurid and exploita- after her father dies. Belle,
tive. Not a single person the naturally beautiful
feels relatable: everyone's young star of "The Ballad
actions are either deplorable of Jack and Rose" and the
or pathetic. Or both.
remake of "W hen j
The worst pat1 is that it Stranger Calls" is startlingly .
wastes a talented cast, unglarnmed here, wearing
including Elisha Cuthbert Joan lett's feathered mullet
and Edie Falco- actors we . and .no rmikeup.
know can shine when given
Dot lost her hearing at age
the opportunity. What they 7, after her mother died. So
have to work with in "The now for some reason she's
Quiet," which was directed stuck 1m the receiving end
by Jamie Babbit from a of evervone's unsolicited
scrip'! by Abdi Nazemian confcssiims. Sometimes the
and Micah Schraft. merely words are troubling (as
asks them to sleepwalk whe/1 Nina tells her about
through myriad suburban the molestation) and somecliches. sometimes literally. times they're unintentionalCuthbert plays-Nina Deer. ly hilarious (as when a boy
a petulant, popular cheer- who has a crush on her.
leader who's misunder- played by Shawn Ashmore
stood. Falco plays her mom. from the "X-Men" movies,
Olivia, who's passed out on explains in detail about how
the living room tloor when much she, um, inspires him
we first see her, the result of when he's alone in his room
her chronic pill-popping . at night).
("It's hard work decorating,
Naturally the secrets don't
Paul," she mumbles to her stay that way for long, espehusband. "I have to rely on cially since - that's right
the French and the Italians - Dot has a secret of her
to · send me fabric. " own.
Babbit previously directCertainly Carmela Soprano
can . relate, but she has the ed the clunky "But I'm a
benefit of better writing.)
Cheerleader," which also
Then ' there's
daddy seemed interested in shock(Martin Donovan), who's ing for shock's sake. She
entirely too close to his little also has . a long list of far
girl, something that's hinted more wholesome TV credat early but in no time we' re its, including "Malcolm in
seeing him climb into bed the Middle" and ''Gilmore"'
with her - we're hearing Girls." -Here, though, it
Nina revel in describing · seems as if her main aes- ·

Bv CHRISTY LEMIRE

thetic intluence was Adrian
Lyne. Every frame of "The
Quiet," with its overly
styled blue-g ray tint and
hazy interiors, calls to mind
"9 1/2 Weeks,'' "Fatal
Attraction" or "Unfaithful,"
movies that actually were
suspenseful.
If you ' rc on the edge of
your seal this time, it'' only
because you can ' t wait to
rush out of the theater and go horne to wash off
the stank .
"The Quiet," a Sony
Pictttres Classics release. is
rated R for strong and disturbing sexua l content. a
scene of violence, language.
drug content and brief nudity. Running time: 96 minutes. One star out of four.

Travel &amp; Destinations
AP Photo

in this photo provided by Sony Pictures Classics. recently orphaned deaf girl, Dot (Camtlla
Belle), discovers a dark side of her new family in "The Quiet."

Visitors, some with audio guide headsets,
learn all about Edinburgh Castle in this June
photo in Scotland.

Oticbn • Delta

AP Photos

The fishing village of Kyleakin, on the east coast of the Isle of Skye, across the Skye Bridge from the mainland town of Kyle (Strait) of .
Lochalsh is shown in this June photo. It's named after King Haakon IV of Norway, whose fleet moored there before the Battle of Largs
that saw the end Gf Norwegian rule of the island.

•

road and low road,
•
a wee tas
of Scotland

LOS ANGELES (AI') The 59~ year-old says he is
Goodbye yellow brick road, a fan of Blackstreet's "No
Diggity'' · and
Tupac
hello hip hop.
Elton John tells Rolling Shakur's "California Love."
Stone magazine that he
"I want to bring my songs
wants to record .a hip-hop and melodies to hip-ho.p
album with Grarnmy-win- beats," John says. "I love
ning producer Dr. Ore.
these beats, but I have no
"I want to work with idea how to get them."
.
Pharrell, Tirnbaland, Snoop,
John
performed
Kanye, Eminern and just see . Eminern 's song "Stan" with
what happens," John says in the rapper during the 200 I
the Sept. 7 issue. "It may be Gramrny awards.
a disaster; it could be fantasJohn 's new album, "The
tic, but you don't know until •Captain and the Kid," is due
you try."
in September.

Bv NORM GOLDSTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'eeder

'

Huey Lewis. .
,
Musician, Singer, Actor. Proud Delta Wearer.
You know him for his chart-topp1ng h1ts songs that shaped the times. But you m1ght be surprised to team
that Huey Lew,; has a new instrument of choice: Delta, the heanng device designed fo1·
people who have dilliculty understanding what other; say when it's noisy.
.

.

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invrsible behind your ear.
• Comfortable: S'nooth and sleek. you II practically forget it s there.
• Unmatched performance: Delta's Artif•ciallntelligence analyzes and adjusts sounds to make
speech eas~er to understand, whether with family or 1n business.
• Cool colors: Choose li'om 17 finishes in solids or patterns to blend in with your hair and skin.

special tnarts to

. for buying my
Convnerc\al
steer
at the
2006 Meigs Fair.

•

Heanng clearly IS evcrythmg to Huey Lewis. Especially with the demanding lrfestyle of an entertainer.
you stay connected to the world, so you can achieve your goals and make the most of life.

De~a

helps

For 'JIOre lnfonnation about Delta. come in for a free demonstration.

Jordan Parker

HEARING
Diane McVey

for buying my
Reserve Champion
Market Steer at the
2006 Meigs Fair.

Jacob Parker

William 0~ Smeltzer

Owner &amp; Audiologis,

GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON

ATHENS

435'/, Second Avenue

232 Huron Street

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1Aero's from Post Office)

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Open Mon. ·Thurs. 8:30-Spm

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Wear Delta and keep your edge!

..

Road signs were another
indication
of
the
Highlands, as they doubled
identification of towns and
villages with the equivalent
name in Gaelic.
There are spectacular vistas at every turn. And th e r~
are
many
turns.
Fortunately, there also are
numerous lay-bys - a
British term for roadside
parking - and pull-overs
for the requisite photos of
. one of nature's spectacular
shows, with every twist in
the road a new act.
The glens and the lochs.
Green meadows overlooked
by the Cuillin Hills. Clouds
dropping down over the
mountaintops to greet viewers. Trees unspoiled by
progress. lined up with an
artist's eye. Flowers, yellow
and purple amidst the
brown bristles.
It is an area deservedly
known for its hiking and
fishing. but we were more ·
than content just to breathe
in the stunning scenes
before us.
It is indeed u poet's canvas.
We settled in at the Curran
Guest House. a charming
bed-and-breakfast with
gracious hostess in the village' of Kyleakin (Caol
Acain in Gaelic), just on the
other side of the Skye Bridge

If You Go•••

KYLEAKIN, ScotlandThere is indeed poetry in
SCOnAND: .
the geography of the
http:/;www.vis~scotland,c
Highlands of Scotland.
om or http:;;www.scotlimdThe country's laureate
tourism.com. Vis~Britaln
poet, Rohert Burns, etched
can provide information by
the literary vision hundreds
phone: 800462·27 48.
of years ago:
"My heart's in the
ACCOMMODATIONS:
Highlands, my heart is not
http://WWW.b·and·b·SCOt·
here;
Jand.co. ukjstars.htm,
"My heart's in the
http:; ;www.aboutscot·
Highlands a-chasing the deer;
Jand.oom/b-anct-.b.htrnl
"Chasing the wild deer,
· or http:;;www.travelscot·? .
and following the roe,
land.co.uk.
·
"My heart's in the
Highlands, wherever I go."
Lured by that ·romantic
that link s the · mainland
vision, we left New York to
Highlands to the Isle of Skye
follow the seductive sound The road to the Highlands of Scotland on the countrv's western coast offers spectacu:
(An t-Eilean Sgithenach).
of the Scottish Sirens to the lar vistas from a winding, but speedy highway through its hills and mountains, shown in
The bridge opened in 1995
Isle of Skye.
this June, photo .
to replace the ferry.
We began our journey
With much (too much'?)
with a nonstop flight to not only provide inforrna- though occasioriall.y warnings become ~•lerts for
on our itinerate palette, we
Glasgow, · on the · River tion and -souvenirs, but for a killing some weeds on the wandering sheep, as the
savored just two day s on
Clyde, a city once known · small fee (about $6) they unfamiliar side - we head- sheep - their wool often
Skye. visiting, in particular,
for building great ships, will book your accommoda- ed for Skye, known as the marked with a colorful
Dunvegan Castle, a rare
including the Queen Mary . lions in the area.
"misty island," just off the splotch for identification aristocratic home still lived
The licensed B&amp;Bs start coast of the Western seem to outnumber the peoand the Royal Yacht
in, currently by the 29th
Britannia. Today, it is visit- at about $50 per person per Highlands. The roads, ple and the cars.
head of the MacLeod clan.
ed more for its shopping.
day; reasonable hotels are though still good, narrowed
You can spot some of the
We lucked into a weather
With another couple who available for about double a bit and became far more hirsute Highland cattle, too.
it was sunny and
aberration;
had a similar desire to expe- that. (Figure higher than curvy as they snaked with their distinctive long
warm
most
of the time. The
rience the Highlands, my that during the peak sum- through .the braes (hills) and bangs over their eyes, a natScots considered it a heat
wife and l spent a short peri- iner tourist season.)
the bens (mountains).
ural protection developed
wave. It got up to near 70
od of adjustment in
On the road again, bright
You can tell you're get- over .centuries to cope with
degrees. with little rain.
. Glasgow, gettmg acclimated and early, growing ac.cus- ting closer to the Highlands the wind-swept and rainto the time - it was mid- torned to driving on the left when the deer-crossing soaked habitat.
Please see Scotland, 06
June and daylight peeked in
early and lasted until after 9
p.m. - and attuning to
Scottish speaking accents
(we never did), while
adjusting to looking first to
the right when stepping off
the street curb.
Then we rented a car nnd
set off north for the
Highlands, stopped on the
way at Bulloch at the northern em! of Loch ' Lomond,
boated the lake and walked
a bit on its bonnie banks
before settling in at a bedThe Holzer Medical Center Community
Health and Wellness
and-breakfast for the night
.
- our home of choice
Trailer will be there and provide
wherever we were in the
countryside:
FREE SCREENINGS- .FREE HEALTH INFORMATION .
· While it is wise to make
these
reservations
in
Thank you,
advance, we winged it, tak- ·
Katie Hubble
ing advantage of good fortune and, at times, the helpful Information Centers that
are available in most every
town in the country. They

Thank You

M.A., CCC-A

With special thanks to

A killed bagpiper 1n Edinburgh keeps Scottish
traditions alive for visitors in this June photo .

a

CENTER
We-Can
Fabricators

..

Sunday, August 2.7, 2006

Elton John wants to
make a hip-hop album

R.C. Construction

Dl

&amp;unba!' otime' -6tntinel

Op~n

Mon.- Fri. 8:30"5prn

Saturday by Appointment

·o ticon

PEOPLE Fl RST

•

CPA
for buying my
· 2006 Market Steer
and supporting the
youth of Gallia County.

loin us in the
Park on Sunday!

10 1.5 The River's Community Day

.

�iunba~ limt~·itnttntl DOWN ON THE
~ Adopt-a-tree

•

Bv OLIVIA MUNOZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DEL REY, Calif.
: Teetering ai the top of a lad. der, SIUan Brioza plucked a
: huge bruised peac h destined
: fpr the ground and decided
" to save it.
: With it 's creamy, succu: lent llesh, the fruit deserved
· to be savored. he decided,
: perha ps sauteed in butter
: and served with a fontina
: cheese fondue.
! " II wasn't worth throwing
! on the ground." Brioza said,
: biting into the peach and
: then tossing it down to a
· colleague from Rubicon, the
; upscale San Francisco
" restaurant where he works
! as executive chef.
~ The taste of the Elberta
·· peaches- an heirloom variety that can be hard to sell on
. a large scale - motivated
Brioza and about two dozen
other families, restaurants
· and neighborhood groups to
adopt one of the trees on
which they st ill grow.
For the second season in a
row, farmer and writer David
Mas Masu·moto has invited
the public to adopt the trees
as a way to support his
efforts to pre ser~e older varieties of peaches from obsolescence. For $250, sponsors

industry has shifted to this
uniform red peac h that eats
O.K. I don't want O.K."
Masumoto, whose 1995
boo~.
"Epitaph for a
Peach," chronicled his
efforts to keep hi s peach
orchard viable, is pan of a
small vocal group of farmers committed to working
the San Joaquin Valley's
rich soil without pesticides
or herbicides.
He advocates scaling
back, using 'organic growing
methods and supplying primarily local markets rather
than the nation - a radical
notion in the country's No. I
agricultural state . California
produces 75 percent of the
country's peaches.
Masumoto, who also
grows Sun Crest ·peaches
and grapes, started the
adopt -a-peach program last
year. This season , he emailed updates to the people
who adopted trees on how
the crop was doing to build
excitement for the harvest.
Poet Gary Solo, who grew
up in nearby Fresno, said
adopting
one
of
Masumoto's trees offered
an opportunity to support
not only one farmer, but a
way of life.
"It's a good way to connect with your agricultural

Bv JIM PAUL

crops, need to decide now
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
whether to Jllmn more acres
of corn, he said. Many of
URBANA, Ill. - The those extra acres could
principle of supply-and- come from more farmers
demand has corn farmer breaking traditional crop
David Kunz bubbling with rotation patterns and plantienthusiasm about the future ng corn on the same ground
of his business.
corn is growing on this year.
Dozens of ethanol plants · "If they 're going to do
under construction across corn-on-corn it implies
. the Midwest and Great' maybe some more fall
Plains will mean more tillage, more fertilizer needs,
demand for corn, and that more cash needs, difference
likely will lead to higher in seed requirements," Good
prices and bigger profits.
said. " You can 't wait until
. "I happen to be more the last minute to make all
: encouraged by what I see those decisions."
· going on in agriculture now
Good and colleague Gary
: than anytime from the time Schnitkey developed a for:I got involved in it in 1977," mula for farmers to detersaid l&lt;urtz, who farms about mine whether growing more
800 acres southeast of corn might be ,more profUrbana. "More demand for itable than keeping a 50-50
corn, it's very simple. it · corn-soybean rotation . They
: leads to higher prices."
determine a break-even
More than three dozen price for growing corn by
: ethanol plants are under con- considering the difference
. struction or expansion. between the cost of growing
according to the Renewable corn and the cost of growFuels Association. Add those ing soybeans - which they
to nearly 100 that are already set.at about $110 per acre producing and it's easy to soybean price relative to
_ recognize, the need for much soybean yield and corn
: more of the gasoline addi- price relative to corn yield.
tive's major raw material,
Using a $6 per bushel
: says Darrel L. Good, a crop benchmark price for soy· marketing specialist at the beans, Good and Schnitkey
University of Illinoi s.
reason that the break-even
In fact, the portion of the price for ·corn would be
U.S. corn crop consumed for about $2.40 per bu shel.
: ethanol production is pro- Prices above that favor
: jeered to rise from 12 percent growing more corn while
_ in 2004-05 to 23 percent in prices below favor soybeans.
· 2014-15, according to a U.S.
"I think for .a lot of pro: Depanment of Agriculture ducers, panicularly in high' report released earlier this . productive corn areas,
' year. American farmers grew you' re going to find that
' about 11.1 billion bushels of break-t;ven price is at a pretcorn last year.
ty reasonable level and
"I think very quickly, probably at or below what
maybe as soon as next year, the market is offering for
we need another five mil- the· ' 07, '08 and '09 crop,"
lion acres of corn, 5 to 6 Good told farmers attending
percent more corn," Good the university's Agronomy
says, assessing the nation. . wide need. "And may be we
need to. add to that a little
more in '08."
That means farmers, who
already are begi nnin g to .
think about nex t ye ar's

~~I 7!:' \~~~~~
liz!!
'1'

// Norris Northup S;
Thank.You
1
Dodge
. PARKER INC. \
J. Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
1M~ llllf 2006
·· for buying my

.

'

?HaWt14MJ.

~~

NICOLE
MOOD/SPA/JGH

",

lj.

Day last week. "We believe
that there is a lot of momentum here, a lot of attractiveness to rrowing more com,
but you ve got to push the
pencil on it here as you
make the decision ."
But farmers do have some
time to be cautious, said
Philip Shane, market development director for the
Illinoi s Corn Growers
Association. Recent abundant crops have left a surplus in storage and a decline
in exports could help meet
ethanol's demands, he said.
"The corn is there. It's
just going to be shuffled and
price is goin~ to dictate
that," Shane satd.
Even so, short-term
demand for more corn to
feed ethanol plants is
inevitable, and that has
farmers like Kuni smiling.
"The biggest bugaDoo to
agriculture for the last 30
years has been too much .
Now we can have too little.
That 's exciting," he said.
"All of sudden, the supplydemand balance is in our
favor and it never has been."

,

.

LivESTOCK REPORT
GAUIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, Aug. 23.

Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415# St. $100-$ 157 Hf. $ 100-$ 140 425-525# St.
$100-$140 Hf. $90-$130 550-625# St. $95-$ 120 Hf.
$90-$110 650-725# St. $95-$11 5 Hf. $85-$ 100 750-850
St. $85 -$98 Hf. $75-$88..

Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $48-$53; Medium/Lean $44-$46;
Thin/Light $10-$40; Bulls $50-$68.

.
Upcoming specials:

Ohio V811oy
Publishing reserves

reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must B
Reported on the fin

ay ot publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
Register will
b
esponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl
he tirtt lnaaruon. W
hall not be liable fo

SUNDAY PUZZLER

ny 1088· or expens
hat resu_lta fi'Ofl:'l th

114~

118 t:lt.g 1*11

.

118-E!Qind

...

119~111d

120 Rlbblt

1211&lt;intW

IZIIJN .......
125 WOrd
1ZII CMn:lllrttt
127 Mile cM:k
121lellv hll
128 .......... caplllln
130 Equivocelt
131 Simian
133 Malfll a dllierenca
138 PaltsltDib
137 Mill' SIICIIIn
141 Cllolc
t4&gt;1 Nonlletlll writer
145 Old Gnll!&lt; coin
t48 a.ne cllk:W,
for lhaot

1481'*-

t51~•.-cn~.

elc.

153 Fllhlauod

t5Sf&lt; ""PPPt

I57 Clrnua 01 Einlll*l
158 Wllow rod
. 158 And~"~ trtond

teo hrart

181 Rospnl
162 Fabric 101 ~

183 Oldhlrp
164 Anb nation

82 Bnoln-- reeding
(llbbr.)
64Smaldog
=~bofOie
90Mab93 0Tkklg

DOWN

1 1luit lind no mare
2 IJM polil)llillld

s Nobtolooc&gt;nlr1

4GIYI--ga
5 C.wnogle Hill_.

8HorMra

ubllcatlon or omla

ent. Corrections wll
made In the llrs
vallabla edition.

96 Plrfa' rlvtr

7 f'MIIIII ..,.

8MIIItr-rk
9 Sluclc

Gald8n-Rd.
tOol !IeMire llliqll

«&lt;~

»-Current
pplies.

103

brdlgo
11 Tht PtiUieuCh
12 Employ

105-

'

~ Al l

I06 Long stDI):
108 Wllui'id with the horns

130am

14 vtc*n
15 Tlll!)dy, t960HI)1e
18 Corp.cle
17 Ornw WililY
18Foat=
19MoMa
't~:lhoTramp"

air Housing Act o

112 Presa
113 Dllnk In a can

1968.

115 Gab

)-This
ccept s

newspape
only hel
anted ads meetin

117 Get- rest
119 Pomalrult
120 Slinled
122 Grasay lleld

30 VIlli! falllhes

32 Oownw•dmotton

34Aoduoe

36 SIIJI'III garment

EOE standards .

124TlnV125 Of heal

37 Curve
311 Schaatlard game
40 MMe. title .

126 snaotlng or pearout

42 RIICoUck
43 Porcotoi I jar
.... SUcldln tmpiCt .
48 HMillls to par

i

130 Paid atNolo
132 Sauer

134 Ctoanat
135 w•1 oyod
138 Far too heavy
137 Pole

\\\Ol \(I

=

.

I'

'Stille

.

roups lndividuai -Ar tists'fa
pen M1ke and Theme
ight. Opening Soon Sta t
Theater, Live Entertainmen
Point Pleasant (304)542·
OS
.

164
Women" name
156 Fish eggs

g;e9 EIMIIgtloollir9Y

1' male Boston Terrier/
Pekingese mi x, small ins1de

71 Mabapartnil
.72 CIIZid
.

w,. - Diener

3 yr old male AKC Black Lab
rnlx. 4 yr old male Elhew

Poinl.i740)441-0405.
Beautiful kittens free to good
home. 8 wks old. (740)367-

723 1
Free to good home, all vac·
cinations curren t, many
sizes, many colors of kiHens.

Call (740)446·3510

-------To good home black &amp; wh1te
male &amp; fema le long haired
kittens (304)675-8195

Garage Sate- Rai n or St"&gt;1ne,
4466 SA 554, Thursday &amp;
Friday. Living roo m su1te.
treadmill, mens, womens,
boys, girls &amp; baby clothe s.
Infant car seat, toys &amp; lots ol
miSC.
- - - - - -- Yard/Moving Craft Business
Sale. Friday/Saturday, 330
Keeler Rd ott Bulavllle Pike.
Chnstmas crafts, Baby, toddler, boy &amp; girl clothes and
much more!

AUCTION .•IND
Ft.EA MARKf T
Cross Creek Auclion Buffalo
Auctron Saturday 7 pm.Aon
Price &amp; moving sale from
Eleanor.
Building is
fuii. Seating for 200 Air
Conditioned Bui lding We
gladly accep! Visa and
MasterCard .(304)937·2118
or (304)550·161 6
Ste hen Aeeo Lie# 163.9

1 w111 buy J.YJ:!!o; .Car.s: Call
(740)388-9303

\\I· R\ It" Is
HELPWAN'J'f1l

Building Supplies ....... .. ..................... .. ........ 550
Business and Buildings ........................ ..... 340
euslness Opportunltv ................................. 210
Business Training .......... ........... ........ ........ .. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks ......... .. .......... ........ ........... ,. 010

Child/Elderly Cere ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrigeration ......... ,............ .... ... ..840
Equipment for Rent ..... .......... ................. ... .. 480
Excavating .................. .. ........................... .. .. 830
Farl)l Equlpl)lent ......... ............................ .. ... 610
Farms for Rent ..................... ............. ........... 430
Farms for Sale .. ............ ........... .................... 330
For Lease ......... ........ ..... ....... .... ................... . 490
For Sale ............................... ........... ..... ......... 585
Far Sate or Trade ........ .................... .............590
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtea ........... ............ .. ........ .. .. 580
Furnished Roama ..... .............................. ..... 450
General Heu ling .... ..... .......... ............. ........... 850
Glveaway ...... ... ....... ............. ......... ..... ...... ..... 040
Happy Ado .................................... " .. ............ 050
Hay &amp; Graln... ........ .... ........... ............. ........ ...640
Holp Wanted .......................................... .... ... no
Home lmprovements ................................... 810
Hal)lea for Sato ......... .... ............................... 310
Household Goods ..... .............. .. ........... ..... .. 510
Housealor Rant ........................................ .. 410
In Mel)lorial)l ..... ...,........................... ............ 020
Insurance ........ ......... ............... .......... ,,,,,, ... ,, 130
Lawn &amp; Gotden Equlpment.. ...................... 680
Livestock ..... ............. ,... ...................... ..... ... .. 630
Lost and Found ....................... ............. ....... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ................................ ........ .... 350
Miscellaneous ................... ,,,, ....... .,.....•••. ... .. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.......... ........... ..540
Mobile .Homo Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Rent ........... ........ ............ 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ...... ..................... ..... 320
Money to Loan .......... .. ......:.. .............. : ....... ... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera ... , .....................740

Thank You

Dave Small
Trucking
for buying my
2006Market

LambI

Christian

Forgey

Savannah ~~
Forgey ) '

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

CaU toclayl (740) 446~2342

(740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

LASS
I
F_l
EPS
work tor you!
· lsell-buy-rent-h1re-f1ndl
~!Very
issue!
J

'"-------_.1
I tO

Autos tor Sale .......................................... .. .. 710

.for buying my
Market Goat at the
2006 Meigs Fair.

FORGET what you
ha11e heard about
telemarketing.
Our professional
environment has
enabled us to become
the leader in the
Teleservices Industry
for over 20 years.
Benefits Include :
Up to $8 hour, a
generous bonus pl an,
401-K. health benefits,
weekly pay, paid vacati~n , and paid holidays.
We specialize in
makmg calls for the
NRA. Paid training rs
provided. so no
previous e)(perience is
needed

Call 1--877-463-6247
ext. 2331 to f1nd out
why our empl oyees

pipe. 1-beam, -lin , etc. money The New Avon .
Mason wv 304-593-1904. Call Marilyn 304·882-2645

lost:Pregnanl Siamese cat.
may have had kittens by
now. Declawed. $25 r&amp;.\'ard.
Please call (7 40)446-2923
or return to 130 Bastiani
Drive

'

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood items.
To $480iwk
Materials provided.
Free information pkg 24Hr.

801-428-4649

!!9
year company is looking
for a wel l ,motivated HVAC
installer
and
helper.
Experience is preferred, Pay
is based on e)(perience If
Interested ca ll (740)4411236 and leave message
with receptionist.
Accepting applications lor
full &amp; parH ime paramedtcs.
We have a benetit package
available. Applications can
be obtarned from Mason
County
Emergency
Ambulance
Serv1ce
Autho nly 2309 Jackson
Avenue POint Pleasanl WV
25550. or you can call 304-

675·6134 .

Are you 1nterested m a
rewarding position? PAIS is
currently accepting applications for part time e11ening
shift direct care positions for
the Mason, WV and Point
Pleasant, WV providing resIdential/commUnity
skill
training with indiiJiduals With
MA/00. High school diploma or GED re qwed . No
experience
necessary.
Criminal background check
required. Must have reliable
transportation. Hourly rare
starting at $6.50-SB.OO/holll.
Call (3041373·101 1
AVON! All Ar l;:las! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304·
675-1•129.

----

looking for a trustworthy
indiv1dual for l1ousecleaning .
Approx . 1 day per week .
requ ired .
Reference
(7 40)441·9593.

Help Wanted

$ STNA'S $
SIGN ON BONUS
Arcadia Nursing Center is now hiring
STNA's for afte rnoon and night shift s.
Full and Part time
positions available.

Come Join Our Caring Team!
Please apply in person or

740-667-3156

As k for Jane Ca;ey
Hetp Wanted

Help Wanted

iilc:: InfoCision

Musical Instruments ........... ...................... .. 570
Personals ........................................ ............. 005
Pets for Sale ................. ,"'"""" ........ ........... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
Professional S.rvlces ..................... ............ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ..... .. ........................ 160

lnf0Cis1Un \V iii be acce pti ng resumt!s and
conducting On-the -Spot lniel'vkv,s!

Real Estate Wanted .......................... :..... ..... 36D
School&amp; Instruction ........ :.. .......................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650 ·
Situations Wanted ............................ ,..... ..... 120

9:00am · I I :00 am &amp; I :00 pon · J:IIO pon
242 Third Ave .

Space for Rent ............................. ,, .............. 46D

Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale ..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ....................... ..................... 715
Upholaterv ...... .....,....................................... 870
Vans For Sa1e.J... :......................1 .................. 73D
Want edlo Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy ~ Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do ....................................., ....... 180
Wanted to Rent .......................... .................. 470

Yard Sole- Gaillpoils .... ........... .....................072

Yard

Sai~Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074

Yard Saie·Pt- Pleasant... ............................. 076

U m

~wAN~

Ir·o

..,___._
.........__.._=.,.._

OPEN INTERVIEWS
Tuesday, August 29th
Gallipolis. OH
If unahle to attend , please call
1-877 -463-(,247 &lt;'&lt;!. 4256 to &gt;C hcduk an
intcrrk" at our loc~ l offi~c~ . Be part tll :1
l'Ompany that wa:-. vuted a:-. o ne n f the

1110

CASH

Do you have a ctaas A
COL 7 Immediate OTR drlv·
li"tg opportunities available
with Canton, OH Carrier to
ser.vtce our Jackson, OH

Borrow $200
Pay Back $203

account

i){PAESS

Now Hiring
Manager &amp;
Assistant Manager
lor Gallipolis. Ohio.
Excellent Pay &amp;
Bonu s Program
No Experience Necessary
Will Train
Fa)( Resume·

i606)BB6-B90B
Janice.k1dd @cashtn.com

•Weekly pay
•Hospitalization and 401 K
•Late model equipment
•No NYC or Canada
•95% no touch freight
•hometlme on moat week·

ends

•SSOO stQn on bonus
Must be at least 23 yrs. old,
have valid long form DOT
physical and have 2 years
OTR experience.

'Bfue l()dvel efJ'an!'por1
Ask for Bob

1-800-652-2362
Driver

' NO EXPER IE NCE NECESSAR'I
'FULl ·TIIAE CLASSES
• COL TRA ININ G
'FINANCINQ AVAILABlE

' JOS PlACEMENT
' ENROLLING ~KNI

ALLIANCE
TAACTO A·TRA ILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEV ILLE . VA

1-800-331-1 203
CosmetologiSt needed. Call
(740)446· 7425.
local Domestic Violence
She lte r seeks part tome
advocate tor outreach serv·
ices in Mason Ccunty. SOcial
servtces e)(per1e nce pre·
ferred Competitive salary.
Please send resume with a
CO\Ier lette' to PO Bo)( 403
Hunl1ngton WV 25708 post
marked no later than Aug.

Wanted

Flatbed
Owner Operators
•A11g. $1.77 gross- load ~d
mile
• Avg S. 38pm fuel
surcharge
•$500 Orientation Pay
• Insurance Available
• Flatbed Trailers Ava ilable
6 mo OTR e)(p. required
'Ask about our Dedicated
Runs

HEu•WANt'ED

ass-713-2na

F1nanc1al Institution: Mason
HVAC Positions Available
CoufliY based F/1 seeks
With A W~\1-Establi s h e d
qualified man ager who W+ll
Athens Area Coo tractor
report to the Board a
Directors. Applicants should
We Have OpeninQs for a
have a minimum of thraa
Service Technician and an
years experience in financ1al
installer. Must have 3 Years
mstitut ion accounting and
Experience and Clean
operet1ons. A proven reco rd
Driving Record. 80% ol
Call for the nation's lead·
of deliveri ng loan and
Work in Atl1&amp;nS Area.
ing non-profit organizadeposit prodvc1s with a t"ltgh
E)(cellent Wages Basad on
tions. We ofler pa1d traindegree of quality service
Experience. Send Detailed
ing. holidays' and IJacaskills is required. The quali·
Resume To·
tions.
lied individual should also
HVAC PositiOns
have fa miliarity with r&amp;g\.lt aApply today by calling:
PO Box 363
tory compliance and · quar· (740 )446 _7442 ext. 1901
The Plains, Oh 45780
terly flnanc1al reporting .
Toll Free:
A high degree of initiative IS
-4
_
_
1 877 63 6247
required lo purse opportum- b...:~;.;;;~~~.d]
ties in the Mason County
-------community. The can didate
Ohio Valley Home Health ,
should be goal ori ented to
We are now accepting
Inc. hiring lor Full Time AN ,
achieve the unlimited opporapplications for one part
Full Time and Part Time
tunity. We offer a competit ive
time clerical ope,ning
CNA, STNA, CHHA, PCA
salary. Resumes should be
Applicants must have
and Per Diem OT, ST
forwarded to:
computer e~per i ence
Acce pting appl ications fo r
Point Pl easa nt R6gister
and possess good typLPN 's. Competitive Wag es
EB 23, 200 Ma1ll Stree t.
ing skills.
and Benelits including
Point Pleasan t. WV 25550
·To apply, stop by the
health
msurance
and
Gallipolis Daily
Mileage. Appl y at 1480
Tribune,
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or
825 Thi rd Avenue,
2415 Jackson Avenu e, Point
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1,
Ann : Kevin Kelly
Pleasant, VN or phone toll
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center Is currentl y accepting l':=~~~~~~ tree ·1·866·441·1393.
applications lor STNAs. All _

li"''""''""''""''""''""''""'"il

sh•hs. part-time. No Phone
Calls,
Please.
All piinterested
applicants
should
ck up "an
appli cation at 333 Page
Street Middleport_, OH. For
further information, please
contact Hollie at (740)992-

No expert11nce?
6472. EOE
Call S00-91~~2n8
www.matonecontractors.c

om

$15.67·$26. 191l'1r., now hiring. For applicatloll and free
governement job info, call
American Assoc of Labor t9 13-599-8042, 241hrs . amp.
serv.
Rt 35 Adu lt Book Sfore need
Midnight Clerk Full · lime
(304)937-4900 Drug Test

Help Wanted

NEEDED3SALESPEOPLE
Business in Great shape.
2 years college preferred, good
attitude.
$30,000 Plus a year (lsi year)
Paid Vacation, Experienc.e not
necessary, will train.
Professional appearance, good
attitude.
Drive to make above average
income.
Call for interview

1-800-837-1094
MARK PORTER
GM SUPERCENTER
Ask for Mark

-========-========;Help Wanted

Help Wanted

r

GALLlA COU NTY DEPARTMENT
OF JOB AN D FAMILY SERVICES
. WORK OPPORTUNITY CENTER

1ST ANNUAL JOB INFORMATION
FAIR
SEPTEMBER 12, 2006
10:00 AM TO 2:00 PM

Help Wanted

FEpERAL
POSTAL JOBS

Now
accepting
resume's for
part-time

NAZARENE CHURCH FAMILY
LlFE CENTER
1110 FIRST AVENUE GALLIPOLIS,
0Hl045631

sales
Acquisitions
151 Second Ave.
Gallipolis
No phone calls
please

EMPLOYERS AND JOB SEEKERS
WELCOME FOR MO RE
l'JFORMATION CA LL: 740-446-3222

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FREE TRAINING AND JOB PLACEMENT
Home Health Aide/ Homemaker Training
· Program
ToRe HeldM
Tile Mulberry cmmmuri~l' Center
Pomeroy,OH
Th~

Area Age ncy o n Aging is curTent ly acce pt ing

ppl ic;lllons for the ir Home He:-tlth Aide/ Homc makt"r T r aining Program.
The pmgram is f ree to 1he pan ici pams. Lpon graduati ng. pm1ici pant
will be as~i!'ttcd with job plaremcnt. Fnr more information contaL·t the
Area Agency on Agi ng at

1 ·800-~31-26..W .

An Equal Opportunity Employer,
To schedul e nn inte rview call Meigs Seni or Center n.t 740-992-2 161.

II!!

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

lludtye Hllk -Hod;lfl@ Valltr
IVY'~"'" ll-~""rt~ l i.l~&gt;!rt~l

.'i1·n·in , Athm.,.'Nr li ~in •. M"r 1. .Honml' Nohle. Pan and Wa.1hin wn (mwllt'.l.

Holzer Senior Care Center
Seeking Full Time
Billing Clerk
Holzer Senior Care Center is
looking for a full-time billing clerk .
Experience with Medicare and
Medi caid electrQnic billing is
preferred. Must be abl e to work in a
multi-tas k positiol) and have good ·
communication skills.
Benefits include:
Medical Insurance
Life Insurance
Dental Insurance
Short Term Disability
Vacation ·
Holiday Pay
Paid In-services
· Regular Rate Increases
401K
If interested please stop by and sec
us at 380 Colonial Drive. Bid w~ ll .
Ohio or give Barb Peterson.
Di rec1nr of Human Resources or
Tcrc&gt;a Wibon. IIL1siness Office
Ma nager a call at 740-446-500 I.

20116 "Top Ten He.t Places to Work in
Ohio"

111t0

L,--•Hf•u-\.V,•w•r•rn_.J L,.-•HEt.r·
·-\.VAN
-JEil•
. _.J
DRIVE

Are you 55 or older? Pai d
employment traming for
interested
individuals
Clerical, food ·service· and 30. 2006.
driving posi110ns available ,
Call the Senior Employment
Help
Center (866.1734-230 t .

Help Wanted

Ca ll

1"0

Email Resume:

call (740)446-4043 to idanti- - -- - - - - - - I.:.O;;;;;';;;r;;;'
' ;;;';;;
Hs;;;H;;;
ed;;;;;;;;;;!,l
fy
Zuspan Metal Sulvage. Now
buying junk cars , buses, An E)(cellen\ way to earn

Apartments for Rent .. .. .. ....... ...... .......... ...... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ............................ 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessorie s .... ...... ................ 760
Auto Repalr ..... .. ................................ ........... 770

·

A local financial institution is
seeking a full-time colh~c:\o1.
This individual must possess good ~erbal and written
communication skills, ab1lity
to work "'\flh 9)(isting loan
officers And Chief Lending
"Officer to develop .an understanding ol all aspecls of the
Collection
Department
Salary commensumte w11t1
experience Interested ind1·
viduals send resume to
Edwards W. St1nes , 21t
West
Second
Street,
~omeroy.
Member FDIC
and Equal Opportunity
Employer.

A New Poin t or View

L.----;;,;.-_.1

Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

'

YARn SALEGALuPous

Tree already cut down to
g 1 •1 ea~ay for firewood, need Absolute Top Dol lar U.S.
cut up. (304)593 -275 9
Silver and Golc:t Coms ,
Proolsels, Gold Rings. PreI..an· i\1\'0
1935
u.s. Currency,.
FOUNil
Solita1re Diamond s· M T.S
Co1n Shop, 15 1 Second
FOUND: Tri-Color Beagle, Avenue , Gallipolis, 740·446)Nib righ t Collar in Leon, 2842 .

78

Over 35,000 Readers

pn

Kittens "free to good home

CLASSIFIED INDEX

76 Falma.

eo Manor

..,.-•Hf•J
•J'•w•
· -nn_
AN • r

Yool SAJ£

(740)245-5186.

751nlho~ol

oiU.S.A.

ltJO

70

~

dog . (740)379-2467.

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announ cement .......... ,,,, ....... ,.. ........ ............ 030
Antique s ....................... ................................ 530

77=

i

I· \ 11'1 0\ \If \T

150;
t52

\II · ~

ANNOUNC.:\\-tENTS

138 Healtoy
139tsleol140 ABaldwin
142 Blerrish
t43 Facilalol ·
145 Smel
148 E plurillus t471lny bit
148 H'""""' pal1

48 Sllcl
50 Pl•lf4"kM1
51 ,..,.._ paqlle
52Amrogefal
64 PlldoMod
55 Dish
55 Blry .
59 Anoz- polio
80 l'lrt oiM'IT (alb.)
62Blob
65 Rtw'+Jii

D•lly J:n - C o lun, n : 1:00 p . m .
M o ndey -Frld a y ror :tn •., rt:l o n
In Next: Day •a P a p e r
S unday J:n-Co luOTin : :1. : 00 p . n "\.
F or Sund•V• Pape r

Lab. Want to buy Junk Cars
Male. Duly Ad Area Please (304 )773 _5004

on ut,_,

47aurdona

·1.

)We will not knowing
(304)458·1510
y accept any adver
isement In violatio
f the law.
l~~iiiii~iiiiiiii;;.l Found: CMocolate

129-- lou

41FtM

Real

dvertlsements ar
ubjeet to the Federa

11 0 Roslraln
111Tense

G IVEAWAY

Ti ny si l 11~r &amp; black kittens,
male &amp; female. parents Oil
prem1ses. (740)4 16-4015

;; =::,..,on adoor

1~1

of Mason, WV

•

therlght to edit,

iD«l

1\

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your ctasslned ads
.;::, ~
Borders $3 .00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
'
$1 .00 for tarqe

Wprd A,ds

7:30 a.rn. to 5:30 p.m.

*POLICIES*

Sale at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30.
For more information, call Brad at•(740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers .com

tOol Alllnnalt;e fllliY
107 bddlr pilot
IIlii Avet-. Mica
110 lnllt
111 Old boat

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Monday thru Friday

Cow/Calf Pairs $485 -$ 1,025; Bred Cows $475-$950;
Baby Calves $20-$250; Goats , $21 -$132; Lambs, $92$112.50; Hogs, $44-$47.

Wai·Mart

classified@mydailytribune.con:w

Oftfce #o«r'~

Back To The Farm:

THANK YOU

~allipolis Ball~ arribunr •The DailySentinel• Joint ~lra~ant legistrr

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

Swulay, August 27, 2006

73

..•

'

CLASSIFIED

roots and pay homage to
farm life," said Soto, who
joked with friend s as they
picked peaches.
People who came 10 pick
from the trees were encouraged to enjoy the day.
"My kids are city kids. I
want them to have some of
those great memories I do
from m.y childhood memori es of playing on a
farin, of playing in the dirt,"
said Kenn Fujioka, 49, who
brought hi s 11 -year-old
dau ghter and 13-year-old
son 4P from Los Angeles.
He spent weekends as a
child on his family' s coffee
farm in Hawaii.
"You can tell they' re not
so perfect, but the.Y taste
really good," smd his
daughter, Elena VegaFujioka, palming one of !he
huge peaches.
Nina Ricceri ,. 9, whose
family adopted a tree with
several other families from
their Oceano neighborhood,
had the perfect word for a
supposedly imperfect fruit .
"It tastes like a peach,
only peachier," she said.

Farmers.hope boom in need for the gasoline
additive eth~nol will boost com profits

Market Goat
at the 2006
Meigs Fair ~~

FARM

program helps people connect with fanning
get to spend two Saturday'
harvesting as many pe ach~;
fro m their adopted trees 1
they can cart away.
"I was trying to fi nd a W~)
to personalize produce, ..
Masumoto said of the adopta-tree program. "A lot of·people don't have that connection to their food anymore.''
Elbenas are an older type
of peach that grow a thick
coat of ·fuz7. and swell big
enough to bully a grapefrui t.
When they ripen, their sunkissed side turns a deep red
and triangular yellow
streaks emerge, the stamp of
a leaf's one-time embrace.
But the same qualities
that create the variety's
unique taste make it too delicate to package and sell
commercially. Most peaches sold in supermarkets are
smaller, redder, less fuzzy
and heartier than Elbertas,
which' bruise easily and
can 't withstand the weeks in
cold storage required for
cross-country
shipment.
When they do sell at
upscale grocery stores, they
typically go for about $3 per
pound, Masumoto said.
"People want ready-toeat-looking fruit, but the
irony is they rarely eat it the
same day they buy it,"
Masu.moto said. "So, the

PageD2

·

'"''..,., w.infm.:i~ion.com

Equid Opportunity Employe r

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Hatp Wanted

PERSONAL BANKER
One of We~ t Virgin ia\

lar~e~ t comm uni!} banks is looking for cncrgct!c
Personal Banker cand idates for our Puint Pleasant offi~.:e .

Successful carllliliatcs slmu lr.J be highly moti v;.~ t e d . se lf-s t a rt e ~ wil h at least 3
year ~ proven ~ucce .~~ in ret ail b"ow k:ing . Candidates shuuld have exce l\t:ut
customer servil·c ~kill!-. ami verbul cmnmun icatJun ~kills, desktop cumputer
'&gt;k ills. a general know ledge of the financial ~en• ice i n du ~ try's products and
sen·il.:es and be ubl c to~muh· indcpcn(lcnt decisions conrcming customer
i nqu iric.~ nnd pmblems. Loan ex pcr ien ... e is prc fc m•d.
off~-:1~ compctitiw salary and ro mprchcnsive be nefit~.
including ;t -101 (1-.l plan . C i t~ i~ une ufWV\ l&lt;~r)!C!--t &lt;:O!llll\Untl} bank~ and

City NoJti(lnal B&lt;mk
1 1ff~rs

a gr('at tl'am en\ 1mnrnenr

Seriou.1· candidmes shmlidSubmit resumes by
September 5,1006 to:

· ~ity National !lank
AUn: HR (PB-Pt. Pleasant)

P. 0. Box 7615
Cross L a nes, WV 25313
or fax 304· 769-131]
Male\Female\Disabled\ Veteran

EEOC/AA Emplo)e r

Member FDI C

�I

Page 04 • 6 unbap G:llltd -6 tntlnd

~

1-IJ.J J' WM"1VJ)

Officer

Local Electrical 0 1slnbutor
seeking a part 11me dnver,
must be 21 years old wtlh a
valtd dnvers license Contact
West V1rg1nta Electrrc 1885
Eastern Ave, Gallipolts

• NOTICh

i

ouny
IS
accapt1n
resumes from potential can
1attes to ftll the poSition o
Ulatant
911/E M
!rector
reQUireS ,
erl1ftcat1on
EAPONS Cerllftcatton,
ssoclitle or B S Oegre
elplul (but not reQuired)
ust be proltctent tn al
spects of computers (pro
rammtng helpful but no
eqUired) mcludmg bela
amlliar wt th Arc·VIew,
Reports
an
rystal
ccess Must have preVl
us expertence 1n the lol
owmg areas E'mergenc
Dtspatchmg, Emergeoc
aoagement. Superv1s1o
nd work1ng knowledge o
EMA Flood Plato progra
helpful) and Ctty·Styl
ddresstng
programs
alary benetns and sched
le w1!! be dtscussed dunn
ntervtew
process
Resumes w11! be accepts
nttl September 1st 2006
Please send or dellvet al
resumes to Mason Count
11 Center, PO Box 38
Pomt Pleasant WV 2555
he
Mason
Count

MONI&lt;:)'

m

I..OAN

~=:;~;~::;
• • -~OTI CE••

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Otvtslon of
F1nanc•al
lnsltlut•on's
Ofhce
of
Consumer
Affa~rs BEFORE you relt·
nance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
ol reQuests lor any large
advance payments of
lees or tnsurance Call the
Offtce
of
Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1-866·
278-0003 to learn If the
mortgage
broker
or
Is
property
lender
licensed (Thts ts a publiC
serv1ce announcement
tram the OhiO Valley

Needed, Contract labor for
local home Improvement
company. Some expene nce
would be beneltctal
Pay
based upon JOb and e11.pen·
ence Please call (740)992·
5094

Gaillpo!ls Career COllege
(Careers C,lose To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
1·800·214·0452
www galllpallll&lt;:ll•eercolk!ge com
Accrod1led Membe1 Accred111ng
Counc•l for lndepen(]oo! Colleges
and Schools 12748

Stuck trymg to f1gure aut
what to do With yoUJ life?
Nurse
Feel you are go1ng nowhere
With your current JOb?
Are you 1nsp1ted to help 1he
The UmverSI!y ot R1o
elderl y itve lite to the ful lest'&gt;
G1anda and Rto Grande
Put you r s~tll s to use and
Community College can
JOin HCA Manor Care lor a
help
chal!engmg and reward1ng
Call 1-B00-2 82 7201 or tog
career'
on to www rto.edu
·

MDS NURSE
COORDINATOR/
ADON
Ouahftca ltons tncludo a cur·
rent AN license 10 Ohio 2
years of long-term care
e~pe n e nce, MDS expe nence preferred Strong man·
agemenl and commumca·
tion skills are a· must! Pt10r
superv tsor~ expenence We
otter competitive pay ad a
comprehenstv{)
beneftts
package lncludtng 401 (k)
with company match, tw110n
asSistance and moret

Overbrook
Rehabilitation
Center IS current ly accepting
appilcattons
for
Housekeepmg &amp; laundry
part-t1me position All tnterested applicants should p~ ck
up an appllcatton at 333
Page sheet, Middleport,
OH For turther tnformatron
please contact Lmda at
(740)992·6472 E 0 E

$22,572 Mtdwest Homes
(740)828 2750

SERVICIS
ovzone
he Company that deliver
un Cool-lightmg Retro
Exotic 1tems ei(Cttement
he 60's and 70's w"h
n
odern day twtst For Mor

Al1 real eatata ad ...antalng
In thla newapaper It
subject to the Federal
Fair Hous ing Act ol1968
which make• II Illegal to
advertise ' an~
!Imitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, se11
familial atatua or national
origin. or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.·•

etatls call 740· 742·323
r 740·742·1066,
Fo
1·866·550
V1s11 Novzone a
ww novzone com
omlng Soon The zon
Retail Store

prelert~n ce ,

Soulmates LLC comtog
Soon' For people who are
looktng tor true love, a
Soulmates
'740·742·3232
or 61 4-783·1232 l.ooktng for
Reps

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertltements fo r real
estate which Is In
violation ol the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwetungs advertised ln
this newspaper are
available on an equal

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1·888·582·3345

2 stor y home, 3 bed·
room, 2 ba th 2 car
garage 3 acres m1 1 5
I m10utes hom Gallt pohs
I Photo/i nfo
online
www orvb com
Code
7186 or Call (740)446·
7029

bues.

opponunlt ~

Country tn the C1ty Two
tncorne producmg houses 1n
Pt Pleasant
One home
newly rerJ odeled $20 000
tor both (740)367·7760
House 10 Henderson, large
ltvtng and Dmtog Room,
l&lt;tt che n Bath, 2 Bedrooms,
241(24 detached Garage
A ppro~ 3 acres
$30 000
(304)675-6732

New listing
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath

I

Ranch, new wtn dows.
Trex
deck ,
13x32
Sunroom, 1 car garage,
tu11Shed basement, cellar
Summer Kttchen, On 54
acres. l andscaptng &amp;
mature trees. Hysell Run
Pomeroy, (740)992·2834
app only

2990 Sta te Route t24,
Syracuse out oll!ood p lam
Ohm Rtver v1ew, 6 room 3
bedroom, 1 1f2 bath 1 acre
tot, garage (740)992·7866,
(740)992·5776 (740 )339·
3363

NO DOWN PAYMENT oven

ML'if'tiMNf1lUS

New lower Pr1ces on
limestone at Rodney Stone
(740)245·5316 A1ver Gravel
8. Sand also avatlabte

i

__

lms &amp;
ACREAGE
1 75 Acre l ot
Mason Co WV
Rt 2 Box 127,
leon. WV 25123
Approx 500'
Road Front age
Uttlllles Ava•labte
59,995
(304)295·9090

4-5 bedroom 2 bath . 3.000
sq ft
Hardwood
floors
throughout
the
house
Water/trash
pa1d
Call
Ap prox 3 acres 2 house (7 40)446· 7425
s1tes Uttht1es x2 c1ty water
large solid 2 story barn , 4bd HUD horne t Buy tor
approx 1/2 m1le ou r SA 2 18 $20 9001 For ltSIIngs 800·
Bea utiful lot, city or county 39 1-5228x1709
schoo ls Senous buye rs
AHentlonl
only $44K (740)44 1-7333
Local company offertng "NO
land lor sale Several 5 to DOWN PAYMENT" Pro·
12 ac re lots located 10 Gallia grams for you to buy your
Co Morgan Twp an9 Mergs home tns1eact of renting
Co . Salem Twp LaM con· • 100% f1nanc1ng
tracts
avatlab le
Some • Less than perfec1 credt l
restm;:ttons No calls after accepted
• Paymen t could be the
9 OOpm 1740)609·0143
same as rent
MercerVIlle bwldtng lot lor Mortgage
l ocators
sale 4 745 acres SA 218 (740)367·0000
close to schools Good
home
stte
$16 000 Clean, pretty. 3BR house for
1740)256 1553 1740)339· rent Downtown $695 .,.
9236
uhllt1es Call 740-4 46·9 961

Happy Ad

l arge 2 bedJOoms. stove
rei washer &amp; dryer. no pets
dep Patnot (740)379-2540
Mobile Home sties for up to
16xSO m Counlry Homos
(740)385·4019

BIRTHDAY
DOUG

Going out of
Business Sale
Gene Plants
Heating &amp; A/C

300 4th Ave.

I

Gallipolis

1

Happy Ad

Happy 45th ~t!
Birthday J.P. f1
Jlr. Preacher Man Ill
,.-.

•

~.~

Wdll\ mul lrumrd 1r1 It' (' \Uif&gt;
jw r rlu· 11m mrh of rlw 11 md

I ,

&lt;Of{' \It'd llh' a1 I 1/or1d ~r/rnl/\

m r•lw e
Help Wanted

HeiR Wa,nted

m IIIIIWIIl/llji//C'(/Iht• \AI J
Cll•{m lOIII

f~lnt

r11 I '"1/tlll d 1/w /CJIIIIIK
ltllllrflrlf' {1 If Jl 1{1111'/fl

H !llf h i \ Ill

111111
WU/

t/u

11//11/lm'

ft \1'11/lld a\ em /1
~0111 /HI lilt'

I held 1ou close in my hea, r rndav 1/ marl" m•' f"d
wmpltff.,

tou 111r11 hm r 1/itd.,, biU )OU are nor gm1e ymt 11111
(/~(/

Q&amp;i.NOW HIRING
McDonalds of Gallipolis
is now accepting applications for
the Ciallipolis location.

1M tt port of me
A r long as tht Sllll s1Wtf'5

the \)llfdhifllll ~
rll~ rdmfa/ls

Yt)ll 1111Jl fne on tnudl.{ oj mr jorc~tr.

jor rltur n n/1 my heurr knr111 r

Sadly missed by llir wife Kitty,
Son Tim, Daughter Sherri,
Granddaughltr Whittrey, Brothtr Haney,
S i~lcrt A'ntlu•rlnt &amp; Rrtb)'
I' mmd\ mul ( lmrr!J I mntly

10:00 O.f11.
:~!i~ HI The Hutllon Center On Rt. til R. Of
W.U. We'll Be Selling Hntlques, Partial
modern fi much more.

I

Downtown Apartment. 3
bedrooms, 1 1f2 baths, cen·
tral air, ca rpet/h ardwood
fl oors, appliances includtng
washer/dryer
provtded
Ample storage avail able
Deposit
requ tred
Call
(740)446-7654

Funriture

1 Pl M I B R Suite W1 Whth.
Mar ble . Supe r Curvet! G l.t~s Chtlld CthiiK'I ~

Be,mtl f ul

P'-

(\lrnct

Cupb(~tud

O.tk Cur\tXI G l .t"~

SCL tetur) 0.1k Ht Hny s Q Pl Fl.tllll' Mah
D R Sune 0.1~ Hnnkc.tse E.trly SIL'P H,td,
CuptJo,uds. ~.m cy O.tk Wardrobe Oa~ \\,1sh

M 1 W.tsh

St.tnd's.

St.md

s 5 Pc Q I\

B I{

Ellm Vjew
Apartments
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt
Starting at $385 and up
Central heat &amp; a1r, WID
hook-up com operated
laundry owner pays water,
sewer. &amp; trash

(304)882-3017
~d
&amp;
Furntsuao
apt, 3 room s
bath, upstairs, clea n, no
pats Ref/depostt requtrea
(740)446 -1519

L£ Amount 01 Vtrg m1 .1 Rose . Rotanc Janncct.
I C'nx:ks, Wdlcr Roseville Por l~n -'r, &amp; H 7n-5.
Ro~evtl l e C.md lc Holder 160- ) I &amp; Ro~e\JIIt:
lbl2 11. S o\rnt Ch,mde lter l'itl.tn) S1vk
Jum ho Jar Old Blue Ctnt 1 1 J.tr.-..
Chnstnu.. Plate&lt;&gt; 70\ &amp; ~0\., (;"·nwn
Btml. Hen On Ne~l . Milk Bott le~ Lg. l'Jtd1cr
W/ye llow R11~e~. &amp; Much Mml'

GraCIOUS ilvtng 1 and 2 bad·
room apartment s a1 Village
Manor
and
Rtverst de
Apartments In Middleport
From $295·$444 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Houstng
OpportunitieS

l'oll t'C1rblcs

Up

l u\~

8.: Ball Cctrd' Sm

e,,,,

lton
Stove Ir o n Sk il let Cnflct' G r 111dcr L.! Sthl'l
T J.tV W1 Cnllt'e &amp; ll•a P1 1h - ue,lllll'l l Su~.u
Wtlll..l

call 446-46-16

304·7735447 011304·?73·5785

- H-e -lp_ W_a_n-te_d_

Help Wanted

" In1ature Pinscher CKC ·
Sale sofa&amp;. cha1r $350 Sola m
&amp; 1 seat $400 Reclmer red/m ale
$350
AKC
$200 Mollohan Furn Clark blac k/female $400 Tall,
Chapel Ad, Porter 0 claw
shots,
wormed
(740)388·01 73
Ope n (740)388-8788
Saturday only
Purebred Golden Retneve r
Thompsons Appliance &amp; puppies, 'o'et checked. ftrst
Repatr-675-7388 For sale, shots, parents &amp; previous
re-condtttoned autom atic
washers &amp; dryers rerr~ge rators, gas and elect r~c
ranges, Ellr condtlloners. and
wrmger washers Will do
repat rs on maJor brands m
·sh op or at your home

r ... .
,~

H e lp Wanted

r=====::::..;::::::::=====-===::::::::::::;-

:.c.....:._____--::-::-:c::--

Sale
Vinyl 13'2" wide
Berber 13' 6" wide
Mollohan Carpet
76 Vine 44 -7444

outstanchng &lt;tnd lo..:u~~d "'' 01 ~

managers. We' re lookmg for a dynam1c per "otHl that bcltcv""
c ustome r s come fr rst. h as un eye for fa~h10n and knov.· ~ wh. 1111
means to exceed our customer's expeLl&lt;~tton!-1

Halfhill's Taverh

If you have retail managcmcn1 ex perience. we " ~mid li ke to
speak with y ou about a career with Peebles.
avrttl ublc m our Store

w re locate

234 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
is proud t9 bnng you
Wed. n1ghlladies night
$1.00 Beers
7 pm tillfam

we hdvc po~r11on~

Man age1 T1arn rng Prog t a m

We Offer a Competilive Sa/my, Bonus Potentral &amp; Euellertt
Bene,fits

Anyone interested in applying·
may pick up an application at either
our Rio Grande or our 'Pain!
Pl easant location.

Plea~e

I

mail/e. , wi/ or fax your re\ ume to:
Scot Sock
D1~trrrt Man11gcr
Pcchlc~ Dt' pdrttncnt Stotc
3~5 1\ M.tyn Tr.ul
P.unhlt lie. KY ~ 12~11

Please specify Gallipolis location
wh en filling out applicati on and
return to th e above locations.

F,tX 606-7X9- 1102
..:0rn
W\~ \\ pcchl cs ~.·om

,..,(Jcli.:Cit..,tn~·.:~torc~

\\L' ol!l' &lt;illl.'ljllll Ojlj)ll!\Ullll\ '.'lll pi0\1.'1 ,11\d rlillllllli' ,\ 1illl ~ llu \11\ J ~jll lo l

•

L,~-------·

pup on prem1ses, reference
on prevmus ltHers females •KIEFER BUILT •vALLEY
$200 ,
males
$ 150, •BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE(740) 662-0364
STOCK TRAILERS *LOAD·
iir.;i70F;;;.~~---., MAX
*GOOSENECK,
MUSICAL
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
..,
INsTRUMmi'S
'ALUMA
' ALUMINUM

dillOn

$10 500

I

Ballet, Point, Tap, Jazz,
·Baton, Flag
Studios: Locust St. . Gallipolis
Main Sl. Middleport
740·245·9880
740·645·3836

Train in Ohio
National Certification
Financial Assistance
Job Placement Assistance

3601
81 Dodge 112ton, 4x4 6 cyl
4 speed , Ru ns goo d.
S1.450. 174{)) 448·1655

r

Fo~~LE

03-11 - 1697T

~~-•lllitiiiiiiiiiiii-_.J

e

1· 1986 Chevy· passenger
van VB , PS. PB, AC
174{))441-2667
1994 Mercury Vtllager M1n1
Van PL, PW, PS, New ti res,
runs excellent $2,000 Neg
Call 740·992·4272

04 Kawasaki 700 Prame
4x4 Real tree hardWOOdS
camo, under warranty until
03108 $4 500 (740)446·
7158

Advertise your item
of$1,000 or less 1
for ONLY $5.00
*One llemPerAd
• Personal hems· NoBusmesses
' Musl Adverttse Pnce
' Run.1for (l days)

PUBLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
060416
Sealed proposals will
be accepted from pr...
qualified bidders at
the ODOT Office of
Contracts
unlll
10 :00am
on
September 20, 2006.
Project 06D4t6 Is
loceted
In
Gallla
County, CR SIVarlous
and is a Guardrail
Rebuilding
project
The date set for completion of lhis work
shall be as set forth In
lhe bidding proposal.
Plans
and
Specifications are on
file in lhe Department
of Transportation.
August27. September

3, 2006

Write your Ad HERE (IS words or less)

5

ADVERTISEM-f'N T
FOR BIDS
Separate sealed Bids
for the painting of our
250.000 gallon elevated slorage tank at
and

ou r

elevat-

Fall Semester
begins
Monday,
August 28
at the
·
University of
Rio Grande and
Rio Grande
Community College.
Call 1-800-282·7201
for more
information.

or

An appointment may
be made to view the
truck by contacting

Increase

or

decrease or omit

to

any

Item or Items and/or
award to the lowest
and best BIDDER.
Each proposal must

contain the full name
of every person or
company Interested
In the same. The
Tuppers
PlainsChester Water District
reserves the nght to
waive any informall·
ties or irregularities tn
!he Bidding.
Howard
Caldwell,
President
of
the
Tuppers
Plains·

(8) 25, 27
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE

The

Raccoon

Township

Board

of

Trustees will offer for
sale

a

1988, 4· Door,
Cab,

Craw
International
Truck.

Dump
.

Sealed bids will be
accepted
lor
this
!ruck by certified msil
to : Raccoon Townsh tp

Tuppers
PlainsChester Water District
at the office located at

Board of Trustees,

Bar 3D Road ,
Ohio
45772, until
10:00
o 'clock
a:m .
September 5th . 2006,
and then at said.offrce
publicly opened and

Reedsville,

Our CLASSIFIEDS will WORK for YOU!!!

right to accept or
reject any or all bids.
The dump truck will
be sold " as Is".
The truck can be

ed storage tank at
Lotlridge In Athens
County. They will be
received
by
!he

3956t

Ad must be submitted on lhis ooupon and
musl be prepaid.Offer e•pin:s 81311116

obtained from:
Tuppers
Plains Chester Water District
39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville , OH 45772
(740) 985·3315
The Tuppe rs PlatnsChester Water District
reserves the right to
re)ectany and all Blda

Chester Water District

Public Notice

Sites available w/3 months
free lot rent

Gallia Meigs Performing
Arts

Bulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders, Dump
Trucks, Graders, Scrapers, Excavators

800-516-7303

50,000-gallon

Ready for a rewarding &amp;
challenging career?
Apply for CHHA classes
beginning Sept. 11th
Applicatins must be submitted
by Sept 8th
(740) 441-1377
We help with JOb placemen'tl

Training For Employment

Associared Training Services
2323 Performance Pkwy
Columbus, OH 43207
www.equipmenloperator.com

Five Points in Meigs

740 385-2434

Operator

740-645·

County

lntersectwn of 33 &amp; 664 Logan
M-F 9-7, Sat 9-6 Closed Sunday

Heavy Equipment

2002 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2
door automatic trans 55,000
mtles
AC, power locks,
amf lm
powe r wmdows
radio, cd player 1n great con-

LIVINIUCK

TRAILERS ·e&amp;w GOOSE·
JUJ~,t.LI..J\.A
Conn
Alto Sa xophone ' NECK
HITCHES .
,._,;,MERiiiiiitrnANiiiiiiiiiDiiilSiiE
iio.J1 Have Begmner Books and Carmichael Equipment
'
New Reeds. Good Shape (740}446·2412
1· Crattma ttc XL twm bed. 1 $400 00 740-949-2453
set· l udwig drums; 1·4 tt
metal brake to bend l tn· With
Real Estate
Real Estate
stand !740 )441_2667
---,--,--.,-.,-42 Blue &amp; Gold McCaw
Feathers,
$35/cash
(304)88 2-2436

'

Add l t~o n a H y. lf you arc able

r

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

4x4
FoR SALE

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
, ._ _ _ _ _ _ _,J UncondtiiOnal llfettme guar·
2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee aotee. local references furltmtted
$10,500
Loan nished Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
value $1 4,500 (740)367
0870, Rogers Basement
7762 or (740)367·7272
Waterproofing

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

A Store Manager
For New Store in Gallipolis, OH
our b u st!]ess Wi th

r

1978
Coachman
Leprechaun
motorhome,
21ft has good motor, instde
needs work Asktng $2 000
OBO If mterested cal1
(7-40)441-1236, if no answer
lea'o'e message, ask for
96 Chevy Suburban, 2 WD, Janie
FMfCD dual atr, 3rd row
2005 28ft Dutchmen w/sllde
seat, 2 sets nms dual
out.
bunk and extras Sttll
exhaust $5,500 080 Htgh
m1les but runs grea t under warranty $14,500
(74{))367·7755
(614)554·4526
\ I R\ IC I \
99 Chevrolet Suburban,
loaded wtth leather tntenor,
HoME
new ttres, good · condl t1on
l\1PROVEMFNfS
$4,800 1740)446·6323 '

BULLETIN BOARD

Now Hiring
We have bu ilt

balers square balers &amp; and weekends.
mower conditioners @4 7%
Ftxed Jor 48 months through
John
Deere
Crech t
Carmichael
Equtpment
(740)446 2412

"EOUS

Honey suckl e
H1lls
Apartments, Gallipolis, now
accepttng applicatiOns for 2
Bedroom Apa rtments. No
Rental Assistance available
at this time Rent starts at
$3 15fmo Eq ual Houstng
Opportunity (740)446-3344 Hoi Tub for Sale (304)675·
1732
Immacul ate 2 bedroom
JET
apar lment m the country
AE RAT ION lviOTOAS
New carpet &amp; cabtnets,
Repat red, New &amp; Aebut!t In
l resl11y patnted &amp; decorated ,
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
WID hookup Beautifu l coun800·537 ·9528
try sett ing Must see to
apprectate
$399/mo
(614) 595-7773 or 1·800· Ke nmore Rad1ant Free
798·4686.
Standing Range With self·
clean1ng oven, $100 0 80
Newer roomy One Bedroom
1740)245·0610
whh breaklast bar Stove.
new refngerator Countr y New Bow Flex Power Pro
setltng First/last mo rent with adra leg elll ens1on
$600 (304)675·40 14
plus, deposit 740·992·3543

www.auctionziP.com
-

" fH \ \\I'C II{ I\ Ill 1'\
Commercial butldtng "For
Sale" 1600 square !eel, off
Auros
street park1ng Great toea·
FOR SALE
Mol 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis PriCe "Negottable·
$500' POLICE IMPOUNDS•
New, Lrg. Outdoor Stone &amp; New roof! Mottvated Seller' CarsfTrucll.s from $500' For
Metal Fireplace N1ce1 $250
listings 800 391-5227 x3901
1 \tnt . ., , t'l'l u . .,
0 90.(740)245·0610
,\.I 1\I\IOC h
02 Chevy Cavalier, 4 dr
Downtown
Comme rctai Trailer Htl ch 6 0001 Tra1 ler '"':11""-~~--"""1
auto, a1r, CD, good con dt·
wgt.
B50Tongue
wgt
,
rat1
ng
FARM
Retail space lor Rent $4001
tlon $4,250 {740}446-1663
111s
As1ro
Van
$50
(304)882·
EQUIPMENI'
month
Upstairs Offtce
(leave message)
2324
Suttes for Rent $1251 month
you pay the Utilities Call
"K1EFER BUILT ' VALLEY 1933 Dodge Street Rod
PErs
(703)528·0617
"BISON
'HORSE 6 LIVE·
FOR SALE
Steel BOdy $22,000, t 973
STOCK TRAILERS ' LOAD·
\II l&lt;t II \ \ll l \1
Plymouth Duster 57,500
"GOOSENECK,
2 temale Boston Tamers, 4 MAX
1304)675·3773
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
HOLSEHOW
months old $100 (740)379' ALUMA
"ALUMINUM
2467
Goops
1994 Honda CIVIC $500
TRAILERS ' B&amp;W GOOSE·
Pollee Impounds! For ltstHITCHES.
2
male
Minia ture NECK'
n os BOO 391 5227 ext
Equlpme nl 1 "'
·
•
Dachshund pupp1es,
1 Carmlchul
~ 7 40)446- ~ 412
C54B
shortha1r red &amp; 1 longhatr
blackftan, vet
checked
Appliance
-20_0_0_Cc-h-,-ys- le-,-Sc-e-b-n-ng
Dtesel D1tch W1tch Trencher Convertible Ltm tted Cloth
1304)593·3820
.,-,.,...--.,...------ with
bac khoe
$7 500
top leather, lnf1n1ty sound
Warehouse AKC
Mlm
P1n sche" (304)675·3773
system
Garage
kept
Pupp18S Males bl ack/rust,
30mpg
New
t1res
$7,500
1n Henderson, WV
Pre· vet. checked
AKC Mm1 JO 4240 CfHIA, NH 315
owned Appliances starting Schnauz er
Puppies wtre· he baler, round baled 1740)446-7484 0' (740)441 7411
at $75 &amp; up all und er Wh ite/black
salt/pepp er, straw Call (740)256·601 1
Warranty also have recon- bla ck/silver.
$400. each.
dttloned Big Screen TV's 740·696·1 085
John Deere 1 0 tt No Ttl Dnl! 2002 Cavat,ei 4d, 5· spe ed,
59,395 m1las $4,300 1999
rent
Carmichael
by Ron's TV (304)675· AKC Pomaraman Pups, 3 for
Taurus $3,700, 1998 Olds
Equipment (740)446-2412
7999
Male, 3 Femal e wormed,
lntngue $3,400. We have
- - - - - - - - $350 (740)388·8642
Grand
Ams.
Su nftres
John Deere M1n1 El(cavatorf
El ectnc cook stove, $75
Saturos
Neon
S· 10
Almond color, co ndttton AKC Reg tstered Lab pup· Tractor Loa der Backhoe!
N•ssans. Toyota Blazer
good (740)446-7481 call p1es,had shots &amp; wo rmed. Sk td Stee rs Carmtchael Vans, Stra tu s 3 mo nths,
Equ1pmen t (740)446-2412
before 9.00pm
1 Chocolate &amp; Black, male &amp;
3,000 mtle warranty Cook
female $250 00 ready to go - - - - - - - - Motors1 328 Jackson P1ke,
Pecan wood dtmng room
304-n3-5746 or 304-593· New John Deere Compacts
1740) 446·0103
table, four chatrs, hutch
2570
and 5000 Sarles Utility trac$300, 1960's Walnut Dantsh
tors @0% Fixed for 36
bookcase bed , mat ching
Joh n 2002 Mercury Mountatneer
Basset Hound Pupptes both months through
dresser and chest of draw·
parents' reg tstered 1 male, Deere Credtt Ca rmichael Load ed wtth only 48.000
e rs $27 5, 1940's Four
mll es
1 fem ale, $200 each Has Equipment (740)446-24 12
poster bed , matchtng dress·
1st
shots &amp; wormed - - - - - - - - 20()2 Ford L1ght10g F150
er and stool $275. (740)245Quality John Deere Hay ptck up 30,000 m1les Call
1304)675·451 0
5488 before 1Opm
Equipment f~r less-rou nd (740 ~256· 1 245
evemng s

2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer
EXT lT 4WO Thlfd row
seat Garage kept like new
$16,500
condttlon
1740)446·7484 0 ' (740)441·
7411

FACTORY DIRECT
STEEL BUILDINGS
Clearance on Repos, can·
celled orders, surplus build·
lngs No reasonable offer
refused Call Today lor avail·
able s1zes 1..aGD-222-6335

t'lllh{WI'

uml 1111 1111rtr 11111red luKI!
J IIIII

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apa rtments,
an d/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call 1740)441-11 11
for application 8. lniOfmat lon

DEPARTMENT STORES

11 tr~i/

ltJIJn• Hill lflr/(1\'

Thursday, A\19. 31,

Peebles

Jim Hardyman

l1

(740)441-0 194 or (740)4411184
_______

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66

In Memory

I f1'/l \0111 IOJu

AUCTION

&amp; all remami ng
sluck. Stop by or

In Lovilll( Memorv

Magtc Years Day-Cafe-PreSchool Inc Opemngs avatl·
able, now accepllng Fall·
Enrollmonr State licensed
"Puthng Chtldren F~rst"
(304)675-5847

LARGE ANTIQUE h
COLLECTIBLE

Van

Mom. L1sa

Aprr/22, !1)4J . Alr!liH/26 2005 '
I /waul 1m1r I'OI(I' ir1 rhe

Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apartments Washerfdry ar
hookup, stova/ret rtgerator
Included
Also avail able units State
Route 160 Call for details

Pcl~t horn H:1s kch' I tlllg_,tl'll' tt!c:'l B.l~kl'l: Every thrng Must Go 191.)) B.t} hcrr) - l tN~ hn,g'k lkll - 11)ll7
Corner Jot Bu1ldin g
-- r im
Othll"
1V1 ht 1hn~· r
Wl1 h J apl' 3 off I CC l '"""""'"n. Lg. Gold Mtrrill Co~&lt;tltll,tCiod,
sp,!Ces.lg g.iragc
C l ot~. Hm\ttrcl M rlkr Gl alld!.tlhcr Clod, ,
space
Clm1.1 Doll, r,t)O Ltmp . Co.ll Butkl'l A:
tU.. Can Plus Much mon:
1990 Ford Tru e k
1988 Chevy Ast ro
CONDUCTED BY

----------------------------J

Love, Dad.

In Memory

Auction

Lg CnJcr Pre~~ Pn~t Ctf'tK Ph. l llrc". Ltn~·n-.. ,
Sev Tu) \ - M1Iton lktQicy Ttddbh Wmb

Plumbing

,,

Auction

APART·
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Onve from $349 to $446
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
740·446·2568
Equal
Hous1ng Opportunity.

&amp;

Announcements

r

r ~~~~~ Ir M~r:&lt;»~

I

Cann1ng Tomatoes Picked Angus Cattle Auctlon
or ptcl.. ym•r own 740·247- labor Day Monday. Sept
4292
.1fh C1rcle B Farm, LLC Us
tl' J: Southstde, WV
104,til5 6053

r

(; l a'is w nrc
L~. A m ount 0 1 (J I.t~~Wd tc..' l'~· mon. Ptnk. &amp;
Yel low De pre~s torr
Culho lt Blul' [hJl'L'.
Empue Cht n.t. -t7 Pe~ H lu e Wll hm I(S
PJU~~ 1.1 Cu t!c c Put &amp; -1. C up ~. Sternw,ul'. Rub\ .
Horner Laugh 1m A m ert~.. ,tn Fmtor 1.1 G.tiP"
s~llKC I ~. W.lll Ptx.kl'l~. C'.tm rva l G l:t\\ S\\llld .

40TH

Twin Rivers Tower IS accept·
tng apphcat1ons for wa1t1ng
list for Hud-subSized, 1· br,
apartment, call 675·6679
Equal Housmg Opportunity

LMNma&lt;

itO

Nu.:e Poster B R Su tl c"' 2 P1.. Set'fl'l dl'\
Book.Gtse. V1d lahlc\ Stdc Rnard~ Swr~; l~
C1.1rk 1-'t.tno lJt.ummd Dve C.1hmel lnll.tl-.. s
Rock 111t! Ch.u r\ Sl'l r) t (1 L.1ddt.'t B.~t· !..
C!lur1 ':-. Lg Cl.!\\ &amp; Ba ll O.tk 'lahk O.tl-.
Man1.d. Oak H.dl Ttl'l' . '"emon Sl\o\\ C.tse. &amp;
Mw,;h Mmc

HAPPY

Jo Marguerite (Moore)
Hi nneman

g

Filch

SUitt'. Sptm:t Dt"s ~ Chctry Pn"l~t B~.·d. Sc'

BfRTHTJAY WfSHES!

ffl
$

1&amp;2BA apts downtown
across from park, newly renovated, Central HIA, Includes
water, sewer, garbage
(74{))709-1690

2 bedroom, all electnc. A/C,
porch &amp; awmng Very very
nice, no pets tn Ga1!1poi1S
(740)4 46·2003 m (740)446·
1409

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

Happy Ad

r ":o~ Ir ~- Ir~~~ Ir v:~~~ Ir

Ril'k
l.aDonn a

(740) 992-2156 (304) 675·1333

Over 35,000 Readers every issue!

Euj!cnc Phmls
&amp;

Call ·today! (740 ). 446-2342

CLASS
IF
I
EDS
work tor you!
lsell-buy-rent-hire-findl

2 bed1oom , 2 bath. new car·
pet 8. vmyl, $375 3 bed·
room, 2 bath garden tub,
ut1l1 1y room, $475, depoSit
requtrecl ,
(740)992·7680
Syracuse

For .rent N1ce 2 bedroom
mobtie home In Country
Hpmes $325 ... depos11
(740)385· 4019

Happy Ad

\\oho reaches 94 years old Sept. 1,
21106. Her birlhday will be
celebrated Sept. 2 by ramily
rel~tives, near &amp; far including
the Moores, Kemper, Griffin ,
Smith, Hineman, Sprague,
Adams, Skidmore &amp;
Ebcrsbaugh farnilil:'s.
Love You
1 Happy Birthday Marguerite

cla~sified@mydallytrlbune.com

2 Bedroom Tratler $400/mo
$400 depos11 Call (7 40)3677762
{740)446·4060 01
(740)367·7762

3BR home- SR 554, Bidwell, 3 bedroom mobile home 1n
$575fmo sec dep all alec Mtddleport, all electnc, cia,
$425 plus depostt, 92 Pearl
(740)44 6·3644
St , Middleport, 740·4163BA house- LeGrande Blvd 1354
$600 rent &amp; sec dep You
For Rent- N1ce 2 BA. 2 Bath
pay ut1ht1 es Lease &amp; references reqwed (740)446· Mobtle Homa 1n Galhpol1s
$450 per month plus
3644 lor appliCBIIOn
depos1t (740)645 7765

We love and miss you more than words could
ever ex pre-.s You are forever
111 our hearts

Housekeeping over 6 years
exp Honest and reliable
Calt(740)379-2898

Weight No More
All
Nat ural Nut rlll on
Fast.
Easy We•ght loss Doctor
Formulated
IMtvlduall'f
740·
Coaf hed Programs
742 .!092 ask for Dav1d
Wanted D1rect SuperviSIOn Robtnson
Herbahle
Employees to oversee male independent Dtstr~butor
youth tn a staft secure rest
den\lal enwonment Must 190 Ctnw'Ewt.RLY
pass a phystcal lramtng
C'R~
reQUirement Pa1Q oeneftts
Call between 9am 3pm Jemty s Ho'lle tlew 0are1
Mon-Fn to apply (7110)37'1 For D1 si'lb1 , d Sr1-11 IN , Call
9083
/ll o1 -p~ l ! '1 I

REPO'S &amp; USED from
$
t ,900 down
M1dwest
Homes (740)828·2 750

Blol1rande
and a Coach too at
0. V.~.S.

August 27, 1984
November I . 2000
H appy 22nd B1rth!la) P l.

Hook-n·Go Local tratle r
movtng 25 mile radtus
(740)388·8228

Wanted tc Do Houstng
Cleaning (740)339 0537
(740)339 0546

NEW
StNGLEWtDE·
$22,572 Midwest Homes
(740)828·2750 ,

range relr disposal and
garage 136 F1rst Ave rear
2 Bedroom Tratler lor rent 14 Depos1t and relereilce
X 60 Trailer lot lor rent (740)446·2561
740-949-2237

6 unllap G:lmt~ -6tntlml • Page 05

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

~allijlllis iatlp mubtmr •The Dally sentinel• ~oint jka~nt l\enistrr

Gene Plants
N1ce 3BR. 2 Bath, S10wge
Plumbing 1/tg
8utldtng, large De:ck. Green
Schools. $485/mo $485
&amp; AIC i~· going
depOSit
(740)446·9 116,
(740)339-2541
out of busi11ess
Hartford WV clean 2 bedroom, 1 bath $350 month. ~r!21r-~-----, &amp; would like to
References
DepoSit
ArAK I'Mt.NfS
requ1red (304)576·4037
FOR R ENT
tha11k all of
House for rent No Pets 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
their customers
'-74:.:0:.:·99=2·.:5e5=B:____ meats turn1shed and unlur·
for 40 years of
Ntce 3 BR home 10 Spnng 01st1ed, secunty depoSit
Valley Ntce yard no pets 1 reqwred no pets 7 40-992
service. Thanks
yr lease Taktng apps $600 2218
to et1ch &amp;
roo Call Dave @ (740}441·
0114
everyone. We
~-~":M
='='o•8•11•.E•"H~o·~·1 ~
-"l -1~b-e-d,-oo-m_u_p_s_ta-,s-u-ni-U&lt;·
will miss yo11 ..
I&lt;"'OR R ENr
ntshed
apartmanf w1th
For rent or sale· country
home, 7 acres. 3 bedroom 2
bath. wfd, stove &amp; relngerator call (740)408·2440

2bdrm·2ba mobtle home Sit
uated on a beat1fully seclud·
ed approx 1 ac lot w1th covered front porch , back
deckfattached shed. frutt
3 bedroom 1n Ga!!1pohs trees and much more local·
Great localtonl WID conn ed 10 Cheshtre Will rent for
$309/month $100fdeposlt $450 00/mth+ $350/dep ,
(1oc lot rent, water &amp; trash),
No pets
I bedroom 1n Ga!11pohs or sel l for $45,000 Must
Great locallonl $179'month, see Senous tOQ only call
$1 OOfdepostt No pets Call 7401441-0775 (II no answe r
leave message)
Wayne (404)456·J802

at

Laz.y T Royal Chaparral
Fam1ly Resort Campground
lor
sale,
members hip
1304)372·6569

Part·Ttme
Teacher's
Wanted
1o
do
Asststant $6 70/hr Send
Hou sec tean~ ng
weekly &amp;
resume to E&lt;Hiy Edqcat1on
btweekly (740~446·1137 ref
Stat1on 2122 Jeflerson Ave
1f needed
Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Salesperson needed for
Supply Company
CommiSSIOn based pay w1th
established roiJte Mustllave
valid dnver s ltcense and
reliable transportahon Send
resume to Sparkle Supply
LLC. PO B&lt;»: 278 Gal!tpohs
OH 45631

cr

,·-·.-=--,--, ~(N7:40:)-82-8-·2-75'.0__.,-,--

thllfi/1/1 \

Jant tor~al

Locators

wtlh less than perfect cre dit
IS available on th ts 3 bed·
room 1 bat h home m
Middleport Co rner lot. v1nyl
std1ng fireplace m livtng
room, good carpet, 111e floor
!n ktlchen . French doors
7U
open
to master bedroom,
3 bedroom 1 story 1 1/2
bath g'as heat cia. 2 car JacuZZI tub. off street park·
garage
1n
Middleport tng Payment around $550
"89' Suzuki Fat Boy muffler. $72 500, (740~992·6926
per month 740-367-7129
8oo red out, many extras
$1 500 740·985-4258 "90.
Ford ProBe Tu8ro Chager,
In Memory
tn take wtth head. 2 2(12
valve)S1,000 00 740·985
4258

Please forward resume to
Bonme McCam NHA or
Cheryl Bol en HR Heartland
Tfl Axle load of ltrewood
ol Jackson, 8668 SA 93
$350 A Load
740·949·
Jad&lt;son, OhiO 45640
2195
Fax 740-286 0295
ViSit us online at
www hcr·manorcare com
EEO/Orug-Free Employ~r
People Strength
Commttment

s

PR~IONAJ

..___iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioollllrl

Fall enroll ment lor new
Ptano students now open
lnqwre
[740)446·2272
Char les
A
Murray
Gallipolis, 0 1110

New 2006 Clayton sin- ;;::=~====~
glewtdes start1ng at $ 199 84
Hous~
10
per month Trade-Ins wei·
Beautiful. 3BR home, wrap comes Ca ll (740)385-2434
FOR R ENT
around porch downtown
Gallipolis
City Schools NEW 3 br doublewtdes from 2BR home- Vtnton St $375
Call 740 446 . $269 mo Midwest Homes mo + sec dep You pay uhh·
118 000
ttes Gas heat (740)446·
96
• •,
StNGLEWIDE· 3644

IP;u~b=hs~h,:ng:C:o:m:p:an:y:)=~ 9r

I':

'farketlng Position f01 local
Med1cal
Eqwpment
Company You must be
HI \11...,1\11
h~ghly mottvated expenence 150
ScHtX)L.~
prefer red
Salary
...
I NSTRUCIIUN
0
Commtsston
negol table ••-ioiiiiiiiiiiiiii•,J
HoM~:&lt;i
1-l&gt;RSAIJ..
Send resume to Box ill.
Concealed Pts tol Class
c/o Gallipolis Tnbune. PO
Ohio, WV, Sept 9, 2006,
8 01( 469, Ga!ltpOIIS OH
$75 00
9 OOarp VFW 2 bedroom home, beauttful
45631
'
9 9 acres
near
Mason WV Ph (740)843- s1te
Waterloo, OH $34 000
5555,
Med1Home Health
(740)532 7614
' Seeking PAN. OT. and ST
w1t h Ohio li censu re tor
Gal hpohs. Oht o and sw·
rounding area We offer a
compet1t1ve salary EOE
Please send resume to 352
Second
Avenue .
Galhpolts,OH 45631

r

Mortgage
(740)367-0000

Announcements

t'OR lill&gt;T

Gallla Co Rio Grande, 8
water NOW
acres. co
$15 5QOt Shepherd lane ,
super 12 acres $23.500 co.
water! Kyger. 16 acres
$15 9001
Meigs
Co
Umberger or landa~er Ads
5 aces $15 950' Red Htll Ad
13
acres
$26,900!
Reedsville . dry 13 acre fteld
$19,9501 Cook Ad 5 acres.
$21,500 Call 1740)441·
1492 for free maps to VISit
fenced 1n lot &amp; unattached
www pryoerland com We
4bd, 2 bath Only S32 9001 garage (740)441-1715
hnaocet
FORECLOSURE! For list·
AAA MODULAR ranch
tngs 800·391 ·5228 e~ F254
models $55,838 Midwest Mobile Home Lot for rent
~~~~ Vtnton Call (740)441 ·
Homes (740)828-2750
5 Room House With eath, 3
tots
tn Leon $30,000 Clean well matntalned 95
Phone (304)674-0132
Clayton, 14x70 all electnc Mobile Home Lottn Johnson
3 br 2 bath , complete w1th Mob1le Home Par~ 1n
OH
Phone
AAA MODULAR ranch appliances, washer dryer. Ga!ltpolls,
models $55,838 Midwest curta~ns. new bhnds heat (740)446-2003 or (740)446·
pump With central, a1r, 2 1409
Homes (740)828-2750
porches, new underplnntng
REAL Esl XI'E
$16.000 OMO 1304)593·
AHentlon l
WANilill
6437 or [304)675-8668
Local company offermg "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Great used 38R home only Need to sell your home?
grams for you to buy your $9,995 Wtll help w•lh dellv· late on payments. dtvorce,
hOme tnstead of renltng.
ery Call (740)385 7671
• JOb transler or a death" I
· 100% tmancmg
LAND &amp; HOME PACK- can buy your home All cash
• Less than perfect credit
AGES· 1st t1me buyers &amp; and quick closmg 740·416·
accepted
Midwest
Homes 3130.
• Payment cou ld be the FHA
I~ I \ I \I "
1740)828·2750
same as rent.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do bl!smess W1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the ma1l unt1l you
have mvesttgated the
offenng

ANEOE

Please ma1t fax or ema11
your resume by 9{11 /2006
to Farm Credt! Serv1ces
Attention Job Code 06-69,
P:O Box 34390 lOUISVIlle .
KY 40232, Fa11 (502) 420
3490, Ema11
resurne@e-farmcredtt com

To be considered an applicant you must
eMeet m101mum QUBIIIICB·
liOn for the pos1t1on
• Submit a cover letter and
resume tndiCallng the speCific pos1t1on lor whtch you
are applymg by the posttng
deadline
EOE
-------HOME HEALTH AIDES
SIGN ON BONU S Home
Health Care of SE Ohto •s
currently htnng horne a•des·
Call
competitive wages
740·662·1222

Pleasant Valley Hospital
IS currently acceptmg
resumes tor Fullttme·
Reg1stered Nurses
Applicants must have a
current West Vtrgtnla
license Flextble
scheduling excellent
sarary holtdays. health
tnsurance Slnglel!amtly
plea dental plan ltfe
1nsurance. vacatton.
long·te1m drsabtl1ty and
retirement
Send resumes to
Pleasam Valley Hospttal
Clo Human Resources
2520 Valley Dr1ve
Po1111 Pleasant. WV
25550
(304) 675-4340

It

FOR SALE

tUM SAJ.E

Sunda~Augusta7, 2006

Sunda~ Aug ust 27,2006
MOBILE H~lf:&lt;i

Bed room
TWo
garage, pool, 2 acres, Bathroom Overs1ze 2 Car
Eastern School D1strict Garage
Storage Bldg ,
740-992-3465 after 5 OOPM newer carpet and roof 1fl
Acre lot Well maintatned
Home
VIne S1reet. Racine!
4 rental hoUses ~ For Sale"
740·949·8010
$95,000
Good mcome productng
propetttes Great locat1on1
M0811£ H O\U:S
Pnce(s) are Negottable
mR SAtE
Mottvated
Seller!
In
Gallipolis
Call
Wayne ..___ioiiiioiiiiiiiiioo_.l
(404}456·3802
3 bed[oom doubleWJde wrth

r-~~~!:""--,

RN NURSES

1

HOM&amp;&lt;;

4 bedroom, 2 bath, double Three

For rent or sale 17 600 sq t1
warehouse on At 2 w1th 3
acres fenced 1n &amp; gated
blacktop
parkmg
to t
(304)937-4127

G a llipoli s , O hio

The mlntmum quallftcaflons
are Bachelor's degree 1n
agrtculture
busmess or
related f1eld Work-related or
education-related ag or
agnbuslness expenence IS
des~rable and 10 some markets may be requtrad

10

OPiuKilJNfl'\'

(Agr1-consumer}

Farm Credtt Servtces tS
seektng
a
Ftnanc1al
(AgrJ·
Servtces
Otttcer
Consumer) 1n our upcommg
GallipoliS, OH ott1ce ThiS
candidate's pnmary respon
stbil~tes Will center around
bwldmg strong relatlonshtps
w~h b\lsmess contacts and
customers m the consumer
ant;! agncullural markets
This person wtl! use his/he r
knowledge of hnance and
agnculture to pro'o'tde t:rus1
ness contactsllnl!uencers
"value added· tnlormallon
aboutthe1r customer needs
the FSO Will market FCS
financial ser'o'ices to customers based upon the md1·
vidual's need for these prod·
ucts and servtces

...".~--~....
~ ro

~~~~~--~t~.
o
BliSIN&amp;'o.'&gt;
11'-\'\{1\1

:::;;::~

F inanci al Services

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

read aloud.
A copy of the speclfl·
may
be

cations

Bargain Hunters Delight
We have too much ol a good
thing . Overstock Jewelry Sale

Over 1000 items 50% off
THE KARAT PATCH
Diamonds-N- Gold
Silver Bndge Plaza

French City Childcare
Center
now accepting applications
for care providers.
Musl have HS diploma, tnquire
within. No phone calls please.

300 Third Ave., Gallipolis
The Meigs County Council
on Aging , Inc. 1s now taking
good, clean items (no
cloth;ng please) for their
3rd Annual'Benefit Auct1on.
The auction will be on
Saturday, September 9,
2006. For more information
or to schedule a p1ck up
please call (740) 992-2 161.

P.O. Box 313, Rto
Grsnde. OH 45674·
031 3 or delivered to
the
Township
Trustees by Tuesday,
September 5 , 2006.
Bids will be accepted
unt1l 7 :15 pm at which
time bids will be
opened
by
the

viewed

at

the

Township
Garage
located
al
1856
Pleasant Valley Road,
VInton, Ohto.

one of the following

trustees:
Dwight Roes 1·740·
245· 9239
Charles Metzler 1 •
740-245-5817
John vance 1-740·
245·9343
Ruth A . Mlllhone

Fiscal Officer
August 14. 27 Sept. 1.

2006
Public Nolice
The

Meigs

County

Health Department
will accept sealed
bids for sale of the
followtng equipment:
1995
Ford
Crown
Vtc!oria
VIN :
2FALP71WOSX18103

4
1995
Ford
Crown
Vlelorla
VIN :
2FALP71W9SX1 B105D
Vehicles will be sold
in "as IS " condition

and can be viewed
and/or inquired about
at the Meigs County
Heal1h Depar1ment.
Minimum
bids
of
$ 500.00 for each vehi ·
cle should be submit·

ted

in

mailed

persort
to.

or

Health

Commissioner 112 E.
Memortal Drtve, Suite
A , Pomeroy, OH 45769
by or before 4 pm on
8/31/06
(8) 18, 20, 27

Trustees.

The
Trustees reserve the

BUS TRIP FROM
PVH
Charleston,
South Carolina
September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 200'6 ·
Includes transportation,
hotel, breakfasts &amp; tours
$320/person (double)
$310/person (triple)
$3001person (quad)
$450lperson (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH
Community Relations
(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Serenity fiouse
serves v1ctims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1·800-942·9577

�PageD6

GARDENING

.

49 dead in Comair plane
.crash during take off in
Kentucky; NfSB says
plane on short runway, A2

Sunday, August 27, 2006

'

Caterpillars are buttef/lies too
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, Va. ~
Butterfly gardens are a
wonderful way to bring new
colors into your yard but
they won ' t attain their
potential if the plants you
choose are appetizing only
to the adults. Caterpillars
are butterflies too. yet they
prefer an altogether different bill of fare.
Serve up sweet and colorful
nectar plants for the auults.
Offer an assortment of leafy
host plants tor their larvae. No
host plants, fewer butterflies.
·it 's as simple as that.
Cat&gt;rpillars hhve enormous appetites, consuming
many thousands of times
their own body weight in
order to live out their rela. tively short lives as aerialists. That 's part of the hospitality 1rade-off. Learn to tol -·
. erate a few defoliated plants
in exchange for raising a
vibrant nc\~ crop of "wildflowers with wings."
"You're going to notice
some nibbles out there but if
that bothers you, put your
caterpillar gardens in a corner of the yard or somewhere where you won't see
them every day," ·said Kris.
Wetherbee, from Oakland,
Ore., and author of

SPORTS

AP Photos

This new adult Luna moth has just emerged from a coccoon
and is' drying its wings prior to an initial nocturnal flight.
Moth s-pecies greatly outnumber butterflies and, despite
their drab reputations, many are JUSt as colorful.
ly, including fennel, dill and
Queen Anne's lace.
If it's the smaller whites
and sulphurs you want tlitting Caterpillars have voracious appetites and none more than this hairy Gypsy moth variety_
about your property, then These larvae in large numbers have oeen known to defoliate huge tracts of Eastern forest:
offer host plants from the Their more oenign outterfly or moth cousms, however, are Content to feed from a few host
mustard and cabbage frnnilies plants sitting in a colorful and protected corner of your garden.
~
· jewel tlowcrs and garden
she said. · "Have a water . terllies will linger.
ever they can find them so it
broc&lt;:oli, respectively.
• Feeders filled with soft would help to have a fe~
Larvae of the nocturnal source that is a safe place fruit.
Overripe citrus, water- shallow mud puddles around,
for
butterflies
and
other
Luna moth feed on the
melon
insects.
Have
a
variety
of
and bananas attract
Gardeners increasingly
leaves of sweet gum, alder
and . persimmon
trees, nectar plants there that will mobs of butterflies although are enjoying caterpillars
they often draw foraging simply for what they are. .
among others. Blue butter- feed the adults."
wasps,' too, · so be wary as
"Tiley arc just as colorful,
You also might provide:
fly caterpillar~ like flowery
interesting and diverse as
• A few tlat stones placed you approach.
clovers and lupines. Gulf
•
Weeds.
Successful
butadults."
Wetherbee said:
in
open
spots
of
the
yard
Fritillary and Zebra lang.pl'ant
terfly
gardeners
aren
't
"Some
have.
stripes. Some
wings have a teenage crush where the adults can "bask"
or get a solar recharge on . purists. They know butter- have touch-type hairs;
on passion flowers.
tlies have tastes that occa- Others have giant 'eyes' for
"If vou don' t have plants cool summer mornings.
• Shelter, primarily some sionally mean tolerating frightening predators.
specific · to cenain caterpil"It's quite entenaining to
lars, then adults won't lay nearby shrubs and trees, weeds around their property.·
High
on
the
weed-feed
find
a &lt;:aterpillar that will
the
adults
can
rest
at
where
their eggs there and you
list
are
clover,
nettles.
planturn
into a butterfly. Your
won't have butterflies as a night · or escape strong
tain
"
and
thistles.
family can be part of all the
result,':
Wetherbee winds and pelting rain.
•
Clubrooms.
Adult
butterstages that will occur by
•
A
season-long
series
of
said. Wetherbee
suggests
take
their
moisture
and
tlies
offering
caterpillars a.chance
offering a full-service butter- flowers with different
nutrients
wherever
and
whengrow)
in your garden."
(to
tly garden that satisfies the blooming times, heights and
needs of the entire family.
colors. The more diverse
"You. have to attract them and brilliant the nectar-rich
so they can lay those eggs," blooms. the longer your but-

'THAI« YOU

inside. (The Scots do have a. bacon. sausage. tomatoes
sense of humor.)
(and sometimes mushNearby, the Royal Yacht rooms), along with toast and
Britannia takes on visitors coffee. For later meals,
·from Page 01
at its berth at the port of there was Angus beef and
seafood. And "chips" with
But don't count on sun- Leith on the Firth of Forth.
as
all
ln
.
Edinburgh,
everything,
sometimes even
shine. Rain is generally a
through
Scotland,
from
the
with
meals
with
given in Scotland, especial- ubiquitous pubs to water- other potatoes served
or rice. ·
ly in the Western Highlands side restaurants, the ·dining
And, of course, haggis,
and the islands, the wettest was prime (a· pleasant surnational dish.
of alL It rains so much that prise to those who, have theDrink
is a national
it is no wonder that Scottish traveled elsewhere in resource . Regions compete
men are called . Mac (a Great Britain).
in producing their famed
national joke).
A "standard" Scottish single malt whisky, which
On to Inverness. in cen- breakfast included eggs, line the pub shelves overtral Scotland. with a stop at
Drumnadrochit. halfway up
Loch Ness . . Can't go to
,.
Scotland without paying
I,
..
'
respects to "Nessie," the
legendary sea monster that
THANK YOU
has made this town a
tourist mecca.
Of course, no visit to the
binhplace of golf would be
complete without time for
18 holes, accomplished, at
least by one of our traveling
Carter Parsons
companions. at a picFOR BUYIN~ MY 2006
turesque course on the
. Rio Hopefuls
Moray Firth near Inverness.
MAKIW STEER!
Golf course choices are
numerous, except in the
Court"ey
northern Highlands and
some islands. With some
Parsons
540 golf courses and about
5
million
residents.
Scotland may have the
highest. ratio of courses to'
people in the world.
Then, back down and
east to Scotland's capital
city of Edinburgh. Park the
car here. Walk the streets
~ certainly the Princes
Street shops- or hop on a
0'1-~~~1
tour bus or public bus and
get to Edinburgh Castle.
W:.:$
the historic symbol of this
historic citv.
Farmers Bank
"Such dusky grandeur
Adjustable Rate .
clothed the height.
"Where the huge castle
Mortgage Special
holds its state.
"And all the steep slope
down ,
"Whose ridgy
back
Interest Rate
heaves to the sky.
•
· "Piled deep and massy.
close and high,

Scotland

Thank You
Spurlock Fertilizer
&amp;..Ag Unefor
buying my 2006
Market Lamb!

.............,...
'

DR'S HADDAD,

GAINES, ST. ONGf
&amp;MUFFLEY

looking a variety of beers.
Time to return ,. we drove
back across the narrowest
part of the nation, some 60
miles from Edinburgh to
Glasgow~ with a last stop
on the way to see Stirling
Castle,
its
approach
flanked by statues of two
of the nation's historic
heroes. Robert the Bruce
and
William
("Btaveheart") Wallace.
In all, less than 700
miles in 12 days. Still, just
a tasting. ·

i'. /Ill
.''2' 7~ "f'
!f S.O.S.

'

-?.104

·

Holzer Clinic
for buying
my.2006
Market Steer
Lawrence Wedemeyer-Buckeye Sharp Shooters

Laurel ·Commons Apts
Located in Ravenswood at 14 North Ritchie St.

ll '-' ,1:)\D~}o2'7/3o jj,j;~~
Great Specials._ .... ,
Newly Renovated Ranch and Townhomes
starting at $405
·

~\.\\
.·~· ·.
~

Electric
1M·~ "''f

I

Cabin~ts

'

"' Neut~;tl New
"' Updated Ba1hs .

"' Updated Baths

2006

Largest in
avenswood

~!I~
!',

Parsons

·~ Brand New ApJ&gt;Iiance.J

' Brand New Appliunt:es
*Neutral New Carpet

:»-;,.__li,~...,;R:io Hopeful~

Come for a visit...

stay forever

"'Bring !his adv~rtisemem in for a 'Free Application Processing

Buy It!'

town, ..
Sir Walter Scott knew
what he was writing about.
No wonder theY' created &lt;t :
monument for -h im in the
city. (A monument to a
writer'} And you can climb
its 278 steps for yet another
wondrom, vjew of the city
from on high.
All Edinburgh museums ·
are free,"' is a hus that will
take you to five of them . A
statue of a trio of cows
stands outside rile Art
Mu seum. Called :·Three
Grazers." it mimics the
sculpture of "Three Clraces"

·,I~

1

Farmers Bank '
Home ·Equity
Line of Credit

3~90°/o

, 3.90°/o

Interest Rate

Construction or Major Renovati.on
On Primary Residences

No Closing Costs!
No First-Year.Annual Fee!

1

Available For Purchase or Refinance

Farmers Bank
Construction Loan
Special

_'I .

3.92°/o

Annual Percentage Rate

Locked In For Three Years!

.

Annual Percentage Rate .,._ Interest Rate

·6.385°/o

romanti c

Discount tor 6 Months

Annual Percentage Rate ·&amp; Interest Rate
lor 6 Month Construction loan Period

On Primary Residences!
APR " Anr&gt;ufll P~ic-till{lt' flillt• and r•te h• sub~t to du•n&lt;Jiil •l'lilf c "'•""'"'"lion
A P~"~ b•$&amp;\1 Of\ $100.000 00 foVJ at ~ . 7~"4 ltlil &lt;al rat•, 6 J115'\o. ,..PA. ccmP&lt;Jtad en :.\60
tf'c.nltl&amp; r•r.t~v&lt;rutnt "'m mo&lt;ll" '" ~ymotf\1 o ! 'SBJ 117 t ota l t,nanc• c;r, Atge ot
5-1:?5 587 11 wflklh •nr.lu&lt;ioJJI. S7M 00 pro;maotl ' '""'",.. ch~&lt;g ,. NU!tn!&lt;l clt151r1&lt;J cri•t•
ar~ ~"lmiltt.d tn $6;lt- 00
PUI'OillltUI ·eaultee 10~ doWI"1 011.\l'f'Drl!. Lo..r&gt; 10 \l~lu~ .d
&amp;()•;. · LO!IIn none• e ~R ~tOI8 on ly 1c ~:~umaJ)I '~"ll•"'ce. mOO~e11omes 0&lt;:1 r&gt;OI 8~1)- HUI$
lll&amp; IOC~otd .!'1 lot 45 Qllys h0111 dt lot cllPfll•Cill iOI'. Olhllo ld!" l18. Difl """''' •!td 181e.a An.:!

llrtnjl ava.latlll lhlll)e'O\d onij 0&lt;1

+c-at•

va,I..EOt'and oJfld&amp;tW&lt;Ilong 31AI'&gt;oJat(tll All o•~~a&amp;&gt;:ll'llt'

o&amp;mw .. rs "'"Y '"" q&gt;!alrly as li"f."C..,IJ &lt;! 'CIOjvCI 10 crr.ll l ~ptc.r~al O!lq,• '01 hi'I" II..-U
11m~ •aiel " "'b i.,&lt;el 10 c~ .. ,.,~e di!iol~
Q/t.,, •ndi en S8plomoh;u J l,l 20CG

• Jo.P ~ 1~ •nr&gt;usll'erco:mtilglil Rl18 ji,{!\....,!Hd Rate 8110 'lf&gt;H 811-.cll... only oormg '"' $i•
(t;l rnonlr"o conslr.tGIIoo IOfln tl@llo&lt;l ar&gt; d bf! lnRnc OKI by fa&lt;mv. rt~o to ctuongot l o ...,Mer &gt;~r1·
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Farmers
Bank
Savings Compariy

•••

• Owen sets. course
record at Early Bird Invite
See Page B1

e

Southern hits school year in high gear
· RACINE
Teachers program. Mark Miller, oew
often are noted for preparing superinten~ent, . said that the
their rooms and their lessons "district wanted to provide
long before the actual school quality training for the
year begins. but this year the teachers to expand their
days prior te the beginning horizons and open their eyes
of classes were used . for to the cutting edge strategies
training time.
used in education today, but
Southern was one, of sev- the teachers benet! ted and
era! \chools that chose to · the students should see the
incorporate' a three-day pre- benet1t.
lude to the school year, havSpeakers included Linda
Remediation
ing qualified for a grant Casto,
from the Perry-Hocking Specialist and Cenified
Educational Learning Center Inclusion Specialist from the
to help cover expenses.
West Virginia Department of
Inclusion,
embedcted Education.;
AI
Cote,
assessment, critical thinking Director of SEOCEMS and
skills, positive behaviior, education liaison with Ohio
bus safety, CPR raining and University;
Brigette
ESIS training were all Stevens ,
Certified PBS
included in the Southern Specialist from .SEOSERC;

and Sue Nichols, CoDirector of Project Access.
"We were fortunate to
have such a quality group of
presenters," said Miller. He
went on to note that David
Beavers, nationally reknown
mathematic s specialist is
going to work with the math
department in September.
Miller said that an $80,000
g~ant the school was able to
hue a math coach to supplement the math department in ·
an effort to bring up math
scores.
Administrative assistant
Sco~t Wolfe with the help of
school nurse Junie Maynard
and other staff members
assembled the three-day
training. "I thi1ik the teach-

ers ·all walked away with
some valuabl~ knowledge
that they can actually use in
the classroom. If there was
one theme we tried to stress .
it was "that we can't do the
same things that we did last
year. Our Math scores at the
elementary must come up-that is the bottom line. And
we also have goals in place
to improve our other areas of
academic content," said
Wolfe.
He stressed that critical
thinking skills are the driving force behind success on
the elementary achievement
tests and the graduation
tesr::.If a student is taught to
think on his own, a student
will succeed," said Wolfe.

Tricia Wolfe, the new
math coacl1. hired and funded by the grant monies,
informed teachers about'm\r.
program. · Southern was lhe
only school of 30 eligible
districts to qualify for the
program which has· operated"
in the Franklin County area
with much success for the
past two years. Grant monies
for the program tlow
through the Perry-Hocking
ESC. The goal. it was noted,
is to have math scores and
critical
thinking skills
improve dramatically by the
end of the prol!ram.
Sandy Clonch, representing the Meigs ESC,

Please see School. AS

Eastern
board
.approves
personnel

INSIDE
• Hezbollah leader says
he wouldn't have ordered
soldiers' capture knowing
it would lead to war.
See Page A2
• Hawk retires.
See Page A3

STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS ~
The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved . classified and certified substitutes
at last week's regular monthly meeting.
Classified
substitutes
approved were: Paula Life,
custodian and cook; April
Lawrence,
secretary;
Darlene Grossnickle, secre- ·
tary and cook;
Kim
Sampson, cook; Jennifer .
Jackson , secretary; Amy
Smith. educational aide.
Certified
substitutes
approved were: Patrece
Beegle , lise Burns, Amy
Clark, William Downie,
Randall Fulks. Jeannette
• Students, teachers
Grate, Vicki L. Griffin, Mary
finding new ways to leam
E. Hill , Melissa Holman .
Li,le.
Chad
Autumn
geography.
Milliron. Cindy Parker. Gay
See Page A3
Perrin, Nathan Robinette.
• O'Bieness to offer
Kimberly Roush. Aaron
Charlene Hoeftlch/photo
diabetes education class.
Schaekel, Ryan Sleight.
Restoration continues on the Chester Academy building, shown here as it looked when built in the 1840s. The exterior Michelle Smith, Jody
SeePageA3
work with the exception of some st~ne work in the foundation will be completed this fall and the interior work will begin. Wam sley, · Janice Weber,
• Couple makes
Angela : Weeks , Craig
whirlwind trip on Cessna.
Wehrung,
Maxine
Whitehead.
Carrie
Wood,
SeePage AS
Woods,
Laura
Ellis
and
Mila
Bv CHARLE!IE HoEFUCH
Association
allowing
it
to
original floo;ing. and frame- take place until spring.
• A year's work:
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM access another $25',000 from work in preparation for the
Roxanne
Williams.
Several people have sandDelaware woman makes
The board approved
the federal "Save America 's inside work.
stones to donate for the founCHESTER
~ A $25,000 Treasures Grant awarded to
Conde as an educaMelissa
"Getting
this
grant
means
dation,
according
to
Powell,
100 quilts for charity.
grant from the Ohio Cultural the Association two years we can move ahead inside and the only cost will be in 'tional aide on a one-yeai·
SeePage AS
Facilities Commission will ago," said Mary Powell who now," said Powell, noting cutting the stones and doing contract for the 2006-07
allow restor&amp;tion work on is actively involved in that the money is designated the replacement. Because of school year. Becky Edwards
the three-story brick Chester financing the project.
for electrical work and heat- work on the building done was apprQved as lead menAcademy built in the 1840s
She said that as soon as the ing and cooling systems.
two years a~ when the tor.
to
continue
into
the
winter.
WEATHER
The board also :
tuck pointing on the exterior
She said the .exterior work restoration began the buildJust as the Chester-Shade brick of the building is com- underway ·now, the tuck ing is "good and solid," she
•Approved an agreement
Historical Association was pleted and the outside win- pointing and the window said, and the foundation with Ohio
University,
getting concerned about how dow framing · is in place, framing, should be complet- improvement' is just to School or Recreation arid
to fund additional work on work will begin on the mteri- ed in about two weeks: The restore its original look ..
Sport Sciences for athletic
the building's interior, the or of the Academy. Weeks only remaining exterior proPowell said one goal of tb~ trainer services at a cost of
grant was announced.
ago volunteer workers tore ject deals with replacing Association is to get the $9.160.
That money qualifies as a out layers of walls and took foundation stones and that,
•Approved
Becky
"match" for the Historical down panitions to get ro the she said, probably will not
Please see Project. AS
Edwards as Lead Mentor for
the 2006-07 school year.
•Awarded contracts for
supplies and materials to the
following
companies:
Details on Page. AS
Petroleum Products, BP Oil
BY BETH SERGENT
Bmfrd. The commission over, offices in Columbus and ing, those hopes were dashed Company; tires. Malone
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM sees all financial decisions in appear before an administra- when no such action was
Warehouse
Tire,
Inc ..
the district that has been in · live law judge which would taken. Ohlinger said at the breads. Earthgrains; dairy
RACINE ~ A proverbial fiscal emergency since 1999. set up what some are calling a August meeting the commisproducts, Broughton's Food
line in the sand has been
Ann Ohlinger, president of legally unprecedented show- sion members said it would Supplies, Gordon Foods.
drawn by the Southern Local the SLEA, said if the commis- down. What makes it unique need to see five years of posi2 SECflONS - 12 PAGEs
•Approved an · agreement
Education
Association sion fails to approve the rais- ·is a teacher's union bringing a tive financi&lt;tl growth to with
Rockspring s
Calendars
A3 (SLEA) with the state's es at its next meeting sched- .unfair labor practice com- approve the raises as opposed Rehabilitation · for Physi cal
Financial
Planning uled tor 10:30 a.m. on Sept. plaint against the ODE's to the two . predicted by Therapy Services, on an as
Commission
on 13. the organization's lawyer, commission with employees Interim Treasurer Richard · needed basis for the 2006-07
Supervision
Classifieds
B3-4
the other side of that line and Mike Hunter, an attorney from the ·ohio Attorney Koker.
. school year.
a
one percel)l' pay raise for from Hunter. Grant and General's Office on both
Ohlinger said Koker's two
Comics
• Approved membership
Bs
teachers caught in the middle. Schwab which was hired by sides of the aisle.
year financial forecast pre- with
the
Educational
in
the
sand
repreThat
line
Ohio
Education
After
.
the
hearing
the
the
.
an
unreserved
fund
dicted
Services of
Annie's Mailbox
A3 sents the SLEA's growing Association to represent the administrative law judge will balance in the black to the Technology
Ohio.
frustration with the Ohio SLEA. has already been issue a report which either tune of nearly' $230,000 for
• Approved an agreement
Editorials
A4 Oepartment of Education's instructed to place the case on ·side can appeal. If the process fiscal
year 2007 and a balance with
Gallia-Meigs
. (ODE) Financial Planning . the docket and into the hands goes to appeal a panel made of nearly $500.000 for FY-OR. Community Action Agency
Spmts
B Section Supervision Commission of mi Ohio State Employmept up, of three SERB members Ohlinger added that she for the · &lt;:on tinuation of
that has not approved a one Relations ~oard (SERB) would render a final decision. believed cuts in stalling for School To Work (JOGS) .proWeather
A6 percent pay raise fer teachers administrative law judge.
Cautiously optimistic the the 2006-07 sc hool year gram. District supp ort is
1
pre.viously approved by the
Thi.s means the two parties commission would approve
Please see Raise. AS
Please see Board, AS
Southern Local School would meet at the SERB the raises at its Aug. l6meet© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

$25,000 to

project

'~~

A

own

County's jump in youth
domestic violence arrests
sparks concern, A6

en

They . begin as dot-sized
eggs. hatch into caterpillars.
and then pupate or rest for a
time in a mummy bagshaped chrysalis (called a
cocoon when pupa are
moths) before emerging
dramatically altered as welladorned winged adults.
The adu Its must be accommodating about where they
lay their eggs. They seek the
particular kind of forage
favored by their offspring.
That's why it's imponant to
have the right host plants
placed around your butterfly.
"Attracting
Birds, garden.
Butterflies &amp; Other Winged
Larvae of the well-travWonders to Your Backyard.'' eled Monarch family prefer
"You usuall'y have . to get milkweed. a !lowering plant
up close, like I 0 feet away, with thick, milky sap that
to see it (larvae-damaged not only provides leafy
foliage)," she said. "Flowers shelter and sustenance but
are ignored. Caterpillars eat also fuels them with a poijust the foliage, the leaves." son distasteful if not toxic to
Butterflies pass through many of their predators.
four distinct stages before
Caterpillars that eventualbecoming the frequent tly- ly . become the familiar
ers you see pausing to sip Black swallowtail dine on
nectar from your blooms.
plants from the carrot fami-

'"Mine

.

Tuppers F'tains 667.3161

Gallipolis 446 .2265

~001' O~ nt Pleasant

674-8200

Southern teachers draw line in sand over pay raise ·

.,

.I

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