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                  <text>ALONG THE RivER

.LIVI\G

No horsin' around:
Local breeders win state titles, Cl

Ravors of the Week:
Keep a creepy eye on these
Halloween treats, Dl

tl

tnt

•
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
( lhiu \a I ll'~ l'nhli ... llillg « o

\I iddll'pt wl • ( •. tllipoli ... • ( ktnlh'l'

1,).

~ 1.,)0 • \ ul. -Jtl. :\ o ;{X

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Patrol: Test indicates trooper was intoxicated

SPORTS
.,

·'

l'ullH' I' O\ •

• High school football

Bv

coroner said decomposition
The patrol has detennined
of the troope(s. body may that the patrol cruiser driven
~EWS&lt;IIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
have been partly the reason by Trooper Joshua P. Risner,
for the high BAC reading.
29, of . tlie Gallia-Meigs
GALLIPOLIS - A state
The latest results in the Post, was eastboun,d on
trooper driving the cruiser investigation into the Sept . Jackson Pike near Mitchell
involved in an accident that. 28 crash were announced Road shortly before 6 a.w ...
killed himself and two others by . the State Highway traveling at between 60 and
in Gallia County last month Pattol in a Friday press 71 mph with emergency
had a blood alcohol concen- conference at patrol head- lights and siren activated.
tration (BAC) of .08, Ohio's quarters in Columbus.
The cruiser lost control,
legal limit for someone to be
Col. Paul McClellan, the spun into the westbound
presumed drunk while oper- pattol .
superintendent, lane and struck an eastating a motor vehicle.
termed the news "devastat- bound pickup truck driven
by Lon Smith, 32, Vinton.
But the Gallia County ing'' to the agency.
KEVIN KELLY
AND MICHELLE MILLER

action. See Page B1

Year-end·
shortfall
projected
for village

Investigators said . Smith
was traveling between 10
and 20 mph and moving to
the right at the approach of ,
the patrol car.
Both vehicles were c~nsumed m a resultmg fu-e
when the cruiser's gas tank
is presumed to ~ave exploded ..The crash ktlled Rtsner,
Smith and Sgt. Dale
Holcomb; 4~, of the G-M
Post, ~sner s passenger m
the crutser.
The ·patrol said a blood

test conducted as part of the
autopsy on Risner was
drawn from the body's deep
cavity area. The test indicated a blood alcohol conceiitration (B,'\C) of .08. An
earlier sample drawn froin
the jugular vein area tested
.000 BAC.
N'.l alcohol was present in
either Smith or Holcomb,
investigators found.
;
Dr. Daniel H. Whitele~,
. ..

.Plene see. Plltrol, A1 :

FlUl 'Down on the Fann'

Bv BRIM J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

..

Page24•

2006 Fall Senior Quarterly ·

Friday, October 13, 2006

OBITuARIES .
Page AS
• Luther Lee Cochran, 81
• Clara A. Elliott, 83
• Char1es Meador, 87
• R. Duane Null, 64

INSIDE
;c.,.,... \
• Supporters gather.

See.,.A2
• Peebles holds job fair.
SeePageA3
.
• Bridge down to single
lane·. See Page A3

'.

,_,Quick end to house

'fife. See Page A3

• Local Briefs.
SeefageA3
~·s Mailbox.
,. . PI!geAS
&gt;Gallia and Meigs

f:nty
calendars . .
,..Page AS
WEATIIER

• •PLEASANT VALLEY HOME HE,ALTH
I 0 II Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(3(}4) 675-7400
(740) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)
(304) 372-2022 (Ripley)

Serving Mason; Jaclcson, Putnam, Ga/lia &amp; Meigs counties

•

• •PLEASANT VALLEY PRIVATE DUTY
10 II Vi and Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
·(304) 675-7404
(740) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)
(304) 372-2022 (Ripley)

Serving Mason, Jackson, Putnam, Gallia, Meigs &amp; Athens

'

···PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPICE
1011 Viand Street
· Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-7400
(740) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)
Serving Mason, Ga/lia &amp; Meigs counties.

'

.
'

•
..

DoUhonP.AS

INDEX
4 SECTIONS- 24 PAGES

PLEASANT '
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Tk raMt~ ·(J' PHF~io~a~
'

'

'

.

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D Section
Comics
insert
Editorials
A4
Movies
C2
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2
B Section
Sports
Weather

As

© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MIDDLEPORT- A projected $100,000 budget
shortfall next year is only
one of the financial problems Middleport Village
Council faces in the last two
rrionths of the fiscal year..
Earlier this year, Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker predicted . a shortfall of
between
$15,000 and
$20,000 by November.
Siuce she f1r-st·cpredieted·
dire financial straits back in
May, council has continued
to grant pay raises and dismiss potential ways to save
thousands of dollars in vil.
lage departments.
Councilman
Ferman
Moore, chairman. of the village's finance committee,
said Friday it appears that
virtually all areas under the
general fund will face
deficits before the end of
the year. Those deficits,
,
Joy llocmoad/JII"*'
Moore said. might leave Jackson Safrit of Charleston, S.C. pets a Belgian Horse during the Bob Evans Farm Festival which concludes today in
council with no choice but Rio Grande.
to reduce hours or issue layoffs to employees .before
2006 ends.
Council
appropriated
$517,250 into the general
fund in January, based on
estimated revenues prepared by the county auditor.
The village has enjoyed the
financial cushion of a
$93,000 estate tax windfall
·this· year, but next year, that
money won't be available.
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Baker said last week the
village may not meet its
original general fund approPOMEROY Once
priations before the end of
again a delay in the shi,pment of influenza vaccine
the year, meaning funds .
has forced the Meigs Couniy
expected for general fund
Health
Department
line items - sucb·as wages
- .may not be' available
(MCHD) to postpone its flu
shot clinics scheduled for
after all to meet even basic
expenses before year's end.
later this month though the
fat lady hasn't sung yet and
Moore said Friday the
mayor's office, police departthe MCHD has been assun;d
ment and tax department all
the vaccines will arrive. •
show projected deficits this
Last year the MCHD was
year, · although "the police
put in a similar situation .
when a shortage of vaccine
department may be able to
forced them to delay the
pull through the year."
'
clinics . Although the delay
In the meantime this year,
is similar this year the difcouncil has approved pay
ference is the MCHD i~
raises for all village employees including Baker.
. being told there is no short;
age of vaccine but the man&gt;
Some of those pay raises are
ufactures are shipping them
financed through line items
out in small increments
not in· the general fund, such
over time.
as street and refuse departAccording to Sherry
ments. Others, including
Wilcox , RN. MCHD direc·
raises for police officers, do
tor of nursing. all agencies
come from the general fund,
being supplied with influen:
and cost the village $4,000
za
vaccine through the Ohiq
per year, per employee,
Department of Health
Baker said last week.
(ODH) are only going to
Her pay raise was divided
receive 20 percent of the
among several departments
amounts ordered on that
and revenue sources.
first . shipment which isn't
Moore said the village
going to be shipped until tl)e
may not even have adequate
last wecrk of Octol)er. ne
fund&gt; to make the final payMCHD ordered 1.060 doses
ment for streetlight operawhich mean&gt; it will initial!~
tions. A levy approved earlireceive just over 200 does.
er this year pays only a porBrtan J. Rltlld/ pllotO ·
Wilh only 200 doses set to
tion of the total cost for Da rcy Winebrenner, pictLJred he re with he r escort, Dere k Putman, was crowned 2006
PINse see dillies. A1
Eastern High School Homecoming Queen at Fnday night's game against Miller.
Pie •se see Shortf•IL A1

1:astern J£omecoming

•

.,

Flu shot
clinics
postponeq

�•

REGIONAL.

,iunbap ltmn -6rnttnd
•

PageA2

SUPPORTERs GATHER

from PageA1

Joy Kocmoudjphuto

Supporters recently h.eld a fund-raising luncheon at the French Art Colony in Gallipolis to benefit the campaign of U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland for governor. From left are, back row, Sixth Congressional District candidate Charlie Wilson, Justin Fallon,
· candidate for Gallia County commissioner, Carole Roush, Gallia County Democratic chair, Strickland, Mary Deel, strickland
campaign representative for Gallia County, Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney Jeff Adkins, Nick Rupert, candidate for 87th
District state representative, and Gallia County Commissioner Fred Deel; front row, Mark Kirkhart, candidate for Gallia
County auditor: Dr. Kelly Roush, hostess for the event, Bobbi Holzer, hostess for the event, Rebecca and Craig Stafford,
host and hostess for the event, and Jeff Fowler, chair, Gallia County Central Committee.

:shorHall
from PageA1
those lights, and the general
fund picks up the difference
in the operating costs.
The village also faces .a
· $90,000 payment to the
Ohio
Public . Works
Commission by the year's
end, The payment repre·
sents the fl«Ond to retire a
planning loan the vlllaae
took for engineering and
plannina of a new water
treatment plant, which was

scrapped early this year. It is
expected to be paid through
a $5 water improvement fee
charged each month to
water customers. ·
Moore has proposed that
the village at least consider
a contract for police protec·
tion with the Village of
Pomeroy, estimating the
potential savings of at least
$100,000 per year, and a
contract for Income tax
administration at a potential
savings · of S25,UOO to
$30,000, but council voted
last week to discontinue
talks about those contracts.
Council
President

•

Clinics
from PageA1
lirrive for the first flu shot
olinic the MCHD decided to
wait until it receives wbat it
ealls an "adequate" amount
of vaccine to accommodate
tpe Meigs County popula~on , postponing both the
0ct. 27 and Oct. 31 flu shot
olinics.
: "Last year we were advising the public to get the vac-

cine elsewhere due to
uncertainty · of · receiving
vaccine but this year we are
being told there is not a
prpblem in getting what we
ordered it's just a matter of
when," Wilcox. explained.
In addition to flu shots,
the MCHD will also be
offering pneumonia vaccine
at the clinics. So far the
MCHD has received 150
doses of the 550 does it
ordered from a pri vale manufacturer.
In a statement the MCHD
said, "We regret that we

Stephen Houchins has said
proceeds from the sale of
the .Middlepqrt High School
and Central ' buildings will
help the village meet its
2007 financial needs, but
the village is no closer to
selling the property now
. than i~ w~s a year ago. · .
Accordmg to Moore, the
mounting financial difficulties are a sign of the need
for approval of a three-year,
three-mill
levy
on
November's ballot for oper·
atina expenses.
"Thlsls not extra money,"
Moore said. "The deficit we
project for next year's oper-

must postpone but circum-

stances are beyond our conlrQL We wish to serve as
many Meigs Countians as
we can, not just a few, there- ,
fore waiting until we have ·
received our order in its
entirety is the best we can
do. The Meigs County
Health Department. appreciates the public's patience
and understanding during
this challenging situation."
When the flu shot clinics
are rescheduled announcements will appear in The
Daily Sentinel.

Gallia County's coroner, was
called to the accident scene
shortly after it happened.
He said Friday that the
autopsy on Risner was performed by the ¥ontgomery
County coroner's office
around 4 p.m. on Sept. 30,
about 58 hours after the
accident and following
Risner's services that ·afternoon in Oak Hill.
Whiteley said some of
Risner~s BAC level cQuld
be attributed to natural
· decomposition of the body.
"We do not know if all
that alcohol was ingested,
but after a few days, alcohol car:t be produced as part
of ··
decomp'osition,"
Whiteley said.
"While he may have had
some alcohol in· his system,
I think it's unfair to say he
was intoxicated," he added.
The patrol has launched a
separate but related investigation to determine when
and where Risner could
have ingested alcohol.
Investigators reported
that Risner had just picked
up Holcomb at his residence.
Risner
was
approaching the end of his
shift and Holcomb was
about to begin his.
Investigators found that
Trooper Keith Fellure of
the G-M Post was off-duty
at the time when his small

ations will only be worsened
if the levy is not approved."
"Either way, we are going
to have to do some shuffling, and the rest of council
must face reality," Mooi'e
said. "As I see it right now,
someone will have to be
laid off."

'. SIPiday 1imei~ .
S.t•cribe tOday • ~~ Ul_~•

(

d I 1,1 II

1

uJ

..-....

L~• Home~~ auelntH

WILLIAMSTOWN, W.Va. scheduled to begin on
- West Virginia Division of Monday, Oct. 16, between
Highways has announced the hours of 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
upcoming lane closures on (daylight hours)," Essig sliid.
the Williamstown-Marietta 1- · "We anticipate that vari77 Ohio River Bridge ·to ous lane closures north
alh?w .for material testing of and/or southbound will be
the bndge deck, according to in place for the next three
Cliff Essig, District 3 bridge weeks," Essig said. "Lane
engmeer.
closures will remain in
"Single lane closures are place overnight; however,

'

.f

•

~.. .:L
I
I
I

,' .,~~~'. -·
n
...-..J

a

I

1
· 1

Springfield Township volunteer firefighters prepare to make entry at 2016· Duly Road near
Evergreen as smoke billows from around the door frame. Witnessess say there were two peo.
pie at home when the fire broke out, but-both made It safely out of the house. The fire was
extinguished soon after the firefighters entered the house. Further details were unavailable.

'

Leaf pick-up
scheduled
GALLIPOLIS
A
weekly leaf pick-up schedule has been established by
the city of Gallipolis beginQing Monday. Oct. 23 .
This schedule should provide a more effective cleanup and eliminate any .questions over when leaves will
be picked up.
"It · is our hope that this
schedule will give everyone

Whitt Villyl Double Huna·
LIFETIME WARRANTY
ENERGY STAR: AJ'IOII Gu A Trlplt Pant

740-992-4119

www.quelltywlndowsystems.com

more

uniform

service,"

Maintenance Superintendent
Jim Davis said.
The schedule is as fol. lows:
• Monday - All cross
streets and Fifth Avenue.
• Tuesday - First and
Second avenues.
• Wednesday - Garfield
Avenue, Ohio 141 and Ohio
588 ...
• Thursday - Thir&lt;l and
Fourth avenues.
• Friday Eastern
Avenue and Maple Shade
area.
For information or comments, contact the City
Maintenance Garage at 446-

FAMILY OWNED &amp; OPERATED· SINCE 19931

0600.
I

SMRM chapter
meeting set
· RIO GRANDE - The
Riverbend Chapter of the
Society
for
Human
Resource Management wi l1
meet on Wednesday, Oct. 18
at 8:30a.m. in Room 201 of .
Bob Evans Farms Hall (conference room on the second
floor) at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community&lt;:ollege.
Continental breakfast will
be served.
· A representative from the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department will be on hand
to discuss fire safety for

•

Outside or in, detecting a natural gas leak is easy. To help you srn • a leak from a gas
line or applianc:e, a familiar odor like rot1en eggs is often added 10 naMa! gas: Or you
m~SEE blowing dirt, bubbling water. or an UI'IU$UIIarea of dead vegetation. A leaking

businesses and demonstrate
a thermal imagining camera.
All ·area human resource
profe!isionals are encouraged
to attend. For more information, contact Phyllis Mason
at (740) 245-7228 or Debbie
Crawford at 245-5306.

Community ·
dinner
MIDDLEPORT - · Oasis
Christian · Fellowship will
hold a free community dinner
starting at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday at the old
American Legion Hall on
North Fourth Avenue, with
chili, sandwiches and dessert.

Commission
to meet

•

All women are welcome to attend and learn more about
breast canc:E!r and breast health.
For more information , call Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446-5679

•

POMEROY - Modern
Woodmen of America Camp
6335 will have a dinner
Thesday, 5 to 7 p.m. at China
One, 1540 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis. The camp will pay
$2.50 toward each person's
meal . ~ will be a drawing
for a family door prize.

Life Line
·screening
offered

·The Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
wants to thank
everyone
who helped make our

2nd Annual Biker
Sun~y

such a success.

· ' Matthew 7:7

Now Open
400 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

a

(740) 441-Q041

Utilities ~ect(on Service (OOPS) at 1-800-362-2764 at least two worlcing days befOIIl

•

Modern
Woodmen to
have dinner

Apple butter
for sale

unlikely that problem could occur. accidents can happen. Remember to call the Ohio

area, call your local natural gas company or 9-1-1 for emergency response.

Nov. 14. Ultrasound tests
will be conducted to determine risk of stroke due to
carotid artery blockage,
along with abdominal aortic
aneurysm, periipheral arterial disease and osteoporosis.
Appointments are required
and can be made by caUing
1-800-497-1557.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis City Commission
will meet in special session
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the·
City
Building,
City
Rock
Manager
R.
William • POMEROY
Springs United Methodist
Jenkins announced.
Church has homemade
applebutter for sale at $5 a
quart an $3 a pint.
Orders are to be placed
with Louise Radford 9925218 or Nancy Radford,
992-3912. Proceeds from the
sale are used for improveMIDDLEPORT
Health Scree.oings will be ment projects at the church.
held by Life Line Screening . On rwo Sarurdays each fall,
at the Middleport First the members of the church
Baptist Church on Tuesday, make applebutter to sell.

Natural gas pipelines are the nation$ safest method of transporting energy. While it's

law! And if you ever su!ipecl a gas leak-walk away, right away, When yciu•re ?ear ohhe

•

(740) .441-0045 .

•••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••
CHECK CASHING:
PAYDAY
ADVANCES:
•• •
•
••
•
Payroll • Government • Cashiers •
Borrow $200
•
••
• Money Orders • Insurance •
•
Payback $203
•• •• Checks
• hold your per&gt;onal check for day&gt;or • • Income Tax • Personal Checks •
•
••
CASH IT
••• cuslomcrs with proof of momhly i.ncome •• ••• IF WENOCAN'T
ONE CJ\N!
••
CC
700379
.011 -BR
CL
750291
.001-BR
• •
•• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
{ Fir~ I Time Cu!oolomers)
We
14
until your next payday. We accept monthly

This safety awareness message IS brought to you by the natural gas member comP4ni"' of the

Oruo Ga:s Assoc,ation.

•

•

• FilE!

proof'ofa
mammotram

and join

for free:

WI_._

(:::,up':, 6X fruhNI:J

pipeline miglt alto make a hissing sound you can HEM.

you start to dig for any landscaping or construction project on your propel'ly-4t's the

BrinK in

.

The week of Oc:tobtor 16tll or~ly, Curvet t• walvin• t he

wrvkefet whf.n you brt nslna cumnt mam~oatrlrt\.

}~'3~

• Prlct lnelud• window (up 10 101 VI) A labor

S.u spect a natural gas leak?
Fint, move your feet!
Then call when you;re ~own the street.

( 740) 446-54 7 4 or toll-free at 1-800-821-3860

_

• lf1111rM Mllllgl'lg • kelp your buddy Hltl
• 10 •mat ~ wtlh Wtbmllll
• Custom Stlrt PIQI • news, wedltr I morel

Local Briefs

Check out our website:

114 Court • Pomeroy
992-&amp;&amp;n

locations
worldwtdo.

tea•••
..............
........

$1890 lnstiUed*

1-800..291-5600

Onrg.soo .

(Nil

.•

To schedule your FREE C!jojca! Breast Exam
Call the Holzer Center for Cancer .Care at

Peebles
holds
job
fair
,_,......,.......,.......,,...

Michelle Miller/photo

Quality Window Systems;,Inc.
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

Sunday, October 15, 2006
'

Peebles District Manager
Scot Sode interviewed
Barbara Black of Cheshire
for one of the 35 or 40 positions at the new Peebles
store opening soon in
Gallipolis at the Ohio River
Plaza. The job fair was held
Thursday and Friday at the
Holiday Inn. Grand opening
of the Peebles store has
been set for Nov. 16.

~

Friday, October 20 is
National Mammogram Day

southbound lane closures
will be removed at the end
of each work day, in the
vicinity of the Marietta
Ohio Route 7 southbound
on ramp."
Lane closures could be
extended beyond three
weeks if inclement weather
or unforeseen circumstances arise.

PageA3

Quick end.to house fire

10 Windows For

!

.f n •

Bridge down to single lane

PROUD roBE APAKf&lt;fYOOI LifE.··

.
.

child became ill and nonresponsive, McClellan told
the Columbus Dispatch .
Fellure used his radio to
inform the post that he was
transpo!'ling his child to
the hospital.
It's now believed Risner
;md Holcomb overheard the
radio traffic "and were
enroute toward the hospital ·
or toward the route that the
off-duty trooper would have
taken to the hospital," a
patrol news release said.
. Damage to both vehicles
in the · crash was described
as massive . Reports from
the state fire marshal and
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration on
the cause of the fire are
pending.
·
Investigators have been
unable to retrieve information from either vehiCle '.s
"black box" to ·this point
because of the damage from ·
the frre and impact.
"This is an unthinkable
set of circumstances to find
ourselves in," McClellan
t~7ld the Dispatch. "We hold
ourselves to higher standards. It's devastating."
In light of the crash, the
state troopers union last
week demanded that fire
suppression
units
be
installed in Ford Crown
Victorias similar to the one
driven by Risner.
McClellan . told the
Dispatch that the fire sup- ·
pression units, which are
· qptional, would not have
prevented the fire resulting
from the crash.

Mtc- Mttler/phuto

• Life
• Retirement
t

AROUND TOWN

·iunba, ltmH -itntintl

Sunday, October 15,2006

Patrol

.

'

•

Sign Up Onllnel www.LociiNit.com

'-*'"!Qmmlirllwt.en~!l'r.ll!'l.ll'(\ ~ !ftl ~

rqnm "4 ...Jt.i wrtt&lt; .,-,y~
•· ~"""'\~""'ioo.ltn. ~ II)I']II{.(. .~C~ ~'II'OJi

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
I 99k Gqgd. Fnl B!Utr .. In Gtfffmlll
. llondey, October 16 at 6:00 pm at the Holzer Center for Cancer Care. located at 170 Jackson Pike

in Gallipolis, just in front of the Hospital. Join us at this American Cancer Society-sponsored group
that teaches female cancer patients beauty techniques to help restore their appearance and·selfimage during chemotherapy and radiation treatments. There is no cllarge for attending. For more
infonnation, call the American Cancer 'Society Cancer Resource Center at (740) 441-3909.
.

lrtat C10w AR•

II lpfgrmatJpnll fair .. in GJI!ipofis
October 17 !rom 3:00pm · 6:00pm at the Holzer Center for

Tuudlly,
Cancer Care, located
at 170 Jackson Pike In Gallipolis, just In front of Holzer Medical Center. All are invited to attend
this informational event desigl)ed to raise awareness of breast cancer. See ad below for details.
For more information, call (?,40) 446-5054.
Fredqm Frgm Smgklog • Smton 6 • Slaying Off • m Gal/jpof/s ·
Tundly, October 17 at 6:00 pm at the Holzer Tobacco Prevention Center, located at
2881 State Route 160 in Gallipolis. Session Six will cover exercise and as'jertive communication.
Regln atlon for this pi'OQI'IIm IS currently closed. Those who are pr•regl8tarad are ·
·,...]come to l!lleod. For more information about upcoming Freedom From Smoking classes,
can (740)448-5140.
Aytfam.Sy,.,.,... Grpyp ..

GtlllaoUs
Tundly, October 17 at 6:30pm in the HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Room C.
All are invited to attend. For more information. call HOPE lrtervention at (7411) 446-8598.
lp

B,..,lng Cl•"' • In Gllllpt!fla
Tundly, October 17 from 6:30 pm until 8:30 pm in the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp;
Conference Center Room AB In Gallipolis. Please call (740) 446-5030 to register or lor more
information.
Cnctr Suppon Grpup • In Gtl/lpo//s
Thuraday, October 19 at 6:00pm at'the Hospital's Education &amp; Conference Center. located on
the Ground Floor of the Charles E. Holzer, Jr., MD. Surgery Center. All cancer survivors. patients, .

family, friends, and all who are interested are invited to anend. For more information. call
(740) 4t6-567i. •

Commynity Coffn • In Gallipolis
Frid•y, October 20 from 8:00 am - 9;00 am in the HMC Education &amp; Conference Center.

Holzer Medical Center Invites all to an informal and ongoing community coffee promoting
conversalion between area leaders in business, community service. education. government
·and private enterprise. Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy Services Department. For more
information, please call (740) 446-5053 .
DI'Wu St!f-MaDI!!Imtnt CJuaa • In Jaclcson
October 23, 24 and 25 (Monday - Wednesday) from 9:00am . 12 Noon at Holzer Medocal CenterJackson in the Education Room. IQcated just inside the Main Entrance of the Hospital.
For more information, please call (740) 395-8500 or (740) 446-5971

�'

6unbap t;tmtl :6entintl

&amp;unba!' lim~ ·6tntfntl
825 Third Avenue·• Galllpolll, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Contro'ller

•
Letters
to the editor are we/rome. They shou/4 be less
· than 300 words. All/etten are s11bject to editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will l1e published. Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues. not persoTUJiities.

TODAY IN HISTORY

OPINION

PageA4

•

~unba!' 1!:ime~.-~entinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galltpolis

'

~ Obituaries

Cocktail party cred

• Page As

Deaths

R. Duane Null

Meador of Huntington; a sister, Margaret Rice of
Tallahassee, Fla.; a son-in-law, Jim Cupo of Clifton, N.J.;
five grandchildren, Cheryl Mead()r and Allen Meador II of
R. Duane Null, 64, of Gallipolis, passed away at home on Huntington, Jimmy Cupo and Susie Stoepker and her
Luther Lee Cochran. 81. Point Pleasant. W.Va. went
Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006.
.
spouse, Craig Stoepker, of Clifton, N.J., and Kathy Hoshi home to be with the Lord on Oct. 13, 2006.
He was born July 9, 1942, in Waterloo, to the late Homer of Rio Grande; six great- grandchildren, Adam Jefferson,
He is survived by his wife of 60 years Geraldine Parks
and Mary McComas Null.
Cochran.
Alexis .and Carly Stoepker, Karen Wilson, Tawyna Coon
·qs on Aug. 3, 1963, in and Alyssa Sheets; and two great-great-grandchi ldren,
. Duane married Helen "
Funeral service will be held I p.m. on Wednesday. Oct.
Waterloo, and she survive' . "· .
·
· Ziondria Wilson and Frances Wilson.
18,.2006
at the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
.He was a graduate of Waterloo High School in 1960,
·Graveside services will be I p.m. Monday, Oct. 16,2006, with Brother Chester Cochran officiating. Burial will be in
Rto Grande College in ·1964 and The Ohio State at the White Chapel Memorial Gardens Christus Chapel, the Forest Hills Cemetery Flatrock. Friends may call from
University in 1972.
.
. 4-8 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 16, 2006 at the Little Tavie Old
with the Rev. Tom Dyer officiating.
·
· Duane was retired as a licen sed physical therapist. In his
Entombment will follow in the Christus Chapel. Friends Regular Baptist Church, Flatrock and also at the Deal
re~trement, he authored the books History of. Waterloo,
may call Monday after 12:30 p.m. at White Chapel Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2006.
ljrstory of Superior and History of 8/ac/ifork. He 'was also Memoripl Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va. Donation~ would
a memb!!r of the Wa.terloo Masonic Lodge.
be welcome to the Ronald McDonald House at 1500 17th
· He js survived by his wife, Helen Null of Gallipolis; a St, Huntington, W.Va. 2S70 I. Chapman's Mortuary in
half-stster, Edna Irene Miller of Gallipolis; a half-brother, Huntington is in charge of arrangements.
Donald (Eileen) Dillon of Dayton; four nieces, Judy
Condolences may be sent to www.chapmans-mortuary.com.
B·arcus, Janice Facemire, Denise Richards and Pam Ball ;
Mount, N.C. will be the
and a nephew, ·Doug Dillon.
evangelist for a revival at
He was preceded in death by hi s parents; his half-sisters,
the Pomeroy Church of the
Audrey Null, Grace Tibbs and Mildred Rowe; and a niece,
Sunday, .Oct. 15
Clara
A.
(Harbour)
Elliott,
83,
of
the
Mudsoc
Susan Miller. ·
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Nazarene, 196 Mulberry
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday, Oct. 16, 2006, at the Community, went home to be with the Lord, Friday, Oct. Community
Church. Ave ., Pomerciv. Services.
13,
2006
at
her
residence.
Willis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Ron Nicholas officiatSecond St., Syracuse, 6:30 9:30 a.m. Sunday ~chool.
She was born on Feb. 2. 1923, daughter of the late Hollis p.m. service with Rick 9:30 · a.m.; morning wor~
ing. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
There will be no calling hours.
· and Margaret (Houck) Harbour. She was a homemaker and Little preaching.
ship, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
Pallbearers will be AI Trahan, Mike Monagahan, Jim. retired from the Gallipoli s Developmental Center.
eventng.
.6 p.m. and ·
POMEROY Major
Clara .was preceded in death by her part:nts, one brothIngles, Neil McMahon,. Robert Rodgers and Bill Webb.
through
Sherman
A.
Cundiff. Monday
Honorary pallbearers ar~ Ralph Lunsford and Rodger er, David Harbour, and by two sisters. Ethel Woods and Salvation Army; Rock y Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Hazel Davis .
Winebrenner.
.
Clara is survived by her husband of 66 years, Ralph W.
. In lieu of flowet:§, please consider donations in Duane's
Elliott,
whom she married on Sept. IS, 1940; three daughmemory to the Holzer Foundation for the Holzer Center for
ters,
Dottie
(Robert) Fellure of Gallipolis, Janice Davis of
Cancer Care, I00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 4S631;
Bossard Memorial Library, 7 Spruce St., Gallipolis, Ohio St. umis, Mo., and Diana (P.J.) Gauze of Patriot; three sons,
45631; or Holzer Hospice, I00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ralph Wayne (Lana) Elliott, Jr. of Gallipolis, Donald
(Debbie) Elliott and Douglas (Debra) Elliott, both of Patriot,
Ohio 45631.
Sunday... Areas of frost in cloudy with a 50 percent
· Please visit www.willisfulieralhome.com to send e-mail nine grandchildren, Christi (Bert) Colvin, Keith (Bethany) the morning. Mostly sunny. chance of shower,. Lows in
Fellure, Marie Davis, Allen .(Mendy) Elliott, Cindi (Phillip) Highs in the upper 50s. the mid 40s.
condolences.
Kuhn, Mehssa (Judson) Swmdler, forrest, Emtly and Ntles West winds around S mph.
Thesday... Mostly c'!oudy
Elliott; six great grandchildren, Garrett and Michaela
Sun!lay
nlght ... Partly with showers likely. Highs
Colvin, Brody Fellure, Teresa Davis, Boston and Isaac
cloudy. Lows in the upper in the upper 60s . Chance of
Kuhn, and two step great grandchildren, Chase and Kaitlyn
30s. South winds around 5 rain 60 percent. ·
Charles "Ed" Edwin Meador, 87, of Huntington, W.Va., Liptrap, one sister Helen Hermann of St. Louis, Mo.
Thesday night ... Mostly
widower of Juanita May Meador, passed away Friday Oct.
Service will begin at 2:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 16, 2006 at mph.
cloudy
with a 40 percent
Monday
...
Partly
cloudy
13, 2006, at his residence.
Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Alfred Holley officiating.
with
a
chance
20
percent
chance
of
of
showers. Lows in
He was born Feb. 23, 1919, in Hinton, W.Va., son of the Burial will follow in Neal Cemetery at Mudsoc . Friends
so,.
the
lower
showers.
Highs
in
the
lower
late Allen Manton and Hattie Mae McGee Meador.
may call one hour prior to the service on Monday at Willis
Wednesday ... Partly
He retired from Owens Illinois.
Funeral Home. Pallbearers will be Bert Colvin, Keith 60s. Southeast winds.S to 10
cloudy.
Highs in the upper
mph.
·
In addition to his parents and wife, he is preceded in Fellure; Allen Elliott, Phillip Kuhn, Judson Swindler, and
Monday
night
...
Mostly
60s.
death by a daughter, Brenda Gale Cupo, formerly of Forrest Elliott; Honorary Pallbearers will be Tony Lyall,
Clifton, N.J.; a granddaughter, Tasheka Coon; and two· Dennis McGuire, and Tom Lyon.
brothers, John Allen Maedor and Clemmer Maedor.
II) lieu of flowers please consider making a donation to
He is survived by his daughter, Karen Sheets of Rio Holzer Hospice 100 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 in
Grande; a son and daughter-in-law, Allen and Brenda Clara's Memory.

The CBS News website American who believes
I( you can handle yourwas deluged with viewers that God deserves some
self on the avenues of
indignant
that
Mr. academic exposure is a
urban America, the wise
·Rohrbaugh was allowed to commoner, a groundling, a
guys will say you have
utter such heresy. Many prole . If you question a
"street cred." That means
"reproductive
people vowed never to woman's
you ate savvy in the ways
Bill
watch CBS News again. rights," there will be few
of tlie hood and have crediO'Reilly
How could this happen , party invitations for you.
bility among the denizens
they asked. How could that Believing that' secularism
thereof. "Street cred"
kind of opinion be allowed has, indeed, led to social
allows you acceptance in
.
on GBS?
problems would melt your
some tough neighborKatie
Couric
replied
So
"cocktail
party erect"
hoods.
murdered in the Columbine .
on
her
blog:
.
"We
knew
quicker than a snowman in
In the media salons of High School massacre.
Manhattan
and
Los Ever s.ince that terrible when we decided to put on Aruba.
Angeles, there is also a tragedy, Mr. Rohrbaugh this segment that a lot of · The truth is that the
hunger for social credibili- has been thinking about people would disagree with national media is dominatty. Let's call it "cocktail why it happened; what . it. We also knew some ed by a "groupthink" that
party cred." That is an drove two teenagers to might even find. it repug- does, indeed. find Brian
Rohrbaugh' s
analysis
acceptance among your murder 12 of their peers for nant."
Repugnant?
repugnant.
1
do
not
peers at swell gatherings absolutely no reason?
Why would Ms. Couric . believe Katie ComiC
where expensive wine and
Brian Rolirbau gh c.a me
canapes are served.
· to the conclusion that the use such a loaded word? If meant to offend Mr.
"Cocktail party cred" has secularization of public a pro-choice person deliv- Rohrbaugh, I think she
a bit in common with schools and a permissive ered a commentary on CBS just couldn't believe what
"street cred," in that you · society led to his son's News, would Katie have he said. I may be wrong,
must have the right alii- death . So, un the Katie · used
- the ."R'' word? I don 't but in her social circles
think
so, because there that kind of world view is
tude. On the pavement, ypu Couric newscast, he said
have t&lt;J be physically tough this: "For over two genera-' would have been no con- rarely if ever heard.
and creatively profane. In · tions, the public school troversy. The pro-choice
So listen closely. The
the media soirees, of system has taught in a position is standard issue at American media is now
course, that is not neces- moral vacuum, expelling almost every media opera- addicted to politically cor- .
rect discourse garnished
sary - but you must think God from the school and tion in America.
But it's not among the with brie and whatever
a certain way.
froni the government, .
Let me give you an replacing him with evolu- folks. A recent CNN poll tartare. Brian Rohrbaugh
of may speak for millions of
that , 45 %
example.
The
CBS tion, where the strong kill says
Evening News with Katie the weak without conse- Americans believe abortion everyday Americans, but to
Couric recently began ·a quences.
should be outlawed unless the press poobahs ' he is
commentary segment fea"And life has no inherent · the mother's ·life is threat- from another planet. At one
turing
a varieiy of value. We teach there are ened. That's almost half the time in ihis country the
Americans spouting qff for no absolutes, no 'right or country. B'ut, trust me, media was supposed, to
about ninety seconds. One wrong. And I assure you, those people are not sip- respect and look out for the
of the first guys invited to the murder of innocent ping cocktails with the folks . But that was then and
this is now.
speak
was
Brian children is always wrong, media elite.
In the toney world of the
Another cocktail, anyRohrbaugh, whose I 5- including by abortio11."
national media, a pro-life one?
year-old son Daniel was
Uh-oh.

Holy heat wave} Batman!

w-. ..... ....

; Sunday, October 15, 2006

Sunday,Cktobert5,2006

Today is Sunday, Oct. 15, the 288th day of 2006. There
: are 77 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. IS, 1964, it was
announced that Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev had
been removed from office. He was succeeded as premier by
Alexei N. Kosygin and as Communist Party secretary by
Leonid I. Brezhnev.
On this date: In 1914. the Clayton Antitrust Act was .
. passed by Congress.
In 1917. Dutch dancer Mata Hari. convicted of spying for
the Germans, was executed by a French firing squad·out.side Paris.
In 1928,. the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin landed in
Lakehurst. N.J., completing its first commercial flight
·. across the Atlantic.
In 1945, the former premier of Vichy . France, Pierre
Laval, was executed.
In 1946. Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering poisoned
himself hours before he was to have been executed.
In 1966. President Johnson signed a bill creating the
Department of Transportation.'
In 1969, peace demonstrators staged activities across
the country, including a candlelight march around the
White House, as part of a moratorium aga inst the
Vietnam War.
In 19,76, in the first debate of its kind between vice-presidential nominees, Democrat Walter F. · Mondale and
Republican Bob Dole faced off in Houston.
In 1991, despite sexual harassment allegations by Anita
Hill, the Senate narrowly confirmed the nomination of
Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court, 52-48. ·
In 2003, , II people were killed when a Staten Island
ferry slammed into a maintenance pier. (The ferry's
pilot, who'd blacked out at the controls, later pleaded
guilty to manslaughter.)
Ten years ago: CSX Corp. announced plans to buy
Conrail Inc. for $8.4 billion to create the nation's third
largest railroad.
Five years ago: Officials announced that a lener sent to
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle had tested positive
for anthra){, and that the infant son of an ABC News pro- .
ducer in New York had developed skin anthrax. Bethlehem
Steel Corp. filed for Chapter II bankruptcy.
One year ago; Iraqis voted to approve a constitution. A
crowd that had gathered to protest a rieo-Nazi manch· in
Toledo, Ohio, turned violent, prompted the mayor to
. declare a state of emergency.
· Today's Birthdays: Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. is
· 89. Singer Barry McGuire is 71. Actress Linda Lavin is 69.
Actress-director Penny Marshall is 64. Rock musician Don
Stevenson (Moby Grape) is 64. Singer-musician Richard
Carpenter is 60. Actor Victor Banerjee is 60. Tennis player Roscoe Tanner is 55. 'Singer Tito Jackson is 53. Actor
Jere Burns is 52. Actress Tanya Roberts is 51. Britain's
Duchess Of York, Sarah Ferguson. is 47. Chef Emeril
on. We
had · bought me, and me trying to look
One evening, my wife
Lagasse is 47. Rock musician Mark Reznicek is 44. Actor
Alexander
a Batman manly and calm despite the
mentioned, casually, that
Dominie West is 37. Singer Eric Benet is 36. Rhythm-andwalkie-talkie set; Michelle fact that after 30 seconds in
she had been talking to the
. blues singer Keyshia Cole is 25. Actor Vincent Martella
gave Alexander one unit the sun I could have fried
sen of one of her friends, a
("Everybody Hates Chris") is 14.
and told him to use it to call an egg on top of my cowl.
little boy named Alexander,
Thought for Today: " I would rather believe that God did
Batman. These Batman
about his upcoming fourth
Finally the cake arrived,
Dave
not exist than believe that He was indifferent. ... - George
walkie-ttllkies contain actu- and everybody sang "Happy
· birthday.
Barry·
Sand, French authqr ( 1804-187~) .
"Alexander says he's
al transistors. so when Birthday," and I announced
having a Batman party,"
Alexander called me, I was that I had to go fight crime.
able to hear, on the other Striding back to the
my wife said.
'"Hm,, I said.
unit, clear as a bel!, a ran- Batmobi le, I opened the car
LETTERS
TO THE
•
"So I told him that weakling wearing an auto- dom bunch of static . door, turned dramatically
EDITOR
maybe Batman would mobile floor mat.
Interpreting thi s as the Bat toward the youngsters and
party,"
my
wife
come
to
the
It
took
·
me
a
lot
longer
.Signal,
I pulled the rubber said, quote, "BWEEPBLeuers to the editor are welcome. They slzould be
said.
than one comic panel to 'get Bat Cowl over mv head. WEEPBWEEPBWEEP."
less than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing,
"Hm," I said.
into this costume, but final - thus rendering - myself Actually, · it was the
must be signed. and include address and telephone
My
wife
said
nothing
ly I was ready. to speak the legally blind, and.drove the Batmobile that said 'this,
number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
then. She just loo~ed at me. words that strike fear into Toyota Batmobile into , the because I had forgotten to
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not perSuddenly, I knew who was the hearts of criminals back yard.
deactivate the Bat Alarm. I
sonalities. Letters of thank.f to organizations and indigoing to be Batman.
e\lerywhere: "Dear, could
The effect on the party climbed into the front Seal,
viduals will not be accepted for publication.
I was not totally opposed. you tie my G-string'" lt guests, as you would slammed the door with sevIn my youth, I read niany turns out that a key part of expect, was electrifying . eral inches of cape sticking
Batman comics, and it the Batman costume ·is this The adults were so electri- out the bottom and backed
seemed to me that he had a triangular floor mat piece fied that so me of them · manfully and blindly into
pretty neat life, disguised that protect s the Bat almost wet the mselve s. the Street. Fortunately, there
Reader SeiVices
a~ wealthy playboy Bruce
Region. It 's very ditTicult The younger guests were was nothing in my way,
Third Avenue , Gallipolis , OH
Correction Polley
Wayne,
waiting
for
the
into silence. because I would definitely
to attach this piece to your- stunned
Our ma•n concem in all s1ories is to be 45631 . Periodical postage paid
police commissioner of self without help, which except for Matthew. age I. have. hit it. and the law
accurate. If you know of an error in a at Gallipolis.
story, please call one of our newsroc:ms. Member: The Associated Press,
Gotham City to shine the could explain why Batman who ran, cryi ng , to hi s would not have been on my
the
West
Virginia
Press
Bat Si,gnal onto the clouds hooked up with Robin.
morn , and probably did side. ("Mr. Barry, please tell
Association , ·and the Ohio
Our malo number$ are:
(it
was
always
a
cloudy
the jury exactly what you
I
was
ready.
In
wet himself.
At
last
Newspaper Association .
O::nbunr • Gallipblis, OH
night
.
when
the
comtnis.
full Bat regalia, I stepped
With all eyes upon me. I were wearing as you backed
Postma1ter: Send address cor·
(740) 446-2342
rections
to
the
Gallipolis
Daily
sioner
needed
Batman).
out
of
the
house,
and
-as
stopped
the Batmobile, your car over the plaintiff.")
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
Tribune, 825 Th&lt;rd Avenue.
Then
Bruce
would
change
as
this
may
soundllung
the
door
open, and. in
The
next
day,
crazy
(740) 992-2t55
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
l\ra&lt;llrr • Pl. Pleasant, WV
instantly - it took him for the first time I truly one fluid. manly motion . Alexander's mnm reported
(304) 67&amp;-1333
only one comic-book panel understood 1 as only a cru- sprang out of the seat. then that the first thing he did
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
- into his Batman cos- sader for justice can got retracted violently back when he woke up was tum
Our Wlbs!tes are:
One month .......•••'10.27
tume and roar off in the understand, why people .do into the &gt;Cal, because 1 had on his walkie-talkie and
[nbunr • Gallipolis, OH
One year . ........ . .'123.24
·
Batmobileto do battle with ·not wear heavy black rub- forgotten to unfasten my call Batman . He said he
Sunday ........... _ • }1.50
www.mydailytribune.com
the Forces of Evil or attend ber outfits in South . seat belt. Eventually I was could hear Batman, but
Senior Citizen rateo
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
One
month
...........
'9.24
a
birthday party.
Staggedng . able to disentangle my cape Batman couldn't hear him
Florida.
www.mydallysentlnel.com
One year , ..........'103.90
Of
course,
Bruce
owned
1\rgollrr • Pt. Pleasant, WV
through the armor-pierc- and stride in a manly. rub- because he was busy fightshould remit in advance
www.mydailyregilter.corn
his
own
Batman
costume.
I
ing sunshine and 384 per- berized· way over to the ing evil supercri minals
direcllc l1o Gallpolls Dally Trtbt.11e. No
suboalplion by mail . . , - in .,...
had to rent mine. It consist- cent humidity. I made it to birthday boy.
named Poison Ivy and Mr.
Our tHJ]Bil addrn= are:
where home CArrier service is available.
ed of numerous black rub- the Batmobile, which was
"Happy ·
birthday, Freeze. This was almost
a::nboont • Gallipolis, OH
ber pieces, similar to auto- disguised as a wealthy Alexander'" I said, using a true: Batman was actually
Mall Subscription
_ , mydailytribune.corn
mobile floor mats, with playboy\ Toyota Celica.
deep Bat Voice. After that. battling Heat Rash . So he
-County
SeiJ!inel • Pomeroy, OH
13
'32.26
strings
so
you
could
tie
When
we
got
to
the conversation lagged: 'will be out of ac tion for a
.-aomydallyoet~htel.c:Gm
26 w-s ............'64.20
them to your body. One Alexander·, hou&gt;e. in because, let's be honest. while. The next superhero
l\r1r11rr • Pl. Pleasant, WV
52 Weeks ........... '127.11
piece was shaped like rip- accordance with our Bat what are you going to talk from this household to
-omydallyreglslef.com ·
.
piing
chest muscles. so you Plan. I remained oubide in to Batman about'' The pen- visit Alexander - aqd I
Outside County
(USPS 436-840)
13 Wef'ks .. · .. ' .•....'53 .55
could transform yourself. the Batmobile while my nan! rac,s? So we just have made this very clear
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 26 Weeks . . .
. .. '107.10
like magic, from a flab.by wife wcm to the back yard. &lt;,tood there for a while, to my wife - will defiPubloshed every Sunday, 825 52 Weeks . . . ..... .'214 .21
weakling into a flabby where the pany wa; going · with Alexander staring at nitely be Cat Woman.

~unbap ~lmes -~entlnel

.

Luther Lee Cochran

Meigs County calendar

Clara A. (Harbour) Elliott ·

Church events·

Local Weather

Charles Edwin Meador

ANNIE.'S MAILBOX
1
1

i

'

I

•

!

Wife has had it with manipulative husband

lvANDKATHY
MITOHILL
MAIICY lutAIII

finish, charges up a storm plenty of women (and
on credit cards and still men) who feel trapped in a
yells at me. In either marriage they cannot leave
Dear Annie: I have been phase, he uses profanity, for whatever reason married for 28 years to lumps to conclusions and children, money. illness but suc!l freedom always
. someone I wish would drop ·ts all-around nasty.
Three years ago, Carl requires sacrifice. It is posdead. This man has made .
my life a total hell on earth. decided we were no longer · sible that continued insurEarly in our mat'l'iage, I ~oing to kiss or caress, ance covera~e could be
realized "Carl" was bipo- . just go right to inter- .part of the dtvorce settlel'ar. I demanded we see a course. That was the final ment. Talk to a lawyer and
'
counselor because of his straw, and I stopped haY- find out.
Living with someone who
irrational behavior, and ing sex with him. We no
the therapist started him longer have any interests is bipolar can be stressful
and challenging, especially
on an antidepressant, in common.
which helped tremendousI tried to save our mar- if Carl is unwilling to
Contact
the
ly. Carl, however, was not riage, but now I am trying to change.
happy with the change, . save my sanity. I'm a good' Depression and Bipolar
and soon figured out he natured, young-looking 50. Support Alliance · (dbsalc,ould manipulate me by I am self-employed and liance.org) at 1-800-826refusing to take his meds mostly healthy, but have 3632 for help. Good luck .
Dear Annie: My husunless I gave in to his had seveml orthopedic proband
has trouble getting
demands , most of which cedures, and Carl's job prowere sexual.
vides my health insurance . . along with my siblings.
I learned to hate him He told me if I file for We're planning to visit my
because of this, and dreaded divorce, he will cancel my brother and sister-in-law
soon and thought it would
sex. Carl soon went off the coverage. ·
meds entirely and became
Would it be horrible of be easier if we stay at a
his mean, agitated, hateful me to get a boyfriend? I hotel rather than with the
self again. He said he didn 't would remarry, but I can't family. I'm concerned my
like the way the medication jump out of the frying pan brother will be a little
made him ·fee'!, especially into the fire without first · insulted if we don't stay
. since it decreased his te.sting the waters. I. can't with them . Any suggesarousal. Never mind that his live on Social Security dis- tions? - Caught In the
family was miserable. Sex ability, and I don't make Middle
Dear Caught: Here are a
was more important.
enough to pay for the rent
few:
Tell them, .. "We are
When Carl is depressed, and groceries. Are there
. he drinks a lot , overeats other women like me ? more Ctltnfortable in a
and yells at me. When he What can I do? - Ready . hotel ," ··we get up a lot in
the middle of the night,"
is manic, he talks fast, to Start Looking Again
starts projects he doesn't · Dear:Ready: There are "We need our privacy,"

"We couldn't r.ossibly
impose on you," ·We like
room service," "Hotels
seem like a vacation ."
Whatever works.
Dear Annie: I live in a
very close community, and
all the women do a lot of
things together. One of the
neighbor's daughters is felting married, and 40 o us
were invited to a shower in
March. The wedding is now
two weeks away, and most
of us have not been invited
to the wedding. Is this right ?
- Off the Guest List in
Arizona
Dear Arizona: No.
According to Peggy .Post.
no one should be invited
t() a shower w.ho is not
also invited to the wedding. It comes across as a
grab for gifts.
Annie's Mailbox is writ-

ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime .editors of the Ann Lattders
column. Please e-mail your
questiotts to am1iesmail·
box@cOincast.net, or write
· to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606JJ. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonis.ts, visit the.
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Gallia County calendar
Community
events
Sunday, Oct. 15
· GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Teenage Republicans will
meet at 4 p.m . at Gallia
County Republican headquarters, Second Avenue
and Pine Street.
Monday, Oct. 16
' GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Ohio Township
Association meeting, 7
p.m., Gallia County Senior
Resource C~nter, 1167 State
Route 160.

· Card shower
THURMAN Freda
Thorne will be celebrating
her 92nd birthday on Oct.
18. Cards may be sent to
her at 794 Cherry Ridge
Road , Thurman. Ohio
45685 .

Local Stocks
ACI- 31.08
AlP -40.00

Kroltr- 21.11
Ltd.-

u.n

Alc&amp;o- 11.17

Aahltnd - 88.11
BIG- 20.811
Bob Evtna - 33.23
BorJWarntr - 59.81
CENX-36.13
Champion- 7.37
Chermlnl Shope - 14.78
CHy Hokllnl- 40.68
Col- 57.97 .
DG-13.71
DuPont - 45.08
Federal Mogul - .40
USB -33.76
Gannett - 57.07
General Eiectrlc - 35.98
GKNLY- 5.35
Harley Davidson :... 63.81
JPM -48.16

NIC-48.82
Otk Hill Flntnclal - 26.22
ova -25.111
BBT- 44.03
Peoples - 30.77
Papaleo - 62.45
Premier - 14.60
Rockwell - 61.69
Rocky Boots- 12.93
Sears - 172.57
Wai·Mart ...: 48.46
Wendy's - 34.93
Worthington - 17.63
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Financial
Advlsoi'S of Hilliard Lyons In
Galllpolls.

3'14/1.«4£
l•'all llat'\'t~st
(i()Sj)(~J ~ill~
flrlda\ K Sat m·da1
OrloiH•r 201h &amp; Oflolwr 21st

.

~

liJIIn 1111 llltHl ·

IJtllllll 12am

at Rutland Chic' Cc·nh·.r·

• l·'t~·r .\dmlsslon • Oocn 11rlz••s
• Ft'atnrl'd .\rllsl t:rrald f~mllh
aiORA \\U h at 1.-ast 20
adell Ilona I m·llsl s
IIIlO: 740-!)IJ;..:I-l!):"i
....... hiJt•c•dc•a·lr~®lll'hl 1 .nrl

~ .,

®Driver Safety

GALLIPOLIS - Ruby
Cornell will celebrate her
90th birthday on Oct. 18.
Cards may be sent to her at
II 0 State St.. Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631.

E-mail community calelldar
items
~o

kkelly@mydailytribulle.co
m. Fax anttouncements to
44~-3008. Mail items to
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio
45631.
Annou11cem.ents may al.m
be dropped off at the
Tribu11e office.

TANLEY

UNDERS

MONUMENT-S
Houn :
Mon-Fri. 9:00am to 5:00pm

CustmtJ designed
&amp; lettered for your
loved ones.
Many samples
on .Display

446-6352
After hoors and for appointments call Lloyd Danner 44b·4ffl
or Da•·ld Tawney 446-1615

352 THIRD A VENUE • GALLIPOLIS,

~-·· •

Progr~m
October 18 and 20 • 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Participants mustattend both sessions
O'Bieness Lower Level Room 010
A two-day class course designed as a
refresher for motorists age 50 or older.
•
•
•

•
•

Update driving knowledge and skills
Learn how to avoid driving hazards
Learn how to maintain mobility and
independence
Course fee $10
Notests!

To enroll in the course. call (740) 592-9206 .

O'BLENESS
Mcmnrial Ho•pital
~~~~Or·~!

A!brlo' lltl ~ '"ll ~lu:

www.obleness.org

�Page A6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday, October 15,2006

Inside

Bl

6unba~ QI;tmd -6tntintl

l'rep rootball Undings, Page Bl
BoDCOftS, . . . 83

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Tri4County Football Scoreboard
Gallia Academy
Jackson

Point Pleasant
Ravenswood

Fairland
River Valley

Miller
Eastern

Meigs
Alexander

•

·· :

Southern

··

Waterford

::=

South Gallia
Symmes Valley
Buffalo
Wahama

'

,

II

Fairland
.downs
Raiders

•

:
..
· ..

18

BY A-CARMI
.SPORTS CORRESPONQENT

CHESHIRE - The 500gorilla also known as
a wmless season 1s no
longer on the . back of the
Fairland High School football team.
T h e
Dragons
struck early
and often
on the way
ro their first
of
win
2006, a 39to-6 romp
over River
Valley.
Roulh
Fa1rland
(1-7, ovc
1-2) rolled
up
21
points
in
the
first
quaner and
led 33-0 at
the half.
Running
back Jordan
Kersey
keyed the
Cumutte
Fairland
-- .· .
attack,
rushing for 95 yards and
three touchdowns. He
scored on runs of two and 37
yards in the first half and
added an ll-yard scoring
run in the third period.
Quanerllack Cole Hatfield
was 12-of-16 for 139 yards
and found Jake Lucas for a
pair of fJTSt-quaner TD passes. Lucas finished with five
receptions for 65 yards. His.
two seoring receptions covered 27 yards and four
yards, respectively.
Fairland rolled up 322
· yards of offense, with 183
coming on the ground and
139 through the air.
The Dragon defense
forced four turnovers -. two
fumbles and two interceptions - and held River
Valley to just one yard rushing on 33 carries. Fairland
recorded four sacks, led by
Bryan Meyers · with twoand-a-half. ·
Sophomore Travis Roush
led the Raiders with 9(i total
yards- 63 receiving and 33
QJshing. Sophomore Zach
Baird added 20 yards rushing.
.
Senior Bryan Morrow
passed for 63 yar'ds and had
one catch for 72 yards.
Sophomore qualterl!lack
Clayton Curnutte came. off
the bench in the second half
to try and spark the Raider
offense. He finished 4-of-6
for II 0 yards with a touch- .
down pass to tight end Zak
Dee! and one interception.
Raider defensive lineman
Jesse Thomr.son recorded
River Valley s lone sack of
the night, droppin~ Hatfield
for a 6-yard loss w1th 7:26 to
play in the second quaner.
River Valley came up with
three turnovers. Junior Sean
Sands picked off a pass by
backup QB Kyle Riley in
the fourth quarter and recovered a Hatfield fumble·.
Defensive lineman lan
Lewis also recovered a fumble.
Fairland returns home
next week to .face South
Point then travels to
Chesapeake for its final
game.
River Valley (1-7, OVC03) closes out the season
with two consecutive road
games . The Raiders travel
to Chesapeake next week
then play at Coal Grove in
Week 10.
poun~

UNIVERSilY

MEDICAL·
CEN'IER

·.:.·

Lany Crum/photo

South Gallia's Dustin McCombs caught
three passes for 142 yards in a win over
Symmes Valley.

South Gallia
makes history
BY

LARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MVOAILYI'&lt;EGISTER.COM

WILLOW WOOD - Black cats, broken
mirrors, Friday the 13th and a matchup
with Symmes Valley - nothing ·seems to
be able to stand in the way of the "Road
Rebels."
It took an interception by John Wells
with less than 30 seconds to go · to seal

PINse see History, 82

Brad Shenll1n ...oto

Gallia Academy Blue Devils defenders combine to put a big hit on Jackson quarterback Zane Holzapfel durIng the Blue Devils' 34-27 win over the lronmen Friday in Gallipolis.
·

Nine straight over Jacksmr
.

'

,_

team's 34-27 high school football
victory over the Ironmen on
Friday at Memorial Field.
GALLIPOLIS - Not your typ·· The Devils' final scoring drive
ical Blue Devil drive, but it led to covered 72 yards and chewed up
what has become a typical result more than five minutes off the
- aGalliaAcademy victory over clock . Contrary to . Gallia
Jackson.
Academy's trademark wide-open
The streak continues: Make it and unpredictable style, all 10
nine in-a-row for the Blue Devils plays stayed on the ground.
over their biggest rivals.
Run blocking w.as an area that
Jayme Haggerty delivered the Gallia Academy coach Matt
knockout · punch with his fourth Bokovitz and his staff spent the
touchdown of night - capping a majority of the time on during
physical, time-consuming fourth ·Tuesday's practice.
quarter drive that .sealed his
"Boy, it paid off tonight," said
BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN®MVDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Meigs keeps slim
playoff hopes alive
Spartans went in to their bag
of tricks recovering an
ons~de
kick. Alexander
ALBANY - Cornelius drove to the Marauder 26,
English and David Poole but Man Demosky's pass on
·combined to rush for 350 fourth down fell incomplete.
Meigs drove to the
yards, leadmg the Me1gs
Marauders . Spanan 38, but Story fumto a hard- bled on first down, and
fought 26-6 Demosky recovered for
win
over Alexander at the Spanan 43.
t
h
e Seven plays later, Demosky
Alexand~r . hooked up with Seth Fowler
Spartans m for a 17 yards scoring pass
Tri-Valley at the 3: 16 mark of the first
. Conference period. The extra points
0 h i o were no good, but the host
D i v i s i o n held a 6-0 lead.
English
f o o t b a II
The Marauders were on
r--:::~::---, action
on. the' drive early in the second
Friday. ·
period, driving to the
The win Spanan 23. English broke
broke
a off a 14-yard run, but while
two-game struggling for extra yards,
losing steak fumbled with the Spartans
by
the recovering at their own nine .
Marauders,
Alexander drove to the
40,
but
and the win Marauder
kept ·their Demosky's pass was picked
pI a yo f f off by Story, who returned it
hopes alive 27 yards to the Spartan 32'. It
Poole
with a 6-2 took Meigs only five plays
'\ mark, and a and English powered over
1-2 mark in the TVC. from four yards out. Casey
Alexander drops to. 3-4 Richardson added the extra
overall and 1-2 in the con- points with 5:33 left in the
ference.
half to give the Marauders a
Meigs elected to receive
the opening kickoff, but the
Please see Melp, 82

.

.

.

Bokovitz. "We kept telling our
kids, 'it would be nice if somebody would say that our offensive
line made the difference, and running the football made the !iifference in the win."'
;
WelL coach -they're saying-it
now. Led by Phil Bokovitz, Sam
Shawver, . David Rumley, Jeff
Howell and Robbie Daniels Galli a · Academy finished with
24 7 yards on the ground, the
team's second highest total of the
season.

Please see Nine, Bl

II /1/oMQJ( eTo(l.o~

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

BY DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Hedy M. w-mdsor,.MD
··~

.

t-

'

•

•

Now accepdll a. . .tlleaiS a ·aew pathaa!
Dr. Windsor' will begin bel) practiCe- on. November 8,. 2006

··":fo~t ~as ant Office:
.~.

304~675-4839
,,

.,
'

.'

.

...Ripley omct:
304-3 n- ~ 7s·6

&gt;

'

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• &lt;&gt;bstetrical Care
• .Pelvic inflammatory diseases &amp; pelvic pain

• &lt;Cysts'and tumors of ovaries, uterus and female organs
• ~ysterectomy, Laparoscopy &amp; other female surgeries
~"

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'

• &lt;Complete blood analysis, infections, evaluations &amp; therapy
'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk fQAfl~ I{ P+~;,l(a~

·,

�•

PREP FOOTBALL

·6unbap lim~ ·6tntintl ·

Sout'-lltem Ohio Athletic League
Nol1hDlvlolon

SEOAL
PF
W-L

PA

PA

...277
... t39
... 21t
.. . t04
... t36

.. 109
.. 169
.. 163
.. 269
..329

W-L

Logan .
.. ...............5&lt;l ...225 .. 33 .....6·2
Marlena ....... .. ............3-2 ... 104 .. 98 ..... 3-5
Zanesville
.. .. .. . . . .. . ..
.3-2 ... t51 .. 86
.. 4--4
warren
.......... 1-4 ... 57 ...221 .....3-5
A1hens ..
..0-5 ... 59 ...213 ..... 1-1
Sooth Division
SEOAL
PF
W-L

ALL
PF

H.
W-L
. 117 ..... 6-2
.. 123 ..... 6-2
.. 143 ..... 5-3
.. t33 ..... 4-4
..·159 ..... 2-6

ALL
PF

PA

.. .229
... 238
. .. 211
. .238
... 222

.. 17t
.. 16t
.. 19t
.. 174 ·
.. 243

Chillicolhe . . . .
. . .4-1
Gallla Academy
............ 3-2
lronlon
...
. .. 3-2
Jackson
...
. .2-3
Portsmoulh ..... , . .
. .1--4

... 177
... 134
... 146
... 156
. .. 117

Friday's results
Chillicothe 48, Athens 0

Fri&lt;,lly, Oct. 20
Jackson at Athens

Gallia Academy 34. Jackson 27
lronlon 49, Portsmouth 42
Logan 65, Warren 0
Mariana 28, Zanesville 2t

Chillioo1he al Marlena
Gallia Academy at Warren
PortsmoU1h at Logan
lronlon •t Zanesville (Sal.)

·Ohio Valley Conference
OVC
W-L
PF

Rock Hill . . . . .
.. ........3&lt;l
Chesapeake .
. .. 2-1
South Point . . . .. . .. .. .
. .2-1
Coal Grove .
.. .1-2
Fairland. , . ..
.. . . .. 1-2
Fllver Valley ............... . ..0-3

All
PA

W-L

PF

... t07 .. SO ..... 6-2
... 58 . . .42 ..... 3-5
... 76 ... SO ..... 3-5
... 56 ...89 ..... 4-4
... 79 ...66 .... .1-7
... 41 ... 120 ..... 1-7

PA

.. .271 .. 167
... 198 ..238
... 151 .. 190
... t97 .. 156
.. .127 . .208
. .'.99 ...255

Friday, Oct. 20

Friday 'a reaullll

Rock Hi;,21 , Chesapeake 8
.SoU1h Point 41 . Coal Grove 15
. -Fairtana 39, River Valley 6

River Valley at Cheoapeake
Rock Hill at Coal Grove
SOuth Point a1 Fairland

Tri·Valley Conference
01110 lltvlolon
W-L

TVC
PF

PA

ALL
PF

W·L

Nelsonville· Vorl&lt; ............ . ....3&lt;l ...89 ... 46 ..... 7·t
Vinton County ....... . .........2-1 .. .80 ... 59 .. .. .4-4
Wellston ........ ... ...........2-1 ... 84 .,.46 ..... 5-3
~exander .. .. ....... . ......... 1-2 ... 60 ... 72 ..... 3-4
Meiga .. . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . .t -2 ...57 ... 58 .... .6-2
Betpre .... , .. .
.. ...o-3 ... 38 ... 107 ..... 2-6
:
. Hocking Dtvlalon ·
•
•

~

Federal Hoclclng . : . . .. . ... .....3-0
'rnmble .... .... ... .... .. ......2·1
Waierlord ... . ... ... . . ...... .. .2·1
'~!iller . . .. . .... . . ... . . .. . . .. . . .1-2
Southern ........ ..... ......... 1·2
E&amp;Stem .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .
.. .0-3

•
•

TVC
PF

PA

... 271 . .103
... t47 .. 143 .
.. . t86 .. 187
.. . t63 .. 174
... 238 .. 129
...99 .... 188

.

AA

ALL
PF

- ~

.. .86 ...7 .. . .. .. 7-1
.. .74 . .. 39 ...... S-3
.. .98 ...39 ...... 6.2
... 45 ... 76 ...... 1-7
... 51 ... 10t ..... 5-3
... 12 .. 104 ..... 0-8

~

.. .t81 ..41
.. .t86 . .148
... t80 .107
...73 . . .186
.. . t86 . .t46
... 74 ...30t

Friday, Oct. 20

Frlday'l !QUits

26, Alexander 6
\linloo County 40, Belpre 6
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; 21 , Wellslon t4 OT
Mlllor t9, Eastern t2
F,.ederal Hocking t4, Trimble 7
Watertord 60. Southern 0

Alexander at Wellston
NelsonvNie-Yorl&lt; at Belpre
Meigs at VInton County
Easlern al Watertord
FedOra! Hocking at Miller
Trimble at Southern

ltlelgs

•

Independents
ALL
PF
W·L

,
PA

SOuth Gallia ... . . ... ... . . . . . . . .7-1 . . .t81 .. t03
Wahama .. .. . . .. ..... . ......... s-2 ... t80 .. 83
~annan ........... ...... ........ t -5 . ..47 . .. t78 ·
F~day,

Friday'S IIIOUits

:

South Gallia 20. Symmes Valley' 13
Wahama 40, Buttalo t 8
Slturdly'o mull
Hannan at Bishop Donahue, late

Oct. 20

South Gallia at Oak Hill
Malewan at Wahama
Hannan al Tug Valley

Cardinal Conference
'

Poc8

. . ........ .. 4&lt;l
. ...... .. .... .3-t
Sissonville .
. . ...........3-t
Wayne ....
. . ... .2-2
Logan ! . .
Point Pleasant ·..... . .•.
. ... t-2
. ... ·. 1-3
Herben Hoover .
Winfield .1 , •• • • • • • • •
. .. . .. .0-5

.

...

CARD
W-L
PF

PA
W·L
. .. 144 . .55
...6-1
... 46 .. .45 .. . .. 5-2
... t01 .. 35 . : .. S-2
.. 95 .. .78
...3-5
... 43 .. .100 ... .. 2-5
... 68 . .126 . . .. 4-3
... 67 . . .tt2 ..... t -6
F~day,

Friday's reouns
Logan 14, Sissonville o
· Poca 27, Winfield 14
f!oint Pleasant 37, RaVenswood 34
T&lt;llsia 30, Wayne t9

Meigs
from Page 81
7-6 lead . .
The Spartans were driving to start the third peri·
od with a first and I0 from .
the Meigs 15, but a bad
snap out of the shotgun
rormation was recovered
by Poole at the Alexander
36.
Meigs drove 64 yards in
13 plays with Poole going
the
final
yard.
~ichardson's kick was no
good. but M,eigs had a 136 ·lead at the 3:53 mark of
the third period.
The Marauders were on
t-he drive to start the fourth
period, and Poole scored
from two yards out with
l 0:24 left in the contest.
Richardson added the
placement to give Meigs a
20-6 lead .
Alexander was not about
ro roll over and play dead,
howeve·r, driving to the
Meigs 21 . Bm on fourth
and 19, Brad Soulsby
sacked Demosky for a 11·
}:ard loss to turn the ball
o-ver to the Maroon and
Gold.
·
Ten play s later, English
went around right end,
untouched nine yards for
the score . The. extra points
were no good, but Meigs
held a 26· 6 lead with just
I: 13 left.
The Mllrauders ' ensuing
squib ki ck was recovered
by the Marauders, and
they run out the clock · for
the win .

•
•

executed that plan perfect- Vikings were never out of excellent field position on
the Rebel 4 7 yard line. But
ly. The Vikings ran 73 · the game.
South
Gallia
put
up
the
this
time, the Rebels
plays on the night comfirSt
points
of
the
game
would
be on the receiving
pared to only 27 for the
fromPageBl
Rebels and held a 19-2 using its big play attack. A end of an opposing team
65-yard pass from Wells to mistake. The Vikings
another bambumer for the advantage in first downs McCombs set' up a 19-yard drove down to the Rebel
Rebels as South Gallia (7· as they pounded the ball at touchdown pass between 25 yard line with an opporI) grabbed a milestone wi.n South Gallia all evening
the same duo in the first tunity to extend the lead;
Friday night, defeating long.
quarter
and a 60-yard but a fumble gave the ball
Combine that with a
Symmes Valley (2-6) for
handful of mistakes by the touchdown run by Cantrell back to the visitors and
the first time ever, 20- 13.
Rebels
and it wasn't the in the second cantos put this time - South Gallia
The victory also marks
win
coach the Rebels up 12-0 after wouldn't letthe opportunithe highest win total ever prettiest
conversion attempts. ty slip them by.
by a South G&lt;;tllia football · Burleson has seen on tile failed
But- Symmes Valley
Following the fumble,
football
field.
squad in yet another Friday
finally
managed
to
take
South
Gallia put together a
"Well, I don't think we
night football ,classic..
that
well," advantage of a South drive which spilled over
"Obviously that is huge, played
Gania mistake, this time into the (ourth quarter and
Burleson
said.
"I
thought
seven wins. they. have
on the second roughing the ended with a 58-yard
never experienced that at we played pretty poorly kicker penalty of the half. touchdown pass from
South Gallia and it is one and Symmes Valley had a After ,the 1S-yard mar- Wens to McCombs which
of those plateaus you have good gameplan for us. We choff, the Vikings had the . gave them a 20-13 lead,
to shoot for and build · Wlk about it every week, ban on their own 47 yard one they would hold to the
upon," said South Gallia we can't make stupid misand began a six end.
Justy takes and we had two or line
head . . coach
minute
march down the
Along wiih the big run
Burleson. "At the start of three just huge mistakes."
Derrick
But even the mistakes field capped off by a two- by Cantrell.
the season we thought we
yard
plunge
by
Shipley
to
Beaver
had
12
yards
on
hold
back
the
couldn't
had a pretty good team,
make
the
score
12·6
at
the
seven
carries
and
Jacob
but we· knew there were a high powered South Gallia half..
. Jarrell posted five yards on
couple things we needed to offense. In those 27 plays,
And
with
momentum
two carries. Wells finished
racked
up
258
the
Rebels
do and one of those was to
canied
over
from
the
ftrst
the evening 3-for-6 for 142
beat a big time opponent in · ·yards, with 142 of those half,- Symmes Valley yards and two touchdowns
Wahama or
Symmes yards coming on Wells to
struck again. Using anoth· with one pick. And making
Dustin McCombs passes.
Valley.
McCombs caught three er lengthy drive with this the evening all the more
"Of course Wahama beat
us, but we came back and passes for 142 yards and time Mullins taking a special was the milestones
majority of the load as reached by South Gallia.
beat Symmes Valley and I two touchdowns as the oppose
to Shipley the team
After going 6-4 last seaknow they may not have Rebels struggled to run the
the record indicative of a ball during the few times managed to get on the son and making the playpowerhouse team, but they . they had possession. As a board on a five-yard offs, some doubted if the
have played some teams team, they managed only touchdown run by Mullil)s Rebels would be the same
tough and !.knew it would 99 yards on 21 carries with followed by the extra point with so much lost. But
Dewey Cantrell .leading from Kyle Meadows to coach Burleson and the
be a dogfight."
Rebels
.p ulled
the way with 87 yards on give the home squad a 13- Road
· And a dogfight it wa§.
12 lead.
together and have ."'llanA late interception by six carries.
With
the
Symmes
Valley
aged
to top last years win
Outside
of
Cantrell
and
Wells halted a ' potential
crowd
alive
and
fried
up,
mark
already, going 7-1
McCombs,
South
Gallia
scoring drive with under
30 seconds left with the didn't see much else in the the Silver and Red contin· while beating a team
ued to dominate the third which has given them
Vikings in South Gallia way of offense.
quarter.
They regained trouble since the schools
"They
dominated
time
.of
territory to solidify the
possession and put our control of the ball a few beginning.
Rebel win.
·
With Symmes Valley the
defense
. on the field all minutes later when a
That final Viking possesstrong
South
Gallia
drive
closest
team to the small
sion was set up by solid night'long," Burleson said.
punt
which
pinned · Helping lead the offen- . was halted by a Shipley school from Mercerville, a
Symmes Valley at their sive train which ate up interception, but again the strong rivalry has formed
own 20 yar~ line with 2:21 most of the clock was the Vikings were unable to between the two schools,
on the clock and South trio of Kirt Shipley, Chuck take advantage · and those but South Gallia had never
Gallia ahead 20-13, forc- Mullins and Chris Capper. opportunities would soon taken home a win - until
Friday.
ing the Vikings to rush the Shipley had 26 carries for run thin.
South
Gallia~s
third
Now the Rebels will take
101
yards
with
Mullins
usual- grind · it out, wish·
roughing
the
kicker
penaltheir
impressive season
·
posting
56
yards
on
17
carbone .offense they had used
ries and Capper carrying ty of the game late in the when they travel to Oak
all night.
the
ball 13 times for 41 · third quarter once again Hill next Friday for a emCapper used his legs and
yards.
Capper also had 87 gave Symmes Valley cia! matchup with Oak Hill. ·
arm, along with a South
Gallia pass interference yards on 7-for-15 passing,
call, to move the ball down with Shipley grabbing five
inside Rebel territ&lt;;lry with of those passes for 32
time running out. But on a yards.
Symmes Va-lley made the
desperation throw, Wells
game
close thanks in part
managed to outrun the
receiver and come down to a handful ot personal
Leam.how to
with the pick, ·sealing the foul penalties, including
three
roughing
the
kicker
seventh win of the season
understand other people,
flags, on the Rebel end.
for South Gallia.
whh them,
Symmes Valley came And using those mistakes,
with
the
running
of
along
into the game with a game·
tlnd the
plan to own the clock and Shipley and Mullins, the

What Mal&lt;es People
Who They Are?

.. :123 ..96
.. .t75 . .92
.. 142 .. 195
.. .t33 . .239
... t67 .. 170
...86 . . .t33

Oc:t. 20

Herbert Hoover at Bluefield
Logan'at Point Pleasant
Poca at Wayne

communicate

Shady Spring al Sissonville
lincoln County at Winfield

to work for

"This was a great win,"
Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said after the
contest. " I' m proud of the
kids, they played hard for
four quarters, we knew
coming in it would be a
Iough game against a good
Alexander team. Now we
have to get ready for next
week."
English
led
the
Marauders with 182 yards
in 23 carries, the junior
carried for 20 yards on his ·
first carry of the game to
put him over 1,000 yards
for the season. English,
only \he sixth player to
rush for -1,000 in a season
for the Marauders, · now
· has I, 171 for the season.
Poole looked like he is
finally health after a knee
injury in the season's first
game, the senior rushed
for 168 yards in 23 carries,
many of those yards came

~~~tf~~htJ'aa;d~~ ·~:a~~~~

I 7·

Meigs will travel ton
Vinton
County
ne~t
Friday. while Alexander
travels to Wellston.
.

·Subscribe toda}.
446-2342 or 992- 155

The
Joint Implant Center

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement, we offer office hours at:
. 3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, 1/'N.

Our next clinic date is Friday, Oct 20.
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800~371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement

S'JiOP SMOKI G
·1
I
I
I

Fisher.
.
Zack Hendrick led the ·
Spartans with 121 yards in
21 carrie-s, Adam McCarty
added five carries for 27.
Demosky was five of 12 in
· ·h
·
the a1r wtt an interc.epuon
.
f or
I08 yards. T1m
Croxford had three catches
for 67 yards. Hendrick one
for 24 and Fowler one for
·

MORE LOCAL SPORTS•
MORE LOCAL
'
FOLKS,

.•••

ALL
, PF
PA
.. .228 . .t09

dragging
the third
Spartans
on second· and
effort
tacklers for extra yardage.
Story was 1-of-8 passing

Sunday, October 15, 2oo6

History

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

I

PageB2

NO ANXIETY

13t1 NO CRAVINGS

Yes, you tried all the other methoda. You've
tried cold turkey. cutting down greduelly, drugs,
evtn lhl patCh end nothing worked until now. Thia
prog111m Is d111lgned 10 you e11n •top emoklng
with no enxle"'. no cr~vl""t tnd no weight
.,
...
g~ln 11~ _,.,_ .....,.,.INd.•
•WHh the Merk Patrick Method• or clinical
hypnolla. you wllltnter lillltl of bllaaful mtntll
""end ph-yalcel rll1111tlon. You will bt ebleto
move. hear. end think yourealf Smokt.frea
foi'IVIf. You will dlacover how key nutrlenta ctn
help 11d In klelllng amolclng hlblt. It Clotanl
..mttttr how long vou'vumoked, wh•hlr lt'a been
toreoreven50v•r•. lelnlgnldthlamllhodto
make you • NOII.SMOKI!R.
o- It lteally Work? My unique mtthod 11
dttlgntcl to work every clay, In real lift...your
lift. 11'1 dnlgntd to woril 1n traffic, on the job, 1t
home, on the phone, with • drink, even In the
pretence of other amoktl'l. a.t of 11111 11
dtllgntd to work with ·no •nxltty. no c111vlnge
end no weight geln .

~ . NO WEIGHt GAIN

·

Moy Be lOx DtaiiC11Dio

Tund..!LOct. 24th

Galll~ls

. Two Sui lOIII: Noon.· i$or 7 • I:3Dpm
HOitdly Inn 577 Stile Rt 7 North
D....o.

•4blllon blglne 1hour ptlcr Ill aemlnar

CASH•"'""""•
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PIOGI'Im. By the end of my aemlnar you
mull be compltltly Ntlt~ed . II not, I will ·
glvt you 1 f\JII rtfund • plut 10% on the
apot, 11 Hmlne• end. Ioller 11111 money.
beck gutranltt for one 1'111011 1nd 1'111011 only.. .I dttlgntd thla atop amaking
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Lilli.

Nine

Bokovitz. "They wanted to
run the quarterback a lot, I
thought we pounded him
fromPageBl
hard, and 1 thought we took
away his will to want to run
Seth Haner, who finished the footbalL"
Holzapfel added 130
with 100 yards on IS caryards
through the air on 8ries, amassed 32 on that
of-13
passing. All but foor
final march to the end zone
alone. Quarterback Jeff of those yards came in the
Golden also had a 19-yard second half, as the signal
quartemack keeper on third caller primarily used his
down that that ·kept the .legs to help his Iro.nmen
move the ball in the first
drive alive.
·
'
The drive culminated half.
Jackson
was
the
first
to
with an 11-yard run by
Haggerty that put the Blue score, as it was able to
Devils ' up 34-20 with 3:17 string together 13 plays 311d
march 68 yards late in the
to play in the game.
first
quarter on a drive
"I think that ·'last touchdown there on a run-drive fueled mostly by the 'runwas the difference in the ning of Holzapfel and
ball game," Bokovitz swted. Oliver. Holzapfel scored
It was Haggerty's third from a yard out and kicker
rushing tou.:hdown of the Justin Mellins added the
night; he also caught a 60· Jll&gt;int after to mitke it 7-0.
But Gallia Academy's
yard touchdown· pass. He
quick
strike offense was
caught five passes in all for
I 54 yards and ran the ball able to ~st back-to-back
four times for 18 more scores wnhin the final four
minutes of the first half.
yards.
The Gallia Academy star . McCoy had a 34-yard run
also had catches of 48 and to set the Devils up in the
21 yards, despite a Jackson , red zone, then a IS-yard
game plan geared to try and pass to Haggerty on fourth
contain him. It didn't work, and long set up Seth
he sill made big plays, and Haner's one-yard touchdowh dive. Nick Stevens'
so did the Devils' runners.
extra
point evened the
"We tried to do some
things to stop their passing score.
After holding Jackson to ·
game and they ran the ball
a
three-and-out, Golden
pretty well at us," explained
Jackson coach Shane found Haggerty on a crossWolford. "I've said all ing pattern. He faked out
along, Jayme Haggerty is several defenders and raced
the best player in the league into the end zone. Stevens
converted again and Gallia
-hands down." ·
· . Jackson ·added a late Academy held a 14-7 half·
touchdown with 42 seconds time lead.
The Blue Devils received
. left
in
the
game.
Quarterback
Zane the second half kick-off,
Holzapfel scored from a but fumbled the ball away
yard out on the quartemack on the first play from scrimsneak to pull the iron men to mage, setting up a short 26·
· yard touchdown drive by
within seven points.
Jackson attempted · an Jackson. Bruce Smith, on a .
onside , kick, but Haggetty haltback pass, found Barry
came up with the recovery. Tanner in ·the end zone.
Galli a Academy downed.the Mullins' kick pulled the
ball twice and the celebra- lronmen even again at 14.
tion began .
The back-and-forth battle
It was the Blue Devils' continued as Haggerty
third straight win over three scored on a five-yard run
very tough opponents. late in the third quarter,
Since dropping back-to· tnen Smith scored from a
back games to Chillicothe yard out early in the fourth,
and Logan to open the to again knot the score at 20
league
slate,
Gallia apiece.
Academy has recorded conGall ia Academy broke
secutive
wins
over the see-saw trend as
Portsmouth, Ironton and Haggerty scored back-ton&lt;YW JaCkson. ·
hack touchdowns on runs of
"They've stepped it up eight and I 0 yards. Haner
here in the last three weeks, broke runs of 15, 7 and 19
and really gotten after it," on the first drive setting up
Bokovitz added .
a Haggerty eight-yard
Gallia Academy, now 6-2, scamper that put his team
also·moves into prime posi- back on top.
tion to return the playoffs
After forcing another
for the seventh time in eight Jackson punt, it \\(aS again
years. The Blue Devils the running of Haner that
should be able to run the set up a Haggerty touchtable, finish 8-2 and perhaps down run. That 10-yard
challenge for a home game score, his fQurth touchdown
in Region .l2. The .Biue and of the night, gave the
White finish up with the Devils a 14-point lead with
two weakest teams in the 3: 17 to play.
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Jackson tacked on a late
League, Warren and Athens. score, but was unable to
Jackson. on the other recover the onside kick to
hand, saw its record fall to prolong the contest.
4-4 and will most certainly
Gallia
Academy
drop several spots in the improved to 3-2 in the
computer ratmgs. The SEOAL, but again failed to
lronmen entered the contest gain any ground on front·
fifth in that same region, but runner logan (5-0), which
will need to win out and pounded Warren 65-0 also
receive some help to sneak on Friday. ·
into the postseason.
Elsewhere around the .
Jackson's climb in the rat- SEOAL , Chillicothe shut
ings was due in large part to out lowly Athens 48-0,
an upset of Chillcothe two Ironton won a 49-42 shootweeks ago, a game in which out over Portsmouth and
the lronmen almost com- Marietta
defeated
pletely shut down the Zanesville 28-21.
Cavaliers ' high-powered
Gallia Academy is at
offense.
Warren Friday, meanwhile
But Gallia Academy Jackson goes to Athens.
torched Jackson for 408
yards of total offense on
Friday. Golden, in addition
to throwing for 161 yards,
also ran for 69 yards. Chris
McCoy adde&lt;l 49 yards
rushing and Austin King
had . 18 in his first game
back from injury.
Jackson's Holzapfel car·
ried the ball 26 times and
was held in check by t~e
Blue Devil defense . The
scrambling
quarterback
was held to only 72 yards.
Brandon Oliver and Bruce
·smith added 53 and 17
respectively.
"I thought for , the most
part we stuffed what they
wanted to do,'· explained ·

Mlrtk Gellto

Ctrtltltd Hypnothtrlplll

I
II
I

•

V. 13 "-''na: F-Cole Hatfield

II

6

6

0

8 -

20

0

6

7 0-13

Scotll.......... ,

FntQ..sa• .

SG-Oustin MoCombs 19 pass """'
John Wells (run laited) 1:46

Secolld Ota•
SGOse. ay cnre11 eo run (pass

Eatem 12, Miller 19

failed) 9:29
SV-I(it Shipley 2 run (kick failed)

121

Thl!d Oulrtlr
SV-o-..ct&lt; Mulino. 5 run (Kyle
Meadows kick) 8:11
FcurthQu. . .

WeiB
(Vance Felture pass 1mm Wells) 11 :10

SV
19
511-201

2

21--99
142
241
3-6-1
2.0
'7-75

87

258
7-15-1
2-1
8-60

lndlvldu.t Sb: 1111c1

lluehlna: SG-0ewev Cantrelt H7,
Derrick Beaver 7-12, Jacob Jan811 2-

5 , John wells &amp;-(-5).
SV-I(irt ShipleY 26·101 ; Chlict&lt;
Mulins 17-56, Chrts Capper 13--41 ,
Tyler Dickess 2-3.
·
P atng: SG-,John Wells 3-6-1142.
SV--Ciiris Capper 7-15-1 87.
R-'vlng: SO:..Vustin McCombs 3142.
.
SV-Cody Bland 1-41, Kirt Shipley
5-32, Kyle Meadows 1-14.

Galllpolhl34, .tacit 101'1 27

JacksOn
GaDIPolis

7 0
0 14

7 13 -

6 14 -

0 6 6-

0 12 . 0 7 -

12
19

Scoihijj........wry
SecolldOu-*

~58passlmm

SG

0

Eastern
Miller

.

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing. yards
TOIBI yards
Cornp.att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

12-16-0139-2, Kyle Riley 0-0-1-{}{).
RV-eryan Morrow 2-9-1-6~.
Clayton Cumutla 4-6-1-11 0-1 .
~: Jake .Lucas 5-65-2,
Michael Lamb 3-43, Jordan Kenley 317, Mill! Bloomfield 1-14.
RV-eryan Morrow 1-72, Travis
Roush 2~. Zak Oael3-38-1.,

27
34

~~

M-Kyle Oyer II!Wrned fumble (kick
no good) 5:57
·
M-'Oyer r&amp;OO\'I!A!d fumble in inzone
(OOOYOrsion no good) 2:30

ThtriiOI-*
E-cody Gerlach run (oonverslon no
good) 6:40
'
Foul1h0u-*
E-Ger1att1 n.~ (ktj&lt; no good) 10:26
M-ftyan Green run (klcl&lt; good) 9:23

Pena~ies-yards

6 o 7 7 -

Scor"•ag~

W--Garren Underwood 4' 59. Kns
Gibbs 2-48, Gabe Roush 3-43, Derek
Veazy t -12.

Meigs 26, Alexander 6

Arata...

W--{)erek Veazy 56 run ~eazy kick)
10:SO
W-Veazy 26 field goal 6:20
W-Veazy 19 run (Veazy kick) 2:07

a..r.-

Secolld
8-Shawn Robinson 31 Jl!ISS from
Nick Harris (pass failed) 9:58
B-Ryan Vannoy 2 run (Jl!ISS failed)

Meigs
Alexander
.

0
6

7
0

6 13 0 0 -

PP

GA

12
14
First Downs
37-123 40-247 Rushes-yards
138
161
Passing yards
261
408
Total yards
9-14-0 . 6-1!XI · Comp-att-int
3-2
Fumbles-lost
:l-3
6-35
6-54
Penalties-yards

Individual St.lldcs

Rushing: J--Zane Holzapfel 26-72,
Brandon Oliver 12-53, Bruce Smith 917.
GA--8eth Hlaner 15-100, Jeff Golden
13-69, Chris McCoy 3-42, Jayme
Haggerty 4-18, Austin King 5-18 .
Paulng: J-Z8ne Holzaplel 8-13-0
130, Bruce Smith 1-t-0 22.
GA--,Jeff Golden 6-t~ 161.
~: J-arandon Traoe 3-113,
Bruce Smith 2-30, Barry Tanner 1-22.
Brandon Oliver 1-12, Anthony Fowler
t-7, Derik S1urgil1-(-2).
GA-Jayme Haggerty 5-154, Austin
King 1-7.

19
44-29t

5Caring ,..........y

FlriiOu-*

au.rw

w

a

M

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-los!
Penalties-yards

18
53-36t
8
369
1-7-0
2-2
2-15

A
13
36-136
108
244
5-12-t
1-1

o-o

Individual Slatlstlcs
Rushing: M--Comelius English 2:J.
t62 , David Poole 23-t68, Branclan
Fisher 2-7. Aaron Story 5-4.
A~Zach Hedrick 23-t21 . Aclam
McCarty 5-27, Seth fowler 2-9, Matt
Demosky 6-(-21).
Paulng: M--aaron Story 1-7&lt;J 8.
A--Matt Demosky 5-12-1108.
AeceMng: M-Brandan Fisher 1-8
A- Tim Croxford 3~7. Seth Fowler 1t7, Z8ch Hedlick t-24.

321
4-9-0
2-15

6-42

30
1-1

G MC TRUCK MONTH
;

A

15
39-t73
145
318
9-14.0
0&lt;)

. IndiVidual Stalllllcs
Rushing: PP-Tvter Grant 21 -1n;
A.J. Jeflers 7-48, James Casto t 0-42,
Derek Mitchell 6-26.
A-Tom Nay 24-127, Jake Young 947, Patrick Mullins 1·9, Brandon
Nutter 5-(-10).
Puelng: PI&gt;-James Casto 4-9-0
30.
A-Brandon Nutter 9-14-0 145.
Receiving: PP-WIII Slone 3-22,
NathanlellWub. 1-8.
·
A-Jeremy Smith 2-56, Travis Long
2-40, Jake Young 3-37, PatricK
M!Aiins 2-7, Tom Nay t-5.

0111

1351"1ne.S t • Gallipolis, OH • 446-2532

Smith's GMC Trud&lt; Center .

· Fairland 39, River Valley 6 ·
Fairland
River Valley

21 12
0 0

6 0 6 0 -

39
6

Scoring aum.--y

Firat Quao1er
hlake Lucas 27 pass from Cole,
Hatfield (kick good) 8:00
F-Jake Lucas 4 P&lt;ISS from Cole
Hatfield (kick good) 4:40
F-JOidan Kersey 2 run (kick good)
2:22

Sacalld au.w

F-Michael Meacham 25 run (kid&lt;
bloci&lt;ed) 8:SO
h!Oidan Kersey 37 run (kick failed)
6:26
Third Ouarlllr
F-Joroan Kersey t1 run (kick
blocked) 7:55
RV-Z8k Dee! 9 (&gt;1lSS from Clayton
Curnutte (pass fa11ed) 5:56
First Downs .
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-an-int
Fumbles-lost
Penatlies-yards

RV
8
33-1

F
15
36-183
139
322
12-17-1
5-2
2-10

173
174
6-t5-2
6-44
4-2

Individual Slellatics
Rushing: F-Jordan Hatfield t0-953, Michael Meachem 6-53-1, Cole
Hatfield 6-5, Matt Bklomfield 1-(-t),
Justin Moore 5-17, Garrett Wireman
4-13, Tyler Thackston 1-4, Kyle AI~
1-1 . Ron Wooten 1-1, Nathan Casey
11-5).
RV.-Travis Roush 4-33, Z8ch Baird
7-20, Tyler Canady 1-t, Cody
McAvena 5-(-1), Bryan Morrow 12·(36). Clayton C~(flutte 4-(-16).

.,.......
••.
,.,
'

'·''

1-304-541-3161
Wrlllllrll/1
msnW$0Wl
lddlioii! Sial -

,

,.,

'

7

llwt:cl.....,...

....

r/ ... n~ ·- "• ,-...-. ~-•.-~....
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s-bnl .......,_. AIIIIIIIIY
Sri;" ofr.K ttmt;l

RAVMONDJAMFS

.... ,.

.

··~'"' ,., ~' -~ " 1.•

... ,

.~

-

26
6

A-Seth Fowler 17 Jl!ISS fnom Man
Demosky (pass failed) 3:16
. Second OuarWr
.
· M-Co~ius English 4 run (Casey
5:02
W~ris Gibbs 20 pass from Brenton
Richardson kick) 5:33
Clar1&lt; (Veaz!t kick) :49
ThlrdQW--5afety :42
~·vid Poole 1 run (kick failed)
llllnl
3:53
W-Veazy 13 run ~eazy kid&lt;) 7:32
. · Fourth 0...-ter
8-Jamc:t Moore 24 pass tnom Hanis M-Poole 2 run (Richardson kick) .
(run failed) 1:56
10:24
FourthOua..M--English
9 run (kick failed) 1'13
W...J.Jeaz; 2 run (Veazy kick) 9:10

We can help maintai n your estate and manage yo ur weal t h fo r future
generati ons. Call us and discover why we are leaders in plannmg fo r life.

I

t8
40

First Downs
14
t9
Rushes-yards
19-59
58-201
Ruehlntl: E--Gerlach 24-143, Passing yards
218
87
Chadd Whitlach 2-13 Kyle Gordon 1- Toral yards
2n .
258
4, Mlke.Johr-. 3-1-BJ,Young 5-(-1). Comp-att"nt
t7·30-0 7-15-1
M-~111,-Green ' 21·118, Dyer 5-56,
Andie L-.fng 16-62.
,
lndlvkluet St1t1at1cs
P1111rijj: E-'-&lt;lorclon 5-9-0 6, Ruahlng: 8--Cody Craig t0-45 ,
Johnson 1-3-1 15.
·
Ryan Vannoy 6-t3, Nick Hams 2-t .
M--.Tyler Householder 6-12-3 81.
Tyler Hull t-O.
fleollvtng: E-Young 3-45, Gar1ach W-l)erek Veazy 13-145 Kris GibbS
1-15,JoshColllns 1'·1ll, Whltiact11-8. 16-97, Brenton Clar1&lt; 10.36, Micalah
M--Dyer 4-64, Green 2-17:
. Branch 3-8, Jacob Road) 2-7. Trey
Anderson 2-4.
Point Plllllnt 37.
P..alng: B-Nick Harris 17-29-1
218, Tyler Hull 0-1 .
RavenSwoocl34
Pt. Pleasant 7 7 8 tS - 37 W--srenton Clarl&lt; 10-15-t 162.
Ravenswood 6 3 t 3 t 2 - 34 Alcefvtng: 8-.Jared Moore 7-89.
Shawn Rayburn 3-54, TylerHull2-27,
Sl;huyler F'razier 2-20, Cody Craig 1Scoihlll IIUI1IIIWY
15, Ryan Vannoy 2-13.
FlrltO..Iot
R--Travis Lang 89 kickoff 181Um (klcl&lt;
failed)
PP-James C8slo 1 run (Ben
Hames kick)
.

Second Oulrtlr
SecolldO=•
GA-Seth Haner 1 run (Nick
A-Andrew Prince 29 field goal
Stevens kick) 4:08
GA-Jayme HSQIII!rty_60 pass from . f'IL-Tyler~~~kick)
Jell Golden (kicl&lt;_ f!110011 :34
R--Tom Nay 3 run (oaaS laled) ·
1'lllrcl Qual*
J-earry Tanner 22 pass from Bruce 1'1'-(lrant 15 run (Brad Layton Jl!ISS
from casto)
·
Smith (Mullins kick) 9:45
11-lang 85 kickoff 181Um (Prince
GA-Haggerty 5 run (kick failed)
kick)
1:34
Foul1h01-*
Foul1h01-*
PI'-Qislo 13 M (Hames kid&lt;)
J-Smith 1 run (kick failed) 11 :48
1'1'-(lrant 12 run (Casto run)
GA--Haggerty 8 run (S1evens kick)
9:55
~Smilh445:
GA--Haggerty 10 run (Stevens kick) Blandon Nutter (ktj&lt;
3:17
.
R-f'atrick Mullins 5
J.-:-Holzaplel t run (MuDins kick) :42
Nutler (conversion ~

J

0 12
17 9

-

J-Z8ne Holzapfel 1 1\Kl (Justin
Mullns kick) ;10

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
.Fumbles-lost

Wahama 40, 8uthllo 18

Buffalo
Wshama

lnilfvlcla-' a IIIICI

Small group of
professionals seeking
100-500 acre farm to
lease for exdusive
Hunting Purposes

(877) 376-7576
(304) 67 5-4480

'

S. Gllllla 20, Symn

South Gallia
SymmesV.

Prtvltt Clltnta htvt ptld
$278 tlch to qu~ comfoll·
ably. You cen bei1tflt now
from thlt group ttmlntr for. ·
only t41.H. C•h. cht&lt;:kl
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Brought to VOY by MI,_
Ptlrlck Stmlllll'l &amp;Aaaocllltt.

m-.mn i'c:ctind • Page B3

Friday's Boxscores

SS Your Land SS

JUST 2112 HOUR~ 110% WRITTEN

hbap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

I Will Pay To Hunt

... _

fiA
.

Sunday, October 15. 2oo6

- :,.__. ---------

�Sunday, October 15.2006

· Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 15.2006

Miller outlasts Eastern in battle of .Winless
teams
.

Local Sports Roundup

.

.;..Eastern runners fare
·. weD at TVC Meet

BY AsHLEY $Ho\W

The celebration was short yet. With 2:34 left in the
But at one point on Friday,
SPORTSOMYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM
it almost looked like another lived. though, as Miller's half, the Falcons made a run
heartbreak was in store for Green scored the deciding for the goal line. However,
TUPPERS PLAINS - coach Mark Fortney's club goal on the next drive for the the Eastern defense held the
· The fact of the matter was- - as Eastern rallied for 12 Falcons.
Falcons at the one-yard line.
both teams entered Friday's straight points in the second
Gree.n finishd with 118
Eastern's offense took
yards on 21 carries and over, but immediately fum· high school football contest half to knot the score.
winless, one team was
The Eagles, who had been received two passes for 17 bltid the ball away in the end
going to win its first game outscored ' 85-0 in league yards for.Miller. He was one zone. The Falcons recovered
this season.
games entering the tilt, of the main reasons the for a touchdown taking a 12· The Miller Falcon&gt; did so, scored their first points of Falcons were able to jump 0 halftime lead.
despite turning the ball over· the TVC Hocking slate when out to a 12-0 lead in the first · Leading in tackles for the
· seven times, as th.: Falcons Cody Gerlach crossed the half.
Eagles was Kyle Rawson
beat the Eastern Eagles 19- goal line with 6:40 left in t~
The scoring started with with eight, followed by
5:57 left in the second quar- Chadd Whitlatch with seven,
12
in
a
Tri-Valley third quarter.
·
Conference Hocking grid
Before the third period ter when the Falcons' Kyle Josh Collins added five.
Eastern, sti ti looking for
battle.
wa:s finished, the Eagles Dyer picked up an Eagle
Miller improved to 1-7 · began a drive on two big receiver fumble and retulned ·its first win, faces Waterford
and the Eagles remain win- passes caught by senior it for a touchdown. The on the road Friday. The
less in eight tries.
Derek You.ng. As a .result, defensive score. put Miller Wildcats are coming off a
'
Alhley SMwlphato
The
Eastern
defense,
left,
played
one
of
its
best
games of the
out
in
front
6-0.
·
big
Week
8
win
over
After Eastern tied the the Eastern offense. began
Miller was not finished Southern, 60.().
season, but fell to Miller 19-12 on Friday in Tuppers Plains.
game at 12 early in the final the final .quarter in great
.
.
quarter, Miller answered field position.
·
less than a minute later
Young wasn't done, he ·
when Ryan Green ran what began the final stanza with a
In-Between Jobs?
proved to be the deciding big run that set up the tying
AAA has temporary health plans along
score across thegoal l.ine at touchdown. The score came .
with other pol.icies
the 9:23 mark.
at the 10:26 mark on a run
to ·meet your needs.
It was a long-waited by Gerlach..
.
beakthrough win for Miller,
For the mght, Gerlach ran
Sheny Fredericks
. . . . . . . . "a' Ill
which had lost two nail -bit- the ball 24 limes for 143
AAA lnsurarice Agent
Give Sherry a Call At
l'eo-448-4751
ters to South Gallia by yatds and both Eagle touchIUE 2417 Uw Ttd•nical S.ppcrt
800-215·1217
(800) 285·1217 or (740) 446-0699
only six points and fell by downs. Young had three
lfncllrtc~··IHW'JI.OOI'ft
Unlimilod Hours, NO Conltnxto
the slimmest of margins 13- receptions for 45 yards; a!l
lOf·moiiAdd12 against Waterford two when the Eagles needed tt
lnsumnce With Someone You Trust
•FREESpam
weeks ago.
most.

Owen

TUPPERS PLAINS- Five Eastern athletes earned all-conference honors during
the Tri-Valley Conference Cross County
Meet on Wednesday.
Michael Owen · won the boys race in a
time of 18: II - 57 seconds ahead of his
nearest competitor. Aaron Manindak was
fourth and Keith Aeiker I Oth to earn AliTVC honors as well.
·On the girls side, Kay lee Milam was second overall and Alyssa Newland ninth to
earn all-conference as well.

·

. · '

Freshmen Blue Angels
wrap up sue~ season

Criteria Used to
. Revin the Applk:atlon

•

8.

The top 'four USA team

Nehus, compc;ting on her
first USA National Team. is
the ninth Indiana Invaders
athlete to wear the USA jersey and compete for the
United States in interna tional
compelltiOn.
Invaders athletes have (Ompeted at the Olympic
Games, World Indoor apd
Ouidoor Track and Field
Championships,
World
Cross
Country
Championships and now

the World Road Running
Championships.
Team director and coach
Greg Harger said , "Thi' .
was a great experience for
NehtK She executed the
race plan reasonably well.
competed strong over the
final I OK picking up five
spots in the field.· For
Nehus, it will be a return to
fall training in preparation
for 2007 championship.
o0pportunities ..,

Wahama gains big ~omecoming win over Buffalo.
and
a
touchdown. cessful.
the · Bison with Harris comWahama answered -the call pleting 17 of 29 'passes for
Underwood caught four acri·
als for 59 yards with Roush in the final minute of the half 218 yards a!ld two touch"
De
k
grabbing,
three
MASON • W. va. - re
d
. passes for 43 as Clark found Gibhs over . downs. Jared Moore was the
Veazey scored four touch- yar s.
· the middle for a 20-yard leading receiver with seven.
downs, kicked five extra
Buffalo entered the contest touchdown pass with :49 1eft receptions for 89 yards while
points and tacked on a field on a roll after defeating two in the second canio. The Shawn Raybum caught three
goal .for good measure in ranked opponents in each of White Falcons extended passes for 54 yards,
"
leading the Wahama White the past two weeks but their lead to 26-12 seconds
Gabe ·Roush and Brent
Falcons to a convincing 40- Wahama jumped out to an later on the ensuing kickoff Jones. were .the defensive
18 homecoming victory early 17-0 first quarter lead when the Buffalo kick tackle leaders for Wahama
Friday night over the visiting and the Bison never could returner took a knee in the
.h .
.
recover. Buffalo, despite a end zone for a safety.
wtt stx solo stops aptece
. Buffalo Bison.
218-yard, two touchdown
Veazey capped off a 61- with Micaiah Branch follow. For the second straight performance by Nick Harris, yard six play series on the ing close behind with five,
game, the junior running saw its post-season desires Bend Area te;tms opening William zu·span and Caleb
back ignited the .Wahama take a severe hit as the
·
f h
d h If Roach recovered a Bison
possessiOn
t
e
secon
gn'dders to a crucial win as Putnam County team drops with
a 13-yard g&lt;!llop ato fJihbie while Branch intercoach Ed · Cromley's Bend to 4-4 following the setback. vault Wahama into a 33-12 cepted an enemy pass for the
Area football 11 capmred its. The White Falcons scored advantage before Harris second straight game, ·
fifth consecutive triumph on its first three possessions teamed with Jared Mdore on
Wahama (5-2) will retUrn
after stumbling in its open- with Veazey giving WHS a a 24-yard TO toss to make it to action next week in the
ing two contests of the 2006 quick 7-0 edge after racing a 33-18 affair with 1:56 final home game of the reguseason. Veazey ran ·for 145 into the end zone from 56 remaining in the third period . Jar season when the Bend.
The, White . Falcons Area team hosts Matewan:
yards in 13 carries . and yards out at the 10:50 mark
scored on journeys of 56, 19; of the opening quarter. · answered early in the fourth with senior night being·
13 and two yards in addition Moments later Veazey boot- quarter to virtually put the . observed at the Mason
to booting a 26-yard field ed a 26-;Yard f.te Id goa1 game away with Veazey ' County campus. Buffalo is
goal ·in the opening quarter. before addmg a 19-yard run once agam cappmg a 65- idle next week before meetVeazey also booted five PAT late in the period felT a 17 .() yard, nine play drive with a ing Matewan the following
kicks to run his string to 24 Wahama lead.
two-yard burst. Wahama week
·
straight on the year.
Buffalo coughed the ball later iced the game when
·
Seniors Kris Gibbs and up 011 two of its first three Micaiah Branch picked off a
Brenton Clark also. had big possessions but Harris put Harris offering in the end
nights offensively for the the Bison on the board with zone to eliminate a Bison
White Falcons, as did junior 9:58 to play in the half when scoring · threat and preserve
Gabe Roush and sophomore he teamed with Shawn the 40-18 Wahama win.
Garrett Underwood. Gibbs RaybufT\ on a 31-yard scor·
WHS picked up 459 yards
ran for 97 yards on the ing strike.
in total offense with 297
The visitors closed to with yards coming on the ground
.evening and reached the end
zone once on a 20-yard scor- a touchdown with • another and 162 through the airways.
ing pass from Clark.
second quarter score at the Buffalo was limited to a
Clark returned to action . 5:02 juncture as Ryan mere 59. yards rushing while
after missing the last two Vannoy bulled his way into compiling 218 passing yards
games due to an injury and the end zone fr01n two yards for a net of 277 yards in total
fntrollliCiAg FreihAir by EcoQuesr...
connected on 10-of-15 pass- out. The try for the two offense. Cody Craig totaled
B.v dupfiCirring the same prQmsts
es on the night for 162 yards point conversion was unsuc- 45 yards on the ground for
CORRESPONDENT

WVSSAC restores two wins for
Matewan in eligibility dispute

•·...... _ ruts Ill clean tire air vu~-~:~,1
Fmlr Airty EcoQuest keeps ·
air fre.shand tlean.smelling doy
night Cullectit•ely known m
SynAirlJ 111 , thtre procmes. wort
together syntrgistically to eliminate
smoke, ndon, ami tobatr11 smoke.

. MATEWAN, W.Va. (AP) Ward. "We still have ques- ping of rival Burch eadier
like dean woter,fmh air is
- Matewan High's football tions about the legitimacy·of this month. In that game.
essentilll It OIIT weH being. !low,
team is back in playoff con- the residency of some of Matewan's Paul McCoy ran
tention. .
their players."
· for a stare-record 658 yards
having tlrt fresh air yov want ~ as·
The Secondary School
Matewan coach Yogi and scored 10 touchdowns.
easy a1 pmsing11 bunon, when it's
Activities Commission's Kinder. said he was glad the
''This bunch has been- Fresh Air by EcoQuest. .
: PROCTORVILLE- South Gatlia's seventh grade vol- Board' of Review on Friday appeal was resolved.
through a IV\10le heck of a
ICyball teani completed its regular season by defeating restored two wins that had
"It drove us crazy," lot," Kinder said. 'This
Call NOW foro FREE triol6ffer:
Fairland 2-1 by scores of 2519 •. 14-25, 25-20.
.
been taken away from the Kinder said. 'Tm just glad comniunity
has
been
Lauren Saunders had 12 pomts, three aces and a dtg. Tigers in an eligibility dis- for the kids."
through a whole heck of a
&lt;t::handra Canaday had II points, four aces and four kill.s,
lndepeir4tnt Distributor
pule.
·
Kinder,
whose
team
lot."
tori Duncan nine points and four aces, Shelby Merry stx
The SSAC initially had played at Gilbert on Friday
SSAC Executive Director
points and two aces, Mary Waugh four points and five kills
ordered Matewan to forfeit night, also had to deal with Mike Hayden declined com·
and Layne Lester three points.
.
148-841-5034
games after ruling line- criticism from a 64-0 whip- ment Friday.
South Gallia also defeated Southern 2-1 by scores of 18- three
backer Garrett Epling ineli- .
25, 25-16, 25-22:
gible, then allowed Epling to
play and scaled back the forfeits to two games. Epling
transferred a year ago from
Belfry (Ky.) High School
atier the ' highly publicized
murder of his mother. federCome F.m~riertce The Difference •Bigger Volumes &amp;Bigger Discounts! Don't pa)' for depreciation·
al
drug informant Carla
· WELLSTON -An instructional course will be offered
The amagt NEW vehicle depreciates 28'k the first week! Don't Pay lnfoicf. That's Wa) .,too much:
on Oct. 28 for anyone wanting to obtain· ~n Ohio Hi!jh · Collins.
Matewan
offici&lt;IIs
met
School Athletic Association basketball offictatmg permll.
OVER $1,000,000 IN INVlNTO~Y FOR IMMEVWf DflMRY
the
SSAC
in
Graduates will be eligible to officiate in the upcoming sea- with
Parkersburg on Thursday to
Call ahead lor pre-approval592·2497 or
son.
appeal
the
two·game
ruling.
· Eligible candidates must be enrolled in high school or
"We told them the facts.
older.
'
The
actual truth," Matewan
For more information, including fee , contact John
Principal
Marcella Charles
Derrow at 740-710-5069 or jsdl4@bright.net.
said Friday. "We· re very
~::~=;~~=-=- IUJ7Wt:P.-\ n11l'd Z8m~ BOJi\\' A.'l ' AC tit mt I'W PL l'S CD~ wJti!.,__---·-LTV61ft3701l1.101ml!. not" 'EPA "*~ .\2 m~PWPwrOto.fTI pvor.;t•n l'lllrf....________
Sl6.995
happy that they ruled in our
06C:lic•&gt;Y lrnpal~ 41) l.'ii #IJ6411110f\\ FPA rated~~ MPGAT AC likcrst' P\\" Pl.jNTseatsL'--- Sl6.995
favor. We feel they did the
Pootiac Grand PrixfFL'-'.U 9.000MhROJ.". .\t ..\r1ihf:N P\0 PIPMTIJhrSIHif11Sprt\''lhb t:rA Rated -~"'Jlli!: Sli.995
right thing."
rv; 't"""'' ~- Le#Hl592 ~- PSadCDMOOJ \tilesBOFW .-\lA{llltCntio;eEPARaled.\.1 \1~--..:._
'SJ9. 5~5
Matewan 's record will
Buick
Lucerne
IU~P\
Pv.
PSesi:ACTIItCNe
!'I~·
WhlsAtJ7rul
'tileo,
fl.oflol
f..pq
R.a1l"ll
2:8
\1~
...
--.
·······----·-·'"··•···--$23.995
change from . 3-3 to 5-1.
Dodge~
#p7~
FJ"A nnfd Ji mpg___.
_____ ___;. $1 L•9S
Matewan was ranked 22nd
CadiiJacDeviii..I-IIOFWI:PARoo.d!A\.....1......... ..... ····· ·-· ·····-··'········'········ .................................. $26.9110 $399
.
earlier
this week in the·
RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande softball
~Ill&lt;
aie.oy
C&lt;Jboltfi3511114000Mikst1lll0fWAT ACllltC""" F.PA Ralod 3l \1,.................................... , ...... •. _... , $14.995
$21 0
program is once again havin~ a high school winter indoor SSAC's Class A computer
Nlsoion Xterra 4x4 m•09 !7.filllmo I!Of\1 FPA ,d 21 mPI&lt;
.
...· - --•--··__:. · $21.6110
$3 19
softball league. The league wtll run from January 7 through ratings. The top 16 teams
Ford
Explorer
XLTffi.\481At
AC
1111
Cnie"" APSe&amp;ISpWhll*mMJ H()f1\•Rtar ,\(.'rd ~~•:Jlll Rli!tod 2il\1PR ~20.295
$296
February 25, 2007 .. The games make the playoffs.
~
RainierAWDf(YI62F.Po\
!Nd
2l
mPf{CXI.AT
AC
tltcr'lt!PW
1'1.
P-Ar
lthr•t.&lt;.
~P"'I'hl&lt;.M.MnOM~···
...
.
•
S20,S9S
$2 g·g
Charles said SSAC offiwill .be played on Sunday afterChev
Trailblazer
Ext
4xht~
F.Jlllbed
21
\ipa,.\T.AC'Ilk~P-A
Pli~nl
SNtRt'llt
.
.o\l' Tu"' ~........
$19.975
S2
99
cials · informed the school
noons.
The focus of the league is offer that rival Williamson High ·=·~jeep Grand Olerokee l.JmJted 4X4t!.""-~ATA('Q~~ 1'1. ~r-"'-T....,.,dlmmo:.n..f,~llol-r&gt;oi.PA "''"':Ill~ $20,995 $3 22
Ford Explorer XLT 4x4 fi~I'WI'I.p..t,.r'llhkllltlTIIt"r"""' .biATJnt-t EI'A""led :l:tlm1 ..l.. ...- .. ---··-- Stl.teS
5269
any softball player the opJ?Ortuni- had turned in a list of seven
Ford.~')UIIUon
Xl.T
4x4
11~'1~
EPA~
li mptWII.IO.,. It(*"'"" 1'1 ..n \~ lJIL ~'""P"'' rhhr'II'IIL~qlu.d---..... L2z.sao
$3 63
ty to further develop thetr skills or eight names of players
Sublnl
Fnl"eJtcrX
AWD11~1
~n
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Y
.
AT
o\(
'
dltl,.,~
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whlo.J:r'
Mlltd
11mJ~~:
.•
-..........
·~···
...
l17,4U
$2 75
whose eligibility were
and ih ·a competitive program.
GMCFA1my4x4t~-AUC tilt&lt;,.. I'\&gt; 1~ . r.,_• ..,.,.I:PA,...,IlmPII............................................ $11.901 S
Charl,es
All games will be either seven "questionable."
Ford ExplorerSprrl'nir4x4fl.llit•" &lt;HC t•w Pl. an,,.nli~•;ol:l'"•"" ~~ rn1'il-·········.............. .. 11 r.m $
declined
to
reveal
the
playinnings or I hour, 15 minutes
ii'1G16Dnd&amp;tC.ravan
SXTt1:WOI RPA,.,.I11mi'I1Sto~ &amp; fri,....,.l'w,""'"""'1lol1o' whlo. .......................... llt.tll
$291
whichever comes first. All play- ers' names.
OS Dudae(;rand Caravan SXT-I.WI•7i'....,..IIL~IIIII"l'" ' llh.,...,'" "· ~ ....... ~'~ ~ ... '"~uM'MIII•h""-..·---- ' ' ' · " ' S
"We complied with their
ers will be in the batting order
ft6~Qtkftdo4M~· ('.ahlll~l'\\ 1'1. AT Al ' tii~TWIJ"'''phprtwhtd.~OinLIPUI·1\ EI'Art~twll~t"J . .... 120.111
unless a player elects not to hit investigution. We provided
.05
Rim Quid c.h 4x4•t!fjj)A1'AC' lilt&lt;... l'll' l'l.l'l.lllllmOIIOIW ..... ohio FJ" ..,.. ll ................. 122.110 Sl
them with the documentaand all hitters will begin with a 1-1 count. . •
ll'!
f'nrdt'l!il
SC 4x4tt.W&lt;I 1111- Xl.l' I'W tU1ooumU..A1'M ' 1:1•• -'""'" "'"""'"""'"'""""'' ' '""""""-·· m .tiC. SJ
. Ohio high school rules will be followed wah the excep· tion," Charles said. "They
ll'!
Doidae
Riun
4x4 Quid C1hn'* z.c.nnnnli-RcW'\\' ih&gt;6 , TA(' ..h,...IIWI-1 . f'11WA rutrd '1'1 •ut• ..·-·H·"""" 121,"1 SJ
have . now determined that
tion of unlimited re-entry for defense.
04(:hrvKt$00
•:xt C.h4x4ot:wo VIIN liocll·l '.l ,.od I8n1J11opn ,..,,.,.. ,~ """.............::..:........................ 121.111 Sl
. The teams will be coached by members of the Rio all questionable players are
04&lt;~· st'oCrew (.)ah 4x4 fiMl\AT .\1 ' IJIII,..l'\\ l'l.o4A/IIIft··~'A. f'IIWil•mr•''flllhr-.lh.~t on~\. HI~') 10\llo.. sll.ttS 52
·Grande softball team. Teams will consist of IO·players with eligible and they have
114 flodilt Rltm1500tt."l4.\A1.AI 'dh m*"l 'lll'\\ 1'1 . :,~~ :r ~ t'tlh .._,_. Alkl) .W.I·l '" r'Mterl lt~m 1 '11··M~·- .,.. __,HRM $21 .195 · SJ J I
restored all of our wins."
114 [~ldil~ lloi&lt;OII {]Ub Cab Sport tl.\''11llllrd!lnM"C11 "" ,....., ll!wf!kl \'II\ 1 ,, .Ill tnll!r -ip "~''--'''' 1'1&gt;1"111 '"~• S16,tt5 S25
eight on defense.
Those wins came against
· PI!iyers will ~ iss,ued a T·shirt, but must provide the Williamson,
""'"""Rilnatr 4~ Super Cab•t.llllllti.IUln•IM*" .\1 \t 'IIII'I"OIIII'" f'\ ...., .~,11J.I•A ......1111 'II'C . ......-.~" 11 Uti $24
Madonna and
ll'! (::hoi•""'"' fl.l11t•T•r -PS I'll"""' •..,._.....
_______..:............................- s 1uu SI 59
remamder of thetr umform.
Shelby Valle~. Ky.
Deadline to sign up is November \7.
,.
Pt'(mlf'llt uQ~o,~I'IG w~M csown pavm•nt of 1 1 ~&amp; tllh or t•tdl· p!1.11 tax 111d 11111 200! ·2008 e!mo ale :1~ • PA ?1mu tl e &amp;0 r\PA 14 mot 11
"If Williamson High
e.7S apr. ,., mo· e '7'! .A.PA, 2001- 88 mot. us APR, 12 me e 15:. 7'&amp; rno• e ~II APR , 200 3 ee me e .,.~ '~ ...,01 e ~0 APR ~OOi! 1!1! mot
: For additional information, includmg cost, or to regtster turned
it in, Williamson
8.7! APA 12 mo. at 8 ~0 APR . 2001 80 mot e.?! APR . 7~ mot 8 30 APR 2000 ! Cr'IIOI e 7! '-PA. ?2 M'IOI e :30 • PA '11119 · ~ r'llot. e 30
contact Rio Grande head coach David Pyles at (740) 245- High had a good reason."
•PA, 9N Sll.. mlf'l !or 0111111 No ~Ymtf\11 IJI 2000 Wllf'IClllf\CIIrt apptQ\111
7490, (304) 675-7492 or by e-!'"ail at dpyles@rio.edu or said Willinmson coach' Doug
·
Denita Robinson at robinson@no.edu . .

win finale .

JI&amp;SNYDER

OHSAA basketball
officiating course.offered

Says STOP PAYING TOO MUCH! .

Check us outio~n~thieiwieb~ii~Ji~~

..

,.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy's freshmen volleyball
team finished its season with ail outstanding 14-2 overall
record, including a 6.() record to win the SEOAL South
Division freshman championship.
.
The Blue Angels defeated River Valley in the season
.·
finale by scores of 25-7, 22-25 and 25-23.
Brea Close led the servers with 12 points one ace with
Ashely Spencer adding nine points and four aces and Molly
Carroll also added nine points. ·
·
: The Angels had 'a balanced attack on offense with Mollie
Blake spiking five kills and Angela Harvey, Amy Noe, and
Ashley Spencer adding four kills each.
·
·
Blake and Lakeisha Williams led defensively with eight
.and nine digs respectively. Close led the assists with six
and Blake and Williams led the serve reception with eight
each.
.
. The freshmen lost to Alexander in their final hom~ match
l;ly.scores of 28-26 and 25-22. .
Carroll led ihe servers with seven points and three aces
with Harvey and Spencer adding three points each. Amy
Noe led the offensive effort with nine kills and Spencer and
Williams added seven each.
Close dealt out II assists and Blake 10 in her first match
as a setter. Close and Williams led the defense with five
' digs each. Noe and Spencer each had a point block.

~G 7th graders

.

.

DEBRECEN, Hungary
- Indiana Invaders' Erin
Nehus, a native of Gallia
County, finished as a scoring member of the USA
Team at the inaugural
IAAF World Road Running
Championships
· in
Debrecen, Hungary on Oct.

members finished within 3)
seconds of each other as
they finished lOth overall
in the international road
championship with Kenya.
Ethiopia, and .Japan taking
the top three spots.
Nehus finished as the
third US atlllete and thus.
the final scorin g aihlete.
The championship was
contested uri a 5,000 meter
criteri.um-loop through the
streets of Debrecen .

°

'

aoaro.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYD41LYSENTINEL.COM

S~RTS

Qallla Academy fJeshman volleyball team
(B) On an application for an.amendment .
of a certificate, the board shall hold a
hearing in the same manner as a hearing.is
The following eight criteria are set forth
held on an application for a certificate if
Columbus Southern.Power Company and
Ohio l&gt;ower Compal)y (operating
in Section 4906.10(A} of the Revised
the proposed change in the facility w~ld
Code and will be used, along with
result in any material increase in any
subsidiaries of American Electric Power·
additional infonnation, by the Board in
environmental im~t of the facility or a
· conducting business in Ohio as "AEP
the reviewing of the application for a
substantial change in the location of all or
Ohio") propose to construct an Integrated
certificate to.construct, operate and
Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC)
li portion of such facility other than as
electric power generation plant in ·
provided in the alternates set fonh in the
maintain the Great Bend IGCC plant:
Lebanon Township. Meigs County, Ohio,
• The basis of the neC&lt;;I for the facility. In · application,
the case ofa major utility facility
(C) · The c:hainnan of the power siting
on 288 acres adjacen' ~o the Ohio River.
, This project is known as the Great Bend
described in division (0)(1) of Section
board shall cause each application filed
IGCC Power Pla~t Project. The
4906.0 I of the RevisedCode, the Board
with the lioard lobe investigated and
proposed project will include a 629 .
shall presume the need for the facility as
shall, not le!;S than fifteen days prior to
megawatt power generation plant, a 69-.
that need is, stated in an application
the date any application is set for hearing
pursuant to division (A)($) of Section
acre landfill and baiJe unloading .faciliUes
submit a written report to the board and to ,
4906.06 of the ~evised Code;
on the Ohio River. The' accompanying
the applicant. A copy of such report shall
1M;
made avail\ible to any person upon
map depici$ the proposed site for th~·' ""'
.• • The. n!lhlr\l ofJ,he ~le
request. Such repon shall set forth the. --· ·
IGCC Plant It should be noted that due to
environmental impact of the proposed
the reduced scale and limited detail this
facility:
nature ofthe investigation, and shall
.· contain recommended findings with
map should.be used only as a general
Meigs County Heahh Deparrm~nt
• Whether the facility represents the
guide. More detailed infonnation .
Mr. I.any M~nhiall, Hea!lhCommis$ioner minimum adverse envit:OOmental impact,
regard to division (A) of section 4906.10
·
considering
the
state
of
available
regarding the general layout of the ·
IP .£..Mem~'Qt.· "· ' ' ·. ·
of the Revised Co4e and .shall become
proposed facility is included in the
Pomero)', Obio 45769~·
technology, the nature and economics of
part of the record and served upon all
application, described below, that. AEP ~ - {7:40)
1&gt;92-'62~
altematives,
and
other
pertinent
parties to the proceeding.
.
Ohio has tiled with the Ohio Power Siting " . .
.,
•
considerations;
•In the case of electric transmission lines, The Board has scheduled the public
M~. 01111')' :!)mith
Pfesidtnt
·
.
that the facility is consistent with regional hearing in two parts:
'
.
plans for expansion of the electric power
I) /'. non-adjudicatOty hearing pursuant
. Lebtnon 'l:wP· lrusteres
S132S Ponllnd R(lld
grid of the electric systems serving Ohio
to Section 4906.08(C), Revised Code,
Appllc•tlon NQw Pending
Rll:ine, Ohio 45771
where the Board ·siJall accept written or
and interconnected
(740)
84l·S304
systems
and
that
the
facility
will.
serve
the
oral
testimony from any person. The
An application for a Certificate of
interests of electric system economy and . hearing will take place December I 2,
'··
Environmental Compatibility and Public
MeigsSWCD
· 20()9, at 6:00 p.m., at Meigs High School,
· reliability;
.
NC\ld to construct, operate and maintain
Mr. Joe BOlin, Chairman.
• The fKility will comply with Chapt!'rs
42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio
the Great Bend Power Plant is now
33101 Hiland Road
3704, 3734, and 61 fl of the Revised
45169. And,
pending before the Ohio Power Siting
Pomeroy. 01\io 45'769
Code and all rules and standards adopted
2) An adjudicatory hearing will take
B01n! ("Board"). This application has
'
(740)
992-4282
.
.
'
under those chapters and under Sections
place December 14,2006, at 10:00 a.m.
been assigned case number 06-030-EL- ·
1501.33,
1501.34,
and
4561.32
of
the
in Hearing Room 11-F, at the offices of
.
*
.
· BGN. This case .number should be
'
'Tuppen Plains.Chester Water OiAtrict
Revised Code. ln.determining whether
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
included in all communications with
Mr•.Donald Poole, ~ion&amp; General
the facility will coin ply with all rules and
180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
respect to this proceeding.. Specific:
Manager
standards adopted under Section 4561.34
43215-3793 . This hearing is open to the
detai~ infonnation on the proposed
39561 Bar 30 Road ' ·
of the Revised Code, the Board shall
public, but is limited to the parties in the
project is inclooed in the application
Reedsville, Ohio 4S?72
consult with tht office of aviation of the
case as defined by Section 4906.08 of tbe
currently pending before the Board.
(74'0) 98S·3l15
· divis.ion of the multi-modal planning and
Revised Code. ·
programs
ofthe
Depanrnent
Qf
' '
Copies of the application, including
Eugene
Tripldt
Transportation under Section 4561.341 of · ' Opportunity for Comment
specific. details OfiOCftion and
Meigs Couitt)' En&amp;lneer.
the Revised Code;
and Intervention
construCtiOn are avalli!ble for public
• The facility will serve the public
106 Holly Lane
inspection at the following loc:ations:
interest, co!lvenience, and necessity:
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!1769
Section 4906.08(C) provides that:
Phone: (740) 9J2-291l
. • The facility's impaeton the viability as
The board shall accept written or oral
Meigs County Disl(ict Public Library
'Srlc:ulturalland of any land of any land
testimony friHn any person at the pUblic
Ms. Kristi Eblin. Director .
Me.igs County Omce o(Econ0111ic &amp;
in
an
existing
agricultural
district
hearing, but the right to call and examine
216 West Main Street
Workforce De~l&lt;lptlletlt
established
under
Chapter
929
of
the
witnesses shall be reserved for parties.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
· Mr. · ~ Vafnldoe, Eltec:utive Director
Revised Code that is located within the
However, the board may adopt rules to ·
(740)'992-5813
238 West MainSUeet
site ofthe propO~ed major utility facility : exclude repetitive, immaterial, or
and
·
Pomeroy, Obio4S769
irrelevl)l\t testimony.
Ohio PoWC!r Siting Board
• The facility incorporates maximum
Phone: (740) 992•3034
' Public: Utilities Commission of Ohio
feasible water conservation practices as
The deadline for filing a petitiqn to
180 East Broad Street
,•
detennined
by
the
Board,
considering
intervene in Ci!se No. 06-030-EL-BGN as
Columbus; Ohio 43215-3793
a\!Bilable
technology
and
the
natUre
and
established
by the Ohio Power Siting .
The Ohio Power Siting BQilld has·served
(~66) 270-6772
economics of various alternatives.
Board or the administrative law judge is.
the follt;~wingSiate a8eticies with copies
of the application:
·
up to five days prior to the scheduled date
An electronic version of the siting
...
'
for the non-adjudicatory hearing, or later
application can be found at L'le Ohio
Date, Time 1nd Location
if good cause is shown. However, the
Public. Utilities COQ1mission of Ohio Power Siting Board's website at http://
of Public Hearing
Board strongly encourages interested
Ohio Depanment of Agriculture
opsb.ohio.gov. To retrieve the
persons who wish to intervene in the
application, search under "Current Casesff Ohio Department of Development.
s.
e
ction
4906.
07,
Revised
Code
provides
adjudicatory hearing to file their petitions .
Ohio Department of Health
for Case #06-030-EL-BGN.
I''·
that:
as early as possible. Petitions should be
Ohio Depanment of Natural .Resources
(A) Upon the receipt of an application
addressed to the Ohio Power Siting
Ohio Department of Tnmsponation
Pursuant to Rule 4906-5-06 of the Ohio
complying with section 4906.06 ofthe
Board, 180 East BrOad Street, Columbus,
Ohio'Envjronmental Protection Agency
Administrative Code, the following local
Revised Code, the power siting board
Ohio 43215-3793.
Ohio ~istori~l ~iety
government officials in Meigs County
shall promptly fix ·a dale for·a public
have been served with acopy of the
·t
hearing thereon, not less than sixty nor
application :
SoHro·
· more than ninety days after such receipt,
Aun/1 of Amerlclln fllctric PfJWtl
and shall conclude the proceeding as
850 Tech Center Drive
expeditiously as practicable.
\
Gahanna, Ohio 43230-6605

Nehus scores for USA at World Road Championships .

BY GAin ClARK

.

.

Name aad Description
orthe Proposed Facility

~unbaJ1 'irime5 :&amp;mtiarl • Page Bs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

'.

I

Rio softball is bringing
back winter indoor league:

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PageB6·'

Qc:tober
OUTDOORS
· Rtjlectiom on buck fever: Consol Energy opens acreage for hunting.
Sunday,

Js buckfiever
danoerous?
.
:6 ·

STIW RB'Oiit
SP\lRTSCPMYOAA.YSENTlNELCOM

1 think it i' safe to sav most
experiel'lred deer hunreis have
ATHENS ·_ CONSOL
experienced buck fever. that
Energy and CNX Land
heart-racins. nerve-wrad;ng,
Resources has placed 4,216
·body-shakmg pheno.menon
acres located in Monroe
that gets us all at one time or
County, into a cooperative
another during our hunting
management agreement with
careers. It typically · strikes
the Ohio Department of
when we see a large buck deer,
Natural Resources (ODNR),
hence the name "buck fever."
Division of Wildlife.
Buck fever is conimonly
This agreement area, dediblamed for missed shots and
cated l!S CONSOL Energy
frazzled
nerves; ' novice
Powhatan Point Wildlife
hunters are often accused of
ha~ buck fever, bul experi·
In one Michigan study, 25
en
hunters get 1t, too. " - h
ho had
Furthermore. a little .bit of """" unters, most w
buck fever probably ' isn't a ~;i~~s,&lt;l;i:~
bad thing; if you don 't get · · which t
1
1
excited bv seeing grune, then lion m
atty P aque c ogs
•
the arteries, wore portable heart
monitors 10 see if the stresseS of
it's tiiiie to stop hunting. ·
But is it actually dangerous? a hunt could trigger dangerous
Now I am relanvely healthy, changes in heart rates.
.
but I can easily remember
For some, merely sighting a
SPORTSOMYDAI LY~ENTINEL.COM
times where 1 was watchmg deer .caused a drastic change
deer approach and wondered
why they couldn't heaf my in hean rate; one man's bean
ATHENS - The special
.
·
h
t
rate
soared
from
78
.beats
per
.
early
muzzleloader deer
heart poundmg 10 my c es ·
minute to 168 beats per
hunting season will open
In those situations I have
had to mentally force myself minute, while he was sitting in Oct. 23 and run through
to look away from the antlers a tree - buck ~deadever!deeOf Oct. 28 at three public
on "" 'here I want my course
dra~ ·a a1
·
·
he
and &amp;ocus
''
h r .huntmg
of the w
IS so p ysOh' areas md'sout astbullet or arrow to strike. I have out
10, accor mg to the
. heard and read that some tro- I'cally demand'mg and hunters ern
should let Ohio
Department
of
phy bucks are shot in the head WI'th heart dl· "~··se
~ ·
Or antlers by hunters who are someone else drag their deer. Natural Resources (ODNR)
unabletotaketheireyesoffthe
Our hunter-gatherer ances- .Division of Wildlife.
antlers, and 1 rccaJl one inci- tors were undoubtedly in good
The three areas open durdent that seems to back this up. shape, buff and hardened by ing the early muzzleloader
1 killed a buck a few years the1r tough existence and season include Salt Fork
ago and upon examination accustomed to strenuous Wildlife Area located in
found where it had earlier labor; I think they would be Guernsey County, Shawnee
been shOt through the lower amused (and more than a little State Forest in Scioto and
jaw; the same deer was also disgusted) · by their soft Adams
counties,
and
missing the point oft' one main descendants whose main Wildcat Hollow in Athens,
antler beam. Now the deer source of pre-hunting season Perry, and ·Morgan counmay have accidentally broken exercise is runnin~o the
. hen ~.or more
the antler point, or it may have knc
r and ties.
been shot off, but the hole chips during football halfDuring this special seathrough its lower jaw was time. Indeed for some hunters, son, hunters are required to
glari~ proof of poor marks- deer hunting is probably their have a permit'to participate
manship or buck fever. Such a only physically intensive and the permit designates
wound would not be immedi- activity and that for just one or whether the hunter can take
ari antlered or antlerless
ately fatal to the deer, but .two weeks a year.
would certainly doom it to a
On reflection, buck fever ·deer. . Only . one antlered
long, painful death .
probably isn't very dangerous deer may be ,harvested in
In hunter education we by itself, but hunters need to Ohio during the hunting
emphasize that when you first be aware of it, and of their year, regardless of hunting
see game is a moment to exer- own physical condition, season or method:
cise extreme caution, gather before heading to the Woods.
·
bo
d
J. F
· '/dli'Last year, hunters took
your wits a ut you, an
· ( tm ~eman IS WI ~e spe- 225 deer during the early
make sure you are making a cialist for the Meigs Soil and
safe shot confident you know · Water Conservation District muzzleloader season on
what is beyond your target.
He can be contacted weekdays these designated areas .
But back tD the original sub- at (740) 992-4282 or at
This will be the second
jea, is buck fever dangerous? jim.fteemmt®oiuwdteutetj . year fur the early muule-

In the

Open

Jim Fireman

Management Area. anows
for the use of the propeny
for public huntin¥, !rapping,
fishing and wildl1fe viewing
opportunities.
"CCNSOL Energy . and
CNX Land join several corporate partners including
American Electric Power,
B&amp;N Coal Co., Sunday
Creek Coal Co. and Scioto
Land Co. . in . providing
increased opportunities to
Ohioans."
states
Jim
· Marshall,
Division
of

district-~

Wildlife
for
1lOUiheastem Otuo. "ltJS our
hope that this agreement
area will be the foundation
to a long t1mn relationship
with CONSOL Energy and
CNX Land."
This is the first wildlife
management area signed
into agreement between
CONSOL Energy and CNX
Land Resources and tbe
Ohio Division of Wildlife.
This agreement was support~through partnerships and

Cl.

6unba, Gttmti ·6tnttntl

15, :too6

•

•
•
•

N~~

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CO?peration of the
Wild 1\ut:ey Fedel'ation ~
well as the Ruffed GroUse
Society.
.
"CONSOL is pleased to be
able to make this ~
.available for pubhc u~.
explained Bob King, ~
dent of CNX Land. "This.i~
one example of CONSOL's
policy to use sul'plus land td
benei'it wildlife enhance~
ment programs and otbe~
uses after mining has
ceased ."
.....- - - - - - - - - .

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Special area Muzzleloader
deer 'Season opens Oct 23

:1112Worlll·-

8~

m 1\l\l&gt;('f 'if&gt;..:~~
$1,995

loader hunt on these areas
to be a controlled, permit
only hunt. This permit system · will help biologists
track hunter ·participation,
harvest, and interest in this
early 'muzzleloader hunt.
Permits will also help biologists manage for a healthy
deer population in the areas
involved, by providing an
opportunity to kill both
antlered and antlerless deer.
In addition to the early
muzzleloader controlled'
hunt permit, hunters must
have a valid Ohio hunting
license and special deer
permit. Urban doer permits
are not valid for this special
muzzleloader season.
Hunters must wear a vest,
coat, jacket, or coveralls of
solid hllnter orange or camouflage hunter orange during this special muzzleloader season.
.
Legal hunting hours are
one half-hour before sunrise to sunset. Hunters may
use crossbows, longbows.
muzzleloading rifles of at
least .38 caliber or larger,
or muzzleloading shotguns
of 10, 12, 16, 20, 28, or
.410 gauge, using one ball
per barrel.
,
All deer harvested dur :11g
this special season must be
taken to the designated area

check station for permanent
tagging by 8 p .m. of the
same day.
Designated
check stations are as follows:
.
Salt Fork Wildlife area:
Headquarters, located onetenth of a mile east of the
Salt Fork State Park
entrance;
Shawnee State Forest:
Bodie's Kwik Stop, located
at 13352 State Route 52 in
Friendship;
Wildcat Hollow: Wolf
Creek
Wildlife
Area
Headquarters, located on
State Route 78 near Malta.
Maps of all three areas .
are available by calling the
Division ' of Wildlife at

. .
.
.
'
,, ' " ' l&gt;'h l p1laiD '
Scoot' To Connect is pictuted here as she races at Scioto Downs. She was namedlhi '2005~hlb Three-Year·
Old Filly Pacer ofltle Year. In hamess raci~ the dri\er rides in a modified caltderivedlftom,ancient chanots.

,

(74()) 589-9930.
Hunting for all other
wildlife sP._ecies, except
coyote, wtld boar, and
waterfowl, is prohibited on
these three public hunting
areas during the special
muzzleloader deer hunting
season.

For additional information on .all of Ohio's deer
hunting
seasons
and
requirements, hunters are
advised to review the 20062007 ·ohio Hunting and
Trapping
Regulations.
lnform'ation is also avail4ble online at www.ohiodnr.com/wildlife.

"-n.:_·

GO ON-LINE AT www.markportergm.com TO SEE PICTURES OF OVER 50 PRE-OWNED VEHICLES!
Dozens of standariJbred horses I'UII

across the field at the Gallipolis
tll'anCtl of Matt-e-Mike S,tables.
They are desiWI!Jted as pacers or

C::: . . E'V'R.c:&gt; LET 308 East Nlaln •
·

C:::.A.II::» I L L.A.C::: --

'1-740-992-66'14 or '1

Hours: Nlon.-Frl.
- .-r ec ••

,.

__......,.,..

trotters depenel~ on 111ell'

P

~

B-6~

Sat. 9-4; Sun.

~2-4

•

.... ,.....,... •-c:•••d- T•w, L.c:-.-•-· -.- F_,,_,. I

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�YoUR HoMETOWN

tunba, lim~ -ienti'nd

Progress may follow
·razing of old PJHs·
Char1ene
Hoeflich

Huntington . Then in 1943,
during World War II, he
left WSAZ to go into radar
work for R.CA and continued in that field after the
war.
A headline in the HeraldAdve~iser of Huntington,
W.Va., on Aug. 23, 195 3,
reads ''WSAZ began on a
shoestring in Pomeroy."
T&lt;XIay I live in the house
which was built on the lot
where WSAZ started so
many years ago.
.So Jo Ellen, perhaps that's
why Pomeroy was selected
as the hometown for one of
the characters in the play
about early radio.

•••

Since we seem to be
writing about old stuff this
week, I must mention my
· contact
with
Albert
Howell, who moved from
here many ·years ago and
now resides on Pawleys
Island, S.C. He sent along
a March 17, 1918, copy of
The Leader, published in.
Pomeroy during .World
War I.
A front page story which
caught my eye was titled
simply "Min~rsville boy."
lt told about the 7-yearold son of.longtime newspaperman Will Fisher
named John who was
described as "industrious
and saving."
·
He set about saving nickels in a cigar box with
which to buy war saving
stamps. He nailed the lid
down, cut a slot in the top,
and asked for help in co1·
lecting Buffalo nickels. He
also did a variety of things
to ·raise money, like pickill.g goosebemes and Sell· :. Had a letter this week ing them, 10 increase its
from Jo Ellen Diehl Yeary, contents.
When a year was up, John
who lives in South
Charleston, and she has decided it was time for him
one of those things 00 her to invest his money in war
.
lllind which can drive you stamps.
The
final
paragraphs
of
crazy .unless you come up
the story deal with the bene~itl;l a solution. Perhaps
fits
of saving. One reads,
~mebody here can help in
.
"The
habit of saving is the
i!Oiving her dilemma, if
M1deed there is a solution, thing that makes for prosperity. Begin early,-take care
which I doubt.
of
the nickels and they will
Anyways. she and John
grow
into dollars." Good
attended a local production
advice any day.
of a musical, "The 1940s
Incidentally, Will Fisher
Radio Hour" by Walton
was the grandfather of
.tones. The story takes
Gordon Fisher of Syracuse,
J2lace during the live pro. auction of a radio show in and John, the saver of
Buffalo . nickels, was his
ilew York in December of ·
John became a PHS
1942. Included in the pro- uncle.
business teacher and even~ram was a cast list of the
tually a controller for a
characters in the play. One
company.
was a "Charlene Anderson
(Charlene Hoeflich is
who grew up. in Pomeroy, generul 1114nager of The
·ohio, where as a kid she Daily
in
Sentinel
was labeled a tomboy and Pomeroy.) ·
~pent hours helping .her
Dad who ran an auto shop.
Aer Mom corrected that
situation and enrolled her
in · tap, ballet and baton at
Miss Dolly's
School of
Dance ... ...
: Now Jo Ellen has a sister
gamed Charlene. . then
there 's me, but I didn't
grow up here, and then
there's one up at Portland
who did , and probably
many more here, but no one
with the last name of
!nderson. It took a linle
orne but. being an attorney
with a reasoning mind, Jo .
Ellen figured out it was a
fictional character.
However. she stiJI wonciers how the author picked
Pomeroy as the hometown
fOr one of his characters in a
tadio show and whether
there was indeed at one time
a Mi ss Dolly's School
Dance. Got any clues?
Now I don ' t have an
answer to th at question ,
'9 ut I do know that
Pomeroy did have a nidio
station for a number of
years which wa~ built in
1923 on Lincoln Hill and
operated as WSAZ by Glen
€base. Some yean. later. he
, ~acked up hi s tran s mis~ion
equipment an.d moved to

-

In the Gallipolis City Park
at the FifSf Avenue entrance,
one can find a monument
dedicated to the victims of
the yellow fever epidemic
of 1878.
That disease, also known
as "Bronze John," was
brought here by crew members of the John Porter
steamboat, but it was not the
first time yellow fever had
gripped Gallipolis.
In 1796, yellow fever
struck both the townspeople
and the U.S. Army that was
camped in town.
A report by Major Prior,
then in command of the
U.S. Army outpost · at
Gallipolis, was included in
an 1879 book by J.M.
Keating called A History of

the Yellow Fever.
Prior stated, "The inhabi.tants of the village, principally French, and very poor.
as well as filthy in their
mode of living, ·began to
suffer first and died so
rapidly, that a general constel)1ation sei:led the whole
settlement."
"The garrison continued
healthy for some days, and
we began to console ourselves with the hope that we
should escape altQgether;
we were however, soon
undeceived,. and the reason
for our exemption hereto-

weather was extremely hot Napoleon's campaigns to
fore was soon discovered."
It seems that the wind had and uncommonly dry. The Hruti, naif of his army was
shifted and instead of blow- water in the pond had evap- wiped out by yellow fever.
ing toward the City Park orated to a point where what A vaccine to prevent yellow
where most of the settlers was left was a great quanti- fever was not developed
lived in blockhouses, it ty of rriuddy water, with a until the 20th century, but
·began to move in a north- thick slimy mixture of there is still no direct cure. ,
vegetables, · As of 200 I , the World
easterly direction toward putrefying
which emitte:l a stench Health Organization reports
the U.S. Army camp.
some 30,000 deaths annual"The ·soldiers began to almost intolerable.
Major Prior had concluded ly · worldwide from . yellow
sicken; in five days, half the
garrison was .on the sick that yellow fever had ·some- fever, lll('gely among unvac,
lists, and in 10 days, half of thing to do with the pond, cinated populations.
Major Prior organized a .
them were dead. They were but what the j;Qnnection was
generally seized with chills, he had no idea. Philadelphia, campaign with the help of
townspeople
of
followed by headache, pains which had sevetaf outbreaks the
in the back and limbs, red of yellow fever in the 1790s, Gallipolis to construct a
eyes, constant sickness at had adopted a therapy based large ditch that was run frotn
the stomach, or . vomiting, on the studies by Dr. the pond to the Ohio River.
In this fashion, the water
and generally just before Benjamin Rush.
This therapy consisted of was diverted. Dirt was then
death, with a vomiting malter like coffee grounds. copious bloodletting. At brought in to fill the hole.
They were often yellow · first, this method was great- The mosquitos moved on.
The next rnention cf yelbefore, but almost always ly frowned upon, but in time
it became the primary way low fever in Gallipolis histo. after death."
· Major Prior apparently to treat the disease. · Of ry came during the Civil War
had some familianty with course, later medical stuoies when some soldiers brought
yellow fever as he tracked showed that yellow fever · to the U.S. Army hospital
the source of the disease to a originated with forest mon- · here from the South brought
pond that was located about ·keys in both Africa and the disease. It was largely
where the Colony Theater South America. The disease contained to the hospital.
The largest epidemics
has been since 1937. Some was carried from the monefforts had been· made to keys by the Aedes aegypti here after 1796 were the
drain the pond in 1793 mosquito. We are not sure if 1832 and 1847 cholera epiwhen some trees were cut bloodletting was done in demics, the ·1878 yellow
down and put in the slimy Gallipolis in 1796. It is fever plague and the great
hold · after Gallipolis had interesting to note that influenza outbreak of 1918.
suffered from malaria, but about 1906, doctors at the
(James Siznds is a special
some citizens objected to Ohio Hospital for Epileptics correspondent for the
draining it because it held in .Gallipolis were experi- Sunday Times•Sentinel. He
frogs, which was·considered menting with bloodletting ca11 be conlacted by writiJtg
a French delicacy.
as a cure for mental illness. to 1040 Mililtlry Roa4,
In August 1796, the
In 1802, during one of Zanesl'ille, Ohio 43701.)

GALLIPOLIS An
influenza (flu) pandemic i~
a worldwide outbreak of flu
disease that occurs when a
new type of influenza virus
appears that people have not
been exposed to before (or
not have been ex posed to in
a long time).
·
The pandemic virus differs from the seasonal flu
outbreaks.
Seasonal
influenza is caused by
influenza virus types to
which •people have already
been exposed, and influenza
vaccines (flu shots and
nasal spray) are available to
help prevent widespread illness from seasonal flu.
The spread of bird flu in
affected areas can normally .
be prevented . The .best way
to prevent infection of the
bird flu virus is for humans
to not have contact with
chickens, ducks or other
poultry. While cooking
poultry. make sure it is
cooked
thoroughJy
to
assure all c hances of
becomin g infected are
diminished.
Why is it important to be
prepan:d for this pandemic?

A pandemic could threaten everyone around th~r
world. While governmen~
at federal and local levels
are planning for this pandemic, it is important that
. you begin individual and
family planning._ Some of
the following are suggestions for ·preparedness :
1 ..Store a two- week supply of water and food. Make
sure the food is non-perishable. During a pandemic,
stores may be closed or out
of the supplies yau need.
2. Check your regular prescription drugs to ensure
that you have enough sup)lly if a pandemic would
occur.
3. Have any non-prescription drugs and other health
supplies on hand, including
pain relievers, stomach ·
remedies, cough syrup, flu. ids with electrolytes and vitamins.
4. Talk to family members
and loves ones about how '
they would be cared for if
they got sick, or what will
be needed to care for them
in your home.
5. Get involved in your

BY REBECCA TERRY, DTR
All the fun of this holiday
also brings many concerns
for parents - too many sugary treats in your kid's possession and the arguments
that ensue over this sweet
treasure trove. If you don't
feel like contributm~ to the
neighborhood
chtldren 's
tooth decay, consider giving
treats that are healthier.
Here are some suggestions:
• Packages of cheese and .
crackers.
• Naturally flavored and
sweetened gum.
• Small bags of pretzels.
• Small packages of
peanuts or raisins.
• ·Granola bars.
• Home made treats.
• Fruit such as apples;
oranges, bananas
• Fresh vegetables.
An alternative.to the sugary treats is to hand out nonfood treats. Today many
families are opting for this
choice. With a lot of thought
and some clever shopping,
you can find fun items at a
low cost.
Here are some ideas:

• Cool stickers.
• Halloween balloons (for
children over 3 years old).
• Crayons, pencils, colored
chalk, fun shaped erasers.
• Whistles, rubber toys,
bubl)les.
• Pumpkin plastic rings,
bracelets, necklaces.
• Coloring books, activity
books, note pads.
Children are going to
want some cal'ldy and they
will be excited to dig into
the
trick-or-treat
bag.
Pftents don't let your children take over the bag! Give
specific instructions to
bring all candy and items
home before eatin~ so that
you can carefully mspect it
for tampering.
'
Children shouldn't snack
while they're out trick-ortreating. To help prevent
children from munching,
give them a healthy snack or
light meal before they go don't send them out with an
empty stomach. When
inspecting the bag, depending on the age of your child,
let him/her pick two to three ·
treats .that they can eat and
store the rest of the candy
out of reach and out of sight.

CORNWELL CENTER
. for Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care

441-1645 today. Supplies
will be limited.

HEALTH SYSTEMS
Gallipolis I Jackson

Over the next few days and
weeks, rationing the treats is
the best approach . Allow
your children to make their
own selection, but limit
choices to one large piece of
candy or two small pieces.
If you child has trouble .
with this, choose for them.
Just place small ainounts in
bags and let them select one
of the bags. If there is too
much candy,
consider
donating some of it to
churches or shelters. It will
bring smiles to others.
Always .brush children's
teeth after eating candy. Tell
your children that if they
don't brush their teeth, they
will not receive the candy.
Limit sugary sweets, but
when you do allow them, be
sure your child has a nutritious meal before offering
any sugary sweets.
WHO CAN APPLY FOR
WIC? - Women who are
pregnant, breastfeeding, or

-

just had a baby; infaim up
to I year old and children
to age 5.
HOW TO APPLY FOR
WIC? - Applicants must
meet income eligibility
guidelines. For example: a
family size of 2, monthly
income cannot exceed
$2,035; family size of 4 $3,084; family size 5 $3,608; family size 6 $4,132. Please note: A pregnant woman counts as more
than one family member. A
person
who
curr-ently
receives Medicaid, food
S~£1'· or Ohio Works First
(OWF) automatically meets
the income eligibility criteria for WIC.
Please call the Gallia
County WIC Office at 4412977 for further information
or to schedule an appoint-.
ment. Evening appointments
are available upon request.

Resource:

................

Hiring full-time and part-time.
Starting pay for new graduates $20/hr.
Hour1y wage adjusted for years of experience.

ccu

Rehab
Med/Surg
PCU

·-pllelo

Emergency Room
Surgical Floor

Please contact Kenny Coughenour. 740.446.5205

Pictured are Holzer Hospice volunteers, from left, Becky Meaige. Gladys Sheets and
Phil Underwood. ·

Holzer Hospice needs volunteers
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer care to the patient and entire
Medical Center's Hospice family, hospice volunteers
program is currently recruit - serve as members of a team
ing volunteers.
of specially 'trained profesAn important part of the sionals that include physi. hospice program, volunteers dans, nurses, social workshare their special talent and ers, clergy and aides. The
abilities in order to assist importance of volunteers to
patients and families at an the hospice program cannot
important time in their lives. be
overemphasized.
. volunteers,
Holzer Hospice services Without
are available in Gallia, Hospice could not provide
Jackson. Meigs and sur- services so 'g reatly needed
rounding counties. to those to patients and families.
who can no longer benefit
E1;amples of services
from aggressive curative which hospice volunteers
treatments. and who need may provide include runpain relief and management ning errands, assisting with
. of phys ical symptoms. as writing correspondence or
·well as emotional and spiri - typing e-mails, baking
tual support.
. cookies or other pastries,
Pro viding support and raking or mowing a yard,

www.keep-

kidshealthy.com.

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HAUNTED
ARIEL THEATRE
Oct.. 20 &amp; 21, Ui • 31
Open each night at{) pm
AU new, much scarrier
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Openings In:

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IFYOUDARE!

assisting in the hospice
office, or being a friendly
companion. Hospice will
help a volunteer identify
their special talents and
match them with an appropriate patient or family.
Holzer Hospice is also
recruiting teenagers for a
Teen Volunteer program.
Students must be 13 years
of age and have parental
consent.
·

If you would Tike more
information about becoming a Holzer Hospice volunteer;
contact
/{el/i
.Templeton,
bereavement
coordinatorlvalumeer coordinator. loca(ly at ( 740)
446-5074 or toll free · at
'
(800) 500-4850.

The Ariel-Dater 'Hall
'28 Sec. Aft. Gallil(;li~~H

740-446-ARTS 278

Our Comprehensive .
Re&amp;ional Center:

Perfect Steeper
SuoorPiUsh

• Physician offiCes for cardiology,
vascular medicine, er\docrinology

10Y.C...._.,.• ...._,.,

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• Cardiac and vascular testing

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• Peripheral artery diseaie rehabilitation
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• Diabetes ~nd endocrine disease
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Anniversary Collection from '774

• Diabetes education
• Clinicalre5ean::h

Boulevard Collection from '974
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COMING SOON:

ISilvers!!~~.S :Z:

law-risk dia:nostic cardiac and vascular ·
catheterization laboratory
•

For more information, call

{740) 446-561'9

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Ill·

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,.,.,..,.... • JG OM ra

r II.., Glt •

, r

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Blood"'-· ~II!GM.WBonli Dlllllitr
---lkvw~.flr.S

T 'N•at• •
·G list ala Uala 1 nFnDtp \unt· ,
·II pi-.JendCGmmunityPIC. t •
Rill\ uh111atlta...and 1lll.ldt-'

•

,

community as it works to
prepare for ~he influenza
pandemic.
Limiting the spread of
~e~s and preventm~ infection 1S an 1mportilnt 1ssue to
consider. Some ways to prevent the spread of germs
and infection are to:
I. Wash hands frequently
with soap and water, or use
alcohol gel if soap and
water are. not available. ,
2. Cover ·your mouth and
nose with tissues when
coughing and sneezing,
then dispose of tissue, do
not reuse. If tissues are not
available cough in your
elbow. not your hands, this
will help prevent the spread
of germs.
3. Do not access public ·
areas if you are ·sick.
Starting
Nov.
I, ·
Hometown
Medical
Supplies will have a
influenza preparedness kit.
available with necessary
Tent Sp&lt;adllnj plloto
medical supplies to help
Teri
Pearson,
right,
administrator
of
Hometown
Medical
Supplies
in
Gallipolis.
and Anita
keep your family protected . .
For more information or Moore, the firm's marketing director, display one of the influenza preparedness kits that
to order a kit, call (740) will be available at HoJ)1etown starting Nov. 1.

Having a healthier Halloween
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH OEPARTMENT

Sunday, Oft:ober 15, 2006

Preparedness key in outlasting flu pandemic·

Yellow fever was no stranger to Gallipolis
ltdAMES SANOS

PageC3

COMMUNI1'Y

6unba~ OUmd -ienttntl

Sunday, October 15, 2oo6

'

COMMUNITY CORNER

• We all like to see things
built up rather than tom
down, but a time comes
when something has to happen if progress · is to be
made.
That's certainly the case
with the old Pomeroy Junior
High School building,
which has been vacant for
)i.ears and efforts to peddle it
· fbr constructive use have
been futile.
Dismantling of the inside
is underway now, and
within the next month the
old building will fall under
the weight of a wrecking
ball. For . many who
remember ' happy times
there, that will be a sad
day. The location along
East Main is prime and
efforts will be made to get
something built on the lot
which will not only be
attractive, but bring jobs to
. Pomeroy.
. This week I came across
two Pomeroy High School
memory books, one from
t928, the other from 1930,
!'hich belong · to Annie
G:hapman. The 1928 book
lias an appeal to the
townspeople asking them
"to not be hampered by
Jack of necessities and
work hard and earnestly
Q:lr the gym." They apparc:ntly did, since the 1930
book features a picture of
the new building which
has a large gym with the
caption:
"This new building,
erected at great expense
and with much sacrifice by
~e townspeople, has prac- ·
ncally solved the problem
of relieving the congestion
in our schools. The erection
of this building also protides us with one of the
l!lest.gymnasiums in southem Ohio. We extend our
thanks to the people of
Pomeroy."
: So no"«&lt; as dismantling of
the old building liegins, it
ISecomes a time for old
.timers and alumni to reflect
·a(ld "remember when ... "

PageC2

I Ne1xt to Big Lots

1"16t1-9730

�'
' .

CEI.EBRATIONS

•

PageC4

tunbap lim~ ·itntinel

Sunday, October 15, 2oo6

•

ON THE BOOKSHELF

·Once in awhile, the livin'
is
easy
.
'

.Ryan McF- .ftd Kathryn Barcus

Mr. and Mrs. Jerrod Douglas

UPCOMING
WEDDING

FRECKERDOUGLAS
WEDDING
RACINE
Maria
Darlene Frccker ' and Jerrod
Keith Douglas were married
on Aug . 5. 2006, at the
Christ Lutheran Church in
:Athens. with Pastor Lynn
Miller officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Charles and Marsha Frecker
of Racine and the groom is
the son of Richard and Joyce
Douglas of Glouster.
She is a 1997 graduate of
:Eastern
High
School,
received a bachelor's degree
from the University of Rio
Grande in elemental)' education in 2002. and her ma~ter's
degree in computer education
and technology from Ohio
·University in June 2006. She
:is currently employed as a
fifth grade teacher at East
Elementary in Athens.
Douglas is a 1994 graduate
of Meigs High School, and
received an associate's degree
:from Hocking College in
computer electronics in June
. 2000. He is self-employed
with J&amp;M Logging.
. The bride was . given in
marriage by her parents.
.Attendants were her sister,
Adria Panerson of Point

'

GALLIPOLIS The
families of Kathryn Barcus
Pleasant. W.Va.. matron of artd Ryan McFann are
honor: and bridesmaids, pleased to announce · their
Andrea Snv.der of Point upcoming marriage . on
· Pleasant, Lindsay Kiktavy of Saturday, Oct. 21, 2006.
Kate is the daughter of
Cleveland.
Amanda .
Whitlatch of Cincinnati, and Rick and Debbie Barcus of
Kelly Markins of New Gallipolis. She is a graduate
Marshfield; and junior of the University of Rio
bridesmaids,
Megan Grande and is employed by
Douglas, the groom's daugh- the state of Ohio as a south·
ter. of Glouster. and Riley east region assistant auditor.
She is the granddaughter
Mark ins of New Marshfield.
Jenna Snyder of Point of Mary Barcus and the late
Pleasant was the flower girl. Bill Barcus of Gallipolis,
Brayden Markins of New and Setty Hammack of
Marshfield was the ring- Barboursville, W.Va.
bearer. Travis Grate of
D~Jblin was best man, and
groomsmen were · Randy
Burke of Coolville, Jeremy
Grimm of Vinton, Chad
Markins of New Marshfield,
and O.K . Robertson of
Maryland. Samuel Evans of
Racine was an usher. Music
was provided by Steffi
Purcell, Bob Panerson and
Edie Ross.
An outdoor reception followed at the Byrd's Nest in
Albany, where music was
provided 1:1y OJ Tom Payne.
The couple took a wedding
trip to Pigeon Forge, Tenn.,
and now reside at Racine.

state of Ohio at The Plains.
He is employed with A.B.
Contracting
in
Point
Plea~ant , W.Va.
Halle Andrews. daughter
of the bride, was the
flower girl for the wedding. The couple spent
their honey moon touring
Gatlinburg. They will
reside at Darwin. A reception will be held for family
and friends at a later date.

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

•·

~:

..

WEDDING
SET OCT. 28

GALLIPOLIS The
Rev. Robert and Bronis
(Yqung)
Persons
of
Gallipolis will observe their
52nd wedding anniversary
on Monday, Oct . 23, 2006.
They were married on .
Oct. 23 . 1954, and are the
parents of six children.
Margaret Geiger,
B.J .
Eichinger, Janet Zweifel,
Chris Manin. Barb Harris
and Donna Hawley. They
have six grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren.
Rev. Persons is a retired
auto body mechanic.

POMEROY - Brett Carl
and
Connie
Sauters
exchanged wedding vows
and rings in a 11 :30 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 29, 2006, wedding at The Chapel of Love
in Gatlinburg, Tenn.
The bride is li1e daughter of
Leon and Christine Sauters of
Pomeroy, and tbe groom is .
the son of Vtrgil and Judy
Carl, also of Pomeroy.
She is employed by the

high SOs and the ocean
breeze was divine. We rented a two-bedroom condo for
about the same price as two
motel rooms but much
more satisfact~ry. We had a
deck where one could stare
at the ocean moon and
stars and a s~all stoop off
·the ground floor. After the
sudden change in temperature here, I surely miss
those balmy ocean breezes!
With regret, we had to
leave our old 1998 Windstar
down there. The transmission went out the day before
we were to leave. The Ford
agency couldn't pull the
transmission until the following Wednesday, so we
decided to "trade." My hus·
band said it has retired, .like
many old things, to a
warmer climate. Did not
plan to brins; home such a
large souvem.r!
Of course, I took along
some books. Have never
read anything by Frederick
Forsyth, so thought I would
give his latest, The Afghan,
a try. fie writes international espionage thrillers and
has been doing so since The
Day of the Jackal in 1971.
This is about an AI Qaeda
plot, which was discovered
on a suspected terrorist's

IY MARTHA WAGGONER

Jess Deremer and CD ·E lls

PERSONS
ANNIVERSARY

SAUTERS-CARL
WEDDING

Beverly
Gettles

computer.
British and
American intelligence know
something big is brewing,
but they do not know what,
where nor when. Their only
hope is to infiltrate the organization with a spy, one
. Mike Martin, a veteran SAS
(British) agent, who has
worked it1 war zones around
the world.
He was raised among the
Arabs, speaks Arabic and,
with his dark complexion,
could pass as a Middle
Easterner. He is to imper·
sonate a Taliban soldier,
· now . held at Guantanamo
for the past five years, a
hero
in
his
native
Afghanistan, whose entire
family was wiped out when
lhe U.S. began bombmg
after 9111.
.
Forsyth . gives . much
detarled mformauol! on
weapons systems, a history
of the areas of the Middle
East and other hot spots
around the world. It was
amazing to me to re~d how
networked the terronsts are
·and in how many tountries
they are located. Dtd not
think of Indonesia as a
hotbed of terrorism,. but I
forgot about Bah. There are
more than a billion Muslims
throughout the world. TIJey
surely do not all hate the
U.S., but it seems there are
enough of them who do to
make life perilous for many
years to come.
·
This is a novel strong on
plot and action, a bit shart
on character, but a pageturner neverthele~s. Stayed
up an hour past my bedtime
to finish it, so .what does
that tell you?

Years after 'Cold Mountain,'
Frazier back with 'Thirteen Moons'

•

POMEROY
Jess
Deremer and CD Ellis will
be married in '!fl open ceremony at I :30 p.m. on
Saturday. Oct. 28. 2006, at
the Rutland Civic Center.
Fritnds may call or send . The bride-elect is the
cards to the couple at 17 daughter of 1ina Roberts and
Texas Road, Gallipolis, North Canton, and Richard
Ohio 45631.
Deremer of Canton. The

..
Mr. lind Mrs. Brett Call

Ryan is the son of Randy
and Carolyn McFann of
Bidwell. Ryan is a graduate
of the University of Rio
Grande and is employed as·
a safety ano health supervisor with MPW at Gavin.
He is the grandson Beulah
N ihert and the late James L.
Nibert of Gallipolis, and the
late Gilbert Edwin and
Freeda McFann.
AIJ open church wedding
is scheduled for 2 p.m. at
the Addison
Freewill
Baptist Church, with the
reception immediately following.

•

Rev. Robert and Bronls Persona

Took another little vacation. We returned to south
Georgia, met our daughter
and son-in-law in Savannah
and took the city tour once
more. It is ;o lovely, it "
a treat for us thought wa.
the second time. Am so
sJad they surrendered the
city to Sherman, rather than
l~t those beautiful old
~ouses get burned! They
have done a masterful work
of restoration.
. We drove down to Jekyll
Island, about 90 miles south
of Savannah on Monday.
About 65 percent of the
Umd on the island is owned
l)y the state of Georgia, so
there is lots of wildlife
(deer, hundreds of squirrel,
birds, forests). The historic
district is occupied by the
Jeky II Island Club, where
"prominent East Coast millipnaires," including •J.P.
Morgan, Joseph Pulitzer, .
Goodyear
and
Frank
William Rockefeller, built
"cottages" ·for their families' winter retreats. There
are golf courses, ·swimming
pools, . immaculately kept
grounds and all manner of
biking and hiking trails. You
can still stay at the Jekyll
Island Club Hotel for a
glimP,se of "The Gilded
Age ..'
·
There is only one gas station on the island, a very
limited shopping center, no
McDonald's nor chain
restaurants. We found it
peaceful and uncrowded
during the week, with
· almost no one on the beach,
few customers in the restaurants and very little traffic.
~e temperature was . in the

groom is the son of Charles
and Laura Ellis of Pomeroy.
A reception will be held at
the Civic Center imrnedi;ately following the ceremony.

HYDE-DAINES
ENGAGEMENT
BIDWELL
Misry
Nicole Hyde and Robert
John Daines are announcing
their engagement and
upcoming wedding on
Friday, Oct. 27, 2006.

Misty is the daughter of
Michael and Brenda Hyde
of Bidwell. Robert is the son
of John and Mary Daines
Crown City, and Rosalie
Punch of northern Ohio.

of

Plllln - Carved
Qlamond
)I RT

RALEIGH, N.C.- "Cold
Mountain" author Charles
Frazier said the Cherokee
Indians were a natural subject for his second novel
because their history surrounded him as a youth, .
At a reading that opened
his IS-city book tour to promote "Thirteen Moons,"
Frazier explained that he
grew up in Andrews in .far
western North Carolina, a
~gion that was once part of
the tribe's homeland.
"It was impossible to live
in th.at place and not know
that other peopl.e had owned
that land or occupied that
land," he said.
The title,
"Thirteen
&gt;tocins," comes from the
1:;./ Cherok~c calendar and tells
.
the readc1 that "even something as basic, to our way of
thinking, as a year divided
into 12 segments .is out the
window," he said.
The appearance was a
homecoming of sorts for
the 55-year-old Frazier,
who lived nearby before
quining his teaching job at
State
North
Carolina
University to finish his first
book, the best-selling
"Cold Mountain :"
It took Frazier seven
years to finish that book.
Following its 1997 release,
the hardcover and paperback editions logged a combined 94 weeks on the New
York Times best-seller list.
Four million copies were
sold. The novel also won ·a
National Book Award and

PageCs ·
Sunday, Ck:tober 15, 20o6 ·

REA'D MORE ABOUT IT

Planting pride in the community
A recent anicle in the
Gallipolis
Tribune
announced the results of the
city's participation in the '
America in Bloom contest.
The complete report is
available at the reference
desk . at Bossard Library.
Gallipolis was grouped in
competition with nine other
cities in the under 5,000
population group - and
was scored in eight areas of
landscape management.
Gallipolis surpassed the
competition in the Floral
Displays category. The
local sponsors of the competition were commended
for their efforts and were
encouraged to try again.
The committee provided
suggestions for Improyement _ ., and suggested
some magazines to read.
Bossard Library subscribes to over 250 magazines each month. Many of
these periodicals have gardening, flower arranging
and landscaping tips. The
well known Better Homes
. and Gardens is joined with
Birds and Blooms, Farm
and ranch living, Country
Living, and Horticulture,
for gardeners everywhere.
The abundance of gardening groups in the area
have helped the library's
collection of gardening
books to grow and prosper
over the years. The library
has books on landscaping,
flower gardening, flower
arranging, flower preserving, trees, ornamental
grasses, ·
wildflowers ,
mulching and pruning
all topics suggested by the
America in Bloom committee for "community education." Magazines owned by
Bossard Library are kept in
a periodicaL reading room
between the reference desk
and the genealogy room at
the library. The most cur-

Betty
Clarkson

rent issue of the magazine
is kept in the library for
walk-in browsers. All back
issues are available for
checkout - for two weeks
at a time.
There is a new wealth of
online periodicals available
on nearly every subject.
.Having a periQdical accessible from home, school or
the office is easy, ecomimical and saves a trip to the
library. The library recognizes this - and makes a
number of resources available online a.s well.
Magazines and pepodical publications can be
searched by subject online
through OPLIN at home,
school, the office - or at
the .library. Searching by
subject locates articles in a
wider variety of sources,
including those not sub- ·
scribed to by the local
libriuy.
.
EbscoMasterFILE premier provides full text from
over I ,900 magazines, over
91,000 photos, maps and
flags - and 60,000 primary
source documents. This ser. vice from your pu)llic
library opef!S a much wider

array of information avail-.
able for the local communi·
ty. The links recommended
by the committee include ·
the information to sign up :
for a free subscription. Each ·
Web site also lists featured·
articles which can be read:
online. By looking at the' .
Jinks .I discovered a new co:
available on pruning, This
$69.95 CD will be pur·
chased by the library and
will be available for loan. :
A featured article in :
www.treeservicesmagazine.c :
om talks about clearing utility lines. Afeatured anicle in
www.lcmrnagazine.com dis·
cussed rainwater management techniques. A featured
in
www.turf,
article
magazine.com markets a
new high foam weed control
product. All three recommended links are published
by the same company. When
h~Jking for information, one
link leads to another - and
one idea sparks a new hobby
or project.
·
The public libraries irt
your state hope that searches for information lead gar·
deners and landscapers to
the public library - the
place, where learning grows . .
(Betty Clarkson is the
Director of the Dr. Samuel
L
Bossard
Memorial
library in Gallipolis. The
Ubrary is open . Monday
through Friday, 8 a.m. until
9p.m.; Saturdoy, 9 a.m. until
5 p.m.; iznd Sundays, 1 to 6
p.m. The Ubrary 's Web site is
www.bossard.Ub.oh.us.)

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

SALE

Free Gift

MEMORY
FOAM
SPECIAL

APPIIclto

Charles Frazier, author of "Cold Mountain" debuts his new·
novel "Thirteen Moons" at Meredith · College on Tuesday,
Oct. 3 in Raleigh, N.C .
becarne
a
big-budget
Hollywood movie that featured an Academy Awardwinning performance by
Renee Zellweger.
The success prompted
Random House to give
Frazier an $8 million advance
for "Thineen Moons."
It also sparked much
anticipation among h·is
fans, who waited anxiously
Tuesday evening to pick up
of
"Thirteen
copies
Moons"
at .. Meredith
College, the . first stop on
the tour. Some sat on "the
steps of the auditorium,
reading the first few pages.
Among them was Cindy
Farrar, a lab technician from
Wilmington, who took two
days off from work to
devote her attention to the
novel. She even got up
Tuesday morning to buy a
CD version of the book, so

she could listen to the tale as
she made the two-hour
drive to Raleigb.
"I've been looking forwand
to this for months," she said.
The novel tells the story
of Will Cooper, an orphaned
white boy who runs ll trading post on the edge of the
Cherokee
nation.
A
Cherokee elder adopts
Cooper, who eventually
becomes a tribal chief. He
meets his true love, Claire, ·
when he wins her in a card
game at age 12, then finds
her again decades later.
"lt's a life story," Frazier
said. "I wanted this book to
be a lot of things, and part ·
of it is Will's connection to
another culture and his
sense of beholdeness to
another culture. Another is a
sense of America in the 19th
century and the really grand
goals we had as a nation."

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.
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effecta •• ••••• caa have
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~'••.r •Jaole 'bolt·

BrinR in
proolofa
mammogram
and join

for free:

The week of October 16th only, Curves is waiving'tbe
I

Lab tests and X-rays are
·available in Albany!
Bring your physician order to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's
convenient location at the Albany
Medical Clime. No appointment Is
needed for these diagnostic services.

.Keeping
~allia, Meigs
&amp; Mason

Lab '-»urs Moncl.y ~ liriday

informed

Jayno Arllwr, MT

senice · fee when you bring in a current !"ammogram.

Mike Sharp, RT

cwves.com

Over9,500 locations worldwide.

8 a.m. to Noon • 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

lmqinc hours M~- friday

Sunday •• ;
nmes-Sentirti1.

8 a.m.

to Noon

• 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

(7-40) 566-4725

~

Gallia • 446-2~''h
Meigs • 992·2155

HOLZER c;.,/1 ,

(740) 992..0308
fo r

CANCER CARE

Maspn • 675-1333

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with

216 East Main St.

Pomeroy, OH 45769

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ENTERTAINM-ENT
HMCplans
second annual ·
Health and
Safety Fair
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center will host its
second annual Health and
Safety Fair on Saturday, Oct.
21 from 8:30a.m. until noon
in the hospital's Education &amp;
Conference Center, locllted
on the ground floor of the
Charles t;:. Holzer Jr., MD,
Surgery Center in Gallipolis.
The fair, designed for the
entire family, is sponsored by
the HMC Community Health
and Wellness Department
and the HMC Community
Relations Department. .
Free and open to the public,
the fair will feature several
displays by hospital and community programs focusing oh
health and safety, including
the American Cancer Society,
Gallia County 9-1-1, the
Holzer Center for Cancer
HMC
Nutrition
Care,
Services, HMC Tobacco
Prevention Center. Holzer
Center for Comprehensive
Weight Loss, Holzer Senior
Care Center, Holzer Assisted
living, Ohio State Highway
Patrol, plus much more.
The New Haven (W.Va.)
Vohinteer Fire Department
will also be at the event
showcasing · their Fire
Safety Training Trailer· that
will be displayed, along
with
the
Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Department,
at the Ambulatory Surgery
Unit parking lot, located at
the rear of the facility. In
addition, several health
screenings will be available
including non-fasting cholesterol and glucose, blood
pressure, height/weight, and
bone density.
A special lipid . profile
: Screerung, measuring total
· cholesterol ~ HDL {good
cholesterol), LDL (bad cholesierol) and triglycerides,
will also take ·place. The
screening includes a 10-

Pagec6·
Sunda~Ckiobert5,2006

Dl

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

URG to host Parents/Family Weekend
RIO GRANDE - The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College will
host a special weekend for
the parents and family
members of its students on
Oct 20-22.
Eric McLaughlin, director of student activities at
Rio Grande, explained that
Rio Grande has not held a
·Sullm- photo special weekend like -this in
Seen here is the New Haven (W.Va.) Volunteer Fire recent years. Rio Grande
Department's Fire Safety House that will be featured at the officials created this weeksecond ann'ual Health and Safety Fair sponsored by Holzer end a,s a fun event for its
Medical Center on Saturday, Dct. 21. The entire public is students and for their famiencouraged and welcomed to attend.
·
ly members.
Parents and family memhour fast beforehand and and Wellness. "Several com- ber.s are always welcome to ·
appointments must be made munity programs are joining visit Rio Grande, but during
ahead of time by calling the us to spread the word about this weekend numerous
HMC Wellness Department good safety habits for all family members are expectages. We encourage the pub- ed to arrive on campus for a .
at (740) 446-5679 .
Appointments
be lic to attend our event and weekend of special events.
Students who live on camtaken on a first-come, first- look forward to conducting
f;tll."
this
particular
fair
each
pus,
as well as students who
served basis.
"We are very excited to
For more information
conduct our second annual about this year's Health and
Health and Safety Fair at Safety Fair, call McFarland
Holzer Medical Center," at (740) 446-5679 or lenni
commented
Bonnie Dovyak, director of HMC
McFarland, RN, BSN, direc- Community Relations at
tor of Community Health . (740) 446-5054.

will

commute to campus, will be
invited to bring their family
members to Rio Grande for
the different events held
over the weekend. Family
members from around the
region, as well as family
members from around the
country are expected to visit
for the weekend.
.. . .
The activities will . begin
on Friday, when family
J;IIembers are expecteq 10
begin arriving on campus.
The events have not yet
been announced for the
weekend, but McLaughlin
said that several acti vities
will be held on Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. _ .
Siblings of all ages will
be invited to campus to
visit the students. They
may visit with tl)eir parents, or they .can vi sit on
their own . Parents and
other family members of

the students are also invited
to come to campus for the
weekend. One idea of the
weekend is to help the family members become more
familiar with the colle~
campus so that they Will
have a better understanding
of what college life is like
at Rio Grande.
This weekend will also
feature the reunion of former members of the Grande
Chorale vocal music group
at Rio Granqe, so the campus wi II also be filled with
alumni remini scing and
enjoying meeting up with
old friends.
For more infomration on
rhe Parents and Family
Weekend, call McLaughlin
at (800) 282 -7201. Fol',
additimral irrformation Ofi
upcoming events at Rio
Grande,
log
onto
www.rio.edu.

Sunday, Ckiober 15, 20o6

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Own Your.Own
Quizoos• Restaurant
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by w owtl&gt; In number of U.S . unts
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Call NOW to speak with
a Quiznos• Fmnchise
Specialist

Q
QulmOs'
AP Photos

Call Janice Branam at D-748-IJ!M
or go to www.OwnAOuiznosNow.com

Ice cream balls floating in a pool of red jello with a candy in the center gives you Floating Eyeballs for your Halloween party. ·

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(Start to finish 30 minutes)

Equipment:
Melon ba/ler
10 small serving bowls (clear is best)
Ingredients:
Two 3-ounce boxes of red Je/1-0
1 pint vanilla ice cream
20 chocolate chips or candy coated chocolate chips
20 gummy worms

I

freeze . (See marthastewart.com and search
Make the Jell-0 according to package directions in a large measuring cup
for
"eyeball
highball"
for
further
details.)
•
with
a pouring spout. Set aside to cool.
.
AP FOOD WRITER
For a sweet take on eerie eyeballs, switch '
Meanwhile, use the melon bailer to scoop two balls of ice cream. Arrange
the balls next to one another in the center of one serving bowl. Gently
re ghouls and goblins haunting you from radishes to marzipan. a clay-like paste
press one chocolate chip into the center top of each ball. Place the bowl in
this Halloween? Try giving them of ground almonds and sugar that is easily
an evil eye. Or even a whole plat- molded. Marzipan is widely available in the , the freezer and repeat process with remaining bowls.
baking section of most grocers. When buyOnce the Jell-0 has cooled (but not set), remove one bowl from the freezter of them.
sure
it
is
soft.
er.
Pour just e!]ough Jell-0 in the bowl to come halfway up the ice cream
ing,
be
With a bit of ingenuity and some basic
In this recipe, the marzipan is rolled into
"eyes." Place the bowl in the refrigerator and repeat the process with
. craft and kitchen skills, it's easy to create
an army of eyes to keep watch over the balls. An "iris" and promineiu bloody
remaining bowls.
To serve, garnish each bowl with gummy worms.
season's spooky happenings . And don't veins are painted onto each using tinted
Makes 10 servings.
worry about precision; disfigured eyes are white chocolate. A final glaze of light corn
__.
all the better.
syrup gives the eyes that authentic glassy,
'------------ _ .• . •
The folks at Martha Stewart Living mag- half-dead look.
For a simpler (though less convincing)
azine use radishes and green olives to create
"Eyeball Highballs" - grotesque eyes version, knead severals drops of red gel l
frozen in cubes of ice. They suggest' the food coloring into a 7-ounce package of
purchased decorating marzipan. Divide the I
eyes are perfect for a macabre martini .
To make these eyes, peel small red marzipan into 12 pieces, roll into balls, then
(Start to finish 24 hours, 1 hour active)
radishes until mostly white (just a bit of press a chocolate chip into the center of k Equipment:
"blood" red skin is left for effect). Cut a each to create a pUpil.
1 thick magic marker
And for ghoulish eyes that give you the 1
small, 112-inch hole at one end and insert a
Toothpicks
green olive. with pimento. Fill an iqe cube chills, use a melon bailer to create eyeballs
4 thin bristle paint brushes
tray with eyes, then cover with water and· of vanilla ice cream suspended in red Jell-0. '
Mini cupcake liners, optional
Ingredients:
7-ounce package cake decorating marzipan (which differs from baking
marzipan)
·
.
·
Powdered sugar
2 ounces good quality white chocolate, dividea
Blue, green and red gel or paste food coloring
'
12 chocolate chips
3 tablespoons light corn syrup
BY J.M7 HIRSCH

A

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Line a baking sheet with foil or parchment paper. Set aside .
. Divide the marzipan into 12 pieces. Roll each piece into a ball. If the
marzipan is too sticky to work, dust the counter and your hands with powdered sugar. Place the balls on the baking sheet.
Gently press the bottom of the magic marker into the top of each ball to
emboss a circle. Leave the balls uncovered for 24 hours . during which time ·
the marzipan will dry slightly.
c
·
After 24 hours , break the chocolate into small pieces and divide evenly
between two small glass bowls . Microwave the chocolate in 10-second
intervals , stirring between each, until melted .
Use a toothpick to add blue food coloring, a drop at a time, to one of the
bowls of chocolate. Stir between each addition until you achieve. the desired
color. Repeat the process to color the second bowl of chocolate green.
Use the brushes to paint the embossed circle (the iris .of the "eye") of
, each ball either blue or green. Carefully press a chocolate chip , point-side
down, into the center of each iris to form a pupil. Allow the chocolate to dry
several minutes. ·
·
Mix several drops of red food coloring with 1 to 2 drops of water. Use a
brush to paint ·veins · along the whites of the eyes. Be generous to give ·
the eyes a bloodshot look. Allow the veins to dry s eve ral minutes.
Once dry, use another brush to paint the eyes with corn syrup to give .
them a glassy, shiny look . Once dry, use a s patula to t ra nsfer the eyes ·
to a tray or sma ll c upcake liners . Cove r a nd s tore at room temperature :
for up to a week .
Makes 12 eyes .
In this photo provided by Andre Prost Inc., are ghouls and gobli ns haunting you th is
(Recipe provided by Andre Prost Inc., importers of Odense Almond Paste) ,
Halloween? Try giving them an evil eye with Marzipan Eyes. With a bit of ingenuity and some
basic craft and kitchen skills, it's easy to create an army of eyes .

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PageD2

~ttnba~ ltmt~·itnttnd .DOWN ·.ON·THE FARM Sunday, 15,
EXTENSIO-N (ORNER Young Farmer picnic.is Oct. 21
October

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So what gives leaves brilliant color?
play of foliage.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia to inform area young farmers
County Farm Bureau is about programs and opportuholding a Young Farmer fall nities that the Gallia County
picnic on Saturday, Oct 21 Farm Bureau and Ohio Farm
at ,Raccoon Creek (0.0. .Bureau has available to help
them in their agriculture
Mcintyre) County Park.
The meeting will begin at endeavors. Representatives
4 p.m. with games and from the Ohio Farm
activities for the adults and Bureau's Young Far.mer
children. A picnic style meal Committee will be on hand
to talk with those in attenwill follow.
The goal of the meeting is .dance about these programs.

tern to dry down in a warm
area before final storage.
:Take a good look outThe cold Weather has trig- Cut off more of the stem
' ~de and view the riot of gered many gardeners to leaviri'g a couple of inches.
color the fall season think about harvesting ten- Store in brown paper bags
brings . What painter can der perennials like dahlias or . wrap in new spaper.
capture the collage of red, · and cannas to store over · Keep in a darj(., cool 35-45
Qrange, purple, and yel- winter in their basements or degrees F. area until next
luw leaf color that we take heated gamges. Label the spring. Checlc: on the
k&gt;r granted in southern plants by variety or color plants monthly to make
Chio?
befor!! digging. Carefully sure there is no decay or
: Do you know what lift the root system from the . mold problems.
causes the leaves to ground and shake off b r
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
River Hewitt,· Heiner's, Jividen's
change color? It has to do wash off the soil.
County
Agricultural . CHESHIRE
Valley
High
School
FFA
is Farm Equipment, Golden
with the biochemistry
Cut off the foliage but Natural
Resources
Corral, SFS Truck Sales,
offering
its
appreciation
to
occurring in the plant leaf leave six to 12 inches of Educator, Ohio . State
the following businesses for Captain D's, Tri County
during this time of year. stem. Allo,w the root sys- University Extension.)
their donations for the recent Vending, Tudor's Biscuit
There are three kinds of
Ryan Shiflet benefit dinn~r: World, Family Oxygen,
12igments present in plant
The Wiseman Insurance Long John Silver's, Dairy
leaves; depending upon
Agency,
River
City .Queen, The Shake Shoppe,
tbe · plant species. The
Smokehouse, Ohio Valley McClure's and Kentucky
green pigment is chloro·
Bank,
Hometown ·Market, Fried Chicken.
phyll, which gives plants
Holier
Medical
Center,
Bob
A
special
thanks
to
those
the "green" color we
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market
Evans Restaurant, Jackson.. - who helped prepare and
expect to see in leaves.
report from Gallip.olis for sales conducted on
Yellow pigments are a
Wednesday, Oct. 11.
combination of carotenes
&lt;!nd xanthophyll. The red
pigments . are anthocyanins.
275-415# St. $80-$136 Hf. $80-$130 425-525# St.
: Chlorophyll, the green
$85-$120 Hf. $80-$120 550-625# St. $80-$110 Hf. $80C!)loring we identify with
Bv JAMES MAcPHERSON
The Food and Drug
$108 650-725# St. $80-$105 Hf. $80-$99 750-850 St.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
most plants, is constantly
· Administration on friday
$80-$95 Hf. $75-$90. ·
peing produced and proken
said canola oil and some
BISMARCK, N.D.
~own. When "daylight is
foods made with it will be
CanoJa;producing
king
extended in . spring ·and
allowed to make the claim
North
Dakota
could
see
its
summer months, the rate of
that the oil reduces the risk·
(Second Wednesday of the month)
crop double with the increas- of coronary heart disease.
chlorophyll production is
faster than the rate of
ing demand for biodiesel
Barry Coleman, executive
Choice - Steers, $83-$86; Heifers, $83-$85.50.
breakdown.
fuel and the recent govern- director of the Northem
Select- Steers, $75-$80; Heifers, $75-$80.
In most plants, chloroment acknowledgment that Canola Growers Association,
Holsteins - Steers, $60-$68.
phyll masks the other pigcanola oil may be good for said consumers will begin
ments present in the
the heart, growers say.
seeing canola listed on more
leaves. When fall comes,
more chlorophyll is broken
Well Muscled/Fleshed $44-$48; Medium/Lean
down than produced, thus
$40-$45;
the hues of yellow, orange
Thin/Light$10-$40; Bulls $50-$63.
and red gradually show
through the leaves, giving
tls the fall color we so
~njoy.
Fall color is
Cow/Calf Pairs $600-$975; Bred Cows $370-$875;
enhanced, especially the
82 (lpln wtdllr
Baby Calves $50-$290; Goats, $22-$125; Lambs, $81red colors, if we have
941.111-11111
dn.; Hogs, $44-$52.
wart'n, bright, sunny days
96 Tab 11 one's own
(allowed by cool nights
IMIS!llt
~elow 45 degrees F. and
98 Ajlprlilt
118 Complole
adequate soil moisture.
1Oil - IIIII OUII
: Warm days and cool
Ohio approved feeder sale Wednesday, Oct. 18, 10
101 Wtfii*OIIld
nights increase the produca.m.
tion of anthocyanins.
For more information, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
105 Runlcid
Likewise, a dry and' cloudy
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
106 S11tllt lillh. ~
autumn season will ·pro106 !lOgn IIIII 0r11ieon
www.uproducers.com
1011 Slli
duce a lackluster fall disBY HAL KNEEN

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'&lt;!Cribune - Sentinel C L A.S S I .F I E D

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Lower

Meigs County, OH

Anyone who considers
himself or herself a "young"
farmer is encouraged to
come out and enjoy the day.
Games, kids activities and
information will make this a
great event to attend ..

Gallia
County,
OH .._...:.:.._·

For more information and
to RSVP, call the Ga/lia
County Farm Bureau office
by Thursday, Oct. 19 at

Websites;
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

(800) 777-9226.

Cows-Steady

.Back To The Farm:

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Upcoming specials:

103=-:..

110 Wlnaed "-!

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'lbdlron 11e Ellpnlal

125 Bow gr liMon
125 Ponder~
127 111m b a cook
128SNp.'_,.
1211 Plllel color

' 131 T1dlld
135 (llv.all

HONDA

2006 NiiMn Altimll 2.5 S

2006 PilOT El ·

102 Supporla lolal&gt;1dgt
104 Wtlshmln.
. bexample
105FIUA'alttl
107 Ttulhful .

. 1Oil Prophet

136 Act . . . him
137 C..n Wzl pMiry
138 Ship ol1.
13t Blue

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12l Wort! dough
125 Coaaoillle
125 111111 of bllden
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2007 NiiMn Qunt S

140~

141 Wlltfl over
142 llrauglt ., bay

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$3,072

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IIIW 2007 ACCORD
2007 CHRYSUR .. •sPECIAl
TOWN &amp; COUIIRf

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2006 Nl..., Sentra 1.1 S

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WrSpocUI Edition Poebgo•
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LANCASTER NISSAH INC.
DBA TAYLOR
BUICK NISSAH

la:;•tOH...~·f

1-lfi'1e-a:.~ 1011
- "'' •OH.
0130
I -100-!QTCAI
(100-~10)

•2tt•f••·•tu

·tct-ltm'*"._.,.,..., '1~"'""
'111-~o-~it&gt;A.

·4 ~UW•

.

'244/-~·
·mr~t ..

"'-• .....
"'"' -.llf'lolil;
,)U..,.,... ..... 41 JIJ;u

1J.(WM.l,..,. ............ ttf(

AU IEW.2007 · ..
__..,..lOIII CRY'S
.
Au1tomatic. 4x4, sport

'2tt•/...+ta
TAYLOR MOTORS

250 c

I

' " ....

MoN. OH. .U701

I·IOO-HfXIIIlE 1100-772--19931

YanlrMDoodle

132 Falmo.
133 Filing
134 EY8Igr8GIIbeo

ts1,s•o

""'
sru

•POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
. Publishing re~trvOJ
lhe right lo odh,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must B

Reported on the Hrs
y of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglster
will
b
asponslble for n

o

he space occuple
the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
all not be liable fo
loss or expens
hat results from lh
ubllcation or omls
ion ot an advert!
·ent Corrections wll
made In the firs
vaflable edilipn.

nv

Box number ads ar

lways confidential.

Real Estal
dverthiements. ar
ubject to the Fedora
air Housing Al'l o

1968.
newspape

cepts

only

iaement In violatio

t the law.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

All Dlaplay: 1:1 Noon 2
Bualneaa ~aya Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column I 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

Sunday Dleplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

POUCIES: Ohto Valley Publlthlng reMNH the right to edit, 19ject, or ctneeltny 1&lt;1 1t •nv time, Errors mutt be reponed on the ftrlt cs.y 01
Trtbune-Senttnll R'$11ttr Will be ruponlltttt tor no moNbltn thl cott of ttwt aptce occup'-d by tht trTOr tnd only tht firtt lnleftlon. w. thlll
1ny 1011 or tXptnll thlt I'IIUII1 from the publicltiOn or omt111on or tn td\lertlltmtnt. Correc:tlon will bt mldt In tht first tvtlllble edition. · Bo•
are tlwtre confldlntlll. • Cui'T'Int rate Cl~ tpphl. ·All rttl tttatt ldvtrtlaemtntl art subject to tM Ftdtrtl Ftlr Houtln; Act of 1968. · Thit
acctpll only htlp wanteclldl mtttlng EOE tllndlnll. Wt wm not knowingly accept 1ny adverllllng In vloltllon or the law.

r
-

.

CARPET . INSTALLERS
NEEDED lo bid on installa·
tion of commercial carpel in
a church and a hospital.
References raquired . Ph
(740)446-{)332.

Reward 1or stolen ladder
stand Qetwaen Route 7 and
Zuspen Hollow. 740-992-

r

2196.

GM;AWA¥

7275.

rb

'NO EXPER IENCE NECESSA I"N
• 'FULL·TIME CLASSES
'COL TRAINING
' FI!I.IANCING A'IAILASLE
'' Klft PlACEMENT
' ENROLLING NOW

5 pups, born Aug. 1. Father:
Losr AND
Jack Russell. slid&lt; haired . .~--•FiiOlNiliiiiiii--,J
mother· small dog. Call
Found: large yellow dog.
(740)794·0697.
0 .0 . Mcintyre a(ea. Call
(740)367-7574.
Chest freezer, old but works
good
Giveaway
Call - - - - - - (7401388.8743.
Missing Beagle! With chain.
Hysell Run. Young red/while
copper nose female boagle.
Free Male Terrier Cocker Call 740-742·1028.
Spaniel mix. 9 months .Qld , !::="',.,._ _ _ __,

r·
r v

YARD SAlE

I

GALUPOUS

TRACTOR· TRAI LER

TRA INING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE , VA

YARO SALE-

("'.:· .

.._,\.;;;/...)
._,.__ _
AAA7

..

Licensed Social Worker
Ryan White Case Manager

.

To a good home, Black Lab Rt. 588 east of Bob Evans. link.
Contact (919)570·
born 3/06. very friendly, Fri through SUnday.
0700/ex 204

p74

Help Wanted

COL driver lor garbage

9686.

-Di-sp-e-1c-he_rs___,-,--.-,-dl-or

250c:ela t •

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Driver

t

A~n

I

1000.
Make 50% selling Avon. Call

(7 40)446·3358.

trelp Wanted

' Drivers- Accepting
Tralneeal
16 Day Class A COL.
Training
No Money Down +

Tuition Reimbursement!
Job Placement Avail! Off
yYeekends, Must be 211
1-866-602-7035

HVAC INSTALLER .
Must be proficient with
installation of heating and air
equipment.

Work from home
and establish sites within the
Ryan White program counties
served by AAA7 through ODH grant
Provide outreach and case
management of se~ces to eligible
individuals living with HIV ancj tl]eir
family members

Help Wanted

Rd ., Athens, OH 45701 . No
phone calls please.

Help Wanted

Medical Assistant/Medical Receptionist
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
recruiting for a Medical ReceplionisVMedical
Assistant · for rts physician offices. The
individual should possess prio'r physician
with knowledge of
office experience
CPT/ICD-9 coding, front office receptionist
procedures and clinical experience a plus.
Excellent salary, holidays, heal1h insurance
single~amily
plan,
dental
plan , life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability and
retirement.
Send resumes to: Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources. 2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340,
fax to (304) 675-6975, or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org
AAIEOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted ·

C&gt;HIC::::&gt;
:r.
UN

Excttllent Fringe Beneflts
$29,000 + 403b retirement plan , CEU's lor
license renewal , health. dental , vision , life
insurance, long-term disability, 15 days paid
vacation+ 15 days paid sick time first year, 3
days paid personal leave, 12 paid holidays
per year,
Travel required with. reimbursement at 44.5

Form1ng Roc~metal band;
Looking tor singl:lr. Call:
740·992-9904 or 740.416~

7824

Competitive salarylbenefils.
Drug-free workplace . Send
resume to Oan Inman
Electric. Inc., 6246 Radford

4x4 's For Sale .. ..............: ............................. 725
Moving Sate- across from
FLATBED OWNER
· Announcement ............................................ 030
Southern High. School, Oct.
OPERATORS NEEDEDI
Antiques .........................- 1......... ....... .. ........ .. 530 ,19th 8nd 20ih. 10:00 am·
•Avg. $1 .77 gross-loaded
Apartments tor ." lent .................................... 440
5:00pm.
mile
cents per mile.
Auction and Flea Market.............................080
•
Avg.
over
$.37
cpm on fuel
Auto Parts ·&amp; Accessories .......................... 760
AocnoN
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
•Flatbed Trailers Alla ilable
Fr .EA MARKET
Send Resume,
Autos tor Sale .............................................. 710
6 months OTR exp.
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale ............................. 750
required
Proof of Licensure, References
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Building Suppliea ....................... ................. 5SO
$0 DOWN LEASE
Aucti on Saturday 6 PM Jim
by 4:30 p.m. on October 27, 2006
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
' PURCHASE
from Parkersburg Building
Bualneaa Opportunlty ................................. 210
Start
your
buatne
..
to
is lui Sealing for 200 We
Business Tralnlng ... ................................ .... 140
todlyl
gladly accept Visa and
Human Resources
Campers &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 790
Master C&amp;rd (304)937-21t8 . •Low Monthly Payments
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780 '
Area Agency on Aging Dlstrlcl7, Inc.
or (304)550·1616
•Flatbed Trailers Available
Carda ot Thanko ..........................................01 0
St han Ree Lie.« 1639
F32 URG, P.O. Box 500, .
H6,713-2778
Child/Elderly Care ............................. .......... 190
www.maonecontractiora.c
Eleclrlcai/Retrlgoratlon ....... .............. .......... 840
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
om
Equipment for Rant .... ................................. 480
fax: (740) 245-5919
Excavatlng ....... ........... ................................. 830
Furniture wa rehouse/dellv·
Farm Equlp'!'ent ..........................................810
e-mail: Jahong@aaa7.org
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. ery person needed. Apply In
Farmalor Rent.. ...........................................430
SINer and Gold Coins, person
10-5.
Lifestyle
Farmalor Sale ........... .................................. 330
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre· Furniture,
3rd - Ave,
EEOIAA Employer
For Leon .......................................... ,.......... 490
1935
U.S.
Currency, Gallipolis. No phorla calls.
For Sale ...... ................................ .................. 585
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
For Sale or Trade ..............................,.......... 590
Coin Shop, , 51 Second
Frulto &amp; Vegetabloa ................... ,.................580
Avenue, GaiUpolls, 740-446·
Fumlahed Rooma ................ ........................ 450
2842.
Gonoral Haullng...........................................850
Glv. .way ......................................................040
Buying Junk Gars.Trucks &amp;
Happy Ada .................................................... 050
WreckS, Pay Cash J D
Hoy &amp; Graln ................................................ ..640
Salvage
(30oll773·5343
Help Wanted ........... ............... ....................... 110
Home lmprovementa...................................810
(304)674·1374
Homes lor Salo .......... .......... ..... :.......:.......... 310
l\11'11 1\ \ 11' 1
.Household Gooda .... ................................... 510
..,I I{\ It I '
Houses lor Rent.. .... .................................... 410
In Memorlam ................. ............ ..............; .... 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment.. ...................... 660
Llvestock ...................................... ::.............. 630
Lost and Found ....................... ,................ .. . 060
fDO WORKERS NEEDED ·
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Assemble crafts,
Miscellaneoua ............................. .. ...... ......... 170
wood items.
Miscellaneous Merchandlae ...................-,:;-. 540
To 5480/Wk
Mobile Home Repalr .... .. .........~................:•.. 860
Materials provided .
· Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Free lntormatmn pkQ. 24H r.
Mobile Homes tm Sale ........................ ........320
801-428-4649
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wh&amp;!!lers .................... ......!40
An Excellent way to earn
Muslcalln&amp;trumentl ......................... .......... 570
money. Th e New Avon
Persohala ..................... ................................ oos
Call Martlyn 304-882·2645
Pets tor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Servlces .. ......... ...... ................ 230
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Careers
make a difference
Radio , TV &amp; CB Repair ......................... ...... t80
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
675·1429.
Schoolalnstructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ...........!.. , ..........: .... 650
BELIEVE ITI
Situations Wanted ................ ...... ................. 120
•$8.50/hour
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
•Futt and Part Time
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
Schedules
Better 'Pay • Better Schedule • Bener Benefits
SUV's for Salo ..........................o.................... 720
'M edtcal Beneftl s
TruckS ·for Sale .............. ..................... ......... 715
$8.50 per hour 1 Day and evening shifts I 401(kl
• Patd Tra tntg
Upholstery .................................................. B70
Vans For Sate ................. ; ............................. 730
• vacattons e...ery 6
' Medical 1 Dental 1 Vision 1 Paid holidays &amp; vacation
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
momhs
Wanted to Buy- Form Supplles .................. 620
And Much Morel
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wonted to RenL .........................................470
CALL TODAYI
Yard Sale- Galllpollo ...................... .. ............012
1-ll77-463-624 7
Yard Sole-Pomaroy/Midclle ........:................ 074
axl. 2321
Yard Sale-Pt . Pleasant .... ............................ 076

'·
I

44/MIIe +
3¢ Bonus Paid Monthly !
•Paid Orientation

'

conditioning

We serve the world's largest flOnprofits and
the most influential conservative political groups.

'
Seles Hours: ,.,........

TOP PAY

PoMEROYil\1nxn.E

Ambulance
drivers.
Competitiw
wages.
Apply
at
Tan German Sheppard. 2
Ge.r~ge Salel Moving , Oct. life
Ambulance, 1770
yrs old (304)675-7961
16th· 2151. 38924 BradbuiJ' Jackson Pike, Gallipol is,
Road, Middleport
OhiO.

Plumber- E~eperlar.ced resl·
denlial &amp; light commercial.
Top pay, insUl'ance . retire·
menl. Contact Tim (304)675·

Drivers .

•PrePass PLUS
•BCBS lnsur. Low preiTvums
• Zero Down lease To Own
mileage. Apply at t480
Ask about our ProPius
Program
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue, Point TRANSPORT AMERICA
Call 7 days a week
Pleasant. WV, or phone toll
866·804·9242
free 1·866-441-1393.
·
WWON.traMportamerica.com

-.alliance!t'actoural~er. com

Chaplain Part Time:
Corporate Chaplains of
Church and five family yard America is seeking candi·
sale. Plus size clothing. date
tor
position
in
Amish products, hotdogs, Parkersburg. Please review
end baked goods. Come to web-site www.iamchap.org
Perry's Greenhouse on St. for information &amp; application

shots current. (304)6756116 or (304 )593-8605 .

Help Wanted

Ohio Vall&amp;y Home Health,
Inc. hiring for Full Time RN,
PT. PTA, Full Time and Part
Time CNA, STNA, CHHA,
PCA and Per Diem PT, PTA
OT. ST. Accepting applk:a·
tions tor LPN's. Competitive
Wages and Benefits including health insurance and

1-800-334-1203

~---·-Centerpoint Free Will Baptist

Mother cat- brown/black
stripped with white tlea col·
lar. Two
babies, ' one
blackiwhile, one black.
(740)446·0995 ..

Cell Vic!O Reynolds, RN,
Clinical Manager at
(740)441·t799or HICI0481 ·6334.

ALLIANCE

: : - - - : - - - - - - " - - - - - - - route. Must have e.~eperience
Free Pallets. Pick up at the .....
&amp; lmowledge of Gallia Co.
Gallipolis Oail.y Tribune
AkD SALE- " I Full or part time. (740)388oflice in the rear

HAS OPENINGS FOR

$28 PER HOURI
S42 PER VISIT

Perennial Cal Sheller
"Tabit ha" 1·2 year old
spayed female. Please give
Tabitha a home (740}645·

1 male , 1 1emare cats, par:
siamese .
Both tixed &amp;
declawed.
Beautiful
&amp;
Friendly. 740·416·f548

MEDI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY

It's better
here.
that

TAYLOIIIIGIII&amp; Dll&amp;
-~ MDTD.I, 111C.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_{.~
!f'f'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Grqphlcs 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Ads

~ ANNOliNCEMENTS l."'___
r G.Iv.•:.-~:.w.&gt;\..V-·1 to ..lbLPWANJ~D 'Irio _Hw&gt;W~

tiel

y accept any adver

675-5234

·

\ \\0 1 \(I \ II \ I ..,

all shols 13041675-6563
.

~All

992·2157

Oead'ifirM
Qlsplpy

• St.rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Should Include These Items
To
Get Response •••

We will not knowing

QIIQIIaii(, .u

Automatic, 4x4

HOW I0 Wfjli Ali 6,2
, '!Uc:cesSU ds

119MIIllnlm~

'"**
122Aia-

Or Fax To

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon

Monday thru Friday
7:30 a_.m. to 5. :~0 p.m.

anted ads meetln
OE standards.

121

446-3008

Wprd Adf

118 Smell

117 Not ledllt
118layerad fOCk

$199_...

•,-\oM,.,. • to., I""""

~~r~----------=O:.:..r.;F,;.ax;.To

97 Anile

130

1331n .....

oooa• c., ........ ~~:

..

99-a.-.·

112Cysl
113 1'111 In poaltion
114 l.llclq color
115 Pel fonlllons ·

118 NMie
124

93"'-1
94 CorrWirino one
96 Dutch and double

110 Shout .

111 inllll1lllld one
113 lings (lUI
· 11.SIIince
115NaYQiflon
118 Dozed

120

118 Rln. .. colors
87llucl&lt;el'a hlllllt
88 IIIII ur F'wbow
89l\ny pllnl
81 Rd&amp;.

Sentinel

l\egi~ter
(74o&gt; 446·2342 (74o&gt; 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

ca~r;~::v

ore than the cost

SUNDAY PUZZLER

' ·m:ribune

To Place

Health benefits, biodiesel demand expected
to boost canola production in North Dakota

. Fed Cattle

v.... "•1411

serve food: River Valley faculty and staff, River Valley
Key Club, River Valley Beta
Club, Rive'r Valley senior
class, River Valley FFA parents/members.
·
"We would also like to
thank everyone who attended the dinner and supported
Ry~n." FFA advisors Bill
Holcomb and Matthew
Huck said.

product labels - from pota·
to chips to bread. And North
Dakotans will begin seeing
even more golden fields of
the crop in the state, he said.
Combined with the burge&lt;ining demand for biodiesel,
the IDA's announcement creates a positive "double-whammy" for the estimated 3,700
canola growers in North
Dakota, he said.

03

i~ter

·Benefit dinner donors hailed

LivESTOCK REPORT··

6unbap (!:(~ -6mtlntl •

OH • Pt. Pleasant; WV

•

VB M..S J. 'rY

POLICE OFFICER 1
Ohio University is accaptlng applications lor two Pollee Officer 1
positions lor the University Pollce ·Oepartmen!it&gt;epartment of
Campus Safety. For pooling datalls Including job description and
minimum qualifications, and
apply. please visit Ohlp University's
Employment web alte at
www.ohlounlversltvlobs.com/aoollcanta/Central?qulckFind=51955 ·

to

APPLICATION DEADLINE:
October 29, 2006

H you have questions about this posl1ion. pleaH e-mail
aheppard@ohlo.edu or call740-593-0312.

We - k a candidate with a commitment In working effectively with
students, faculty and staff from dlvene backgrounds.
OHIO UNIVERSITY IS AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

O'BLENESS

HlAl1H SYSH ..

JOIN OUR TEAMII
Director of Quality /Risk Management
This position will plan, direct and coordinate the
hospitai:s initiatives in the areas of Performance
Improvement, Patient Satisfaction, Patient Safety
Initiatives and accreditation processes. The Director of
Quality / Risk Management will assum7 administrative
responsibility lor Infection Control, Employeee Health,
Nutrition Services, Patient Satisfaction and t:tilization
Management functions. This position will report directly
to the Executive Vice President.
The successfful ca~didate must hold a Bachelor's degree
in Nursing or a related field . A Master's degree in
Nursing or d related field is preferred. A minimum of
three years proven quality management experience is
required with supervisory experience in an acu te care
setting hi ghly desirable.
Please submit a letter of intent and a complete resume to
the Human Resources Department of O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital by October 30th . Salary is
commmensur,Jte with expPrience.:
Hum an Resources
55 Hospital Dr.
O'Blcne,s Memorial Hospital
Athens, OH .t570 I
www.0bl enes~.org

,.

Phone: (740) 592-9227
Fax: (740) 592-94-1-l
EOE

�Page D4 • 6unbap G:tmn: -6mttntl

HW'WANil!D
FACTS/New AtternalivesAII Outpatient Alcohol and
other Drug agency Is
accepting rssumes for the
touowing full time posihorT
PrevenUon
Edue~tor·
- Seeking an energetiC mdi·
\lidual to work w1th youth
and adults m Gaflia an d
Jackson
counties.
Responsibilities 1nclude, but
not limited to: alcohol, tobac·
co and other drug e&lt;i.Jca·
tlon, mentoring progra m,
classroo.m presentations.
trainings. fairs. community
events, development and
Implementation of grant
projects. etc. A minimum of
a
Bachelors
Degree
required. Send resume by
October 24, 2006 to;
FACTS . 45 Olive SHeet.
GalliPQiis, Ohio 45631 or
FAX to (740)446·BOt4.
EOE. MIFIH
·

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15.67·$26.19/hr., now· hir-

lng For application and free
goVarnement JOb 1nlo, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1-,
913-599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.
u 1me emporary
IC
Jerk: Position involve
rocessing program ,appli
Ions, greeting the public
ng, l~ i ng . Knowledge o
icrosoft Woi'd. ability t
earn IBM System 36 Men
rograms &amp; other genera
ffice skills. Application
re available at Maso
nty FSA Office. 224
lrst Street. Pomt Pleasant
25550. No calls. Las
o file is COB October 20tfl,
SA is an EOE.

POSmON
ANNOUNCEMENT

Jiliifi!IIJII

e.

W.RTTIME

tl" "' ~ · ·

........

COOROtNATOR

GALUA COUNrt'
RETIRED SENIOR
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
The

Umversily of Afo
Grande. A S V P (Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
Gran tee, invites appliaations
to r a part·t1me coordi nator
the Ga!lia Retired Senior
Volunteer Program. This is a
grant-funded program
Responsibilities include. but
.are not limited to, coordinatIng grant-based programs
such as Cilizen Corps and
Inter-generational ser&gt;/ 1ces
learn1ng volunteer programs
as well ·as other volunteer
projeds ; recruiting , placing,
onentlng votunrears and sta-

SALES
ASSOCIATBS
Join the winning team!
Training- Two week ini·
tiel &amp; orientation classes
with continued ongoing
training.
Mln~g~ment~ The best
management 1eam in the'
country to assist you.

Compenutlon-

At John Sang FoniUncoln·Mtr-cury we've

established a 35 year
reputation of honesty,
Integrity and outstanding
lionsupervisors: maintaining customer service-- before
necessary written reports: an·d after the sale. With
attending monthly! quarterly
the hottest products on
staff meetings and assisting
the market and as the·
the RSVP Director with pro· . fastest growing dealermating the program to civic.
ship in our region , we're
faith-based and community
adding Sales Associates
organizations.
to better service our

customers.

A h1gh school diploma or
equivalent is required with
an Associate Degree preferred. Good oral and inter·
personal communications
skills required. A valid dri·
ver's license is required.
Preference will be given to.
candidates who have previ·
ous work experience with
the senior citizen population
Must be computer literate.
Candidates will be subject to
a ,profess1ona1 background
check.

American Trades Home
Remodeling, lnteriof, exteri·
or, painting, siding . win·
dows, doors, electric, dry·
wall, decks &amp; roofing

About $31100 down. 812 s .
31&lt;1. Ave.. Mk1dteport. Totally
remodeled. 3 bedrooms. 1
bath. Perfect credit not
required Payment $525.

(7~)992·2078-u-(740)253-

Appraised $70.1100. 740·

1090

~7-7129.

4 comer

i

ntce

38R.

balh New 2006 Clayton sln tots " Syracuse, Oh, groot upstairs, lumlshod tBR apt glowides starting at $199.84
neighborhood, wall built down81alrs. Furniture store per month. Trade·lns wei·
house w/5 rooms &amp; batj1 in rear. Car 101 on side. All on oom... Cai (7~)385-2434.
upstairs and family room 112 ac. kt( 11 130 Bullville
w1tt1 brld&lt; fireplace/ bud&lt; Plko.
Gallipolis, OH Prtoo Re&lt;lJoodr 3 _ , . ,
doubtewtde with tenced in lOt
stow insert and
In $135,1100. (740)4-46-4782.
flnish8d basement, house IIIII~:':"~""':~--, &amp; unattached garage.

-.om

Very

MoiiiUFOII
' .,~
~

I

(7.00)-14 t-1715.

Mortgage

g

BrtcO&lt; house &amp; 7-ilcres land.
1501 sq.ft. liviog area.

NOT to send money
through me mall until you
have invesligat&amp;d the
offering.

1203 sq.ff. unfinished base·
-ment, 3-bedroom. 1·bath,
living rd, kitchen dinging rm
combination, TV· room and Two Story house/1 ecr8.
2-car detached garage. 48&lt;1. t 112 Ba.. O.R..
Located 3-mile&amp; south on kitchen, utility room. tire
Rt·62 at IOO 'Y $125,1100 !or ptacoJgas logs, living room
plus family room , 2 car
Appt. catt (304)675·2845
garage, front porch, ba&amp;S·
ment, storage buildings,
TPC water, heat pump,

pevod driiii!Way, letart Falls.
740-247-2532
ery. Call(740)385-767t.

Acres

lor

sale

at

Heavy Equipment
Operator
Training For Employment

oublocl
to lho
·
Fair
""-'"I
Actof 11111
wbtcft ~ lltogot to

8/one.
For part of us went
wilfl you,
The 118y God called
youllomtJ.

Thlt newaptptr will not

knowtngly-

only $70,1100.
COUNTRYTYME
We .Buy &amp; Sal land
t-1!011-213-8365

Auction

~

Bednns. 2 Blllh. Manf. Home
wiOhio River Viflw

3 Bedroom house in
Pomeroy $450 plus deposit
and utilities. No Pets. 140·

992-5228.

and 401K. EOE

AMVETS BLDG., OFF BURNETTE

RN
Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
a Tandem Health Care facility, Is seeking a sele ct few 10
join our outstanding team
as:

RN SUPERVISORS &amp; RN
UNIT MANAGER
Full&amp; Pen Time
All Shllto Avollobte
Proper license required. We
offer ari eKcellent work enYIronment, shift differential,·
competitive wagM , great
benefits. periect anendance
incentives and much morel
For QUICkest consideratu) n,
please apply online
tendemhe•itllCllreers.com

Scenic Hills NUffilng Center
3, 1 Buck Ridge Road
Bklwell. OH 456 14
Ph 740t446·7150 .

Service, Firewood &amp; Extra :::::=c:=.:=::::..____

Hauling, Reasonable Rates, 5 Room House with Bath, 3
Heap Accepted.• (140)388- lots, $30,000 Leon area
0371
Phone (304)674·01 32

Auction

Auction

Auction

Et/4-u- ~ ~e«tt, a

Real Estate &amp; Personol Property Auc~on

.

Toddler Town Laugh &amp; Learn Day Care, LLC.
202 Evan Avenue, Oak Hill, Ohio 45656

Saturday. November 4th. 2006
10:00 a.m.
· Ooen House. Oct 26. 3§ PM &amp; Oct. 28. 1O=Noon
Real Estate Sells at Noon
Joe Moore, Broker/Realtor
Alan K. Hal.ay
Auctioneer/Realtor · ~
740-441-1111
See Details &amp; Pictures
www.evans-moore.com
f'nmmerda~

/

'

Gradt Kitchen Equipmt'nt

Vulcan SJ\ BurnC'r Stmn b~ Steel Ga ~ Raoge/0\en. Eagle 3 Bay S l:l in le~s
Stcd Si n!.." nh R1 ght Side Dr11i n &amp; G rea~ Trap . An.·tk Air Rctr i g c n~~ or .
Staink ~" Sll'l'l Serv ing Tra}S &amp; Cl!~ . Chc ~ t Frcez~r r. M.krowa\'C &amp; Utility
(':111 . StmnfC.,, Pntpnrari nn Steel Tahlc. Stainle!.s Stcd S1 od Pot ~. A txwt:
F.411ipmc.::n1 I' Oo!y One Yrtu Old and ln Great Cond1tion.

lnranc Equipment

' H1gh Chair&lt;;; . Cribs, l\.oah1Care Changing Station~; Assoned Toy~

l'lay Equipment
Lirtle Tyk:t'" Cimo. L11tlt' Tykes Slide~. Tril·ycl~

HROtarydeml"lealthr:are ccm

15 'i l 1mtc

.S tnr;t ~ e CuhhiC'i: Adjustable Tnbles W 1 Many Chair... : Appm.w;

SO

~· appi n!! Cot ~. Trachcr tJt- . , k ~; CompUier Dc~k!&gt; and Much M ore

Thla Is the Htate of Florence Ellce11or of
Locult St., O.lllpollo. When Mro. Ellceslllll'
purcllltMd her home, ahe aloo pun:haMd
the contenta from the Storemont Eatate.
Thla Ia •l•rve good quality auction II

DIRECTIONS: Approximately 22 miles from Alhens-Rt. 33 north
exil on Rt. 550 through Amesville 10 Sharpsburg-slay slraight on Rt .
377 to Chesterhill , juS! _ mile before-house is on the right. 33 mile.&lt;
from Marietta-Rt. 550 10 Bart\eu lake Rt. 555 toRt. 377, walch for
signs. Check our web site for pholos.
.
VEHICLE: 1993 GMC Safari XT conversion van (193.575 miles) in
good condilion-dent in sliding door.
ANTIQUES, GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES: 50+ pieces of
pink. green &amp; yellow depression (plates , cups/saucers, juice glasses .
goblets, cookie jars, serving bowls, cream/sugars , saiUpepper. pile hers,
vases) in several patterns including ."Adam" &amp; "Sharon", 25+ pieces
Fire King blue depresston casseroles; bread pans. mugs. etc .. Fire King
amber dinner plales. Iris &amp; Herringbone waler pitcher, glasses,
cream/sugars. bowl, buller dish, vase &amp; candelabra , several blue
scalloped hobnail dishes, some Fenton. Wellsville piiCher, selling hen,
other pieces of glassware, 8-Amtrak P1oneer wine gobleiS, 8-green
glass wine goblels, Logan Poltery 2-pitchers &amp; cookie jar. complete set
of Anchor Hocking Wheat PalteJ11 china service for 8 plus several
serving pieces from early 1960s. dresser lamps. 4-kerosene lamps (2AIIadin melal), 2-DieiZ lam,ems (#2 &amp; #8) , some Avon hollies . 3-cigar
boxes. old Bissell hand carpet sweeper. old painted dresser, TOYS:
Juniqr Merchant cash regisler, Tonka Winnebago Indian Camper. lots
of old Fisher Price loys including school house, caslle, garage, radios,
chicken, lurtle , etc .• Radio Super wagon.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: GE side-by-side n;frigerator (only
4 yrs . old ), Tayloe Wood Craft maple kilchen prep table, 4-bow back
chairs, Parson's tabhi, maple sewing d~sk, 2-maple Captain 's chairs,.'
1960s Blonde hedroom sci complete. 1940s Bedroom sel complele
(double bed . dresser w/rnirror. vanity, chest of drawers), rocking
chairs , record cab1nct . 50+ al bums. computer desk, Steelcase desk. file
cabinets, microwave utility '-'an . Amana microwave , Magic Chef gas
range. ,pots. puns. lots of canning jars . 3-dinetlc tables. older chest
freez~r. upright freeu r. SC\I cral metal shelving unit s. 20-mctal folding
chairs , and other misce llaneous 1tems.
MISCELL.\NEOUS &amp; TOOLS: Cmft sman circular saw in case ,
pipe c lamps, wh(·el barrel. Slihl weed emer.load binder. Jog chains, cut
off saw. very l&lt;~rgt: t:hain sa'w. J pt. scraper blade. 2 foot lockers. old
bikes . and other items.
TERMS: Cash or check w/positivc I. D. No Cred rt Cards . Checks over
$1000 muSI have bank authorizalion of funds available. All sales are
•final. Focxl will be available . Not responsible for loss or accidents .

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Roycroft
arts &amp; crafts slanl top desk , Victorian marble
lop !able, blankel chesls, cupboard, arts &amp;
crafts !able, '40s Baby Bad, Donaghho 4 gal
jar wlblue zipper, Hamillon &amp; Jones. Jar,
Unusual Oviod 3 gal . jar, blue banded crock, .
olher stoneware, Dazey churn, masons
shoe blacking box wlblack art, WWI
pictures, poslcards and olher ilems, Uneeda
Biscuit box, · Victorian Plclure Album;
Pictures from lhe 1800's and early 1900's,
casl iron banks. Victorian Dresser boxes,
Fostoria American Glass, Depression ,
Fenlon, Carnival Glass, Pattern &amp; pressed
glass,
handpainted china (Haviland ,
Bavarian, · Gennan,
Japan),
Weller,
Roseville, Hull, McCoy, Roycroft Pottery,
Wattware, Other art Pottery, Min . Oil Lamps,
Old Books &amp; mags., Old kilchen ilems, wall
pockets, lays, adv. tins, linens, Currier &amp;
lves orig. prinls, vinlage ciolhing, pockel
knives, Gallipolis Bottles. 1/2 Pl. Carlos
Niday, very large colleclion of Gallipolis
llems , book "Myolady Evelyn" by Gallipolis
Author, W.S. Rogers Silver Plale ("April"
1944 and "Eternally Yours 1950") , · Huge
Colleclion of Vinlage Paper ' Goods, Much
More ...

Ofrr&lt;e FA~uipmenl
Ready for a Rewarding &amp;
Challenging Career?
Apply for a CHHA ClASses
beg1nnmg
Oct
91h
ApplicatiOns must be sub·
mitted by Oct 6th We help
wljob placement And are
also hlnng rCA (,HH'\ &amp;
SlNAII (".'J0)4J 1 1177

3 Lurgt" f lie C'abmr t.,, Small File Cu bmcts: Chai r~. Fax . 1 o:~hlc ~ . Computer
{ quipmcnl Hand Held W;~y Rad1o~ : TV aud C'art .
'

,,

\' CR &amp; DVD Playe r
For Picture' Go To
"w ~o~. . H aleyau ction ~.Com

TERMS : 10% Down day ot auction
Balance Due wlth1n 30 days ,

Nn Contingencies

Pero;onal Prope rty. Cash or Check w1th ID

OWI/ER: Barbara Skinner and tile late Keith Skinner
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AIJCTIONEERS: john Patrick "Pat" Sheridan &amp;
Kerry Sheridan llo)·d

Apprentice Auctioneer: ·Brent King
Licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio - Member of Ohio &amp;

~alional

Auclioneer's Association

Email: ShamrnckAudion@aol.rom WEB: ww.. .shamrock·
uuctions.com
I'H: 740-59H310 or 800-419-9122

I

~.!.~
l~UA\...A'\l~

cloiOOs size 4

I
•

&amp;

MAX

•GOOSENECK,

DUMPS
5· 'ALUIIA

080. Call (7~)256-1253 .

'ALUMINUM

Nice 1 BR stcwe &amp; refrig fur· Burgandy lift Chair in,excelengine, automatic.
nlshed,
washer/dryer lent
condition,
$250. Farm machinarv. bailer, 87 ·Ford Pickup, F-150.
,""""·~
"""""'~· c•···
rvov to hospital . Shades of .green Oval pIows, 50t mower, teddo r, w/351 engine, automatic
)«t-Ot
Braided Rug B'•t t' $50 bucO&lt;at, pole, elevalor, blade, ~1304WI;;57;.;&amp;;.;2;.;7.;D3~:---,
17.
1740

CASH/APPROVED CHECK ONLY
SMOKE FREE BUI~DING
""SALE PREVIEW WILL BE FRIDAY OcT. 20
FROM 5;30 PM-8:30PM'"•
Note early start time!!!!
Very Good Auction, Don't Miss IIIII!
Check out our website
www.lemleysauctlon.com or
www.auctionzl .com

-If so, you qualify for a

r

,.... 740·992-2070

-------=-~

4x4

·

L--•FoR~::.So;ALEiii'i-.,1-1

John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill

Tractor Loader Backhoe/ trade surprise me Info.

location: 403 t/2 Third Ave. NEW AND USED STEEL Skid Steers. Carmlchaal (304)882·34~
One btocl&lt; lrom GAHS. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Equipment (7~)446-2412
Washer &amp; dryer hoOkup. For For

Concrete,

Angle, New John Deere Compacts

an application caH (7~)446· Channel, Ftat Bar, Sleel and 5000 Sarlas Utilily trac- ---:---:::-:--:Grating ·For
Drains,
Driveways &amp;Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

IOrs 00% Flxtd for 31 t 997 Jeep Wrangler
montho through John 108,0110 mites 4 yt 5 spd
Dooro Credit. Carmichael black, lift, $5900 645-4717
Equ!&gt;fnent 17401446_2412

r...

L--•FiiORiliiiiS.W:iiiiiiltt_.l

i

(740)367-7015.

r1

,

•

-~

sa.nowlllsacrfficelorqulcl&lt;

yoo pay

Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, stove/refrigerator
included, 1 located in city, ·1
apprOll t mtle outside city
limits:

miles.

1989 Airstream (Tagalong)
32', good condition, 4/new
tires. NC, new hot water
tank,
new
plumbing,

...,.,..,,"""

:;_:;:.:.;:;;c...:..:.c:;c...:_ _ _ ..Commercial · building "for sale $6,440· brand new. still
1 BR apt in Spring Valley. Ron!" t 600 ,jquare taet, off on pallet. Call t ·800-352· 'KIEFER BUILT 'VAUEV

NOW ·

Grand

STEEL BUtLDtNG: MDV· ii7 40r),.;~-2-4.t2_._ _ _,

ro

the

Utilities. Call

0489
STEEL BUILDINGS: 3
boitdings tefft 20•28, 421&lt;60
great !or hay storage or aoy
storage need. Call today

'BISON 'HORSE &amp; UVE· st 0,500 (304)675-4475
STOCK TRALERS 'LOADMAX
'GOOSENECK,
DUMPS
&amp;
UTIUTY
'ALUIIA
'ALUMINUM ----::-:--::-:--:TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE· 1999Jayco Ea"e 5th ~I
NECK
HITCHES. 2~' whh slide. Mint conditiOn,

i S::
;.,_ -- I

I, i

FOIIPrnS.. ~

L.------_..1
llouimoul
GooiJs

~

extras.
located

Iro . . ~-n-co1 I

woek otd pigs $35

B

r(304)Sl5-

~

1798
HAY &amp;

GIWN

IMrKUn.all'..i, ~

,

BASEMENT

$2.00 a square bale. Call
WATERPROOFING .
740·992-2070.
Bradbury Unoondtlonal lifetime guar·

_R_d._ _ _ _ _ _ _ antee. local relerencos lurnished. Established 1975.
Clean
straw
$2 .50. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4467401645

740

3pc Oak ent. ctr. $300; 2 AKC male Boston Terriers. (
)«&amp;·3600, (
" 0870, Rogers Basement
0645
Dining rm slite lbl, 9 ch Vet check, shots &amp; wormed,
"
Waterproofing.
buf/hutch $700; 9 cu. ft , POP, will accept deposit or
chest . freezer
$200. down payment. $350 each. iirllor;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;.;..._,

(7~)388·9325 .

(304)674-5780.

Also available units on State
Route 160. Call 1or details

3644.

Pet tnendy. (7.00).Wt-Ot94
LoOC8t company offering ~No :o::
r 1;:_7~
2).W.:.._t_:·1 _1 8:_4_·-..,-.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Apt. fer rent 2 or 3 Br.. No
r
grams to r you lo buy J/ Ou Pets. 740·992·5858.

Appliance

Allenllont

hbme instead of renting.
•1Q0°kfinanCing
• less than perfect credit
accepted
• Paument could be the
same' as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
1740)367 -0000

Auros

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

•alltpoli•llailp.~rihune
Joint flta,ant B.egt,ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unbap ottme' -&amp;enttnel
p•••···············-············
Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __
Address _ _ __ _ _ _ __
City/State/Zip -

RlR S,w;;

:..:::::..:.::..:=c..::=--

Gradousliving. 1 and2bedroom apartments at Village
Aiversl'd9
Manor
and
Apartments in M·ddt
I
eport·
c
11
From $295·$444. a 740·
·
992·50&amp;4. Equa I Hous1ng

Opportunities.

•

Warehouse
in Henderson , WV. Preowned Appliances starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
wananty, also have reconSc
TV'
ditioned Big
reen
s

registration, $200, limtt&amp;d Very good condftion, !e8ther needs. No job too big or
papa~~~~· intelligent. interior. classic. {7401245· small. 10 + years experi·

(740,_....-

9142

-----,-----'-

1 sate 5200
Boxer puppies or
1990 Cht...., pict up 403
per dog. (3041593-0898
.....,
automatic, runs good, good
CKC Jack Russell Tamer shape; 1989 Dodge ShadOw
puppies. Call (740)256-1652 runs good, air works good.
Call (740)256·1467.
Full- blooded Boxem. NOT - - - ' - - - - - ,- regist. , 5 wks old, $100 1992 Honda Accord, one
betore 4pm on Fri ., $125 owner, mint condition,

rounding areas. Free estimates. 1·740-416·1471.

Painting
and
Drywall
Call 1o
,Service, misc. labOr.
r
00
6
estimate after : pm or

bIJ Ron's TV 1""')67"
.,. after Fri. Call (740)446· $2,500. Call after 6pm leave message. 740-985·
79119
4707.
(740)446-8997.
3779.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
Gas Prices Killing You??
Get 2 rms. of carpet clearied
&amp; receive ~7.00 Gas Cash!
3 rms $15.00,
5 rms &amp; hall $50.00
Call Captain Steamer

. 446-6784
Ex ires 10/31 /06 Save Ad

Mason County Little
League Bingo!
This Sunday at
124 Highland Ave.
(WV Jobs Foundation Bingo Hall1
Point Pleasant
Block of Nine·Pragressive pays

$2;250
•

I

•

in only 25#'s or less
Play 3 packs for only $20
•Sunday Doors open at 2:00
Early Birds at 3:00
Regular Session at 4:00

304-675-3877

Ohl9 Valley Home Heal1h, Inc.
hi ling for Full time AN, Full Time
and Part Time CNA, STNA,
CHHA, PCA, and Per Diem OT,
ST. Competilive Wages and
Benelils including heallh
insurance arid Mileage.
Apply at ·
1480 Jackson Pike , Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV or
phone toll free 1-866-441-1393.

The Hanersville
Maestro
(Keith Blankenship)
wishes to
THANK ALL who
supported his recent
· bid for the
Ohio Valley Symphony's
"Maestro for a Moment!"

Republican
Fall Rally
October 19
6:00pm
Gallia County
Fairgrounds
Public Invited

JEWELRY REPAIR
20%0FF
Now thru Oct 31st
Acquisitions 446-2842
151 Second Ave.
'
..

----··················-········

West Shade BarberShop
Own!ld &amp; operal!ld by Chris Parker
17 yrs. experience. ·
First Barber Shop on
Texas Road off Route 7

\
-

~---

NOTICE
Eagles Aerie #2171
Nomination and Election
of Two Trustees
Nomination Oct 2nd
7:30pm ·

Election Oct 16th'
7.:30 pm

Entire Stock! thru October
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry
151 2nd Ave~ Gallipolis
446-2842 '

Sale
Vinyl 13'2" wide
Berber 13' 6" wide
Mollohan Carpet
76 Vine 446-7 444

..

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
OhiO Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

50% pff

Catering for business or
Company Chrislmas Parties
· al your place or ours?
YEAH WE GOT THATI
Parkfront Diner &amp; Bakery
Across from the City Park

__ _____

Phone_ _ __ _ _ _ _ __

enca. Pomeroy and sur-

BULLETIN BOARD

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.: All household
lumilure in very good condition!!!! Malching
.sofa &amp; chair, wing back chair. 3 pc. Oak
Bedroom Sel , 4 PC . solid Wood badroom
sel Nice 011 on canvas, Elgin Wall Clock,
Coffee &amp; End Tables, Brass Floor Lamp,
Oak Kitchen C.abinel, Large Collection of
Plahzgraf Yorklown, Oak Jewelry cabinet,
washer/dryer, Kllchen Cookware, Household
IIams ,
Microwave ,
sewing
nolions,
Christmas IIams, Several llems from
Oulbuildlngs.

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
~40-388-8115 OR 740-441-n66
"Ucensed By The State Of Ohio"

·or·older?

miles, automatic, $4,500

unun

&amp;

2 Bedroom Apartment, 2nd - - - - - - - - AKC Sllerian Husky pup- ..__ _iiiiiiiiiiiO._.I Ded&lt;s. -siding, rooting. lloorpies. Blue eyes, $250. Ful. 1961 Cadillac convertible. ing, and all remodeling
· onces .. all elec. (740)446· A.venue, Gallipolis;

RD. (KANAUGA)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PUBLIC AUCTION
8070 SR 377, Chesterhill, OH
Saturday, October 21,10:00 a.m.

Toddler J&lt;::.quipment

SF'D AIEOE

3BA home· SA 554, Bidwell$575/mo- sec. dep. refer·

ESTATE AUCTION .

''

rent.

(740)208·

garage. and basement.·AIC dty. (740)441-0596.
and very clean. 740·949- APARTMENTS
. 2:l03.
AVAILABLE.

Auction

SATURDAY, OCT. 21,9:00 A.M.

Are you 65

'KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY _ _ _ _ _ __
'BISON •HORSE &amp; UVE· 2002 Chevy Cavalier. looks
STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD- and runs great, 117,000

- - - -- - - - nished mobile home. No Mobile home 101 will take
2BR home- Vinton AYe. pets. Ref/dep. required. t&amp;'s, 14's, 12's wide. $125 Pole
Barns 30M50x10
$375 mo.+ sec.dep. You pay (7~)446-4782. Gallipolis, month, dep &amp;re\.(7.00)367- $6,99S. Painted metal, slid·
utilnies. Gas heat. (740)446- ~OH;.;:_.- - - - - - - 7995.
er, lree deliwry. (937)718·
3644
·
2 bed rms., lal.lldry rrn., rg &amp;
1471 ,
www.nationwideret.
furnished,
1st
fl
.
dean,
In
bams.oom.
3 • 4 Br. house, 2 full bath,'

ASSISTANT lor our

r ~1

-Boy's

(304)360-01

Full Time MEDICAL

Our guest service oriented
dining room is loo~ing to hire
friendly, energetic servers.
Put on your best smile and
apply in person at the
Holiday Inn ot Gallipolis. No
phone calls please.

r

(304)882·3017

~~~.w!25~~: Hud ok. tBR lumished apt .. JBR lur- (703)528·0617

. : : . : : : : : : . : : : : : : : : : . : : : : : : : . . . . . . . lllo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :

Auction

oH. Hrs11-51M-S)

about our Display PrografT\
ed Security deposit and ref· month.
Up~tairs Office · Umlted time' offer! t-866- CMmlchael Equlpmenl .hitch Included,
. 2 bedroom 480 Paxton Ad. erence required . no pets Suites for Rent $125/ month 352..0116
(740)446-2412
$7,999 . ~ocally
$350 rent, $350 deposil,
(304)965-1513.
63

Agency, Inc '

Auction

Ellm View
Apartments

HUDIPRC vouchers accept- street parking. Great locoed. W/D hookups. Call · tionl 749 Third Avenue in
or (7~)645· Galipolis. Ront "Negotiable'
1-2Bedroom house, Racine. (1.00)446-063,4
I It)
4846
One car garage, all utilities,
ce
can Wayne(404)456-3802
paid $625.00 plus $150.011 t-br Apt.&amp; 2 br Apt near Downtown
Commercial
deposit. 740·949·1020.
downtown all utlllttes tnclud- Retail space tor Rent. $4001

IT'S HAIIIIIIER TIIIlE/II

Please send resume to:
352 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Ann: VicKi Reynolds,
Clinical Manager

for

7861 ..

St 48/mol 4 Bedroom HUOt
4% down, 30 years 0 II%.
For listings 800-391 ·5228
ext F254

. .II'W M. .._..,,II, ~. """"- OPI"A
Ak*--" ..... 1...........

We offer competitive
salary, benefits package

Grand

r

SPACE
lNG- Muat sell quanzet style
$350. Water, sewer &amp; trash
EnD n-ld
1
pd.
(7~)388-0173 , 1..--··-~ii""""iiiiio'-p~ steel buiding. 25x34 pa

CALL FOR FREE BROCHURE\ !II
· STANLEY &amp; SON, INC. (740) nl-3330
..::',E&gt;.
WWW.STANLEYANO SON.COM

Karate self-defense, profes·
slonal Blacll; Belt instructor.
'-'en, women, children.
Spacious fully equipped
gym. Bitanga·s Martial Arts
Center, Middleport. 740· 4 rental houses ~or · Sate~
992-5715. Opan daily.
Good income producing
properties. Great location!
70
Price(s} are Negotiable.
Motivated
Seller!
In
Gallipolis. Call• Wayne
Amos and Son's Trash t&lt;W4)4S6·3802.

home

(7~)4.6-4234 ,

..

on!bcfi.ut- I t/21/0b : Real E.illltc tRXc ~ paid current: no
contin_genc.es "'list, satd in pr_
csetll , AS-IS cundhion;
Ca\·ctl Empl&lt;• Veriin &amp; Joann Swmn. nwnrr ~ SeliCI"l1
have pm\"idcd a new !illr\'e)' .

Gallipolis office.

Mercury

Marquis, very good oondi·

tion,
76,000/miles,
Pike. Gas ranges,
AC.CD,PW seats. mirrors &amp;
bunk beds, chests, dineHes, 11!:'11'--"='~--., windows, $5,8110 (304)675·
F.QwMtNr"·
....
couches, manresses. new l 0
r/V\J.n
1534
washer/dryer $400 ·set.
(140 )446·4782 Gallipolis,
Bulav~le

One bedroOm apartment

1 bdrm a~ wilh stow, retrig

Ucin~~; apptt,:o: 2 ~te .alt.loinm!! 1\11(;·
lion ~ltotht Mrth , tins incredll'Mt ~tit n\•erlook • Rl 7,
lht Otlio Rn.:Cf &amp; t'am1 l:md below flu:- profl¢rt) hm
). ~ bed, 2 bArb , manufM:tured homC' . OPt:~· 110\JSF.
dllft for AIK'tietis 11 &amp;: 1: S.•·• StpL 14. OcL I. I.
1~ fnt• I..J PM .A "-"·· Ort g fnna ~ P!\t. Taw

Auction

I \ l~ \I ' ' I I 'I II .,
,\II\1-..[IUh.

us&amp;d furniture store. 130

2000

FOR

t:Um. A•ctMR Nl.

Midi Home Health

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Starting Bl $385 and up
Central heat &amp; air, WID
hooKup. COin operated
laundry, owner pays
water, sewer &amp; trash.

.

. .

st1op or at your homo.

lata on payments, divorce,
includes water &amp; sewer, Friday, Bam..:30pm. Closed
VANS
1
job transfer or a death? I
REm
: $200/dep. Call (740)446- Thursday, Saturday &amp; Quality John Deere· Noy
qon buy your home. All cash
3817.
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Equlpmont lor tess-round
and quick closing. 740·416· 1 and 2 bedroom apart· _lWt_n_R_I\18-rs-Tow_e_ri-s-a~--~
balers, square balers &amp; 1998
Dodge
3130.
ments, furnished el'!d unfur·
........,.... New Marble Garden Tub. mower conditioners 04.7% Caravan, 95,000
nlshad, security deposit lng applicaltons lor wamng E,.,rclse Haakh Rider, Silver F···• to 48 onths ....,.~h
list tor Hud-subslzed, 1· br, Fox fur Jacket, Kohler tub I~&lt;UU r m
.... """"
required, no peti, 7..0.992· apartment, call 675·6679 enclosure (304)675-7961
John
Deere
Credit.
2218.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Carmichael ·. Equipment

•-e

•'.

Wilt do GaiKpolis. PrK:e "Negoliable"

repairs on major brands In New roof! Motivated Sellerl

Mobile Homo altea for up to 4839.
1611110 In Country Homaa. _.;.._ _ _ __;__ _
(7~)385-4019.
To~no applications Modem
Need to aell your home? ~r~;;;;;AI\umoa;Nis;,;;;;,;
_ _ _., tBR, no pets, $275/mo

r..r ......&lt;\.-tilts: s~ .ooo . oo ikM11 per ltaL1: Offered
(rce &amp;. dt'llr of' lit:rl .&lt;olmm18~~. fft}Ssc:Ssioo at cl nt~ing

6472 . EOE

Mobile

r

IN&lt;i, STUNNING prupmy tlus 3-4 bednn . 2 bath, 2
story fBtnt farm hnust" is' It ' ~ f't"Kittd on alu gh hnitk
ovcr·kd:intt Rt. 7, the Obio Ri\·er, &amp;. 1he tillable
hntt(W below. 1\tnli\cttod: hanu &amp; tlfiiV't)"\. to at of
frnetd pi.ISturt &amp; man~· fruit tra~
also l~ated
behind home OP'fiON til : Appm.,
Sl ~ *'· of
'ftoodland. 2 Mory farm hoo~ &amp; blilllt:i OPTION •J::
Applox lJ tc of Oluu Ri\·tf fn.mloll;tt' &amp;. tillable k"·
tom lllnd OP I'~ ON U · (\ 'll"nplcte pacli:Ai:-oe of 1hc \lohlllt

Auction

w~shers.

wringer

Commercial building ~For weekdays, (740)742·3020
Sale" 1600 square feet, off evenings/weekends.
street parking. Great locatlon! 749 Third Avenue in

approved (304)576-2934
Spring Valley, Green and
AERATION MOTORS
lor
rent.
Carmichael
For rent: NK:e 2 bedroom Brookside apartments. Call Repaired, New &amp; Rebuiij In Equipment (7~)446-2412. 02 ·Jeep Rocl&lt;cllmber, 4-cyl.,
mobile home In Country (740)446-1599 tor intorma· Stock. Cali Ron Evans, ,.
5-speed, air, CD, oaraged
Homes. s325 + deposit. :ti::on:_._ _..,.......:..._ _ _ 800-537-9528.
John Deere Mini Excovator/ maintained. $13,1100, part·
(740)385-4019.

Hunrine:ton. WV Alldktfl rl: Whut ;1n 011STSANQ.-

. McNeal at 740.395.8555

Overbrook _Center is current·
ly accept1ng applications for
Dietary Technician or eQuivalent tor 20 hours per week
Ptease stop by and 1~1 out an
application today. If you
· have questions please con·
tact Michelle Gilmore at992·

WONDER'· 3br M·Homa in Gallipolis
Ferry call (304)674-4633

Gale Mountain' 36+ acres

2301&amp; St Rt. 7 S, Crown City, OH 45823
In Gallia Co. :~ortuated arl"~' I\ mw :~o frum

Holzer · M9dlcal Center is
accepting applications for a
part-time CAT or RAT. SiK
months experience is pre·
tarred. Candidate must be
able to perform wittl a team.
as well as independently.
Must be competent in all
respiratory therapy procedures. ventilator management, EKGs, Hotter monif'ors and be part of the Code
Blue ·Team. Hours wili vary
and w~nds and holidays
will apply. Please call Wilma

re-conditiQOed automatk:
washers &amp; dryers, retrigerators, gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and

$475.00 month

740•949•2237 _

$69,900.

SAT., OCT. 21"', 20()1; at Noon

MEDICAl. CENTER

I

Venison Acres· 18+ acres
(304)675-6563
3Br. Retridg &amp; Stove, Washer Now taking applications for ' - - - - - ' - - -only $22,900.
Vlgo Road~ 26+ acres only &amp; Dryer included. Section 8 one bed ipartmer:-ts at
JET

Farm, Olreted in 2
Trada &amp; aa Whole
AUCDOHQ

IIIIDI

Special

WILDLIFE
LANDS

TWO ABSOLUTE
AUCnONS

2.01 Ac.,

Rd., 5 acres $16,500! G81lla 2 bedroom, 2 bath, private
Co. Rio Grande, 8 acres, co. setting, no inside pets, q,se
water NOW $12,5001 Vinton, to town. Deposit required.
t2 acres $23,500. Kyger, 16 1740)446-6890.
acres
$15,900.
Call
(7~)44 t-14921or lree maps 2 bedroom, 11/C, porch &amp;
or
visit awning. very. very nice, no
www.brunerland.com. We pets. In Gal"~ls . (7~ )446finance!
21103, (740)446-1409 or

1409.

AUCDONt1
75 .9: Ac. Ohio River

._...,ltyboooo.

~.:.._.:.._.:..__.:.__ _
Rainbow E 5eries Vacuum skin, 740.992·7449. Virgil's
with attachments. In great Berry Patch, St.Rt. 124, East
condition. Asking $750 . potrecuse, Ohio.
--.,...---:-:--.,...-

Gatllpotls, OH. Phone
pets. Rel/dl!(losn required. (7 '")2"' ••••
· Eq 1
3 bedroom traitar lor rent. (740)-146-1519.
~ ~Carmlchoot
u pmonl
(740)446·2003 or (740)448· No pets. Trailer tot lor rent. .
-----.,...-~~ (740i«S-2412
98 FO«&lt; Mustang, 3800

03-ll-1697T
Auction

$4,too
ar--:::-....-:--, t 997 Mercury GM $4,250 .
200i Chevy cawatier $3,800
F'Jiurrs &amp;
200 t Dodge tntrl!(l $3,1110
VffiETM!LE'l
..._..iiiliiiiii--_.1 2002 Ford Focus SE $4,800
2003 Ford TIIUfUSlX $7,500
Kiwi Fruit! Cherry and
Phone (30&lt;1)675-«52 or
Hldcory nut size. smooth (304)675-1252

MobRe Home lot in Jomson deposit required. 740-992· Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; name brand. 4·1arge bag's. 1 TRAILERS *B&amp;W GOOSE·
MQbile Home Park in · 0031 .
bath, upstairs, clfian, no bag N.B. coats, all $70. NECK
HITCHES.

Associated Training Services
2323 Performance Pkwy
Columbus, OH 43207
www.equipmentoperator.com

II brolre wr hearts to
lose yoo,
But you did not go

Free·. Rent

Mear Vinton. Call (740)441· 2 . bedroom, priYate lot ,
stove-relrlgator-washer11 1t.

800-559-6096

ldvertl•"any

New recliner $2110: JQia &amp; t.
seat $4110. Mollohan Fum.
202 Clark Chapel Rd. Porter.
Phone
(740)388-0 t 73.
Open 9-3 Sat only.

G)

•

'(7~)256-6415

dryer.

r

$150 each, (740)698.()475

cream. (7~)446-7665 .

RENT: Call (740)-14Htt1 304-675·7538
FORSAJ£. ,. 1999 Chrysler Cirrus LXI,
for appl~ &amp; information . Thom-ons Appliance &amp; ....__ _ _ _...;,_..,J
,.~
.loaded,' low miles, clean,
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
great !-lPG. (746)992-3394

- l e Home lol lor ronl

Train in Ohio

In thll newa...,..-1,

.,..r.rera, llmhltlon or
diacrtmlnatlon l:tiHCI on
I'KI, cOkK, ntllglon, ux
t.mllllf limit or n.tktnltl
origin, 011ny lntMHon to
rNbanytueh
preference, llmltlttOn or
dlacrlmlnetion."

I

MOIII!EiillRRDITHOMES

CONVENIENn.Y LOCAT4
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
81ldl0f smaJI houses FO~

(7~)44&amp;2692

Bulldozers, Backhoes,.Loaders, Dump.
Trucks, Graders, Scrapers, Excavalors

AIIIOII--otng

AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wastwood
Drive from $349 to $448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. eau
740-4&lt;6-2568.
Equal
""'••""' "--~ ·n~·.1
'...,.,._.._..........,
'"' " -----

MENTS

or (7~)256·
acres $15,500. Landaker _694_7_
. ------

acres $21,5011.·Off Joppe , 5

- National Certification
- Financial A....slstance
- Job Placement Assistance

aC:IvtriiiMiftlenta tor real
"tltlwhk:h .. ln
vtOIItiOn of thlllw. Our
readers art hereby
lnfoi'!Md thlt 111
dwelllnp. advertlttd In
lhll IWWIPII* are
tvMiable on an eqql .

Help wanted Barteoder &amp;
Pari time Cook apply at
Point Pleasant Moose
lodge. Charleston Rd.

For sale- aH electric 2 bedr
room mobRe home. Ad&lt;tess '
1322 Jackson -Pike, extras

-------Great used 3BR home only
$9.995. Will help with dellw·

i

Meigs Co. Danville, 18 2 Bedroom Trailer. Large
acres $48,950. fteeds~l le, 7 Garage. Partially Fumishad.
acres $14 ,500. Cook Ad. 5 Close to Wa!·Mart in Mason.

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

lot also. Call (740)44&amp;3478.
Mobile home rented for
$4110 mo.

bath, large yard, No pets,
$400 deposit, $400 per
month, utilities not included.
740--416-0799.

7~·

Kingsbury. $35,1100. OBO.
Call740·843-t047 . .

that you do business with
people you know, and

992-5023.

/\rea w/rlght·A-Way.
949·254&lt;

locators.

(7-40l 367..1J000

Publishing Company)

t -800-213-8365

same •• rent.

lNG CO. recommends

of requests for any large
adv&amp;nce payments of
tees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866·
278-Q003 to learn if the
mortgage broker • or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valfey

and runs 3 miles to the Ohio
River
COUNTRYTYME
.. .We Buy &amp; Sell Landt..

3.2 Acres in Morning Stat

~::;;;::;

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of· Consumer
Affairs BEfORE you relinence your home or

Ferry area $6,850 on land BR, C/A, clean, new carpet,
c.ontracl (304)575-2934
ntce level td, R1 833. Small
out bldg. $475 plus utilities
GUARANTEED
BUILD- ~~~. . No pets. 740-843.riBLE!
=~
Land 011 Raccoon Creei&lt;. 5+ - - - - - - - to 19+ acre tracts $34 900 Taking applications for rental
'
• outside o1 ~-3 Br., 2
$59,900. Creei&lt; is DEEP
r~•~roy.

Shekie .pups, 9 wl&lt;s , first · 1995 Chrysler NY $2,800
$200. Plaid· green, red .' shots &amp; wormed, no papers, 1999 Dodge DakOta Tr.

APART~ Couch, k&gt;Yeseat and recliner

Almost 1 acre in Gallipolis House for rent. Pomeroy, 2 BEAUnFUL

S&amp;lhng great commercial
bUilding by owner. Former
French Quarters but totally
remodeled into a big beauti·
ful ballroom type building '
To see ptctures type
s 106 .pOOtobucket.comlalbu
mslm269/drwestmorelandl
Cal~ can be recetiiOd at 1·

r

0.

r

1

304-n3-5333

gramS tor you to bu~ yoUr screened &amp; glassed sun·
iiPi~-!""--;;...-. home Wlstead ~ rent01g.
POrCh. shade &amp; lruk trees: 2 badroom. 2 batll, 14x70.
liko ,_, (740)37&amp;-2540.
Jlu\;(Nm;
• 1110% llnanciirg
grapes &amp; ~rrles. reason·
OrrolmJNny
• Less than per1ect credn ably priced, . 80's. · John - - - - - - - r;
VanMeter, (740)247;2229
2003 t6x80 mobile nome lot
accepted
p
e
Payment could be the
sele. (740)446-0527.

obtain a loan. BEWARE

Help wanted at Darst Group
Home, working w1th elderly,
. heavy lifting involved. 7 40-

-I

Prime property on

George$ P&gt;rlablt Sawmill,
hardwood floors &amp;
don1 haul your logo lo 100 Local company offering "NO has
beautllul woodworl&lt;, kltohan
Mil just call304-675·1957. DOWN W.VMENr· pro- appliances bulij in, pelio and

•NOTICEe
.
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISHrate,

Bonuses, Flat
heattn care, Disability,
Long Term Care and
more

lt~~~r~~

l..,.r'_·.....
~-Do.......l eo

6unbQ a:tmn:-6ndiad • Page 05

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

Sunda~~ober15,2006

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

'

Chili Dinner
Public Welcome
Gallia Democrats
AMVETS at Kanauga
Mon, Oct 16
6:00pm
Meet the candidates
Guest speakers
Entertainment by the
Gilmores
Donations.only.
Paid tor by 111e Gallia Co. Democral
Party
·

OUR BUILDING HAS SOLD
30% off everything
Open 10 am till 5 pm
Saturdays and Sundays only
through the end of October .

Aunt Clara's Collection of
Fine Amish Things

740-446-0205
Make a 'Difference Day
is Oc.t obe r 28th

Family Seni.or Care
would like to invite you to
Make a Difference by donating
new or !JSed books and
magazines to be dislributed to
the elderly or homebound
patients.
Drop off location behind
Bob's Greenhouse and
Farmers Bank in
Gallipolis , OH

740-441-1377

I

�PageD6

GARDENING.

.iunba, lim~ ~6entfntl

Magnitude 6.6
earthquake strikes Hawaii,
waking up islanders and
knocking out power, A2

Sunday, October :15, 2oo6

Ask before".you buy compost·
BY LEE REICH .

becinse all other things being equal,
more variety in means a greater range of

FUR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Are you ready for spring planting?
You might as well get the ground ready
wherever you've already cleared away
vegetables or annual flowers . And one
of. the best things you can do to get the
ground ready is to apply compost.
A third of a cubic yard, which is
about a third of a ton, makes a satisfying meal for every hundred square feet '
of planted area.
That's a lot of compost, but these days
there are plenty of places to buy it at a
reasonable price, delivered, if you can't
make eoough in your backyard. Bagged
compost is one option, but fresh bulk
compost is cheaper, and is seething with
beneficial microorganisms that also go
to wO!k killing off diseases and making
the soil nice and crumbly.
Stan your search for bulk compost in
newspaper ads and the Yellow Pages.
"Compost" is an obvious starting
point in the Yellow Pages, but also try
uTopsoil," "Fertilizers," ,;'Mulch,"
"Manure" and "Mushrooms". Be clear
that what you want is compost, not

APIn this photo provided by Lee Reich,
before spring planting, get the ground
ready by applying compost.

just 'an old pile of wood chips, manure
or wbat might be offered under the
nebulous term "black dirt."
Also avoid composts mixed with
soil and then sold as "top$oil." You
have soil; what you want is compost.
Once you've found someone who
truly sells compost, a few more questions can help you determine the quality of the product.
·
Ask what went into the compost,

Historical society
catalog going &lt;
digital, A6

•

nutrients out. Also, especially in your
vegetable garden. avoid using composts
containing any industrial wastes. ·
Ask about the acidity, or pH, of the
finished prodi!Ct. Ideally, it should be
· near neutral, with a pH of 6 to 7.
'Ask about.rocks. Besides thi: bother
of the rocks, why pay ·for rocks rather
·
.
than compost?
Particularly important is whether arty
compost contains viable weed seeds.
You don't want the layer of rich, brown
compost that you spread on your soil to
grow into a carpet of weeds. Time and
temperature kill most weed seeds. but
weeds and weed seeds creep into slopPY piles or those that sit around too ·
long, especially if left uncovered, so
ask how the compost was stored. ·
Finally, try · to get a sample of the
compost before you get a truckload.
Look at it: Little or ,nothing of what
went into the mix should be visible.
Feel it: Unless it's wet, it should be
crumbly. And smell it: Finished compost has the rich, appealing aroma of
the forest floor.

'

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

2001 Toyota Sequ~io
ftldOMl
ONLY U,BOO Miles!!!

:;o ( T~TS • \ ol. .) h . '\ 11 . ~·~

.......-..,....,.........,..

I I \\ ( H I I ) I\ I

'""'-Ill) dail~ "'ntin.-1 .•·•""

I{ t h . :!()O h

•

• Bobcats get last
second win over IUinois. .
SeePage81

Detttocrats rally at Kennedy Day Dinnet.
.

BY IIIIMJ. REm
Bftt;EOOMVDALYSEN11NELCOM

POMEROY
- · Meigs
County Democrats rallied
around their state and local tickets at Satunlay's ~ Day
Dinner, held at the Rivelbend
Arts Council.
Judge Wtlliam· O'Neill, a
member of the lith District
Comt of Appeals and candidale
forO!tioSupremeComtJustice,
was the keynote speaker. He
joined . Meigs
County
CommissionerMick Davellp(rt
and Debbie PhillipS, candidate
for State Representative. in
encouraging a unified battle for
state and local offices.
Democrnts hope ~ and expect
- U.S. Rep. 'led Sbickland to
gradnatetothegovemor'soffice
and bring other Democrats to

2002 Hondo CRV

~--

\ 1( 1'\

.· NdDGJt '

Page AS

• Jordan' Isaiah Runyon
• Daniel Lester

development in Ohio.
"Meigs County needs liOIIICone with experience as a oounty
commissioner," Davenpon
said.
Phillips discussed issues on
the stare level, including health
care, edua!Jion and jobs, noling
that these issues "affect every-

in W&lt;'lking on economic developmeut.issues in the county. He
~ Meigs County is ranked
t.;nt.
the ~-· and ft""'·-·
'""""'
a:rmsQf~cdeveloprnent ·

"Bob Taft and the k:gislarure
have not ' - - able ·~ address

~ of experience, too, one."

m·

m
·

v=l.l

"'

these is.\ues adeqnatcly and tum
this state around," Phillips said
"'hio leads the nation in the

~on the verge of excit- · number of eighteen 'to thiity

ing developments in Meigs
Coonty. The next four years will
be critical to the eoonomic rondition of the oounty for the next
50years,"Davenport said. "This
is an oppor1Unity to atii3ct new
business and industry while
~our identity."
Davenpon said Meigs
County is ranked second in
potenitial future developiirnt in
a seven-state Great Lakes
regiort, behind a county in
Dlinois. He said the cclmty ·is

four-yearoldsleavingthestate."
1lleonepanysystem in Ohio
has kqt too many people out of
the """""""'
r· ~" Phillips' said. 'This
eledion is aboot wllellu we
elea a Bob '11\ft Republican to
lepiCSC:.ll us in the Ohio House,
ora TedStricklandDemoaal."
. DavelljlOO spoke on behalf of
State Treasurer Candidate
Richani Cordray, Robert
J.IIM!I/......'
Robinson on behalf of Meigs Cou'nty Commissioner Mick Davenport emphasized tile
Stticldand, and Michael Struble importance of experience in his race for r~lectlon, ·when 1\e
on behalf of Secretary of State spoke at Saturday's Meigs County Kennedy Day Dinner.
rankedfirstinpotentialforfuture CandidaleJenniferBrunner.
Democratic Party Chairman Sue Maison is also pictured. •

victocy, as well.

OBITUARIES

newspaperS and his experience
as a jurist.
''1 bring the experience so
screly Iacldng now on the Ohio
Supreme Court," O'.Neill said.
"Myopponentthinksit'sokayto
raise $1 million and 1hen sit on
hisoonlributor's cases. I don'l"
Davenport emphasized the

Athens County Common
Pleas Court Judge L. Alan
Goldsbeny introduced O'Neill.
O'Neill has pledged to aro:pt
''no money from nobody" in his
,second bid for the Ohio
Supreme Cowt. He noted his
endors¢ment by major Ohio

·..

Sydenslrid&lt;er

INSIDE
• U.S. pteSSeS China .for
~ actioo.agl,\inst North
K01ea. See Page A2
• MHS grad plays with

Mardling 110.
SeePageA3
• Camp Arrowhead
halllted house begins this
weekend. See Page A3
• EHS Homeooming
Court. See Page A3
• Meigs Malketing
EOOcation students place
at OOII.,etilioo.
SeePageA3
,
Stl s ltW piiDio
• Openi1g statements to Members of tne River City Players will take audiences on a sentimental journey with their USO.
begin in case against ooin themed Veterans Day musical program. Among those performing will be from the left. front.
Sharon Hawley, Setf1 Argabright. Ashley Saunders, and Margaret Evans; and back, Rachel
dealer. See Page A5
Wood, Dave Warner, .Gary Walker, Kathy Thomas, and Mikayla Pasquale, and Kylen King.
• CNer 60 years after
aiSelllll blast, Army
looking'for bomb debris.
SeePageAS
• SchOol fundlaisels add
141 to $4 billion indusiJy.
BY 11m! SEIIaENT
present their latest dinner theater production
SeePage A&amp;
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINa.COM
which will recognize all veterans.
On Friday, Nov. I 0 and Saturday, Nov. II
• Toy run: See Page Ni

-J.IIM!I/.......
Members of the Eastern High School Band , 13 in all. under
the direction of Cris Kuhn; presented a concert at the
Tuppers Plains Harvest Festival on Saturday, wearing neW
uniforms band members themselves designed.

RivER CnY PLAYERS TO I'F.I.E:RRA1E

USO ERA, RECOGNIZE VEIERANS

RUTLAND - The River City Players at Meigs Elementary School the RCP will
(RCP) will lake audiences on a Wtli mental present the Veterans Day program, "USO: A
journey with them back to a time of big
PI;••- Plllten. AS
bands, Bob Hope and the USO when they

WEATIIER

Special Olympics gets boost from RV Oub
BY Mia IS I F Mlu.ER
MMilLERiil&gt;MVDAILYTI'liBUNE.COM

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CHESHIRE - You may
not know them, but you've
seen their work on Ohio 7
stretching all the way from
Bob Evans Restaurant in
Gallipolis to the Rest Area at
Kanauga.
In 2004. the Big Bend
Good Sam RV Club officially adopted that pan of the
highway to keep clean.
2 SFCilONS - 12 PAGES
The group, with members ·
. calendars
from
Ohio and West Virginia,
· A3
also t;ak.e care' of the stretch of
.
• I ale Mller/pltoto
Classififfl5
83-4 highway non:h of New Haven From left are Guiding Hand School Principal Dave Ratliff,
on W.Va. 62 and received an Richard Gilkey and Phyllis Gilkey of Clifton. W.Va .. Betty and
Comics
adopl-a-highway award in Jack Coughenour of Pomeroy, Haydn Jones, Special Olympic
Se~tember for their effons. · co-ord inator for Guiding Hand , Don and Lee Young of New
Dear Abby
A3
However, cleaning up isn' t Haven, W.Va .. and Bob Turner of Bidwell.
all this club does.
Editorials ·
A4 On Oct. I0, Big Bend.Ciub According to Jones. dona- '.'Every penny helps,"
President Jack Coughenour tions like the one received
said.
Obituaries
As of Pomeroy presented a from the Big Bend Club go a Jones
The group also donates to
Dogs
for the Deaf Inc .. the
donation
of
$100
for
the
long
way
in
supponin~
the
B Section .
SPQrfs
SpeCial Olympics to Haydn . school's many activtties, official charity of the
Good
Sam
Weather
A6 Jones, the Special Olympics which include basketball , National
co-ordinator for Guiding volleyball and the Special
Plene see aub, AS
Hand School in Cheshire .
Olympic Spring Game's.
~ - Oldo Volley l"ubbiohing Co.

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liNCOLN

140 446-•800
1-800-212-5119

MERCURY

Gallilllls, OH

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.

A MedAight medical emergency helicopter was a popular
attraction at the Tuppers Plains Harvest Festival. Me!llbeR;
of the helicopter's crew gave tours of the craft and alto~
children toeKplore .
·
'

.

IWiden't.s urged to dotUlte bloo~
Br CftARI.FN~ HOFFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY- . With a
record low number of donors
turning out at the last visit of
the Red Cross Bloodmobile
to Meig&lt; County. an appeal is
being made' for a' better
turnout Wednesday when il

returns to the Senior Citizens
Center.
The unit will be here fro111
I :30 to 6:30 p.m. at the:
Mulberry Heights C-enter in
Pomeroy and Red Cross officials arc asking local resi- \,,
dents to come in and donati.

Pie- see ala ail. AS · .

.

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